Press Alt + R to read the document text or Alt + P to download or print.
This document contains no pages.
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-11-13 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7
-~ --' '
'
' .. l • ,
·esa ~ ·.' ·la · ' r es
' • , . -• • • ., -"fl · I .. •• • i ' " • •
·'4' • r •• . .. ' : ee
. .• . ' ;:Newport Pier
,. ',J -•' • 'f ··:":!":··;.,,·A~
:Cau.~tiJ ·Opp.~itiaD·
• ..
'"
• •• ' • •
• ..
' . . . -~polio 12 ·Liftoff
' . . • • -'
'r~~i :~u.nd . Gt1ard Coed Fights
-~1\·,~iliar~_Er_Jfest~-~~~ ~!t~pJ ~ . ··"·'' ,,, ·.:. " .. , ·· ... :'." · Ar.Fm.g~o~" :~ .. ~.w_ .. ·, ._· .. ·._:e_~_· ·e~_~.nd.·-.· · ... ·._1 .. 1_.L~.· g~1 .. 1 .. -s~ ~'~~;.i~~ed
l _." ~ ·ri:om Wire 5'n'.1ct1_ ..... giil, fouiht •off 'ii Wo.M.bl bplit 'aiiined1 with. a .,knife tbil montlna. ilbDOit · ooe 1
mohth ·to the aay-attet• a slffilla'r .. sex at-
tack in the same secluded area of Costa
Mesa.
l A W~kend of antiwar protestsr planned
to attract hundreds of thousands or
demonstrators, got gradually under way across the nation today. An Immediate search was begun ror
I n:ie. g9vemment was re.ac1y , to aCt the assailant, who· forced a 10-year-old
swiftly to P,Jt down any violence. A girl1o undress in the billy, rubble-strewn
40,(IOl).man secur. ily force was assembled ~ection ol the Oranie'Oounty Falrgrbuods 29 days 110. ' · I ' io preventV.:.b~·ib Washington. 1"' 17-year~kl VlcUm of today'• attack
A sunrise servlce ·of"prayers, reading!I IUffettd a slash.on' her hind while bat-
and son1 attracted 26 pel'$Olls at the SL tlln# the cleilncut youth, while the
... Joseph, Mo., Civic Center. , smaller girl was sexually moie,ted in
The. Studeni·Mobllliallon Comrn!Uee at.. mid-OctOber: · · · -·
Brown ·Univ......+ty in Provideoce, R.I., ~ Actual rape was not ace 11-•-• distributed l;~fl1ts at fac(orits urging .,.i~"~ however. omp :.a=a '
workers to oppose the war. tHI Wiits ll COlll witll II!' "!Pe method of operation ts rather In Washingtqn ' Pentagon police ar· slnlilar· and we assume ' he bad rape on
rested a,ppr,oitimately 150 persons in-his rhind," mid Lt. GleM Walker, of the
eluding some Ca\holic and Episcopal of Cohnnbla policemen, the first-line Costa Mesa Police Department ifl.
clergymen after they attempted to con-security unit. Backing them up will be vestigaijve WvisJon.
duct an incense-burning "mass. for No words were spoken Jn !he '-·!dent " · 'd th mil'tary h d rter 9,000 riot-trained Marines and anny lll\; peace ms1 e e , 1 ea qua s. which occurred about a a.m., however,
1be arrests were carried out with Utile paratr0opers frolri North Carolina, 25,000 while the teenager who abducted the 1.~
more than i~idental pushing and bump. qther military personnel already in lhe y'ear~ld on Oct. l5 tried to coax ·thei clrl
. . '
' .
..
"' ·.... . ' I .
' '
. ' .. k ' ' . . '
;c~ ..
t • ' •
. ' .
-
~
• }l:fORsp-~ Y· A1'l91:'1QON; NOVE~BER: 0 3", ~969
' ' 'VOl..•a.~llO..m. 4 lllCTMNP. ... ,Atll
·'
'
• I
---·-
Cl,lilLY PILOT St.it,,._ ..
• •
-Launch · Crews
. ~~v•.~~e; Leaky
U ".~-' ,· ' .t 1,. ~,'t;~'tlf'--.Nt08QJ" .~f ~~ •" ~~ ..... •'
L ' o / "' ' • CAP& K.181flroY (tJPl) · -Lamicll
crews" troiJ a 'iabe With Ume' today,
~a.. loak)>_!l)'dnigen ~ lo :the Apollo 12 ~ip and aimed towarcr·an
on·tlme start Ftlday; of America's second
lunar landing mission.
"We knew they would do it,'' said
jubilant commind riiodule pilot Richard
F. Gordon. "We'v~ got a gre~t crew here,
oome great peOple~1 We had all the CO!l-
fidence'in'the Worfd in 'them.
"It's fixed . It's even got hydrogen In it
like li's suppoiled. fu... . r' '
Assured that everything .,vas under cqn-
lrol ·for ari 8:22 a.m. PST ~list6ff,
Gordon, Charl es "Pete" Conrad and Alan
L. Bean went acrobatic fl ying at ~arpy
Patrick Air Force B~e. They took Off in
fonnatlon, n·ying separate whit!' 1'38.jet
trainers.
As he walked to his ai,rcraft, Be~q s~id
that at" first ,it looked like the · hydrogen
tank could not be replaced in tlme to
meet the Friday.l!Jqnch date. That would
h.Bve JQ~~nt a month'li delay. • •
"But they did ·u,. and It must have
taken a lot of effort~" said 'the lupar
module pilot. "We've got some rea!IY,
sharp people iii µ.is program." .
"One hou'i' and fr day from nOw we
!;lllgt,l to be going," ~an .sajd ,before tak~
' 1DETECTIVE' PHIPPS SHOjNS OFF LETTER, SU,POENA
ing after Pentagon guards warned the · Washington area, 2,700 D.C. National be!ore using force.
group that its .P~esence was ·obstructing· Guardsmen, 400 National Park police, 125 The distraught victim oJ tOday's
Penta:goo actlvJtie; . U.S. ·marab.Jls, several hundred FBI molestation a&ld she w:ai walking to
ing orr at 7:5_7 a.m. ·
"You watching th~ clock ,...or
A 40,000.man security .foree ts ready to a1enta and J,50D1volunteer marshall from (See MlllA ATTACK, Pap I)
Court ,Appe1ranc111 Are Part of Police WOr k
put dowsi ~~that might ocCur the -r..anb of the d emo n·s tr at or .s :w:e=;~~:1'~_;!;~rft1;·-" ~t --inttillpnce··,our ·ce·s · "'" · · -1· ·' 1· -. ~ ·,
will 'I""' be -unJea caDed on to be!Ieve·lhe antiwar weelle.,t may'atlract Santa Aria Cop .
restore qrdll, up to 100,000 penons, onJY one-fffth as . •
• •
Gir1 ·· 'Diek
. • • j !
Tra~y~
Most .In -. will be 3,000 Dlstrlcl (flee PRC11'D'.IS, hp I) I Ji d b J
. . / , " n cte · Y ury 10-yef!r-QUJ, Foils · Youthful .B'urglars Co~~. Harbor Qff~ia'!s · .. Ill _ Bor's~ ~ting .. By ~u!!1.~~E.~~~111 :~~'~; :~~e~~. blond guy by !he stove.
.• " ' , . • ' A young S~la Ana pollct qttlcer hf! Ten· YJ!ar okt. Susan Phippa took a page;
R ' . p. . F . p . l been ,aecretlr .bldlc;tN bj"Uie ormwe from Dick Ti'acy's 'Crimestopper's Text· ap zer ee , ·roposa =~g'.;!.!i7b:C:~t."w~'!': b<>qk rei:en~y and 'fo!IO!f two juv,eniles
I · \. · . , · . · , beinl committed to Juvenile Hall. ' '!ho burglarized her neigh~r's ~o~e. . ~ · , · .. • · · Patrolman lUcUrd E... Faust, •. w1s . Ht:r ·w9rk m· putting l!.untington ~ach ' aj JORN VALTERZA ,thele feiellnp ~ wrtdn,," Mead said. scheduled to appear: today for ar-police on their trail lesWted in the arrest
, __ , ~;. Of 1111 .. ., ,..., "'."' ~bb Yid beci111e of· the hlsher tax raignment belOre: Superklr Com1 J~of-Lhe,.pai:r:, · p1ua .another boy; who ac· ~ for ttd;elands me feea for • . • , · Robert Gardner on 1 charge ot ... ult Cor'dlng . to police, later admitted to 22
· cl.mty-sink a bit Wedneoday when bUli ~..JllY, pier pennlt ilomeown:i<• with a ·deadly -pon. . .. · · -·· 1 ·'..,,•i<Jerµ&l·· burll(ltles . Jn . Hunjlngton
two a,.,.. County Harbor District"'°'" would be vtclbm of "double luatiiJn" lf 'Ilia -••!!!'!!'I bf. tho J!U<l Beach ind·two"in Fpunlain ~alfey. ,
J!>lnlclneii"1Ddlc!ated strong disfavor of the C®11ty pier fees·were fo go Into er. of Jurors alter heftlpi· • nUmber of : While .playlnJ ip, front.of her i>ouse at.
the Jdea. feet. \Vitnesses from t.tie ,_nta Ana black com-\ ~ ~lipt 1 Dnve, pct. 17, the Colleee
Fresh from a ~meeUng with, County "( re11'1e •that various J>OJ.iUoal •agenJ munity testify , aga6't Ofticer Faust, Yiew~ool /ilth gr~r said sl:>e ,noticed
AS!lessor Aodrew J. ·lhnsbaW, com-cies are having a touih tbtle 'tialancing many using strong, highly detcrlpUve two kenate boys just sort of sta!l(llng.
mlsslbriers Frarik F. Meatl and W. ~Uen budlf18 and ~ ~ 1o tjd oUt to tenps. ·. . around.
Grubb both agreed that bayfront dwellers rcce!ve ne" reven1,1es. , Chief Deputy District Attorney James "They went to the Thoi'nton's and rang
with pier permits p111 conslderably·more "But lbese ~eu.:llway1 .start Qut on Enright today allegtd Faurt beat Jesse the doorbell,"~she r~allad. "J wtnt home
in taxes than resideuts without Udelands maU amount.I .... and they always seem Gilmore, now ti; of Santa Ana, with his a.nd later decided to go 'to the Thorn tons
pl er permits. to go up," Mead Mid. nightstick as the boy~lay-helpless on the thinking they,; wer;e ; home because Ole
The entire commission did not vote on He aaid that in Ume the fee structure ground testimony sup,>orted by witnesses boys wellf. l.p. ~ 1 · ... ' • "' •
1he matter Wednsday, but will wait unUI could get 10 hllh "Ii could kiU the goose who apj,eared before the Grand Jury. "I rang their doorbell twice. They have
a special meeting to be held after firm that laid the golden-egg." Enright described the incident as being d!apea: that youican aee thro\lgh and sud-.
comparisons on tax aspects of the isJ1e : Newport Bach <!ty councilmen are one of • number whiCh erupted in the
are furnished by the-· • wreatl!og with !he same concept this "ba~klash" (ollowlng !he lrreat ol Daniel G .... ,_ . n·
"We (Me1¥1 and Grubb) have had • month; but city f=· leemi to run Jn Michael Lfnem of Santa Anl and the IC• eneral :nnrza . 1es
tnetting wUh Mr. Hlnshaw aft!1. we .were ' favor of~tbe' fees, te a'Rl'Gng"P.tJbhc -cused Nigfo's iu~qent ~· He , . . .
convinced that !he laxes paid by property outay. , • stressed, however tha ,F1uit'1 . ollepd '> :LONDON (AP)' .:. Gen. lsbnder
owoen w1UI ipter; penn)t,, Were sulJltm. The first forinal bearina on the city beating of Gilmore · wu not dnclly Mirza, president or Pakistan until he was· ~ally N1ller. .But· !he ·commission propo11l (II 'pot foot of boat 11pace per related to tilt Lyoein cue. · l de~ by ·/>!<>hammed ~yob Khan In ~lOOfdnt rely, '111 htanay but wait to yepr) will be held Nov .. 24: M .... 1trong Lynem, SI, a memtt of · the Black . 11111, ~led at his ·London home tOjlay.Jle
ln~k! •. dcclilotl «fter !he ....... r pul3 (llet PIE_R_FEE, Pore I) .• (flee l'OUCDW!,..Po;.J1, was 75,' -· ·. , '
"
. . r t
She then said' the 'boy motlonet:. to the
other' teenager that Someone wis at the
door,,then both ran into 1tbe garage.1 ,
0 1.ran home and told my'. mom. aOOµt'Jt,
and she called tile police," explained
Susan, who then lnhOcently prete~ to
6e riding her ,bJcycle in the street.1unUI
the boys came out. ,
"The dark-h&ired 'guy was. ca~Jng a
box ·covered ·wlth .some sort of cloth. As-
they got to tllejr ~ar I .l09ke(J .at lllei
Jicense num~l' and wrote It do;wp~· '
Police quickly apprebend..i-Jhe, !\Oya
and, said they, later admitted to .ehte'r'liig'
other,homes .. :r~ hauls'ra_oged ,fr:im a·
fevolver to. Di.sOOYfand Uckels. • •
,SuSjln'recelved ·~·letl<f or eo~~nda-·
lion, from HunUngton Beilch Poll"' ,Chiel
Ea~le .Robitaille, :{>!'aJaiJig her for lief out-s'l.andi.ng~l'Qle.-aif 'f'de!tcUY.t. ",~ ,' . , E~loled in the envefQpe."iere two.~·
poonas, one for ~ and ~e_ Jor Der
motlier, 'lnvltihg tl]em tJ> ttll !he~ stOrY,
before juvel\111! court: .; ~ '
"l feel lunny 'boot l>avln&,lo go to'
cOuFf" Susan· said. "ilt)s'stiange to have
ti> ttli,f~ f~~ndl lhat'y.U tiav.e th go to' c,ourt when you hAv,en,'t donp anythlrig:"
: "Now the Thorntons •.rt; going to , piy1
me to play detective while 1¥Y're on
Vac8tion;" said Susan. "They'll give ine
two dollars," they said.
•
something?" asked, Gord~. ,
"You beJcha," rej:illed Bean who wil.I be
m'akin{his'flrst spaceflight. '
After retutn!ng • from the 40-minute
flight, the· astronauts drove from the air
~se to the iqoonport, 31 miles away, to
tiruslt up oqce again on moonship flyiD,g procedures. , _ ' · f
Under suddenly revised rules, the three
(Sft APOLW Ii,. Pa;e I) l
or ... ge Coue
. '
I
I
A cooling: off• period, with onJy:1 ·
slight decreaae in sunshine, is ~ri·
day's f~ast ' f<ir-' the\ Orange
Coast. Look for patchy log and !
temperaLures ranging from 70
alj>ng' lhe coisl .19 "1'7 . ruttller in·
land.
INS' E TODAY
; ;
-t. DAll.V I'll.OT s
Coµ~ty-W on't Back Air Plan
Refusal Marks Major Setbuck for Master Survey
i. By TOM BAllL!Y
or ttrie Otltw '"" •t•n ·
orange County's master plan of air
tnnsportation suffered a moJo< -Wednelday when d!Ylilod c o a n t y
IU.pervllon rtfu!ed to endorN a com-·
inlttee'• iuggestlon that the second phase
of the controvenial survey be launched.
Held over by the board to Nov. 28 was
consideration of a bulky report which
urges a $111,000 study by William Pereira
and Assoclatet ol tilt poalbiuty ol
developing I oophflticated llYale!n ol
airports within Oranp County. "
Envisaged by the committee -County
:Administrative Officer Robert Thomas,
Airport Director Robert Bresnahan and
Plaoninl ~ F....t Dick.-~ la
-an alrport system which would feature
regional airports, metroports and air
parks throughout the county and possible
enlargement or replacement fl exiJtinC
facilities. ...
possible conclusloli or the Vietnam War
and Its effect upon the future of the El
Toro base.
Point alter point wu 1hot down by
supe~ and members ol the public in
a prolonged public hearing which left I.he
three authors of the Phase Two resolution
obviously bewildered as to their next
course of action.
Their only instructions ln the motion
1ucce:ssfully offered by S up e r v i 11 o r
William PhWJps were that the "matter
be returned to !he CAO. refined and held
1n abeyance Unt11 Nov. 28."
If their new recommendations follow
the line of argument offer~ throughout
the hearing, the commllt.ee's next recom·
mendaUon will be contained .Iii a eoD-
1iderably thinner report.
only ~ggravate the factori: of notie, pollu·
tion, congestion and zoning that go along
with such programs and 1 look on this
f(!port '5 li>metblng totally lmpr~ctlcal."
Bater po!Di.d to the proxlmlly ol LOI
Angeles International Aireort and the
San Diego airport "for those who want
world travel.
"U this is what you want then I don't
think 15 to 30 minu tes extra driving Ume
is going to make that much differeoce,"
Haker said. "But l <fffl that, as far as
Orange County is coDCtmed, the prict-11
too high."
The board was warned early in its
Phase Two deliberations that it had
"done nothing towards impllmenUng
many recommendattonr contained in
Phase One" and that it was 1'on the
verge of eclipsing in the Newport Beach
area levels of sound. which would result
ln the soundproofing .or demolition of
homti in al least one •oUter country."
moey homes in the Upper Bay area."
En1ory warned that homeownen in
Mesa Drive, Palisades Rold, ·Dover
Shores, Lido Isle, Santa 1.ublli and the
Bluffs were among thole now dlrtctly
threatened or are within the nolae ltvel
limits that would call for soundproofing
or dtstniction of the homes in West
Germany.
Noise levels af Orange Count)' Airport
had now reached two-thirda. of the sound
emilslon read!Qgs refltl«ed at Loa An-
gelea InternaUonal Airport, Emory HJd.
Urging the supervlsOrs to "not waJt unW
UJe study ls out before working to reduce ~ mounting noise levels," be warned
the board to "bear in mind the fact that
$iO tnWJon worth Of bomes in the New·
port area may have to be bulldozed out
of the rapidly advancing rioise zone."
• '1 It alao urps the joint mWlary-<lvlltan
• use of nlltlng military airflolda and a
·• comprebellllve study ol the effect of the
Supervisor David Baker added his
vehement objections to those of county
homeowners and &·Marine Corps colonel
and branded tbe"phase two rePQrt as
. "totally unrealistic 8¥d ~ssary.
"This is aometbtni that can.· nm into
billions of dollars," "aald Baker, "ind I
wonder if everyone ls remembertng "that
,,..e are only a am.all cowSf, ln area. By
pursuing aomethlni along theae llnea we
Dln Emory of Newport Beach told the
hoard that 30 daily ~es of j,t
aircraft were now belnc recorded at
Orange County Airport, "a figure that
advanctl noise levitla regarded by one Jn. temaliOoal associatl/Jo u Intolerable to
Marine Corps Col. Kenneth T. Dyke1
warned -~isor1 tbit they cillld 'ex·
pect no ~lief from a "non-eliitint fac-.
tcr'' that invariably appears on ~
reporil on airport lssuea-the J)Oillbli
jobit ml!ltary'civlllaD uie .of such buea
UPIT ....... •
June in Washington
Actress June Allyson of 'Newport Beach gives World War I veteran
Arthur R. Thorpe, 72L.a handshake and pinch on the cheek at Barnes
Veterans Hospital in vancouver, Wash. The actress bas been vil1t1ng
friend• in the northwest. ·
f'rom Page 1
MESA ATIACK.
school along Vanguard Way toward Arl·
lngton Drive when someone grabbed her
from behind, his ann across her throat.
She said the youth, 17 to 19 years old,
tried to drag h~r-lnto the weedy, difficult·
to-see area of the fairgrounds but she
was Yelling and fighting too vigorously,
lnvestlgatora said the 1pot is south and
&CT'Oall the fairgrounds field froin.1 the
place where the incident ocCWTed .one .
month ago, but still relatively close.
1be youngster fin8Uy broke free and
ran toward Costa Mesa Civic Center, ' . where a city employe met her and took
her to the neaJ'by police etatlon.
She was finally calmed enoogh to give
Investigator Linda Geisler a clear a~
count of what bad happened, plus a
description o! the·would-be abductor.
••
He was wearing light colored tousers
and a red windbreaker jacket, accordlng
to the 17-year-old girl's story.
Follo"i!Jg the. Oct. 15 assault by a
youth fitting the same basic description,
school authorities appealed to girls not to
use the abortcut)1cross the fairgrounds.
Offidals Of the 32nd D II tr I ct
Agricultural Association alao agreed to
allow the Costa Mesa Fire Department to
burn off high weeds whlch could provide
cover, for the suspect and his acts.
Besides Costa Mesa High School, the
Immediate vicinity includes Presidio
Elementary School, .Te W i n k 1 e
Intermediate School and' Orange Cout
CoUege, providing a rich hunting sround·
airport espal1llon plan upoa ellllllng and
planned communUie1. And !ta compilers
urged the hoard to bear In mind Iha
Hanoi Counts
On Protests
To End War
,.
Nixon Thanks Backers
Ot Viet Policy . Qn Hill
a1 El Toro. 1 • ~
0 We have no existing pl~ to vacate
E1 -Toro and if we. had we would hive
nowhere else to go," the Marine omcer
quietly stressed. '
"We are unalterably opposed to joint
use, it would interfere with exacting
Marine aviation training that bean no
resemblance to civilian procedures and
we are not prepared to recoplie Ip)',
claims for civilian use of our =da.
"You are," the colonel em .to
the board, "just wasting y~ time.",
Isidore Schneider of Univerilty P1f.k,
preiildent of the UniversJty Part com-
. munity Association, warned, supervilort
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President He toid the·eongroamen "I believe we lhat the hoard faced "probably '100 m1J.
From wire •ervlces Nb:on today told lawmakers supporting will achie'Je a Juat peace ln Vietnam," lion in lawsuits if something iJ not dooe
PARIS _ Nmth Vietnam and the Viet hll Vietnam policies that their efforts and that when It comei it Will be because about cootinued encroachment of no1le "might bast.en the day"\when peace will they ,and most Americans put aside other and pollution problems."
Cong made It plain today they wtre coun-come. considerations in the national interest. He aceused the board of failing to act
ting on growing protests in the United The Pri.sldent made an extremely The House reS()Jution, according to on Phase One recommendations and oC
States to speed the end of the Vietnam unusual vlsit to capitol Hill to thank both Rep. Jim Wright (0. Tex.), one of its "ignoring the justified demand1i of airport
war on their terms. House and Senate members for support authors, had 181 of the House's 188 area property owners for long overdue
as young Americans streamed into the Republicans and 119 of the 244 Democrats relief." -r -4 U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Washington for antiwar demonstrations. as sponsors -exactly 300 -as Nixon Tustin residents whose home~ now lie
told the North Vietnamese they were ke under the revised flight path of 1ets using Nixon, is an apparent attempt ·at SJlO · I ed th harboring "false expectaUon1." Re Aid Iona! Nixon conceded the difficult and Ciln-Orange County Airport a so ur~ e marshallnc even greater congress ho d t cla d jet tr and "The great majority of the American endorsemnt for h1I Vietnam policy, nrSt troversial nature of the Vietnam war. ar o mp own on
people IUppOrt Presldenl Nixon as be 111sited tbe House chamber to thank 300 And be cited evidence that Democrats i:~eth!.~nlytryfa~liContinenly. tal Airlines
seeks a just peace." members for •ignlq a reaolutlon aup-and Republican1 alike had .put aside par· Continental was recently given-•• rtin bis li ty considerations and -along with "the ~"" This exchange took place at the 42nd po g po cy. great majority el Americans" _ had sion lo fly a Pacilic Northweat route from
weekly session of the Vietnam peace A :separate visit was arranged for the throwil their support to bis efforts to at-Otange County Alrport and ob}ect.orl Senah: in the first double-appearance of noted that Pacific Southwest AirUnes talks while opponents of the war in the Its kind by a President that congressional taln 8 just peace. may soon be another newcomer to the
United States marshaled thelr1 forcea for observers could remember. "I believe we will achieve a just peace county aviation scene. Entry of both w1a
a massive demonstration this weekend. in Vietnam," the President declared bitterly opposed throotout the hearing. Nixon's words of appreciation were speaking without notes. M Do M ll 1 N--' In another Paris move, South Vietnam d~ed to the Houae members who sign-ayor reen an o "'"t-•
off ed •·•· to -•---North Vi... ed the resolution supporting hJs Vietnam Beach urged supervisora to order the er wu.Y rlCIVllll .,. 'C<V' implementation of the second phase ol namne priaonen · ·ot war on pea .. '! formula, and to 59 senators who From Page I the airport master plan. _
Ll Walker said that the youth un·
~nately 11. apparently quite ordlnar)"
--1ooklng-and-does not-.lren-ln-a maoner
dlstinetive enough to be of major help.
"humanitarian ground•.'' Communist signed a letter or similar :support. Mayor Marshall also warned the board
Man_ Aq_esJe_d ---!~.=~'=~~:ii,: Jn:"ber~·~ !'~~~:'.-.toru::: APOLLO 12 _. • • f!.~-:1~~~:'~\~ oe:::~ 1• •J "I warit to express apprec1a on w til!;"" oprnents that have ·u~eJ'SCOred the urg-Jn Car Assault . Sal,c' ==~tor had ~ed ~= ofni:~e~ff:e U:::~~ ~~ ~~ir ~:.m~:;so~~~Y~~i:~~~. ~'h:Seof~: :~y.for completion of thl
•
"He could be anybody," the lieutenant
aaid.
Bued on the latest victim's descrl~
ti.on, he ls 17 to 19, five feet, eight lnches
tall, weighing about 1115 poundl and with
average length br.own hair.
f'rom Page 1
PIER FEE ...
opposition by boat and pier owners ls e1-
pected.
The original intent of the county fee
Idea was to make the Harbor Di:ltrlct'1
lees parallel to the proposed city levy.
"In this case I don't think we should
Ue in 80 closely with the city/' Grubb
told fellow commlssloners.
C.Ommissioners received more than a
ICOfe of letters protesting imposition of
use feea for noncommercial private uae
of county tidelands.
They promised to make a decision on
the matter bdore Nov. 28 when a report
from the commission Is due on the desks
of county supervisors on the Issue.
A .special meeting will be called soon
after the assessor's lnlormation is receiv·
ed.
Speclflcally, the comm.lslon will •eelr:
figures on typical tax bllls received by
residents with pier privileges, residents
Uving next to county Udelands without
pier rights and homeowners who don't
live next to tidelands areas.
DAILY PILOT ............................ --_,...., c--CAUIOllllA
OlAHOI COM1 r\llLtlJONI) (CMJlltrr
....... N. w •••
~-Ml--
• J•U L c.t.,
Wlf ,.,...... ... 0.-11 """""
n .... r ... n ....
n9Mtl A. M1,,t!IM ...,,.!flt UIW -c.11 Miit! uo ... , ... """ ....., httll: 1'11 .............. ... '".:.~·~S:..~::
, that tbe a wounded prltonen: were being just peace in Vietnam," he said. of support personnel will have to wait UD· "The time available • , , It np1411
0 1 releued u a bwnanitarian gesture on Referring to the pending House reS(l!U-tll Dee: lt ' -.running 9'1t," lhl '..W; "We fear that n M .. aa Woman the part ol his governmenl But the move tiM endonlng hil "efforts to negotiate a There ii no second chance this month-the eynamict of economic growth •••
VU wu generally seen u a lure to draw just peace," Nixon uaerted: "l realize It "We look real good now," reported will provide' chaotic results in the abaence
A Gardena Ironworker cruiaing the
streets of-Co.sta Mesa wu arrested
Wednemay after allegedly mbalng a
woman talking ·to her neighbor in the
roadway with bil car twice, by Only a few
inches.
James R. Cienfuegos, 44, was booked
on charges or auault with a deadly
weapon &temming from the incident on
Cambridge Circle at Aliso Street, ac-
cording to inve!Ugat.on.
Mra. SuzaMe A. Zeboray, 37, of 4~1
Cambridge ctrcle, aald she had to press
herself flat against a car driven by Mrs.
Nancy A. Pearce, of f66 Cambridge Cir·
cle, the second Ume.
"Get your out of the street,"
the two women quoted the driver of the
cat Involved as yelling.
Offlcer John C. White was liking a
report and had broadcast a description of
the car and driver, leading Patrolman
Ted Wilson to arrest Cienfuegos momenll
later in the 100 block of East 19th Street.
f'rom Page 1
Hanoi into direct talka. might hut.en the day that just peace launch operation• manager Paul C. Don· of objective studies upon wlP.cb you· can
Both North Vietnam and the Viet Cong coukl come.'' nelly, base your· decisions_."
have steadfastly re!Uled to dell directly J,;;:==========================::i:;===:;;;;;;=====;;:; with the Salgon deleptlon at the peace
talks. .
Lodge, anned with Senate and House
declarations of support for Prtstclent Nix·
on's policy in Vietnam, adopted a tougher
stand at the talk.!1 today. But he waa met
with vl\uperaUon and mockery of Nlxon'1
peace efforts.
North Vietnamese delegate Xuan Thuy
accused Nixon of trying to crush the an-
tiwar movement in the United Slates.
Mme. Nguyen 'Ibl Blnh, the Viet Con&
delegate, repeated all of her previout
demands (or total U.S. withdrawal and
mocked Nixon'a statement he hoped to
gain a poalt!on of strength.
Nixon'• Nov. 3 broadcast was de-
nounced by Thuy as "A speech of
war."
He uld NJ1on11 declaraUon "ha•
aroused a strong .wave of protest in
American public opinion."
"It Is certain the American people will
oppose with increasing vigor the Nixon
administration's policy ol. agreasion," he
continued.
In the meantime, Hanoi's man warned,
North Vietnam will not modify Its de.
handeau ,...
broodloom by
Tha now spirit of today comes allve in your home with
th is plush, all-wool broadloom from Kar1Jstan-Chandeau.
Choose from 00 great colors, 1rom pale to potent.
Forget your furniture style; smooth velvety Chandeau
goes great with them all. So look nowf
Chandeau, one of many fine .broadlooms and rup from Kerastan. -• -~ + •
Only $10.95 sq. yd, I
POLICEMAN. • • mand for a unilateral U.S. withdrawal
Panther organizaUon, was arrested and
accused of the murder last June 4 of San-
ta Ana Police Officer Nelson Sa:sscer.
Investigation, much of it carried out by
the public defender's office, cleared
Lynem and switched the murder charges
to Arthur DeWitt League, 20.
League, Uke Lynem, is a member of
the Black Panther group. He Is today
awaiting Superior Court trial on the
murder charges he inhertted from his
fellow militant.
A witness who ap~ared before the
Orange County Grand Jury today told the
DAILY PILOT that Faust'.!! alleged at·
tack on young Gilmore was "only ont In·
cldent in a wave of euch hara:sJSment of
the Negro population by the Santa Ana
pollce force.
"They were u mad as hell when they
couldn't pin that Uting (the murdtt
charge) on Mike Lynem," the wltne11
said. "And we had to pay !or it by being
puahed around, insulted, checked and
double checked for no earthly reuon and
generally vtcUmlzed.11
'!be wttnets llld complalnil t• the
police department about the alleged vie·
t.lmlratlon were trultle11' and 11were not
wan led by Chlel (Edward L.) Allen."
Chlef Allen was not available todaj for
comment on the Indictment. His deputJes
refused to comment on the matter in his
absence.
Faust, 28, of Santa Ana, has b:etn a
police officer on that cttY'• force •Ince
·November, 1967. The Indictment at.ale•
that "Faust sl.nlck Gllmort wltjl his
nightstick, using excessive force, alter
Ult two left the ofllcer's squad car to
walk to juvenile hall."
from South Vietnam and the overthrow of
the Saigon govemmettf.. If Nixon rtfU.!lts
to comply he said, "the people of the
world will certainly strengthen their
50lidarity with the Vietnamese people."
Lodge accused the North Vietnameae
and their Viet Cone allies of preferrlnc
"propaganda to makin& practical pro-
gress toward peace."
"You conUnue to rely on false ex·
pectatlons about events in the United
Stiles and South Vietnam rather than on
joining us In 1eekina: a aetUement with
justice for all parties," he declared.
As evidence or American support for
Nixon, Lodge cited a House of Represen·
taUvts resolution backed by 301 con-
gre.samen who he said declared their
"support le< the Pretldent in his efforts
to negotiate a juat peace In Vietnam ."
The U.S. envoy al90 cited letters of en-
couragement from $8 of the 100 members
of the senate. He called the Haute h801u-
Uon °remarkable" and old the two
to1ether rtpre1ented "a very unusual
evenl''
f'roM P .. e 1
PROTESTS •.•
m1ny u the oraanizen flrst e.!ltlmlted.
These sources believe thert might be
small, sporadic outbursts of violence but
nothing thal cannot be handled by the
D.C. police.
~t if more 1ertous autbteW occur,
mlUtary personnel c1n be summoned
from federal lnstallatlon1 wbfre they
were stationed in reHrve, hidden from
public vftw,
,
t ,, IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 646-0275 for en ••port
carpet consultant who will como to your home with 11mples
without any obligotion to you!
H.J.GARRETf fURNllURE
2216 HARBOR BLVD. PROFESSIONAr
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
• •
Op• Moo, Tloun. • Ftl. lvn. COSTA MESA, CALIF,
6-46-0271
. .
•
7_
I
v
•
p1
p!
d•
cL
p
c!
-C
• _____ _,_,
t -~
voi..,•2. NO •. 27.2, S-SECTIONS, 82 P.\*<GES'·
'
ORANG~ ~OUNTY, ~. • THURSDAY., NOVEMBER. 13, i •H .; . . . . TEN CENTS
~ ~ • 6 t:· • a~ach Ready to I~pl~nlent -Top of .P·ier "Plans
By JACJt BROBACK ·
bf .. .,. "'"' lllff
Hunling(on Beach, ·citj . officials are
preparinc • l!lh«l•l~·of •P'!'lllons. to im-
plement-Ill•' Top, of the Pier Plan for
downtown. ,rtidevei9{llllent •. ippro"ed Mon-
day by 1he ·ctty '9ui>ci!. • . Th< lint step will be an appraisal of
propilty 1n the p!opooOd emn.Wn of the
city Parlina ,Autlqity, ·north of Pacilic ·
. CC\111 ,JHiway.
Value of the property between the
pighway and W~nut Avenue from 6th to
Lake Streets, pJus five. acres of Hun-
tington Beach Company property east or
Lake extending to Atlanta Ave11ue, has
been estifnated by the Urban Land
Institute Cl'Uien.r-:-steering c;o~mittee at·
13.l million. ·
An appraiser must be hired by the city
to obtain firm figures on the value of the
property in order that negotlations with
: -. ... ' . . -· . ~, ... , ~!''ftafl ""'"
' "Dl'tlCTlVSripHIPPS-JHows OFF-LETTER,·SUllPOENA'--•• Cwd .._._ A<t ·Port of Pollet Work
,.. j ' I l ,. ··; ! . . .. . l
Girl ··~Diek
; ' '
Tr.-~y ~
lQ-year-old Foils Youthful Burglars
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI "I ran home and told my mom about it
Of "'9 °"" .,,.,. s1w and she called the police," explained
Ten year old Susan Phipps took a page Susan, who then innocently pretended to
fro1' Dick Tracy's Crimesto~w·s Text'-be riding· htr"bic)•Cle in the street unti l
boolJ recenO>: and foiled twO 'juveoilea lhe boys came out.
who1burglariied her neighbor's home. "The dark-haired guy was carrying a
Htr work in putting·Huntington Beach bot covered wh.h some sort or cloth. As
poliCe on their trail resulted in the arr~st they· got · to their car I looked at the
of the pair, plus another boy, who ac.-license number and wrote it down."
cording to police, later .admitted to "22 Police quickly apprehended the boys
res.idential burjfaries l"n Huntington and said·they later admitted to entering
Beal:ti and two in Fowttain Valley. other.homes. Their hauls ranged from a
~le playing in front of her house at revolver to Disneyland tickets.
6342 Flint Drive, Oct. 17. the CQU~gc Susan received a letter of commenda·
View School fiflh grader 11aid she noticed lion from Huntington Beach Pollce Chie(
two teenage boys just sort of standing Earle Robitaille, praising her for her out·
around. standing role as "detecUve ."
"They went to the Thornton's and rang Enclosed in .the envelope were tw.o sub-
the ·doorbell," she recalled. "I went home poenas, one for her aod one for her
and later decided to go to 01e Thorntons mother, in.viting them to tell their story
thinking they were home . because the before juvenile court.
boys went In." . "l feel funny about having to go to
"I rang their doorbell twiCe. They have court," Susan uid. "It's strange to have
dr$es pat you can aee through and sud· to lell youf\ friends that you have to go to
derily 1 aaw .the blond guy by the 5*0ve ' court when YOl! haven't done anything." and he 1dueted." • "N<?" the TbOrntons are going to pay she tben Slid the boy motionet' to the me .to play det.ectlvt while they're on
oth!r t~ that someone was at the vacation," uld Susan. '!:I'bey'll give me
dO<!r , then both r1p1 into~ lbe garage. two dollarai'' ~ aaid.
' \ .
Antiwar Protests s ·&,,rt
' . ' ' . . ,
As-U.S. Troop on·A·l_er 2.
• tnm Wire ~ rested afiprosimately 150 persons In-
A weekend of anUwar protests, planned eluding sonle CathollC and EpiSCGP.81
to I a......... hundredl o( 'lbouaands • of clergymen after U1ey attempted to con-,..._.... , d~t an iocenae-bU:li'llnc "mass for
demOl\llralon, 1ot .~Y lll1Cla wa1 peace" lnllole lhe mllltory heoclquartera.
ACf'Ol!S lbt JUlliiin todlyt. • • , , Tile~ were carried out with little th< fp•ernm<nl waa rel<ly to -·acl ·more titan Incidental puslling and bump-
iWiftb' to J)Qt-down any _yiolence. A Ing alter ~!"'ta&oo guards warned µie
¥lr:;man,ecurity force was a~bled "P!'llto{' ~tact!,!? .P1""""'1 . e ~•as o~~ct1ng
W .sh1..,..,...,, . en gon v1 es ..
to prevent trouble in a ,u 1r;"""' . . A 4<>,000-.man security .force· is ready to
A sunrise service of pray~, readings put m,._.any vtoleni::e thit mipt occur
a~ song attracted 28 persOns at the St. in the Capital .dwtna this weekend 's an.
J ph Mo Civic Center. Uwar prolests, hut' the great majority ~ehe s't d ., 1 'loblll:r.ation COmmillee nt will never be Sten unleS.!1 called on to ,, u en " restore order
Brown University in Providence, R.T., ~1ost In evidence will be S,000 District
dl.stributed Jea~ets at fa ctories urging or Columbia policemen, the first -line
workers to oppose the war. • 11 security unit. Backing them up .will be
Jn Washington Pentagon po cc ,r.. 9,000 riot-trained Marines and army
p.(lratroopers from North Ca rolina, 25,000
ether military personnel already-in ·tt?e
\Vashklgton a~ea, 2,700 D.C. National
EW YORK · (AP )-Stocks skidded Guardsmen, 400 Nelional Park police, 125
rply in -midday trldin1 todly as de· .• U.S. ma:r&hals, several • hundred FBI
es rolled up I( better than flOO.issue agents and 2.500 v°'unteer marshals from
le over ad vances. (Ste quotations, the ranks of the d e m o n 1 t r a l o r a
l'l&tt Zl·ll). themselv ...
,l
landownera can beiffi, olficlaJs noled.
.,. Another atep Is deSigTI of tbe I ,1'11-...
·space parking complex. This will be ac-
,complish<d by the ctly'a Eqliieerllig
Department.
Following ~losely tlD Jhe hee;ls of ~ppraisal and el).gineering will be the tlurd
phase Of the flnanclltl feulblllty•study by
Economic Retear~ As9ociates (EJU),.
Included in this study will be a
delennlnation of the amount and 1type of
' Mail space I• lhe dowotown r<d<velop-
ment area, '()basing ol. the devek>pment,
and recommendaUona on iype of Ieaae
arrange~ts. -•
The linl,.t ... piwel recommended lbal
the city proceed w!Ui the exl<inaklo of the
"Parking Authority lO the north, of the
highway. •. · ·· . · · ~ _
EJlA has estimated that 450,000 square
feet of. additional' retail sp&ee .will be sup-
portable by 1975.
No Role • Ill
-l• • ..ri .. of mort speclatty . centers fashioned .after~ San
FranCllt01s Ghlrardelll Square. '.lbeae
centers would contain excJuaive, beach·
orient.eel stores olferinc b!&fi quality
g-aimed at caplurlnt a good deal of
tqurlat . patronqe ceneratfd. by the
beachee.· · .
ERA h8! slated lhat in the -edla1'
pier Jrta IUfficie:M market supp:>rt ii
already preeent to warr~t oonst.rucUoo.
' •
Brih'e
It b llrwod that the lboppinc centd'I
must hive a dlltJnct' central theme to
which all shops and tenants can ac:1heft.""·
The ERA lhlrd' plwe alucly wW 11ao
~ver a.reas adjacmt to lhe parklnl· pro-
ject, h)Clucling office building and l\olil·
motel dev~k>pn;ient. a civic alldltorlwn,
h,lih rise apartmenll in Ule area
nortbwist of tbe pier and indualrial
cleve~t.
Case
Shibata JJ7 on't Be Suspect's Atto,~ney
By TERRY COViILE
Of .... bellr ....... Miff
A spokestnan fOr Huntington ·Beach at·
tomey George Shibata said ,this morning
that he would definitely no;t be legal
counse:J for an Arii.ona .man accused of
trying to bribe Mayor Jack Green for
zoning 1nnuence.
Shibata had been mentioned in the case
of William New, 16, of IPboenix, because
he represents the company .that ls seek·
ing a zone chanae for: the same 7D-acre
'
parcel lot which New allegedly . offered
Green ft.,OOO ·to fil. :...
New was arrested Mood~ at the .
Fisbennan ~urant, .as police, work-
in& clGlely with~Green, investigated the
bribery at&empt f\)r a week.
·The land In question u ind•strial pro-
perty near Slater Avenue and Gothard
Street owned by Dave a'nd Goldie
Meredith.
A Paramount mobile borne company,
Cactlflor, baa boen aeekiq permllllon·
from :Ui~ c!IY plaJJDmi _;.IRion'·f&
place a lrail<r park· on lhe property.
Sri.tblta was tepraenting Cacti.flor before
the pl,annlng commtsaion.
Sblbata said Wednesday lhat he was
asked last September by Ethan Johnson
of CacUnor to Investigate the possibility
of rezoning that land for 'mobile.r.,home
use. Shibata said he was told by the city
staff·that there was Utile chance.
Later in September, said Shibata, he
was introduced to New by Johnson, who
indic~ted New was an expert-on toDlq
matten and woold represent Cactiflor
before the city.
Shiba)& 'teported that New CJllCO told
him "BOme" City Council member1 had
been contacted repnllng the """' plea,
willch b Cllrreolly IChecluled for 1 public
hearing Nov. 18 before the planning cun~
mlllioo.
All councilmen have stated they do not
recall evrr 1eein1 or talking to New
-, (See BRIBE, Page I)
Apollo Shot Negro Yoath .€lt1hbed
Set tQ Go . .: $~. Cop. ·Faces Charges
01,f 9.flt TiJfffl: ~~~ ~-~~::" =t~~:Kt:
CAP!: Kfl\~lll1Y (ui'n -'ilit' Caimt)o \lrllnd Jiiry cm a charle of dbl>-ma;,, ustni '°'""i. h!Pl1 delqiptlft ~ Nqro'1 ~t "'!°ue-_He
crew• won a. r11« w!Ui lime t-. 1>1111 a)l,yev-old -~ ""° -. ......,._ . . · 'I.'•".-•· lilll Faut11 a1ified fiii1ii*1. liD)l"by~•'tanritrlhr-belnl!-ll\lflod.fo;J•tpllilO-llalL ...... ____ ..• Cli*:~l)' .. llllltlol.:Atl!lmv..l~!!'t!-.. ~ Of GllmGrt na not dlrectl,y A!iofio·lt-;;.;.;,:;;w mid oflned lowtnl an PaliVlnWI IUdlarl Jli. P'1U11, -. wd =~ alleftd Faull fltll f._. iililiillo-llifljiiiilrau.--···------H
on-time start.Friday of America's aecond sCht.C!Ultd to appiar toda1 for ,1r· G no" 18, of Santa Mt, 'Wtth hit . J..Jorm, 21. a memer of the Blad:
lunar Jandin( miuion. raljpfment bjf.,. .Buperior COUii Juclfe n a aa Uie boy Jay helplea oo the -org.....,Uon, war ~Mt«! and
"We knew ' &hey would do it," said Robert Gardner on a charge of us1ult ground, testimony supportr.d "" witnesaes accUMd of the·Jtuudtt Jut June 4 of sM-
jubilant command module pilot Richard with a deadly weapon. who appea~ before-the. Gt.and !.M.fY.·. ·-·~···ta ~.n!_ ~~.1~.-~fi~~~ ~~IS?.O . ~r.
F. Gordoni "We've got a great crew here, The indictment was Issued by the panel Enright described .the mcldent as liliig lnveftlgal1on. mUC!i or It e&t'tfect"bUt by ~ome great people. we had all the con· of jurors after hearinc a number of one of a number which erupted in Ule (5ee POUCEMAN, Pap I)
fidence in the world in them.
"It's fixed. It's 'even got hydrogen in it
like it's supposed to."
Assured that everything was IJ!lder con·
trol for an 8:22 a.m. PST blastoff,
Gordon , Charles "Pete" Conrad and Alan
L. Bean went acrobatic nylng at nearby
Patrick Air Force Base. They took off in
formation, flying separate white T38 je~
trainers.
As he walked to his aircraft, Bean said
that at first· It looked like the hydrogen
tank -could not be replaced in lime to
meet the Friday launch date. That would
have meant a month's delay. ''
"But they did it, and it must have
taken a lot of effort," said the lunar
module pilot. "We've got some really
sharp people in this program."
"One hour and a day from now we
qught to be going," Bean said before tak·
ing off al 7:57 a.m.
"You watching the clock o r
something?" asked Gordon .
"You betcha .'' replied Bean who will be
making hi s first spaei!flight.
After returning from the 40-mlnute
flight , the astronauts drove from the air
base to the moonport, 33 miles away, lo
brush up once again on modnship fiylna:
proccd\lrel. .
Under suddenly revised rules, the three
Navy commanders must be launcht:d by
11 :37 a..m. Friday or they and thouunds
of support per110nneJ will have to walt·U~
UI Dec. J4,
There is no seti!nd chance this month.
''We lopk real good now,:• reported
launch operaµons manager Paul C. Don·
nelly.
,Your Community
Goes Out Toda y
Recreation Is. the big story fot_ 1970 both
In Huntlncton 'Beach and in Founiain
\'alley So fb,at is the big story in the 1969
edilon of YOUR COMMUNITY..Jncluded
i:ii::lde this~copy of the DAILY PILOT. 'J1lt rna&l'ine lnc;ludes the most corn·
p~hensive"'"foumhlp of parkl and reere ..
. tion plans and progress ever pJblished. It
also, of course, offers the usual features o·rr governme'lit, school&, Industry and the
other elements which make your com•
munlty one.of U:ie goina:-est, growing-est
areas ln the United States.
Reid It today. You an get extra coplel
for "thf Folks back horrie" from lhe DAI·
LY PTLOT's Hunting\00 Beach o(nce, 300
Firth ~.1 for 26 cenll each.
General Mjrza Dies
LO NDON (AP) • _;, Gen. tskinder
~1irza, preslden~ of Pfk!stan WftUl.~ w~
depoted lly Mohammed Ayub Khan in
111511, died •I his London home lodav. lie
WU 7L ---""'-
SmiSf'.t Aquatic
' Patk lst Plans
Win Approval
SpeclfiC 'plans for the first part of
SunsetAquS:tic Patk's boat marina even-
tually housing 319 small craft won ap·
proval from Orange County Harbor Com·
mission Wednesday.
Work by a private developer will begin
before the year's end on the marina and
accessory buildings on the county aite
along Anaheim Bay, Commissioners
learned . •
Rough grading for the landscaped
areas of the Huntington Beach area
water park already is complete, Harbor
District aides S;Bld. -
Topsoil will be brought in this week to
cover the fill dirt, they added.
Meanwhile new bid proponls will be
prepared for award of a paving contract
on parkln& Iota and roada in the park.
One round of biddlng on the paving
work already was held, lbe aides said,
but no,"'bldders came forth .
The atoll will try qaln wllen the bid·
ding climate-,ja more favorable -in
January.
Bid.I for the work should be opened late
ttiat rlionth. ·
Ultimately the park will have a boat
yard\. marina, restaurant, convenience
and iquor store, overnight campground
and picnk: arfl. '
The first segment of the marina,
district aides said, should be complete by
mid-May of 1970, well In Ume for the next
summer season. The boat slips will be equlj>ped with
water, electricity and telephone service,
aJont wlth lockers for each boat.
A wailinl lilt for prospective tenants of
the marina ll F.OWln& by the day, distrtct
spokesmen aa1d.
GWC Students
To Protest W.a
S&udtnla at Golden West College have scheduted • Vietnam War Moratorium
, obeefveUoa troni 10 1.m. to I p.m. Fri·
day Jn fhe free speech area adJ~nt &o
• the CoUege Forum.
The obeervanct, sponsored by lhc war
moratorium committee ol t~ campus
Young Democrats. will feature. Avt talk1
by SOUlh Vietnamese 11ttden~.
Bill Lager, chairman of the committet,
satd that the studtnta , who m. attendfug 1 Cai Slate-Long Stach, wtfl call for a new
t re;imt, ' fret from communism and
• Amertcan Influence.
Hano4 Cong Make Clet;ir
' . . .
They Favor U.S.. Pro~~~
From wire 1en1ct1
PARIS -North Vietnam and the Viet
Cong made it plain today they were coun-
ting on growing prote&tt .in the United
'states to speed the end of the Vietnam
war on their terms.
U.S. Ambuaador Henry Cabot Lodge
told the North Vietnamese they were
harboring "false expectaLions." He said
0 11le great majority of the American
people support President Nixon as he
seeks a just peace." 1
This exchange too1t place at the. 42nd
weekly session o( the Vietnam peace
talks while opponenta of the war in the
United States marshaled their forces for
a massive demonstration tbls weekend.
Jn another Parts move;Sooth .. Vietnam
offered today to release 62 North V~·
namese prisoners of w a r on
"humanitarian grounds." CommuniJt
North Vietnam rejected the offer •nd
said It wooi1d never deal directly -the
Saigon Fvetnment. · ' ·
Tile S.i1on-nqollator had announced ' .
Child, 4, Saved
From D~ownirig .
By Baby Sitter.
A lour;yearoOld chUd waa ,1avf:4 from
drowniq W-y. ilftmioon by her
babyaltter who. pulled her from the bot-
tom of a llwlmmtni pool al ber lflln-
Ungton ll<ach home.
llebra Berry, of !Ml ~~'!..!Ane, WU
reacued 111'3:0! p.m. by-__, WUmu.-
15, ol !lllO Sw1llow Lane. ,
Ml11 Wllmu 1od 1 -by, Identified
u Rlebard Holm, of 4410 .Sunlwept Line,
santo Ana oublequenlly -mouJh to iDlii;ih ruuocilaUoo lind mlved
ttie child.
A .,_ oquad f,.., tbO Hllllllnlton
Bach Fin Doportrnent foUnd the cltlld
bre1lhin1 weakly ind wlUl feint pub<
when they were 1ummoned t.o the ac-
cident.
The child was taken to Hunthllte1n
tn~mmullib ,Ho~P.lt.al w,hete she _ ll now In the' Intensive care utUt·ln fair con·
that the 82 wounded prisoners were· belnt:
released u a humanitarian gestUN On
the part of his government. But the move
wu generally aeen as a lure to draw
Hanoi into dlrtct talk&."
Both North Vietnam and the Viet Co!Jg
have steadfastly 'refused to deal directly
with the Saigon delegation at the peace
talks.
Lodge, anned with Senate and HO\lle
declarations of support for Prelklent Nix·
on's policy in Vietnam, adoP'ed a toucber
sland at lbe talks today. But brwu IQe:t
with vituperaUon Ud mockery o( Ninn'1
peace effort!.
North Vietnamese delegate Xuan 1'hUf
accused Nixon of trying to crush the an.
tlwar movement in the United Statea.
Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, the ylet Cong
delea1te, repeated all of her previoul
demands for Jotal U.S. withdrawal and
mocked Nltoa's ltatement ·be hoped to
gain a position of llrtagtb.
Nlxon's Nov. 3 broadcast was de-
nounced by Thuy u "A ape«h , of
war."
Cou&
Weadler
A coolln1 off period, w!Ui only
slight decr~;ln tunBhine, ila Fri·
dAY:1 , for~ut for · the Orange ~. · Lobk for pltcby · fOfJ and
1tmpe111un11 raJll)n&:I · from. 'IO
alon1 die -tcr77 fllrther• ... Jandl
INSIDE TOD,,(Y
Hmo art t0Cla11'1 uouth being
"tuMttd mt'~ to 'KH drug1 b11 11
~rocw tnvolviflQ tht "'°'' mcdio1 Nt.,1 romtraman Johann ~
1t1e1h ttU.t tht i'IUide atof'JI "''no
lnjormotion he gltaned while
po.ting, a, a hippie. See Page 14.
!'.:;,..;. ·-·-·--...... Ol'9fCU
n • ..... • " M' n
--Llffl• 1t -.. ............ ................ ~ ..... c..., 11
frl¥W """' n ,_, .... ..__......,"
dil14"'. •' I
~ 1¥-bY ,i ltter wa! treated , in· the
ernerge:'I' room · for shock bul later
'""'"' .... ·--=:.. " 1>n
" "
·-. ·-. ·-. --. __ ..., ........ -· ,•
n:leuecL • · .• • • ,
•
1 l,? DAllY PllOt •• ' M•jer Sethek
' I
,
'
County ~l\e)e ·cts
, ·~~ ---r · * ,. ' . .. '
Airport .Sur.vey· ..
. ' ._._ "
B\i-TOM B4RLEY 'lbelr only lrlltructionJ In the motion
-o, .,.. o.111 '"" 1"" successfully offered by S u p e r v I so r 1 Orahge County's muter plan Of alt Wlfliani...PhWlps were that the "matter
transporta.Uoa Suff~ a major selbick be rttumed to the CAO. refined and held
Wedoeldl;y-when dkrlded cou-nty in.abeyariceuntu Nov. 26."
su~ rtfU9ed 19 ehdone a com· If their new recommendation1 . follow lnl""'~.i!i!ue1Uon lfi~t l!iesecoocl.ph... UieUne of ariwnent offered thr<iughout
or the controversial survey be launc~ed. the hearlni, the committee's next recom·
• Hefd .oVfir by tbe'board lo-Nov. i& was itiendation will be ci>ntained in a con·
consideration of a buJky report which siderably thinner report.
uraes a $111 ,000 study by Wllliam Pertlra Supervisor David Baker added his
and Auociate.s of the po&Sibility of vehement objectJons to those of COWJty
devet.plng a sophlattcated system ol homeowners and a Marine Corps colonel
airports withln Orange Cowrty. and branded the phase two report as
Envtaaged by lhe .commlUte -County. "lolllly unrealJJtlc and ..,_...ry.
Administrative OfHcer Robert niomu. "This ls lOmething that can run into
Airport Director RobM Bresnahan and bllJions of dollan," said Baker. "and I
---
' .
, Educational ,.
~Financing.
Forum Set
Prob!'"" of eduoallooal 11nlnclO, .will
be pmented by two atata uatmbtymao
In a community forum Thursday, Nov. 20,
sponsored bf the ltunllngton Buch
League of Women Vote.rs. •
Assemblymen Robert Burke (ft.ff~
tlngton Beach) and Leo J. Ryan (~
Mateo} will talk at the public meeting to
be held in the Westminster High School
cafetorium. The meeting will start at I
p.m. with a reception for t h e
assemblyman at 7:30 p.m.
Plannlna Director Forest Dickuon -ls wonder if everyone ls remembtrlna: that
an airport system which would feat.me we are only 1 small· CCWlty in •fta. By
reJiooal airports, metroports and air pursuing llOlneth1ni •hlnl these lines we
parks throughout the county and possible only aggravate the facton of noise, pollu-
BLACK AND WHITE -Esters Everson (left) holds
attention of Gudrun Wromar and Debra Sisler in
conversation during visit Wednesday of 5() students
Following the talks, a seven-member
panel ol local educatori will quiz the
legislators on taxation for education, bills
comin1 before the '1970 le'gislature, and
prtoriUes in education. Questions from
the floor will follow tbe pine I questioning.
en1.atge·M8tt -01'"-replacem:ent of elisting lion, congesllon-·and zoning that go along
facilities. v;ith such programs and I look on this
.. Both assemblymen are meniben: ol the
It also urges the joint military-civilian report as something totally impractical."
use cf existing military airfields and a Baker pointed to the proximity of Los
comprehensive study of the effect. of the AngeJes lnternatlonal Airport and the
airport e:xpan&ion plan opon existblg and San ~go airport "for those wbo Want Bla~k" White Pai:;-Oif
Astembly Education Committee, -and
.Ryan Is chaim)an of the Joint Commlti,e
on Teacher Licemlng and Public S(:bOol ' . Employment ·
planned communities. And its compilers workl-travel. 1
urged the board to bear in fulnd the "lf this ls what· you want tM:n I don't
possible conclusion of the Vietnam war thlri!c 15 to 30 minutes extra driving time
and iU: effect upon the future of the El is going to make that much difference,"
50 Students From Compto1i Campus Visit Valley High
Members of the panel ol · local
educators are Dr. Clarence ~Hall,
superintendent of the Ocein View sC:bool
District; Curtis Bluemke, bus Ln.e_. 1
mana,ei, Westminster School :Diatncto.
Correllan 'lbompson, bullness manager,
Orange Coast Junklr College Di!lricL_
Toro base. .Haker said. "But I reel that. as far as
Point after point was. shot down ~y Orange County ls concerned, the price is
supervisors and members bf the public 1n too high."
a prolonged public hearing which kft the Tbt board wu warned early ln it1
three authors of the Phase Two resolution P~ Two deUberaUons thit it had
obviOU$ly bewildered as to their neit "done not.bing towards impllmenling
coune of acUOn. · -many ncoaunendations contained in
Frem r_,,e l
POLICEMAN.
Phase One" and that it wu "on the
verge of eclipsing. in the Newport. Be~
area levels ·of -sound which would result
in tbe soundproofing or demolition of
homes in at least one other country."
• • Dan Emory of Newport Beach told the
board that 30 daily departures of jet
the J)U6IiC defenilerr,-offfce, Cleared aircraft were now being recorded at
Lynem and swttd!ed the murder chareea Orange County Airport, "a figure that
to Arthur DeWitt Leiaue, 20. • advances noise levels ?eiarded by one In~
League, like Lynem, ls· a member of ternatiooal aS4')Ciallon as intolerable to
the Black Panther group. He is 1oday m:iny homes In the Upper Bay area."
awaiting Superior Court trial on the Emory warned that homeowners ln
murder cliarges he Inherited from bia Mesa Drlve, Palisades Road, Dover
fellow militant Shores, Lido Isle, Santa Isabel, and the
A witness who appeared before the Bluffs were among those now dlrecUy
Orang~ -county Grand Jury today told the threatened dr are within the noise level
By TH0~1AS F,ORTUNE
01 ni. OtU, Pllft Slttt
The while girl was holding hands with
the black boy. "You know what we've
established?" she sai d. •'There 's
ba.!ically no prejudice among us. It's our
parents."
Gudrun Wromar, 16, of Fountain
Valley, may have been overstating by at.-
tributlng all the prejudice to her elders.
But with Esters Everson, 17, of Compton,
We was making a point.
"You tell them also," Everson said to
the reporter, "that after seventh grade
16th Huntington
Yule Program
Gets $427 Boost DAILY-PILOT that Fauat'a alleged at-limits that would call for soundproofing
tack on .young 0Up1.0(e wu "only one in-or d'81ruction of the homes in West Huntington Beach's 16th annual
-cident in a wave of .such harassment of Germany. 110peration Merry Christmas" is off to a
the Negro population by the Santa Ana Noise levels at Orange County Airport good atart today with a donaUon of $427
police fQl'W. had now reached two-thirds of the &OUnd by th.! Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley
''They ..... ""mad .. bell when lhol' •millllln re1dini• rqlstered at Lot An-Boord ol !Wlllon. .
couldn't pin ' Uiat 't.bln1 (the murdir ge~lntemaUonal A1rJ>Ol7. Ernol'f ~ Project leadS'I Mrs. ViVlan Bomes of
charge) on Mlli Lynen\, .. the wltneu UJ'lbta: the supervlaor.s to lJOl wait until the city Recreation Department and Mrs.
saJd. "And we hid· to pay fot~tt by re ·~-the study Is out before world,~, to reduce , Lorena Penhall ol the Assistance Le.ague ·--puamd--around;-lnlttl~ked . theae...au:iun~..D.OJie.Jeytl~ e~~~ -aMl-tbe-board-COntribuUoo w.o_uld_ fill 29 double checkOd lotM 1'woo 1 the boerd to ·t~ la mind' .act""'' I t:hriotmu bukets for the needy.
aenerally viclimilld... . ' . . ' ', $10 million wOrih ol homes in _UM; Ne'lf· .Tbe l!Ulual event i.s sponsored by the
'nie witness !Mid· tompllints tot the port are~ may have to be bull~, out two organizations. Last year baskets
police department about the alleged vie-0f the .rapidly advancing nolle zone. went to .more tban 200 local families and -•· . 1 It'-·· anc1· " not Marme r.-Col. 'Kenneth T. "'•kes · 'd he d · te th! tlu""attsm ·were · nt tQlt were - -.... ~ ........... ~r.'!r·~·-··u.-·t··~---... J~d-' · leaderssa1 t nee 1sgrea r syear.
wai1teet by ·Chief (Edward L.) Allen." warned aupei:vl IOr'S "'1~, uit:Y cou ex-Provided for the less fortunate are
Chief Allen wu not available today for ~ no relief from 1 non-existent fac-Christmas dinners, and clothing and toys
nt on the indictment. His deputies tor that Invariably appears on county f hild e comme . reports on airport issues-the possible or c r n. . . refuged to comment on the_ matter m his joint military-civilian use of such bases Letter~ have bci;n senl to organp:at1ons ab5e~ as El Toro. and businessmen 1n the commuruty ask-
Fauat, .38. of Santa Ana, has been a "We have no exlstjng plans l9 vacate ing fvr asslllance in the project.
police officer on that city'.a force since El Toro and if we had we would have Needed is cash to ~y food ltem.s,
November, 19e'7. The !001ctmen~ states nowhere else to go/' the Marine ofii~r ~lothing and toys. Donations ~f food will
that "Faust struck Gilmore with his quieUy stressed. · als> lie most welcome, according to Mrs.
nl&htstlck, using. exceulve force, after "We are unalterably opposed to jolnt Borne:>.
the two .left the offl~r's squad qr to use, it ·would interfere with exa cUng Those wishing to donate may conact
walk to JUVenlle hall. Marine aviation-training that bears no her at 536-2573 or Mrs. Penhall at 842-
Bicycles to Go
--At Police Auction
Bicycles, more than 70 of them. will be
the main attraction at the semi·aMual
HunUngton Beach polia: auction, 10 a.m .,
Saturday on the police parking lot, Sth
Street and Orange Avenue.
Other items recovered by the police
over the year and now on sale includt
jemlry~ surfboar:da, clothing, tools, etc.
The sale is strlcUy on a cash and carry
bub. llilheol bidder gel> the merchan-
dlle. Parents ate asked by Police C?Uef
Earl Robitaille lo brlni their kidl and
take a bik! home.
DAllY PILOT
OllANCI COAST PUllliHINO COM,.AN'\'
Robert N. W••' rruldtfll •nd l'uDlltlltr
J1ck It Cwrlty
Viet Prulocnl tnd C.~nt,.! M1111tet ·~
Thorn•• k••~il t:lllllor
Jhefl'ltt A. M11rphint
M1n•tln1 lli1or
.,i.11,,,f W. l tlt1
AHOC!t ll fdl!Ot
H1iltflltft4! lleecl Oftke
JQt 5th 51rttl
Mtl1r111 All''''" P.O. 101 no. t?•41
°""'"""" lffwMrl 1e1<i.: 1,11 .,..,, .. ..,. """"' c .. 11 Mew: :uo wt1I ••• &tr«f"
L"lllWI k.C.11: ~n F•cSI Al'ttll#
resemblance to civilian procedures and 8548. '~•e are not prepared to recognize any The leaders ask also that they be
claims for chdliaa use of our airfields. noU!ied of any needy families.
DAILY l"ILOT llltf ""'"
Flipping Over Flapjaclu
D•MY Gray, JO , (left), and Mark York/;7. sample fare to be served
up 5aturday by Fountain Valley Boys lub President George Scott,
during club'• pancake breakfast scheduled fur 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Fund
raising event will be held at lhe club, 9840 Talbert Ave. Price Is $1
for adull<, 50 cents fur cblldren under 12.
; I
all the while peop)e in my neighborhood
start moving away to Orange County.
They're afraid we're going to have ki~s.''
' Fifty students from Dominguez High
Schoo l in Compton, most of them black,
were hosted Wednesday by 50 studenls
from Fountain Valley High School.
The Fountain Valley students were
paired off with the Dominguez stqdents
- a girl with each boy, a boy with each
girl -to be guides and new friends.
They showed their visitors around
Fountain Valley High. dropped into a
class-room, had lunch together and then
talked togetr.er in ·small group
discussions.
For the most part they got along well
'"'ilh each other because they ~red about
getting along. When some of then1
\\erC"n"t at ease in the interracial situa·
lion they didn't say too much and listened
to !he othen. There was no friction.
''You kno\v how you feel when
somebody is staring at you,11 said Debra
Sisler, a 15-year-old Negro. "My guide
v.;as really nice. I met his glrl friend ."
The exchange was arranged by Miss
Doris Longmead, instructor of English
and the mentally 5ifted, who previOU!ly
taught eight years at Dominguez.
She made the change to Fourrtain
Valley, she told the students, because she
was in a rut. Last summer she taught
Negro literature and history. to the white
stu·c'ehl!: and they visited Domingues
High one day.
What did the students get out of the ex-
change?
Leta Timothy, 16, of Fo1.U1taln Valley
High, said, "I thought it was cool. Like on
this campus we have three Negroes. We
can sit there and say, 'I'm not pre-
judiced ,' but uuS gave us a chance to
n1eet lheril. They're really neat people.
"My motber says she's not prejudiced.
But 1 can't invite one NW° kid to a par·
ty . It has to be· a Couple.' ·
Diane Honda, 15, said; "I wish we could
have talked longer. We're worried about
get.ting a football stadiwn w~ they're
worried about gettlna texts. That'J really
rotten."
Tony McKay;-17, of Dominguez High,
said he got a lot out or the ezchange. "l
never get out of Compton," he said. "It's
just like people who have traveled around
the world know more than those who
have just traveled around the United
States."
Jack Cairnll, ·a n\ember of the Seal
Beach Elementary District boa.rd; Waldo
Price, princlpol ol Fountain Vall<~
School; Dave Borkenhagen, Huntinctat
Beach Elementary School D I 1 Ir I c I
teacher, and Carl Mameman. Hun-
tington Beach High School District
teacher.
Frem Page l
BRIBE .•• "It's good f9r both sides," said Miss
Sis ler, of Dominguez. "I don't think
either one knOws as much about the other
side as they think they do. You know, prevlousty. CouncUmanJerry Matney did
blacks think whites are too good. And say that representatives of Cactifior haye
\Vhites Utink black is dirty." talked to him about the zone change, bu.t no special requests were ever made; Earlier this year black students from Mayor Green reported to police that be
Doney High School in Loa Angeles had been contacted by New about thrM
visited Newport Har.bor High School in weeks ago to discuss the Dling mat&er.
Newport. Beach. There was bitterness No mention of money wu made,
then of the blacks against the whites and however, until a Nov. 4 luncheon with
the well-meaning white &tudents were New, aaid Green, at£t; wbk:b be notlfled
hurt. police , ·
"Corppton ls not an all-black ghetto,'' MoOdai's ineetlq"wlth New was .. up
said Everson. "The lower class are more with the ~1tion of police tn-
militant. They're really hung up on ft. .f(y:eSUgatorif ana: be was arrested after
The biggest·fight we have now is the poo . •'a'llepdly apiriotfiiing Green $4,~
Negro students fighting the better off.. cainpalgn contribution if the
Negro students. They call us Uncle TOms. chaftle were to. go throug11.
"Our school Is one-third whites and New waslcheduled to be arraigned thfs
one.third Pttexican-American. You can see afternoon .in West Orange COWJty
that not every white person Is prejudiced Municipal Court on two charges ol It.
and you know that you can mak e it." tempUna to bribe a public offlclll.
"The block t live on has four Caucasian C.Omplaints have been filed by the diatrlct
families," said McKay. attorney's office.
'hand,eau
~--....:'•
broadloom by
The now spir it ol today comes alive In your home with
this plush, aH·l'.'001 broadloom from Karastan-Chandeau.
Choose from 00 great co lors, from pale to potent.
Forget your furn iture style; smooth velvety Chandeau
goes great with them all. So look now!
Chandeau, one of many fine .broadlooms and nJSS
from Karastan. • • --•
Only $10.95 sq. yd.
"t --· --If IF. YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL "'46-0275 for 1n e.,,-rt
carpet consultant who wil: come to your. home with wmpJ.s
without •ny obli91tjon lo you!
PROFESSIONAL
INTiRIOR DESIGNERS
H.J.GARREIT fURNf[URE
2215 HARBOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF. Opt0 Moo., """'-l Prf, lvts.
Mt..0275
' • '
I ~
'
' '
•
I~ l
--r •
-. -_ .. _ ..
Fountabi ValJey T..tay'* Fflla)-
'
YR~ 62, NO. 272, s SECTIONS, 82 PAGES • • • ORANGE COUNn', CALIFORNIA . .
•
-THURSDAY, NOV~R I~, 1969
. --•
TEN CENTS
)leach Read)r to Illlplelllent Top of ·· Pier Plans
' . . . -'
:'" B1 JACK BROBACK
J • • QI ~ Del~ Pllet ll•H 1
HUnUngton Beach city . pUicial& are ~-a schedule of;operaiioos to im· p~t . tlJe T~ of the Pier 'i:Jan for
do\f\llOWh red'evelopment, approved Mon-·
dayl·~ lh\! cllf· council.
l 'J'M·fint step· ~lll•be ,an ;wpraisal of .
pnP.r\)' )p theJ>1'.9pooed e~tc,nsion _of the C~t.Par~ing. Auili9rity north or . Pacilk: ...,.'lflihw~y. · . • r .,'1 4 • • , i ••
' .
Value of the property between the
highway and Walnut Av~ l'rom 6lh to
Lake Streets, plm five acres of Hun·
lingtoo Beach Company property eaif. of
Lake extending to AUanta Avenue, has
been estimated by t11e Urban Land
Institute Citizens steering Committee at
$3.l •million ..
Ari lJ!Pfllser mu!t be hired by th~ city
to obtain firm fi,ures on the value of t11e
property in order lbat negotiations with
D.lllLY 1"1'-0T Slat!'""'
' 'DETEC0TIVE' PHIPPS SHOWS :OP'i' \.ETIER, stJ.ilPoENA
Court A~arances Are ·P' rt of Police Work .. -
Girl
"
Tra~y!'
i()-year-old Foils Yout1iful Burglars
• By RUDI NIEDZ1 El.SKI
Of Ille DllllJ ,ltet lllff . Ten year old Susan Phipps took a page
from Dick Tracy's Cr1mestopper's Text·
book recently and foiled two juveniles
whp burglarized her neighbor's home.
!fer work. in putting Huntington Beach
police on their trail resulted In the arrest
of the pair. plus .another boy, wbo 3£·
cording to police, later admitted to 22
reSidential burglaries in Huntington
Beach and l\voln Fountain Valley.
While playing in front of her house at
6342 Flint Drive, Oct. 17. the Co11cgc
View School fifth grader said she noti1..-cJ
tw~ teenage boys just sort ot standing
·~·nd. «They went to lhe Thornton's and rang
the doorbell." she recalled . "l v.·ent home
anr,ater decided lo go·lo the TI1ornlons
thi lng they were hon1e bccau.se the
bo s went in." ·
·~J rang their doorbell twice. They ha ve
drapes .that you can see through and sud·
deii.ly l saw t:ie blond guy by the stove
an~ he ducked." She then said the boy molionei:· to the
oUjcr Leena,gcr that someone was at the
doOr, then both ran into the garage.
'
''I ran home and told nty 1no1n about it
;ind she called the police," explained
Susan. v.·ho then innocently pretended to
be riding her bicycle in the street until
the boys came oul.
"The dark.haired ,guy. 1o1•as carrying a
box covered wlth some sort of cloth. As
they got to their car 1 looked at the
license number and wrote it down."
Police quickly apprehended the bOys
and said they later admitted lo entering
other homes. Their hauls ranged from a
revolver to Disneyland ticket s.
Susan received a leller of commenda·
tion from Huntington Beach Police Chief
Earle 'Robitaille, praisiog her for her out·
standing role as "detective."
Enclosed in the envelope were two sub-
poenas, one for her and one for her
mother, inviting them to tell their story
before juvenile court.
'"I feel funny about ha ving to go to
court," Susan said. "!l's strange to have
to tell your friends that you have to go to
court when you haven't done anything."
"Now the Thorntons are going to pay
me to play detecti~e while they're on
''acatlon," said Susan. "They'll give me
two dollars," they said.
Antiwar Protests S ta1·t
A~ U.S. Tro op o?i A le1·t
From Wire Servlcta
A ~·eekclld or antiwar protests, planned
to atttact hundreds of thousands of
depionStrators, got gradually under way
across ithe nation today.
711e 1pvernment was ready to act
swiftly to pot down any violence. A
40~000-man security fore~ \lo'aS a~sen1bJcd
to.prevent trouble kl \Vashington.
A sunrise service of prayers, rcaClin:.:s
ary<t song attracted 26 persons at the St.
Joseph. ~to., Civic Center.
The Student Mobilization Commitlce <it
Brown Uni\lerslly in Providence, ll.l.,
diiltributed leaflets at factories urc;in:;
wprkers to oppose the 1\·ar.
ln \\1ashlngton Pcnt:ia:on pollce ar-
S10"1t Hnr/,et
NE\V VORJ\ IAP J-Stcx:kl'! ski<klcrl
!!liarply Jn 111idday tradlng U>dny us dt:·
cllncs rolled up a bei<cr lh<in 500-issuc
lend 01•er ndvn nccs. l~e quutallons,
Paga ;1-2:1>;
..
rested approximalely _ 100 persona In·
eluding: some catholic and Epi scopal
clergy1ncn after tlley .attempted to COfl<o
duct an incense-burning "1nass for
peace" inside the mllllary hf:adquarters.
The arrests were carried out wllh little
more than Incidental puahing and bump-
ing after Pentagon guards warned the
t'l"Oup that its presence was obstructing
JJent.ag6n aelivlttes. · '
. fi. 40.000..man .S~urity. force' 15 ready to
put ct.;>wri any vk>lenee that might occur
in the Capital during lhis weekend's sn--
li\lo·ar protests', but· the great majority
~·i ll never be seen unless called on to
restore order.
~lost in evidence will be 3,000 District
of Columbia pollce1nen. the rirst-Jine
SCQ.lrity unit. Bac~ing them up will be
9.000 r iot-trained Ma~nes and army
paralroofl(!rs Crom North C~rolina, ZS,000
rther military pcrsonlfcl already In the
\\1ushington area. 2,700 D.C. National
r.unrds1ncn, 400 Na tional Park Pollce, 125
U.S. marshals, several hundrtd FBl
n;cnts and 2,500 volunteer marshals rrom
lhc ranks ot lhe demon1trato r 1
themselves.
•
)
landowners can l:iegin,.officials noted .
Another llep is delign of the l ,17&-
space parking complex. 1bil will be ac--
complished by the. clty•s E.,ineertng
Department.
Following closely on the bee.ls-of a~
pralsal and engineering will be the third
phase of the financial feasibility study by
Economlcjle~r~ As;oci.ates (ERA}.
Included ·in tl'ils study will be a
detcnnJnation of the amount and type of
rolall 11'1« in tho downtown rodeveiop-
ment area, phaa!ni·ot the development,
and recornm~alkm Otl type O{ .lease
arrangements.
The first two~ ...........,ded'that
the cltJ proceed .-Ith the estension·.of the
Parking Authclrlty to the north of the
highway.
ERA ha8 Ut.tm•l.ed that 45.(),000 ~uare
ffft of additiopal retail space wJll be sup-
portable by 111~ ·
• ~ended ls ,a Mrie1 of resort
1peclahy. centfn. f•1hkw>ed .iter San
Francisco's Ghlrardtjll Sguare. These
cenlera would cont.liq exclusive, btach-
oriented stores 4fferin1 hJch qualtty
pods aimed al ca~g a good deal of
l()Jlrisf palronlge sener•ted by tbe
beaches.
ERA has stated that in Ille iqunedlate
pier-area sul!lcient martet support ii
already preaent t.o warraat,COllllrucUon.
·It is str"9ed•th1t the·ahoppiq-·
must have a dJstinct Cflllr11 theme to
which all 1hope: and ienants can adhere.
The ERA third phase study will a1!o
covtr a~aa: adjacent ·to· the 1>1rkina' ~
ject lncludi,l'lg of(ice bulld.1111 and hotel-
motel development, a civic audJtoriwn.
high ri.,, apartmeiita 1n: tbe aru
northwest of ' the pier and thdllllrlal
developmenl
No ·Role
' ~ . . . .
' • Ill B , .. h . . r1 ·.e . -.
Shibata JJ7 on't Be Suspect's At~orney
By TERRY COVIl.LE
Of tM o.&tr PIM Stitt
A spokesman for Huntington Beach at-
torney George Shibata sakl this morning
thal ~ would definitely not be legal
counsel for an Ari1.0na man accl1$Cd of
trying to bribe Mayor Jack Green for
zoning influence.
Shibata had been mentioned in Ute case
of William N~w. 66, of Phoenix, because
he represents the company that is seek-
ing a zone change for the same 20-acre
Apollo Shot
Set to Go
Off on Time
parcel fOr ,.,ilieh New allegedly offered
Green H.000 to fix.
New was arrested Monday at the
Fishennan Restaurant, as police, work~
inf ckiisely with Gr~n. invesUgaled the
bribery attem~ for a week.
The land in question is industrial P"O:'"
perty near Slat.er · Avenue and Gothard
Street owned by DaVe and Goldie
Meredith.
A Paramount. mobile home company,
Cac:Uflor1 baa been seeking penniuioo
from the city planning commission~ to
place a trailer park on the property.
Shibata was repreeenllng Cactiflor befor.e
the planning commission.
,Shibata said We4fieaday thal he was
asked l•st September by Ethan Johnson
()f Cacttnor to Jnvest.lgate the pealblllty
of reronlng that land for mobile home
use. Shibata said he wu l.o&d by the city
staff that there was little chance.
Later in September, said .Shibata,. he
was lnlroch.1ctd to New by Johnaon, who
Negro Youth Clubbed
• Indicated New was an expert on IOD.lni
matters and would represent Cactfflor
before the city.
Shibata reported that New once told
him "some" City Council member• had
been contacted regarding the zone plea,
which is cun:ently scheduled.for a public
hearing Nov. 18 before the planning com·
mis~on.
All councilmen have atated they do not
reCall ever seeing or talking io Ntw
(!et BRIBE, Pap IJ
SA Cop1 Faces Charges
A young Santa Ana police offictr h8J witnesses from the Santa Ana black com-"ba>klasb" following the arrest of Daniel
beer. aecretly bidicted by the Orange munily tesUfy againlt Officer Faust, Michael Lynem of Santa Ana and the .c-
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Launch eountY Giaod Jury oo a charge of clllbr many using stron1, hlibJy dtlcrlpllve cused N_eg:ro11 subsequent release. H'e
cr1w1 woa .a race (l!illi u"-~. blng i 17-y~-oldJ>facit ~.wbo wu tvm'· · ... _ ... ,~ • ...!>.iL.. .-.~,' 1tro"'!I, how~er U~ Faust'1 •l!<B"I
replaced 1 leaky ilyd!Ogl:n tanll -lft '1111 'bela,lilonriltltd Iii Juv"1111 Ifill. '!'· ·bjel lletMY .......,.,A_'"'"'"!'' llUUDI of GDrnoio "" DOI. tllftctli JJO!lo..IL.,..~il>-~ !'l!'anl an __ P•lr!>ilbln IUcJtrd E, Faust, 16, wu Enrljht today allei>d F'!JISI °belt J-' reilted !o th< Lynern case.
on-lime start Frlday°Of-AirierICa s ~ sCfiec1UJ~today-t"or-xr;---cllmore:-now 18;-of S.m.---AM,-wlth-btt--L)'nem1-Jl1 1-m:emer-of-tbt---Black---
llfnar landing -· ralgnmenl bllon Superlor COUrt Judp n~ 11 the boy toy ~)plea on tl10 Panther orPn1?Uon, .,.,. emeted and
"We kntW they would do ft" said Robert Gardnf.t on a charae ot uaault arouiil,ftftimcmy111pportld,b7wttneslel acnaedofthemun:lerlutJune4olSan..
jubilant comma00 -moau1e pilot iuchanl with a deiidly weapon. who apl)eared before the crranl:f Jury. ta• Ana-Police Officer Nellon Saucer.
F. Cordon. "We've got a great crew bere, The lndlcbnerit waa Issued by the panel Enright described l!'e Incident as beJng Irive!tlgation, much of it carried <lU& by
£orne ·great people. We had all the con-or jurors alter hearlng a nwnber of one of a nwnber which tnJpted in the (Sere POUCEMAN, Pap J)
Cidence in the world in them.
"ll's fixed. It'll even got hydrogen in it
like it's supposed to."
Assured that everything was under con-
trol for an 8:22 a.m. PST blastoff,
Gordon, Charles "Pete" Conrad and Alan
L. Bean went acrobatic flying at nearby
Patrick Air Force Base. They took off In
formation, flying separate white T38 jet
trainers.
M he walked to bis aircraft, Bean said
• that at first it looked like the hydtogen
tank could not be replaced in time to
meet. the Friday launch date. That would
have meant a month's delay.
"But they did it, and it must have
taken a lot of effort," said the lunar
n1odule pilot. "We've got some really
sharp pe<>ple in this program."
"One hour and a day from no1v we
ought to be going." Bean said before tak-
ing off at 7:57 a.m. ,,,
"You watching the clock or
something?" asked Cordon.
"You betcha," replied Bean who will be
n1aking his first spaceflight.
After returning from the 40-minute
flight, the astronaut,, drove from the air
base to the moon port, 3i miles away. to
brush up once again on moonshlp fiylni
procedures.
Under suddenly revised rules, the three
Navy commander1 must be: launched by
11 : 31 a.m. Friday or they and thouaanda
of support personnel will ::iave to wait un-
UI Dec. II.
There is no second chance this month.
"We look real good now," reported
launch operations manager Paul C. Don·
nelly.
. Your Community
Goes Out Today
Recreation Is the big story ror 1970 both
In lluntlngton Beach and Jn Fountain
Valley . So that is the big story In the 1969
editc,n of YOUR COMMUNlTY inclUdOO
~.1iilde this copy of the DAILY PILOT.
The magazine IRl;:IUdes the most com-
prehensive roundup of park.s and recrea-
tlo'l plaM and progress ever published. It
also, of course, <lfrers the usual features
on government, schools, industry and the
other elements which make your com·
munlty one of the going-est, growing-est
areas in the United States.
Reac! it today. You an get e:'titra copies
for "thf folks ba ck home'' from the DAJ·
l. Y PILOT's J-funtingt.on Beach oUice. 3"
Fifth St., for 2S cent.s each.
General ~lirza Dies '
t ,ONDON' (AP)' -Cen. tskandcr
!\11rui. president o1 Pakistan until he was
deposed by !\1ohan1med Ayub Khan !n
19.13. died at his London home today. Ho
.... 7L
l
Sunset Aquatic
Park 1st Plans
Win Approval -
Specific plans for the first part ot
Sw1set AqUaUc Park's boat marina even-
tually housing 319 small craft won ap-
proval from Orance County Harbor Com·
mission Wednesday.
W-.>rk by a private developer will begin
before the year's end on lhe marina a~
accessory buildings on the county si,te
along Anaheim Bay, commlssionera
learned.
Rough grading for . the landscaped
arcos ol the Huntington Beach area
water park already Is complete, Ha~bor
District aides said.
Topsoil will be brought in this week to
cover the fUI dirt, they added.
Meanwhile new bid proposals will be
prepared for award or a paving contract
on parking kit! and roada In the park.
One round of bidding on the paving
work already was held, the aides said,
but no bidden came forth .
The staff wlll try' again when th< bid·
ding climate ls more favorable ..... ln
January. ,
Bk!s for Uie work shoold be opened late
that month.
Ultimately the park win have a . boat
yard, marina,· restaurant, convenience
and liquor store, overnight campground
and picnic art.a.
The first aegme.nl of the marina,
district akteti ukl, should be: complete by
mid-May of 1970, well in time for the next
summer seaaon.
The boat ~IJll will he equipped ~itb
water, electricity and tele~one aetVlCC.
along with lockers for each boat.
A wilting list for prospective tenants of
the marina la growl'n1 by the day, district
spok.e.smen sakl.
GWC Students
To Protest Wai
Students at Golden West. Collcgt have
schedu~ a VietnJm. WQT Moratorium
o~rvauon from ',10 a.m. to I p.m: Fri·
day la the frtt speech area adjacent to
the C.li<p Fonun.
, The obeervanct, sponsored by the mr
moratorium commlttte . of ~the . campus
Young DemocraQ, will reilul'tr Dve \Ill.ks
by SOOth Vl1Lnah)cse slud1'J'l\li
8111 Lager, chairman of the coi"nmlttee,
slid that the students, who are,..attendJng
Col St1:1tc-Lo11g ntac~, wtll ·cill for a 'new
reglmt, fl"ttl ·from · <»tnmunlsm! and
American lnOucnce.
'
Hanoi, Cong Make.Clear
They Favor U.S. ~rotest,s
Fnmwlr<oenlcet
PA:RIS -North Vietnam and the Viri
Cong made It plain today they were coon-
ting on growing protesb in the United
State& to speed the end of th~ Vietnam
war on their tenns.
U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge
told the North Vietnamese they were
harboring "false expe(:taUons." He said
"The great ma,k>rlty of the American
pe<>ple support President Nixon as he
seeks a just peace."
This exchange took place al the 42nd
weekly session of the Vietnam peace
talks whlle opponents of ure war in the
United States marshaled their Corcei for
a massive demonstration th.II weekend.
In another Paris move, South Vietnam
offered today to release Q NOrth Viet·
namese prisoners of w a r on
''humanitarian grounds.'' Communist
North Vietnam rejected the Qtrer and
said It would never deal dlrectly 1ritb the
Saigon government.
The Sli(w llflOllllor hid announced
Child, 4, Saved
From Drowning .
By Baby .~itter
A four·year~ld child wu 11ved from
drowning , Wednfad1y afternoon by her
babyaltter who pulled her lroin thl bot·
lorn of: a 8'1mmlng .. pool at her Hun-
tington Beacll home. l
Debra Berry, of 11611 Waite Lane, was
• rc&OJed at 3:07 p.m. by Darotby Wllmas,
15, of 16250: Swallow LIDe:
Miss Wiimes and a puaerby, lderitlUed
.. RJdlard Holm, "ffto llulllwept Lane,
Santa Ana, IUbloqulnt)y ldlillnlltered
mouth to mouth rauldlalkla and mrtved
tho child. A. ,._ ll<)llld from the Huntlntfh>n
~ ·Fin Depvtment found tho cOJld
brulhlq weakly end with faint pulse
when uiey 'Were summoned to the ac--
. cide.iit. ,. .. •
, .The' chlla , Wll liktn tO • HW>!Ju&!OP lnte~mm'unlty Hospital whenf she Is
now trl U1c ih\enslve catt urill lrr ralr Con-
dition.
Her bab)t• sitter Was trealed in 1 the
emergency room f6r shock but later rtle•sed. ;, . . .
-
that the 62 wounded prisoners were: being
releas&f u a humanitalian "iesture On
-Uii ~ othls government. But-tbe1n0•e
was generally seen as a lure. to draw
Hanol lnto direct talks.
Both North Vietnam and the Vlet Cong
have steadfastly refused to deal directly
with. tbe Salgon delegation at the peace
talks.
LOOge. armed .. wlth .Senate. aod . House
declarations ol support for President Nix-
on's policy in Vietnam, adopted a tougher
11tand at the talk• today. But he waa met
with vituperatk>n and mockery or Nixon's
peace efforts.
North Vietnamese delegate Xuan 'nilly
accusea Nixon of trying to crush the an-
tiwar inov·ei;nent in the· U!Ufed Sla:tea.
Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, the Vlet Cong
delegate, repeated all of her preVlous
demands for total U.S. ,rithdrawal and
mocked N)Joo'• atittemerit be hoped to
gain a position "1 llrenfth·
Nixon's Nov. 3 broadcast wu de-
nounced by· Thuy •• ts. "A apeecil or
)Var."
Weat,ller
A coollnJ! off pcrloil, with only •
slight dccruae ln1sunshine·, la Frl-
~ay·s forec'5t for the OratJJe
Coast.· book· for' l>Btchy'-fog aftcl
temperatures • ranging fr<lm '11
along the coast to 77 ·further in-
land.
• • INSIDf; TODilY
How a-re tod4~'• w<>Uth being
"tvn1td mi" td UH drug& b~ a
con.rpiracy tnvol_trlng the ""'"' ~
.media1 'News cameraman Johafin I
RIU)> tdll lht l!Ulde lloTll Ullng
inJoTTP1ation he gleaned while
,P91fllQ !" a hlpplf. See P~• 14.
·-· ... · • " ::· ·1~ It, c....., ,,, ... Jt
t."'9Mtlci •»> i...., n c..-........ ~~j ... '~ ,, -(..., 111
~="......-.. :: =... ..: ..... , .. , ,... • ""* ..... ...,. ,,..,.,,.....,.. :J1 T......... •
flltl.,.c. at•tt n.t9rl "
"'""''""' ., "M -~ J A~~ LI"*" II ... .... , j....... .. ........ ......
1
' • -Cou·nty .J.l.ejecls.
-.. ' . .
Ai'rport ·Survey: <·
•
-'
By TOM BARLEY
ot "'-D .. IY '"" M•fr
'·Orange County's mimr plan of alt
ir1111portatlon suffered a ·m•Jor setback
-w~$day when divided co u n t 'I
eupeniborl . ttfused l9 endQrle a com·
'mittee'1 suuestion that the second phaee
j!f the cont,.overslal SW'\'~y ~ tau~. _
Held over by the board to Nov. 28 was
consideration of a bulky report which
uraes a Slll,000 study by WlllJam Pereira
one! Aaloclates ol the possibility of
d<vtloplng a oopllliUaled system ol
airports wlthln Oran1e County.
Their mJy Instructions ln the . motion
sttccess(ully. offered by s u p e r v i a o r
WilU'1tl P.l\illlpt were that the "matter
be ~ to the CAO, refined and held
·tn abeyance until Nov. 26."
'If .i~~lr new recommendations fo1low Ute· one cf argument offered throughout
the hearing, the committee's next recom-
iniridiiitlon will be contained in a con-
siderably thinner report.
SuperviSor David Baker added his
vehtment objections to those of county
homeowners and a Marine Corps colonel
and branded the phase two report as
.. totaJly unrealistic and unnecessary.
Educational
Financing
Forum Set -
Problems or educational finincln& will
be presented by two state assemblyman
in a community forum Thursday, Nov. to,
sponsor«! by the Hunllngtoo ll<acli
League al Women Voters.
Assemblym<n Robert Burke CR.Hun-
tington Beach) and Leo J. Ryan (D&n
Mateo) will talk at the public meeUng to
be held in the ·westminster High School
cafetorium. The meeting will atarl at I
p.m. with a reception for t b •
assemblyman at 7:30 p.m.
Enviupd by the comnUttee -County
AdmlniJttaUve Offlctr Robert Thomas,
Airport Director Robert Bmnah1n one!
Plannlnr Dlredot Fore•t Dlebson -11
an airjJort system wlllcb would feature
regionel airport.. metroport.s and air
parks throughout the county'a'1tf posatble
enlargement or replacement of e1.lsUng
facilitlei.
"Th is Is something that can run into
billions of dollars," said Baker, "and I
wonder il everyone Ls remembering that
we art only a small county in area. By
pursuin& aomething along these Jines we
only aggravate the factors of noise, ponu-
tlon, ·congestion and zoning that go along
with such programs and I look on this
rtport as something totally impractical."
BLACK AND WHITE -Esten Everson (JOft) holds
attention of Gudrun Wromar and Debra Sisler in
conversation during visit Wednesday of 50 students
OAIL'I' PILOT 1il1H ,,,.II
from Dominguez: High School in Compton to Foun·
taln Valley High School.
Following the talks, a seven-member
panel of local educators will quiz; the
legislators on taxaUon for educaUon, bliis
coming before the 1970 legis~ture, and
priorities in education. QuesUons from
the floor will follow the panel quest1onln1.
It also urge11 the joint, mllltlry·clvllian
use of existing military airfields and a
cgmprehenalve study of the effect of the
, airport apomlon plan upon e!lstlng and
planned cornmunJtles. And It.a c!ompllers
urged the board to bear tn mind the
possible conclusion of the Vietnam War
and its effect upon lhe future of the Et
Toro base.
Baker pointed to the proxlmilY of Los
Angeles lnternatJonal Airport and the
SilD Diego airport "for lhose who want
world travel
Bla~k!l Whit,e Pair Off
Both assemblymen are members of the
Assembly Education CommJtt.ee, and
Ryan is chainnan of the J~t Cmunlµet
on Teacher Licenalng and Public School
EmploymenL
"If this ls what you want then t don·t
thin.It 15 to 30 minutes extra driving time
is going to make that much difference,"
:Baker said. ''But I f~l that. as far RS
Orange County is concerned, the price is
too. high."
50 Students From Compton Campus Visit Valley Higli
Members of the panel of loclll
educators are Dr. Clarence Ra lJ,
superintendent of the Ocean View School
District; Curtis Bluemke, b u sin e 1 I
manager, Westminster School ~: Point alter point was shot down by
15Upervl9ors and members of the public In
a prolonged public hearing wb!ch left the
three authors of the Phase Two resolution
obviously bewildered as to their ne~t
course of action.
F,...... P .. e l
'Ibe board was warned early i.a its
Phase Two deliberations that It had
"done nothing towards implimenling
many recommendations contained in
Phase One'~ aod that It was "on the
verge of eclipsing in the Newport Beach
area levels of sound which would result
in the ~ or demolitJon of
homes In 8t ·least One lslher country." POLICEMAN. • • Dan ·Emory of Newport Beach told the
board ·that 30 daily departures of jet
the pubUc-defender's office, cJtared a!tcraft were now ·being recorded at
Lyne:m and switched the murder charces Orange County Airport, "a figure that
to Arthur DeWitt League, 20. advances noise levels regarded by one in.
League, like Lynem, Is a member of ternalional usoclaUon as intolerable to
the Black Panther group. He Js today m::iny homes in the Upper Bay arta."
awaiting Superior Court trial on U)e En1ory warned that homeowners In
murder charges he inherited from hl.s Mesa Drive, Palisades Road, Dover
fellow militant. Shores, Lido Isle, Santa Isabel, and the
A witness who appeared before the Bluffs were among those now directly
orange County Grand Jury today told the threatened er are within I.he noise level
By THOMAS FORTUNE
01 Ille 01llr Pllll 1it1ff
The white girl was holding hands with
the black boy, "You know what we've
established?" she said. ''Th e r e's
basically no prej udice among us. It's our
parent!." Gudrun Wromar, 16, of Fountain
Valley, may have been overstating by at-
tributing all the prejudice to her elders.
But with Esters Everson, 17, of Compton,
ahe was making a point.
"You tell them also," Everson said lo
the reporter, "that after seventh grade
16th Huntington
Yule Program
Gets $427 Boost DAILY PJUJI' that Faust's alle1ed at... limits that would call for soundproofing
tack on young Gilmore was "only one In-or destrucUon of the homes ln West Huntington Beach's 16th annua l
cident in a wave of such harassment of ~rmany. "Opera tion Merry Christmas" is off to a
the Negro population by Uie Santa Ana Noise levels at Orange County Airport good start today with a donation of $427
police force. had now reached two-thirds of the sound by th.! Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley
"They were u mad.·as ~ll when they emission readings reJistered at Los An-Board of Realtors.
couldn't pin that thing (the murder gelu International Airport, Emory sald. Project leaders t.1rs. Vivian Bornes or
charge) on Mike Lynetn," the wltneu Urging the supervisors to "not wait until the city Recreation Department and t.1rs.
said. "And we hid to Pl)' for 1\ by being the study is out before "'·orking to reduce Lorena Penhall of the Assistance League
pushed around 1Multed. checked and these mounting noise level!," he warned said the board contribution would fill 29
double checked 'tor no urihJy reason and the board ~ "bear in mind the fact that Christmas bcuket.s ror the needy.
1enerally-victhitized;" .,.... , .,.,r-~ ,$10 mJl.lioA.-Wdfth ... of-homes-in the .New---'Ibe an:nuaJ-eVent Lr .sponsored -by-the
'Mle witness sa.ld compllinti' tw the port area may have to be .bull~, out two organizations. Last year baskets
police department about the alleged vie-of the rapidly advancing noise zone. went to more than 200 local families and
timJJaUon were Crultless and "were not Marine -COJ'P? Col. Kenneth T. Dykes leaders said the need is greater this year.
wanted by Chief (Edward L.) Allen." warned su~rvisors ~~ they .could ex-Pro vided for the Jess fortunate are
Chief Allen was not available today for ~~ no rehef f~m a non.existeIJt fac-Christmas dinners, and clothing and toys m t the indlctment. His deputies tor that invariably . appears on co~nty 1 h'ld com en on . reports on airport issues-the possible or c 1 ren. . . refused to comment on the matter in his joint military-civilian use of such bases Letter~ have bee_n sent to organ!zat1ons
absence. as El Toro. ~nd businessmen I!' the commuruty ask·
Faust, ~· of Sant.a Ana,' hu been 1 "We have no existing plans to vacate 1ng F.>r assl!tance tn the project. . poll~ officer on that city a force since El Toro and if we had we \\'ould have • Needed Is cash ~ ~uy food Jlem.s,
November, 1967. The indictment states nowhere else to go," the Marine officer clothing and toys. DOOations ~r food will ~at ".Faust struck Gilmore with his quietly stre~. .als) be most welcpme, accordmg to :fttrs.
rugti!tick,. uslng excessive fO!'Ce, after "We are unalterably opposed to Joint Borne..;.
the: two lert the officer's squad car to use, It would • Interfere with exacUng Those wishing to donate may conact
walk to juvenile hall." Marine aviation training that bears no tier at 536-2573 or Mrs. Penhall at 8-U-
)-resemblance to civilian procedures and 8548.
we are not prepared to recognize any The leaders ask also that they be
Bicycles to Go
At Police Auction
Bicycles, more than 70 of them, will be
the main attraction at the semi-annual
HunUngton Beach police auction, 10 a.m.,
Saturday on the police parking lot, 5th
Street and Orange Avenue.
Other Jtems recovered by the police
over the year and now on sale include
jewelry, surfboards. clothing , tools. etc.
The sale is strictly on a cash and carry
basls. Highest bidder get.a the merchan·
dilt. Partnta are asked by Police Chief
Earl Robitaille lo bring their kids and
take 1 bike home.
DAI LY PI LOT
•offrl N. Weed
J>rnoelrtll """' Pl/tllltllt,
J1ck It. Cv•ll'Y
Vitt PrtsiOMI Incl Gcntral Mlllltd' i
Tlri11111t K1evil
f.(11!~
Th1M1' A. M•111hln1
Mf<'l•tl~1 llllot
J,lb1rl W. 11+11
Auotlt lt ldllOt
""'''""" ..... OHke 309 5th Slrttl
M1lli119 Add'''" P.O. 111 110, t2141
OtW °'"'" ~._. te1c11: '211 Wu! S1111M l w llwir•
t oii. Mr\t: llO Wr\t 11v Stttd 01vne llc~fl. lll Fcrc~I AYtnVI
claims for ci..Ulian use of our airfields. notified of any needy families.
DAILY PILOT Sltfl l"lllt9
f'lippitag Over Flapjacks_
Danny Gray, 10, (!•It), and Mark York , 7. sample fare to be oerved
up Saturday by Fountain Valley Boys Club President George Scott,
during club's pancake breakfast scheduled for 7 a.m. lo I p.m. Fund raising event will be held at the .club, !lS4-0 Talbert Ave. Price is $1
for adults, 50 cents !or children under 12.
•
l ...
------
all the while people Jn my neighborhood
start moving away to Orange County.
They're afraid we;re going to have kids."
Fifty students from Dominguez ~gh
School in Compton, most of them black,
were hosted Wednesday by 50 students
!rom Fountain Valley High School.
The Fountain Valley students were
paired cff with the Dominguez students
-a girl with each boy, a boy with e.aclt
girl -to be guides and new friends.
They showed their visitors arotmd
Fountain Valley High, dropped into a
classroom, had lunch together and then -
talked together in small g r o u p
discussions.
For the most part they got along well
with each other because they cared about
getting along. When some of them
ll'eren't at ease in the interracial situa-
Uon they didn't say too much and listened
to the others. There was no friction.
"You know how you feel v.·hen
somebody is staring at you," said Debra
Sisler, a IS-year.old Negro. ';My guide
\\'as really nice. I met his girl friend."
The exchange was arranged by Miss
-Doris Loogmead, instructor cif English
and the mentally gifted, who previously
taught eight years at Dominguez.
She made the change to Fountain
.'/alley, JShe told the students, because she
was in a rut. Last JSummer she taught
Negro literature and history to the white
slut'ents-and they visited Dominguez
Jiigh one day.
What did the students get out or the ex-
change?
Leta Timothy, IS, of Fountain Valley
Jligh, said, "1 thought it was cool. Like on
this cail'lpus we have three Negroes. We
can sit there and say, 'I'm not pre-
.,
'·
judiced.' but this gave us a chance to
n1eet them. 'Mtey're really neat people.
"My mother says she's not prejud1ced.
·But I can't Invite ooe Negro kid to a par-
ty. It has to be a couple."
Diane Honda, IS, said, "I wish we could
have talked longer. We're worried about
getting a football stadium where they're
worried about gettin; texts. 'Iba.l's really
rotten."
Tony McKay, 17, of Dominguei High,
said he got a Jot out of the exchange. ''I
never get out of Compton," he said. "It's
just like people who have traveled around
the world know more than those who
have just I.raveled around the United
States."
Correllan 'nlompson, business manapr,
Orange Coast Junicr COilege Diatrlct.
Jack Cairns, a member of the Sul
Beach Elementary District board; Waldo
Price, principal of FOOl!lain Valley,
School; Dave Borkenhagen, Hunttnpln
B.each Elementary Scbool D i st r 1 c t
teacher, and Carl Manneman, Hun-
tiogtoo Beach High School District
teacher.
From Pqe l
BRIBE •.. "It's good for both sides," said Miss
Sisler, of Dominguez. "I don't think
either one knows as much about the other
side as they think they do. You know, previotisly. Councilman Jf!rrY Matney did
blacks think whites are too good. And say that representatives of Cactifior have
whites think black is dirty." talked to him about the zone chanp, but no special requests were ever made. Earlier this rear black students from Mayor Green reported to p<>Uce that he
Ilar&2y High School in Los Angeles had been contacted by New. about three
visited Newport Harbor High School in weeks ago to discuss the zmlng matter.
Newport Beach. There was bitterness No mention of money was nwde,
then of the blacks against the whites and however, until a Nov. 4 luncheon with
the v.·eU-meaning white student!; were New, said Green, alter which he not1fied
hurt. police.
"Compton Ls not an aU·black ghetto.'' Monday's meeting with New was tel up
said Everson. "The lower class are more with the cooperation of police ln-
militanL They're really hung up an it. vestigators and he was arrested after
The biggest fight we have now is tht poor allegedly again offering Green "4,000 U a
Negro students fighting-the bettoer -off -Camfjltgrr-ciiitttbUUon-u the ·Zliiii'li'
Negro students. They call us Uncle Toms. change were to go through.
"Our school is one-third whites and New was scheduled to be arraiined this
one-third Mexican-American. You can see afternoon in West Orange County
that not every white person is prejudiced Municipal c.ourt on two charges d. at..
and you know that you can make it." tempting to bribe a public oHlcla.J.
"The block J live on has four Caucasian Complaints have betn filed by the dittrlct
families," said McKay. attorney's office.
handeau
\
broodloom by
lhe now spirit of today comes alive in your home with
this plush, all·wool broadloom from Karastan-Chandeau.
Choose from 00 areat colors, from pale to potent.
Forget ¥C>Ur furniture style: smooth velvety ChandealJ
goes great with them all. So look now!'
Chandeau, one of many fine .broadlooms and rugs
from Karastan. · ----·
Only $10.95 sq. yd.
"* tf IF YOU CAN 'T COME lN-CAll 6'46--0275 for •n ••port
c1rpet consultant who wirt comt to your: home with simples
without •ny oblig•lion to you!
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
H.J.GARRtff fURNflURE
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA M!SA , CALIF.
646.0275
\
'
,
-
[
(
t
r
(
i
' I
I
'I
'
• '
•
'
• ••
' ••• . -... ..
Sa4dleJta,k.·
-~ Eb 1Il6 N'· '!::'" -.
• VOi! 62, NO. in. 4 S~TION~. 50 PAGES "'i°" 7 ORANGE COUNT'f, CALIFORNIA
' . ' ••
• -·
·-THURSDAY, NOV£MBER U, 1969 TEN' CENTS . . ' . .
..,. ;
•:: . -
Moon-· Flight
'Go ' Again·
'V 1 , , ~ , d Santa Anan n ree.: ng ,.o e
Sheriff Adds Two Cars i' ~r~igned
CIAIL ._ PILOT S"U .... i. · ' . M.RS. PE·TER MORGENROTH PROTESTS V.IETNAM
CclM Wom•n Car.rl•• SOn and Signs at UCI
' : I I ,
' ' .. ' '
. '
Leak· Fixed
· CAPE KEN~Y (UPI) -Launch
crews won a raCe with Ume today,
repl.;,..i a leaky i>Ydros<n tank in the
Apollo 1Z moomhip and aimed toward an·
on-time start Friday of. America's second
lunar landing mlssion.
"We knew they would do It," said
jubilant command module pilot Richard
F. Gordon. "We've got a great.crew here,
~ome great people. We had all the con-
fkleocE: in the worlcl in them.
"It's fii:ed. It's even got hydrogen in It
Uke it's supposed to ...
Assured that everything we under con-
trol for an a:n a.m. PST blastolf,
Gordon, Charles "Pete" Conrad and Alan i.. Bean. went icrobatic nrtne i.t nearby
Pllricli Alr'F..i.e -™1 ~.ell j\
IOnnalioo, lll'inll ,.pafaj. whit. ·Tit je(
To Saddleback Va.lley .
"Unfreeiing" of three Orange County
Sheriff's offJee positions will make it
poojlblt lo .step up patrols in the Sad·
dleback Valley area by adding two cars
to the 13 now uaed for dayUme patrols
lhroughout the county, Sheriff James
Mfllkk said Thurtday.
Both can will be used ln the South
County area, he said.
M~lck explaJned that five posiUOns ln
the department had been "frozen" at lhe
time Fountain VaUey lncorpor1ied and
formed iUl own police department.
Two of the positions were later filled to
meet needs of the city of Yorba Linda,
wh.ich contracts Its police service with
lhe Sherill's iifflct. ' ·
A request to reactivate the remaining
three positions wu filed some Ume ago
with the oomty admi.IUstrator's olfice,
Musick said, because increasing popula-
tion; and • .CIMly ·~t~lllo _,.
·~~~=~~ . •I.:.. ,. (. ··:...:: ·-.
would baVO been fnrthcominl onyway,
Musick said, boll a wtdfly )1$11clzod
(taolul\on odOptH by the Saddltback
Repub~ ASltmbly, complaining of In-
adequate pollce protecUon, "q1ay have
helped bring II lo a head."
Addition or the two cars ls just a
preUmlnary to further planned upanslon
C>f Sheriff's Office services to the urUn-
corporated areas of the county, according
• to Musick.
"We have sufficient data to justify ad·
dlUonal positions~ will be presentlni it
in due coune," said the Sheriff.
Musick said thit, despite shortage or
positions, be did not feel there had been
any notlce~ble law enforcement problem
in the newly populous Saddleback Valley area
"Disawion of fire and police pro-
t.ection ut1ually Is a prelude to . in-
corporaijort ~oyttr1entl," he ~~':·a~ _l ~~c1o..n""3:.~~""~
On Charge
A ·young Santa Ana police officer Jw
been ltCrelfy lndlcttd by lbt Orqo
Cc?unty Grand Jury on a charge of club-
~tng a. 17·year-old black youth who 'WIS
belni committed to Juvenile Hall.
Patro~an Richard E. Faust, 38, was
scbedu1eil to appear today tor ar·
ralgnm:ent beCOl'fl Superior Court Judge
Robert Gardner on a charge of assault
wfth a deadly weapon.
The indictment Was issued by the panel
of jurors after hearing a number of
witnesses from .the Santa Ana black com-
munity lesWy against Officer Faust,
many using strong, highly descr1pUvt
terms. ·
Yt utm .w &.: lir'inOOnas. . . trallieta;t=. ' · · . . ~ · · •
M. he·-fD hto alrlrln,_Nld that al fu1! U' .Jookld file lht ~n
lank couiil nol be replaced In !line lo
meel lbt Friday lallnch dale. Thal would
have meant a month's delay,
Chief Deputy District. Attorney .J.ames
Enricfit 'tottay alleg!d Faust .beat Jesse
G~, .., . .,, ol·ija!li; Ano, "1tli 'his ~k 'U tho bdy Jay' ht\pj.., on the
IJ'ound, testimony IUpparltd by w11n .....
· . :;...__;,.._ +----~·"F·-·-~'T.:._~•ho. ~~·before~ Grand~-
Harb&r '.Jluard ~upports ~~;~=u~ As Pro~t a~ Support ..
Armband symbolism was the order ()[
the-day.as.handfuls cf stt¥tenll at South
Orange County campuses today obser~ed
both NaUonal Unity Week, or the Viel·
nam Moratorium.
Clemente, Dana Point area, Miss Johnson
said.
"But they did it, and it must have
taken a lot or effort," said the lunar
"module pilot. "We've got some really
sharp people in lhis program."
Mlcllael L)'lltrii of Sanla Ana and lbt ac.
Al • p• B' ild" Pl. c~ Negro's e:ubs~uent releue. He . 1so .. 1er u_ .. mg . ·ans =·.~11:.~ljj~a~a:;· ::i~ related to the Lynem case.
At San Clemente High School, director
of student activities Dale Drager SJid
about 10 percen~ or the _stud~ts are
w'taring armbands today, with red,.whlte
ahd blue t)Bnds of the Unity Week sup-
pOrters outnumbering~blat:k armbands of.
rqoratorium proponents by about thr.ee to
ooe. St'udent body -president Dan Sa~ds
was among tht. wearers of the Uruty
Week annbands, Ora'ger said.
Cindy Johnson, 14-year-old sophomore,
ts the active leader of the Unity _ Wee.k
campaign in support of the President s
Vietaam polfcy.
Many students had asked her group (Jr
the red, while and blue armbands, she
reported, adding, "I'm not really sur·
prised. because we always knew I.hey
were here, although they may not be
heard as much as the ·other demonstra~
to~ls of the Unity OriVe,' Cindy said,
are tO wear the armbands, display the
nag or nag atickera, leave·porchllghls on
a't night aftl:I drj,ve with headlights on du~
lilg tbt day, and write letters of supped
fD nail'"uil l<aden dutjng the ,...k_ ..
"We dtdn't'f»ck this ,.eek to cootramct
t"e rhor1klriunl," the student said. "It ~;as moft '-*8use .'of Veterans _Day and
th.? Apol'o) ·launch. We're not 1or.1g to do
any demonatl'aUng; bat we know there
arc a lot· of st.dents Who sUll support
th~ir country and we just wanted to give
thtm a chaoce' to express themselves in-
dividUally." ·
Abi:ut • t OOI Unity Week bumper
1t!cktM baVe been dislributed In the1 San , .
I VifjP •Man W~
Ano.th.er Delay '·'-
•
In' Theft Case
Laguna Beach High School stud!llts are
wearing quite a few black armbands but
not many red, white and blue on campus
t'lday. Mini-courses today and Friday <are
dcalin&; with Vietnam ·issues and
a former student, · 1969 graduate Eric
Pitlller, now at1endl.1g Cal State • and
Fullerton,,is leading preparations for a
peace march through downtown l..aguna
Sr.Wtday atternoQn.
The march i.s scheduled to leave the
library at 3 p.m. and proceed to the war
monument at Heisler Park.
At Mission Viejo High School, several
red. v1hite and blue armbands were in
evide<.1ce early in the week, principal
Robert Ferguson said , but today he had
noUced only a few black armbands. One
Viejo student was teP.<>rled to be wearing
both varieties.
"l can understand that in a way," said
Ft-rguson: "I'm sure most or the
youngsters wearing the black armbands
.lrc basically patriotic. They're all good
.kids." .
"One hour and a day from now we
ought to be going," Bean said before tak·
iog off at 7:S7 a.m.
"You watching the c~ock or
something?" asked Gordon.
"You betcha," replled Bean who will·be
m¥ing his first spaceflilht.
After returning from the 40-minute
night, the astronauts drove from tbe air
base to the moon port, 35 miles away, to
brush up Ona! again on moonshlp fiying
procedures.
Under suddenly revised rules, the three
Navy Commanders must be launched by
11 :37 a.m. Friday or they and thousands
of support personnel will :1ave to wait un-
til Dec. 14.
There is no second chance this monlh .
"We look real good now," reported
launch operations manager Paul C. Don-
nelly.
Stoek Market
Ferguson said attempts to distribute
both. black annbands 1r:1d Unlty Week
posten1 on campua had been halted ~use of a rule that nothing not
directly related to acbool actlviUes cao be NEW YORK (AP)-Stocka skidded
hatliMI out. "not even m~rbles. ''· -sharply tn midday tradiag today as de-
Saddltbod< -~• prt1idtnl Dr. Fred · c1intJ rolled up • heller !hon 5/JO.i!aut Bre~ reporied.1 ._!I!, qll~ron '!'It cam->ead over advancea~ (See quotations, p?Js,~ 1,~ east 1..-~:tnoment." · Pages U.-23). ·
A · fly~r .rea:arwi the v I et n a·m . Analysts attributed the sharp decline to
, moratorium had hen"tfisttibuted earlier rumors in the financial district th.at a
, In the week Bramer Sild,•b!.Jt for today major New York bank would ralse its
IThuriday) at least, all atte.1tion seemed prime rate-the minimum fee banks
to have been diverted to the ASB election ch:irge their best credit customers for
. fnr frW!man senators. loans.
Jly·RICHARD P. NAU.
Ot flll DlllY l"llM IMft
A call fOi" bids on the•uniquely designed
SOO.foot Allao Pier in Sou'th Laguna ii one or the ways Orange County wlU start the
new year.
The Oran,e County Harbor Com·
mission Wednesday recommended a~
proval of the pier plans at the 4.2·acre
county park.
If expected approval by county
supervisors is forthcomi.ng, Jam~s Ball·
inger, harbor district engineer, estimated
that bids could be ·adverlised for about
Jan. I. It will lake about six months to
build. Th~ facllity will cost $800,000, it is
estimated.
The Harbor Commission also hu
agreed to a request from the LagtWa
Beach Unified School District that the
pier be available as an outdoor rtsource
for oceanography students.
Wrote Owen Tait, assislant superin·
tendent of . t.be district: "Our classes
would like. to study the ecology of the
area before. lhe pier is built and again
after it Is finished.
'"l'hey'd .llke to experiment with col·
ored lights and moon phaaes to see what
klnd• of fish can be caught under dif·
ferent clrcWD1tances.
"We 'd Jike to have made available for
us a sfuall .•pa« foi a dliplay Case .so
that the students' findings could be on ex-
hibit for the public."
'nle seaw1rd end of the Jow silhouette
20-foot wide pier will broaden Into a dia-
mond shape .
Droplinc fishing will be possible in the
· ~ham.her Asks ~ity Funds
" --. . . .
Clemen te CofC Seeks $2 ,744 to 'Tide It Over'
center of the diamond while other
fishermen will be able to ca.st from Its
exterior.-.
Fishing is said to be good in the area
which is now popular with surf
fishermen. It has been estimlted tbat
400,000 anglers might use \be faclllty ao-
nually to try their luck at catching
~alibut, ~alico baa&, bonita, perch and
olher species.
The pier ls to have a bait and snack
show, fresh water, fish cleaaing facilities
and restroom1 .
The state Wildlife Conservation Board
last month approved $334,560 as the
state's share of the jointly-funded pro-
ject. Rep. James B. Utt (R-Tustin) had
earlier announced an award of the same
amount of' federal funds.
Alton Allen, fifth district county
supervisor, said today,hat the slate and
county will . finance the project, each
paying ball. Then, be said, the federal
government reimburses each for half the
funds wied.
This means, said Allen, that the federal
government pays , about half lhe cost,
with the state and county splitUng the
rest. ,
'Thanks to Eiler'
Fun d Solicits
Laguna Support
Friends and admirers of Laguna's fam·
ed Greeter, Eller Lanen, are invited to
respond to an annual "Thanks to Eiler''
request from the · c om mittee ad·
ministering the Gr~ter P)md, esttbllah'·
ed three ,years ago to help su~ !he
noted Lagunan who frill be IO years old
ne'xt March. • '
, . ~ayi]if faijed . In Its att~pt . to
Richard Winters Bllrie. todiy ·.wOn a persuade the City Council . to millch Ill
fin1her delay or municipal court aeli911 Ofl · $1 I ,37S.membenhlp rrveoue wlth bed .tai:
grand then charges rnvotving losses from . ·funds roi communlty piomotion, the San
enough, and said 'they'd rather spend the help rtnance tourist promotion and that 11te fund ortginallY wu tet up lo-give
bed tax revenue on maintenance of eome ,tourist ~r1es have dropped sharplf Lanen a trip to his nattve.Denmark,.but
lour miles of btaChea purchaotd by the on his rtlurri, doclf/rl' "le! h< -Id not
the Orange County Clerk's oUlce. . Clemente Chamber of Commerce will ask
Bufke, 27, of 26372 Papagayo Drive, the city.to mitc"h '$2,744 "to tide Us Over
r.·Ussion Viejo, was ordered to return the fall and Winter advertising program,"
Nov. 21 to Santa Ana r..1uniclpal Court Chamber manager Gllberl Essen said
Judge William Thompson's CQ\lrtroom. Wednesday.
Bucke 11 ~ of embezzllhg nearly A council-chamber battle over ad·
fA DOO from the office ,of the , county . °'ettisiog.upendilUfes be:g,an when piqn-cle~k. tt is allqed that he for,ed bankinr cifmen turned down-the Sll.37S request
rP.cords In that amount 'during .bis two because it concluded an M,500 advertising
city. becau&e there has been Do money for contin~ living alone Md Ke w11 lnltllled
The city's ISed tix ordin ance requires · ldverUsing alnce tbe· end ot' the city's in a room-~ at ,tow Colt, bJ. the
that revenue be used either for ad· fiscal year on June 30. Hotel Laguna . Since Ulm\, he'h11 lived It
vertlsing or for improvement o( tourist· . Cbaffee and ~IUI ?r~ley, owner of the th~ hotel , Jaylng ~lf hil own· npeneea
rc1ated facllltltis. · • . San Clemente tnn, said the ·presence of rrom soclat "leCUrity and .. veterant ·lcf·
In the past five .Years, the city has ministration lncome1 the hlnd ~paylnl the agreed on an advertising allocaUon1 the :Neatern Whltf House had had. an 'balance: . ,
matchin&, "'e amount collected by fthe· · advetH effect on tourism because an the Each fear, the fUnd hi augmented 1;ly
chamber in 'membership dues. : 'put>Uclty bad eJvtn woukl·be vlsllon lhe ·holiday 1ta1tOR donationl from the com.
But at the Jag{ council meeUng, ~n· Impression that there would be-no ae-munit,..L along with manj from diNn\
Lynem, 21, a memer of the Black
Panther organizaUon, 'TIS arrested and
accused of the murder last June 4 of San·
ta Ana Police Officer fielson Slllcer.
investigation, much or-11 earned out by
the public defender's office cleared
Lynent and switched the mufdb. cb8rges
to Arthur DeWitt League, 20.
.League, like L~ is a member of
lhe Black P1nther" if'OUP· He ia today
await!~ Superior Court b'ial on the
murder cflarjes ht Inherit«! from hl6
fellow militant.
A witness who appeared before the
Ora~ge County Grand J'ury loday told the
DAILY PILOT that Faust's alleged at-
tack on young Gilmore was "only one in-
cident in a wave or such harassment· of
the Negro population by the Santa ~a
poli ce force. •
"They were as mad as hell when they
couldn't pin that thing (the murder
charge) on Mike Lynem," the witness
said. "And we llad to pay for it by being
p~ around, insulted, checked and
double checked ror no earthly reason and
generally vlctimized."
The witneu said complaints to the
police department about the alleged vlc-
Umlzatlon were fruitless and 0 were not
wanted ·by Chief (-Inf L.) Allen."
Chief Allen, wu not available today fO!'
comment oa the lncUcdiiiot. lfis depuUes
re(~ to comment Ofl ~ matter ln bis
absence.
· Weadle.r
A cooling Q/f Pfliod, with only
slight decrease-in 'sllnsbine, Is Fri·
day's forecast-for th9 Orange
j:pasl .. Look fot patchy IOI and
tenperatures · riftciric ·from 170
along lbt --le '17 further in· \o!!d· .. -' '
INSmE TODA. Y
How a.rt. today's uo1,th being
"tvrned ow." &o ·WH drug1 bu a co~rocy ' fnvollrlnQ ute "'°'' 'me'dia1 News conwtaman Johann
Ruih ttUi the imide irtor11 t41fng
lnfotmotion he glmMd -while
poting GI o hippie. Sti Pooe J4.
' 1 • • • llttllt II ........... &.-.. If • I (.....,.. ' ..... it C'91tlflef #-f, ............. II C""'4n JI ......... +..I
!(,.._. ti ~Orlilll't,a.ty '' year employment. .. .-· program. It was designed to lure visitors
Today's delay was promplfd by the ftJ. . from other parts of Cali£omla and the
Ing of· ~.n ' irnenaed 'complalnl by the • west. as wen as Canada, to the seat of
clJmen decided thiit the Apartment, Hote11 coinmodalions In San Clemente and .en-plaeei •here Laguna Vlsltort .. remember·
and Motel AsaoclaUon should also ~up 1 · couraged them to go to other areu. .Ing the-<kttitt, take Lime· to lend hlm l
match:in& funds, ainct U 1t.mla to fit This . was con.firmed by, Euell. who cardl and ootes. • • 1 · • .:
..... •t1c" II IYMI ...,., V °""'" · n ......,. •ft NNNI ,... ' .._ ....._ a.n . ....,...__,_. " .,....... . i,...,. '•u .,..... if ....... ".,_._, distrkt at~ey's , 9ffice. Dtlenat at· the Western White House.
tomey Rober1 ~w. successfully 1fgued Some ine'mbets of the council mall\-'
th11t ht neede(I mke. time to examine lhe tained the IMl"t presence or President n~';JOCU:rninfr ·• -Nixon and•his entourage Was adverli1ing
,,.
from any~incr111e in ,tourlim and sb0ukl1 saJd, "We were half .empty all '1Canmtr · · Afthouih .rtsttur.m.· htte· been told
not "rely on clty fundr,•-···~ • l ·btcaust people thO\llht thtre'd'1be no ..J tJiey may ienct r bill1 to rthe lu.¥1· fqr
Chamber president Ed•in Chafftfll . ioom btre. Apparently, the Nlxoa PlbHci~ Ll'heo'a .meals, 'they hive not dQDe "'
tr(ued lhtl U.. be<Ht~·1"'1·ifiltlluloll ,to .. ' .. ::1 1$t.t~r Pqo 11. c • I 1. ',I , ~S,... GBf;l!J',&1.1.. , ... J) . ~
' ,~.
'
,Ml.I....... u ........... ~ '· .....,._._,,rp
I
I
J
• •
' ' "
•• •
-'
l Dllll.Y"l'llOT -Tltondlri Ns:s:1illW "lJ,"}M
'
Domtt ·th
Mission . '" ~ . \ -
" Trail
~ax Override
Slated for Capo -
,CAPISTRANO VALLEY·~-An 85-<tiit
tax override has ~.recommended b,Y
Truman Benedict, superlnlal\knl of Uio ••
Capislrano Unilled School Diltrict.
Benedict made his proposal to the
Citizens Advisory Committee studying
the district's budgetary needs.
Benedict said that all cuts made 1n
classes this year at the hiib school and
junior high could be relnitated. teq
teaching specialists could he hired and
n<eeoaary )>u,.. c9ll1d be leased «
purchased... . ,
The commitleo will decide by Monday·
whether or not a tu elecUon should Lake
place> ill-hbruary .• . . ..
. e 'Ye•• Vote Sought
SADDLEBACK VALLEY - A cam•
paign for a yes vote on lhe Nov. 25 t<:hool
bond election has been laU11Cbed by the
San Joaquin · Bond Rate CiUzens Com-
mittee.
The elecUon will decide.whether or not'
to raise bond interest rates from five to
seven percent so that· bonds already
voted in the San Joaquin School District
can be sold.
:e Sand Conteat Set
MISSION VIEJO -Remember U..t
sand castle you buUt with the turrets.
moats and elaborate towers?
AU sand castle enthusiasts· are invited
to jojn in the recreation center'• "Sand
Thing" contest Sunday, Nov. 16.
.ConstrucUon won't be limited to
castles. Particlpanto will be doing their
own "lhirii' fn'diVidu·any-or in groups
starting at 1 p.m.
The-drawinf for the "sand' grant
parcels" will take place on Saturday at l.
p.m. Wjnners not preaenfwill be notifi~.
Call tht recreation center at 837-4084 Jor
information.
. "
. '
l"etl!Y111 "' Atta -. ha .. qreod
lhat noo·prolit organlza.Uons u•inc lbe
groondi; !rvlpe !)owl or the new !healer
may do· So without fee. ·
Directon agreed that aueh «aaniza.
tions need' pa7 onlJ "out or P,Oeke~ ex-
penSeS" caused tiy use of the faCUWei
.na mUit lumbh -~-Prot.t m..li'
Ing organizallons using the Festival wUJ
pay on a regular ree basis.
Jn other bu!iness, lhe board:
-Agreed to pay 1225 .Wkad of a full
$450 to Festival scholanhlp ·recipient
~Uubeth Brown who loct college creditJ
at San f'nnctoc9. Stal< because of rellllll
to cross plcllet lines lut year. ..
-Learned that the Chamber or Com-
merce wants the FMUval to turn on Its
ChJ.iStm:as decorations Nov: 28 · aS' ·the
kickoff of a community-wide holiday
decorations event.
-Approved Dec. 8 use of the Festival
Forum for a talk to Laguna Coordiriating
Council by Forest Dickason, county plan-
ning director, on the Orange County ·
G.en~ral Plan.
-Denied a request to purchase
Christma.s music that w~d be piped
Services Slated
For Mr. Hyman
Services wi*be held at 11 Lm. Friday
In Sheffer Lquna Belch Mortuary
Clu.pel for Harry Abe Hyman, wbo died
Tueaday In the Anahelm·Euclld Con-val~t HOspU.al at the age of a
A D-year ' Lquna Beach nsldtnt,
ffyman .lnlde bl&,bome al Ifft Temple
Billa DrlvL HiWas active in P>e Lacuna
Beach Mlaonlc.Ll>dge, In which be held a Jif~ ~~_p. Hyman wu a civil
engtnter for 3' years and formerly awned
a buildb!& and contracting !inn in New
York City. . • S11mposl11m Planned He ts ilurvJved by his Widow, Emma, of
SAN -• • u CAPISTRANO _ A ..,,,,: the home and by two '°"'• Frank P. JU~· .,... Hyman o! Hollywood and Artbur D.
poslum on J>Ollulion anct population will Hyman of Los Angelea. Son Frank, a mo-
take place· Sunday; ~ov. 16. tioq plcture and televialon actor, ii known
· Spealdng will be Dr. Grover Stephens,, for his appearances in "The Robe" and tn
chairman Of the biology department at n ..... De "· Valle Da ·
d wm J_,__ of "-S -a~ y Y• series. UCl an ard viM-.in un: Ill
Diego Pluiied' Parep\hood ~·
The evtnl<wi!l-take p!aoe•at1 ~-m. al,· A "dd · .CJ t
the Conuilun11Y" Pneb}'tio'lan Ch.-Z' 'vn er~ ·a a e 32002 Del Obispo, 5an Juan Clpistr-, .. · · · ' ·
.. . • ;: t. ••
over the F..Uval'• pubJlc ad!irelf
ay1tem.
-Acreed to purchase a movie tcreen
for the FesUvaJ Forum bat held off, on
dllcusaed purchase of .a motion plclura
projector and allde projector,
-Turned down r-purchase
·or a iru c0pi'lh1 macblnl'liecause ii
would not he uaed enough.
From Pagel
CHAMBER •.•
ty ~red .them any."
San Clemente, with a population of
18,030, recorded retail sales of $21 million
jn 19'8 .and a bed lex revenue of $35,700,
Essell 51id •
l>esci'ibing the city's stand as "short.
sighted," Chaffee said that failure t.o pro-
mote tourism is costing $100,000 in lost
bed tu and sales I.ax revenue.
The San Clemente ficurts were in
zharp contrast to the Laguna Beach (pop.
13,600) picture, where the city council
voted a $42,500 advertising allocation to
the Chamber of .commerce this year.
after taking in '114,400 in bed tax
revenue.
·"The Impact o! our advertising pro-
gram Is clearly shown In figures for the
pall lhree yean, sald Laguna Chamber
manager Karren Morgan. "Bed tax
revenue has gone up from $66,000 to
Sll4,.00 and our sales tu receipts are up
from '300,000 to Mll,785. 11lia representa
141 mlllloa . In mail saie.. The San
Cl.....te people don't aeem lo realize
that the bolel-mald people gel only about
15 to 20 percent of the lourtot dollar. The
rest goes to restaurants, retail stores and
services ln lhe _community."
"There's no doubt that promotion
pays," the Laguna manager concluded.
"And by using bed tu revenue for
advertising you're just re.investing
outside money at no cost to the resldent
taxpayers."
From Pagel
GREETER •••
according to commillet chainnan Pete
Fulmer. •
Child care will be provided.1, 'i. 1,f p .. • k'e-F d --.-.r.n-u;~::·na;;· iri~c,..---anf'.a · . -ee --• CoUefiU .. ·~•-rr ,. .. .r·r:: .,..,.. : )
'1t 'is appropkate It this: approaching
Thanksgiving time to express our ap-
_preclaUon..[or,al1-Ellu-lw .. done !or the
town," said ffarTy Lawrence, Chamber of ·COmmerte president and member of the Gi:ftte~·Fund commltleo. SAN CLEMENTE ·.-,TonigbL'a ·Ille Lagun• Bead!· lllgb' School's tarsity
night for college. bound San Cl~rnente football team will stage its annual "pan-
Higb School students. c~ke demolition" Friday morning from
Because· of increasing competition for 6:·30 to 7:~·at the Cottage Restaurant.
college admission, the school's Guidance Each ·year on the' ~ 1'f the
Department has scheduled speakers homecoming pntt-, g.lrll ol' I.he high
representing universities, state colleges school's pep squad treat the varsity grid·
and junior colleges. ders to "all the pancakes they can eat,"
n,re will also be a bnkhure wiµi a along 'With aausqe.. scrambled egp,
planning. calendar, adminlons data, re-oranae juice and nulk, which Cottage
qubid test dates, financial aids and P.rol'!1etor Harry Moon supplleJ at
acbolanhips. The meeUng in the· nonunal .co.t. .
cafetorium is to begin at 7:30 p.m. Moon aaJd he ls cleap.nc the decks for an ~tldpated full house or some eo
J:lung.ry students, along with coachet and
sports writerL
Other members are Mayor Glenn Ved-
der, Miss Lorna Mills, president or
Laguna Federal Slvlngs and Loan and
columnist Remlow Hanis.
Donations to the Greeter'Fund may be
addressed to the Chamber of Commerce,
280 Park Avenue.
Last year. says Fulmer, a single an-
nouncement that the fund needed bolster-
ing brought contrtbuUons r r o m
throughout the South Cooll area. There
were manY anonymous gifts, from a·
dollar up and many from children, some
accompanied by notes expressing thanks
for Lantn.'1 ever-cheery greetings. Solon to Reintroduce
Bill on l\larijuana
SACRAMENTO (UPI) Laguna Teen Corner
Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (0.-San
Jose ), said WedneSday he plans to rein-
troluce next year his bill te> remove
marijuana from U1e list Gf narcotics. The
measure, which does· not alter penalties
for pas.session and use of marijuana, was
defeattd during this year's session.
Vasconcellos said he decided to rein·
troduce the meas\ll'e after hearing
testimony of five medical and pro-
fessional experts before the Assembly
Public Health Committee.. They agreed
mari}Uana was not a narcotic but a mild
hallucinogen whme effect.s could be com.
pared to lbose o! alcohol.
..
" . ,
' ·I
~
I
II
'
'
UtdlY r 11or
~~ COU1 PUil llfll,.. ~'f
l•Mrt N. 'W•ff
,,...., ... "*llifler
J ... t •. c,,,..,
Yb ,,_... .... GffoefW M9Mfet
n.. •• ICMYlt ....
The11111 A. M•r,lll11t _ ........ , ....
li1.Ji•'4 r. Nill ---'" ----222: ,., .......
MeUl'1f .t..i111t .. , 1.0. a.. Ml. '1611 --a... ,,_., ,. wti1 ..,. """
....,.., hKll: '111 """' ................. ,.....~,.,. ts.Kii: • till ....
·_ £4. a· ..
( W.f\. 'f l'ILOt Wiii! 9111di i. _......, "'9 11 .... ,.... .. ...,..._...,.._. .... ............... ., .... , .......... ); S1J11· Cit.,......._.._...~
• .... ........... ---.... ,....-Ya4-• • r • •
_ , .... _ .. _ .,.....,. .. ,,n _ _,....., ........, ._,_, ... -.... .., --.c.. ...... .
· "· s'1n •n•t .............. m Cfu2'1R'•llpt· ~ .... o. .... c..1 __ _
~---___ ....
t .....,_ --............. """"" I ..., .. ·•UtAJCA ...., .... ... --·---· ·~ :-c.i.-.:... "I:.::.!:=.:-: --..,,,. .. ...,., .,. ...... -.. _, . _ _...
I
'AFS Student Finding
Germany Lile Difficult
By FRED SCROEMEllL
Of Ille o.ltr ..... ,,.,,
ilow would you -do tr you only apoke
EngUllb, were !lying to learn German,
and the instructor was teaching it tn
Spanish.
Sound confusing? Well, for Joan
McMahon, it ls. Joan is spending this
year in: Gennany u an American f'.leld
Servlce foreign exchange student.
The problem isn't only the language
barrier, She is stJll learning that in
Germany, it ls customary to take flowers
wllene;ver you visit a friend .
According to her letter. Joan may not
be missin& much of what'a hlippening in
the U.S. "The Guthoffs (htr German
"family") 11.1bsaibed to TUne Magazine
so that 1 would be able to keep up with
woria-arriln In Engliah. They w. get
NationaJ Gqraphio and Seventeen,''
wril<I .loati • ' * * * . With Ham-.ntnc only a day away,
thole In . charge are belbmln& 1 to
nrtmblt ;<hiekem wllboo\ beads. I
IOll1ellmtl wonder wl\T peoplt get so U·
cltad aboul· .lhinfs .aa the .final momenl draW. neats' M6ybe that'• human nature,
bu!. amid ·the dec<iraUom lhe floot
pnparation,-and lfllinc all ili.'people In
all: the places. at the rlgh! Ume , all
membera of Ult atudent COW1cll may lose
their beads. •
Take hear! 1hoo3h. It looks lo me as
though the 19111 Hom~ing wlll be a
success. Even with the last minute flur-
ry, new and exciUng eventa will take
place. Alter all, its not often that 1,800
1tudentll can 10 to andtnt Gttect and
1till be within the city limlta.
TM parade ls acheduled lo lta\'t Fri·
day allmloon and trivet lr'1m the lllP
>Chool lo tho lower-flf Park Ave.,
below G~ A maaalvt pep rally Is
(
1cbeduled. with the 1989 homecoming
court to be presented to tho community.
Rwnor has it that, since Friday is
usually the day that everyone can take
advantace or the beach, "that many will
fonake the pep.rally and aave their ·~ell
power" for the football game that nigh~
* * * 100 ... 99, .. 98 ... 91 ... down goes the
t0unter on the mimeograph mach.ine In
the hiih school offices. It is just one of
the many "dittoed" reminders that pour
forth daily to high school personnel. And
in one administrator's of flee t can see the
plaos for another memorandum to be
sent to the faculty.
49 ... 48 ... 47 ... the last page of the new
note has been typed and the secretary is
headlng for the ditto machine. But on her
•ay. she is stopped and asked to get a
reminder about homecoming to the
teachers.
4. •. 3 .•. 2 ... !. .. off flies the lasL copy
and a new ditto is on the machine.
The new reminder will Join the ranks
with SC1'.ltt! of Cl'WJI likll It that have come
off the very same machine.
Then -..Iy the office realizes that
the faculty members artn't giving • hoot
nor a holler about all thete "important"
mes&11gts.
And lb a reminder fs sent to the faculty
from the administration. It reads.
"ft has come to tbe 1tttntioo of the ad·
ministration that many l m po r t a n t
bulleUns are not deserving the attenUon
they should in order to insure productive
communication. It is therefore Im·
pttallve lhat all teachers read and file
all memorandums, to insure an increased
levet<>f ]>RiilucUvlly af thilil;h ialiiOI."
Like all the res! of these mlmeolraph-
ed mlnullii, this one will end fn the
circular file . IL reminds me of tomelhlng
that aclentllls label an lmflO'Sibility -
pe!J>dual motloll ... from the office to the
teacher •• .!nm Ulo olllct lo the t'8cher.
<
-_..,. -------~--·~.
TO SPEAK IN LAGUNA
Lt. Gov. Reinecke
Reinecke Speaks
Friday in Laguna
At Women's F ete
California's Lt. Governor F.d Reinecke
wiU mate his first political appearance in
Laguna Beach Friday evening as guest of
honor at a dinner sponsored by the
Women's Republican Club, Federated, of
J,agun~ ~ach.
Reinecke will review accomplishments
of the Republicans in Sacramento during
the past three years and also make some
prediction& as to GOP plans for 19'ro.
Reinecke, who 5tl"Ved four years in
Congress, was brought back to California
from Washington D.C. by Governor
Reagan when Robert Finch was named
secretary of Health, F.ducation and
Welfare in the NixOn adnlinistratlon.
A few tickets are still available to the
Friday dinner in the Towers Restaurant,
according to club spokesman Fern Ran·
dolph and reservations may be made by
calling 194-1630.
Hunter Lied
On Insurance?
Major Set'IHH!k
6~unfy Rejects
• ,1 "'; • • ~~ .,
· J\1·rport Survey "~
By TOM BARµ:Y loo high."
01 1tte o.irr Plllf 1r9ff Thti board was warned earti In lt-s
Orange County's muter plan of air Phase Two deliberations ~t It had
lraMporlailon sulfel'f!f a mijor setbaclt "dclle ni>lhing towards lmpllmoallo(
Wednesday when divided co u n l Y many recommenda~ ~talned In
su~rv.isors refused to endorse a com· ., Phase One" ans! tbat' it wu •'on. tbl
m1ttee s suggesU~ that the second phase verge of ecllpslng in the Newport Beldl
of the controversial survey be launched. area levels of sound which woUkl relutt
Held over by the board to Nov. 26 was jn the soundprOoftoa or dtmo~tlaa Of
consideration of a bulky report wh~ch homes in at Jw:t oae other coun~."
.urges a $111,000 study by William Pereira Dan·Emory of Newport ·BeaCh klJd the
and Associates of the · pwibility of board that 30 daily departurtS of jet
'developing a sophisticated system of alrcnft were now beinf, rtCorded at
airports within Orange County. Orange County Airpo_rt, a figure .that . advances noise levels re1anled by one in. Envisaged by the comnuttee -County ternaUonal association as intolerable to
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas.. many homes -ln the Upper Bay area."
Airport Director Robert Bresnahan and En1ory warned that bomeonert In
Planning Director Forest_Dickason -iJ Mesa Drive.· Palisades Road; Dover
an airport system which would feature Shores, tklo lslt, Santa lsa.be1, ~ the
regional airporl8, metroports and air Bluffs were .among ~ nil"(: lllrec.P-)
parks throughout the county and po5Sible t~atened or are witbm the ~ ltve
enlargement or replacement of elistinj: hnuts that ~oul<I call for ,~ng facilities. or destruction of the homes: ..--Wut
It also urges the joint military-civiqan Gem:iany · . . .
use of existing military airfields and a Nol!e levels at Or!Jllt.._Cowjty Atport
comprehensive study of the effect of the ~ ~ reached ~oi ~ ~
airport expansion plan upon existing' and erruSSion ' ~ ·~.~ ,at toa,:An•
planned communities. And its compilers gele~ )ntemational ~~ El'Df'.l"Y '8fd.
urged the boaf'd to bear in mlnd the Urgmg ~supervisofs to J?O,t wait until
possible conclusion or the Vietnam war the 1tudy Js out befort wor~ to redl.lce
and its effect ,;..,..,, the future of the El these mounting noise Jevela, he warned ..,..... the board to "bear in mind the fact that
Toro. base. J $10 million worth 6t homes· in the New· Pom~ after _noint was shot do~ ~y port area may havl-to be bulldoieid out
supervisors and !!lembe~ of the pubhc m of the rapidly advancing noise une." a prolonged public heanng which left the , three authors or .the Phase Two resolution Marme Co~ Col KeMetb T. Dyft1
obviously bewildered as to their next warned su~SOTB th~~-~e!_,~ ~· course or acilon. ~ no re~ief from a ncin-amcm rac-
Thelr on1y instructions tn the motion tor that inv~ably appears on countr
successfully offered by Supervisor ~:rts .;.~.n~se~~ YiilHam Phillips were that the "m11tter JO mi .... ,,,,.
be returned to the CAO, refined and held as El Toro. . . .
ln abeyance until Nov. 26." "We have no ex1stmg plan1 to vacate
If their new recommendations follow El Toro and if we had we would have
the line of argument offered throughout no':"here else to go," the Marine offi~
the hearing the committee's next recom· qu1eUy stressed.
mendation 'win be contained in a con-"W~ are una~erably o~ to joint
ilderably thinner report. use,. 1t wo~ld. tnte~e~e w1lh exacting
S · o 'd B k dd d h" Marine aviation trairung that bean no uperv1sor . ~VJ a er a e is resemblance. to civilian procedures IJld
vehement obJect1ons to. those of county we are not prepared to recognize 1111.
homeowners and a Manne Corps colonel claims for civilian use of our alrflelds. ~nd branded !-h~ phase twe> report as "You are," the colonel empbasJzec:I to t.~ta~y ~ealistic. and unnecessary. . the board, "just Wasting your time."
. '.fhls 1s someth!~g that can ~~ into Isidore Schneider of University Park,
billions ~f dollars, .said Baker, and I president of the University Part Com-
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A life in· wonder 1f everyone is remembering that munity Association warned supervisors
IUl'anct company attempting to win court we ar.e only a s~ail county in a~a. By that the board faced "piobably $200 mil-
approval of its cancellation of a $240,000 purswng something along these. hnes we lion in lawsuits if something is not done
policy on . the late actor Jeffrey HW1ter only aggravate the factors of noise, pollu-about continued encroachment of noise
contended he concealed a heart ailment tion, congestion and zoning that go along and pollutioo problems."
from them. with such progr~ms and I look bn thi,! He accuaed the board of failing to· act
Bankers Security Life lMUl'antt Socie-report as somethmg totaJly impractical: on Phase one recommendations~ an4 or
Jy w.enU '®t.Ul'edn"'1•Y-•nd..•.al.dJ!!< 1l'1<<r 119iJi.l(it.li>_the.PrWmlly_~ "ilnoring-ll!eptllied demalida.o! .. alrjlort
actor concealed the aJlment he suffere<I Angeles Jnternational Airport ancf: Use at¥'.propUif"owners for Jong overdue
ii nee childhood when he· apPlled for 'the San Diego airport "for those who want : relief . ., ' · , • ~
j>ollcy. · Huiiter died in in .accidental fall world travel. Tustin reSidents whose homes now lie
at hfs Mme in Van Nuys Jut May 27. He. ... "If this is what you want then 1 don't under the revised fHgbt path of jets using
was 41. The company offered to repay all thin.~ 15 to 30 minutes extra driving time Orange County Airport also urg:~ the
premiums it received from the actor, is going to make that much difference," board to clamp ·down-on jet traffic .ud
totaling $3,032.09, in retW'n for can· Baker said. "But J feel that, as far a$ oppore the entry of Continental Airlintl
cellation of the policy. Orange County is concerned, the price Is into the county facility.
nandeau .....-..... :,
broariloom by
The now spirit of today comes alive in your home with\
thi s plush, all-wool broadloom from Karastan-Chandeau.
Choose from 00 great colors, from pale to potent.
Forget your fumlture style; smooth velvety Chandeau
goes great with them all. So look nowf
Chandeau, one of many fine .broadlooms and rvss
from Karas tan •. -----•
Only $10.95 sq. yd.
* .. ti I~ YOU CAN'T. COME IN-CALL />46-0275 for an expert
carpet consultant who wir. com• to your home with Hmples
without any obtigation to you!
r:=:~~~.~.~·J. GA~~~ .t~Nf[ll ~~:~~'. :;:~
646.0211
7
•
7
·-.. ~~g~n~ ·n~aeh
EDITION
• voi:..62, NO. 2n. 4 SECTIONS, ·SO PAGES ORANGE COUNT-f CALFORNIA ··-' 1 ~\ : •
. . ' -, . .. ' ' .
•
, ..
THUlSDAY, ~ 13, 196f ' " .. , • • I' ' . •• \ • • .
•' ..
• •
•
-l. •
' -' . . -. . ' ..
. " ' ,. 1 ..... .,.,,,
·•.... .
·r· o·· .. s· ·· . ·I ,_ ) , ·.
'
9 ,·1 lea·' :1.n • • n
.Moon Flight
:'·Go' Again;
·LeakFiXed
Sheriff A.dds ·Two Cars
' : 1 . I • •
' . I . . I
·To SM(lilmack Valley · "
'
.•
"Ui>fn>;iing" of three Orll!p Coun11 wwld have boon roni-nmc . -· Sbertlf's . ofllce" p..itionl , w)l1 J!11ko ,I! Mllllck aid, but a wtdelY •piblictaed
CAPE KENNEDY . (UPI) -Launch poaDi1o to. llep .up patn>ls in ,UJi Sad-ret0liltlon adolfied 'by the• -~
creWB won a race with Ume tocl1y, dleblck Valley 21ru by 9ddlnc two cars RepubUcan Amtmbly, cornplalftinc ol Jn.
replaced a leaky hydrogen tank In Ibo to Ibo JS ,_ uaed for dayUme patrol.I adecjoate .police pro!ectlon; .. _ hive
Apollo I• --·hi"p·ond aimed toward an throqhout the county, Sheriff Jmea helped bring,lt to a head.'' , • "~'~ Muitct ·111d Thunday. . Adll!Uoo of the two em lo )ult a
on-time start Friday of America's second Both cars 'wlll be med in the South lftlimialey,&o further pllnnld 9QmJlklp
lunar landing mission. County area. be aaid. I ,of. SherVf.'• Office •l'Yices· to t.he--llldn-
"We knew they would do It,'' said Musk:t explained that five positions in ~corporl\ed•areu ol the county, accordiaC
jubilant command module pilot Ri~ the 'depattrheht hai:l .bten "ffuzen" at~ to MUllck:.
F. Go'don. "We've got a ~at crew here, time Fountaih Valley lnoarpor_ated ~ ''We have sufficient data· to, justify ad· ~· formed flf-pollco cl<plrtmeol "clJlteal·pqoitions and·wlD be~ it some great ~pie, We had all lhe cob-Two of tbe poslUons wre later ftDed to JD dLll'COUflt," said the Sheriff. •
.Udence In the worlcl in them: · meet Deeds of the city of Yorba Unda, . Mulidl:1 said tbat, ....... ·abo{tqe of
"It's fi•ed. It'• even gol l>y<Jroiei) in it which ceol(actl. ltJ police .ll<Vice with . pootll9'>1,Jle did not fell tbert l>ad be'!i
':. ' . ,ilAIL'Y 'PIL'O' ···" ,.,_.. like ifs.supposed to." !ht Sheriff's:office. :MY l;,IOl~ble law~ r=·
,1 : •. • MRS.:PITER. MORGE!IROTH·PR.OTESTS VIETNAM · Assured t!iale .. rythingwuUnciercon· U:.,. '°:u~".:::UrO:.:::.::m~ ~'!"''"'"~ populoua. ~,1~
. . . Ccll!I w ..... n.Clrri•• Son ond Si1111 •I UC! trol for an 1:22 a.m. PST blutoi!. with 11>e•....,;iy ailJDIJ1liliali 'ol!!Ce. ............. of llrt ,inll, ...... "'°'
: : • • • . , · Gord!>ll. Charles "P~''.Cl/nr~u.i ~ ,.Lowlj;ll~ ... ~ ~ "'4: •, ..-!."..Jt ~-i ~ .. ,, :"'l'.. -'·' . . .L. ...... iaf:roNtle:flJiel,•....., .... e.-.w;~~ .. '"!". ='·':.l=~11_·.,. ...... -. ~·~.hl ··. ~·wear ·ArmbafulS ' ;::~:ir~~~j= ·~~orlhl~.ptrbab\r tlmofthlstJnddown~ ,
•
~ .~-----~~---_traizlers.,_,------,,.----.,-~....,.'""'::-M-r----. r --' ' •t.
.. • As he waiked to his aircraft, Bean uJd H' ' . . B d s nn ,r ..... ,. .. ...... ; nd s thatatlirstitlookedllkethehJdrogen ·ar or oar .: UPrurlS . ~:s Prowst a . . upport ~~,:1:n:y r. .. ~t:~~.~~:-..::
•t---o . -have meant a monlll"s delay. Al 0 -p• ~B-uilffing ·p1
• '?.nnband·symbolism· was the Ol"dec of Clemente, Dana Point area , Miss Johnson "But they did jl, and It must have ISO . 1er : . . . ans the:aay~:fs handfuls· of students at South said . t3ken a lot Qf el~ort," said lhe lunar
Orange County campuses today observed Laguna Beach High School students are module pilot. "We've got some ~Uy
both National Unity Week, or the Vie~· \\·earing quite a few black armba nds but sharp people in lhis pro&ram." BJ RJCBA!W P.. NALL
nam Moratorium. not many red, white and blue on campus '·One hour and a day from now we · et' .... """' swr
Al San Clemente High School, director l~ay · ~tini<00rses today and Friday are ought to be going," Bean said be Core ·1ak· A Call for *' 91'1, the Dtilquely designed
of student~ activfties Dale Drager said dcalin{:; . with Vietnam issues a n d . off 600-foot Allio plft: in SoUth Latuol la oDe
about 10 pei'c~L or the . 'iludents 1 are • a former sl\.ld~I, 1969 graduate Eric mg at 7:57 a.m. of the Ways Ofanae .County will start the wearing ....... tu.nda>today, with red, white liUIJer, now attendf.1g Cal State and "You watching the clock or . . . -r
"'.:....-: of "the U ·1 W k Full ' rton I I ad ' g p at· f th' '" ked G n1 new year. · · and blue bahds n1 y ee sup-e , s e in repar ions or a some 1ng . u o on. The Qrarige County HarbOr Com.-
porters outnumbtfing black armbands of peace march through downtown Laguna "You betcha,'' replied Bean who will be mis.s1on Wedllesday recOn\rhehded aP.
m<ntorium proponents by about three t? Soturday afternoon. making his first spaceffight. J>(_oval of the pier plans at the 4.J.acre
one. Student body president. J>an Sands The march Is scheduled to leave the After -returning from the 40-minute county park. was among tfie" wearers of the Uni(y librar}' al 3 p.rn. and proceed to the war If e~ approval by ' coWity
Week annbands, ~ager said. monument at Heisler Park. flight, the astronauts drove froitl the air supervisors is forthcoming, James Ball·
Cindy Johnson. 14-year-old sophomore, At Mission Viejo High School, several base to the moonport , 35 miles away, to inger. harbor district engineer, estimated
ts '.the active leader ol the Unity \Veek re<I . white and blue .annbands i,•;ere in bru sh up once again on moonshlp flying that bids could be advertised for about .
campaign .in suppor t of the President's evide.1ce early in the wrek, principal procedures. Jan. 1. ll will take about six months to
Vietnam policy. Robert Ferguson said, but today he had Under suddenly revised rules. the three build. The facility Wilf cost $600,000, it Is
Many studoots'had asked her grou p fJr notictd only a few black arm bands. One Navy commanders must be launched by estimated .
\be• red, "''bife and' blue armQands. she Viejo student was reported to be wearing 11 :3? a.nl. Friday or they and thousands The Harbor Commis.5ion also has re~, addinS:·-"I'm. nO~ really sllr· b!ith varieties. or support personnel will :1ave to wail un· agretd to a ;.:::quist from the Laguna ::~he~a~f~;':~a~;::sm~;c~o:~·~. r~~~=~n~nd.~f.~ands~~=t i~~s~ay~;· 5f~~ tilr:~ ::·no second chance this inonth. ~~t ~~~:~bl~1n ~s~~~ ~di"~
heard as much as t!Je 'ol:l'ler demOnstra· youngsters wea ring the black armbands "We look real good now," reported for oceaoography studenls.
l·-." · · ·. • are basically patriotic. They're all good Wrote_ Owi>n .Tail, a~iatant .su. perin-"'" launch operations manager P1ul C. Don· . r ., Goals .of the Unity Drive, Cindy said, kids." 11 tendent of ttie .dlstriCt : ' .. Our classts
are to wear the artnbands, display the Ferguson said attempts to distribute ne y. would like to study the ecology of the
flag, or Dag stick.en, leave porchl.ights on , both black armbands 1t1d Unity Week a.Tea before the ·pier is built.Ind 1gain
at pleht and drive wtth headlights on dur-paste~ on campus hid been halted Steele M•rlcet after it la :".nished. · in~ the day, and write letters of support because of 1 rule that nothing not '11ley'd Uke to experiment with col-
to naUonal leaders during the week. . WrecU1 related ·1o school activities can ha NEW YORK (14.P)--Stocks skidded ortd lights· and moon phaaes .. to see what
''We dldn,11..i)ick thls week lo contradict banded out, "not even.marbles.., sharply In midday tradinc today 83 de-kinds of fish can ·be ciugh\ tmder dlf·
t!ie' moratOrium," the student said. "It Saddlebact.Colleat~JJFaklent Or. Fred clines rolled up a better than 500-Jssue-ferent circumstances.
""as more because of 1Veterans Day and Bremer reported all quiet on that cam-lead over advances. <See quatatibns, "We'd Uke to have made available ror
th.! Apollo laU.nch. We're not ·got.1g to do P'J~ "2t-Qst I.or the moment." ·Pages D-23), us a small apace !or 1 display case so
any demOnstrating, bu we know there A flyer 'regarding the VI et n am Analysts attributed the sharp·decline ta that the students' findings cotdd be on ex-
art-a lot or~ students who still sµ!'fXlrt moratorium httd been dl~ibuted earlier rumors In the financial distr}ct that a hlbit for the publlc."
c~ of the diamond while other
fls~nMn .wlµ be . ible to cast from Jl&
exterior.
· 1Jihlnr la said to' be · good in the area
wtiich : is · now ' popular with · surf
flJhermen. Il has been estimated that
400.008 qlera miaht uee 'the facility an-
nually to try their luck at catching
halibut, calico bass, bonita, perd1 and
other species.
TIJe pier Ls to have a baii and ~nack
show, fresh water, fish cleaning facilities
and· restrooms.
The state Wlldllfe CooservaUon Board
last month api)roved '334,560 as the
state's sbare of the jointly-funded pro-
ject. Rep .. James 8. Utt (ft-Tustin) had
earlier announced an award of the same
amount oi: federal fund!.
Alton Allen, fifth district county
supervisor, said today that the state and
county. will fldance 1the .. project, each
paying half. 'Iben, W said! the federal
government reimb\alel each for half the
fund• u~: · '.' .
Thi! lneans, said Allen, that th'e (ecteral
g""""'"'11l pays aboot h,ii fM cost,
with the· state and county 1pHtfln1 the
· rest ·
'Tlianks to Eiler'
their CWfllly and we ]ust w~nted_ lo.J:~ye i:1 the y,·cek Bramer said, but for today major New York bank would raise its The seaward end of the low 1ilhouetle
thfi'm ·a Chance to express themselves in-!Thursday) at least, all alte.1tion seemed · prime rate-the minimum fee banks 20-foot wide pier will broaden into a dia· fund Sol:c;ts
dividually.'" to have been diverted to·the ASB election charge lheir best credit customers for mond shape. a. 11 ~ut • 2~°'° Unity Weck bun1ner ff'r frt'shman· senators. Joans. Dropllne fiii:iiing will be possible in the
&t!ckm have ~n distributed in the San La S
, , 1 guna .upp'?rt Viej~ Man Wins ChaQlber Asks C~t.·y Fun.d. s .~~J.~1!~~5~~~
.&J _: · fh' 'D ,.i1 y requelf. from the. c·o mm t t tee ad· nnO er cJS, . '· mlnlatering .the Gceeter .f'uiid, istablish-fu Theft Case C"kmente CofC Seeks $2, 7 44 ~ ~f iJe, li~O.:v.et' , : ~iE·:r ~~~·~
• , ., · ·Having failed · In' Ii> au.mpt ._to · enough,and sald~ey'dritherspen<jthf hel~.nnince.~'~ lnd.lhlt : ,~f"'id,~··"'.,i.~e
Richard Winters B\lrk:e ~ay ":'on. a. per"'-ade ·the. Cltf ·~rictl ;,to . match its bed ~1 rFyenue OQ lflainlenattce ol l!lme , tOuri.( ~ ihave ~~ .harP.lf . ~ I tiiP~~· .DtriirfP*1 ~iJyt t..rllier delay of mu•icW,al coun .-f•---$11@7S.mfml>j!rljijp '"'i'\l!lf"wi!!> 6eit ta.'" foo,. mllel of beacllea· JIUctha!ed by !ht "· · ' · · · " . · . oo hlf ,r<tum.. . · Ile '116pld !\\!! &rand~theft cbatges involving losses from fu'nds for com,nunlJy promouon; the S4n clly. ' ., '. · ! ' bec~4there ~ ~ DO .~ f:or contJ~ ll.vfril ilt.ie ~· 'tt'U ~
the 0rani~ County Clerk's offi~. . Clem~te Chiim)jer of Commerce will ask The clty's bed tal 'O nance req~irei advertising since~~ .,_.r ·of Ottrcity;1 ~ ~SJ _a. I'90ni ~at.' . ,<Xllil bf~,
Burke 27, or 2S3i2 Papagayo Dnve, the city to match $2,744 "lo tide us over that revcnut be ,u,ed elther for 1 ad· fl seal YY c.J-JUDt 30. ~ · • 1 • tfO'f:l' ~Slnoll tben..iil bai .._ ._
?o!l:;c:lon' Viejo. \\·as ordered lo n::urn the fall and winter ad\'ertisi ng program,'' vertlsing or for inynvement of totJriS(· C8afree And Paul Preaftf; ""*'of the the ho1'11• ~ W bll GWn •...-:S , No"~ 21 to Santa Ana ~unicip:"I Ccurt C~11 mber manager Gilbert Essell said rel~ted facilitits. ~,~ ' ~ Sait Clem,nte Jtl,: ID1 ~ pr$0Ce o( f~ ll)Cfal 'itcurltf·aad vtt.ttiiw Id·
Judge \\.lllian1 Thompsan ~ ccu•trocm. \l.ednc!lday. In the past fiv e , lhi' ell Ns the W ~ Wldt MOuse hid had mlnllttllfon Income, the Nnd pay~ me
Rurke is accused of cmb?ulin:: n:!-:rly A ~ncil~hamber baUle over &d· agreed. on an "' Ing all , lion 1 _ es e ~ an · balance. _ 1 • '1 • •1
1 $28.000 froni tl:c rf~cc of the county ,·ertis1ng expenditures began when coun· matchi ng the am OWtl• ~ol~\.ed ·b . the . ad,verse effect Oft toqrlsm becau.!e "" the ~ year, lhe (Uftd, 11 au~ ~
c!Crk. It is alltged t'i~t he fo"gc:t banking t:ilmen turned dO\vn the $11 ,375 request ch11mbcr ln me mbb1hlp dutS. P~'.>fl<"ll~ had given would-be vlsllors.the , holldaY,se~son ,~1UOrii from ,'tbt: corri-
rtcords in thit an1ourit during bis two bec.:iuse ii conch/ded an $8,500 advertising . But at . thz last cotlncll meeting, coun-, Impression tha~ ther.e JOUld be no· ~ munlty ...: alpna 't'lihrmaryy~ from-~ftat•tit
ear -employment J)ior.ram. It was designed to lure visitors c1lmcn decided lbat the Aitarllnent:otel tommod'atlons in San CJtmenle and tn· plact1 where Lagii.na vtst\Ort. rtmembfr.
Y Today 's·dela,y ~·as promi:tcd by the fiJ. from other parlJ of California and lhe .and . 111otel As~la~1ori .should also t up · courrigtd lhem ~o .10 to~ area.,. hfl ~lhe C"tteter, ~te umt IO jiend hi~
Ing 'of an ·amcnted ~mpl&int by the ~·est. 111 well as Canada, to the seat of mateh lng funds. sinct 1t lland1 to nefit Thia was o:inf1tmed bf Euell, who .cards and notes. 1 • •
d' trici altorney"s-office. De.lense at· tbe Wdtern White tl°"st. from any Jl'ICf'tase ip tourism. al)d should !aid. "We were .b~f empty •II tu;rnmer · AkhOug~· reJtaunmis hl:Tt betn tqld
1;:m,v Robitrt Law .successfully argued Some members of the council main-not "rely ori city funds.'' I bf.cause people thOught• lbere1d: be ho 1 t~Y mi y lend bldl . Id tbe hitcf fOr
that-ite-needed more time to e.xamine the tairted the mere presence of President Chamber president Edwin Chaffee room ¥-re· Apparently the f(lxon publld· · Larsen's mdls .::r1.:•• not. done .o
new document. Nfxon aiiifhli"enlollrage wu advertblnt a'fllled that the bed tax wu lhatliu!Od tO • (Seo GBAMBER, r,.. ·I) • (Seo Gli • hii·I) , '
.,, -" .I • ,. · .. .. .
•
··~--.. ---
. .
SantaAnan -. '
Arraigned ·
:O~_Charg~
' · A :rO<mc Sania Ana police oll)c<r· has
been IOCl"tlly Indicted by tho Oranci
County Gr~ Jury on a Charp ol clubo
bq a 17-year-okl black youth who wu
bemc,committed to JuveniJe Hal].
Patrqlmao. JUchard E. Faust, 21, was
ached~ .to 1ppear ~Y f}P' ar·
.ral~t before Superior Court Judge
Robert Gardner oa a charge o! assault
with a dudly weapOn.
The iQdictment Wlf ilaued by the panel
or jurors after hearing a number of
wltMl,ei from the Sanfa 'Aili black p>m·
muntty lesll(y. •&aln!I Offieer . Faust,
.llllllY • uainc 11toq, highly •. descripUve
.tenns. ' ' •.
' tbio!' ~ llillrWI ~James ~ '*' -.,P,aail but~
Olllnote. -II, !IC lnla -· "irilh his ·~·y.. . \ l .,......;... .. llfo ..., Jq .... "' tho -
lfOUnd, test~..,~ by wltn...., Wli:f~ litlor', the Gi J..,.. Eniflht dl!lci1bed the lnctdenl as belnt
one of a r1umber which erupted ~tn the
"blcklash" followill( the arrest of Daniel
Michael_ L)'ll!lll of Santa Ana .@!!!!_Ibo AC·
cused Negro's subsequent release. He
stressed, however lhat Faust'• alleged
beaUnr of Giln1ore was not directly
related to the Lynem case.
Lynem. 21, a memer ol Ule Black
Plntbet organiiation, wu arr'5ted and
aCCUMd· of the murder last June 4 of San-
ta Ana POiice Officer Nelaont Sulcer.
Inv'estlgatlll'.I, much of It carried out by
the public defender's , office, cleared
Lynem and switched the murder Charie!I
&o ~ur DeWitt League, 20.
Leap, ·like I:Y!leni, Is a member ef
the Black Panther group. He ls today
a1f'aiting ~or Court trial on · the
murder charges-~ irihertte<I ' frOiU -his
fellow m.Ultant.
A wltneu who a;ppeared before the
Orange Couaty Grand Jury today told lhe
DAILY Pll.X>1' that Faust's alleged at·
tack·on young Gilmore WI! "only one in·
cident in a wave of such harassment of
the Negro population by the Santa. Ana
police force. .
'"l'hey>-were-as mad as hell ·when they
couldn't pin that thing (the murder
charge)· on Mike Lynem ," the witness'
said. "And w. had to pay for rit by being
pughed · around, Insulted , checked 'and
doublt"checked for no etrthly reason and
aentrally Y"icthnized." .
The witnw:· said complaintl , to the
. PQllce depar.tment about ·the alleg~ vJC.
ti ml ration were frq!tleas ·and "were not
wanted b)I Chlil· (ldward" L.) Allen."
Chief Allm wu not available today for
comment on the tndictmenl'. H.is depuUes
refused to'commerit onlthe matter in bis
absence.
Orange
.
A cooling-off period, with onlf.
slight deer .. in 1UD1bine, is Fri-
day's (~an for the Orange
.Coost; Looi>. for ; palclly foe !nd1
temperatures ..ranctqa from 7CI
along Ule -lo 77 further ln· 'land • . ·~ r· ,
; ~-n.a4,Y . ''.
How are toda,.,'s uouULbeind
.. tun1td on" to au drugs bu a
CONpiroCJI !noolliing the """' , Mdia1 Naas camerama11. Jol&an"
R••" teUs Ute lnaidt'. atot-v afng
fn/ormotion he gleaned tollflc
,poling a.ta ltlppN. See Page 14. ·-C,....,llfl ··-.-. ··----....... ~ , ,...,,11 r , ......
='ti~ .. -·
" • ....,
a
" " " • " D•ll
" " •
==-u-~ ,,......,... .. ......__ ...
~C..... II
'""" ,.,., n _,, 1>a --·: ,_
T_..,.. II -. ·--. ...,..., ..... ,.,,
J -
•
t
Tax Override
'
$lated for Capo
CAPISTRANO VAU.EY -An 1kent
tax overflde hu beta ~ended, tDr
Trumao.Jlenedlcl, fll]>ttin-1 of Utt_
Capislrono Unified Sdlool District.
Benedict made his proposal lo the
Cltiuns AdviJOI')' Commltt,. studyln&
the dlalrict's lJudceWy needs.
Benedict said that all cuts made in
ciasse,s this year at the biP school and
Junior high could be .refnstal<d, ton
teaching specialists coUld be h!red and
neceuary buses could be lea.ed «.
purdlued.' . • Tlie committ .. will decide by Mond11·
whether or not a ta1. election should take
place In F•bruary ..
futivll of Aris dirocton have qr,.d
lhat non-profit organisations uslnf Ibo
grounds, Irvine BoWI or the -thealtt
may do·so wlthotit !et.
liiredora qreed liial IUCb orpnlsa-
Uons need PIY Ollly "out Ct ~ n·
......... ··-bJ .... ol the factllllos
and must furiilih lniul'Uct. Pn>rn -·
Ing ..-glnlzaUons uslnf the Felllvol will
pay on a regular fee basis.
Jn other buslnea, the board:
-A&reed lo P1Y 1115 Instead ol a lull
$451 \o ·Fe.tlivll ocholaiihip recipient
Elizabeth Brown who loo\ college credits
at S.., Fnncbco Slata because of refusal
lo .,_ )lic:lltl lws 1111 year.
. ' ,. •• . ' ••
ovtf q.e Festival's public addrt11
J)'llem.
--Acned to purchue a movie screen
for the Festival Forum but held off on
dllcQaad purchase of a motion picture
projecl« and slide projecW.
-"!'\Wed down recommended purchase
of a tat oopyiJll'· machine becaure it
-.Id not be -enough.
CHAMBER ...
ty scared them away."
San Clemente, "itb a popql1tion of
18,030, recorded ret&il sale. of Pl nilllion
in 196;& and a .bed tex.revenue of $35,700,
Essell said . . e 'Yes' Vote Sought
SADDLEBACK VALLEY - A cam-
pai&n for a yes vole on the Nov. 25 school
bond election haa been launcbed by. the
San Joaquin Bond Rate Citizens Com·
mitttt.
-Leamld liial the Chamber of Com-
merce "ant.I the FnttYal to turn on its
Cfitistn1as ~ecorltions Nov. 28 as the
kickoff of a community-wide holiday decorations event l>escribing the city's stand as "short-
-Approved Dec. I use of the Festival sighted," Chaffee said that failure to pr<>-
Forum for a talk to Laguna Coordinating mote tourism is cqsting $100,000 in lost
Council by Fomt Dickason, coonty plan.. bed tu and sales tu revenue. ning director, on the Orange County
The election will decide whether or not
to r:i.lse bond Interest rates from five to
tieven percent so that bonds already
voted In the San Joaquin School District
can be sold.
General Plan. 'nle San Cltmente figures were in
-Denied .a request to purchase shirP conlraat to the Laguna Beach (pop.
Christmas muaic that would be piped-13,600) picture, where the city council
• s.... Cotttat Set
MISSION VIEJO --ber that
sand caatle you built with the . turrets,
moats and elaborate towers? ·
Services Slated
For Mr. Hyman
AH sand castle enthusiasts are invited Services will. be held at 11 a.m. Friday to join in the recreation center'• "Sand In Sheffer Lquna Beach Mortuary
Thing" con"'I Sunday, Nov. I!. Ch&pel for Harry Abe Hyman, who died
Construction won"t be Jimited to Tuf:ldlY In the Anaheim-Euclid Coo-
cuUes. Participants will be d<>ing their valeloent HOlpital at the age ot •.
own ·thing individually or in -groupt A D-year. Lquna. Jleach resident,
1tarting at l·p.m. Hyman made' hla home at 1413 Temple
The fb:•winf for · the "sand cranL 'Hilla Drive. He was actiVe in the Laguna
parcels,. will take place on SJturday·at 1 Beach Muonic Uxt1e, In which he hekl a
p.m. Winners OQ1. pre1ent wiJI be notified. ll~ memben>Up. •Hyman wu a civil
Call tbe recreation center at 837~ for enatneer for M ye1r1 and formerly owned
lnfonnalion. a bulldina: and conlractin& firm In New ·Yort City. . ·
:• S11R1pollMM Plaa•e• , He b ourvived by hla widow, Emma, of .the llilme and by two IOlll, Frank P. SAN JUAN CAPl8TIWIO -A aym. H)'11Wi' of Hollywood am Arthur · D.
poslum .,; pollullon IJ!d .pop!latloa wW Hyman 61 Loi An(ela. Son Frink, a mo-
lake place ~ay, Nov. 18. tloa picture and televlalon act<r, iJ -SpeU!iig WIU be Dr. Grover Stephen!, fa< bis appearanceo in "Tbe _ .. and In
cha1nn1n·of the biology department 11 the Death Valley Days Rtiea.
UC! and ',1Jlll>ri Johmon ol the S111 · •
-Voted • $42,$00 adyertl.siog allocation to
the Chamber of Commerce thl! year.
alter taking in 1114,400 In,, bed tu
revenue.
'"lbe impact of OW' advrislnl p~ cram .. clell'ly ibown in figures for the
·put lb,.., yqn, aid Lq\1118 Olamber
manaaer Karren Morgan. "Bed tax
revenue has gone up from $86,000 to
. $114,• and our aalea tax receipt,, are up
from '300,000 lo 1418,785. This r<presents
$41 million in retail sales. The San
Clemente peQpte don't seem to rtallze
that the hotel-motel people get only about
15 to 20 percent or the tourist dollar. The
rest goes to restaurants, retail stores and
services in the community.''
"There's · no doubt that promotion
pays," the Laguna manqer concluded.
"Anc! by uaing ·bed tu ·revenue for
advertlllng you're just re-investing
outdde mooey at no coat to the resideot
' tazpayers. ..
From P .. e l
GREETER •••
.aoc<:ordlnl lo COl!lll1iUee chainnon Pele
Fulmer. D~~~~>;:'>ip.m.'~t ·:G~0dd SI t ' the Communlty J>resbyterlan Church, n ers . a e
...., Del Oblspo; Saa .n.an Capistroq>.
Chlld carnrill·bl.~=--7 ,. -, 4 ----
• co11 .... be~fJ¥.i . Pan~ke Feed
1 · _"It_ la -~ppropfiate at this approaching
-Thanll&Mng-tlme-to express our ap. ~~lion for llH Eiler has done for the
town," AAd Hany Lawrence, Chamber of
Commerce president and member of the Gretter ·Fund committee. SAN CLEMENTE -Toni!)>l'1 the Laguna ·Blach lll&h School's vtrsity
night for college -bound San Clemente football team "ill stage ita annual "pan-
Hlgh School students. · cake demolition" Friday -monUnf from
Becauae of inaeaslnc competjllon for 6:30 to 7:30 at the Cottage Restaurant.
colle1e admission, the ach0o1'1 Guidance Each year on the morn1nC of the
Department has scheduled speakers homecomlnc game, glrla ol the 'high
representing univeraJtlea, atate colleaes acbool's ~ aquad treat the vanity grid·
and junior colleres. den to "all the pancakes they can eat,"
'fbeie wUI alao be a brochure with a aloog With aausaa:e. scrambled egs,
pllMing calendar. admlssion1 dlta, r.. orance juice and milk, which Cotta1e
qutr..i test dales, linanclll alda and proprietor Hmy Moon suppliel 11
scl>olarshlps. The meeling In I b e nomlnll coot.
cafetoriwri is to belin at 7:30 p.m. Moon said he 11 clearing the decka for an anUciP11<d lull house of some llO
hungry llludenll, along wilh COICbes and sports wrltera.
other 111f:mben are Mayor GleM Ved-
der, Mis.!I Lorna Mills, president of
Laguna Federal Savings and Loan and
columnist Remlow Harris.
Donations to the Greeter Fund may be
addressed to the Chamber of Commerce,
280 Park Avenue.
Last year, say1 Fulmer, a single an-
nouncement liial the IUnd needed holster·
ing brought contributions f r o m
throughout the Soulh . Coul area. Tbere
were many anonymous alf'tl, from a
doUar up and many from children, some
accomponled by notes exprwtng thanks
for Lanen'• ever.cheery creet.Jnss. Solon to Reintroduce
Bill on ~farijuana
SACRAMENTO (UPI) Laguna Teen ~mer
Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (0-San
Jose), said Wednesday he plans to r~in
trOCuce next year his bill to remo.,.e
marijuana from the list of narcotics. The
measure, which does not. alter penalUe.s
for poosession and use of marijuana, was
defeated during this year's session.
Vasconcellos aatd he decided to rein-
troduce the measurt after hearing
testimony of five medical and pro-
lesal0nal experb befor< the Assembly
l'libllc Health Committee. They agreed
marijtiana was not a narcotic but a mild
hallucinogen whose effects could be com ..
pored loJhose of alcohol
UAl lY r 1101
~ '°"'1 PUlliMllMG ~'
lt•Mrt H. W1.I .,.. .....................
J11l It. CY1l.y
'llCll llMl*ll .... V-91 "'--'
TM1111t' Ktttll • ·-n.-. A. ... .,.,11111. -l-kl1••~ P: N1U ·--... -'---121 hr..t Aft. ...., __ ,.0. .. '61,tua --e-._, .... .., .... ..._,,"-di: nn ., ........ .._. ... ----=·· .....
AFS Student Finding
Germany Life Difficult
By FRED l!CBOEMl!RL
Of ftllt Deltr ,. ,, ...
How would you do U you only spoke
EJlllish, wm lr)'lng lo learn Germon,
and the instructor was teachina: it in
Spanish. ·
Sound contusing! Well. for Joan
f\fc~1ahon, it is. Joan is spe nding thls
year in Germany as an American Field
Servtce·forelgn exchange student.
. The problem Isn't only the language
barrier'. She Is still learning that in
Germany, It la CUJtomary to take flowers
"'·henever you visit a friend.
According to her letter, Joan may not
be miuin&.much of what'a happenlng in
the U.S. "Tbe Gulholfa (her Gennan
"lllllily") subocrlbed to Time Magazine
IO that I would be able to ktep up with
wort~ af!aln ·In £nillah. They al'° get
Notiol1al Gqraphic and Severn.en,"
lnit.H Jou. *· * * Wllb Hll!lOCOlll!nf only 1 dly 1w11,
-In cllarp .,. belflnnllll lo
resemble dllclillll wllhoul boadl. 1
aomeUmt1 wonder' why people: iet IO e,:.
cited about· lhlngs u the linll moment
draws neir. Maybe that's human nature,
but, amid lhe decor•tlon<. the float
pnopor1Uon, and .. !ling ID th! people In
all the pl1cu 11 the r1gltl Ume. 111
mtmbers ot the student council may lose
lhelr helda.
Take heart though. lt looks to me as thouih lbe 111111 Homecomlnc will be a
succea. Even wtth the last minute fiur.
ry, new and exclUn1 eventa will take
pl1ct. Alter Ill, lb not often that 1,000
students tan 10 to ancient Greece and
still be within the city limits.
Tbe porode ii lcl>eduled lo !Hvt Fri·
day allemoon and lrlvtl -the hllh ocbool lo 1be iow.t M<1lon ol Park Avt.,
be1cnt G1-n. A IDllOlve pep nlly b
.
' '
•cbedultd. wit!i the 11111 bomeoomlng
court lo be presented lo 1be comlntmily.
Rurn<l' ba.!I it that, llnce Friday is
usually the day that everyone can take
advantage of the beach, that many w\11
forsake the pep rally and save their "yell
power" for the football game that night.
* * * 100 ••. t9 ... 98, .. 97 .•. down goes the
counter on the mimeograph machine in
the hJgh school offices. It is just one or
the many "dittoed " reminders that pour
forth dally to high school personnel. And
in one administrator's office I can see the
plans for llnother memorandum to be
sent to the faculty.
49 .•. 43 .•. 47 .•. the last page of the new
note has been typed and the secretary is
heading for the ditto mach!ne. But on her
way, she ls stopped and asked to get a .
reminder about homecoming to the
teachers.
4 .•. 3 .•. 2 .•. I .•. oil flies the last copy
and a new ditto Is on the machine .
Tbe new reminder wiU join the ranks
With sccns of GfMll like it that have come
off the VtrJ Mme machine.
Then suddenly the office reaU... thol
the faculty members aren't gtvln1 a hoot
nor a holler about au these "Jmportant"
mffll1e1.
And so a reminder is stnt to the facult y
from the admlnlstraUon. It reads.
"It has C0111f: to the attention of the ad-
ministration that many I m po r t a n t
bulletins art not deserving lht attention
they should In order to Insure producllve
communication. It is therf!fore im-
peraUve that all teachers read and file
all memorandums. to Insure an increased
level of produclJvlty at the hl&h JChool."
Like all the rell of the"111imeograpll-
ed mlnuUat, I.his one wUI end In the
circular file. It remind.a me of tomethlng
that oclentlata label 111 impoollbOJty -
perpetual mollon .•. '""11 the office lo the
ttacbor ••• !rmi lbe Cllllce lo the teacher.
TO SPEAK IN LAGllNA
Lt. Gov. Reinecke
Reinecke Speaks
Friday in Laguna
At Wome1i's Fete
Callfornia's LL Governor Ed Reinecke
will make his first poliUcal appearanei! in
L<&gWla Beach Friday evening as guest of
honor at a dinner sponsored by the
Women's Republican Club, Federated, of
l.aguna Beach.
Reinecke will review accompll!hmenf.t.
of the Republicans 1n Sacramento during
the past three years and also make some
predictions as to GOP plans for 1970.
Reinecke, who served four years in
Congress, wa1 brought back to California
from Washington D.C. by Governor
Reagan when Robert Finch was named
secretary of Health, Education and
Welfare in the.Nixon administration.
A few tickets are still available to the
Friday dinner in the Tov•ers Restaurant,
according to club spokesman Fem Ran·
dolph and reservations may be made by
calling 494-1630.
Hunter Lied
On Insurance?
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A life in·
BUtance company attempting to win court
approval of its cancellaUon of a $240,000
pollcY· on the late actor Jeffrey Hunter
cootended he c6ncta1eir a l!eart· 1ilment
from them .
_ _ Bankers_Security .Life..Insurance _SocJ~·
ty wif!t to court Wednf!fiday.and said the
actor concealed·. ihe aliment he suffered
Fince childhood when he applied for the
policy. Hunter died· in an accidental fall
at his home in Van Nuys last May 'll. He
was 41 .. The company offered to repay all
premiums il received from the actor,
totaling $3,032.09, in return for can-
ctllatlon of the policy.
•
Major Setbaek
County Rejects
• • ' • I 4
Ai-rport Suryey 1
..
By TO!\f BARLEY too high." ' ·
Of 1t1e Dllllr Pu.t "'" The-board "as warned early in Its
Orange County's master plan of air Phase Two deliberations that it had
'lrwportaUaa auller<d a major setback "done nothlnl towards Jmpllmenllitg
Wednesday when divided c o u n t Y many recommtndaUons contained In
supervisors refused to endorse a com.. Phase One" and that It w.aa "oo the
mlttee's suggesUon that the second phase verj:e of eclipsing ID the H~ Buch
of the controversial survey be launched. area levels of sound which woukl .rMJlt
Held over by the board to Nov. 28 was in the aoundprooflnc °" demoDUon of
COO.!lideratioo of a bulky report-which homu in at Jeut coe other country."
llflles a 1111,000 study by Wiiiiam Pereira Dan Emory of NeWport ~adi told the
and Assocla"' ol the possibllity of board that :Ill dally ~ ol let
developing a sophisticated system of aircraft were now being teeOided at
airports wilbln Orange Coonty. Orange -County Aill>ori. "a flluri lbat
Envi"••ed by the commilte• _ County advances noise level'' reprd~ by One ift. .._ teFnaUonal auociaUOn u intOlerable · to
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas, many homes in lhe Upper Bay lrea."
Airport Director Robert Bresnahan and Eniory warned that homeowners In
Planning Director Forest Dickason -is Mesa Drive, P.allsades Road, Dover
an airport system which would feature Shores, Lido lsle, Santa Iaabel, and the
Bluffs were amonc those now direCtly regional airports. metroports and air threatened or are within the nobe Jevel
p11rks throughout the county and possible limits that would call. for soundproofing enlar~ement or replacement of existing or .1;....,.tructlon of the homes fn West facilities. . '"""
It also urges the joint mllitary~ivillan Germany.
use of exi.st.ing military airfields and a· Noise levell at Orange 'Ccunty -Airport
comprehensive study of the effect o( the had now reached twHblrda ol the aound
airport expansion plan upon existing and emission readlnp reetatered at Loi An ..
planned communities:. And its compilers geles Intematloul Airport, ErDOl'J".aald.
urged the board to bear in mind the Urging the superVlson to "not l!'ait ~unW
possible concJusion of th_e Viebtam War the rtudy js out before working to redu<:*
and its effectinnnn the fut:Ure' ol the El t,hese m0W1t!ng noise Jevels," be wamtd · ~-the board lo "bear In mind the fact lhal
Toro base. l $10 mllllon worth ol homes in the ~-Point after "tiOffit waa ~ down by port area may have to be bulJdOled ·o..rt
supervisors anCI members of. the 'public tn of the rapidly advancing noise zone."
a prolonged public bearing whlcb !ell the Marine Corps Col KeMelh T. Dykes
three authors of the Phase Two resolution warned supervisors that they CXl1ld u ..
obviously bewildered aa to their next ~ no relief from 8 "non-exiltent fac-course of aCtlon. .,... ... Their only imtructions ln the motion tor" that invariably appears on county
successfully Offered by S u p e r v l s 0 r reports on airport issues-the possible
William Phillips were that the .. matter joint military-civilian use of such bases
be returned to the CAO, refined and held 85 El Toro.
in abeyance until Nov. 26." "We have no existing plam to vacate
1£ their new recommendations follow El Toro and if we had we would have
the line of argument offered thrOughout nowhere else to go," the Marine officer
the hearing, the committee's next recom· q~~W% :,~:iterabJv op-ell lo joint mendalion will be contained in a con· / ,..,.. &iderably thinner report. use, it would interfere with en.cling
Supervisor David Baker added hls Maririe aviation training tJ:la,t bears no
vehement objections to thoee of county resemblaDce to civilian pncedurea and
homeowners and I Marine Corps colonel we are not prepared to recotnize ant, clahnl for clvWan use rl our airfieldL and branded the phase . two report u "Yoo afe," the colonel emphuiled to
"totally unrealistic and unneceasary. the board, "JUsl wlsllng your Ume."
"'I1lls is something that can run into JsldOre 'sclmeider (If Unlv&slty Par~.
billions of dollars," said Baker, "and I president of the University Park Como
wonder if everyone Is remembering that munity AuociaUon, wp.rned supervisors
l'.'e are only a small county in area. By that the board faced •lprobably p:oo mil-
pursuing something along these lines we !Jon in 1nsulta Jf something is not done
only aggravate the factors or noise , pollu· about continued encroachment Of nPlH
lion, congestion and zoning that go alon_g and pollution problems." f
y;itll such programs and I look on th';! He accused lhe board of failing to,..act
report ~.!l~e_thll!g_ ~al!r 1!11.P.rtctl~a nY..hJ..k:!Q.!le ecommtndations and of
Baker JOinteOlo lhe proxiri\i!Y o . . > ")poring Ibo Jli!!llleil demiiiaSof-~
Angeles lnternational Airport ani:I · . a'r.u }ll'Opertj "c71mera for long o
San Diego airport "for those who want relief." t
world travel. . Tustin residents whose homes now lie
"l( this is what you want then I don't under the revised night path of jets using
thin!{ JS to 30 minutes extra driving time Orange County Airport al90 urged the
is going to make that much difference," board to clamp down on jet traffic and
Haker said. "But I feel that, as far as oppose the entry of Continental Airlinel
Orange County is concerned, the priei! i.!I into the county facility. '
· ho.n ·deau
hrcaciia om by
The now spirit of today comes alive in your home witlt
this plush, all-wool broadloom from Karastan-Chandeau.
Choose from 00 great colors, from pale to potent.
Forget your fumllure style; smooth velvety Chandeau
goes great with them all. So look nowf
Chandeau, one of many fine .broadlooms and fU8$
from Karastan. ,-• ---w •
Only $10.95 sq. yd.
1i IF. YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL ~275 for 1n 11pert
carpet consult1nt who wil: com• to your home with wmples
without any obligation to you!
H.J.GAl\l\ElT fURNfJURE ·
2215 HARIOR ILVO. PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,.. M'°• TllM. • Prt. '-
'
COSTA MESA, CALIF,
646.0271
(
' ' ' I
' l
I I
I
--·. ----~-~----------·----·-----··--·---~--__.._.,.. _______ . ________ ~.--------•r•
ThundaY, Nowmbtr l.3, 1969 DAILY PllOT J J
Bantatti Was Egged On
Proud bantam hen, owned by William D. Stiles of
Klamath Falls, Ore., checks out three -inch egg
\vbich she laid. Ce nter egg is a normal bantam egg
UPI TtltPMlo
\Vhile egg at left ia a grade AA la r g e egg from
supennarket.
HERE'& WHAT YOU GET1
LnilblJ'llUllUd 7 ft l11r. B ft wide mattress
with m1tchlnc ~u11 box 1,rin1s
PLUS t1t1 co•piell DRlltlH'AX, ortitaatd bJ Drtltt:
• Fieldcrest •~iron King or Queen sheet
• Fieldcrest n~lron King or Queen fitted bottom sheet
• 2 Kint or Queen bolster pillows • 2 pillowcases
• King or Queen mattress pad
• KinrorQueen metal frame
wilh easy·rollingcasters. , . ..,,._ . -~
~~-
»;_ :!"~. , .. '
s
Britisher Sees Dark Clouds
For World's Plane Builders
LONDON (AP) - A British l"Onfronted with huge cuts in
authority thinks lean times military spending.
may lie just around the corner "More and more the em-
for aircraft builders. He phasis will have to be on keep-
predicts aJ90 that Americans ing all available contracts, an will in c r easi n g l y buy
American and fl y American money, for America's own in. dustry." rat.her than spend U.S. dollars
on foreign planes and equip-He also said the tremendous
ment. costs of major aerospace proj-
The predictions were made ects could threaten both the
by John w. R. Taylor in the industry and Its customers
foreword to the ma ssive tll&i-with bankruptcy.
70 edition of "Jane's All The "The aircraft industry,"
World's Aircraft," of which he Taylor said, "seems to have
is editor. got itseU into the position
The 1,000.page record of where it must continue to
aviation development publish· bu.lld progressively bigger and
ed today by Sampson LoW, 1 faster trans~ aJr~t to
Marston and Co. Ltd., costs' stay in busiaeSS, even if the
$25.20 per copy. It is the 60th custom~_ does not really want
annual volume. them or is not ready for them.
"At the mom ent." wrote
Taylor, "there is a worldwide
shortage of production capaci-
ty, due mainly to America's
involvement in Vietn am.
VIET PULWUT
"Already, however, t h e
pullout of U.S. forces in Viet-
nam has begun, and the na -
tion's aerospace industry is
"Ultimately, this coold be
just as dangerous as the situa-
tion a f~ years back when
the industry began to produce
such advanced missiles that it
almost put itself out of the
manned military a i r c r a rt
business."
Taylor said the trouble or
U.S. warplane manufacturers
ha ve resulted from "ever-in-
Crossword Puzzle
ACRO SS
1 Ctase
5 Fru it
10 Stdlmtnl 14 Command
to dog
15 Alltrc alicn
16 Solt mn
declar atlon
17 Gtnt rous l 'J Mr. Harbach 20 Acttd as a
servant
21 Lays In
suppl it s:
2 WOids
23 Olympian ,,,
25 Rivt r of
SW Asi a
26 Accumulated
JO Strldts
lofti ly
34 Dtath notices
35 Artist's subjtct
37 Kind of sound
38 Ar~b ian
garm ent 3' B1s eb111I
team
~ZMaca.,,, ~J Sma ll round
marks
!45 M1n1m1n,
e.g.
'46 Chtmica!
compound
'48 More · hackneytd 150 lltm of
summer Wtll":
2 wo1ds
I J' ' ' ' z
6J .. ..
A •
52 Lt nglh b;
width 54 High rating:
2 words
55 TV stations 59 Plcb.Jrtsqut
t.3 Farm worktr
t.4 Washington or Otta wa
tmploytt:
2 words
66 Oimlnu tlvr
suHlx 67 Period cl
time 68 Preposition
C9 Otcay
through use
71) Fur sourct 71 Forward
DOWN
l lnvtrnt ss
na llve 2 Drink
heavlly
3 Sign
4 Somtlhing
susptndtd 5 Pitct
of road
mach !ntry
6 Kind of
scort
7 Conntttlvt
WOfdS 8 Rtllglous
reprtstnll·
tlon 9 Ont to whom
a cht ck is
111~dt ovrr 10 Obstrv rs:
2 words
11 Consumes
12"-~·-
Brult!":
2 words 13 Busint ss
t sl11b!ish·
m'nt 18 OJsstnt
from
dom inant opinion
22 Ltopard or jag u11r
24 Medic inal
plant
2'Urgts
27 Brothers' sup,rlor
2B Lariat 29 Nobles 31 DlslncHntd 32 N!lghbor
of China
33 He~d ••••••• Jb Ki ndof
island CO Acctpts:
2 words
11/13/69
Cl ESP mt t ling
44 Caus e fo r
damage suit 47 Oo a cltan-
lng job:
2 words 4'J Bird
51 Li st of
members
53 Qui vive 55 Quantity
of tobacco
56 Disllke
vtry much 57 Thtatrical
!1f0Up; Abbr. 58 Sta lt of
exc ittmtnt 60 Part or
!ht necli: t.l Rus sian
man's name bZ Coi n of
USA and
Can ada 6S Sun ktn
lte shot
12 13
I I
creasing sophistication and
resultant cost escalation.'
"The Fill combat and
reconnaissance plane, after
extended development and
modification, may soon begin
to fulfill Us early promise ; but
the U.S. Navy and Royal Air
' Force ver.!ilons have gone and
the original plan to equip the
Strategic Air Command with-----------! 210 FB111As has been cut
drastically."
FRENCH MISSILE
Dur re111Jy.qulltot Kln1 wltfl
4Z ·~ tt at sleepln1 luxU1Y. lmly
dtcor1tor tic~nl on dtlUJ.•
mattrtss and matchln1 du1f
box IPfinp. lncludn compllt1 ORTllO.PAK llstot ... ,
"Missile designers continue
to make life more aod more
dllficult. f o r conventional
forces ~ none more so than
h.Jnc~•-~9.fd_.:Avjatlon ~~ their new MM3S Es:octt an-
tiship missile," Taylor con--
linued.
Area Proud
Of Its Fire
Volunteers
"Small enough to be launch-LA HABRA (AP) -The
ed from any class or surface firemen of La Habra Heights
ship. thbi Is designed to race may have lost a house
toward its target at lllgh Tuesday, but few residents
subsonic speed, In 8 11 would dare say "I told you
REG. $199.95
8T4H-e5-
so." weathers, a mere 6 to IO feet
above the water, over a range La Habra Heights has the
of 20 miles. How can one only purely volunteer fire
JX>SSlbly defend a ship against department In Los Angeles
such a missile? County, is proud of it, and
"After the experience or the recenUy defeated an attempt
Eil k to absorb the department by a Jsraeli destroyer . at, sun county fire prevention district. by more primitive S t y x
missiles In 1967, Exocet must 'Citizens of this unln·
be giving the admirals of the corporated community just
world much cause f o r above the Orance County line
thought." fonned La Habra HeJgbts
Volunteer Fire Department 25 Taylor claimed a scoop with years ago with a fisUul of
"the very significant Soviet dollars and a lot or local spirit. military aircraft known to NATO (the North Atlantic They've res.isled change to
Treaty Organiz.aUon) as professional r;tatus ever since,
'Moss.• " building ap the volunteer force
to a membership of 45 This is a military version or residents _ ranging in age
the TU114 airliner. It carries a from 17 to 82-and an equip-
saucer·like early warn In g ment roster of two pumpers,
radar above Its fuselage one tanker, a patrol truck and
similar to the kind fltled on four jeeps.
lhe U.S. Navy's E2A Hawkeye. "Our department is sup-
20 FLYING HOURS ported entirely by donations
Discussing the Soviet TUl44, from our residents," said
the first supersonic transport Chief Virgil Fout&. • 1 W e
to get off the ground and the receive no pay whatever. We
first to break the 90Und bar-are the only s I m on -p u r e
rier, Taylor said: "But it log-volunteers in the county, and
3ed only some 20 fiylng hours we're a little proud of it."
in its first seven months of So proud that 51 percent of
flight testing, whereas the two the citizenry put their namea
British-French Concorde pro-laat month on a petition to
totypcs amassed more than keep the department from
JOO subsonic fiying hours in being annexed by the county.
fi ve months. ' 0 It was simply a conviction
"Nobody now expects the among our 2,500 homeowners
TU144 lo enter service before that the voluntttr Clre depart-
1972. It will .!illll prected the ment could to the job better,"
Concorde by a year, and both said fonne r chief Robert L.
will have a lead of around five Shoup.
years over America 's first "We are very we 11
supersonic transport, t h e organized, and can usually
Boeing 2707." reach a fire here long before
"Desplfe' the attractions of county units can," he said.
low initial price and early The firemen work out of their
delivery, Soviet commercial homes, mpondlng to beeping
aircraft continue to achieve radios or to the community.
little succe11 outside the Com~ wide siren system.
munist bloc/' Taylor reported. So what ,happened on that
"The new •stretched' twin· houte fire Tueli:lay night.
turbo-fan TU13tA looks good 1'We don't believe anyone
on paper, but the CQUld have saved the/house
Czechoelovak alrline'a (CSA) under the clrcumslancet.''
recent carn:eJlaUOn of a plan. uid Shoup. Hft wu too deeply
ned order for IJ m u 1 t Involved when the alarm soun·
represent a blow for the Soviet ded ." Six county units rein·
industry. foreed the volunteer force. No
11It remains to be seen one was injured.
whether lhe tri-jet t U154 ---'-"-~----1
scheduled 10 enter servlce -----------1
with the Soviet Aercflot airline .----------.!
r111l 80" lonf, 6Q• wids for dreamJ
ov1rslze sleeping comfort. Rich
diamond-quilted msttress and
mitchfn1 box sprln1, plus )'Ollr
ORTHCJ.PAK li1ted above!
REG. $159.95 8JJOB5
in 1970 ca n preS<nt a more Who Cort•? FOUNTAIN VALLEY "'rtous challenge to the West.
"Certainty lt gives the Im· No '""' newsi>a><r 1' "' -~ 16131 Harbor Blvd. presslon or being an at.. cares aoout your community llkt
tracUve, thoroUghly modem your community dall)-newspaptr
desljl'I and the overhaul Ufe of doer. It's lht DAILY PILOT. ( Nellt t. z.dr'•I
Phone: 839-4570
C•tflM • 1 Kt OllTHO MATI
LAKEWOOD
4433 Candlewood Dr.
, .,,.. hM L.11 ..... c ...... ,
Phone: 634-4134
DOUBLE
BONUS!
Ki"""'-Stn~ 9EDsPllEAD PLUS «
Queen Sin HEA , ..... 111-... Your F"Uf'cMlt of Ml Kint « Qllllft Sia _ ....
luxurious dee~wn quTittnr. exclusive deconitortickini. C!loJct
of Twin or fulklzt dt1Ux1 mdtr•
lllCl'box sprint A -Drtl!e spec!~ -buJ .... s5oee r. BOTH
PIECES
Dnply 5ted cover with Ortho's
buo!int '"'·-· Cholca ol nor full mattress
llld 011tdlln1 bouprlftl It
spoclal Dnllosnilpt
•ooao . BOTH
PIECES
ANAHEIM
1811 W. Lincoln Ave.
to,,... .. ,.. .... ,
Phone: 776-2590 11 /1)/69 I Soviet turbofans Is 1ett1n1·---------~1
!teadlly more respect.able, -----------!
whlch shou ld help." OP N OAILV10·9·SA!.I0·6·SUN 12·G·JMMEOIATI Ull!VIRV ·EASV CRIOll T!i!MS ·BANKAMEHI CA Rll MASllH l.H .. MI,• ·-~L •
•
U Dl.ILY ~!LOT
Also Seek Canada
By SYLVIA PORTER
Ir you were a small investor
In Canada today, you could
buy a new issue of Canada
savings bon<b payin£ you 7 p~r
cent ror five years ol 71/1 per-
ctnt for each of the next two
years, 11'2 pe{-Cent for .each of
th'e Jut six years. U yoo held
the boodS to maturity in nine
)'e8rs and didn't cash the i~
terest· COOPona'as they came
due, you ' would get • a bonus
payment . ·w.hich .albog. .with
your accrued interest would
DOUBLE your original in·
vestment in the nine ·years.
You couJd buy the bonds in
LIFE GOES ON • • •
AHD ON, AND CN • · •
ai., TlllllY OttANT, It.Ph
How )ona can you expect 10
live 1 Certainly it Is now pos·
.llblc to live longer than your
parenlll and their &t'ICellon. Jlut. _rhit fncn:ued_ Ji(e n ·
pectancy Is not completely
autGmatic. You mu.st Jake an
active part. in helping it to be
reallied.
Your _physkian is tne mail)
llnk. He Is there to tielp you to
maintain good heal!H, over-
come a slckneu and to spot
J>OM\ble trouble be.lore it gets
too 5erious. Pha.nnadsllii are Pro:ud to be ano~r important
link by supplying any medi-
cines and health' aids you m&.J'
need or )'OUT doctor may pre-
scribe,
denominations as low as $50
up lo a limit of $25,000. or
course, you could cash in your
bonds at any time for their
full face· value plus earned in·
terest.
If you are a small investor
In England today, you also
could buy a new series of sav·
lngs bonds via payrOll deC!uC*
tlons which would pay you the
e<fulvalent ot a:tax-lree 7 per·
cent for five years or 71,i per·
cent for seven years -a
return which 1he London
Economist says ls "npt to be
sniffed at." You could get .JI
sorts of bonus deals to en-
courage you to hold yclur
bonds to maturity plus safety,
plus the advantage o f
systematic savings, etc .•
BUT I.F YOU are what you
are -a small saver in the
United States buying U.S. sav-
l11gs bonds via payroll deduc·
lions -you can get 4'ri per-
cent but only if you hold the
bonds lo maturity in seven
yean; you get much Jess if
you cash in before maturity.
And while Congress eventually
will eet around to raising th!s
rate to 5 pefmlt by shortening
the maturity of the bond to
fi ve years and 10 months_, the
new high rate still will be less
than 1969'& rise in lbe cost or
Ji~Jni._ ~
The new 5 percent rate wUI,
in b l u n t summary, be
disgracefully belated, although
It will be made retroactive to
June. It will be shamefully out
of lijle with wh~t the_ Treasury
i11 paying sophisticated buyers
of Its marketable securities (8
percent on a short-term 1.0.U.
last month). The rate will be
blantantly unfair to the in·
noeent saver in this era of
steep interest rates a n d
galloping Inflation.
And even after it's voted. it
will mirror a lack of Im·
agination among ad·
m I n I stration policymakers
which is embarrassing.
IT'S ·GETnNG tougher and
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US when you
need a delivery. \\'t vdll de-
liver promptly \\"itbout extra
ch&rcc. A" gr:eat •mall)' people
rely on us fcir thcii-health
needs. \V,e \\"e.lcome· reque11a llF===========:::;.
for deli,.."°ry s e r v 1. c e and
cha1"&e act0unu.
PARK LIDO PHARMAC·Y
U1 Hos,ltal R .. d
Naw,..-t leach 642·1st0
''" Dtllvtrf
ON THE TUBE
For the b•1t 9uide lo wh-+'1
f..11pp111 in9 011 TV, rt•d TV
WEEK -d"1fribut1d with the
S•turd1y 1dilion •f th1 DAILY
PI LOT.
Real Estate lnves~ment Opportunities
*
...
BEER BAR SS .. $61,001 -. .. ,,..._ Wiii M S104ff. ... ,wft\,.._..,.,...
*
*
*
'
"'· Sl&,000. P1.-c:I ............ Ha.tiwe, ,,...... .. U,ut 1HcL S..... 46 pin., ...... hclftfti ...., ..... ,,..,..,,
PLANNED DEVELO~MENT, •• ......... c_.,. ,...,,,..
w-•M'' .._,.... pl-.d hr rilte w9t« .,...,, 1:tt hi L..t•aa llMk. be. ...
knt '""• e\'eUobla fot *"'.,-"'· loclrl H-wttl MM I W. -41
J ~ a., rlle """1 -4 ~-fer Slt.Sot 11 lf6t. H>t' m... .. i..
''*''""'·
CLOS~ 0 IN FAMILY HOME o... ;,..., , .._, ._
2 0,..,.1.-. Xtr• 1.,... l•I '-~ ,... fa!. ........ ...,. ...
......... ,.H•. $tr ... ,......, .• , ......... ,,...., 141.MI M WaHt
,.,.. 19 Leimn ..
INFLATION HEDGE ... ,.... .... -_...,;., .. •"' .. . a,.,. c:..ty -11 ....... ~ ... M9 ,.,....., .. ,..ell;' ....
..... , 1.'IJ,100 P9' .. ,.. ""'9Jtl ,...,... .........
lllallrey W. U!er, Broker
... Wflll & ASS~TES
-,-~ ...... lloKli
Tim Adams, Asiociate
255A Th1lle Strffl
71-7·1A20·
•
t:: • •.
CALL US N9W FCR
INFORMATION ANO
A BAOCHUllE.
A . TEl.UHON[ -J.a._-.-b,,.,;MmmlllG . -HWu .
543-""2222
I Of'lllC!I TO HAYE
AIL DI' ~ANGl ·CO.
. . • ;I"., r '
Co1nplete-Nelv York Stock List
...
i
----------------··--·=-----
L
• Thursday's Closing
In All Homt
Editions
. . ' ·-·-----~ --
•• ' \
•
J.f DAILY PILOT Th'lld'1, Novombtf 13, 1%9
Cites Nlielerir Subs .
-Rickover Assails
Mesa Woman Retires
From Library Career
Mrs. Louise Blinkhern of
Co3ta Mesa has retired from
her job a~ head cataloguer for
the Cal Pdly Pomona library,
ending a 37-year librarian
career.
A luncheon recently was
held in her honor at Diamond
Bar Country Club.
Now Mrs. Blinkhem will
assist her husbaDd, Larry, in
his insurance business. They
Jive at 1992 Rosemary Place,
CooU Mesa.
Mrs. Bllnkbem was city
librarian at the San Marino
Publlp Ljbrary for 19 years
and cataloguer and audlo-
!~sual · ' assistant W}_th t,!J.,, __ .c.--~
Arcadla School District lor
three year before going to
Cal Poly Pomona Io_m:i. Mrt. Blinkhtrn
lpecd-metbamphetamlne-it a 'ftrJ danttrous drus. Jt
ii named for the speed with Tl'hicb its ustr rides to super~
DOrmal levels of excitability and wa.kclulneas.
u ....
Speed i! used by the medical profasion for emergencies,
•~ as cootrolling J>.lood p~essun: during 5urgcry and for
diet contrpl. But mdapread ~ is dcstroymg moro
)'OUDJ minds in California than any other drug. -·-A "speed hinge"' i1 one of thcm0itphysica11y and ?SYCho-Jog!caJry" damagins n:pcrience. a pcrso~ c.in have. OvCl'o
..ctJvation of the nervou1 l)'ltan ooopled with main oo. int~ organs can have drastic effects on the speed usu,
Death. foll~llla ~e dc:pres.sion and exhaustion, can
come from nnpuritia in the drui. or throu&h violence
aMOCiated with the utet'a pcychotiO; coodition -and lhc
lfo\Jp<axiQly ol otha uten. •
WIWJ•• 'Na
Speed is obtained from black m.rtet dell9'. lbc qualit1
ol 1he drns they dispeme ia questionable.. Often kb "'cut'"
with suc;ar, or any white powder, to atrttch the supply !o
the detriment of the user. Contaminatioa i1 common and
produces injurioua aide effects, such • abscesses. blood
poUonina md aaum hepatitis tram contaminated nm:tles.
Fonalable pl'Oblems
Jn trcatinr the "'speed freak" ;the. medical profession i.t
faced with both phyaical and psychiatric problems. Simul·
taneously the community it faced with the need for some
aearchiDJ, understanding and, .above all, positive action.
Parenl..s and concerned younc people ~ to direct their
eDCtgia loward·counterac:tin1 the abuSc of such danger·
ous drop 11 speed, if lhe trend of abuse ia to be reversed.
WUlto ..
~ire to f<nntfr drui uaas who IR working 'Nith
\duntecr clintcal teams, there are throe buic 11cp1 in.
copiq with tbl dan.auoua drua aituaOOa.:
"""' Oet ""' --...._., M&t• a atand h9ted oa clinb1 mcs.nc., not on _...,,
Tlllrdl lmdw younolf. o.t to,..... wlui othen in""" ......,.Ury ........ tn'llll to capo with !hit problem.
I'« --lnfarmolion ... 1"o 1Ubject, writ.:
Drug.Abu&elnfmoJ11atton
• MJ StllM Sttttr, S.. Tnmd~. C.U/ot?1'9 H/01
Nearlr ~veryone
Listens to Landers
'r-
•
Newport National Bank
offers you the
warm glow of creative interest·
you can bank on.
When you're saving money, green is a
beautiful color but Newport National
Bank would like to add some additional
color to brighten your savings picture.
Newport National 13ank. pays the highest
bank interest anywhere on your savings
account, and at the same time, offers its
customers a.n opportunity tci acquire a collection of exquisite miniature reproductions of origi nal
oil paintings. These striking decorator miniatures will add infinite charm to your living room , office,
den , bedroom, or wh erever. Also for memorable gift-giving at Christmas or other special occasions.
Framed in antiqued gold, set off by rich velvet , they measure 7o/o" x So/I" overall. (A regular $15.00
retail value.) Each miniature is ready for hanging in decorator grouping or singularly in small areas.
Now is the time you can truly admire every entry in your savings passbook.
how the program works:
for new savings accounts only
Open a $100 savings acco4nt-and buy one miniature for $3.95 (plus tax)
Open a $200 savings account-and buy one miniature for $2.95 (plus tax)
Open a~$300 savings acCount-jlnd buy one miniature for $1 .95 (plus tax)
Open a $400 saving$ a<:counl-ond buyl>ne miniature for$ .95 (plus tax)
Open a $500 savings account--<ind buy one mlnlalure. for FREEi •
•Umit of two frtt miniatures regardless of amount of deposit over $1000.
for present depositors
• Each $50.00 deposit to your savings account entitles you to pur·
chase one miniature for only $3.95 (plus tax).
• A depositor (with no deposit required) can purchase a decorator
, miniature for only $4.95 (plus tax). -
• A non-depositor can purchase a miniature for $5.95 (plus tax).
(recularly 1 $15.00 v1Iue)
at unique
E•th account irlSuttd to $15,000. Member r D.t C.
A beautiful dis~ay of these fine decorator miniatures are at all offices.
itpwt OflJct Mkllebort If Mtc4rtlnlr 833-3111 • a.,.w. Offlct B1ysidt 1t J1mbom 642•1141 • c.Atp Plrll Otfict Nutwood 1t Commo11W11lth 871·2900 • SunnJ Hills Orllct HJ!'bot 1t Bru 871•7290
hperiw'lmct Sllptrlor 1t PIKtntla 642·9511 • U1t'""-Dffice Ent Chipman 1t SUit Collt11 87'-4MO • Wutclitr Office Wtstcllff at Dower 642..Jll l
• M Ind! Oftlcil LliS1't1 Wvrld, Stli1 ludl 596·2711 • U"llM ttlRJ onicl ltl11111 Wortid, LllUIM Hills a.10·3200
•
•
•
.,.
. .
..
• ..
"
.•:
,, ..
, •• !
·'·
,,,, .
., • < .,
.. . ..
' . ,,
' ··'
I
I
I,
I
I
ti
~
M
rr
ol
u
1
b<
Co
bi
b<
" ra
fl,
wi
or
wi
m
m
te:
E1
GI
n\
gr
fi1
on
"t
M
-<:U
Sil
be
"
P1
ac
ta
In
th
Ll
lo
th
a\
m
le
()J
D.
la
ci
th
J>1
cc
cl
" J>1 do
!•
' ' ' ,
0
~
F u
n
' 11 •
I • '
r
• ' • ! •
I
t
b
'
' I
' \
---~-~ -.... -.-..,..---..,,....---~~ •• '1( .. -..... -...... -• -. . ... -.. -;..... -.... ":,..:=':"".'"""""•
• •
...
YOC. 62, NO. 272, ~ S~TIONS, so·PAGES . . ORANGE COl'.INTY, CALIFORNIA -. .
S·1;1pervisOf's W 9n't · Endorse Aii Ma~ter Piaii
aevetop~ 1: ~~ica_ted syst;;-~r
airport;s~ within -Orance ·County.
....
lly TOM·BARLEV
Of t111t D911¥' ,.lilt Staff
Orange Coonty's master plan of air
transpOrtation suffered a major setback
Wednesday when divided co u n t y
supetvison -refused to endorse a ·com-
mittee's suggestion that the second phase
of t}Je controversial survey be launched.
Held over by the board to Nov. 2' was ~sidera\ioq, or a bUlky r·eport-Wli!Ch
urges a $1'11.,000 study by William Pereir,a
and Associates of the possibility ot
C~pAccused
Of Clubbing
Negro Boy
A young· San\a Ana · pol,ice of ricer, has
beer. secretly lndJcted ~y the Orange
County Grand Jury on · a charge of club·
bing a 17-year-old black youth who wu
being: committed to Juvenile Hall.
Patrohnan Richard ·E. Fa.wt, %6, was
scheduled lo appear today for ar-
raignment before Suj>erior . Court Judge
Robert Gardner on a charge of assault
with a deadly weapon.
The indictment was issued by the panel
of. jurors after hearing a number of
lvitnesses from the Santa Ana black com·
munity testily against Officer Faust,
many using strong, highly descriptive
terms.
Chief Deputy District Attorney James
Enright today ·alleged Faust beat Jesse
Gilmore. nOw 18, of Santa Ana, wifh his
nightsUck as the boy lay helpleSs on the . 2'nd testimony supported by witneMEs-aps)t!ared before the Grand Jury.
, ~gb.t-described the incident as being one-~ 4 nµm~i: 'lfhi~. eru~ in the
"backlash" folloWing tbe arrest oC Daniel
MiChael Lynem 'Of"~nta· Ana al1$f Ute ac·
-cu~......Ntlif0!&..,.subseqliellt-re1ease;..-He
stt'Dedl hOwf:v~ .~t Faust's alleged
.~ijng of Gilmore was not directly
related to the Lynem c;ase.
Lynem, !I, a memer of the Black
Pan~ organizaUon, .was arrested and
accuSed of the m)f?der last June 4 o( San·
ta· Ana Police Officer Nelson Saascer.
Inveitilation, much of it carried out by
the public defender's office, cleared
Lynem and switched the murder charge..
to Arthur DeWitt League, 20.
League, like Lynem, is a me!l1ber of
the Black Panther group. He is today
awaiting Superior Court trial on t~
murder charges he inherited from his
fellow militant.
A witness who appeared before. the
Orange County Grand Jury today told the
DAILY Pllm that Faust's alleged at·
taCk on young Gilinore was "only' one in·
cident in a wave of.such harassment of
the Negro population by U1e Santa Ana
police force.
"They were as mad as hell when they
couldn't pin that thing (the murder
charg1?) on Mike Lynem," the witness
said. "And we had to pay for it by being
pushed around, insulted, checked and
double checked for no earthly reason and
generally victimiz.i::d." .
The witness said complaints to the
police department about the alleged vie·
timization were fruitless and "were not
wanted by Chief (Edward L.) Allen."
Army to Present
Sea Groin. Fiel.d
To City Friday
The U.S. Army·.eorpe: of Engineers will
officially hand jurisdiction of the. west
Newport Beach groin fteld to the city on
Friday the official completion day for
the f~ new stone jetties. 1
Officials of the corps and the city will
meet at the 31th street groin at 1:30 Fri·
day for a brief ceremony of sorts 111ark·
iiig the end of the ~ork which began last
summer. . . City Tidelands Coordinator George
Dawes said the Corps still wilt be ·respon·
sible for most of the mainlenance costs
of the four granite projections.
Because of their construcUon, however,
maintenance will be nil, he said.
Heavy equipment will still be in tbe
area during comJng months, however, be·
cause th e groi n field next-will be cov·
ettd with material scraped from the
Santa Ana River bed in the Anny Corps
sand haul project. 1be huge trucks with their cargo of
granite. however, have disappeared from
the ocean l'ront.
The project involved carting tons or
boulders from a quarry in Corona for
dumping on the beach.
'f'he COTJli Dawes said, still has minor
11oork to do 00 the two l!lteel groins buUt
in the area in 1968.
'Vorkmen .will -replace scores of1 bolt.I
which have.rusted out because of lhe sea
water's corrosive acUon.
.,
Envisaged l)y the ,commi\tee -Gounty
AdminiatraUve Officer Robert Thomas,
Airport Director ~rt Bres"8f\an and Plan~~.Director1F~rest Ql~kasOn -!~
an airport system which would '·feature
regional airports, "metroports .and -air
_parks..:tbr.ougbout,lhe cpunty·-andi>0sslllle
enl~rgement , or. r.eplacement oC exisUng
facilities.
It also. urges the join~ ffillitary-ci vilian
use of existing military airfie.ldf and ,a
con1prthensive :SJudy or the, effect 'Of the
airport ·eq>anslon plan .upon existing and
planned communlUcs. And its compilers
urged the board to bear in rninCI the
possible conc!Usion of the Vietnam War
;ind its effect' upon the future of.. the El
Toro· base: • · · · .... .-'
Point after .point was shot down . by
supervisors ana• members of the public. in
a Prolonged public hea'Nng .whiCh litt~tlie
three awlhors ~f the Phase Two re~olution
Actress 'June-Allyson of Newport !leach gives \~orld War I veter~
Arthur R; Thorpe,_ 7~. a handshake .and pinch on the .cheek at Barnes
Veteriifs"';"Hospital in W.ancOUYer, Wash •. The actress :has been visiting
friends in the norihwest. 1
'Anxious ·Newport Owners . ..
MQb Coast Freeway Meet
• " • i " . . r. :.,,
. By EVELYN SHERWOOD
01 lllt D-ilt' 1'1191 Stiff
A· panel or local and state officials was
greeted by an ove.rnow crowd or New·
port ·Beach property owners Wednesda y,
anxious to, know if and when the Pacific
Coast Freeway will wipe out their homes.
Plainly surprised at the Cliff Haven
Association turnout at Cliff Haven School,
Newport. Beach Traffic Engineer Robert
Jaffee and his colleagues gave a report
on freeway status.
"The Balboa Bay Club has asked that
the highway be relocated to allow for
highrise buildings on their recentJy ac·
quired property across from the e.zistlng
club,''-Jaffee explained.
Grumbles and growls weu audible as
Jaffee explalnec;l the city's position so far
in the controversy.
Further dileussions .a~ plaMed Nov.
21 at IO a.m. In a Balboa Bay Club ·meet·
ing teaturing BBC Mi nager Dick Stevens
and William K. J:;lashimoto, assistant
district engineer for the State Division
of Highways.
NO coNSIDEBATION
"We hive ,never been a11owed to talk
about or •make any CQt!sideralions con-
cerning the freeway. About three years
ago tbi~·started to perk up again.
"The adopted, route "is ·still on." Jaffee
said.
There are. no· questions· concerning the
·~. ' '
highway from the'upper bay br'idg"e south.
The .city of Newport Beach Council must
sign the agreement with the California
Highway Comn1ission before plans go
ahead," he added.
"The most recent projection call s for
three bridges across the bay on Coast
Highway. There would be two complete
inte rchanges at Dover Drive and Coast
Highway~ Riverside and Tustin," he
continued.
"lt still leaves something to be de-
sired," he 'noted, "from an operational
vi.ewpoint. ''
"By 1990, the traffic projection is for
125,000 vehicles a day. At the present time
there are SS,000 on a peak summer day,"
"It's pretty local traffic," commented
the engineer.
SAVE ACCIDENTS
"Traf!ic ·al~'ays exceeds projections,"
. he noted. "The freeway will save 6,®0
accidents a year and 30 deaths in traf·
fie ."
He refused to discuss other ,route pro-
jections with the demanding audience.
He declared he would recommend to the
City Council the adoption Of the route.
He admitted the recent change of prop-
erty ownership by the · Bay Club had
brought about the re-alignment ol the
route.·
Hashimoto, assistant state high.way en·
(Se.e FREEWAY, Page!>
obviously bewildered as to their next
coU:rSe Of aclion. : · · · · 1
· Their onr; jnstrucUons. In , the motion
s11cctssfully offered ·by Sup e r·v Is or
William Phillips were that the "matter
be returned to the CAO, refined and held
in abeyance until Nov. 26." 1 -'
_ If their new recommendations follow
the line of argument offered throughout
the hearing, the committee's next recom·
, m.el)d&tion. will be .contai.ned· ln .a con·
si~erably thinner report.
Supervisor David Baker added his
vehemenr objectl:Oiis ·.to' tlioie 'of Coµnty
homeowners and a Marine corps colonel
and branded the phase 1wo report· u
"totally unrealistic and unnecessary.
;.This is something that can run Into
billloils of dt;>Uars," said Baker, "am I
wonder if every~ is r~beriftg Qtat
we ai:e gn]y • ~an -coon!)' in area. By
pursuing somethlni 'along · these unes· We .
only aggravate the lactors-.of noi_.e,.W}Ju.
tion, congestion and zoning that go. alone
with such programs, and ' I loot on thl9
report as somelhing·totally.impractical.''
. Baker pointed to the proxlmiJy of Los
Angele'.s In ternatJon1I Airport and the ~
San DJego ·airport "for thoae wtio want
world travel. ', • , ·J
"JI Uiis is what You want then 1 don't
thipk • 15 to 30 Minutes extra drivhll Um•
Is going to make tha~ much diff~~nce,'1
IWl:er said. "But [. feel that, U fat as
(See AIRPORT, P111e I)
·.
Pier Fees Oppo~ed
Two Harbor Commissi.f!ners .Objeet ..
By JOHN . VAL TERZA
ot 1t1t oiiur r 11et St•ff
Proposals far Udelands, use fees for
county areas sank a bit Wednesday·when
two-Orange County Harbor· Di.Strict com·
missioners indicated strong disfavor of
the idea. ·
Fresh from a meeting with Courity
Assessor Andrew J. Hiilsbaw, com·
missioners Frank F. Mead and W. Allen
Grubb ·both agreed that bayfi'ont dwellers
with pier permits pay considerably more
1;1 taxes than residents without tJdelaQds
pier pe~lts. . ' ~ · ·
The entire commission did not vote 6n
the matter Wednsdar.,'tiUt 'Will wait ·Until
' a special me'etini to: be "held lftU firm
comparisons on ta:r asp!cU: of the -issue
are furnished' by the Uaeaaor. ·
"We (Mead and Grubb)~!Jave had ·a
meeting with Mr. Hinshaw and we were
convinced Uµt the tax~s paid. by property
owners wltf1 pier permits were substan-
tially higher. But the commlalion
shouldnt rely on heafsai but. wait. to
m1:1.ke ·a decision after ,the usessor puts
these teelings ln ~iling," Mf.a~ said.. ~
Grubb ·said because of ihe llJgfler tax
bills they pay, pier . pennit bbmeown~i
would be vlcUms of ;'double taxation" lf ihe county pier fen were. to go .into ef. feet. ' · · i
"I realize · that va?'ious political agen.
cies are having a ·tough time balancing
budgets and are tryin1 to reach om to
·(See PIER'FEE,.Poge I) :
Fast Ketches
Waging Duel
To La Paz
Apollo 12 Lauric-h
. .
Back on Schedule
~--..kiiQd'ootk-',.),,-~. 'I'· " \,;..,,.:·:..J~··;,·~ '"'' •• , '"r,'P'.J ' i . ~~ ·.(':-'.'""•:.-,, . . PaMage and l!lackfin, appealed lo be C;U'E · ,KJ;NNE!>Y· -t.~1)' ~. 4ttftCb
·waging a classic ocean racing duel dov(n Cl"flWS won ·a race W"I~, tl(M today,
-1heBiiaClllfom1i coafflOill)l'Jn.Ulril--ropiaced-a.:leaky~lll-IH J Lon B · Apollo 12 moonshlp and ,ahned toward an annua . i ucti t? La Paz yacht race. on-time Start Friday of Amerk:a'a RCOnd
1ccord1ng .to radia reports ·received Jtinar landing minion.
late this motning by Carroll Hudson of "We knew they would do It," said .
Newpor(Beach, Windward Passage, skip. jubilant command module pJlot Richard
pered by Mark-Johnson was out in front F. Gordon. "We've got-a great creW here. . , ' some great people. We had .all the con-w1th some 70 miles to go before rounding fidence In the world in them. .
Cape San Lucas. "Ii's fixed. It's even got hydrogen in it
Black.fin, radio reports Indicate, ha~ lik~ it's sqpposed to."
held the lead Wednesday afternoon but Assured ttiat everything was under C1ln·
did not reports its position to race offi. trol for an 8:22 a.m. PST blastoff,
cials today and its exact position now Gordon. Charles "Pete" Conrad and Alan
was unknown. . L. Bean w~t acrobatic nying at neari>y
Wind for the race has shifted from Patrick Air Force Base. They took off in
southeast to north and moat boats are fonnation, flying separate white T38 Jet
flying spinnakers in the clear, sunny traiper~. . . .
weather. Northwesterly winds are ex· As he walk~ to bis a~~aft, Bean sll!d
peeled tonight after rounding the cape. that at first 1t looked hire the _hydrogen
Folkrwing Passage and B:lackfin were tank . could not ,be re pl.aced In ,Ume to
Concerto and Dorothy O., bOth about 160 meet the .Friday laun~h date. Thit would
miles from the cape. Vector -which is have meant a months delay.
relaying radio reports to Hudson -has
•. 'lit ;, ,_ , ~ • ~. fllo
· .. "8'!1 tlley did tt, ind It muet ha ..
1--wen 1 Jot iii• effort,'! Pid the IU11ar
· tnnte_pt1ot.:.!!We!.ve...aot..:miliA;Jea.flT,
llllaip people 1n·lhl• prosram." .
'••one hodr and a day from now we
ought to be going," Bean said before lak·
lnli.alf at 7:57 a.m.
"You watching the clock . or
· soinething?" aiked·Gordoa.
'\You betcha," replied.Bean who will be
making hJs first spaceflight.
Alter returnina: frorri the ;40-minute
flight, Ute astronauts drove from-Ple air
base to the 'rnoohport, 35' mtlel' awa)r, to
bru&ti ·up once again on moonshipv Oylna:
procedures.
N~~~~~~~~~r:e~: ~1!!~!7:::
11 :31 i.m. Friday or lhey ·and tholisand1
of support per!JOMel Will :11ve to W8it UJ>.o
Ill lie<:. 14.
Thtre is no second. chan,? ihis pK>nlb •.
"We· look real gOod_ now.~' re~'
launch oper~tiorufmanager PauJ 'c.:non.
nelly. · · ·
• 215 miles and Rascal some 200 miles to go
DAILY PILOT boating editor Al Lock·
abey, is 340 miles away and Alvlento
300.
Most of the mystery surrounding the
early stages of the race finally were
cleared Wednesday a£ternoon when
Blackfin broke a long radio silence.
Newport Students Hear
The ya~ht radioed race officials that it
was temporarily dropping out a t
r..tagdalena Bay because or an injured
crewman. Bob Barneson of Newport
Bea('h. But later the ketch reported that
Barneson was being treated by a physi·
clan crewman, Dr. Frank Lossy or
Berkeley and was in no danger. Barneson
apparently suffered a mild heart attack.
't'he rest of the 28-boat ~leet was strung
out behind the two leaders who were
some 600 miles down the coast, with
Arlana, George Thorson's Cal 40 from
Los Angeles Yacht Club apparently the
corrected time leader.
Second in Corrected time, according to
Long Beach Yacht Club officials, was
Dona J, a Cal 36 skippered by John
Roberts of California Yacht Club, Marina
del Ray.
Ariana Is a Call B entry, while Dona
, (See RACE, Page 21
VetsonBoth War Stands
By THOMAS FORTIJNE
01 11'11 o.llr 'tlM Iliff
Newport Harbor High School student.!
taking part in a moratorium-unity week
program today heard two Vietnam
veterans take opposing stands· of sup-
porting the President's policy and.calling
for outright pullout.
Students questioned the spea~ers at a
7:30 a.m. assembly, then later during an
extended lunch hour forriled w a r
discussion groups.
Attendance at the moratorium ac·
tivltles was optional and only about 200
students showed up for the early
assembly.
Tom Hayden, 28, lQtroduced as a·m03t
decorated veteran, said, "Thole who op-
pose the President's plan to end the war
ere only prolonging what they oppose."
He aaid the United States ls In the war
fighting to give the •Vtetnamese people a
chance to detennjr\e their own future.
Hayden Is a m<1irketing manager for ~
ltollywood computer company.
The Other· veteran, Ralph Barracano,
22. now a UC Irvine student, said, "U.S.
troops do not fight for mllltary glory or
'because It la tradition. They flj:llt in ouT
name: But It isn't ,our war. It isn't the
peoples'"war. rlsn't-correct' and It· 1iri1t.
in Our interest. It ls In the·iliterest Of·a few," ·· ' ·
..A ~documentary film titled 0Vletnarn~
Why?"' pi:Oduced by Aear,t 'Metr,onom~
NeWs was showp. at tht assefl'.I~. Bad
guy background mqsic was played when
Ho Chi Minh Vf&s Sho:f.n and· the harrator
said, "Archittet or a tiloody ctVil 'l"ar tha;t
rlrove 1he French from Jndoc;hln.a, he O°'f wat~es .~ovttouSTy ·{tS ,Spath Yletnin\
prmpers. , , ·
. '
decide Is are the consequences of no war
worse than war?"
"The horrors of war ;n P,id Bai-·.
ra~aro. "It ls a silly Jtgument except in
the case when war la not.worthwhile."·
A student aaked what WOUld .. happen to ·
the,mlllion and a' half Catholics in South•·
Vietnam if, the United States unllaitra.lly
(See HARBOR, Pa1e Z)
Orange
Weadler
A coolintr·off per1.;.,, with only
slight decrease in 9'Ullhine, 11 Fri·
day's forecut for the Orange
eoa.t. Look for, patchy, fog Ille!
temperatures sangt11K from 70
along the coast to 77, fltrtPer in·
land; • <
INSmE TODAY ... . .
Hoto 47e today's ~outh bd'ng
"turned on" &o"-Vi• 4;uo1 bw o
co~rocy lnoollling , I/It, ~Ir
medaar N~tw• can!lntmcm JoMi&n ·
Rlllh lell.t th• b&lfdC llol1/ Ullng
lnjormotlo• h• gleOftl(I w~fle
l'O'lng aa a hippie. Ste Pagt 14. . ' .
'
. '
. .
'I--'..: , f, OAILY llll.OT if.11,,.... · llayden accused. Barracano or· playlnf
to the 11tude1Jls' emotions. "War Is bid,'
he said, 1'but lhe qesUon you 'have to -FOl.''COW THIS SNOWY EGRET ON A TOUR-OF!fl'P'ER"liil:WPORt !AV (SEE PAGE 19)
I'
' -f
~' .., . .. '
J. '
-.
DAAoY PllCT N
High Schools
Mixed on
. . . ;.. ~Moratorium ..
,; • Hiah l!IChools in the Newpott.-Mesa ·u.ultd SChool DJJtrlcl acted on an U>di·
;vidwl basis regarding today'• mora·
torlwn. , At li;&tancia High Scbool,. Costa Me&a,
..ho pr<lll'aml wttt planned for today, nor
· were any rtq1l<lted by Liie lludenla, said
I 'Floyd .Hamman, prin<lpal.
..... At CQft.&Mesa High _~~}, a roe>!!!"-"
tnade available for students who wishta
I to discuss the Vietnam War during their
I unocl>eduled periods. ·
The forum was "bulcatly set u~ by a
lfCIUP oi interested students," Aid Bill
Va..,..., usiltant ~rinclpal.
A morniDC usembly wu held at eo.
rooa del Mar High School, with three
guest speakers from UC Irvine. Attend·
ance waa on a voluntary basis, and the
program was studtnt-planntd.
The speakers wert: UCI faculty mem·
ber Dr. Grover Sttphtna, dJJCussJng UPorlllMioft Growth and their RIJaUon
to the Vietnam SltuaUon;" Greg Hoff·
man, sluclenl, on the history of the Viet·
nam War and other aspects, and Ralph
Buracano, a UCt studtnt and ex-Marine
wbo served in Vietnam, giving his views
on the war.
From Page 1
HARBOR ...
'wlthm.w. . .
"All right thtte are going to be a lot of
people kill"' by the North," conceded
'Bairacano. "On the other hand we can ~eep our puppet strings on them. Do We
think the United Stat.es ii so Btrong we
can interfere with the natural forces of
blatorJ?"
"It's kind rl funny," countmd Hayden.
''I think hack and I'm glad •• lnlmened
!IJ•lnst-HiUu to c:Mnc< the coune of history."
A ltl.ldent Jtated, "Wouldn't you agree
at Pearl Harbor we had' no choice but at
Tonkin Gulf we bad a cholct."
"That's right and your e 1 e c t e d
concre11s made the choice," replied
Hayden.
Hayden, while answering questions,
Pointed lnto the audience and said, "11lls
yo<m11 lady with the hllrblnd... .
Steven Slap, a long-haired boy stood up,
and the 1tudents applauded and laughed.
Hayden made the point, "Today there
are thi'ee mllllon popular self defense
fon:<S In South Vielnlm, Including hip
ocbool llud-~up against com-
munlsm."
He said the Saigon government was
popul1rly ele<:ted and that the l96'l "I.,._
Uoo he helped supervl!e u a ~
Amerfcan adv,_. in one ~.,
-''jiiii6161y WU fJii' -JqatJiiiilO~
tion ever held on the face of the earlh."
Bmacano aaid Vietnam la a OOWllrJ
witll a ltJnl blM«y of corrupt and outalde
control "Since the people ire JI09r," he
uid, "they promlle allegiance to
whomever proml.sts to keep their
atom.lchs full But 10111e of them go out
al nlgbl to join the Viet Cong.''
'"The movie you just .,._. aaid,
•Everytlrne we kill a Viet cone it 1ttms
like five more ot' them pop up.• Why ls
that? Are Liiey like maJlc dragona?"
The lunch hour discussions were led by
eight students whose beliefs range from
conterVaUve to liberal. They are Greg
Og1lvie. Steven Slap, Mlrlin Walker,
Peter DeGraff, Mike Rucker, Sanda Hall,
Dive Patillo and John Burton. ·
The war discusaion acUvit.iel!J were ap-
proved by the high &Choo! administration
1t the request of students. Clas& time was
:shortened for the programs.
Fashion Island
Going to Dogs
Fashion lsland ls 1oing to the dogs
Saturday.
A free. semiannual, full breed dog
show will be held in the north park area
of the Newport Beach shopping plaza,
with a 10 a.m. judaina: time, according
to Mrs. Jerry Dwyer, chairman.
Dfdt'l' PllOI
DIANN COion "*""' .. ~AJIY
••Nrf N. WeH ---J·~· 91. C1tl..,
VIII ,,_... _. °""'" .......
n.....Kenrl ·-,.,...... A. M.,,S.f.---. Je-F. C.IA111 --"" ----,211 w ..... ,i... '"'"'" Ma .. ~P.0 .... 1171.'1'61. --c.lfl Mitt: Sii *"' ... lfrtef ~ lttdl• m """' ,..,..... ............... ~ .. 1111 '""'
• ~ .,,.__ . . . ' . ' .
'.froops Stand Guard
\
-Antiwar Protest·
1
Weekend Begin·s
From WU. llttvlm
A weekend of uUwar protests, plaMed
to attract hundred! or Ulousands of
demoostrators, got gradually under way
acroa the nation today.
'Ibe government was rtady to aet
swiftly to put down any violence. A
40,000..man !iecurity force was assembled
to prevent trouble in Washington.
put down 1ny violence that 'micht octur
Jn the Capital durina; this weekend's a~
liwar protest.s, but the great majority
will never be seen unless caned on to
restore order.
OAILY l'llOY"""' ~ llld!MI "'911W HER CAR TURNED TURTLE, EXPECTANT MOTHER RECEIVES AID AFTER CRASH
Met• Wom•n Eac•pn. Serious lnfury In Accld•nt •t J1mbor" Ro.1d •nd E••f Bluff Drive
A sunrise service of prayen, readings
and 50f'lg attracted 26 persons at the St.
Joseph, Mo., Civic Center.
Afost in evidence wW ht 3,000 District
of Columbia policemen, the first-line
security unit. Backin1 them up will be
9,000 riol·trained Marines and army
paratroopers from North' Carolina. 2.5,000
other military personnel already in the
Washington area, 2,700 D.C. National
Guardsmen, 400 NaUonal Park police, 125
U.S. marshals, se veral hundred FBI
agents and 2,500 yolunteer marshala from
the ranks of the demonstrator•s
themselves.
Frona Page 1
PIER FEE. • •
rcce:Ve new rev!nues.
"But these fees always start out on
!mall amounts ... and they always seem
to go up," Mead said.
He said that in lime the fee structure
could aet so high "it could kill the goose
that laid tbe golden eu."
Newport Beach city councllmen are
wrestling with the same concept this
month. but city feeling seems: to run in
favor or the fees, despite a strong public
outcry.
The first formal hearing Ofl the city
proposal ($1 per foot of boat space ,per
)~BJl).wUI be·held Nov. 24. More strong
opposition by boat and pier owners is ex·
peC!ed.
The original intent of the county fee
ldf.a was to make the Harbor Dtstrict'a
leeJ parallel to the proPosed city levy.
"Jn this case I don't think we should
lie In so closely with the clty," Grubb
told IJllow c:ommlHlon<ra.
Commissioners received more than a
"""" of letters protesting ·lmposlUoo of '
From Page 1
FREEWAY ...
U!e fees for noncomme.rctal private use
of county tidelands.
They promised to make a decision on
the matter before Nov. 28 when a report
from the commission is due on the desks
' of county supervisors on the iaaue.
A special meeting will be called soon
after the asseaaor's information is receiv·
ed.
Specifically, the commision w\U seek
figures on typical tax bills received by
residents wlOt pier privileges, residents
living next to county tidelands without
pler right3 and homeowners who don't
live nett to Udelands areas.
UCI Students
~
In 'Mixed Bag'
Vietnam Protest l
Many atudents stayed away from clan
today and others found their professors
were not hokUng them as UC Irvine
observed the first day of a tw!Klay Viet-
nam War Moratorium for November.
The campus administration took a
gtneer. said today there were sUlJ dis-hands-off policy although staUng It ls not cu~ions concemlna; the Bay Club univeralty policy to cancel claues.
proposal. . It was a mb:ed·bag of protest.
Jaffe said until a short time ago· lbe Some students left campus to pass out
city wouldn't even talk about the free· leaflets at shopping centers, 1<>me
way. picketed and some manned tables to sell
"Now we are discussing things," he antl·war materials.
added. "We agree we need a £low of Speakers held forth on a variety of sub-trafflc: This is the place it should be. jects, ranging over and beyond the war.
There are no bean fields. It is all down· Among them were the Women's Libera·
town." . , , lion Front speaking on new ideas for
.. The ~le ~u~1enq muttE!:':ed duruig rai&Jnl, ~hil~n. the Biological 40 Com· ~1scuss10l)S. 1 mlttee, apeaklng on the J>!>lluting of not
LIJTY Wils4?11;sald the department has pnly Vlt!tnam but your owTI country, the
spent a ~t · c!f ... tJme studying. hl.ghwa:y ..:.-"11nlvenlty-Interfatth·-ctnter, on the role
mlstakea Ind admitted the 1~do~ coa~ ol the CltrisUan in the anti-war move-
freeway route ~ some unfortunate ment and SDS on blocking recruiters on
cu.~F"·1 sta "be 'd "th River ide campus. or n . nee, aa1 • e . s Draft counselling and child care
tnlerchan&e would leave th~ busme.ss services wert: provkled all day
hulldinp hut take the parking.'' E · Juded all . errtll Both 1peaters agreed on the proposed vents inc a noon? y, Ill a
plan for a north route going around Hoag ,theater, do;lt-you:raelf war ~pture, and
Hospital a peoples revoluUonary Jug band in·
Wilson° commented that there 11 no eluding ·~~one with any instrument who
study ol any other route . cared to )Oln. .
The meeUng originally scheduled to All this was leading up to a rock con-
conclude at i :3o p.m., was conUnued at cef'!. and live-Jn on the central lawn
the request of the demanding audience tonight and march Friday with Cal State,
for answers to questions. Fullerton stud ents to Hughes Ground
"It will take ten years," Jaffe said. Systems' aerospace plant in FuUerton.
"There is no money to purchase homes One table manned by volunteer& from
in the freeway route." the ~Cl Young Republicans -agai~st
The last acquisition was 1963 \li'hen 11 ~e tide of protest -was gathmng
properUes on Kings Road were pur· signatures for a petition supporting
chased from the Irvine Company. Preskletrt Nison's Vietnam policy.
''The freeway has to go somewhere " Despite the varied acUvlties, the
Jaffe concluded. "The traffic problein general aura on c~mpus was quiet lt
has to be · resolved. The city council almost seemed as if aome students had
could make up its mind to sign the taken the moratorium as an opportun1ty
agreement by January." for a four-day weekend.
From Page l
AIRPORT. • •
Orange County Is concerned, the price is
too high .''
ThE. board was warned early In Its
PhaSfl Two deliberations that it had
"done nothing towards implimenting
many recommendations contained in
Phase One" and lhal it was "on the
verge of eclipsing Jn the Newport Beach
arta levels of sound wh ich woukl result
in 1he soundproofing or demolition of
homes in al least one other country."
Dan Emory of Newport Beach told the
board that 30 dally departures of jet
aircraft were now being recorded at
Orange County Airport. "a figure that
advances noise levels regarded by one in·
ternaUonal U50Clalion as intolerable to
m:iny homes In the Upper Bay area."
&n1ory warned that homeowners In
Mesa-Drive. Palisades Road, Dover
Shores, Udo Isle, Santa lsabel, and the
Bluffs were among those now directly
threatened or 11re within the noise level
limits that would call for soundproofing
or destruction of the homes in West
Germany.
Noise levels at Orange County Airport
had now reached two.tturdJ or the sound
emllaioo re1dlnp registered at Los An-
gtles InternaUooal Airport.. Emory nld. uralnt the au.pervl10rs to "not wait until
the llUdy ta out before worklng·to reduce
thet:e mounUn« noite }evelt,"-be warned Ille hoard lo "bW In mind the fact thal
flO mtWoa worth ol homu In Liie New·
pon MU may have to be bulldozed out
of the-rapidly advanclna noise, zone."
Marine Corps Col. KeMetb T. Dyk"
w#Md 1upervl1t>rs that they could ex·
pect. no relief from 1 "non-ellltent lac· for" that invariably appears on county
'""'"' e11 airport Juues-the J>Oos!ble Joint milltary-clvlllan "" of such 1iiiil u El Toro.
"We have no lJllirtlng plans to vacate
El 'l'oro and U we had we -"'·ould have
nowhere elH to co.'' the llfarJne officer
qulellJI 11ttsoed.
I . '
"We are unalterably opposed to joint
use, it would interfere wlth exacting
A1arine. aviation training that bears no
resemblance to civilian procedures and
we are not prepared to recognize any
claims for clvlllan use of our airfields.
"You are," the colonel emphasized to
the board, "just wasting your Ume."
Isidore Schneider of University Park,
president o( the University Park Com·
munity Association, warned supervisors
that the board faced "probably $200 mil-
lion in lawsuits if something is not done
about continued encroachment of noise
and pollution problerl'll!I ."
He accused the board of failing to act
on Phase One recommendations and of
"ignoring the justified demands of airport
area property owners for long overdue
relief."
Tustin residents whose homes now lie
under the revised flight path of jell us.ing
Orange County Airport alsq urged the
board to clai.np down on jet traffic 11nd
oppose the entry of Continental Airlines
Into the county facility .
Continental was recently given permis-
sion to fly a Pacific Northwest route from
Orange COunty Airport and objectors
noted that Paclllc Southwest Airlines
may soon be another newcomer to the
county aviation· acene. Entry of both was
hlllerly oppooed throughoul the hearing.
M1yor Doreen Marahall ol N "'l'O'I
Buch urged supervlaor1 to order Liie
lmplementaUon of th• oecoad pl1ue ol
the airport muter plan.
Mayor Mmhall alao wll'ned Liie hol1'!
of Immediate fUture expansion of senrlce1
from the county airport-"recent devfll.
opments that have unduscored the ur1·
ency of the need for completion of the
Phase Two study.
"Tbe time 1vallable ••• Is r1pldly
running out." ihe sakf. "We fear that
the dynomlct of economic ~ , . ,
wlll provide chaotic resulte In the absence
of objective 1tudl.e1 upon which you can
ba sc rour declaions."
Woman Escapes
Injury in Crasl1
An expectant mother escaped serious
injury Wednesday night when her car
collided with another vehicle and over·
turned at the intersection of Jamboree
Road and EastblUff Drive in Newport
Beach.
Police aald Mrs. Peggy Jungsl of 238
Tulane Road. Cotta Mesa, who is five
mootha prepant, was southbound on
Jamboree Road at about 6 p.m. Wednes·
day when a car driven ~ Mrs. Gerald-
ine Narr, 50, of ms Tuitln Ave., New·
port Beach pulled out of Ealtbluff Drive.
Mrs. Junpt's car--rolled over severat-
times. She was treated at Hoag Memor-
ial Hospital for cuts and bruises and
released.
From Page 1
RACE •••
J. ts In Claa D. .
Poaltionl u of 8 a.m. roll call today:
Alerlon M 50, 115 za. Alvlento, II ll.
ttS 03, Aquarius 25 38, 11 38, Arlana
24 19, 11C 55, Aventura 25 .fa, 118 20.
Bohemta U 18, llJ 48, Charisma U
24 58, 113 33, Concerto 24 29, llJ 211, De-
binda 211 30, us 11, Donna J. 21111, m 11,
Dorotby 0 M 38, Ill 15.
Irish Mill U 3t, 113 13, Isobar U 29,
114 ~. L'alleero 25 14, 115 %7, La Prensa
26 19, llf u.
Pasado Mana 2e 39, 116 32, Pericus
.2$ 'ZT, 114 00, Rascal 24 20, 113 19, Robon
ill U IO, 111 23.
Serapia !S 28, 114 OS. Severn 25 55,
113 SS, Tanqueray 2.5 zz. 113 00, Vector
24 56, 113 ot, Windward Pa.saage 23 17,
ll1 o.1.
Student Crushed
In Elevator Fall
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A 22-ye.,...ld
medical technologist student wu crushed
to death Wednesday when an elevator
collapsed at Sutter Memorial HospllaJ.
.
The Studtnt A-1obillzation Committee at
Brown Universi,ty In Providence, R.J.,
distributed leaflets at factories urging
workers to oppose the war,
In Washington Pentagon police ar·
rested approximately 150 persons in·
eluding some Catholic and Episcopal
clergymen after they attempted to con·
duel an incense-burning "mass for
peace" inside tpe military headquarters.
The arresta were carried out with llttle
more than Incidental pushing and bump.
Ing aft" Penta;on 111ardl wll'ned the
group that tta presence was obatruding
Pentagon acUvltles.
A 40,000-man security force is ready to
Government intelligence s o u re e s
believe the antiwar weekend may attraet
up to 100,000 persons, only one-fifth as
many as the organizers first esUmated.
These sources belleve there might be
,;mall, sporadic outburits of violence but
nothing that cannot be handled by the
D.C. police.
8\Jt if more serious outbreaks occur.
military personnel can be summonid
from federal lnstallallona -· they were stationed ill •reserve, hidden flOID'
public view. ;
Nixon Tliiinks Backers
Of V·iet Policy on Hill
WASHJNGTON <UP!) -Pnsident
Naun today told lawmakers supporting .
his V:letnam policies that their efforts
"might buten the day " when peace will
come.
The Pre.sldent made an extremely
unusual vllll to C.pltol HUI to thank bolh
House and Senate memben for support
as young Americans streamed into the
Washington for antiwar demonstraUons.
Nixon, b an apparent attempt at
marshaling even greater congressional
endonemnt for his Vlelnam policy, first
vistted the House chamber to thank 300
members for signing 1 resolution sup-
porting hi• J)Ollcy.
A separate visit was arranged for the
SenaU: in the first double-appearance of
ita kind by a Prealdent thal coogreaslonal
obaervers could remember. ·
NlJon'a words of appreciation were
diret:ted to the.House members who_slCn!--
ed the reJOluUon 1Upporting his Vietnam
pell!! formula, and to 59 aenatora who
signed a letter of similar 5tlpport.
The Pruldent quickly told hou5'
memben why he wu there.
"I want to txprea opprectation to Liie
many membera of the House, on both
aides of the aisle, for their suppcct ti. a:
ju.st peace in Vietnam," he said.
Refemng to Liie pending House molu-
tl0t1 endo1'31ng tµs "effort.a to neaotJltt a
just peace," Nixon asserted: "I real,ize It
might. hasten the day lhat just peace
could come."
HI! told the congressmen "I believe we
will actueve a just peace In Vietnam,"
and that when it comes it will be beclUle
they and most Americans put aside other
considerations in the national Interest. t
The House resoluUon, according
Rep. Jim Wrlght CD-Tex.), one of .
authors, had 181 of the House's 1·
Republicans and 119 of the 244. Democrat.a
as sponsors -exactly 300 -as Nb:on
spoke.
Nixon conceded the difficult and con-
troveraial nature of the Vietnam war.
Ahd he cited evidence that Democratl
and Jkl'!!bllcani.alike had !'!It aside par-
ty considerations and -atone wttlf••fhe
great majority of American•" -bid
thrown their support to his efforts to at.
lain a just peace.
"I believe we wilt achieve 1 just peace
tn Vietnam,'' the Prelident declared
speaking without notes.
handeau
broadloom by
The now spirit of today ccmes alive In your home wt th
this plush, •11·wool broadloom from Karastan-ChandelU.
Choose from 00 great colors. from pale to potent.
Foraet your furn iture style: smooth vefyety Chandeau
gou treat with them atr. So look now!
Chandeau, one of meny tine .broadlooms and ruas
from Karastan. · • • -• ·
Only $10.95 sq. yd.
~ IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 646-0275 for•• expert
c1rpet consutt•nt who wil: come to your home with umpl1s
without ••y obli91tioo to you!
H.J.GARREfT fURNrpJRE
2115 HARBOR ILVD. PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DES IGNERS COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646·0175
,
l
I '
' ! \
•
•
THE TOUR STARTS AT 9 A.M. WHERE BACKBAY DRIVE CLIMBS THE EAST BLUFF
a Wall{ Around
Upper Newport Bay
Photos by Lee Payne
Of Dilly PUol Siii!
'IT'S ONE OF THE LAST COASTAL INLETS WHERE MIGRATORY BIROS CAN WINTER'·
-Sl'RITI LY ORANDMOTtflR. -BEARDED YOUTH LISTEN 'NATURAL INCUllATOR FOR FISH'
--. ..... __... .... ·-~-
N DAILY 'ILOT
UPPER N!WPORT llAY -LOOKING SOUTH FROM WEST BLUFF
They came to see Upper Newport Bay. There
were about 150 of them -some old, some not
so old, some young. Most had seen the bay ·be·
fore, but not like this -up close, on root.
The walking tour · started •here you park~
Y.OUT car -at the spo!. !. h e r e _the dusty o!!_
road that rims the bay"""l:ielow the c!Ufa climbs
the hill to East Bluff Drive.
There were three speakers.
John JohnsoO, a biology teacher at t}earby
Corona del Mar High School, talked about the
importance of the bay as a living laboratory.
"It is one of the last coastal inlets where
migratory birds ca n winte r alter their long
flights from the north," he said.
Another speaker was Bob Wheatley from Ful·
lerton. He's a member of the Sierra Club who
earns his living as a chemist for the Union Oil
Company.
lie talked about the fish that br'ed In the Up-
per Bay and how ill warm, shallow waters serve
as a natural incubator fer bass, halibut, smelt,
perch and anchovy .
Tite third speaker, research enatneer Frank
Robinson of Newport · Beach, made It clear the
tour was more than a nature walk on a pleaaant
Saturday morning. Ill ·cqllilzm, lllt Orange
County branch oi the Sierra Club and a group
known as Friends of Upper Newport ~y, have
designs on public ·opinion.
These groups don't agree with existing plans
to-develop the Upper Bay. They 're not saying
it should be left ·entirely to the birds: They do
~want nlore ittenUOif pm<! -w p ub lit llitet"tslS In
the bay, .Robinson §aid.
Boiled down, it is Orange County's classic
problem: Access to public tidelands -as shores
o( the Upper Bay are classified -111 controlled
by a private property owner. In short, you can't
get there from here.
The question: How to guarantee the prlfalc
prOperty owner the right to develop his land a.<>
he sees fit while, at the same lime, guarapteeing
Uie public's right to use Its tidelands.
It's a knotty question. Fiinny thing about the
Back Bay. Used to be nobody thought It was
good for much. Then the population beian press-
ing In and waterfront property started getting
scarce and people were getting concerned again
about natural resources.
Anyway, the next tour ls Dec. e. It starts at 9
a.m. where the dusty old road that rims the
bay below the cliffs climbs lbe hill to East Blur~
Drive.
TWO OP 250 WALKERS POND.ER LE CT URER'S POINT
I I
" .. .. .. -. "' ..... "-' ... ~~ .. ,~ .................... ~, ........... , ............ , ..... , ......... ,,-;·,.· ·.·.·t .J,1.\ ...•• -.·.; ...... ..
If DlllY PllOT
1----.. -.MUM--~ _ _...._.
..
' J"l lj
lJ '.
Cli,i,r~s Will Come ot Age ;-
-A:nd.l~JJney-Friday . .
LONDON (UPI') -
Sometimt ,rrtdly n • g b t
beneth the 1lltter~·n1
chandeliers of Bu~
Palace Queen Ellzahiilh JI will
lift high her cblmpagne gla95
and loa!l .the flllute IJIOnarch,
Charles III, who I! 21 Friday.
Though fulure king, be I!
now Prince Charles, th e
Prince of Wales, ~ the
champagne ls a special vin-
tage laid down years ago by
hi! grandfather, Kin& G<Orae
FriW night's ''family
circle'' In the · gilded state
rooms of Buckingham .Palace
will· feature a perfonnance by
violinist Y ehud.i Menuin, whom
Charles met recently and br
vited to help him celebrate.
All back -tie d1rme:r w i 11
prettde Afenuln. A concert
orcbestra will cater t o
Charles' clusical tastes with
a program ot Mozart. Charles
himself may treat the guests
to a cello solo.
!t wltt probably bO a lismJ.
Ing, rather than dancing, pat·
ty. Such ''Ustening" parties
have been rare in Buckingham
Palace since the Edward.tan
era.
About 1,000 gUts !or Chari.,
have arrived at the palace.
Presents Include a polo pony,
solid gold curt links from
jewelers in l\fontreal and a
box of lucky white heather tram the royal staff at
Balmoral Castle in ScoUand.
VJ, for this occaaion. "jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Once Charles was a shy!•
young lad whose clandestine
s11;!g of cherry brandy while at
prep school gave Britons a
chuckle.
Today he is no longer shy.
... . . .. . . . .. . .... .. .
•
He is serioos, sensitive,
unspoiled.
But not loo serioos. His wit
is sharp, his eye for the hearty
laugh keen.
K-Mac Drug & Discount Store
Our everyday prices are com-
petitive with all d i s c o u n t
stores. Try us for your health
and beauty aids at discount
prices. -
STEREO SENSATION!
Shark Net Protects
Nixon in Florida
At a recent Cambridge
University revue the future
Charles Ill appeared in a
garbage can in one skit. He
brought down the house.
Charles still blushes easily,
• yet his composuri seldom, if
ever, falters.
Charles is a millionaire, but
3333 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach
Acrosa from Newport Beach City Hall
Phone: 675-6611
The colorful sounll! of
Orange County Music
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
....
From Fashion Island. Newport Beach
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) Teen-age neighbors of the
he gives hall his income to the I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! British people while bi sl=
-The tropical waters around President on Key Biscayne
President Nixon's bland home make a hobby of angling for
and private beach here abound sharks from the seawalls of
"'ith so many sharks the White private homes.
House has put up a shark net Dr. Arthur Myrl>erg, a
to keep NixoD sale while specialist on &barks at the
swim.ming. University of Miami InsUtute
Jerry w a r re n I a!Sistant of Marine Science near Key
White Hoose press secretary, Biscayne, said sharks are
said Jn reply to a newsman 's potential hazards to swimmers
telephone question: ''Thelll is but added: "There are
a shark preventive, treated millioos ol people who come to
net around the President's south Florida waters every
properly ill the bay." year. Only once every year or
In .the last· Week, while Nix· two does an attack occur."
on was visiting Florida, trap-The last person known to
pers from the nearby tourist have been killed by a shark
aUracUon, Sequarium. pulled around Key Biscayne v. as
six tiger sharks in the 12-to skin-diver William Dandridge,
14-foot range from the Key tom apart June 24, 1961, by a
Biscayne area, in sight or tiger shark estimated at 18
downtown Miami , according to feet.
Dr. William 111. Stephens, Many other sharks favor the
shark specialist al Uie at· wann waters along nearby
tract.Ion . Miami Beach. Says Myrberg
Other shark varieties found q( the shark hazard: "There
In the area include lemon are more individuals who die
sharks, black _lips and bull -in-the United ~stales-every
sharks, all of which commonly year from bee stings or light·
run 10 feet in length, Stephens ning t h a n get bitten by
said. sharks ."
Books as Gifts •••
•esweto ........
are mailed wttll MH
The Bookstall
333 E. 17th St., Co•ta Meoa
548-4811
-
mother the Queen Is finding it
hard to keep royal
establishments going on $1.1
million a year.
He probably is the most
popular male royal family
figure in Britain since Edward
Vlll, not the Duke of Windsor.
So Friday night before a
gathering of 500 close friends
in the vast palace the Queen
toasts the traditional
adulthood ol. the future king.
Charles will begin collecting
an aMual tax.free income Fri·
day of $264,000. The amount
should be double but...Charles
is giving half to the govern-
ment to .help bol ster the
economy.
He also inherits stocks,
jewels acd valuable art ab-
jects left to him by his
grandfather, King George VI.
Their total value, is con-
siderable, but is a royal family
secret.
The lax-free status of his
annual income of $528,000
from the Duch of Cornwall in
southwest England m a k e s
Charles a co nsiderable
millionaire. for millionaires in
Britain are in ·the 90 perctnt
tax brackel.
Beach Cle1·k
To Get Trip
Paul J o n e s , lluntington
Beach City Clerk, is going· to
take a trip to Denver Jan. 21-
23.
Jones will be attending the
.exccuth··e board meeUng of
the Jnter.1ational Institute of
f.lunicipal Clerks, of wh ich he
was elected a trustee last ~1ay
In Sl Louis.
LEARN FROM THE EXPERTS!
:JJon l • /ttt:J6
Orange County Florists' Assaciation's
HOLIDAY SHOW
Sunday, November I b, 1969 1'-5 PM
Jamboree Room of the Newporter Inn
I I 07 Jamboree Road Newport Beach * Wedding Fash ion Show * Floral E,hibits * Demonstrations by outs ta nding
floral designers * Door Prizes ! ! ! ! !
ADMISSION $1.50 PER PERSON
exceffent opporlunil'I lo
A I "C"1raJ.e (7 " p learn b~e J1 ..;)ecrels Of
Orange Counl'I; lop /foraf Je:iigner6
while galhe1·ing hoAJa'I Jeco1-aling idea:J.
SEE OUR HOLIDAY DISPLAYS!
Hulrisms "Q.u•1;1y .. , s ...... s•"'· 1,., ..
2640 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA -546°5525
Deck your halls •
with Christmas music
for One Dollar.
This yea r,. fill your home with the joyful
sounds of Chri stmas ... 'vi th this newly recorded
RCA stereo album.
"Christmastime in Carol and Song" can be
yours for just $1 if you join our Christmas Club or
open a checking or savings account at Southern
California First National Bank.
Decked out in a colorful foldout jacket,
this album also makes a beautiful gift.
.. Come into any of our 50 · 90UTHERN-i
offices for your album . And enjoy
holiday music this Christmas and
foryears to come .
SIDE ONE
J..RTifUR FIEDLER Ii. )ftdley: "Jo¥ To TM '4'0t'lt1.•
Hi1 Otthf.llr1. & Cllol'us ~Ji110lc Bt/11," "A.ll'Cl!f' I• A
~loitgtr.'" ~M'e M'iao\ l'IW. A
~lfm"'J Cltri.il,..u'"
ARTHUR FIEDLER &: "Qrrol qf /he &/Li"
Hi1 Choru1 •
STEVE LAWRENCE-"Go TtR I! 0. TM Mou,./!J,,. ..
ARTHUR JllEDLER A;
His 0rc)w,,lfa
Armt:UR FIEDLER I ''Silmlt .\"iQW'"
Hil Onhealra & ChGrUI
sri:vt LAWRENCE/ 'ff11m.· rro"'t fir. C4ru:~·~'" EYDIE GORME-
ARntUR FIEDLER I
Hi1 Orcheitra
LEONTYNE PRICE-"1 WoV.t• . .\1 .' r;·~·1..1,, ·•
ARTHUR FIEDLER" Ilia Ordlee;tra
Cost• Mota: 230 E. 17th Street, 842·1660
---------
-·.
I '
,
I
I
1
I
I
I I
.. '
,.. .,
\ . , -.,
N.Y. St.Mb
voe. 62, NO. 272. ~ SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUfORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1 l, 1969 'TEN ' CENT . .
Supervisors Won't Endorse Air Master Plan
By WM BARLEY
fH ... o.ltr P'lllot M•ff
Orange County's master plan of air
transportation. suffered a major setback
Weitnesday when divided c o u n t y
supervisors 'refused to endmR a com·
mittee~s suggestion that the second phase
or lhe controv~rsial survey be laWlChed.
Held over by the board to Nov. 26 was
coosideration of a bulky report which
urges a'$Ul,l!Oo study by WiWam Pettira
and Associates . or the po6SlbUlty o!
Cop Accu se.d
0£ Clubbing
Negro Boy
A young Santa Ana police officer has
beer. secretly iridicted by the Ofang3
County Grand Jury on a charge of club--
bin~ a 17-year-old black youth. who was
beiitg committed to Juvenile H~ll.
Patrolman ffichard . E. Faust, 26, was
scheduled to appear today far ar·
ralgnment be!ore Superior Court Judge1
.Robert Gardner on a charge. of assault
with a deadly weapon.
· The-indictment was issued by the panel
of jurors after hearing a number of
witnesses from the Santa Ana black com·
munity tesUfy . against Officer Faust.
many using strong, highly descriptive
terms. •
Chiei Deputy District Attorney James
Enright today alleged Faust beat Jesse
Gilmore, now 18, or Santa Ana. with his
nigbtatick as the boy lay helpless on the-
ground, testimony supported by witnesses
who •ppear<d before Uie <;rBJid Jury.
Eprigbt described the incident as being
devel9p!Dg. a sophisticated system or
airports within Oringe County.
· E~Visaged by the committee -Coun ty
AdmlnistraUve· Officer Robert Thomas;
Airport Director Robert Bi-esnahan afid
Planning Director Forest Dickason - is
an ~ .s~ which would feii.turei
regional airports, metroports and air
Jmrks throughbut the county and passible enlar~emeht 'or replacet1\tllt of emtlng f.Cilibes. . . .
.Jt*·alsoturges the joint1mUltar.y-civillan
use or existing. military air(ields and a
ct1n1prebJ!nsive study Of the effect pf the
airport expansion plan upon exi1Ung and
planned communities. And its compilers
urged the board to bear in mind the
possible conclusion of the Vietnam War·
and Its effect upbn 'lhe lulu~ bf tile El
·Toro base.
Point after point ,v8s shot down by
superv\sor-1 and members of ~public in
a prolonged public hearing whklh lirt-the
three authors of the Phase TWo resolution
obviously bewildered as to their next
course of action.
Their only instructlOM In qie motion
successfully o(fered by S u p e r v I s o r
\Villiam Phillips were that the "matter
be returned Lo the CA01 ,refined and held
in abeyance until Nov. J6/'
If1their n;w ~mmenda\I~~ follow
the line of argument off~ throughout
the hearing, the committee's next recom·
n1endaUon will ~ contained. in a con·
slderably thinner ·report.
Supervisor David Baker added his
· vehement Objectloi'Js to "thOfle Of county
homeowners and a Marine (;orps cOklnel
and branded the phase two report as
"totally wirealistlc and unnecessary.
"This is something . that can nm Into
biilions of dollars," -Said Baku~ "Ind I
wonder If everyone iJ rememberin& that
v.·e are on1y a ·small county in area. By
pursuing something along these lines we
o.nly aggravate th,e factors of noise, pollu-
tion. conaestion and 'aonina: that go alone
with such prOJfajns and I IOok oa thil
report as something totally impractical."
Baker pOinled to the proxlmity·of I.Os
Allgel(!S . lnlernaUonal Alrport •nd th:.
San Diego.airport "for those who want
world travel. 1
••1( Uµs is what Y.OU waiit' then I don't
think 15 to :SO minutes extra drivinc time
ls going to mak.e that much dillerence,"
Bak.er said. "But I feel · that, as far ·as
(See AIRPORT, Pqe I)'
Second ·Sex Attack
Coed Cut in Fair Path Assault "
• .Sy ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tJle Delly Pli.t IMff
Screaming and struggllng, a teenaged
girl fought off a would-be rapist armed
with a knife this morning, atffiost one
month to the day after a similar sex al·
tack in the same secluded area of. Costa.
Mesa,
An immediate search was begun for
the assailant, who forced a 10-year-old
girl to undre5;5 in the hilly, rubble-strewn
Nixon Thanks
Policv Backers
• •
On .Capi~l WU .
_f.ection o( the Orange County Fairground!
19 days ago.
The 17-year-old victim or today's attack
suffered a slaah on . her hand while bat-
tljng the cleanCut yoUth, while the
smaller girl was auually molested in
mid-October.
Actual rape was nol acCooiplished
ho\\·ever.
"The method of operation ls ralher
similar and we assume he· had .rape on
~s mind.'' &aid 1:.t. Glenn Walker, ol the
~
Costa ~1esa Police • Department In-
vestigative division.
·No words "·ere spoken Jn the incident
which occurred about 8 a.m., however,
while the teenager who abducted ·tbe 10.
year-old on Oct. 15 trled to coaa: the girl
before using force.
.The dl&traught victim of t0day'1
molestation said she wu walking to
school along Vanguard Way .toward Arl-
ington Drive when someone grabbed lier
(See ASSAULT, Pa1e J)
Leaky · Tank .Replaeed
Cape Crews Beat Clock;
, : ~pollo Back to 'Go'
one. ot a r1umber which erup&M.Jn ~
"backlash" following the arrest ol l;>aniel
Mi~.ae1 L~ of Santa Aha_a~ac· _
cuSid Negro~uent reliiie.' 1fe
sfreased. however thit Faust's alleged
beating of Glhnore was not directly
related to the Lynem.case.
"'WASHINGTON (UPI). -. President
Nixon today told lawmaktr11 SQW»rtJng ·
1L.-.....polic1e1,.lhot-lhtlt...en..to
"might hasten the day" when peace ·wul
come.
. APE-KikNEDY-(llPl)~f>· ..... .--..lllUl'1fi!l"'ald7~ln!lllll"1v'.--~ .•
·Lynem, 21, a rnemer or the Black
Panther· organization. was arrested and
accu.~ed of the murder last June 4 of San·
ta. Ana Pollce Officer Nelson Sasscer. Inve~Ugation, much o! it ca.rried out by
tlie .public defenders office, cleared
Lyn cm and switched the murder charges
to Arthur DeWitt League, 20.
League . like Lynem, is a m~ber of
the Black Panther group. He 1s today
awaiting Superior Court trial on ~e
murder· charges he inheri.led from his
fellow militant.
A witness who appeared before the
Orange County Grand Jury today told the
DAILY PILOT that Faust's alleged at·
tack on young Gilmore was "only one in-
cident in a wave of such harassment of
the Negro population by the Santa Ana
police for ce.
"They were as mad as hell when they
couldn't pin that thing ,,<the m_urder
charge) on Mike Lynem, the witness
&a id. "And we had to pay for it by being
pushed around, insulted. checked and
double checked for no earthly reason alld
generBUy victimized .''
Y out h, 19, Held
l n Heroin Sales
Ring Arraig ned
A Newport Beach youth arrested . In
connection' with a $200-per-<lay heroin
sales operation Tuesday was sch~uled
for court arraignment today, while his
companion from Costa Mesa faced lesser
charges. Jack H. Hahn Jr., 19, ot 1811 W. Balt';Oa
Blvd .. Newport Beach, was c.har_g~ with
sale and possession of material 1n lieu of
heroin in a complaint issued Wednesday. Stat~ nareotlcs agents clai!'"ed thit }~ahn. held in lieu of $5.000 bail pending
his arraignment in Central Orange Coun-
ty Judicial District Court, sold an un·
dercover man some material two weeks
ago. b l 'l ed The powder was an aly zed, u 1t urn
out not to be heroin, leading to the
unusual nature of the complaint issued by
the Orange County District Attorney's of-
fi ce. B lf l David 8. Reese, 21. oC 1300 e a:;
Ave .. Costa ~tesa. driver of the car 1n
wh ich Hahn rode when stopped by Costa
?itesa and Newport Beach detectives, was
to appear in the local court today.
He \\'BS cha rged with driving w~ile
und er the Influence of a drug after being
pulled over at Victoria Street and Canyon
!toad.
Sl ock M•rket
NEW YORK cAP)::st0Cks skidded
sharply In midday trading today ·~ de·
cllnes rolled" up a better than •~omit
lead over 1dvanct!I, (See quotations,
Pages 22·23).
.
\
O•ILY 'II.Of Sf•ll ,,_ ..
MRS. P.ETER MORGENROTH PRO TESTS.'VIETNAM
CdM Wom•n Carries Son and Signs at,UCI . . ... . . -
Irvine Students Open
Mixed Bag.of Protest
lilany students stayed away from class
today and others fou nd their professo rs
v.'ere not holding them as UC Irvine
observed the first da y of a hvo-day Viet-
nam War Moratorium !or November.
The campus administration took a
hanlh-Off policy although stating it is not
university policy lo cancel classes.
Jt WIS a mixed-bag of protest.
Some sludent:s left campus to pass out
leaflets at shopping centers, some
picketed and M>me manned tables to sell
anti-war materials.
Speakers held forth on a variety of sub-
ject!, ranilng over and beyond the war.
Among them were the Women's Libera·
tion Front speaking on new ideas for
raising children, the Biological 40 Com-
mittee, sptaking on the polluting of not
only Vietnam but your own country. the
University Interfaith Center, on the role
of the Christian ln the anti-,var move·
ment and SDS on blocking recruiters on
campus.
Draft counselling and child care
services "'ere provided all da y.
Events included a noon rally. guerrilla
theater, do-it-yourself war sculpture. and
a peoples' revolutionary jug band In·
eluding anyone with any instrument Who
cared to joln.
All this was leading up to a rock con·
,cert and live-in on the central lawn
tonight and march Friday with Cal State.
Fullerton student! to Hughes Ground
Systems' aerospace plant in Fullerton.
One table man~ed by volunteers from
the UCI Young Republicans -against
the tide of protest -was gathering
signatures for a petition supporting
PrcsJdent Nixon's Vietnam policy.
Despite the varied activiOes, the
general aura on campus was quiet. It
almost seemed as if some student s had
taken the moratorium as an opportunity
!or a four-day weekend.
*'* * * * * Guerrilla Theater Group
.Stages Wai· Play. at· OCC
A per(ormance by a guerrilla theater
group garbed in dark cloth.Ing and chalk·
white makeup marked a Vietnam
f.1 oratorium program this morning on the
steps of the audltorlurv at Orange Coast
College.
The guerrilla lhealu group. composed
cf OCC students, 1t1ged an lndictment of
the American involvement in the Viet·
nam war. The play coocludlng with Lhe
11tudents picking up a lareg black trunk,
symbolizi ng a coffin, and marchi ng down
the sidewalk of the campus trailed by a
girl playing a mournlul tune on a flute.
A large crowd of student& sat on the
grass and watched quietly.
Later, they listened to draft counselor
Don Elder, owner of the Bird in a Cage
Bookstore, Newport Beach.
Other speakers roUov.·ed Ekler at the
program . 1ponsored by occ:a Asloc:lated
Student Government. ' :----.J-
Among the students whO arranocf the
program were Barry Weinberg, Jack
Vaughn and Andy Kincaid. niembtrs of
the unrecognized camr>u-s SOS chapter,
. The President·· made tn ertremeJy
unl!Slial visit to Ca.pi.to! Hill to thank both
House and Senate members for support
as young Americans streamed into the
Washington for antiwar demonstraUons.
Nixon, Is an apparent attempt at
marshaling even greater congreseional
endorsemnt for his Vietnam policy, flr5t
visited the House chamber to thank 300
members for signing a resolution 1up-
porting his p)licy. ·
A separate visit was arranged for the
Se.n3h: in the first double-appearance of
ill kind.by.a President tliat congressional
observers coold remember.
b •s words of apwectaUon' ~e
dlrt-:ted tO the House memJ>ers who sign·
cd the resolution supporting his Vietnam
peat'! formula, and to 59 senators ,..ho
signed a letter ot similar support.
The President quickly told house
members why he was there.
": ""ant to express appr ecialion·!o the
many members of the House, on both
sides of the aisle, for their support of a
just peace In Vietnam." he sa id.
Referring to the pending House resolu-
tio•1 endorsing his ;'effor ts to negotiate a
just peace," Nixon asserted : "I realize it
might hasten the day that just peace
could come. '1
He told the congressmen "l believe we
will ' achleye a just peace in Vietnam,''
and that when It -comes It will be becau se
they nOO most Amerlcam put aside-ether
concideratlons in the national interest.
Th.? House resolution, according to
Rc1;1. Jim Wright (D-Tex.), one' .of its
authors, had 181 or the Houae's 188
Republicans and 119· of the 2t4 Democrats
as sponsors -exactly 3oO -as Nixon
i;poke.
Nixon conceded the difficult and con·
truversial nature ot the Vietnam war.
And he cited evidence lhat Democrat!
anJ Republicans alike had put aside par-
ly considerations and -along with "the
great majority of Americans'• -had
tl1rO\\'i1 their support to his efforts to at-
tain a just peace.
•·1 believe "·e will achieve a just peace
In Vietnam.'' the President declared
6peaking without notes.
Mesa Y 01mgster
Shot by Sniper
• A Colla M•l!i boy trotting lhrooih 1
vacant kK Wednesday on the .way to hi1
home was apparently· ehot in the knee by
1 sniper using some type of gun, police
said today.
Gregory L. Cllracadden, 12, of 139
Rochester St., was treattd at Hoag Me-
morial Hospital after the l :XI p.m. incl-
deQl, but no projectlle could be found In
the bloody woilrid:
Tht(J>oy told police he heard 1 shol
while running along ln the IOD block of
EaSt ·18th Street and tumbled to the
around before limplni homt ror help.
' ' • ._,3. 1-•-• lot J eflort." •Al.I ..... _ hmar crew• won a race wfµt time l.1.lffrf• . ...-u g . -..u w•
replaced 1 leaky hydrogen tank Jn the module pilot. 11We'Ye gGt llOtDI really
Apollo 12 moonshi p and aimed toward 'an ahar:p people In this program."
on-tlme start Friday of America'• second "One hour and a day from now we
lunar landing ml.sslon. ~-to be going," Bean said before tak.-
"We knew they would do It," said ing off at 7:57 a.m,
jubilant command module pilot Richard ~·You watching the clock or
F. Gordon. "We've got a great ~ew here, something?" asktd Gordon, ~ome great people. We had all lhe con-"You betcha," replied Bean who will be
fidence In the world in them. making his first spaceflight.
"It's fixed. It's even got hydrogen in It After ret'urning from the 40-minute
like It's supposed to." flight, the astronaull drove from t.be air
Assured that everything was under con. base to the moonport, 35 miles away, to
trol for an 1:22 a.m. PST bluklff, brush up once again on moon!hlp flying
Gordon, Charles "Pele" C.Onrad and Al.In procedures.
L, Bean went acrobatic flying at nearby Under sudde1'1y revised rules; lbe Uvee
Patrick Air Force Base. They took Off in Navy Cflmm8.nders must be launched .by
• formation, flying separate white T38 jet 11 :37 a.m. Friday or they and thousands
tr11iners. . . . . of support personpel·ww-have to ~alt un·
As he walked to his aircraft, Bean said til Dec. 14. . , {
that at first it looked like the hydrogen There 'is no second chance this month.
tank could not be nplaced in .time-to •:we look · real good POW;~'· reported
meet the Friday laurich date. That would launch operations manager Paul C. Don-
have meant a month's delay, nelly.
Hanoi Counts on Protest
To Ha sten End to War
From wire aen1ces released as· a humanitarian gHture on
the part of his.government. But the move .. PARIS -North Vietnam and the Viet
Cong made Jt plain today they were coun·
ting on growlng prote.lts In the United
States Lo speed the end of the Vietnam
war on their terms.
was generally seen .,s a lure to draw
Hanoi into direct talks. '
U.S. Amba1sadOr Henry Cabot Lodge
told the NOrth Vietnamese they were
harborlrig "false expectations." He uid
''The great majOrlty of the American
people support Prestdent Nixon as he
seeks a just peace. 11
This exchange took place at the 4Znd
"·eekly session of the Vietnam peace
lalks while opponents of the war in the
Uni{ed States marshaled lheir forces for
a massive demonstration th1s weekend.
In another Paris move, South Vietnam
offered today to release a Noi'th Vlet-
namese prisoners of w a r en
"humanitarian grounds.·•' Communist
Notth VietJiam rej~ted , the , olfet and
said It .-ould never deal directly with tbe
Saigon a:overnment.-· ·-
The Saig<11 negotiator had announced
lhal lhe a wounded Jirl..,,.n were beln&
• .. ' · ES tancia Booster
Break£ ast Set
The Estancia lllgh'School Boost.er Club
will hold !ls fiflh amuar ..... 111111 s.tur: d•x Jn lhe hi,ti school e1lilem.
1'he menu will Jnchld! pancek.et, eggs.
sausage, ora_nge juice, .milk and 'Cflffet.
Breiakfut will cost Ji.2$ for aChitts and liO
cen ts for children undt{' 12.
Breakfast will bt served from 7 a.m. to
11 a.m. Door prlzes will be itven.
. .!i
'
Both North V-and lhe Vld ConJ
have steadfastly refused to deal directly
with the Saigon delegaUOn 'at the peace
talk_s. ' ·
Orange
Weatl!er
A cooli ng off period. with only
1light decrease in r;W\Shine, ls Eri-
day·s forecast_ for the Or'ang~
Coast Look f0< patchy fog and
ttmperalures ranging from 7U
along the coast to 77 further in-
land.
INSm E TODAY
How are ~·c rowth being
"turned on" to "ff. druga b11 o
con i'piracu tnvolvtno the maaa
media? N~s comeroman Joha,.n
RU!h tell.s the inddc 1aor~ wing
inJorma tion h• glcotttd whU'°
po.sing as a hippie. See Paoe 14.
.,,..,,. u
C1lltt111l1 '
c...i11t1t '*-'' c~ • Cl'iHI~ fl .. 1....,,,, ..
OfWwet1 II
ltl .. rlll ''" ' ·~""""' " ,.,..c. n.n -.. AMI Llflftn IJ
Mll1'111 '
•
•
-
. ~ . --
"
llighSchools
Mixed on
.
:Moratorium·
'..
Jll&h scboob: in the Newport-Mesa
Unl!itd School District acloil on an Ind!· ~dual ~i' regardini today's nlora-
tei'lum.
At Estancia High Scbool, Costa Mua,
JlO programs were planned fer today, .ftq!'
were ab,y rtquested by the ~ents, ~ld
Floyd Harriman, . pr1nclpat.
At Cos~ M~ High ~~!, ! room w~.s . _
made available for stitden~ who wistied
l ' .. ~ ~ ... --~--... c
'
·Troop• Siatid Guard
·Antiwar Protest'
Weekend Begins
' . '
From Wire Servtcet
A weekend of anUwar protests, planned
to attract hundreds of thousands of
demonstrators, got .gradually under way
acl'ON the nation today.
'lb& government was ready to act
swiftly to put down any violence. A
40,000.man seciifity force was assembled
to prevenftr9l1ble in Washington.
agenlS and 2,500 volunteer mars}la.la from
the ranks of the demonstrators
themselves.
to discuss the Vietnam War durinj: their
un,cheduled periods.
The forum wu "basically set up by a
group <i interemd otudenta," llld Bill
Vaughan, usi&tanl Finclpal.
HER CAR TURNED TURTLE, EXPECTANT MOTHER RECEIVES
M ... Woman E1cap1:1 Serious lnfury in Accident at JamborH Ro.d
CAILY ftlLOT ftMM • ., ltlc ... ,.. l(ffll~
AID AFTER CRASH
end E11t Bl!lff Drive
A sunrise service of.·prayers, readings
and song attracted 26 persons at the SL
Joseph, Mo., Civic Center,
Governmenl intelligence s, o u r c e s
believe the antiwar weekend may attract
. up to 100,000 persOns, only one-fifth 41
many as the organizers first estimated.
These sources believe there might be
small, sporadic oulbu~sts of violence but
nolhing that cannot be handled by the
D.C. police.
But if more serious outbreaks occur,
military personnel can be summoned
from federal installations where they
were stationed in reserVe, hidden from
public view.
A morning assembly was jield at Co-
rona del Mar High School, with 1hree
guest speakers from UC Irvine. Attend-
ance wu GD 'a ·voluntary bi1ll, and. the
Jll'OCllm ·WIS lludertt-planntd.
Tbe apukm were: •lJCI faculty mem·
ber Dr. Grover S~s. discussing
"Population -Growth· end · tllelr !WaUoo to the Vietnam Situation;" Greg Hoff.
ma:n, student, on the history of the Viet•
nam War and other aspects, and Ralph
Barracano. a UCI student and ex-Marine
wbb served in Vietnam, givial his view1
on the war. , .
Beach Aitorney Shibata
Won't Take Bribe Case
By TERRY COVILLE
Of "'9 0.11J Pl"' .....
A spokemi.an fOr Huntington Beach at·
torney George Shibata said thla mornJng
no special requests were ever made.
From. .PGfle 1 that he would definitely not be legal
Mayor Green reported to police that he
had been contacted by New about three
weeks.ago to discuSI the zoning matter.
No mentlon of money was made,
however, until a Nov. 4 luncheon with
New,-sa.id Green, after which he notified
poliCe.
• counsel 'for an Arizona man 3ccused of ASSAULT , , , trying to bribe Mayor Jack Green for
1... zoning influence.
from behind, his arin across her throat. Shibata had been mentioned in the caSe
Monday's meeting with New was set up
wilh the coopeTation of police in-
vestigat<irs and he was arrested after
allegedly again offering Green $4,000 as a
campaign cootribution if the zoning
change were to go through.
She aaid the youth, 17 to 19 years old, of William New, 66, of Phoenix, because
tried to·dntg her into the weedy, difficult. be represents the company that is seek·
to-See area of the fairgrounds but she ing a zone change for the same 2Q.acre
y.•as yelling and fighting too vigorousJY. parcel for Which New allegedly offered
Inveatigators said the spot is south and Green $4,000 to.fix.
aCl'OSI! the fairgrounds field from the New was atrested Monday at the
New was acheduled to be arraigned this
afternoon in West Orange County
1'-funicipal Court on two charges of at·
tempting to bribe a public official.
Complaints have been filed by the district
attorney's office.
pliCe where the incident occutred orie Fisherman Restaurant, as police, work·
month ago, but still relatively close. ing closely with Green, investigated the
The youngster finally broke free and bribery attempt for a week.
ran toward ·€oat.a ·Mesa· Civic Center, ·The land in quest.ion is induatrial pro-
where a city employe met her and took ' perty near Slater Avenue and Gothard
ber to.thepearby police staUon. street owned by Dave and Goldie
She wu fmally calmed enough to give · Meredith. · Boastful Boy
Freed in Theft
Investigator Linda Geisler ·a clear ac-A Paramount mobile home company,
count of what had happened, plus a Cactiflor, has been ·seeking permission
description of the would-be abductor. from the city· planning commission to
Lt. Walker said that the yooth ~ place a trailer park on the property.
fortunately is apparently quite ordinary Shibata was representing Cactl!lor before
looking and does .not dress in a manner the planning commission. A 15-year-old Costa 1'-fesan is free today
distinctive enough to be of.major help. Shibata said Wednesday that he was after being egg-zonerated of any guilt in
"He could be anybody," the lieutenant asked last 'September by Ethan Johnson the pre.Halloween burglary of a local
said. of Cactlflor tc> investigate the ))05Sibility poultry supply house, a crime he had
Based on the latest victim's descrip. of rei.oning that land for mobile home
tion, he is-17 to 19, five feet., eight inches use. Shibata said he was told by the city boasted about to his buddies.
tan, weighins about 165 pound.a: and witb staff that there wa.s little chance. DetecUve Roscoe Broad said In-
average length brown hair. !"'·La~ in September. aaid S~bata, he formation led to the youngster's arrest
He was wearing light colored lolllera: was .introduced to New by Johri9on, '!ho for investigation of the 90 dozen-egg
and a red Windbreaker jaclmt, 1eoordiDg. in~lcated New was an ex~t on zonmc burglary at Dave's Egg.Ranch, 830 Baker
to the 17·~-old atr.1'1 a~. " matters and v,r~ld rep~nl Cactifk>f St., two dlys before Halloween. ---yo '"'"' u;roa.~rey-a-til!fore-the-clty·.-, ~-......,_~""7". -----""H8'1>iiwled w...a.baby.arul-begged.
youth fitting thetsame-basic1deacript1~ Shibata re~ that New once told take a polygraph lest," said Broad, ad·
school authorities appealed 'to girls not to him "some" ·C.lty ~ell .member's had ding that the youngster's parents con·
use the shortcut across the fairgrounds. been cont.acted regarding the zone pie~, seated Wednesday to his ao-called lie
Offldals Of the 32nd -Di 1 tr i ct which la currenUy scheduled for a public detector examination.
Agricultural Association alao agreed to h~ng Nov. 18 before the planning com· "And be really didn't do it," Broad con·
allow the Costa Mesa Fire Department to mission. tinued, saying he thinks the boy has
burn off hlgh weeds which could provide All councilmen have stated they do not learned a lasUng les.wn about taking cer•
co'ler for the suspect and his acts. recall evet aeei~g or talking to New tain credit where that credit Is not due.
Eeslde.s Costa Mesa High School, the previously. Councih~an Jerry M.atney did
Immediate vicinity Includes Presidio say that representatives or CacUflor have
Elementary School, Te w·1 n kl _e talked to him about the zone change, but $1,000 in Stereo
Equipn1ent Stolen
"I
lntennediate School and Orange Coast
College, providing a rich hunting ground.
Street Hearing
Set for Monday
A public hearing concerning plans for
three streeta south of Talbert Avenue
between Harbor Boulevard and the Sant.a
Ana Ri ver will be held as scheduled at
the Monday meeting of the Costa Mesa
City Council.
All subsequent public hearings will be
held on the first and third Tuesday o(
each month, in accord with an emergen·
cy ordinance adopted at the council's last
meeting.
The new plan calls for Monday night
business sessions followed by a Tuesday
night legislative meeting. All meetings
will begin at 7 p.m. in council chambers,
77 Fair Drive.
Dhl1¥ PILOT
OUJf09 CCWl" ......... ,.. CCMI'""
••Mrt N. W•-' ,,...~ ..... "'*'"""
J•c• •. c.,1..,
\llOe '"''*"" .... G_r .. ,,,,_..,
'
T'Ji•Mlt Kem1 ....
1~111111 A. Mwr,~lftt ""'*""' (llltor ---2JO w.,, a.y $ttfff
M·m.t-· P.O ......... fl.It --......... :mi ....... .......
&AillllllS ""'"' -..... t ,._ ...................
,, ·-
Fashion Island
Going to Dogs
Fashion Island is going to the dogs
Saturday.
A free, semiaMual, full breed dog
show will be held in the north park area
of the Newport Beach shopping plaza,
with a 10 a.m. judging time, according
to Mrs. Jerry Dwyer, chairman.
An unlocked door led a burglar to more
than $1 ,000 in •ound equipment including
100 record albwns and a stereo console,
the viclim told Costa Mesa police
Wednesday.
Timothy J. Atzel, 22, of 1978 Maple St.
listed value of stereo itself u $800 and
said he wa~ not insured for coverage of
the heavy loss.
From Page 1
AIRPORT ...
Orangt County is concerned, the price is "We are unalterably opposed to joint
too high." use, il would interfere with exacUng
The board was warned early in Us Marine aviation training that bears no
Phase Two deliberations that it had resemblance to civilian procedures and "d h we are not prepared to recognize any one not ing towards impllmenting claims for civilian use ol our aJrfields.
many recommendations contained in "You are," the colonel empha!lzed to
Phase One" and that It was ''on the the board, "just wasUng your time."
verge of eclipsing In the Newport Beach Isidore Schneider of Unlvenity Park;
area Jevels of sound which would result president of the University Park Com· .
in the .90undproofing or demolltion of munlty Association. warned supervisors
homes in at least one other country._" that the board factd "probably $200 mil-
Dan Emory of Newport Beach told the lion in lawsuits i( something is not done
board th'at 30 daily departures cf jet about continued encroachment of noise
aircraft were now being recorded at and pollution problems."
Orange County Airport, "a figure that He accused the board of failing to act advanc~ noise levels regarded by one in· on Phase One rerommendations and of
ternational association as intolerable to "ignoring the justified demands of airport
mJny homes in the Upper Bay area." flrea properly owners for long overdue
F.i11ory warned that homeowners in relief."
?o.lesa Drive, Palisades Road, Dover Tusti n residents whose homes now lie
Shores, Lido Isle, Santa Isabel, and the under the revised flight path of jet.!l using
Blurts were among those now directly Orange County Airport also urged the
threatened or are within the noise level board to clamp down on jet traffic and
limits that would call for soundproofing oppose the entry of Continental Airlines
or destruction of the homes in West into the county facility .
Germany. Continent.al was recently Jiven permJ,.
Noise levels at Orange 'County Airport sion to fly a Pldflc Northweat rQ\lte from
had now reached two-thirds of the sound Orange County Airport and objector!t
· bniulon reading• re~ at Loa :An--noted· thar Ptcltlc SoUthwtst Airlines
geJes International A Emory said. may som bt another newcomer to the
Urging the supervJllOt'I to "not wait until county aviation sctne.. Entry of both was
the study is out before working to reduce bitterly o~r!' throuahout. the hearing.
these mounting noise levels," he warned Mayor n Mars'hall cf Newport
the bQard to "bear iJ) mind the fact that Beach urged supervisors to order the
SID mtt!Jon worth of homes in the New· implementation of the second phase of
port area may have to be bulldozed out the airport master plan.
of the rapidly.advancing noise !Olle.'' f\.fsyor Marshall also warned the board
Marine Corpi Col. Kenneth T. Dykes or immediate fu ture expansion of services
warned superVisors that lhey could ex· from the county airport-"recent devel·
~ct no relief from a "non-exlstent fac-opment.s that have underscored tht urg· tor'' that invarlabty appears on coun(y ('ncy of the need ror completion of the
rePof{S on airport isaues-lhe possible Phase Two study.
Jo!nt military-dvlll&n UM of sucb bases "The time available •.• ls rapidly
as El Toro. · ruMlng out." she sald. "We fear that
0 We have no exlrt.ing plans to vacate the dynamle& of econotnle ffOWlh •••
El Toro and If wt bad we would have will provide chaotic results Jn the ablence
nowhere else to a:o." the Marine officer of objective studies upon which you can
quietly streued. ' base your decisions."
• ,,
Woman Escapes
Injury in Crash ·
' -
An expectant mother escaped serious
injury Wednesday night when her car
collided with a,nother vehicle and over·
turned at the intersection of Jamboree
Road and Eastblutt Drive in Ne1"J>Orl
Beach:
Police said Afrs. Peggy Jungst of 236
Tulane Road, Costa Mesa, who ls five
months pregnant, was southbound on
Jamboree Road at-about 6 p.m. Wednes·
day when a car driven by Mrs. Gerald·
ine Narr, 50, of 2285 'I'\istin Ave., New·
port Beach pulled out of Eastbluff Drive.
Mrs. Jungst'a car rolled over several
times. She was treated at Hoag Memor·
ial Hospital for cuts and bruises and
released.
Student Crushed
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A 22-year-old
medical technologist student was crushed
to death We(nesday when an elevator
collapsed at Sutter Memorial Hospital.
The Student Mobilization Committee at
Brown Univusity in Providence, R.I.,
diatrl.buted leaflet!· at factories urging
workers to oppose the war.
In Washington Pentagon police ar~
rested approximately 150 persons in·.
clucllng some Catholic and Episcopal
clergymen after they attempted to corr
duct an incense·burning "mass for
peace" inside the military headquarten.
The arrests were carried out with little
more than incident.al pushing and bump.
ing after Pentagon guards warned the
group that ill presence wu obstructing
Pentagon activities.
A 40,~man security force is ready to
put down any violence that might occur
in the Capital during this weekend's an·
tiwar protests, but the great majority
will never be seen unless called on to
restore order.
Most in evidence will be 3,000 District
of Columbia policemen, the first-line
security unit Backing them up will be
9,000 riot-trained Marines and anny
paratroopers from North Carolina, 25,000
other military personnel already in the
Washiniton area, 2,700 D.C. National
·Guardamen, 400 National Park police, 125
U.S. marshab:, sever'-1 hundred FBI
Viejo Man Wins
Anotl1er Delay:
In Theft Case
Richard \Vinters Burke today won a
further delay oI municipal court action on
grand theft charges involving losses from
the Orange County Clerk's office.
Bu rke, 27, of 26372 Papagayo Drive,
f\Ti i~ion Viejo, was ordered to return
No v. 21 to Santa Ana Municipal Court
Judge William Thompson's courtroom.
Burke is accused of embezzling nearly
~28.000 from the office of the county
clerk. It is alleged that he forged banking
records in that amount during his two
year employment.
Today's delay was prompted by the fiJ,
Ing or an amended complaint by the
district attorney's cffice. Defense at·
torne.y Rebert Law successfully argued
that he needed more time to examine the
new document.
DAILY PILOT Si.ff .......
FOLLOW THIS SNOWY EGRET ON A TOUR OP UPPER NEWPORT BAY (SEE PAGE 1')
,
....
handeau
broadloam by
The now spirit of today comes alive in your home with '
this plush, all·wool broadloom from Karastan-Ch!nde.au.
Choose from 00 great colors. 1rom pale to potent .
Forget your furniture style: smooth velvety ChandealJ
goes great with them all. So look now!
Chandeau. one of many fine broadlooms and rugs
from Karastan. -· --•
Only $10.95 sq. yd.
H.J.GARRETT fURNl11JRE
· 2215 HARBOR ILVO. PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,... Moo. T11111. & "'· '"'·
/,
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
6~6-0275
I
I
11
I "
J
I • I
I
I • I • I
1
-----------------~--------------------------..-..-~-,...,.--. •
•
'WE'VE DETERMINED THE RETARDED ARE QUITE CREATIVE'
Ctramic Beer Is tht Work of Yount Fairview Patient
MIKE PHILLIPS INSTRUCTS IN SHELTERED WORKSHOP
The Real Profits Can't Be Measured in Dollars
White House Panel Says
NASA Ignoring 'Experts'
WASHINGToN (UPI) -A White
House panel charged today the apace
agency is incompetent to decide what
rOle man can or should play in future ei:·
plorations of the solar system.
The report made it clear that neither
NASA nor anyone else knows enough
about man's ability to, survive .and func--
tion 'in space to make it sensible to ta1k
now of•t'l'it>-)'ear1flightS such·as a voyage
to M&'S.
It accused the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) of lg•
D<ling for the past nine years expert ad-
vice on what should be done to find out
whether man can contribute anything
useful to missions far from home.
AJ a result, notions of landing men on
other planets, such as ·Mars, cannot be
seriously coosidered now even if the
budget makers were willing to entertam
them.
• • l, • '
S11ioke.The111. Ont.
Quiliing by TObacco Overk'ill
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Ten·conlihned •moken have •pent a·day •mok·
Ing fOut pacl<s ci cigarelte«:each. In a loba<to lrgy intended to make them
qu!L
"MY MOUTH feels· like :a furn.ace/' said Orie woman reaching for her
57th smoke. "I'm numb all over." , Other reactions included vomlUng, stingfng lungs .. and an aversion to
cigarettes. . · · I "The uncomfortable ef£ects of excessive smoking will teach the smoker
to be repUlsed by a cigarette," sald Sacramento State College psychology
proiessor Dr. Robert Marrone, who dlrected the experiment Tuesday.
MARRONE, who conducted a similar test In June, said be believed these ~
were the first such experiment.I in the natiOn. He said 60 percent of the June
participants have qWC smoking entirtly and the rest have cut down draatically.
The AmeriCan Cancer Society joined the coUege in sponsoring the experi·
ment held in conjunction with Cancer Education Week.
The housewives, students and businessmen in the experiment had to
smoke continuously, and were fined $1 if Ibey were found not smokbJe.
Some of them had smoked up to two pacb a day for 21 yeart.
"YOU'RE NOT going to like the feeling you'll get after 10 hours of smok·
Ing but it's part of the unlearning process," Marrone told them.
' He said smokers teamed thrOugh social pressure and t.btough habit that
1moking means satisfaction. "U you take any learned ~that la ~itive. tn overabundance, tt
becomes negative," Marrone said. The ill effects of. conunuous amoklng began
showing up afWr two boors, ha reported.
.
D~IL V PILOT S
School l:mpovtaill~airvfuw -. ~ ~ -
Dramatic Steps .Being Taken in_Eilucating Ret.arded ..
• ' • I ' _,,, •
EDITOR'SNOTE:Thiail thefourlh salatles,Mdallmecloctlopuocbmoril-.-·-·--but-., are llcwlils ln...,... In o ,.,.;., of lix orlic!ea dealing IDith Ing Md nl&ht.· • .· ·' · 11ued '<., tho 1..i·-·_..,. . .,.. llorlel urd'""""'ble''& -,.. ....
prog!'01118 for the m'111ally retarded II is a model Industrial plant ' oendlng _,, pnmlllog po-DUI al qo.
at Fcdrview State Hoapital in Costa Contracts come from such aeroepace the~. tbe wortdql ltaff la now "Remember .••••...••.. ?," llkt cme
Mtso. _ companiOI aa Co11ina Radio, Newport, dr•w!lli mon ...,,potenllal·pellellts, but hooollal Clllldal darlna ·the ICbool and
RTHUR R. NSEL Beach, and lnyolve manullciure of com-with pd noults. 1 altond -kap -· delcrlblnf • By A°' "" Oil.Ir ......"1,..,, ponents or often· renovation ol old· part.a '1Thi)' can p out. Into the eommlll)lty mean, pa.,,....,_ peUenl for whom tbent
for re-111e. and Kt just· Ute·we ~ "11ie eiplatried. · wa llttle bope 10 years ago.
Remember your first day of school, 0W~ do not mak~ a hl1. profit.'\ says both• in terms ol penoDIJJ4lDiidwc&-ml "He w.1n to vialt the other day," the
alone in a crowd of strangers -with a Phillipa. ezplalning that eactl woiker ls earning a Dvina: · mill actded. ''He'• bought. aJaund:romat."
peanut butter sandwich .your only link to paid 15 ~ 45 cent& per ho..-, with -all but . fi®all patients bave--a ~1fqr tucb . (TornG'N"OtD! Rct~o-rch on mental,,.
home -and a·big, acary world ahead to a weekly expe""' allowance going Into drlllllllc ,....._ -not.liy a.Ion& Ibo!, tard<ltioK -10Mi:t ii ii' leading?)
conquer? ' 1------~-------~-~-----~~-~~~---..;....-~--'---
Tbe world ls more than blue water and
colored continents on the page of a book.
Many thing, must be learned. Some peo.
pie must wort harder than others to do It.
School at Fairview Stal<! H°'pital -
like any -is for learning. Only the con-
cepts may be ~!erent at first. The ideas
may be simpler.
Like bow to climb ltalrs with both feet
Instead of ooe at a time.
Or bow lo 8'k politely for more lunch
Instead of takii1g your neigbbOr's. ·
Some must atill learn to talk.
0 A Way to Grow" is the tiUe of a
documentary film oo the fll"St day for
beginners at Fairview School -and
subse~t days -when they go on to
more tradiUonal subjects.
"'They were little and lonely and scared
• • "c waiting for the world to be ex·
plained, .. says the narrator.
Dramatic, significant steps forward are
being taken by paUents in the federally
financed compenaftory education p~
gram diroc:led by Mrs. Shirley
Thompson.
Fairview Scbool ltaelf la supervised by
Principal Margaret "MaQ!e" Sewell and
Vice Principal Dr. K'"1 V(atklm.
"Actually, our job ls to wort ourtelV"eS
out of a Job.'" says Dr. Watkins.
The c:urrlculum begins with olmple, but
Important training for """"' patients,
th"' progno,... to mualc, pbyllcal educa·
lion, U.S. History and other loplcS.
One student became an expert on
American Presld.ents.
Regular teachers staff the school, aided
by teams of specially trained psychiatric
technicians using a variety of in·
structionaJ met.bods.
Special programs are oUered IOI' the
d..i, the blind and those with other
physical u well al mental bandlcapo,
and there are night vocaUODal claRea for
oldf'l' patients ..
For the blind -as an· example -an elephant loon Just lilco thal strange
creature they can bold and minutely feel
-but not made ci plastic and vutly big-
ger. .
· Art work ts one al the mast popular
cl.,...J!efl«:!illiJl>o~of many
patients, much of the wort is, indeed, ex·
tremely arUstjc.
"We've reaily detennined the retarded
are quite creative." says one bospltal 0£·
ficial. "it doesn't depend on IQ."
One al the maot.oucceaful -.tloos
al Fairview ScbooJ -which bu ltl own
alm& mater song -ia the monthly Fri-
day assembly, featuring s tudent
participation and timely themes.
"We thihk the kids get as much out of
that as anything," says Vice Principal
Watkins. "School spirit bas built up a
lot."
Just like on the outside, however,
school ls not for everyone. ,
SOme people will so. to work. Juat like
any other wage earner on the outside,
they can't expect to be babied by the
boss. ·
Mike Phillips, forenian, Is boos to 35
~tients who work in the sheltered
workshop, complete with coffee breakt,
'Pro' Holdup Men
Get $1.37 Million
In Armored Car
NEW YORK (AP) -"It wu a mOI!
professional job," said the police olflcial
heading the investigation of the ·$1.37
milllon _Wells Fargo armored car holdup
by· three ·gunmen -the second largest
c.,h robbery in U.S. history. "They were
very cool."
"There were times theY could have
shot the guards, particularly the one wbo
went for hit gun," added Deputy lnspecoo
tor Thoma& J, GJeaaon. "But they
didn't."
Wedoesday'1 daring daylight theft of
Aqueduct Race Track receipts wu near--
ly foiled by an unidenUfied housewife who
became tusplclous when she peered out
her window and saw three men Mt in
uniform transferring money bags to a
car.
Her ~all to police brought patrol cart to
the scene minutes after the bandit trio
had roared off with the stolen money,
leaving the three Wells Fargo guards
handcuffed Inside their truck. .
'The cub haul .surpuoed the lt,%19,ltB• taken In the llllO Brinks robbery In
Boston and in U.S. history is exceeded
only by the theft ol 11 ,551,2'17 from a U.S.
mall truck in Plymouth, Mass,, on Aug.
12, 1962. •
Robben got 17 mllll09 In cash in a
tralh i'obliery in Britain lh August 1963.
Frank Basil, president of the New York ,
Racing Association, aaid the bl wu fn..
sured by Aqueduct and Wells Fargo.
The robbers disarmed the guards,
handcuffed them In the rear and placed
canvas bags over thelr heads. Then one
of the robben drove the truck lWO blocb
to a quiet residenUal slde street where a
1968 Chevrolet wu wailing.
Hurriedly they transferred ID bag1 ru~
ed with bllla -moelly used, dirty CUI'
rency that could euQy be paaaed. They
left eight bago of coins Md two other·
11,ap ol billa they apparently ovvlooliod.
enne••J s~~cial$,~f :th~ ~eek! .
ALWAYSFIRBTGUAUTY.,. V,1s1t .our.·Garden Shop now!
•
.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,....-.-~..-~~~~~~-~~~~~~-..... '
.... --l&tNDA'f TOOi , ........ DOWNEY
Ranunculas bulbs for • ~ blooming surprise!
10for49c
Plant now and have a brilltant color
floww garden by spring! Yellow, red,
orange, pink, rose and sunset .. , luxuri-
ant flowen.
MONTCLAIR
"-lty ttillp ..... ID plant lmw b
-1y spring bl-... Varieties IU<h •
Milt, Garden Party and o-.land fGr a
bit of Dutch. 5 for 59c
1Cl119 Alfred daffoclll bulbs extra large
#1 for blggar blooms. Yellow oplondor
daffodil1 for ....Jy opring in ~ 11-
gardor. 25c-
Abo #3 size, quallty bulbs 10far98c
Double anemone growing and blooming
In a riotous mixture of color ••• and all
·'from little bulbs you've planted nowt tq for49c
Single anemone bulbs 10 far 49c
Jumbo 'hyadnth bulb1 for fragrancol
City of Holland -1e1y ••• blooms.-a
mau of -:like flowers that will clol',.ht
you -opring.
51or89o
Jan los, IClng of the llun
L1nnoce,... hyacinth bulbs 'for'9c
Pyracantha di1plays attractive darlc
-,_and prodlas bright'"""""
lies. Plant ,_for~ garden beaulyl
laaL77c
~ntha 5 1aL size 3.19
hpalie11 pyracan""' .. _ S aaL7.99
UKE IT•••
CHARGE' IT!
YOUR .
CHOICE I
Japanese Black Pine. or
Juniper Tams evergreens
for basic landscaping!
77c,
Mlllk, hanfyand adaptable forloaalc
landscapl ... A plofeul-1 look hr
the home~-
NEWPORT BEACH
"
• "
.--
. -~~~~ tor '!i:t-~•_u:
Reds . ~aunch Big
' .
Attacks ) at DMZ
·SAIGON (UPI) -'Nonb VleQwn
!Junched Ila bluest. attacu In neerly a·
yoar near the clemllltarltod,... (DMZ)
driven bock by wperlar fire power.
cc-i ... .., • D1111Y Ptllt hl•J Wednetdly and today, and South Vlet-
President Nixoil's daughter Julio : .._ military oources pld the Com-
hopes the Vie!n"l'! wa~ WiJI be OV•, nlunll(s llad Poottloned tanks In· Cam·
Col. Michael Healy, 41, of Chicago,
COlllllllllder of tho !lb U.S. Special
Forces Group ln Vietnam, fle·w today to
the Bu Prana cutpoot, 112 mile> northeast
of Sllgoo, with Brig. Gen. Lam Son, com·
mender of tho Government special
fon:e1. -·
Gunman Gets Record Bank ·Haul i-nlndiana
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) -Fedenl
and local authoriUts found themaelves
confronted ·today with the problem of
t!~ the bJueat bank robbery In Jn.
A lone gunman, described as well
dressed, neat and nervous, fled with
$t~;ll81 from a branch of tho American
Fletcher National Bank and Trust Co, -.
.
alto llelll( up, II~• -!oY<O In a back
l'OOQl. • '
Police lllld the man may be the nme
bandit wbo oo Ol;I. 10 robbed tho
Merchant. Nltloiiat Bank 111<1 Trust Co.
brucb In Speedway of llO.D54. la both c..... the bancllt clalmed he hid
dynamite.
The robber W-J ·entered the
branch bank nesr clOl!nl lllne lll<l sloo4
at a C9Wlter briefly, then approached
branch manager Jack Trttter, a . ln-
qulrlng about a csr losn.
A> a'teller loclred the ~t clollna Ume, Tretter ulcl the bandit uc:ed a
.!2.caltber revolver from a cut and
'cllaplayed III red stlcU taped fDIOiher aJl!I attacl>ed to a battuy.
b t J b · ·b b d bodla Oppoclte a lerles of Special Forces • ~r--y_nex -une:. er__ us an camps under atea• for a week. sraduat~s from Amherst College The tncteue In tho North Vietnamese South.V.lelnamt!t ~--&aid _ --tho Communist. had about so tanks
gan
then and.he's.of military age, I've and Viet Cong military offensive ap-£ot a , vested interest in it, you peired to be Jn response to orders
" h disclosed ln captured C o tn m u n i s t know, she' told a ~eP.9rter as s e docamenta Planninl "annihilation at.-
and her 21-year-old husband, -Oev· . l&CU" •1o-~de with tho anU·Vletnam
id Eisenhower, toured the Veterans · war demonstraUOns ln the United States.
Administration hospital in North· • The.flareup In the winter offwly• just
bampton Masi. ' belO.. the D!l{Z lillled M Ame<!Clnl 111<1 ' -' · · 0 wounded 121 In tho blggetl bsllles In
eight months. The communists loot 108
killed In ground .... uits that failed to
breach the defenses when they were
acrou the border from the camp. Healy
said, "My kind ot threat Uke this is aer·
lous but we do feel •we have him (the en-
emy) off balance." Son said, "We hive
the situaUon well in band." ·
The North Vietnamese were still active
in tho Special Fore-. area but !Junched
no ground uuults. Spokesmen said 40
rounds of. mortar fire hit a South Viet·
namese artUlery base near Bu Prang tl>-
day and that three Communist sappers
were killed at I.be barbed wire perimeter. Field Marshal VileoimrMont-
gomery has decided to auction
off a portrait of him done by a
m i l i t a r y colleague, the late
Dwight D. Eisenhower. Mont-
gomery said he sat for the paint-
ing white acting as Eisenhower's
deputy tupreme aUied com~fld..
e·r in Pari! after World War 11.
Montgomery said he had decid-
ed to sell the painting at on auc-
tion Nov. 26 because "an Ameri-
can friend who wa.s visiting me
said he thought it ought to be
in America."
Officer, Panther Slain
" In ·Chicag~ Gun Battw
'
• A Cedar Rapids, Iowa house-
wife who figured a milk bandit
would strike her next left a not~
in her milk box asking the bandit
to 0 at least Ie3ve me enough milk
for breakfast." The bandit toot
several cartons b.U't left one behind.
Police said · the band.it has been
milking a three-block area in c ..
dar Rapids S inc e last ,Monday
morning, when be topk 14 cai1o'1'!• •
Pamela Tedesco, 19,' .wiU reign a1
queen of the 1970 TouT11(lmtnt of
Roses on New Years Day. The brown-
eyed Pa.sadena City Collig6 cotd· ex·
claimtd, "I always pictured myself
sitting up on that beautiful float ·on
the queen's throne, Now it is finalJy
ootn g to happen to me." • Sen. Eugene J .. McC~rthy, (D-
Minn.) says a new political party
may emerge in the 1912 presideri·.
tial campaign \Vith Mayor John V.'
Lindsay of New Y.ork. as its stan,d--
ard bearer ... Unless th~ two major
parties give voters ·a better choice
than in 1964 and 1968, there will
be a third party," said M<;Ca~y,
who tried unsuccessfully for the
1968 Democratic presidenlial n.om·
ination. In an -interview on· CJis.;
TV's Merv Griffin shpw, ·he added
that Lindsay, recently re-elected
as an independerrt -Liberal . after
losing the Rep ublican primary,
"could very easily be th~ le3der of
such a party."
CHICAGO (AP)-A policeman 111<1 •
youth police deocrlbed as a Blac~ Pan-
ther ~y member were killed and eight
penOnl were llljured early today In •
south ~ide gun batUe.
Pollce Aid the shootings erupted at 'an
said. An eme:rgeney call brought 50 more
policemen to the scene.
Policeman Frank Rappaport, 31, was
kllled a ahort time later. His alleged
' President Asks
Quick Action on
Prison Reforms
WASHINGTON (UPI) -~ent
Nil.on . today advocated immediate and
dramatic reform of the naUon's prison
•Yslem to help protect the public from
the crimlnal who comes out men
dangerous than when flnt arrested.
Nbon directed Attorn<y General John
N. Mltdlell to coe><dlnate·a 13-polnl P!'>-gr8m with emphuis on rebatiWtailOn,
particularly of the young og.n.ier. -
The President a!Jo urged Iii "e<m-
cerned citilen" to lllpport prilOlt~rtfonn
· a1 -cne of the nlOlt effective ways of
fighting crime.
·"One of the areas where cltlzen
cooperatlon b moot nffded is In th•
rehabilitation of the convicted crlmlnaJ,"
he-Said. "Men and womerr ·w}?o are
roleased from prison must be given a fair
opportunity to prove themseiva 11 they
return to society.
"We wUl not insure our domestic tran·
qullizy by keeping lllem at anns
lengths," the Preildent saJd. "U we tum
ciur back on the u-eonvlct, then we
should not he llll"priled II be B(atn turns
his back on US:"
Nixon to Name
.Deputy for Space
, -WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nit·
on, a,waitlng the A'~llo 12 launchlng, an·
nounCed today he will name George M.
LOW : manager of the Apollo spacecraft
proFam, to be the deputy administrator
·of Uie nation 's space program.
· · Lo'fi, 43, from Friendswood, Tex., has
been with the space program since 1949
and Is now serving as manager of the
Apallo program at the M an n e d
Spacecraft Center of the NaUonal
·Aeronautics and Space Adm.inistraUOn in
'Houston.
'
.
auailant, Spurgeon J. Winters, 19, was
~abandoned bulldlng when they answered
a call that men with guns were in the
area.
Seven of the injured were policemen;
six suffered lunshot wounds and one was
hurl by a brick.
Patrolman Ronald Comparin said a
woman living near the building told
police as they arrived that a gang of
youths was waJtlng in the building and
plaMed to klJl her husband.
A> six pal<olmen approached the build-
lnf, shotpn and rifle shots rang out and
two officers were wounded, authorities
abot ·and .twed by Patrolman Robert
Tracey, wbo said he saw Winters fire
the fatal lbot tnto Rappaport's head as
tho policeman !Jy wounded oo a sid ..
Wolk.
Another youth, Lawrence Bell, 20, was
wounded by police fire and taken under
arrut to a hoSpital.
A.uthoriUes aaid Winters and Bell were
member& of the Black Panther party but
It wu not known if the shootings were
connected with any Panther activity.
Police said a third man also was
beUeved to have been In the building
clurlni tho shootout.
Israel Attacks
-. '
Egypt, Jordan
-By THE ABSOCIATED PRE&!
lsrael!Jeta bombed and strlled mill·
tary £ariet$ ln.E~and Jordan today.
A military apakesman llld planes
struck at Egyptian m!Utaryobjectlves In
the southern sector of the Suez Canal and
returned safely after 30 minutes.
Jet. alto pounded Arab guerrilla pool-
Uona southeast of the Sea of GaWee after
the guerrlUas almt<j buoota 111<1 light·
anna fire at an Israeli Army patrol on
the Jordan River, the apokesman sWd.
There were no Imtell cuualUes.
· The lsraell Cabinet met In secret
seuion for the , third time this week to
stu1y aecurlty affairs. Ta:ie government
comrpuniquea have been headlined by the
Israeli preu, but no deft.Us have been
disclosed.
Christian Hayden, 21,
Faces Draft Law Tenn
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -. Christion ,
Hayden1 21, son ol actor Sterling Hayden,
will be sentenced Dec. 15,on two counts of
vlolalina: drift laws.
Hayden was found guilty bY a federal
jury"Wedneaday of faillna to report for a
physical examinaUon March 6 and failing
to ,report fc:r induction last.May 6.
Snow Falls Over Mi·dwest
. . . '
Arctic. Air Makes Eastern Part.s of U.S. Shiver ·
California
LOS ANGELES ANO ._,lCINITY-
Ver!lbl1 ctoud1 tllrougll Frlcl•Y but
l'l'IOlllY iw11ny 1nd nol 11ull11 Ml wtrm
d•Y•· OVer"fght IOWI ne1r ~· Hfgll
Tl'lllnd•Y n.
e6~b~~~:~~~!~?.':.i~ow~x1;.:~
1nd morning hNr1 11«oml111 -•terly
7 to 12 knoll In 1t1emoon1 Tlluiw.Y
" .. J'rldlY. Vtrl•bl• clc>Vdt but fl\OSllY WMY dlY•. $ca>ne Nld'lr IOI ffflf
Tl'lurMllV tie<Ofl\1111 "'°'' txttn1lv1 Tl'lllrlCl11' nltht •nd 1tr~ J'rlcUoy.
$1kl111IV Cl»l•r 11•1'1·
EXTREMll SOU THEll:N NE'o'A.OA-
'•lr !l'lt'Olllft J'rldlv wllrt -c!oud-lt!tf1 al llm<fli. $119l!llY Wltll'ltl' dlYI.
0v .. 111,111 lows .u kl AS. "*"""' TllW1-dlY 72 to 12, ~
M>UTHEAN (ALIFOll;HIA COASTAL
ANO IHTEltM!DIATE . llAU.E'fS-
V1rl•1tlt doudt tlll'Olltfl Prldn Wt
"'°'llY WllllV dt}'t. OYffaltl\t Iowa •I to 6'. "",_ Tl'llrMleY n 19,0. 1111111·
IY eooltf" FrldlY. • $0UTHEAN CALtFOIHUA MOUN•
TAIN AltEAS -Varllble c10l.ICl1 bvt
"""'IY lilt lllrovtll Frklllv. 11111tt1r w•"""' Tlour1drf, SOUTHER N CALl,OlllHIA, IHTEll:•
IOlt AND DEl!ltT •EGIONS-V•rlo
1bM c!Wd1 ~ P'rldly but "*llY
"'l\ft"f' '"" 1!'9lllf'f"WlrrNI' ...... ~ 1\11111 lows ,....-• Qw9M. Vlllw ofl!ef'-
WIM ,, kl JO --v1lttya, 90 lo '° '°""" virlira. -Hllflt T"'-'""' 10 fO ., """" ..-111.v .. Tl to 11 low..-Vlll..,..t.
IMl"EltlAL AND COACHELLA llAL-
LE'fl INCLUDING PALM S•AINGS-
SOmt ll!tll c101.H11 l/lnlllti'I Frie!.., bvf
l'l\OlllY 141111\Y 1114 llltlllf"f' Wll"'"''
ll•Yt. Ov.rnlflll Iowa II lo "'· Hlllll
f hut•Y IO 10 17.
co .. w
lulWll' ""'"'' Lf9M Yll'ldlt Wlndl 11!1111 •nd momll'll twrll 11itcoml1111
w .. tt-ffl I te If lnt!J OUt'llll 1n.r-·llO\t,, ,..,.., 1nd flr1<11Y. H,. n.
CMlll l lfm-•llltM rtntt tl'O'lt fl
to 7•. 111t111d '--""""'" ,,,,.. fl'tlT\ .M to ti, W11tf ..,.,_11\1~ U
Sun, Moon, 'l'idu
TMUltSOAY lecoM 111111 ............ 11:• I·'"· •• ,
11«1111:1 1ow . •• •1u '·"'· •·• •1tlD.t.'(
l'lr't 111111 "'"'"'"""" 1:4 1.111. J.S Fl"I low ., .• ,. ........ •:J.f l .11'1.l.I
SKOl'ld l'llflt ....... ,,.,.11 ::111 •·"'· J.1 llCIOfld WW ............. 1:30 11.m. OA
S.111 ltttft l :U IJl'I. I-tit •:JI 11.m,
Mfllll ltl ... 10;4 ...... I-th 1:1f 11.11'1.
·--•• -1
V.S. SumMart1
Arcttc 1lr dN.,. ~ mUCll Of !hi .. .....,. """°" of tM 111tl()ll ledtl••
llN"llllllM dllllY t.mPtrttvrn, 1!rOl'ltl
wlildl •nd tnOW.
Tr1vt1ws •lld 1lecllmt111 wemlnt'I
w•re 111 tllKI tor M0n1•n1 "'' of
tilt COl'lllntnlll Divide 11'1d lrtWltn
w1mlllll• '"'' 1111 tor """"'1t Ind
"'"'" Wyerilln1, Wflltt'l'I Nlbtllltt
1nd 1111 llltfl movn11111 '"'' d Coror.dll.
Lo'91•11d ,,,. In Colortdoo w•t r.
porttd clottd 11rly kid.,. by b•-1111
•-· TwO ll'ICl'ltt of ,,_ ltll 11 S..ull
111. Ma•lf, MICl'I .• end 1n Ind! fell
t i Alpen1, lft I-tr Mli;lll11n.
(
Temperature•
Mltfll.ewPnc.
A1tiv.utr11..,. .. " Al'ICltltlH " " Alltntt .. " ••lrtnfleld ~ " l l1m1rct .. " .... " " ..... " " ll'(NMvlllt .. n CflltaH " .. Clt1Cl11111ft n " -.. .. " 0.. MtlMI " .. ...... " " 1'1lrbtPIQ ·• ... ·-" .. ... _ " H _,.,, .. " KIMll City " ..,
LOllAftttl" .. ..
Mllllll .. " Mlrwlfwotlt .. n
"""" 0r1 .. ,.. " ..
H-YOI'\ " .. 0.k1•11d .. " Olt!•llOIM Cffy ~ .. Om1111 .. " "•Im SPrllllll .. " "•IO ltollln ti ..
""""'• " ..
Pllbbu'91'1 " " Portl1nd .. a
lt1111c1 City .. " lttd llltft " " ·-.. " SIC(l!'Mlllo " " Slit W e C.11"1' .. ..
$111 DltM ti ..
S.n flr111tlKO " ..
SHNJt " • Jf'Ol(•llf " n
Tlllr'lnll " .. W1lll!M!011 .. "
• :sPEClAL
• J •PRICES ••• .
: SPECIAL TERMS •• ... , .. 1 ......... Ctlt
• lltcept ... ~ltylU • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Mil'" •SPINITS-C:ONSOLU -....
• WURLITZER $399 • STURN SPINET CONSOLE
WlllMtl, nclll"91 .Mir W••• Ua6IMf tfllt
•HALLET &
DAVIS
W1rnut 1MC11111 ._,.
•WURLITZER
SPINET
Llll'kJ /Iii. -
$445
$445
•KOHLER &
CAMPBELL
•YAMAHA
CONSOLE
$588
$745
anmnR1111R1DR1111a1111111111R111111R11111111R111111U1mmn
ORGANS
•-llHW CIOID N._,,.,...., ..
• WUlllllZlll oHM ', ............... , ..... ,.,_~
• iWUIOID SPtllll
A~ llewl\il '''*• ti.lll1tr.MI~
• WUIU'IDI OHAll
M~hl .--I• Ii-! .. ·-· . <• COllSOll Mwlll _..._ w1t1t _...
b oll• .......
• HIMllOllD W
Spilt ... ~ ..... --.
l•d. Ltolle ..-.. .r.1 ...
•199
•599
•599
•899
•1399
•2299
OVER A HUNDRED
TO CHOOSE fROM
fUMOllllt llAUI POil ., ..... l'llH,
& .,,.... ....... u .,.._, ...... • ... ..,,c.,..n
OPIN TODAY, SUNDAY 12·1
DAILY 10.6, IRIDAY 'Tit. 9
• JESS.E
FRENCH GRAND 5.999
•IOllMll NOD s..,_.• ... t~J. Al loot11111Mil -0-.. ,.. ........... 1 .. wll~1Mff_1_
• DAii 8IAllD
h!lleol•, -••lltrliltil ..... 111 ... -11.,.-
• IWOll & IWIUI
GIAllD
,.. lho tlllcrl0tfo11ll"' ..tJo! •
A .. ,..,.•-• 1~11 "'"" M •l,,,....toM••~etM
• mnnru llllll ""'....,." .......... ' ... m,.ht11rie....i .... ,,,.i.
ci,. ..... -I> tho 11-..
'1499
51599
'2199
: 1839 Newport Blvd. ·at Harbor, Costa Mesa-Eall •.• 642-28·51--.-
••••••••••••·WE HAVE A SIOCK fROM IACH IO ROCKI" teeeeeeeeeee
NEVER BEPORE •••
AND NEVER AGAIN WILL
ABLE TO BUY NATIONALLY
ADVERTISED MEN'S CLOTHING AT THESE
RIDICULOUS LOW PRICES • • •
WOULD YOU BELIEVE!
S.UITS
NOW
VALUES TO
$150
WOULD YOU BELIEVE!
Sport Coats VAL~~: To
NOW
$4CJ
SORRY
ALRllATIOllS IXTllA ON SALi CLOTHING
M ........ ltoffft Apll~ rftht, ,_,.....,., wl" • I ...
chol• 1peclollzl'"J lit style M••'• clotlll'"J. hos • ....
•aowledg• of coorcllnerio• ucl t'"4h plus •pe<l9'
oblllty 1111 pobTic refotfo•.
Gery Colvl•, left. 01r "" 4!1Ulltetlt nta111~. (111t ,...
hrllftl tr."' Florhlo wt.we ht "loyed • A"ftlhal ...
locldH _,.. o HtlOffl cl•tfllBt IHllll.t.mrlf"' c• .. ,..,. •• ~ ..a ....... ff!IM"-t.
THIS OFFERING IS GOOD
9NLY FOR THREE DAYS
THURS., FRI. & SAT., NOY. U-14·11
USE YOUR CREDIT
WE 'RE OPEN DAILY
10:00 A.M. • 9:30 P.M.
loath (oast ?t•za
SAN DIEGQ FAWY. AT BRISTOL ST.
COSTA MESA
PHONI 54o. ISOZ ·
•
·-----·--·--------... -·,.·-=:=: "'· "'=="·""-·"·"'-"·-="'===.....,.,"·"'~,-;."", "·"'· ,,, "'"'""'i;=====,..,==-'"'='""' """==·""-=·==ir.--,_
..
I Hijacker
~akes It,
But 2 ,Fail
$2,400 Income
•
For Po~r Uroged '
WASHINGTON (AP) A ~ld<nl or N. r l h w eo l
praldenlial panel bu recom· lndi..trtea. mended eettfnc the mtllmum "'lbe .rellUvely low dollar •1 l.lllW rr.. !Meru-Income !0< poor Americana al coot · ol lhe ·proer•m ......,.
Tbe lllCCPl al two' alrllnera: 12,400 a year for a family of me.'lded ~ undencore the blJacDd Wednalday •" er four _ $800 a year more than fact that Ulese proposals ' are
-America luded In CUba Pruidenl Nixon bu proposed. not designed lo solve all the ·
today. 3be p1rata of the flnt nation's aoclal problems," it ,.... lollod In 'fllihl and II"• The l'llUf.· named b Y said. But. the report added : mted Jn Qille. former prft dent Lyndon B. "With such a balls we shall
'The lwo llijacldnp ocoumd Johnson, ......i up• Ii-month have gone far'towards solving
houn apor1' over the Abwon study by llelldlng ils report lo the critical problem ol poverly U.S. Bishops Valley In Brull ind oeveral the Whit< House Wednesday. tn lhls nation."
tbollfand mllea away , in the 1be sweeping report, ei--The comm!5.'lon said the j.,.. Okay Celibacy 'rlcl!dly ol Santlqo, Clille, on titled '"Poverty Amid Plenty" IUll 12.400 level "'was nOl ·
Iba l'oclllc Coast ol Soolh and prepared by l he chosen because we feel that ll WASHINGTON (AP) .Amerlcia. BGth planes were on Pruldent's Commiaakm on ls an adequate lnconte, but Prleatly ct1ibacy, under attack domeltlc: fti&bts. I n c o m e M a i n t e nan c: e because tt is a practical pro-by · liberal churchmen, bu
Th11rsday, Novtmbt r 13, 1969 DAILY PIL°lr 5
• House Committee OKs •
FundS .for·Work on SST
' ' . .
WASHINGTON (AP) -'Ille
H~ Approprlatil:Jl! Com-
mtUee today approved lhe full
$95.11 million requested by
Pre.sklent Ni1Cll for continued
develwment or a commercial
111personlc airliner.
Funds for further work · on the 300 passenger, 1,800 miles.
per-hour SST were ·Included in
a bill appropc:iallng $2 billion
for the Depar1menl e f
Transportation and r.tat<d
agencies.
The bUI also would provide
m~y to hire 3,fKIO air trafric
controllen -1,000 more than
Nixon has asked for -build S4
conlrol towers and improve
radar •and communicaUons
racilities in airports acrou the
country.
******************* MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan assodatiott
Jt:rj unldeolWed man armed Programs, recommends aboll· gram that can b e · Im-been upheld for R om a n
with 1 band 1rtnade and a tlon ol all other federally pleme.nted in the near future." catholic clergy In the United
pbt,ol IUCC!eeded ln forcing the financed cash payment pro-Another basic difference Sta.tes. by the National ~
Bru:lllan alr:lins', a .J1~ grams and gradually In-between proposals of the com-fere.nc:e of Catholic Bishops.
-buUt YS11, with 15 penoru: ettas.ing the tnbi.mum income ml.ulon and the President A statement reaffirming L'Je lbolrd,~ j,o· Cuba after two level to $.1,500 a year, a total deals with work requi~ments. principle was adopted by a 145
NOW uPEN
EVERY SATURDAY
10 A. l\v1.-4 F'. M.
Ul'I T..._...
Rubita S urremlers
Yippie leader Jerry Rubin, wearing the wig he was
~iven when the conspiracy eight ti'ial started, sur-
renders outside the Federal building in Chicago
Wednesday after leaving the court four hours eariier
without permission. The judge Ordered Rubin's ar-
rest and revocation of •l'P,000 boqd. He was jailed
pending hearing before judge today.
Fo rdham Students
End Cam pus Rioting
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Some Fordham University
studen ts wielded lead pipes to
turn back unarmed campus
guards, lhen ended a sil·in
\Vcdnesday night before New
York Cil:y police arrived.
F'ourteen guards were injured,
police said.
Elsewhere, protesters flew
Mrs. Gandhi
Gets Vote
NEW DELHI (UPI)
Prime h1inislcr Indira Gandhi
"·on a vote of confidence from
a 11)3jority of the ruling
Congress Party members in
Parliament today, crushing an
atte mpt by old guard party
leaders-to oust her from of.
£ice. '
Mrs. Gandhi pledged after
the vote to "rededicate my se[(
~nd until the end of my days"
to work loward reuniting the
party and improving the life of
her 530 million fellow Indians
in Uie world's I a r g es t
democracy.
the Viet Cong fiag at the
University of Wisconsin and 1
group of Princeton University
students tried · unsuccessfully
to blockade a building.
At Fordham, about 7 $
students seized itdminl.straUve
offices in Mid afternoon to pro-
test the school's Reserve Of.
ficer Training Corps program.
About half left, but 36 vowed
lo stay all night.
Unarmed campus po Ii c e
tried to break through bar-
ricades of broken furniture
and overturned file cabinets.
Some of the students hit them
with lead pipes and threw hot
water.
After the guards retreated
and city police were asked to
help, the protesters broke two
windows and scattered across
the campus. Six were at·
rested.
The 14 injured guards were
taken to • several B. r o n x
hospitals. Police said two of
the injuries were serious.
A university spokesman
estimated the damage at
"lhousands and thousands of
dollars." He said students did
not try to break into the files.
I
Antique it yourself
I I
Qroni;iis't':nriqll~
Apply right over old l1n1~
Turn drab.discarded or
unfinished furniture into
dis tinguished decorative
pieces 1n 3 easy steps.
9 authentic traditional
colors-kits come in
2 sizes. Open stock
also ava ilable.
SEE HOW EASY IT IS AT OUR
, DEMONSTRATION ,
FRIDA Y 11 /1 4 & SATURDAY 11/15
11 AM Till 4:00 PM
VISTA PAI NTS
2931 BRISTOL ST.
COSTA MESA
1 Mlle South Of South Cont Pfau
relitellllc -· federal coot ol lfl blllioo. Under the PJ:<sidenl'''J•!llili' lo 68-vol< or the 213 U.S. OponMon., .111on;9..,..-1 p.m.;,[dj_m.f~ But two QUJean teenage.rs nie"-iMiil -iDoolui procram a.Wstance proposal an able-blihOps -in cl"Osed session
who ocrimped for months lo would «st fl bllllon • year bodied h<ad of h"""'hold Wednesday wlille outside a •UINA l'ARK !eUNTINllTD• nJllCN
finance a almllar maneuver and provide payment& to about \\-'OUid be required to work c." militant black m I n i s t e r Mer s.v· Bid Memiy s.n..11c1r
wore overpowered In filght 36 mllllon penoos, · com· lake job lralnhig. 'Ille com-demanded lo lalk lo-lhe "high Yllilrf"1tn ;;~!· ; , Edlnlw st Bllcti
and returned home bound in mission Chairman Ben. W. mission feC?mmended no such holy honkies" meeUng in the pandtulacor:::.:d=·~~~~-=H=•=iM=man==~lai==~::...:H=etne==mon==~u=-='=~~·=""":::::~=l=·~~~~~-=S=lall=e=~=llJlton==::...:H=o=la=l.~~~-*::....*::....*::....*::....*::....:*::....:*::....:*::....:*:.........::::;,...-'.*:.....:.*:.....:.*:.....:.*c....*~*~*
•
$elect from · the largest,
most co•plete collectio
·~
of Fall 1969--
Hickey Freeman suits
. ~
Here, this lieek, 1 QllllPlela selecVm of Ille new sHltooettes 1 \
with all the fine custmlzed delalli~gs titat have made t i
Hickey Frenian oobtllldiac. Md, i>r Ute lll8l1 who
appreciates aood faslt ion ·lllt ~;s15· fads, here is the
newly Shaped Blame llOdel. Of course, you'll have Ille choice •
of the finestwaolen's.in exci ting new Jllt!ems
and colors. See 1bis coHection. Suits from m ... Sport
coats from 111.• Store for Men.
u ms· c
-
Newp0r1JJ Fashiat Island Newport Center• 644-2200 •Mon., ThutS.;Eri. 10:00 till 9~3010lher days JO:OO lill 5:30
•
.,. -.--. ·' --~ "
• DARY PILOT EDITO:Bl,U; PA.GE .~
Eyes on the ·C~pit·al l
'Ille eyn of the natlan's "great alleot majority"
&n OD the capital BS "the isma.U VoCal minority." w81
to begin a lhree-<lay demonstration against tbe Viet-
nam war today. ·
Whatever ocours In Washington -peaceful or vlolerrt
protest -moat Americans will be a\king, 0 \Vho needs
another Moratoriwn?" What can 1! possibly accomp-
lish?"
One answer to the · second question Is that it will
continue the _eocpurag~me_nt _Qf }fanoi ~ refuse_ 1 fair
age! honorable end to th~ war. And· that will mean more
American casualties than would otherwise be the case.
1 If the protesters marching this weekend remain
pellceful, they will, of course, be ·exercising a cber·
,_. !shed Amerjcan right to petition the goverrunenl.
Some will be using the demonstrati6n as a step t~
ward overthrow of a goverptnent they ~lleve evil.
others will bask in the belief that they want peace,
and that somehow Presi<ient Nixon does not. Some will
be marching because it's fun to be against things -
and President Nixon Is a symbol of most of those things.
This we~·end's planned demonstration is unlikely to persuade Americans that the President is wrong in
his end-the-war program. With !Ill of the force it could
muster nationwide, the Oct. 10 Mdratorium Day was
followed by polls showing that l'l(r. Nixon had over-
whelming support from a heavy majority of Americans.
The President has no attractive paths. He ·knows
that. He has chosen the most honorable path available
lo him to extricate the U.S. from an unprecedented
predicament. He seeks -and deserves -the support
and patience of Americans in following this path.
-One more demonstration, one more shake of flits.
or any,Amerlcan lnlo •Hldnf a troop wllhdrawal 'baaed
on terrru dictated by Hanbl.
• Indeed, wbtle tlie marchers troop down Pennsylvania
Avenue this weekend, we might well remember that
next Wednesday Is a far more signl(icant day In Amer-
ican history _.jhan this weekend tn Wa•hlniton. lt'wllf.
on Nov. 19, 18113, that l'\braham Lincoln cfeU.vered the
Gettysburg Address.
In that brief message we heard -and hear -a
call for national unity and a plea "that ffl>m these
honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause
for which they gave the liitfwrmeasure of ·devotion
•.. that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth
of freedom -and that government of the people, by
the people, for the people shall not perish from the
earth."
In Asia no less than in the United States of America.
Ta1king Without Listenblg
State Controller Houston F1ournoy and ~o Repub-
lican assemblymen spent five hours on the UC, Irvine
campus last week. They were there for the , commend·
able announced purpose of trying to establish a give--
and·take dialogue for better understanding between the
university community and Sacramento lawmakers.
Students and faculty urged the state officials to
''sometimes say something good about the university
instead of always bad-mouthing it."
. The Republican officials argued that campus ac-
tions speak louder than politicians' words.
.. .-.. . ' ..
• • • •
at the White House, should not hwnble President Nixon
Clearly there was plenty of lip on both sides. The
question is, did either side listen enough to recognize
the element of truth in both positions? i
S~LENI PAATNEP.S
We Fear 1
Most of All
The Un known
" t have never agreed with the maxim
that "ignorance is bllss." On the con-1
trary, 1 am convinced that knowledge ii
often the best medicine we can have.
If we try to two how the human mind
operates, thia knowledge can give·ua a
sense of comfort· ...... for-it soon-btcomu
evident that every mind operates in pret-
ty much the same-way;-that-our-in~
dividual fe_an and teacttona are not uni-
que or omi®UI. .
FOR INSTANCE, 1 hsve learned It to
be generally true tti.t we do not pt as
much pleuure fr1lm the lood things that
happen to uS aS we"get ~from the bad -
things that happm tp UI.
Last month, one of the newspapen that
had been taking thls oollllllll on a trial
basis decided to drop" it; at the same
time, another and larger paper pk:ked It
up -with a nel gain to me.
YET, TUE PAJN ol the bad thing
outweighed the pleasure of the good
thing : 1 was more depressed by losing a
paper than 1 was exhilarated by galnlng one. The lo.ss seemed to confirm some
deep fears of mine, whereas the gain of·
fered only a &light and temporary Wt.
From my reading and observation,
hov1ever, I know that tJlls ls a general
feeling with most people. Self-confidence
is not as common an atUtude as we
think; and many of the people who seem
most self-assured are eecretly troubled
---by thoughll of ·decllne·and~allure.
TO KNOW TID8 ls a great comfort. We
can '1!en make ~ proper allowances for
R eform ing the Military Draf t Dear
Gloomy
Gus: Kennedy ~ow Supports Nixon's Plan
I -
With the newsp4per1 f~ of d~
pressing news, with headlines .an·
nouncing disasters, how nice it
~ be if one day you mJde
joumajlaUc hlatory by having a
giant headline reading, "HA VE A
NICE DAY !"
-H. S.
Tll" fHflltW rtt•ctt ,...,.,., ,....._ Mt
_,.,, "'-ti' ... __,..,.,, ....
~ "' "'" "' ••-? • .,.,. DellJ .......
WASHINGTON -Pruident Nixon may
be unmoved by the riling Ude of anti-war
proteat which crests here thia week, but
Teddy Kennedy does not propoee to etand
against it.
Teddy found a face-saver and switched
-from oppoelU~ to support of Presi-
dent Nixon's plan for reforming the
mjlltary dralt.
The switch by the young Massachusetts
Democrat cau~d an embarrassing·
reversal by Sen. Mike Mansfield, Mont.,
the Senate Democratic leader. Mansfield,
who opposes the draft in toto, had to fall
in line with Kennedy; the Democratic
. ~~ ·-The switch cleared Kennedy' 1
our own feelings when conditions become -"image," however.-Just-ln ,time, with
adver&e. The only efrecttve antidOte to camput. di.ssetiters already , scrou~ging
deprt"ulon is the knowledge that certain transportatl~n for Saturday s anti.war . march here, Kenpi!:dy discarded the depressions are nonnaJ, and that tht villain's cloak he Did been weating and
emoUonal structure of the_ hu1!_1.an being re~Ued on the aide of~YQYth aqd ac-
is so delicately comtituted that we are tivi!lm.
more easily pajned than pleased.
Whatever the misLakes or excesses of
psychiatry in ii.& early days, one of ii.&
happiest resulls has been the breaking
down of the banters of mental isolation
among people.
KENNEDY BAD been holding out for a
broader-proaram. of draft reform. He
planned to uee ~ House-approved ad-
ministratien refonn bill as a vehicle to
carry SOJ1'lfl more extepsive Kennedy.
authored refonna.
It became clear, however, that Ken-
nedy waa in fact building a Senate
roadblock for the President's modest lot-
tery proposal which, rather surprisingly,
had surmounted opposition in the House.
There were criUcal editorials to that el·
feet and· aonie artful, ~ by Ken-
nedy's opposite· number, the GOP whip,
Sen. Robert Griffin, R·Mich.
Thep came &he suggestion by Pr~sident
Killgman .Brewster of, YaleJJnIV.rsity,'
Ulat Keilnedy and hla fellow sponaor• ol
broact--draft refonn~were -holding -the
'President's reform plan as a "hoatage."
Brewster &aid lha tactic would-not be,:_·
appreciated by "this c)'nical generaUon
of students."
CONFiloNTATION -l!r<wster made-
hls col\llnenll directly lo Kennedy ' i~
testimony la.It~ Week ~before a sub-
committee headed by the senator. In his
testimony, Brewster also provided Ken·
nedy with the face.saver, and capped an
interesting series of behlnd·tbwctnn
maneu\·en:
I. lvh_en It became Clear last mOnth
thal House military ~ (Reps. L.
M~el Rivers, D-S.C., and F. Edward
Hebert, D-ka:rwould reluctantly 10 along
with President Nixon's narrowly-drawn
random selection bill, Senale Oemocn.tic
f:.eade r Mansfield asked Chairman John
C. Stennis, D·Miss., of the Stnate Anned
Services Committee, if ·the Senate could
also approYe it.
2. Stennis, noting that his committee
had never opposed a lottery, said \he rll'i·
dom.selection provision was acceptable.
He added, however, that after an eight-
week floor battle over the big military
autqorization bill heiikl not have the time
for another protracted parliamentary
wrangle in which Kennedy and hi1 friends
would be-free-to-offer .amendmentt-of all
sorts. Stenn1s asked Mall!lfleld for. ·a
gentleman's agreement that only, the .
Preaident's plan would get serious con-
sideration.
~ MANSFIELD put t b -e question to
Kennedy. As noted above, Kennedy first
took the position that he could-not sup.
port the narrow Nixon bill. Mansfield
then announced that he dld not expect ac-.
tion thb1 year on the President's plan.
4. Mansfield 's statement came under
heavy criticism-just as preparaUoM were
mad~ for the anti-war mobtlizaUon and
march here. Kenn~'s draft hearings
were in proaress and, In preparation for
Brewster's appearaiwe, another Yale el·
ecuUve off~ed a suggestion. ·Alfred B.
Fitt, who had been a manpower eKpert in
President Johnson's Pentagon, proposed
that Nixon's lottery bill be amended to
require further act.Ion on draft eztemion
and draft reforms next year. ·
5. Brewster adopted FJtt's proposal In
hi! prepared testimony. KeMedy's office
was advised of it in advance, and the
senator began exploring it early last
week with other advocates of sweeping
draft ~eforms.
f. A FEW HOURS after Brewster ac--
tuali)l-l11ade-the suggestion-Kennedl'-en-
doried It and said it opened the wa,: for
him to suj>port the Pmldent'• 1qtl<ry
bill ~1. when consulted, said be
thoy.ght lt inlgJit open the way for com-
mlCtee acUon. Man_sfleld fell in line -and
said the Senate would act U the com-
mlUe!! approved the bill.
Image·maklng aside, there may be
aome unpleasant dividends to be collected
by Ktnnedy as a result of last week's
switch. For one thing, his retreat may
not really clear the way for the
_Preaidtnt'• bill.
By Robert S. Allea
and Job A. GoldJmlUr THE WIDESPREAD dissemination .of
p.sychiatric ideas has provided a com-
munity of feeling. We now realize that
our personal problems are neither so
strange nor so singular as we thought
them to be, and that our similarities to
other people are greater than our dif •
ferenees .
Once More: 'Operation Thanksgiving'
Knowledge relaxes tension, for what we
fear most of all is the unknown; and
especially the unknown and submerged
part of our own personaliUes. Recogniz·
ing that we share the fears and frust.ra-
tions·pf most-of manklnd Is the first and necessary step toward coping with, and
mastering, these mental monsters of tbe
deep.
To the Editor:
Sinef: the great publicity given ••opera·
ti on Thankl1lving" by the DAILY PILOT
last year, it seems your"""' an: fran-
tically searching for our ~-num))ers
this year In vain. I know. &here~ are 'news
releases pendlni and I appn;date all
your help. Rilht now j'our 1eadtn are ,in-
terested . in ·local.in&. • • 0 J> er a t i o n
Thanksllvfll&" me numbera. · •
.,,..-·~~~~ ~ff\"' ·~ ,,x;~ .. n· MaHb~~,~ , . :
~"""~"~!;:,_,.f,t ;;I
• Not only did the Copgress change the
sh00td not be upset by a few studenU
refusing to say the Pledge of Allegtance
because it now contains the ·words "under
God." The public should be upset with the
Congress for monkeying with the Pledge
of "'11egiance and converting it into a
religious dogma. This type of feolislmeu
the American people can do without.
GEORGE EDWARDS
pedlng the conviction of criminals in all
categories. I leave this for them to think
it OVtf.
Tons of Fu ry and Ire You would be ,..dOlng Out prOgram ·a~
great ~lee if 'you could print our
numbers dally ~ now \l.DtD two days
before Thanbgtvln&: Calta Mesa, 54&-
43ZS: Lquna Belch, 419'1128; San
Cl~t<, 4112-1814.
Pledgt: of Allegiance Into a religious
tl::igma, they changed it Into a particular
type or dogma, • ~unitarian dogma.
Please oote: the words now read,
"., .. one nation, under God, indivisible
•.• ," NOT, "one nation indivisible. un·
der God, ••• "
• Capital Punbhment
There was a happening ln Arizona
where a womao gained admission to the
cell of a man sentenced to death for rape
and murder. She wanted to pray for his
"90Ul." Result: She was stabbed, the
guard was stabbed, and the crtminat
escaped only to be captured later and ex·
ecuted.
THE MORAL OF this Incident is ob-
vious: The poor soul, Jn her Cbrist·llke
hollnesa , merely puts the rest of us on the
spot, She, and others of her Uk, put.!I
ob9tacles ill the way of law enforcement
agencies. Such kooks would let the
killers, on probation, return to do it
again.
A cop who solves a murder mystery
and brings the culprit to book is un·
derstandably proud. It ls only natural if,
in reporting it, he enlarges a lltUe to give
hiic achievement a glow.
This was a perfected vice In old-time ·
prohibition agents; who we.re always
drying up the country and smashing huge
rings, which usually turned out to be
some wight who was transporting a case
of booze to a duck blind. In the 1920s it
was a laugh a minute covering the
federal heal in a big city."
1·his grandiose manUe bas not fallen
upOn the narcoUcs squads, federal , state
ftod locat Even in the old days they wore
it when they could, bul It was a trifle pale
when a whiskey seizure was bigger than
lhe BatUe of Gettysbura:.
A FEW WEEKS AGO U.S. Customs
(Treasury ) conceived a continental war
to dry up the marljuftDa tratnc from
1.fexico, and other lesttr drugs like LSD,
which carry lighter penalties. They
enlisted the help of state and regional
COP.'_ and preciously annoonct<I. in
military Jargon. ·a venture called "Opera·
Uon lnterctJ)L"
They blockaded all Mexican bonier
checkpointa like Tijuana and El Paso.
and shoot do-.m ever.y IUCker relumlng w Marlboro Country. ft was delipd to knock the brtalh out
Of you, and It dld.
AS MOST Otr THE travel was by
auUJmobile. the occupants soon had more
grief-than t<levlslon luglUvea cut off at
the -. They bjld counted on a clay et
t~ hone parks, or tome sleuy Jointa. or beWnS .., a ·JumJ>fne bean's jump, and
whit Ille)' got W11 all houri In I traffic
jam. 'Thelr cars were tom apart, their
persons and kids searched, and one in a
L"lousand searches yielded a few crumbs
of pot
The narcos in a rew days said they
picked ·up 16 tons of mari)uana, which
should read a thousand pounds in the
customary ratio of bluster to fact.
111EY ALSO PICKED up some
millions of lons of Mexican ire, not to
mention Yankee fury. They managed to
wreck the tourist business temporarily
and blight legitimate business, when the
Mexican government began inquiring of
the State. Dcpartmellt what the hell was
going on.
Jn the midst of ll the narcos floated a
yarn that they had dried up marijuana In
the United SI.at.es, and this was as bizarre
as the cnisade itself.
Their major accomplishment was that
the big Mex.lean produMs, wholesalers
and sm uggler optioned out. They didn't
go out· or buainess: they returned to their
golf until the nonsense blew over.
IT BLEW OVER fast. The Washington
masterminds went into 11 hudd le, and in a
week of stuttering and roce-saving bad
grace, they changed Operation Intercept
to Operation Co-opernlion -we would
begin co-operating with our Mexican
friend?>·. Get it, or is it too subtle for you1
For this we maintain the far-sighted
vmers In Washington in elegant salaries
and expense accounts?
l'hank1 lor your help. -
MRS. WM. D. PLOWDEN Ill
Chairman, "Ope!•Uon Thanksgiving''
Operation Thanksgiving ii the bur·
geoning effort bV the thrti conimuni·
ties ma-ntioned to'take 8eroicen1e1t -
primarUu marb11 Marine• -i11to
Orange Coast homer for TJiank sgivittg
dinner. -Editor
Vnltarlan Dogma
To the Editor:
From U.s inception in 1892 until 1954,
the Unlled Stat.ts seems to ha ve survived
qulte well with a "Pledge of Allegiance to
the Flag." But then in 1954, Congress,
that eminent body of theologians, saw fit
in its divine wisdom to change llle Pled ge
of Allegiance into a religiou,, dogma by
adding the words ''under God."
B11 George---.
Dear George:
Farmers get paid (or not growing
things and n1any city 'M:lrkers are
unemployed. Why not move the
farmers Into the city wnere they
wouldn't t.11ke up so much room-at
their job of not growing things and
move the city unemployed <>UL to
the country where they could raise
their own vegelabl~ and meat?
T. H.
Dear T.H.:
I know there·s something \vrong
with your !ogic 60mewhere., but un·
til r llod jt have you considered
running for president ?
THUS BY Congressional edict a dogma
was established and the Trinity was
abolished.
Jf lhe public is going to be up&et, lt
.. ' . -
To the Editor :
For the ·ihfonnation of poor souls who,
obsessed with some kQ!d of rell&lous
hangup,. or from, :Simple. ignorance, op-
pose capital punlS_hment, we submit that
th is holier-than-thou influence is im·
T eachers a nd. T enure
State Sen. Clair Burgener, R.San Diego
Ii basica lly right when be says teachers
are over-protected by the tenure laws.
''The bad ones love tenure," Senator
Burgener told a group of Republican
women in La Mesa IJlst week.
The good ones like tenure, too, which is
to be expected. Tenure is a sound coneepl
provided it isn't used to harbor in·
competent teachers, whlch too· often is
the case. Teachers ask -and deserve -
to be treated as professionals, but they
resist mightily any suggestion to weed
from their ranks those who are not
capable of professionalism.
IT IS PLAINLY illogical to suppose
that every teacher who somehow con-
trives to get pa st the three-yeer pro-
bationary period and obtain tenure is
forever more to be considered duly
qualified to instruct In the classroom.
Tt:cre are shyster lawyers who get kicked
out of bar associations and doctors who
Jose their licenses for malpractice of' one
kind or another. It does not seem
llltogether far·f('tched U1at oceaslonn ll:V
an in<:ompetent teacher would surface at
the schools.
The inaJility of professional teacher
organizaUons to face up to this problem
has led to.ro1ne rather darin& moves bf
outsiders. 1 ,
ONE CONSERVA1tVE member of lhe
State College Board of 1'rdsthes baa: pro-
posed laking away frotn the faculty and
college presidents lhe power to grant
tenure and putting 11.-ln the hands of
tru~ees. ,
That would 1io.a,glganllc_encr,.maklng __
every teacher vulneral>te to Politkal
plunder· tiy the vulture1 who 1lt on the
fence tiaJtlng for some excuse to attack
educati,on and educaton.
Teachefs'jconstlntly pltad for hiaber
salaries in line 'With their professtonal
staluo. They would be In a much better
bargaining position for U>ole pay bocisU II
the public coula bt wured that tenure.
laws aren't maklng It possible ror in-
con1pet.ent teachers to re.main in the
classroom, thtir lncom,petence subsldlzed
by the llXl"Y"·
DIQy Callfonilan
El C.joo
Jt is the same with dope. The oonvicted
peddlers return again and again to entice
the young to try something they have not
yet experienced -the kids are curious,
you know -and tl;lis i1 not dangerous per
se, but the pushers hook the kids ,for a
1tea4y Income for skunky characters who
will f'lot tnoWingly allow themselves to be'
gainfully employed in honest work.
S. G. UNDINE
----_Thu rsd J!)I, Novtm)>e 13 ~ __
Th• •dlwrf4t page of the Doilv Pilot •••kl w lnfgrm ~"4. _,,.,.
ldate rtodtr1 b11 prestnttng thit
11.IWtpa:ptr.!a-opf:nfonl and--com-
mtntaru on-toptcs of intertaC
and dgnificance, by providing a
forum for the e:pre11'on of
our redde:n' opiniOflf, and bt1
pre1entin11 the dloer1t: vie10o
point1 of informed obserotr.t
a:nd spokestnen on top,cs of the
dov.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
,
'
... -T ... ,..., ...... ':' ... -..
•
• '" .. -
•
< ., •• . ~. .
Sleep Saying: Women Have Mor e Nightmare s·· ··: .. ~ ly Phll lnttilandl .....
1-.• • . ' • I • ly !.; M. llO
. -... --..::... .
• "Ab! It's our Mister Snow-the abominable offk.
MAft•CP ' ' U --a,er. ".
•
CONSIDER THIS -"How
mlll\Y -w.. ~.who. commit
.m..,..ier ~:i.;aae<1. 111io u?"
inq\lti'es a ellent. That I don't ~. But I . clO . know ap-
proUnately ball Ille people
,who 1et ,murdered b a v e
records, of1 arrest on personal
.... uit charges. . A n • il-
luminating statisUc, what?
' A S LE l'!P ·SPECIALIST
CCJDtendl women h@ve more
nJllbbbarea than men ' . . .
YOO, TO!),, .MAY FEEL this
n,ure Is '°"· but ii'• ... ported the av.efage American only
..... the ~phone about JO
tJm<i I week .• .IN SWEDEN
It'• ~~ the law to exhibit
a trained mon¥y ••. CHARAC-
n:RISTIC of I Pisces girl,
, ..
' . ' I.
1 Spain . Seeking Better ·
, . . '
!·Ties With U.S., ll.K~ . . . ,
. ' saya lllll' Plllllt !'!IP! Is her
gilt CW· ~-d<>Uble WI< ..•
EVER\' FOURTH P.ATl,!:NT
11111111· CCIWl\ey-lma• llOlbell>ll1g
to"do Will! can. I
HOLIDAYS -our Chief
PrognoeUcator uys "' t ll_F
novelty boys can be expeeteCS
to market perfume for dogs
again Ibis Cllrlslmas. They did
fairly well Iii· ...,... put
with a SCftlt called Kennel No.
9, I'm told. So you think that's
quaint, do you? 'Ibara not· so
quaint. Wbat11 quaint ii the
$Uccessful sale of fa I s e
eyelaabes for dogs. Thou.sands
have been' turded over at $3.95
a pair.
CUSTOMER SERVICE. Q.
"How far can a man shout to
make limself !!Dcierstood~".A.
I .
2666 HARBOR BLVQ. By PIUL NEWSO'.M foreign mi_nister and taJlting
Ul'l ·l'•nl .. "4 .... • 1.111y11 witb Adm. Luts Carrero Bla:l-
Spain is looking for better co, vice prtSldent Under Fran-
! relations with the United co and a man who also·came ,.. ~ States and Britain. out well in the cabinet reshul-
' For the British it r;neans a .ntndtr Cutiella, Spain hid
• gradual toning down of the tealed· on llnd,:and ·sea com-
djspute over Gibraltar .which mu n 1 c at lo n s b e tween
'-had neared the ·crisis stage. Gibraltar and, the mainland
For the United States it means and prohibited ~early 5,000
a .solution to the question of Spanish workers from com-
U.S. Spanisb bases, unr"'°lved mllllilc dally to jobS on Ifie" .. .,. .. • after two years of negotia-k
ti roe . oos. On Oct. 1, deadline' set by 1'
These may be expected as UnJted N at ton 1 rtsoluUon
result of a major c,abinet remanding Brl~ r e t u r n
r es b u f fl e b-y w h i c h Gibraltar fo Spall!, the Spanish
Generalissimo Fr a n c i s co government cut off telephone
Franco in late October shl!ted ll.ld telegra;ph communication
power to a group of young to Gibraltal. ·
technocrats and reduced to In-Sparllards, ever alert for
slgnlllcance the role of the government shifts perhaps
blue-shirted falangists. signallipg the dJrecUon Spain
Among the most important will take as r,anco prepares
changes was the replacement the way for his successor.
of Fernando Maria Castiella, quickly noted the absence of
Spai'.1's foreign minister since Gibi--1taf in the n e w
i957, with a pro-American, government's statement of
pro-European man still in hi1 pollcy'and the unQSWIJiy wan;n
40's, Gregorio Lo~z Bravo. . reception accorded the , new
Among Madr1leuos, th e BriUah •mbaa•lidor by Fran-
-546·7080 COSTA MESA ·,::·'·waiD~YS9to9 .
,. SA"9JDAY 9 to 5:30
'SUNDAY 10 to 5100 -• ,,, '</
MAGNAVOX • ~~MllOME 11n1T.....,. c' . . '
_foceign mlnistrJ u_n.d.u_co. -. ~+--~
Castiella had come tO be call· ,..Questions ~ Uie ·spanish •"
ed jokingly ·"the ministl): .of parliament about Gibraltar ~ ..
the affair" because it ~ed went Unanswered. -. ,
INGLE~EDGEJ.RuO..L:.
to 1te cfe4llng ollly '!ith the Lopez B~ o p p; o st ~
Gibraltar dispute. Ca811ella'1 pilll<les Ii• war. tt
The Americans liaa1ia<I not~Gi!Staltar Ud has been ·an ad;
much more luck in dealing vocate of-cloair eco,.Uc ties
will! CasUel\aJhan the BrltJsl\. with the Ulllled Stiles_ all!I
The high eccr.iomic and Western ~ M Britain
political price Castiella had moves cloittr tO membership
set on the bases, principally in the EW'Qpean Common
the air base at Torrejon near 1 Market; Spain may be ex·
Madrid and the Polaris sub-pected to pfess her, bid fOr "'
marine base at Rotan, had Jed association. -\
to speculation the United But, howeVtf S~ may
States might abandon them liberalize ber e c O'D om l c
altogether. policies, the HberalilaUon is
Of late, the United States: not expected immediatelj to ;
bad beeJ\ bypassing t b e extend to the poljtlc•I fteJd. . ~
Parents Help Teachers ~
At Capistrano School
More than two d oz e n
parents or children attending
Palisades School in Capistn!ino
Beach are making regular
visits to school to assist
teachers in a variety of
volunteer roles.
Principal John Crain says
the parents are proving to be
I GRAFFITI by Lury
~ helpful as library aides, In the
kindergarten, on the
playground and as classroom
aides for teachers.
Crain points out that the
help rendered by parints
enables leachen to provide
more individual attention to
students.
Serving as volunteer alde
coordinator of the parent
group is Mrs. Natalie Bright •
Mrs. C¥oly;i Lee is chairman f,
or the women who are helping
in the library program.
other v,olunteers include
SaDie Zenner, Joyce
Jorgenson, Louise Gates, Joy
Peters, Ema Estep, Colleen_
Hemrnerlina;, Petti J, u n a ,
Nalley Weagley, Na-ncy
Barber, Doris Conroy, Ann
Reyes. Dorothy Ferrick 2.1d •
Judy Pearson. '
Also, Jean Hall, q l n a
Herald, Sandy Cox, Ponna
Connors, Dorothy Strickland,
Michelle Reiachl, K at h y
Wilkins, Patricia Hoffman,.
Beverly Daines,. F t,a D c i s
Morgan. Beverly staneclper,
Lucy Fletcher, Glna Herald,
Israel ~' Jo)' Peters and
aiar1o1e v....n.
..
,.
.. ILADIS
0 Nof ~ d ull or1t i11
th• bu11ctl. 0 Sln9lo od9e fo,
••fety,
EA.
TURNIR ·PROPANE
TANKS
0 R,oplecern•nt fink.for your '
prop•ne torch.
0 '11;9 c•p•cify h11 1f•nd•rd
threff with b.U •••I ,..rve.
D Fine for hobby work (my
hobby h ••fe cr•cki119.) sac
•
'MASKING TAPE •• < .. ; •
0 : Do th1 w•y th1
prolouion•I do•1 it lhir•
111 111llt•nt.)
M•k•1 fo, • n11tor lob,
''"''hours of cl1111 up
fim•.
l ig ~ Inch by 60 y1rch,
29C ¥"'•
60 Yda. --------..
PS'fCHIDILIC PAINT sn
U1• for hippie •rt,
posf•tt, rnodel1, f1•fiio"
•r{
Sot co'lt•in1 the 7/1 01. i•rt of brilli•nt
f101.1rtsc1"t wet1r
1011.t•ble color1. D. Gre1t for holid•y
dee.or,Jion1.
119
TOIUT ILU
'
CHECKING,
. •UP•
• • their 208. • Wben concerned. enter wwjol 1111111 and tacb
two out of three want to talk said be.: to the cellln&.
things over with wcmen. Their your. quettion.I and ~
wlve1, usually. In their 40s, menCI ore we&comtd and
only one out of three is in· to;ll bt 'Uled wherntr po.t·
ttrested ln dlscuaaing the .rible in "Checking Up ...
sttuaUon with a wemln. By Addf'e# mail to L. JI, Boild.
their 70s, practically none of in caf't of DAILY. PMT.
the men looks to the ladies Boz 1875, Newwrt Beath,
anymore as far aa ialk goes in Cali/ .... 9ZM3 .
time of trouble. Such were tbe l1r;:=::;::::====;:;:::=; general findings in a na· I ,
About 200 yards ••• Q. "HOW
MAtiY CIGARS can a n
automatic c J g a r • rolling
machine turn out in an hoW'?"
A. LllUe better than 600 • , •
surgery?" A. Tonsillectomy
... Q. "AT WHAT AGE gener-ally do girls atop growing
taller?" A. 16.
CONVERSATION-The
older men get, the less likely
'they'll tum to \yomen for ad·
vice when they're worried.
Advice? Make that read con-
versation. Take the men In
tionwide survey on the sub-
ject. Exceptions turn up, it's
noted, but they're rare.
RAPID REPLY : Sorry, Mr.
K., still haven't come uP wllh
the name ol that ~tie steak
house in PhoeniJ:, Airz. Rtfer
to the place where the
management" cuts of! the ties
of all m a I e customers who
Q. "OF THOSE COUPLE who
can't have babies, how often is
it the husband's fault?" A. In
every fourth caae . , • Q.
"WHAT'S I.he commonest
. . ' '
SOOPER KLEEN
IS BETTAH!
' . .•..
'
' .. r
A
CLE'AN
FI LTE R
DRANS
6E TTE R
0 Ad\'w!tftd •peelal' flOOd t~ru ''ov1mb9r 19, 11169 (tnd H your n1m1 II
O<:.tu~nt, WllCl'I your n\lllbox tor our new cnr!5!m11 nw111r b•l"O
lfnt --..J
FURNACE FILTERS
' I
D Com• in •nd v•t 'trn while th1y'r• hot.
0 Filt1n in tho mo1t popul1r 1i•11 to fit ju1t
1bout'1ny fur111c• unit you got goint;
0 And if It •in't 9oin9, yeu'll probobly fr••i•
thi:1 Wintfr.
0 Cl 1111 filton m11n el•1n1r 1ir, lower f11•I bills,
i nd !Jettor clrc1.1l1tion ef w•rrn •i,.
E:AC"'
'
FUi Y, 7 INCH CIRCULAR FLUORUCINT 81,ACI( LIR
... ~~
< ' ~"
SAW
O -Rt•li1lic•lly-pric1cl-11w-~
with flo1lin9 bl•d• 9u1rd
•nd 11f1ty r•h1cfin9
DIP 'N
' '
' ' ' ..
j
'
h1ndl1. 0 Univ1r11/ rnotor up to_
I 1/1 h.p. 0 Combi111tion rip •nd
cro11·cut bl•d1 ind rip
9uid• i11clud1d.
1788
GRIP
0 l'v1 l1t•rd of chip 'n
dip, but thl1 i1 1idiculou,1,
0 Gi~•• rough fool h1ndle
• 1mooth 1olt vi"yl
finish fer "o 1Up.
0 Dri•1 in minut11, u1•
diff•r1nt colors 10 you'll
kftow which i1 which.
199
GLIDDEN SPRED
SATIN
0 If you'ro doing 1 littlo
pr•·holld1y r1d•tor•fin9,
this i1 th1 bo1t p•int you
(Ill buy,
Thou1•ndi ol color1, 100 %
1crubbebl•.
Setitf•elien 9u11,r1nt11d or
ycur money b•clr (not 10
loud, 1cm•on1 ·.,,i9,hl h••r
you.)
I
..
FIX TURI
.D .-Eix.t.U.r.•.iUl ..i.111h.n_!illL
Ill 11 in'c~ blllb.
0 Novi ! w•y to "'• 101111
unu1u•I d•cor1tln9. D Nico 90tturo if vo11'r1
h•vint Rod S•rlint '""'
Alfr1_d Hitchcock ••
b , ...... .
Wild lltli+ tliow.
··~
•r • ' °' PATIO ·CLAMP ... LAMP
li1 Her.:t • P•fio l•mp th•t
9001 •"Ywhot• you w•M
it wlth,ut on •rgu"lont.
0 T1k•1 1to111d•rd or
bugprooi lit• bulb,
comploto with 20 ft.
C~td·
·199
ltlPLACIMINT CHIMNl'f
GLASS
0 Cle•r repl•t f FMllt 9f1t1
for your h11rric1111 l•mp
in two 1bo1.
0 2'/i bylincllor2Vt'
by 10 ineh.
D I• nic• for your 11111t
•• f.,;.
'
647 39c
.#.F-:="f::'l'I"' ..... ~ ' -..-,,,....----... ·---------~·f ' -,,,
0 J u1I in ti"'' to m1~1
your roof 1ecur,,
0 Thit 1tuff ttickt ind·
11•11 ov111 on wit
1urf1tf1,
0 Cfll CO'l'f!I 12,5 1qu1r1
f11t i11 I/I inch depth. 2'9
' .
1',QIRWARE ELECTRIC ' COMPLETE 3
'
'•
How's Your l'.learing
MODn-oF-NE'K"HEARING-'AtD-GIYIN Wfty let'bethroorn
clo111i"g cher11 ilowl yo11
ov1r1
RGTISSERIE·----SHILF--UNl l'.-----t±---1
A most unique !roe offer of It welghs less than ODi quu-ter
special lnteftst 10 those who ounce, and it'a all at e.ar level,
Ii ea r but do not Understand ln one unit. No wires lead frmn
wOrtfs bu Just been &MOUJICed. body to head. Here Is ,truly new .,
A true-Ille, actu.ol size replica hojle for the hard o! filFlng.
of the smallest akl ever made Tbele models are free while
'!Ill he given sb>Olutely free to the liinlted 'llll!'Plf IOlll, so we ~yone anrwering th I s adver-auuest y o u Wiltt ftW yaura
fjtment. Try it to aee how ft now. Again, we rtpeati there ,Is
.,. worn in the privacy of your no cost and certainly. RO ~ ""' .wn home without cost or obll· gation.
g:aUon of any kind. It's yours to Write for yours today to Htar-.
keep fret. The slit of 11111 aid Ing Aids: e • ROI M-4111, Dally
ls· only one o( many feature&. Pilot, Cotta Mt11. . .,
Juli •tf1ch thl• I" w1ter
clo1•t ind It cl11111 f•r
you, •utorn1tlc1lly. •
s, 11H''1,· •e.011•1t1lt1I,
•nd •• •· '
49c
....J .... _.,_
'
I
!Moor b1rb•cuf119 11 ilt
fi11•1t.
D Compl•t•ly rn•forlr•d
unit dett 111ylhi111 from
d\l:~k to 90011.
11• fun to 1nno11nc• 11
c•1T1p111y, "Your 9061• i1
eo1•1d."I
4495
-. I
0 fir••f 1h•l•l119 h•ro for d•ll1 b•r,., f•ll'lll'I roolJI,
--r·-.• -0 Co111pl1t1 ''•ieJo includ11 thrt• I i"ch tr 11 Ind
sh1I•••, c11.1,I• of tt1ftd1r4t, br1c•1t1, ,g • 1hot••
towtl o.r.
0 Choo•• froll'I 9old or ••oc.do.
4•1
I •
I DAil Y PllOT
Crash Victims.Fou.µd
• • •
Wife Recounts Orde al in Sierra&
• -~. WALKED I MILE.S
Victim Mll•r ... •
• ..
?. Vietn.am Vet
~ ,
~Campaigns
~· '• : For Reagan
NEVADA CITY (UPI) - A
young couple from Washing·
ton state whose plane crashed
In ~ Sierra six days ago was
rescued Wednesday after the
husband walttd eigttt miles
with a fractured ankle and
other injuries.
"I'm so thankful," said Mqi.
Anita Miler, 23, at Miner's
Hospital here. ".I prayed to
God that He would save us."
Mrs. Mik!r was brought from
the tiny re.mote valley where
the crash occurred tut Fri-
day after her husband, Mar·
vin, 25, had been found by a
logger eight miles from the
wreckage.
Both ol the Milers suffered
facial cuts and "beautiful
black eyes."
Mrs. Miler said she prayed
during the 'first day of their
ordeal, when her husband was
delir,ioua and she had to melt
anoW"for hlm to drink.
Dozens of planes and nearly
300 ~ searchers had
combed the Sierra last week-a~ mine cabin. The
end searclting for. the missing couple stayed in the cabin
couple.·· One plane came '° most of tbe fiv,·day1 1 bom1n&
close they "could have hit It ' up everything woodea to keep
with a rock," Mrs. Miler said. warm during. ,the OOkl nichtl.
The area is covered with a They had packacet of dried
foot of snow and the lost plane soup and survived on that,
was white. Already difficult, along with a few cans of loft .
the odds against rescue were drinks. Mrs. Miler: said they
increasing with each day as could have stretched the food
winter approached. for another four days.
The woman s3id they were For the first day, she said,
on a two-week vacation from her husband was defu:ious.
their Vancouver, Wash .• home. "He scared me 901 because
They took off Friday after-the blood was J ust running 'l'M SO THANKFUL 1
noon from Reno heading for out of his ear,'" she said. "It Wife Anlte
Disneyland. · was terrible. He wasn't ln his -----------
As they ·went into some right mind. He was 'out.' "
clouds, she said, "the down-She said he recovered on the
draft just pulled us down some-second day.
thing terrible." The husband was also under San Berdoo' When the plane crashed, she care in the hoepital, but was
said, "I looked up and here n•H' ~~......... !\> ..... the-,s;::~ Riots .Renew I was and I was all right, ahd ~ .... ,, ... ~ '""H""'
J turned to Marvin and said, who foqnd Miier northeast of , · "1
'Oh, honey, let's g'et out of ~e ~lain town of ~~nie· SAN BERNARPINo (AP)
here.'" ville, wd the man.~as pret· _ Police say tbey're baffied
Their plane had hit a tree ty well shaken up... h "unrul ~-" In-
and broken in half. By luck it He sakl he took Miler to his . over " Y Y muw
was within a few yards or an_ "home, and got help to rescue~ volving up to 300 young blacks
Mrs. Miler from the cabin turned a two-square-mile area
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
young Vietnam veteran who
favors a tougher policy toward ~h~,y;:n::::~·~,! Jail Escapees Tied
mote Gov. Reagan for the
where-she was found "pretty into a nightly battlqroupd.
well emausted ." The thtnl llralght night of
Miler is a printing shop sa-tr®ble luted about three
pervisor at a P~. Ore., hours and was ovtr at 10 p.m.
medical laboratory. His wife Wedneeday. police said. QI~
is a dental receptionist in ficen cle~ the streeta usini Repub l ican presidential T s • H ld
nomination in 1972. 0 tatwn 0 up Burton Heagy, 27, a mem~r
• o( the Young ~~blicans ex· j LOS rnGELES (UPI) _ ecutive board tn York, Pa.. ru•
said he has raised about $2,000 One or two convicted bank
!or the project. robbers who overpowered and
after forct.1g the car off the
Vancouver. tear 1aa Gii occaslon.
·Lolli to Leave ..
Post With: Reag3Jl ·
·.
SAcl\'AMENTO (UPI)• -operaUoo. CJl Uilt financially
General s.vio.. D tr·, c i o r ~ C11!fomia Expooition.
Andrew, R. tom. will leave the Raq8"' Jllll!Oll LolU lf'lleral
Rbpn adiDbU!ratton .at the ..:;Ices .• ~ abol:lly after ~~~~~~~~! ehd of ibis month to tan. an tJ:W psnor 'took office in • ._ j ' . ~1ecuUve posttlon wtth,._a f1rm J9'1. He.,\fal .u execuUve. o:f
tn ·Waahingtoa. o.c. Huah!{ • i\(rcralt Co. and Todoy's Finol
Gov. Rooald Reqan'a olllce ,.._ °'""'1abder-01-lhe Stocks T odoy
Wedneaday a-.iced Lolli'•• ~~~oi11t~·g:-~·;;an=Air='=Del~. =e=nse~· ~I'~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; . reslinaUon. mm the -.~-tr v ,.
year po.'Jl as ~ad CJl the itate
g o vernment'a ~eeplne
de~nt. Lo1·11 1wu
reported on "vacation .. and
wUl not return ~ hi• office,
the announcement u.Sd.
The governor · did not name
an ~late auceeuor but
'Verne Orr, Dlrecfqr .Cll Mot«
. velkl.• ~ ...,. w14e1y
montloned ·tn ._.ia~ for
the job. ~ ' ·;
-Orr told newamen· he 'bad
'not been cootadecl by
Reagan's 1of'fice. .
"The , ....... ~·t ) ai>
poin_ted anyone yet. "iatof'Paul
Beck, R e a a a n,..' 1 press
89Cl'et81')"'.· ·~· .,. '
Lolli'• retliilattOn had been
upec:ted for ....raJ 'monthl
alter 1'epoN 'drculated '1'141 he had dlaqrtenHiots With
Earl c.oke, aectetarJ : of
Agriculture and Serylcel, ever
BIBLE THO UGHT S
' SALVATION: GOO PLANNED Chri1li1n
1t l'fttio• 8EFOll.E h• cr11t1d th1 E1rth!
Eph. l :J-4, I Pit. 1:19-20, Tih11 1:2. God
cr11t1d 11J lhln91 for Hi1 pl111ure, Riv,
4:t I CKi119 J 11. 8ibl1l, This i1 LOGICAL:
tli1t on• would cr11!1 good thi1191 for his
OWN pl111u}e, ·Gin, I :1 1.
Goel llll'lr inl1nd1d ANY cr11lur1 lo b,.
co11'11 EVI L. but h1 91v1· fli1 cr11tur11 this CHOICE. How 1li1 co~l.t GM "''"'''PLEASURE ln th1 OB EDIENCE of hi1 cr11tur.11
(If DISOIEDI ENCE were IMPOSSllLEI 1 S1t1n end c1rt1in 1n91l1
b1c1"'' E\l.ll 111.t df11,1y1d in H11v1n, r.1b1lling tg1i111I God.
k1v, )2:7-t , Jude 6,
C'M KNEW r1b1llio11 would t1k1 pl1c1 1mon9 men, Hi1 cr11lu•11
111 Etrllt l1in c• th•y w••• FREE to t•h•ll. H•nc•, H• p!1nned in
,,.tlll¥•11C• • Chrhtit11 wt y of 11l•t lion1 Htv• you le1rn•d of
&•111'1 plt1111M w1y of 1tlvt tion7 A1• you • pj1rf of it? Writ• or
pho11• f~r FREE liooH•t tellin9 of God'• wty of 11lv1tion. Churc~
•f Chrl1t, 1•7 W, Wiho11 St., Co1t1 M•1•, C1lif. 92627, P~o11•••
14•·571 I,, 141·2441, 646-1.763. VIS IT 111 ind 1tudy th• Bibl11
&04f'1 w,1111 wit~ u1. Su11d1Y1 9:45 A.M., 10:-45 A.M., 6:00 P.M.
Tu•N•Y• 10:00 A.M .• W•dn•sd1y1 7:3 0 P.M .. ALL ARE WEL·
COME.
He said he has mailed theJ escaped from a pair of
"Reagan 721' bumper strips federal guards used a revolver
around the country to about taken from one of the guards
1,500 people who h a v e to hold up a gas station only
answered ads he has placed in hours later. according to
Human Events, a magazine police.
San Diego Freeway a n d
threatening to kill them but
the third prisoner talked them
out of it. To prevent possible
retribution by other convicts,
the name of the third prisoner
who intervened was not made
public.
TOYS • l«lllllD e STA-
k_arls TC)I ·& HOllY -. :SALE!·~ with a conservative political A Hollywood gas station al·
philosophy. It costs $1 for a tendant identified ' Gerald A.
packet of the bright red and Godsey, 53, as the i\Jnman
yellow stickers. who took $175 from the station
Edwin Gray, Re a g a n ' s Tuesday night. 'I'be iden-
associate press seer~, said tification later· Jed to the
he knew nothing a b o ut nearby ~very of a deputy
Heagy 's campaign. "This is U.S. marshal's auto in whic h
the first we have hea,:d.of it,'' Godsey and his compa1ion,
Gray said. The 58-year~ld Robert French, 29, escaped.
Republican governor is ex· Both men were still at large
pected to run for a second today and comidered armed
term next year;---..--and-dangerous.
Heagy, in-.. a telephont . .in-Police said Godsey and
terview, said he disapproves French slipped out of their
of President Nixon's policy or handcuffs and fashioned gar-
gradual withdiawal from Viel· rotes with th' cuffs and their
nam. shoelaces to overpower and
He said he wants the Presi-disarm Deputy U.S. Marshal
dent to give North Vietnam a James McFarland, 50, and
deadline, and then step"up"t.he Guard John AndefSOCl.
war if the deadline is not met. The two men and another
"There's no progress,'' he prisoner were en route from
Solon Urges
·DDT Action
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Sen. John A. Nejedly said ti>-
day the Nixon administration's
decision to prohibit most
domestic use of DDT within
two years demonstrates the
need to ban the pesticide in
C<illfornJa "at the earliest
possible date."
4 • TIANSISTOtl . SIT OF Z WAUll TALlllS . .-.-----·--.......,..,.., ewDlll•••
......... $9.99
TASCO • 711 POWD
-MICllOSCOPI ~ ...... c-.. .-... ................................. ,, .... 1..,. . .
~fu~ NOW $16.99 _..___ ....
....... _11;tt 1lt ,__, ....
LAY~A-WAJ
( . . ' . . ..
.00.tAl'lui:oun · ..... ~ ................ . .......................
-.... tt7.00 -$12.97
SUDIDDLI llDDLIS ...... ......... _ _,_ .... ,
................... -P.M -o.ior $1.47 ............. _ ........... ~ ............ .. ..,..,. "" .......... _ .........
~ ..... ,.._................. . ' .... ........, w....-: ....
.......... $13~97
"
WAlCH -CHIONOMETU
n. .... ...... ...., "' ..... ef ...i._ I Wot•,. ......,, ... ,,..,, $wm _., . :r...,.......,.....,
$15 V.a/11e ' Only $9, 99
......... , ... ll ,IO
PU.STICAST CASTING
AND EMIEDDING
$9.99
SHDW'N TELL
'-.._...... rl-cffic. List.I .. .,.. .... °"" "°"* .. ,...
"" ....... le M,,_
__ _,sa.,i.,,d, . _'_'._W.t'R_.....JL.q_t_ -~~ -~McNeil_lsland_prison_near
compllshing anything. I spent Seattle, to Terminal Island
two years in Vietnam in the Prison Jn Loi Angeles Harbor.
jnfantry. I know what H's Godsey and French put guns
T h e Walnut Creek
Republican said he will rein-
troduce next year his legisla-
tion to ban DDT and other
P.esticides. which.Jail to Jlre.1tll
down after application. His bill
cleared the Senate this year
but died in the Assembly
Agriculture Committee. ·
•
'.-Jike." to th' ~Ids of the two gu ards
"
•
•
'
{HIGH FASHION
DIAMOND TRIOS
For Ber •••
a.n. t:tqui,itrly .rrled diamond fin·
,11a~ot tinA: wtb mate.b ing •id~
,.~ding baDd.. Caa hr ,..,ro " 1
Ht ot sepan.tely.
l 'l a~t briHS.n1 CUI di•·
mond for brr third lingtr
!efr hand. Trim cailored ~!IC'mblt with 11nclurtercd
'°"" $275
I• C'lf'll d>.mond t\ltroonJed hr t igh btautiful round dia·
moods I() ~hana> ir:s btautf.
For Dim • • •
weddin1
n11pti1!<. $390
1 11N«Ulinr rnachin&
buw:l foe bb~ ti11g
IANl(AMl l lCARD • MASTlR CHAl Gl
AJk ..oo.n out conTCnit111 cn:dit pl1nJ
n..-n.at COllld=CIP laUt
)EWEl.EllS POii 42 Y!lS.
M-. T"'---fri. , ... , ......
T....,w .. ., s.t. lM P.M.
HAUOI SHOPl'IN• CINTll
2m HAllOI I LVO.. COITA MllA
MS.MU I
HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTON llACH
lt2·SS01
. . .
APOUO/SATUIN
, MOON aocm ... _ ... ---·--·.....,.... ~ .... _, ··-tie-' ..................... ~ =··= =· ::=::""" ..... --=-"' ~ W.W., ................
flet· •12.00 $8.88
. MATnL HOT WHIB.S , ................... -............ ---· $9,99 ft91. t1J.00
......... $5.76
IALE ~fllU
lllilY I.Al
••• 1 atv ...... ., .. ....r .... ...,. ....... ...,. --~ .._, ... , ........ .. --$11.67
PLAT· DOH ~,..... ... ..., ...... ..... .... "••· ..... 47c .1.00 '
"THI FllHoHT HUSTUI"
IY TYCO .. _ ...... , ... ~
-11 ........... ~ .... ,
.......... $16.87
SUTCH-A-TUNE a..-.. ............... .., . ..., ~~_..... ...... ..... -· ~ij:'16 . ...---$4.96
50 FASHION ISLAND
NIWPOlT HACH '44.0fll
1 10,,_.,.,........,,
Other Stere1:
WESTCHISTIR
LOS ANGELES
CANOGA PARK
,_ ........ .,, ... ""' ....... ... ....-..-~ ......... ... -_ ...................... ... .... .._.. .... ..,n~_..,
••G. ..... $12.66
POWlllDI X· I llCHAIGIAILI
ILICTllC CAI
..,~_,.,, ... , ..... ........,
.... h#M"'J! 1-1 ........... ...... .................... ......, ... ~.......,.,_.. .. ,_ ...
'~--.................. ... ...-..~ .... ..,. ......... ... -~.r ... ._....,.., ...... _. .. .._ ...... ...., .. ..
..... Wlw,11 ...... .
IALE ""ICE $26,87
CllSST DOU
I IN4i W .............. ... ........ ~ ......... ........ ....... Mii Wt ........ .... ...
$7.91
AUIOIA 'S SIITTLI IOWI.
·~~ ... .._ . ., ....... .. _.
$7.97
-,.. __ ._.., ............ .............. -·-°"" $2.96 '
lM GAMU
..... c..,w. ......... ... _
$7.95 .............................. ... _, ""'""
····-$2.47 AMAD-A·MA'.llCS ........ _ ... ..,._,_
~*'-=..:----·--_'..$Fi---" -.. -oft,, ' ,79
'
$14.97
EAST IAKE OVEN
SALE PRICE $7,61
ALL-PRO HOCKEY
,_ eflk'-1 ... , "" -.. HI. ~'" At-i.tlN •r T•dor. Ste.I ''"'' lro-wM' 11 "'i.,.n ,.... in• • ..i '°'""
.,... ,...." ..... rpc...-dtl ... •""'
•••. 2000 $17.94
ltG. WHEEL
ly MAIS
Wll'i<I'• ""' .... Mir """'' ....... , ... .-ii q>$fe, Sift • TY •
$9.99
GREENHOUSE ,... .,.. ~ ... .,._.._ r, • .....
eM _ _. e•coti'.i.oel tel, hclllde<I • ... 1.'::oc .._. .,. 1 -+-iou ,..., • "' .. 1:.r.'....., ... i.., 11 ... ,...__.. .. _ ................... .
5687 ONLT ... -............. ·-·-········ •
IAIY KNOW IT ALL
$1.88
G.I. 4 -SPEED MONAURAL
RICDID !'LA TEI
s-.... ................... ,., "" ., .... .. ....,... ........ _ .... rK•
W'fl. .......... AtflHI .._.,_,d ter•
..... ,...,_ 162/l. Ulll. 41 •• 71 ,,... ,..., ....... ~ ......
$18:9'1 '
OPEN
DAYS A WEEK
-----..-------------------· ----· --~ ------.---..--..--,.---,..--.--.. ------' ..
' Thund01, N°"mb" 1', 1969 OAILV PILOT 9
;uneasy But · SiJicere .Alliance Readi·e·s Protest to War
• • • . •••'f N•1 lhe tr1111 n trl~ • measure our aucceu by our • "1ati.n., the flNlllC• Ind _....ltlM • ,.., ~ Chllllon -"" "'" .,..., deficit but we hope Ulat can be , • .,,..., oen-trtlloM .... ..terlbtd reduced "
Mobe'• elght national co.
chairmen, aa1d bt flnllly bod
enoucll· lie ll>Hw a punch '*"'* 111 Wes nOt ping dolfo' without a fllht."
If we _. really •dollf what
we ~ to be doinl, we ~ t have lar8' 1J111i>!>en
*·000 posters, 1 O O, O O O war but aga1Jl,1t a h06t of other med1at.e.ly and ln one piece, to quartvs in Washln,gton.
brochures, 550,000 a n t l w a r ills, ln f b d Soorea: oJ volunteers and 1 • t l c k e r s, 10,000 armbands, • w ree spee<: 8 n 2S 000 ............. A conference statement, democratic rig~li for Gl's, to corps of 30 paid staffers
1 -written by Lens. had st the ... , d f operate out o[ a IO.room, "" "·· ··-.. Ume, " Is ethln f op repre:w n an ree •1 -th ult In "' w..:: -..... " som g or a J m o s t II poll" I •·-n t end • ,Wlr"a-mori 1 e a
"-In tfllt tll•1lcll fetm r11e A,. SNC111 •
,AMlttW'Nrtf "•"'" But much more troublesoma
' By KEN BARTNETI' 11\aq the dollar pp ~· been of piop!e -~·" Wheil It )a not rOCllllCI on the
~. · ,._11tti1 ,,_ wttlW the ldeologtcal 1ap with lt$ ~ never en'ding clamor ovtr tac.
' . BlmllUP Old Leh, the New IAl!'a
dlltrult 11111 cm the llbOralo OI tile· M~ or Kannedy
•tripe -Ille kind of liberals operat!ni the Vlelnlm mora.
tor!um, a .,.,... II -bat
reluctant -"' ol the
llnancl"'ly Independent f-m • uca P•~ ' o de·~ t offi bulldln "' •v ~verybocly: the draft, to put an end to non ;:Jl.:-iip ce I 1
the N:a:~ and ralses Its "We call for this dernonstra-racism in all America and col-ha1f-mlle from the White • WASHINGTON"-lJke ... Ilea, p 0 w er rolatlooahlpl,
bli unhappy family, Iba New political pbrueololY a n d
. Mobilization Comm11te0 to goals.
Others .at the meeUna broke
up the bta11l, and.OllO l>y one
aU the dllpulll on tile West
Coast -eVelt the one betW'een
Hallinan and the Trotal:Yllta
-were resolved or-at 1wt
put ulde u tile day ol the
,Parch neared.
own ougb ~ls ' ow.l tion and rally •.. to stop the onlalbm in Washington, D.C." ijouse. malUnp .. d ...,.y.produclng And a dozen org..W., evtnta. war In Vietnam now, to bring To implement these goals,
·End tile .war In Vietnam bu The storm clouds wm lhtre
blckend r .... tile btlinolng. al the very start. Followers of New Mobe·.O.Utlob. .
The SMC bas been organtz.. all our troops home im· the New Mobe set up bead-(Set MOSE, P81• 11)
Ing around the antiwar move-lro;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;ii;;;;oi;::-
ment •Ince 1968 in lhe single
issue tactic historically dear
to the Trot!.
• But delplte the lnoer strains Leon Trotally, wbo h a v e
&btre wu even a craanlled around the war
;-brawl at one Issue s1nCt Iba. mkHllUel,
mtotlng -this u • e a 1 y lrled !'> pack the Ju))' 4th allllnce of mode r'a t e 1, meeting in Cleveland that
; liberals, c 1 er t c a I pac;iflsta:, brought the New Mobe into
· rodleall and Communiltl may beln(.
;bring off the largest peace A 'dlftct descendant of the
deamstrations in the naUoo's NaUonal Mobilization ·Com·
,history. -mlttee, which •laged tlie l!lel
· Hundz<ds ol ~di ol Penlagon mar.cit. Iba New
• demooslraton art expectad to Mobe ""' the bralnchU~ of the
: take part in three days of old MObe personaltUes -
.marches and rallies beginning Lens, pacifist David DelUnger,
: In Wilbington at dusk Thurs-Pn>I. Sidney Peck, aU tough
day and ending Saturday wltll minded radicals, all tree or
, mammoth marches and rallies any clearcut factional label.
. here and in San Francltco.
DISTl\VJT IWllCALS
' There wu even agreement The Uberall in turn distrust ·~0ur line is an ~tiwar line,
on a speaker's list -:-a the radicals ot both the new not a Ttotaky Une," said Miss
· dellcate compromise-that will and old left variety. Liberals Upman, a 2 4-ye a r · o Id
put a Black Panther on the aWl embrace the electoral plumber's daughter fr o m
San Francisco platform fltb system and believe that ma· Lynn, Mau. ''Any attempt to
former Sen. Wayne Mone. jorUy opinion, n 0 t con· accuse us of being -~omlnated
The same kind of com-frontaUon, ii tbe surut way to by any political philosophy is
promise was painfully roached· a Vietnam. pullout. rtdbaltlng."
for the Wublnilon nlly They laU ~ ,.. how a ma· SJ!IGLE ISSUE
where Sen. George McGovern, jority movement can be built The Trots came off the
0-S.D., and Trotskyist Carol with ·a Pf'Olfam. Cid rbetotic 11 .. ':.Je issue line at the Llpman will be amoaa a wide that ulaufts moderate con-... -'6 spectrum of speakers. victlou. 'Ibey are also wary Cleveland n1eetlng and went
1n the day-to.day operations of violence, potential or ac-alo11g wllh the conference Call
of the coalition, the fa.c:Uons tual. for actJon not only against the
A.UCT-ION
UNPAID STORAGE ACCOUNTS
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15
10 A.M. TILL 7
LAGUNA BEAC!'.1 VAN & STORAGE
.-· . '!be vut maJokty or the RETAIN CONTROL
· d e m o n 1 t r a t o r s wW be They maftlled to retain con-
aoo1111cal or moderates --lrol o1 the leaderihlp at •pie concerned mainly with CleYOland but tile lluff.way
: Vi.tnam. They will b e contention between old alid
·unaware of th e com· new . left forces aDd the
. muncaUona gap, OC<Utonal moderate middle has rope!
credlbillty pp and dollar IBP unabated since.
coelbt and cooperate. But &lch Ideological croaa cur·
their Ideological dllierences reotl aro the Ideal IWlmmlng I
· remain. place for the Trobkyists or
New Left radicals dlltrUat "Trot.I,'' a 111Dder but high-
Old Left nidlcala -who ly orpnlied lntmutlional
operate under a chain of com· orpnlaation with roots In the
mand . and submit to a hiltoric and e v e n t u a 11 y
SEARS Has Everything; ..
Including SUNDAY SHOPPING
Sunday Hours
12 Noon to 5 P.M.
'that vu: the umbrella At a Nov. 2.ateering com-
organllation coaxing them out mlttee meeUng ln Chicago, for
,of their homes, schools and example, the ideological dln
~buslneae1. became 90 fierce that at one
.. point Peck Ureatened tO
;f'O,IOI IN DEBT resign.
" The New Mobilization, or · And Just be(ore the meeting .:New Mobe, could be as much c J 0 s ed. the naUooal co-
.., M0,000 In the bole Saturday chairman did Indeed bolt from ~--a deficit tt hopes to cut his seat. "I just blew my cool ~drasUcally through the sale of at the very end," he said
commemoraUve posters and later.
..-buttons. At a planning meeUng or the
:. "If we're ln the black, we're West Coast Mobe in San Fran-
;doing bad," said Sidney Lens, cisco, the explosive radical
·the veteran labol' radical serv. lawyer, Terence Kayo
;Ing as one of the New Mobe's ·Hallinan, watched in rising
,,eight national co-chalrmen. anger u Trots k y i s ts
...... Any moveinent that ls in the maneuvered on the floor.
lack is doing bad. We Hallinan, another of the New
discipllile, such as members of murderoua split be t we e n
'tile Communlal Party, USA, or Stalin zid Trolslly.
the Trot.skyiita. The Trott are m~ben of
NO COMPROMISE the Socl•llJt Worker. Party or
The ·-IJ"M• also ha-a tts off!prln1. tile Young ~.. a1w.w ... Socialist Alliance. They have
bone-deep aversion to com· been at the center of ·N1w
pro{llise or what they see as Mobe conteltion llnce the
the dilgulsed sellout of radical Cleveland meeunc .
alms. · '!be Troll hold about 10 of
Peck, who at U can oPU&te • the 100 ~ committee
with the prasmatlsm or the seats, but neither they nor any
Old Left, calla that avenlc:r.t other faction controls the "purism" and says It is part coaUU«1
of the tradition of the Students ' "On the campusea they con-foi: a, DemocraUc Society, a sUtute a 1 very important
notable coal!Uon absentee. force," Peet llld of the Trots,
"I think there's a belluv1 Jot "particularly 1 in the vacuum
of young radicals whb don't go left by the demise or the
for that holiness," Peck said. SOS."
But these yllung radicals are worried as .tlJe movement TROTS PROMINENT
: Mvettl•emtnt drives toward a mass political Trots are prominent tn the
leadership of the Student
Mobilization Coinmittee, an
organiu.Uon that cl&ifus over
1,000 chapters in the nation's ·
high schools and campuses.
Carol Upman, 1 former na·
tio.ial secretary of ihe Young
Socialist Alliance, iS national
SMC secretary.
~LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK ::~ie~n~ '!'.!'.~.'."~:
11·, • • • • • more moch!rate ~1t mu s t Ur11r1neX t•lt h•fp YOU b•tOPll• th. frJm 1l1m p•PSO!t 'j'OU W•nf fo b1. '-~me and the
CWrin111 ia • tiny tabl1t aitd e11ily 1w1ilow1d. Cont1in1 no dan91rou1 , u=v more
cftut•· No 1tanin9. No 1peeial 1rarcl11. S.1t rid of er•••• fat aitd li•a hopelessly compromised.
l{"n9ar. °'rl1t1r h11 b111'1 1u1d •uece11fullv bv thou1a1td1 all o••r th1 . "There's a tendency among .. .,,.try fer OYl:f 10 Y••n. Odrin1r c••h Sl.25 ind the 1119• •eonomy radicals to get nervous Whe'.l
•h• $5.25. You mu1t 1001• u9ly fat er your money will be r1fund1d by large numbers of peopfe are tu dru99ht. No '1'1111tion1 •••ff. Seid with th!1 9u1r1nt11 by: with UI" says Ron YOWlC co-
WfOID'$ Alli~ PHAAMACY-1104 NIWPOIT IOULIYAID project' director of the New
MAIL OIDDI PILLID Mobe. ··Thar•'• a feeling that
•
For the Washington· march,
the SMC ii producing .over
Lowest Price of the Year!
·D.eluxe Lawn Building
--;SA.VE Sll Now!
t.wn Ballcling
Rep)!Of'89.95 7888
163: ai. Ii. . ...._ With plr· wood floor, me! roll fann-
ed -·· Whi .. ,_
e Sise 7.ut.. with 216 eli. ft. area
• Slidlas doon. lock with k.,.
• Gamnloed and painted -1 ,
• Verlleol rib -•Ia. decontod
liJk -ned cloon, heny bot·
1omrnme
•White walla, -n roof, black
coldllllll and terolla. TerrifiG
bay!
1179.95,a.641-IS9.88
RegUlar '144.95 ·
J .
88
AakAbontSean
Comeoient Credit Plant
--------------------·------------------~-----------... I --· ...... ---·-----CANOOi4.,. GLHW.I omllC • "'° WffA,.,.,. 10IMCI I
I ........ ---IS ~-·"-·-I ~ M!UWOOO PAWlllNA WfJA MCIMICA. ¥-..r 4 ..... '---------~----·------------ea.rs ----------------" ....................... NtA:.ll.ttWP.a....,11..._ .. IP.& --....... d 1 taa I 1 l• ... Mt t)I ,.,;
--"-
Sears
-··::SA-VB ·f J]..:.....c __ . -·
$48 Shir/e .., . to f44!
• Set of 3 : "'nrlehom G
Selected OOds, ••'• 1 3 6o]f Clubs head c J>ers1mm • • ·
tite ~nl;,uv.speed he.ls~ i;~ 3688
$96 Sh· • s ll'ley EngleJi
:· 1.":. ~~ ii~~·t"o's 2.0~. ~o]f Clubs
b'j"'er •hot a!i-!'.l"' blade 10; . "'led su~ """''ent. Sand onJy. •iace .tace. Petit; 6988 .
$69A Id , • 8 IV mo Palmer Al
fectry f::l.~·::,i""'• 1, a. 4• P~~inuin Shatt, :fi_ew step d 0 w id rnatcli ed. 4 · aft. In reguJar alum inu1n 688 Slos D •nd ta11. .
• Set 0/U~ Ford Steel
5, 6, 7 8 ~ iroFins, no's. 2 a S4haft Clubs
for ~· ' · ared t ' • • reguf ier •hot aliirr:" blade 6 9., ar sizes only ent. In
!134 "mold P~ 6l.~t1:•ilu9desL,8 ir!':,r2 Afo4ntin111n Shaft
Cnrom ' · ustrou ' • • ·
blastede t!~~:Bhed heads. h8~d 8988 S Regular and ta11 • avefl8to .
$46 Arno f 19!
• No'• 1 a'd Painter a.m ~inish. C~!o'rl 1 Chror_ne plate::OO Set
Mdbl,.ted / tr' m ring 29" $56 Arn ace. Durable. .
• No·e 3 old Painter 5 I
Plated t't 6" 7, 9, p Cli~ ron Set f a.c C n1 s h · ome
ab1:.· 010rfuJ trim s:~~1jj~~ .3681
SAV.£'32%
$2.75 Doug Fort1 o to 373?
Gives the Kolter l Golt Bans
Olli'er dlsf.ance. J 87 $2.99 D • "" oug Ford 80 GoJ Pkg. J
"Pons:-S harp click «w t f Balls
$2.99 D. , ,. , .. )17
• oug Ford 90 ,.,_., Pkg. J
""''""'"' ..,...,, """ Balls
14-Club C "· ... .,. ""•· J 87
• Vinyl c 0~artnient Ba Pkg. J ~~~~~cji~:~:· p 1Ji~~d~et~~~
· •dded •lin = 911 g.
1------··--~---~ -------~··-------N-----------------~ I ~"1.-'"~I=~ ·~MPIC~WfO nco.i~ ~~ :aCOMIMM 1
I CXWf1tlH HOUYWOOO OIAHOE ~ """"" mt40I VAlif( I awtCA l«Jll'NOOO '~" ears SANTA MONIC4 VftMONf .....
,________________________ _ ___________________ , .
-J•1 ....... 0umaA11••lM'....,.... -•• ........ ...., ..... ~,_.JOA.M.llfo.JOP.M.
r
..
)f OllLY PILOT Thurlday. N"'m"" 13, 1969
·1;~.ey Like •oelilahs.~
.
'Half of County Barber Siudents Glils
By Aaodal<d Prell
ANAHElM -A '"""'Y of Oraoat Colrlty's l"'O barber
colleges indicates that nearly
half the students art women
•.. and both sexes are baPPY
about il.
Several girl barbers say
they have found that men with
long hair prefer them because
they fear a male barber would
<..'Ul off too much.
'And, adds a 19-year-okl
fema1e student: "We're a lot
more gentle, and men really
appreciate that."
Men students say they don't
mind the ladies bvading what
traditionally bas been a ma~
domain. As one put it. "l
fjg\lte if a girl can do the.job,
!he's welcome."
One barber college owner
said the increasing popularity
of men 's hair styling is what
attracts tbe girls.
Student Kathy Davis of
50 Officers
To Graduate
On Friday
Fifty recruits from eight ci-
ty poUce departments will
receive their diplomaa from
the Orange County Peace Of·
ficers' Academy at Golden
West College Friday.
The graduation a d d r e s s ,
scheduled for 1:30 p.m. in the
CoHege C~ter, will b e
delivered by state Senator
George Deukmejian (ft-Long
Beach).
Deukm ejian was elected to
the State Senate in 1966 after
two tenns in ·the Assembly.
He was re-elected in 1968 and
appointed majority f J o o r
leader when the Republicans
came to power.
Par t icipating in the
ceremony will be Richard R.
DeFrancisco of the Costa
Mesa Police Dpeartment and
graduating Clas! presidenlj
Gary E. Newmeyer of the
Santa Ana Police Department
and class vice-president; and
Derald D. Hunt, director of
the Golden West College Law
enforcement program.
Dr. Thomas A. Blakely,
evening college director for
the Orange Coast Junior
College District, will award
the .dip!on;i_~:.. . ·····-· _ _
DEATH NOTICES
BOLZ
w11111m em. Ate 116. o' 221 E. 2C'lfl
SI., COlll Mtil. 01!1 of dHltl, No-
Yembtf' 11 . 511,...lved b'I" 1l1Pdl111htM",
Mrt. H1rrler John•on. Coal1 M ... i
broti.r. c11...el1ncl Boll. South L1911AI/ two 1!1tan.. Nitrv Rodr!g11e .. N-POrt
Btld!, I nd Emm• Pl'lel•n. Sttvlcn
wm bt llelcl P:rldav, JI AM. Bell
!lroMIWIY ChlPtl. wlltl RIV, Cl11ri.s
Smlltl offlcltHnt. ln11rnmtnl, Harbor
R11I ""-l•I P1rt;, DlroKtfd b'I' llll
arotow•Y Morl!HrY, Cosl1 Mes.a.
HYMAN
H1rry Abt H't'n'IM-"" 11. ol' un T9"\ll'lt Hitt1 Or .. La111n1 Bffdl. Dill
of dltlll. No\'etnbtl' 11. S111Vl.....i by
wl!t. Eml'l'llJ llOll. Frink p, Hvrntn,
HollYWOOd (Ilsa known •• GUY ~'~!I)/ bro!hlr, Arthvr D. Hvrntn.
LOI Al!fMln. S.....lces wlll bt hlld
Frldtv. 11 AM. Sheffer L11un1 fl•&eh
Mo!'lv•l'Y CMPtl. Enlombmtn1 ID !DI•
low. Slit!!..-Laaun1 Buth Mor!\11ry,
Dlretlor ..
RUMBAUGH
ltoW't C. R111nbt11af'I, J r, ,t..,. Q , ..
12111 C..ncty Lint, G•rden Grci~.
Diie of dlllll, Novtmber 11 , SVrvlv..:I
by ... 111, Sut1 _,, MlchHI and K-
m'I mother. M1rur•I Rl.lfftba111h.
Sl!"'k n. SllvrdaY, 11 ,t.M, 5m11t11
Ch1PR1. lntenntnl, We1lmlr15teo< MtfnO. r1•1 Park. Smith• Mortu1rv, Dlr•tlorL
WOODBINE
1!:11111 Waodblot. Diie ot fftltl, No-"~ a. Gr1¥nr.s. ••vkn Frkt11,
16 A.Mi Good Sheohtrd CltrMllrY.
Bt lll MOr1111rv, 1741 $4.lperlor. Co.II
M111,Dlr-.c:I-
ARBUCKLE & SON
WestdllfMortaary
4%7 E. l Tiil St.. Costri Mesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corolla del Mor OR :J.1450
Colla Maa Ml 5-ZUI • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UI BroadW8J, Costa Mesa
. [JWQI
• DILDAY BBOTllERS u .. 11ng1oo v.ne,
M-ary
lllll Beadl Blvd.
Huallagtoii _.
uz.m1 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAllK
C.me1<ry eM-ry
Chapel
-Padflc View Drive Newport Beadl, CaWorala -• PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL P'UNEllAL
HOME
'lll!BtluAn.
w ... -·-• -~-NP~ER• MORTVARY
Lop.•-CN-1131
Su Clemme ffUlll • SMlms• MORTUARY
111 Miii s..
Hulillgtoo -~ -
' .
nearby Cypress agries: "Men
like to look better now.
They're mOre conScioui or
their appearance." Sbt says
some me.1 believe women can
style their hair better to sui\
women.
Mi!! Davis originally in-
tended to be a beautician but
changed her mind because she
did not want lo work around
women -;;They're too catty
and they go.!Sip too much and
are too particular."·
Why do women join the snip-
py set?
'
Miiiy DiY!a o1 Balboa say1 lt'a because sht likes to work around men -"lt makes me
feel better."
Katt.> Lemke of Lakewood
quit a job as legal.secretary to
start cutting curly I o ct s
"because there's good money
ln Jt." An'd She adds: "Men,
particularly y0W1ger guys,
prefer women."
Do inen ever make passes at
girls wielding looking glasses.
"Sure " says-one 'but we
have a' pretty good defense.
Razon."
Bottomless Dancing
. 4 ppeal Turned Down
SANTA. ANA - A bot·
tomless bar operator's last
minute plea for c o u n l y
supervisors to reconsider their
proposed ban on bottorliless
and topless dancing lasted
about a minute Wednesday.
Unimpressed supervisors
heard the explanation of Carl
Connover of Orr.ige that a Los
Angeles Superior Court judge
had ruled a similar Los
Angeles County ordinance tG
be unconstitutional and im-
mediately voted -unanimous-
1-Ionor Choir
Selects Pair
SAN CLEMENTE -San
Clemente High School students
Lorrie Jensen and Craig
Dastrup have been selected as
members of the Souther.1
Caliromia Vocal Association's
honor choir.
Four other San Clemente
High students were among 376
throughout Southern CalHornia
who qualified to try out for lhe
choir -Marlo Mainero ,
Virginia Crow, Pam Vienner
and Barbara Smith.
2nd 'Mind'
Decathlon
Announced
CHIL.DRENS
THEA'J:RE GUILD
PltESENTS -
~~y,_2?!39.
Ticlets On
S.le Here
.1FARB-ERWARE'
lnew t·able~top~size
~-.......
FAMOUS ~OPEN HEARTH" ELECTRIC BROILER -. ' . . -
8~"xl2"
\ f c:ookinf surface
~HEILTHFULI SMOKELESSI SPATTER FREEi.
'cooks and cleans like a dream. Farberware's
new size "Open Hearth" electric broiler
with an a~· x 12" cooking surface. "Cool·
zone" brolllni method; (air circulation
around cooking meaU seals in flavorful
juices. Only the fat is drained off. No smoke
'-llD spatter. No hood or enclosure to dry ' . out meal Se!Ve the healthiest meats you've
mrtasted.
--
Cookl"11-wlth·F1rborw.,..
Demon1tr1tlon-S1turd1y,
November 1S, 10 a.m •• s p.m.
Chamher Reeommendatlon
, CoU:n ty .Taxing A-gency Revamp Asked
Prices Effective Beginning Today
Sears
Jimmy Cana, fi•&-time
World'• Pocket Billiard
Cbampio~ will appear per.
1on1lJy from 1% noon 10
2:30 PM. 6:30 PM to 8:30' Pi\I
i• the following ltDrell on the
followi .. days:
~EIMonte-
November 10 and 1 I
5elrl Corina-
-12 ead l~
Outdoor Lighting Sets
• 2S-ligla1 r;iv• your home the • 1 gay, bright look of the holiday Low Priced·
11eaaon. Let1 yourimagination 299
set the tone. Several festive
colon, ltanolartl C 9Yt bulb!. Set
INSTALLED
CHAIN-LINK
tEN(ING
Beautifully Shaped 7-Ft.
Scotch Pine '
Sears Low Price!
88
==~--
• E.c:h with I fnohly -look md -fectly obaped r ... ,.... o(-..
e Add llght oel> to <IPhlnl the ~el,
etarllgh't. and trim to excite the children
with the elegance of Cbriatrue
7 Ft. Beuer Seoteh Piae_Sl 8.88·
Sears '11h·Foot
Best Scotch Pine
I .h.
Regular $29.99
itVE 2688
• Tb-graoefuJ. .....rat
looking artificial tftee
ara 11mmetrie1lJy
lbapod, there Ire PO '
badajdes
• Each ii designed to ltlly
lovely £or yean without
any needie drop or
meet. Fire resist.ant
AalcAba"'S"""
CoMveniena Credit Plaft
\
20 Indoor Midget
Light Seu 199
Sean 2~·1nch
Ornament.a
Greet V1JueJ Low Priced!
...
...
U.L listed for iadoot
use. 1f one lainp bums
out die mt .... li$h!<d.
Jrs colors.
Choose from a lar.gie 1eo .. " leaion of 2~·ia. balle ~i
in assorted colon. Bai: ;·~ U12. ... ,
~-----------------------~------------------------~· I 1U1trtA PAK l l MOHT! t.oHO WrOt ftOO 111.... POMON4 toUtH OMIT flLAlA \
(.ANOO.A P• OL8CMlf OlVJtllC • IOtO IANfA NM l'ClaANCI_ ••• -,
I CCWTCIN HOU'f'WOOD CIAHGr I µMNl'A Pl.....,. \'AU EY I ~~ (X)Yl.I• HGl.EWOOD 'AMO(""' Sears IAH'IA MONICA vtttMONT .. ._ • ~------------------------------------------~ .. ......, ...... ,....,NOA:.M .... liJOP,M.,S.....,11 ....... lt ... --• "Stdf 1· Oaaa: ................. •••A ' • •·
. •
' ' • •• " ,, ,,
• • • ... • • • ~ • • • .. • • • . .. •
• ~
•
'<
••
••
•
• .
•
"
J.
<
L
T
•
• •
N
•
N
N
N
•
• •
N
N
N
N
• •
N
N
• • • •
• • • • •
• • • • • • • •
"'·
"
•
Record
Marriage
Licenses
·meoree•
~~·----=--0--0----=--,,------,,-.,,------------ -----------------~--.....-----------Tll11nday, Nowentbtr l), 1969 DAIL V PILOT JL
LOWEST TOY PRICES IN TO •
Mattel?•
Dancerina
Doll
1199
All Mine!
Tors a ._,, ·-
s-1 -........
, Bl!>~ lllo-'1 --3-a--
Allr.br D-.. T.,." ,_ "f'_1 •• · .-rn;;;-";;;';;.--..,
• ~...i'· HotWbeel c.r.
66«:..
New>loddo .. a..o.·
P:o.m.DeW. ,_,
.All-Tafl• ,_ ........
c-• Fmo!
HoPPll7
Hop 594
~I.a
""" _....,
SEARS PLEDGES THE LOWEST·TOY PRICES IN TOWN.
ONLY SEARS THE WORLD'S LARGEST RETAii.ER CAN
OFFER SUCH A BROAD 'SELECTION OF TOYS AT TIIE
LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN Wtl'H SO MANY CUSTOMER
CONVENIENCES~
Jbta.J'a
Talklns
Barbie
Doll 494
• Alllhad
Toys"' '°""' Pficct
--···-· ·-···--·------· -·l'Jiiy;·-·· ...
Skool
17ke
Bike 4ea All-T.,.. ,_ -
lo 'I\ 1 ! ''~ 1 L I r I< ' ' l '' \~ ' 'I '' ~
Ke-'• Eioy Bake °"'1..11.'8
Topper'• Rinp 'n Tb~9.9'
ldeal'1Jlana!IOs 2,97
Li,..Blfte 5.9,
He~m Trie7c!e, 11Ma..6,97
Mon Big Whee 9.99
11117 Tonka Fan Bam._.6&
•
Prices Effective
Beginning Today
Electric NFL Football Game
• 2 NFLte&m. in official nnifi>rma 1194 e St. Loah Cmlinolt uid ~-Be"-
.• P.ebd with 1ction ~fun!
Sturdy Big Haul Dump Truck "Prices Effective
Beginnin1Tod1y" ·~ ..,.p t.-• elUld ·=--r..-458 ud ........
Marx 6-Unit
Freight Train
....... --·#"'"' ....... -. •• ..,.:.,.... ~~°(IA.!•e·e:,, oper1tin1
-·.i ' • ,
. "I> og car 1592 •·• •Straight traek ·
& curved track
Hu
E•erythfng
for Boys
and Girlt
HotW'beolo
B ....... BIJI
RaeeS.t 994
All-I
T°"" "'-
"""
Ohio
Art
Sketeb·
A~Tane 394
All O!Uo
An: Tors
"'°""' Ptka
Snper!
Ideal'•
Zeroid
Robota
396
All Pithtt
Price TOJt
"'--
21-lncb
Tia
Man
Robot
1096 ...... _
""" ..... Hiab-im,.a .., .....
Great Bike Values for Christmas Giving!
-
'-Tremendoll.I Vllue!
Boys' 20-in. Spyder Bike
Boys' 20-in. Spyder Bike
Hl1hrl1e h111dlf:b.er•.
Coa11er bnlte. Ch1i"
guard. ChrnnM pitted left..
der1. Flamboyant lim1
1old. 29s1
5-Speed Screamer Bicycle
• ~J>" fnme deUp
•*l6wbed1tylin1 6999
• Euluin daol "" l>nkH
• ~tyle embioned "''
Sean 20·ln.
Jumor Bicyclea 2911
e Can be eou'ft'l"led te feD
aise Sp)'der bib; lnl..-
wh"" , ______________________ _
1U1NA P.AIX TA 1·4400, 521-4530 fl llQfll GI 3-3t11 lONO IUCH Hf 5-0121
• Cirlt' I• blee; bo1a•
m•ntl --~----------------------, roMOHA 10 2.11,5, NA 9.s161, vu 6·67.5t rteo WE a.4262 sou1tt coAsr rlAlA 540.3333 I I CANOGA PAIK 3•0·0661 GlEHDALI Ot 5.100•. c;:a ... ,6JI OlYMrtC .. SOTO AH M211
I COMITC>I< NE 6·2511, NE 2-5761 ttOU,_ HO f-5941 , OWiGI 637-2100
COVINA 966-0611 Nill'NOOD oa a.2521 PUUllHA "1-3111, 251-4211 " -----... -------~------.------' S-. Hlahll Manclar .......... Salunlay 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., ........, 12 "'911 io S P .M.
•
• SANTA 4NA Kl 7-3371 lOllRANCI 5•2·1511
.------....... SANTA·FE $PIING$ 944·8011 VAllfY PO 3·1461. 9'4·2220 I S·ears SAKTA MONICA EX -4 ·6711 vt~ PL 9·1911 -~---------------' "Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Moneyiklck"
,,
•
• • '
l •
.
I
t
r1
I
I
I .
' ' I
I •
.1
J
' ,
JI OAILY PILOT
• • • • • • • i
. ow -Jus.1Jite=Mid~~r . Ne,ar~~~iss N@;,, riv \Ila' -, s .... · ff. ~11--.1m~'8,?.,~~F!J'r--t.,,, -., J ~~· ... ft' f11ll·tlm• bo•th19 •clitor woril119
'Tliere .was a P :,.ture of. the' Fat., ·F,~~;-jge· :n' F'ront of 'Me· • • • ;..;__ m.,·ttH. Blt the ~;"'~~Hf!·:if~!:i:1~::: ""' ~el.ll • 'incMllDt ia qoly, one of 4,500 i1 a cfeily f11t.r. of lt.e DAILY
WASHINGTON (UPI! -
This Is the story "' • ...,.
-miss -that split .......i wben
a routine flill>t faces posalble
disaster.
ed altitude after a routine
takotff from Newark t11irport.
On board were 55 persons
bound for Detroit.
(FAA).
1be third member ol the
United crew -2Dd Ofrtcer L.
)'. Maher -so~d the
alann. "Look!" he shouted.
The pilot, Capt. Ray A. Lem-
mOq, reacted instantly "I
o_bserved a large jet aircraft
on. a collision C'OUrse to ours. I
, immediately appPed hard"°ver
left • aileron," . sending the
plane into a steep climbing left
tum,0 his report said.
Inside tbe cabiri, t h e
passengers were frtptened
but uninjured. The t w o
stewa,rdeues, however,• suf.
tered minor Injuries.
puently did DOI see th< United cident k>ok place In only '
jet untll it was too late. or fi~ secoads." 1
buardllls -}ea than. foot PILOT. ' _.,UOo -our ml!I coI-
1
._ ________ .
'ssiooa in the natloo's airways I"'---------
. ·at yMr, according to FAA ,,----------;' It happened Nov. 5 at ZZ,000
feet over aa obscure electronic
navigaUon check point ln the
mountains of New York State
known as the Tannersville om-
ni directional range.
The weather was cloudy.
Neither the sun nor the ground
was visible as United Air
; Lines Flight 285, a Boeing 717
~ jellioer, climbed to its assign-
(Continued from Page 9)
"MOBE ...
Unknown to the United
jeUiner, a Seaboard World
Airways DC& cargo jet also
was climbing through tbe
clQUds. This is the way the
crews of both planes saw wbat
happened next, according to
reports filed with th• F~al
A v la t-i o n Administration
To Maher, the two p~s
"appeared as close aa IO
feet." So cle&e that Mabu
said the crew in the ~pit<Of
the Seaboard plane were
"clearly visible." •
The captain cl the ,SCaboard
jet -Joseph Szaflarski -ap.
"There was a picture of the ' But ·"there is no doub
fJt fUJela&e in froat ol me • • • any cl our minds that if
then it disappeared," he told second officer had not spot an Airllnea: Pilots k$sociation the 5eabolrd f1i&ht, the re:.
(.\LPA) lnvestlgl.tor . wouldbavebeen1mld-atrc
Szaflarski said .for one ter· lislon -not a near mila,",tl
ntylng Instant he thought he United p11o1 aaid 'ln a-letltr t
mlgbl hit the tai) ol the United ALPA. ,
plane. Whit happened? Who was a~
Accordin( to the United !aull? Tbe pilolS? l'bO air tral-
copllot, V.A. Popelm, the .in-ftc controllers? AD in-
'Y' Guides
Form· Three .,
' '
timates •.
When It happened the Na·
nal Transportation Safety '~d W¥ boldlng five days of
~arinp on the problem. The
~ Jots ltgued for a third man
'1. all tft't>mu.\J et 11 n ~rs.
feauuclaos plogged for an ~ 1 eollll&oo avoidance 8fltan. Otben argued for
sepsate eiaJ'ridon for private
alld ..........W aircraft.
Some caUed for ~ in-
1.enalty lights' on all alreraft,
or. special p'1tlt to inciu,.
•Visibility. But \here was no
dear cut acretement on a1 plan
Idl -•• P!'oblen\ thal has
LET'S BE FUllDLY
Ir you have new neJ&:bbon
or Jtnow ot anyone moving
to our area. please t.ell UI
ao thlt we may extend a
trtendly welcome and help
them to become acquainted
ln tbdr new turroundlna:L
So. Coast Y'uitor
494-0579
494.9361
. flarb~r Visitor · teama began traveling the
, country in Seple~ to drum
: up suppcn for the November
,' demOQSlrlliOOS and to help
: build local support organlza-
1 Uoos •
N N • dahiitd ·more thin !00 .liv<S
e'\f ~tl~ll8~®~rillg~the~·~1~~~tl~O~~~a~n~'I;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~
The YMCA Indian ,Guid" ol f •
: NOT TEIJ.JNG . ' " Lens, when asked how much f these operations cost, replied
~politely, ''J know but I'm not i telling you."
Huntington Beach will com-
plete the dlviaioo of the
organization into lhree groups
(natiODfl) Friday night at
~arina High School.
' .. 'I SEE BY TODAY'S
WANT ADS
• Got a ,reen thumb? c.a~
' Steve Wilcox, a ~fonne.r ~ teacher and the closest thing
; .the New Mobe has to a comp-
• troller, says the East Coast
• operalioos could cost $100,000.
•."But I don't really know and I
: don't think anyone knows," he
~added.
Ceremonies marking the end
cf the, soU~ry • Great _&iver
Nat.ion will start at 7:15 p.m.
in the Marina ootdoor am·
pbithe.ate'r. From the
~es wW emerge the
. italize on it! ~ ,
route and equipment for
,ale,
' Hallinan, co-ehairman of the
, parallel West Coast effort,
' said he wooldn 't be surprised
• if operations there also cost
'. $100,000. The New Mobe ex-
pects to spend $15,000 just to
convert a San Francisco poJo
grounds into a rally site.
Both East and West Coast
Mobe! worked independenUy
to raise funds.
They duded off old mailing
lists, Raged benefit cocktail
partiea, dinners and art auc-T •-V .. ., • . T• lions, looked up old friends in GKirtg p n Gtttng t:tDe
the labor movement and •
•
• Great Coastal, Winnemucca
and N\ll1Mm Star ,n.usm. '
Great Coastal ,}iation( will
serve · everylh\ng south : ol
Y?l'ktown Avel'Jl.le:,'.'f)ille the
Winnemucca Nation covets
'-t central Huntington ~ch m:
eluding HunUngton Harbour
.and Ncrthern ·Star taies Jn
northern Huntington &each.
Fathers and SQrlS in the YM-
CA Indian Guides will be Jii
full costume and have invited
l flpectators to bring cameras if ~ UPI Tt ........ , ~esired. . '
sought donations through' full-Remember when you could make a purchase with a man watches a program -0n one of the many newly-'
page newspaper ·ad-dime? WeU, you can still at the Greyhound bus installed coin-operated television sets as he waits
vertisements. Actor Burt Lan· terrninaJ in Los Angeles. An unidentified service-for a bus. Orte diJlle buys 15 minutes.
e&ster'anamewas used in a~-------~------------~----~------------~
fund appeal letter in the Lo6
Angeles area.
DONATIONS VARY
Most donations ranged from
$5 to $25, fund -raisers said.
One East Coast businessman,
whom they would not identify,
came through with $5,000 for
the largest single iodividual
contribuUon. ·
Lens said labor groups have
donated between $2,000 and
$10,CKKJ so far. Among them,
he said, were the
Amalgamated Clothing
Workers and the
Amalgamated Meat cutters.
What will become of the
New Mobe after Saturday?
Lew says it will survive.
"We've been holding together
l!lince the summer of 1966 and
our coalition now is infinitely
broader than it was then."
Peck is less optimistic. "I
think it has good potential," he
said, then pegged the future of
lhe coalition to what 's ahead
in Vietnam.
President NiJ:on, Peck said,
actually served notice of war
interuificalion in his speech
Nov. 3 and the effect of that
will drive more people into the
peace movement -evrn·
tually.
"It lakes time for that to
jell," Peck said. "But I think
it will."
Stop Routine Smallpox Shots, 2 Urge
PHILADELPlllA (AP) -
Two researchers from the Na·
tional Communicable Disease
Center recommended Wed-
nesday that routine childhood
smallpo.i vaccination b e
discontinued.
School Sets
Open House
Clavis Montesso ri School in
Costa Mesa will hold an open
house Sunday for interested
parents of 21h. to six year olds.
The 15 childrei,1 now enrolled
in the school can be observed
between 2 and 4 p.m. using[
Montessori materials.
The benefits~ they declared,
no longer outweigh the risks . .
The recommendation came
from Dr. J. Michael Lane.
chief of the domestic branch ·
or theh center's s m a 11 p ox
eradicaUon program, and Dr.
J . Q. Millar, director of the
program, in a reJ)ort to a
meeting o[ the American
Public Health Association.
The recommendation does
not represent the official view-
point of the Communicable
Disease Center. The center. in
Atlanta, Ga., is part of the
U.S. Department of Health,
Education and Welfare.
A similar report from Drs.
Lane and Millar is to appear
in the Nov. 27 issue of the New
England ,Journal of. Medicine,
along with rebuttal from Dr.
Samuel L. ·}\atz, chairman of
the pediatrics department al
Duke University, and Dr. Saul
J. Krugman. New Y-o r k
University pediatrician.
Dr.· Ka~ waS quoted·in ·the
latest issue of Medical World
News, a · weekly jwrnal for
physiClans-, as s,ying he feels
that : reacJjQDll t to small{>!>I.
vaccine, which cause seven .to
eight de-aths 1 year, are no
jusillication for stopping m~
vaccination.
Drs. Lane and Millar argued
that the ·United States c.9.n ex-
pef!t a .... nii.nimum of 310 deaths
from vaccination reactions in
the next 30 years.
They said eliminating the
vaccination of children, while
Continuing it for such hlgh risk
groups as health workers,
travelers and military recruits
would redUce the figure to'a·
bout r.o deaths.
Drs. Lane and Millar said
"vigilant surVeillance" and
rapid control of any oulbruks .are the keys to keeping a na-
tion free'of smallpox.
"In the . rare event th3t a
mass vaccinatiOn campafgrj
.ha:s to be carried out:.;·'they
said "it.could .be done npldly
and inexpensively • , •
"The experience of Britain
and certain other smallpox-
free nations demonstrates that
vigol'OWI childhood vaccination
is no~ necessary to prevent the
re-establishment of imallpox
if prompt and adequate con-
tainment measures are taken
whenever the disease reap-
pears." -------
PUBLIC NOTICE!
only
• For the experie.nced ·build-
er or quallfi4!d engineer .• ,
good present 'and futtrtt
with City Building De-·
p!lftment. '
' e This HAIR production will
be wideJy apornvM. . •
liquidation · • -of fiDI!
wigs, & high qua.Hty .ac-Cesaone.. 'Olange ·)'OW'
hair at)1e & co1of as often
as )'OU change yoUt mind
. .• . tor you~lf. A N o.
Christmas.,
I ,
br;Jliant-color
• 2'51i1.11: SCREEN
••• tor nr..nke pleluratl
• CHROMATONE
••• adds d1pth to cotor: 1
warmth to lllKk ind whit• I
• QUICK-ON
• •. tlimlnatn war•·•p-gins
''lnatant" pictlrn a"d 111ndl
automatic
• COLOR PURIFIER
•.. k-.11,1 ...... --
""' ff llt 11 .. m11
• AUTOMATIC
Picbn•Sond Stallillltrt
for optlmu• ptrf1tr11UC1I
Mikes 'Cents'
Pinch pennifS. Make dc:larL It's
tht twS1. deal )'OU'W been offll!r·
td today. Call 642-5678 for tht
dlrtct lh'lll! to Jlf'ofits.
The Montessori Jn et ho d1 emphasizes practical tasks as
peeling carrots and tying
shoes, sensorial acti vities like
shaking sound boxes and feel·
ing while blindfolded, and
academic preparatiailS of feel-
ing the shape of sandpaper let·
ters and teaming· the decimal
system.
Clavls Montessori School is
located at 1525· N. Santa Ana
Ave., Costa Mesa. Jt is one of
three Costa Mesa Montessori
schools, the others being
Montessori International and
Montessori Ce'.:ite:r.
WE ARE OVERSTOCKED AND MUST CONVERT
MERCHANDISE TO CASH. DRASTIC SAVINGS -UP TO 30% BEFORE
SPORT COATS ~~:~
,
NOW
$44.88
$29.88
$27.88
s4.5·· '·gso CART OPTIONAL
• LASTING
RELIABILITY
... is unrH lly flllOUI
Magaavorl l.F. St.qt
Bo-CllCOltry CllOult
FREEZER SPECIALS From
DELANEY BROS. Seafood
•
THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY
21th St. -On The Bey -NEWPORT BEACH
Phont: 67J.3450 Phone: 549-1933
AUSTULlAN
.LOBSTER TAILS
IUTAUIANT-ADULT POITIOHI
#I WHITJ-
JUMBO PRAWNS
U.S.IA. CHOtCI -TOI l llLOIN
STEAK K·BOBS
IKIWllU
l LI.
IOI
$9' 95
IOI
95~.
SEA·PAK RSH TEMPURA
Pll.COOUD. IAMI
llPPID. 1 .. J OZ. POITIONS
Pll IOI C4 V1 Lnl
OLTMM NOUD.AT snCIAL ._
6 PAK -12 oz. '"·a. 1onm
5359
001
5114
-OPEN DAILY • I A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
ALL SIZES
SLACKS
AU OF THE POPULAR
STYLES & COLORS
$39.50
$28.50 $20.88
$31.50 $24.88
$10 & $11 $ 6.88
! T SHIRTS STRl=:~.~9~AINS ~2.50
I
1
ALL SWEATERS DRESS-SPORT SHIRTS
30% OFF
ALPACA~TALIAN IMPORTS
30% OFF
LONG & SHOIT SWvt
SUEDE SWEATERS ROBES -PAJAMAS
$34 88 30% OFF
~~--~~~~--'~~~....:~~~.;.. 30~ BEU BOnOM & FLAIR SLACKS.
' 0 off JACKETS. MOD SHIRTS.
MENS JEWELRY. TIE sm.
A L'ELEGANT MENS · SHOPPE
3355 VIA UDO • • • • • NEWPORT BEACH
IB!HIND BLUE DOLPHIN RESTAURANT)
' ,
NEW COLOR PORTABLE TV
fnJoy bl9·fft featurn and perform1nc:e-•nd
102 sq. in, brilli1nt·color pictures on 1hi1 1upetb·
performing M1gn1vox' mod et 6224 th1t his Chrom1-
1on1, Ouick·On, Bonded Circuitry Chassis. plus tel•·
acoping diP<>I• •ntenna al"KI c1ttying h1ndl1. P•rfect
in any room or office-and• great gift,. toor
s2ggso Complrt1 with
Mobile Cart
St~f~ (~\.''I 4() f\11,l(jfld\..t; (~1dc11 rv r11r1dels fror11 ~25 9 'lll
KERM RIMA MAGNAVOX
llfl!flll•llOa: lfome EKtertalnmf'nt Center . ,-• • Focto;,11 Dlrert Denier
2666 · Harbor BIYd. Costa Mesa, Calif. 546·1691 •
6B55 Westminster Wesmtinster; Calif. 894-2350
' 1·2116 $. Brookhunt Garcteit Grove, Calif. 530-4360
1.2891 Chapman -Gorilift Grove, Calif. 636;1250
EXPERT FACTORY SERVICE
•
•
MUSICAL TREAT AROUND THE CORNE.R
-Mrs. Richard D. Allen and Mrs. John F~
Porter (left to rightl.Jpost a sign .jndicating
· 1the next concert in the current series of the
t oncert Curta in to , Ope~
. ' ,
,]
'. ' •I ,,
-,, • ., ll
. ' ' Orange County Philharmonic Society. Musi-
cians will be al play Nov. 22 in UCI Crawford
Hall.
' .
Maestro, 0fchestra -Retur:n
Orange County concertgoers will wel-
come the Los Angeles Philhannonic Orches-
tra on its return from a triumphant concert
tour of Japan when the musicians play ·the
Saturday, Nov. 221 program in UCI Craw-
ford Hall.
Conducting the second in the current s~r
ies of seven concerts will be Rafael Fruhbeck
de Burgos. The concert will begin promptly
at 8:30 p.m. and no one will be seated during
Public Lecture
Concert Previewed
Henri Temianka, founder and director of
the California Ch~mber Symphony, will pre-
view the next concert 1n the current series
sponsored by Orange County Philharmonic
Society.
His lecture will begin at 10:45 a.m. Wed-
nesday, Nov. 19, in the Cinema Theater.
Fashion Island.
Previews are open to the public and tick-
ets, at $1 or $3 !or the series, may be pur-
chased at the door or by calling Mrs. Ken-
neth M. Smith at 646-7364. Students are ad·-
mitted free o! charge.
Additional previews are scheduled !o
Dec. JO, Feb. 4. March 4 and April 8.
The concert will be presented Saturday.
Nov. 22, at 8:30 p.m. in UCJ Crawford Hall
by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra
with R.afael Fruhbeck de Burgos conducting.
Mrs. Edward W. Schumacher, preview
chairman, is assisted by the Mmes. Gilbert
H. Thompson; Frank A. Cooney, Smith, E.
Morgan Quinn , Herman Johnson, Richard
Brockmeyer and J. Donald Ferguson.
the opening number. Seats will be held oriJy
until 8:25 p.m., announced. presidfnt.John A.
Vibert.
The program will open with Symphony
No. 88· in G Major by Haydn. Following will
be excerpts from "Suite Espanola" by Al-
beniz .and. arranged by Fruhbeck, and after
· fntennission, Symphony No. 6 in B Minor.
Opus 74 ("Pathetique"), Tschaikowsky will
be played.
Tickets for the series, at $21, are on sale at the Orange County Phi.lhannoriic office,
201 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Sin-
gle tickets are $4 and student tickets, $1. 75.
Additional information is available by calling
the office at 641>6411 . .
During the Japanese tour last Sej>tem-
be,r, the orchestra played 17 concerts iq 2P
days, with1audiences brought to the point of
shouting acclaim -an almost unprecedented
reaction for Japan.
· On opening night in Tokyo.122 curtain
calls brought two encores from tti.e surprised
and pleased visitors. An average of 14 cur-
tain calls and at least two encores were the
rule throughout the three-week lour.
Maestro Fruhbeck made an· outstanding
impression as.iuest conductor of the orches-
tra last season in the county's March concert.
Considered Spain'5 most outstanding conduc-
tor, be was born in the town of Burgos. A
piani8t and violinist from early cilildhood, he
entered the Madrid. Coriservatory at 16 to
study hannony and composition.
He subsequenUy studied conducting at
the Munich Hochscbule fur Musik, and.at hi s
graduation from that famed institution he
was awarded the coveted Richard Strauss
Prize by the City of Munich. Al 26, he was
appointed music director of the Bilbao Sym-
phony. and three years later ~ame music
director of the National Orchestra of Madrid,
a position which he holds to this day.
-
·c:ountiaris Gain Fame
By, JUDY HURST of Ille Ddr Plllt Sttft
. More and 'mort, 'WOll'len are assuming
re3ponslblUtles and acquiring enhanced
1tatm in lhe profesalons and busineu.
1liese changes are dram 1tlea11 y
reflected In Ute pag., of the just-publish-
ed Jt'I0-71 edlilon of "Who's Who of
American Women."
More than 24,000 women w it h
biographical sketches 811! included in the
sixth edlUon and 9,651 art appearing for
Ute first Ume.
Representing the Orange Coast are 18
outstanding women.
Miss Louise Bieger of Corona del Mar
currently is manager of the . interior
design studio anif furnitun! gaHery'ln ·1.
W. Robinson's, Fashion Island. Educated
at the National CoJlege of Education in
Illinois, ~1iss Bieger joined . Robinson's
during the 40s as personnel and employ-
ment manager.
She is teaching an Interior design cla55
at Orange Coast College and is a meftit>er
of the AmeriGan Institute of Interior
Design and the NaUonal Home Fashion
League.
Mra. Patricia Ann Guye Bray of
Newport Beach started as assistant sec-
retary at Mariners Savings and Loan
A!soclaUon, Newport Beach and pres·
ently :is manager of the saving1 depart-
men,t and a vice president.
Past positions in various companies
have included receptionist, assistant of-
fice superintendent, bookkeeper and data
coordinator for data processing.
The savings and loan executive is a
member of the American Business
Women's Association and a Newport
yacht club where she was director
in 1965.
GONC ERT SINGER
Mrs.,Gorh\nlt . !<>( I
... "\ I f •
J'reda. Draper Is the wlfe of V..ernon
Gerhardt of Dana Point. he studied
opera and • concert sln8'.lng at Chicago
Music· College ' and with Dino Bigalli in
. Chicago.·
She-loured as sololst with· the Ballet
Russe de Monte Carlo; ~Chicago Opera
Con1pany and Wo\l the Americitn Opera
Society's first award in IMO.
A fonner member of the vocal faculty
at Northwestern University, Mrs.
Gerhardt has appeared with leading U.S.
symphony orchestras, in concerts and
operas on three continents and was the
recipient of the presidential citation,
~fedal of Freedom in 1947.
Her latest venture Is the ownership and
operation of an antique shop in Dana
Point
Mrs. Mabel Fitzmorris, who attended
UCLA, entered the real estate field dur-
ing the 40s and now Is owner or Fit.zmor-
ris Really Company in Corona del Mar,
She is a member or the Nalional
Tnstilute of Real Estate Bo a rd s,
California Real Estate Association ,
Newport Harbor~osta Mesa Board of
Realtors where she was named realtor-of.
the-year in 1958, Newport Beach Business
and Professional \Vomen 's Club where
she was president in 1949, Order of the
Eastern Star and the Soroptimlst Club of
Nel\'J)Ort Beach where she was president
in 1961.
Mrs. Fit.zmorrls makes her home ln
-Gorona-del-Ma•.----·----
EDUCATOR
Mrs. Conroy
Mrs. Merritt Weaver Conroy, educator,
received her BA and MA degrees at the
Uni\•erslty of Maine and did postgraduate
work at 'lhe University of Wisconsin. She
Js an assistant professor of mathematics
at Ca!Uomia State College at Long Beach
and formerly wu an instructor of math
at LOng'BeaCh City College. '. Making her home In Westminster, Mrs.
Conroy '"-ls~ffiliated with t he
MathematlCa1 Association ()f America,
Phi Mu, Phi Beta Kappa, Eta Delta Ltd.
and was a Baptist deaconess.
Fountain Valley Is the home of com-
puter aystems analyst Mrs. George Van
Currie. She received her BA from De.Paul
University and studied postgraduate
courses at San Diego State College.
Prior to working as a computer
systems analyst for Astrodata, Inc. in
Anaheim, she was an engineering aide at
Convair, San Diego: associate engineer
at Ryan A er on au ti ca I, San Diego;
digital programmer for Aeronulronic,
Newport Beach, and computing engineer
for North American Aviation, Downey.
Sh~ b a member of the American
Institute ol. Aeronautics and Astronautlcis,
American Allronomlcal Society, Associa-
tion for Computing Machinery, Aircraft
Owners and Pilots AssoclaUon and Nine-
ty-nines.
Mrs. Robert Bemis Atiller. the former
Irma Hauser, is a pediatrician who
resides in Laguna 'Hills. She is directly
from the....medical staff of Sunland Hos.
·pita I for Physical and Mental Retarda.
lion in Orlando, Fla.
Dr. Miller was a student at Denison
University, the University of Chicago,
Rush Medical College and earned her
teaching certlflcate al Columbla Uni-
versity.
Dr. Miller was associate house physi-
cian at New York State Orthopedic Hos-
pital, examining medical offictr at Ellls
Island lmmigratlon Department, physi-
cian at pediatric clinics in the New York
State Department of Health and special-
ized in pediatrics and gynecology at
Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.
AR TI ST
Mrs. Krl kl
ArtJst Anny NetU Krlkl was bom In
Prague where she studied at the univer-
isily and schools in Switzerland and
Vienna. The wife of Edward G. Krikl ~
Costa Mesa has exhibited In a one-man
show· in Panama and group showa in
Pasadena and the Huntinglon Sheraton
Hotel.
The former Pasadena art teacher Ls a
member of the National League of
American Pen Women and tne Costa
Mesa Art League.
Mrs. Le!ter C. Layman of Capistr~
Beach, writer, is a cum laude graduate
of New York Unlvers.ily. She is a mem-
ber of the Los Angeles Preu Club, Kappa
Delli Pi and Theta Sigma Phi.
She was director of public rtlationl
for ~plac Council ol Boy Scouta: of
America, the Heart Association and
NaUonal Foundation for Infantile Paral-
ysis, all in New Haven, Conn., and was
fashion and beauty editor for the Bridge-
port (Conn.) Post.
Mrs. Douglas Stanley Reeve of La-
guna Beach, known professionally as
Sally Reeve, received her education from
'"'the London College of Music.
Currently she is a free lance feature
writer, reviewer and publicist for cul·
tural organizations including the Laguna
Beach Civic Ballet Company and public
relations director of the Festival of Arts.
She is a fonner columnist tor the
Lagtma Beach Post and former editor of
the _Fe.rt.lval ol Arts magazine.. She Js afflli~ted_ w:ith the National League of
American Pen Women, on the Civic Bal-
let's board of directors and toot first
place award from the Orange County
Press Club in 1966 for the best feature story.
ACTRESS
Clairi Trevor
Mrs. Milton H. Bren or Harbor Island,
better known to theatergoers. as Claire
Trevor, began her career in the New
York theater.
E4ucated al Columbia University,
Miss Trevor has appeared in 150 motion
pictures, 200 radio shows, 2tl theatrical
plays and scores ot televi sion plays. .
She was the recipient of the Oscar in
1948 for her best supporting role in "Key
Largo," and was honored as the best
single actress in 1956 for her television
role in "Dodsworth."
Mrs. Arthur Sawyer, writer and edu-
cator, makes her home in Seal Beach.
The former student at Oklahoma Baptist
College of Fine Arts, DePauw University
and Neff College has joined the National
Women's Society of Christian Service,
National League of American Pen Wom-
en and Leisure World Writers' Chlb.
The author of "Leaven for Seven /'
"Hello Alaska," and humorous poems
and magazine artk:les was principal and
teacher in a South Dakota school, radio
broadcast producer for chlldren's nature
programs in New York City and nature
editor of the Maplewood-South Orange
(N.J.) Record.
Mrs. Ruth Forbes Sherry of Laguna
Beach, writer, was a student at Illinois
Institute of Technology, Vassar College.
Universlty of Chicago and Stanford
University.
Among the books she has penned are
four editions of "Mojave ," "J>r:lsmaUc
Voices," "Human Voices.'' "Of Time and
the Dry Heart," and numerous poems,
stories and articles.
She is acti ve in the Amqican Society
for Aesthetics, Poetry Society of ,i\mer·
lea .. National Le3gue of Pen Women,
Poets Laureate International, American
Philosophical Society, Poetry Society of
Southern California and Kappa Alpha
Theta.
lSee 'WHO'S WHO,' Page 14)
(Even 1n a •
Pinch; He Shuts Off Wrong Source of Supply •
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My wife has
an annoying habit of interrupting me in
mid·1tntence. I &us~ she has fallen in-
to this habit because of an inferiority
complex. ~I've told her repeatedly that these in-
terrupt.ions are not only rude but
frustraU11g. She pays no attenUon and the
fatemiplions continue, So, in self-defense,
I have adopted a technique to relie ve mt
anger. J squeeze ber nose between my
thumb and index finger when she in-
terrupt!. This gives me 8 feeling or deep
satisfaction which displaces the pure
bate.
While It 19 a successful taclic from
psychological point ,nf view, It ha sn't
deterred her one Iota. She sUll int.errupls.
What do you suggest?
-LE:t!NG'!'IJN
..
ANN LANDERS ~
DEAR LEX: A .... wbo would tq1ldll
Ith wtfe'1 nose •he• 11te bdtrnspU wOlld
do uyiblq. HaYe yoa consld<rtd cl1po
plq a maz:alt oe m moatll? Or 1wattiaf
Jttr bl ~ baltO wlUt u old-fasldooed
mntard pl•1itr?
nta womlii Is obvtoatJy • co·mpal1lve
talker and I can tell yo.a rl&ht now there
ts no cure for IL ne IDOll e.lfecllve
method ol de11l111 wltti 1nterrupttrs la to
ccmtlnae talkl11, dh!reglnl tlte I•
~~. a!Hl make Jt cleer you .ha,·e ao
ll&eatkln ff yieldln& die Door.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am wrllinl
for my neighbor because she II not
educated. Please tell me what 1he should
do.
10-,.Mtt..C..nt«led.IDl to PIY·lbe
taxes on her little howe. She went to a
loan c;ompan)o and waa told lhey didn 't
make "small loans.'' They tllked her
lnLO borrowing 11500.
She fell tM;_hlnd in her payment!. and
yesterday rtceived a notice saying she co lleagues and employes, return to a wife
has lost her home to the loan company. whom he described as self~ntered,
She didn't reallzt her home was the col-uninteresting, and 1ere as a bed partner,
lateral. 1be woman cannot afford a lawyer. What should she do? when he was enjoying the intellectual and
-SORRY FOR HER physical &llmulatlon of a 25-year--0ld
DEAR SORRY: S ~ e tall ca I I woman with whom he co mmunicated
Le1al Aid IDd lte tUnkf'1iil fOf' t.bote blc·' perfectly for three· wee ks? ·
Maned .. .,.,. wtie C11t tbtlr Umt to Religion 11 not a factor . There art oo
QillJ .,1zrtW 'IWJ'· childrer involved. The younger woman is
Aid let w. be a lellM io *" who unmarried. cooperative aJHI available.
sip apeemnta wttboat lepl coan1tl. What'.s the answer ?
Poor people wbo lblnk Ibey can't afford a -LOSERS WEEPERS
.. WJtr are tbe,_ tM1.w_bo ~a lll'!>'L--DEAR LOSER: The .. mpte ~am·
Ille -• ple.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Why wuuld ·• CONb'ID~NTIAL TO NO IV!NIJOW NO
3&-year-<ild man who is hand90me, sue-OOOR : You are e prisonCr o[ an un·
ceulul, romantk: all'! well thou;tlt of by fl'lrglvlna: hc llfl. Not onlv must you
forgive him, but you must lorpt-run,
forget aboul the past. Baluc Mid It best
-"To forget is the great secret ol ltrong
and creative emitnces." Thole who
re!u.oe tl> forget mlp lhemoelves lo a
life of hell. (That last gem wu mt .••
nol Balzac.)
AletMlllno-tto--
CHt. If fGa Utink you laave to drtM to ..
accepted by your rrlaMll~ pt die rec111.
Read ''Booze -1 Y•..-Fw TleMpn...
Only," by Ano Luden .. Sad SI ct.al ..
cobl and a lens • .., ..... case d, .......
enVelol)6 wll!t. )Wr ~ ..
Aan Landen wll1 lie llad to HIP 100
wl,tb ynu·r JWOblema. Send abem II hft bt
t!art of tbe DAILY PILOT, eee .... 1.
seK-oddrelled, ....,,... .,...,.,-
f 4 DI.IL V '1LOT
Mass Media Guilty of 'T tJrning --Ori' Yo~th
By JO OLSON
Of .. Dl#r ..... ,.,,
Drugs are fun.
That mass media are belp-Ull spread lhla insldioua 111>-
truth ls the contenUoo of news
cameraman Johann Rush, who
presented a startling
documentary film and first-
hand infonnatio.1 on drugs for
the Lido Isle Woman's Club
and teenage clilldren of the
members.
Slan)ey, who ·WU arrested
recently and bad a cache of
rour million doses of LSD ia
hls house whm be wN ap-
prehended, bu made more
than a mlllioo dollars from his
The rarely photographed
St&.tley, who wa.s the one who
arranged ta have the formula
for STP stolen from the Dow
Chemical Co., underwrites
drug-tWng rock and roll
groups because he knows the
value ol the opportunlUes for
reacbtng a young au~
that they _.., ..
drinking that particular brand
because the drinkers would
"feel it" and "be turned oa,''
both drug terms.
Mad magazjne, an Innocent.
looking magazine popular wltb
teenagers, recently publlshed
an issue with a hippie, drug
terms and a border of marl·
juana leaves oci the cover.
drug users. The pholop"apher,
"'1om Rush knew, WU a drug
Ulir I zid he aurmi.led tbat the
author was too.
ne story wu writtta for
two audience., Rulll · e_m..
phaalzed. It was -led
so teens would catch oo to the
drug slanJ but their fiarents,
without catching tbe llang,
would only think that tbe
singers were a fine group. One
of their 900.gs, he pointed out,
was in the number two spot b
the Jlltlon, listened to by
virtually every teelJa&er in the
through the ,_., dru( atan1
tenm .. ieena..,.. and youtha
catch them but Par-don't.
He dllpleyed a copy ol the
"Hippie Handbook," a Volume
cootalnlng hlnll on '-lo run
away from bonlt, where to eo.
'-much It wU1 cost and
whqe to stay. lt also gave
hints OD varjoul d r u 1 •
available and other thlnp that
will give ti.cts, ll>Ch u the pa
in aerosol cans. "Kids do it
l~ilff the g8') and are dying
frorll it," Rlllh warned.
NaUonwlde store chains are
~ling drug«ie.1ted clothes to
tetnagers by playing drug
music while the teens shop.
The drug-ork!nted clothes are
The youthful newsman. who
lived as a hippie for two
years, observing, studying and
filming. decided to try smok-
ing marijuana becaUS"e he had
read in national publicatlom
that it was oot habit Conning.
He soon realized that the
reports were grossly wrong,
that be himself was becoming
addicted. He faced reality and
returned to work, more con-
vinced than ever of the need
fOI' a program ol action to
tum the drug tide.
Groups such as the Grateful
Dead and Country Joe and tbe
Fish, who keep their drug us-m, a secret, write and sing
drug music to induce the
teenagers a.id preteens who
listen tO them to "turn on'' or
use drugs.
Stanley also financed the
Diggers, a group re1pomible
for suppling free food as an in-
ducement-for runaways to San
Franciaco, •ttd owns at least
one Sat Francisco night club
where drup are used.
Adv~lng agencies,
maguines, department st.ores
· and . myriad other businesses
Small children are being hit
lhroogb comic boob. Ru.ob
showed a Jerry Uwis comic
book which had a :stOry Of a
person taking drugs and
becoming happy. He oald that
although Jerry Le'wia probably
was no aware of what was
goilll on, the writer of the
comic strip, probably a drug
user, was using the allure of the drugs to sell his comic
book.
Stories like this may not be
done specifically to promote
the use of drugs, but, by riding
alq to financial success with
the movement, they a r e
rurtberi ~1g programming
young people to accept drugs.
country. '·
A Loot rnapzlne article on
the Jtffersoo Airplane, also a
groqp of drug UJen, was writ·
ten to Induce rtader1 to come
to dnlg nlrbt clubs. The:
photos with It, by the >ame
pbotographer, glamoriud tbe
drug scene.
A launber of record com·
pany officials, IOme of whom
are drug usen, and actora are.
Included In the grpup meklng
money tbroogh the 111< of
drug-oriented ad& and pro-
ducts.
A r t I 1 t Peter Max, the
slngbll group the Monkees
and lbe exclusive Los Angeles
night club the Factory all
were charged by Ru.sh as
being drug-oriented. He said
the reum the Factory is sO
excl'1!ive. is that the patrons
we drup there.
exaggerated in style, &trang,., __ llO---
gannents that look like they
are being seen by someone
on a "trip." Here again, the
store officials probably are
unaware of what they are
doing.
Many television programs
and films such as "Easy
Rider" use drug Jz1guage .or
are out·ancklut drug pro-
motions.
Things like the motorcycle
accident Olat happened to Bob
Dylan when he wu 'jblmed
on" are carefully kept qu.let.
however.
Addiction Ui psycholog\ca1
with most drugs, R u 1 h
related. He told the teenaJerl
in the audience that they may
not feel that smoking mari·
juana just once ls hannful, but
said tf they once started
smoki'.1g ii, In a year they
would be ready for a new and '
stronger drug.
Rush, who struses that hip-
pies are not "Dower children"
or propagators of Jove, but
simply drug users, said they
are part of a subtle method of
propaganda being used to pro-
gram youths to want to take
drugs.
WAR AGAINST DRUGS
Johann Rush
" cub in on the popularity of
the rock groups and make
rrloney by using them in their
promotions aimed at
teef\leers.
~ businesses, R.u s h
pointed out, do not realize that
they are usbe ·drug alang in
their advertisements.
The oewsman brought
several issues ol national
magazines that are readily
avaJlable on newsstands. Each
of these had a feature article
that caught the attention of
young people and freely used
drug terms.
The publishers have. caught
on to the fact that teenagers
will buy more JQ.gubf:.s if
there are •ories;about the
singing groupt (Who usua1ly
are druf users though the.Ir teenage. ans rarely realize it),
and they lean on thete issues
for profit. These sometimes
include a parallel story about
drugs such u thf: ooe thitt ac·
companied a Life -story,
''Marijuana's Turne 'd . on
Millions."
"You all ·are being pro-
grammed In one way or
another," be warned. Teen!
are. being ·bombarded wlth
rock groups and psychedelic
poeters, "hich s i m u I a t e
"trips." Adult.I are being pro-
grammed to buy certain kinds
of soaps and cars and start
Ouiatmas lhopplng earlier
every year.
Concluding his talk, the
newsman, not many years
older than some of his teenage
listeners, told them not to
think in terms ol just smoking
marijuana or sniffbg glue
once just to see what It's like,
but about what lies ahead
after two or three years of
drug e~imentation.
The complicated system of
pushing drugs originates
primarily from ooe penon, the S 1 n Francisco-based
pusher-of LSD who "made"
Halght-Aabbury, Ozley
Stanley.
various drug-pushing dealings.
Yet be faces only a three-year
prison term for all the serious
damage he has done to young
people.
IN COMICS
From a newspaper comic
section Rush showed an ad for
a soft drink that advocated
• FEATURE STORIES
In a Post magazine, there
was a feature story on the
Manlas and Papas, who are all
1be whole Idea of some drug
dfsciples, such as Tlmothy ¥-ary, is to broadcast, .. i-___ .,.... ____ .._ _______ """"'.r=:!_C.._""""' ____________ ...,,,,,......,_,,_~--
·-
From Page 13 Trio Launches Season
••• 'Who's Who' Lists 18 Outstanding Wome.n Tutling up for the first fund· ching, piano.
raWng p-oject of the year for Mrs. William M. Laing of.·.
Alta Bahia Committee of Coron~ Highlands will lead ac· ·:·
Orange CouDty PhHbannonlc tlviUes of Alta Bahia aa, ·A
Adrien Stoutenburg
Lqunilas I• known to
readers u Laoe Kendall.
of
her
The free lanc~uthor,
librarian. political newspaper
reporter and publisher of
children's books is a member
ol the Authors Guild and
Poetry Society of America and
has had many of her works
reprinted in foreign languages.
She is the author of "Heroes
-Adviae-Ul~S-n-o-w-1-h
'lbompson," ''Good·By
Cinderella," "LltUe Smob,"
"Dear, Dear Llvy: Story ol.
Mrs. Mark Twain," "Mai;ters
cif Magic"' and '"Story History
of tbe Fur Trade."
Mra. Donald B. Vanderbilt
ol Laguna Be.ach was listed as
musiceditor ·critic and
violinist in "Who's Who."
She earned her degrees at
A t I a n t a Conservatory of
Music, Ci ncinnati
Conservatory of f\f u s i c .
Juilliard Graduate School and
CIVIC WORKER
Mrs. W•rner
was an exchange scholar at
Hochschule fur Musik, Berlin.
She was I violin soloist for a
New York concert company,
faculty member of Emory
University, music editor<ritic
on the South Coast News in Bazaar Tenipts
Wise Shoppers t Laguna .
Mrs. Vanderbilt Is founding
member of Laguna Beach
Chamber Music S o c i e t y.
coordinator of the Orange
County Philharmonic Society,
founding member of the F'irst
Nighters' board of directors,
and member of the Com·
munity Concerts Association 's
board of dire c tors and
Laguna Beach Civic Ballet
Company's board of directors.
Hand decorated novelties
and homemade cakes, cookies
and candy will tempt shoppers
atbendlng the b a z a a r
sponsored by. Anchor Lodge,
Vasa Order of America.
The sale will take place
from 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 15, in the Senior Cit11ens
Recreation Center, 15th Street
and Irvine Avenue, Newport
Beach.
Other mouth·watering fare
to be offered buyers includes
·oot dogs, hambursers and
·sauerkraut.
Entertairunent will be pro-
vided by Torsten Lundgren on
the accord ion, and Steven
Noby will play the accordion
!er children's games.
Soroptimi.ts
Soroptimiit Club of Hun-
tington Beach gathers at 12:15
p.m. the secood and fourth
Tuesdays in Francois
restaurant.
THE ALDEN
SPEAKS
FOR
ITSELF
N .. vy.lrtwfl.
ll•cl..C11f
. Aho ll1cl pit.
She also is active in the Na-
tional Charily League, Na·
tional Society of Arts and Let-
ters, National League of
American Pen Women where
she was president in 1960 and
the Women's Club of Laguna.
Atrs. Lois Tolen Vogel is the
author of "How lo Sell Real
Estate" and "How to Help
Your Real E~te Salesmen
Produce A1ore Business."
The former student at
TURN ON
TV WEEIC •••p1 you tun•'
.te wh•t'• h•pp•nin9 IMhi"' t+i,
tub• -E••ty S1hird1y in tht
DAILY PILOT.
L1ettick·
HEMPHILl'S • '
1131 NEWl'ORT ILVD.
COSTA M•SA 549744
• •
Wellesley College, University
of Minnesota and Chicago
Academy of Fine Arts has
been a real estale
saleswoman, bus l n e..s s o~
portunlty broker, mortgage
loan broker and now ii owner
of Vasel Company in Corona
del Mar and director and vice
preside~ of. Cali!crnia In-
jection Mold,lng Company.
Mak.inc her home i n
Newport · Beach, Mrs. Vose!
belongs to Newport Harbor-
Costa Mesa Board of Realtors
where she was director In 1956
and the Corona del ~far
Chamber ol COmmerce.
Mrs. J.ck Robert Walker of
Dana Point _was the first
womll'.I journalism graduate of
Western Reserve. University in
Cleveland and the first editor
of the university newspe.per.
She did postgraduate work at
Northwestern University.
Among her many positions
the journalist has been editor
of the Coastline Dispatch, San
Juan Capistrano; associate
editor of Orange C o u n t y
Illustrated and staff' writer
and eolumftilt for the Daily
Su~Post, San Clemente. cur-
rently she Is a free lance
writer and handles publlca-
Uons, ad copy and publicity
for 99 Enterprises o f
Capistrano Beach .
Listed l n "Outstanding
Young Women of America,"
Mrs. Walker is the winner of
several writing achievement
awards in the Orange County
Press Chlb aad was president
or the San Clemente ·
Capistrano Bay A m e r i c a n
Association of Univ e r s j t y currenUy is ex e. cut I v·e Society, the Woodwinds and chairman. Hosting the musical ·.
Ill oil lecll are Mrs. John Croul and com-.:-Women. She also joined the secretary in the HB Chamber Plano Trio w er se ons mlttee members, the Mmes. San Juan Historical Society, of Commerce office and book· from Loeillet. Hobt and folk Clyde. G. McCall, Rlch&rd ·
League of Women Voters, keeper and secretary to the llOOiS. Franklin and James L. ·
Orange County Historical board oi Warner-Chase Inc. in The trio will perform 1t to Gaines. ..·
Society and Theta Sigma Phi. Huntington Beach. a.m. Thursday, Nov. 20, ln the Guests are invited to attenfr.. .. ·.
Airs. Norman Warner, civic She was the recipient of the home of Mrs. LeRoy C. meetings the third Thursday ·.
worker, was president of the citlaen~-the-year award from Willmann in Newp:>rt Beach. of each month. Information ,.
Junior Woman's Club of· Orange District and was nam-Memben of the trio inciude may be obtained by phonin1:·
Huntlngton Beach ; third vice ed <iitizen-of-the--ytar by the Thomas W. Henderson Jr., Mrs. Laing, 675·5033 or •.
president of Orange District, women's division, chamber of oboe ; Mrs. Henderson, flute. publicity chairman Mrs. Perry· .
Calllomia Federation of commerce.· and Mrs. Christopher Kit-G. Gill, 673-7071.
Women's Clubs, president of.r================================a HB Assi~e U!ague, Boy
Scouts den mother, aod RB
Girl Seoul! troop cookie
chairman.
A.in. Warner makes her
home in HWJtington Beach and Henson-Kickernick snuggles
OPPOITUNITT-SHAH EXPINSES
to ACAPULCO or CARlllllANS you in ruxurious comfort .. New 12' 11 20' Ld. C••-••• Wwld Cr11ill ... 51ffpt 10, L••·
Wu, 2 M. C.W-. J H ... 2 9 .... Ms., lffk Deeb, l ... C•
W.-WI 5'"'9d JO tt.ts. P.O .... 1tlJ, Ne..,.rt ..... c.IH.
17141 •4lotJ27
Yesterday's mothers weren't
educa ted in the chemislry of foods.
They knew little about proteins and
probably never heard of enzymes.
Cozy, bunny-soft l:irusliect nylon fleece
beoutifull y foshioned , corefully
detailed, ond com'pletely core-free!
Just toss into washing mach in e ond
watch it tumble out lovelier than eve r.
..
TodAy~
MoTltEas
ARE
·EduCATEd
They didn't know how essential
enzymes ere to their children's
health or that these enzymes arc
killed or inhibited when milk is
heated. The enzyme factor is
reduced lo less than 10 per cent in
processed milks.
Today's mothers know that
\vi tho ut enzyme activi ty vitamins are
not assimila ted by the body; that
their children suffer fro m vi tamin
deficiencies because of la ck of
proper digestion.
This is why more o( !oday's
educated mothers are demanding
Alta-Den.i Da iry's Cerlified Enzyme.
Rich Milk for their families. It is
naturally perfect because it is
unaltered by heat
Luscious sh a.des of tropic blue
Certified Enzyme-.R ich Milk is
inspected daily by the Los Angeles
County Milk Commission as part of
Alta-Dena Dairy's rigid production
standards.
Alt•·Dena Dairy delivers from farm to home all onr Orance COunty.
For home delivery 0111 832-0800.
THE WESrs LARGEST PRODUCER OF CEllTIFlED EHZVME•RICH MILK
•
or scottie pink in sizes S-M-l.
Long Gown 12 .00 Po jomos 14.00
Scuffs 3.50 Short Gown I 0.00
e For t1rly t ifl 1t1ltrr, 0111 1p1rli:lin9 Chrhl·
,,.., wr1ppln91 1r• r11dy lo 1~h111et vo111
ch0Jc1l
fashions for ' ..
••
Fashion l1ltnd-N1wport leech
Stonewood Cent•,_.Downey
I
•
l q
'
.,
•
,
--------------·------------
Sorority Shop Lures Eorly Buyers
The busy fingers of members of fi ve Beta S~gma
Phi chapters have prepar~d myriad items for the
annual sorority Christmas bazaar and tea Saturday.
Nov. 15, in the Costa Mesa Grange Hall. Proceeds
fron1 the preholiday everit Will be given to the indi·
vidual chapter pbilanthropie_s, including Children's
Hospital of Orange County, CyS'Lic Fibrosis and the
Long Beach Art Museum. Modeling one of the fea·
lured ite1ns is Mrs. Joseph Giwoff with help from
Mrs . Eldon Dvorak (leit) and Mrs. Robert Bailey.
Sale ~ours will be 10 a .m. to 4 p.m.
Your Child's Lifetime · Legacy!
'
' -...
CAN ONE MILLION
WURLITZER PIANO OWNERS
BE WRONG?--
Thi• '"' Wurlltiitr 11'19d• fflelr •llllo•l'1 ,1 ... · wt" tho llCtW.' l9ft4I Mlec~ IHffrlel• ttMy'q,
always •s•d PO ea11,. wetl0blo11ded te•o, •ilffoNltty COQbt911t ,efforl'liOite• ucl • flt.ti-•f
pl"'ll'•• WHt ~91 tftti.,.., co11lcl Y•• air-for?
WHILE THEY LAST I --------,
SPINETS CONSOLES
A 111!! 36 Inch Spinet In walnu1, frullwooa or 1able
bnlwn. lnch.odtt bnlcll, de--livery end one free In·
ho me !\In I f\O . s595 A few 40 fnch con..,les
lertl Frultwooi:I 1nd Medl-
terrene•n w•ln11I, lnch,!Cles
botncll, dellverv arid OM
tree ln-1\ome l11nl119. Sfi95
ALSO ••• WEEK-END SALE ON MAJOR BRAND REBUILT .GRANDS!
SAVE UP TO 40% ON NEW PIANO COSTI
ALWAYS EASY TERMS
USE OUR CHRISTMAS
LAYAWAY NOW!
WalliehsMusie Ci1Y
South Coast Plata on Bristol just North
of San Diego Frwy., Cost• Mesa, S4Q..3165
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED
To Join Us For Coffee, Cookies and Conversation
The Tee
Tattler
CEdl!or's No!e: A column ol _.,,n•1 !OP toll scores will •11pe1r et(.11 wm In the OAI LY PILOT. To rePOrl scor .. tor the weel, 11te11e mtll them to P O. Box U6G. Thev mvsl be rt'Cl'IYeG bV
Monelt'kl,NC"O SAN JOA.OUIH LOW HIET-The Mme•. Warren CG!lim, Urn1rd Egl»rt, 71; Wllll1m
S•~IO!I. 7~; JlmU Keeter. n. MESA. V!JIOE TIN WNllTLE-Clau A, Hie Hnon . Jtex Derbv, 39; Paul Stlderman, 311 Jamn C1!119h1n, R~rl Kinder. 3'; Clai.s 8, 1~e Mmes. Oeln Otson, John Ad1ms. 15; T-Llk111, 3-tt Wllll•m Cohen. 32; CllH C, lh1 Mm11. W. C.
Wll ll.m•, 3"1; Lowell Slark, Roberl tiefldr!tk•, :ill· Merlin Wltll1m5. l l. MATCH V PAR-Class · A, lht f'r';~~· t~k~'l;:f ~.J~:.n R~i $hlr!rf, IC.. L. Lltnlt, ~; Cl••• 8, !ht Mmes. J•mtt Bed<, 2r Cohen, 1; Ken
Lt•Wrt, Junes $u110t1, O; Ci.u C, Ille
Mmet. B111il1 w111an, -31 $t1ni., WUl!1m
f'll!Mr, -5; 1~'Vi°N~lnl~tt"'·
U.Dlll DAY, MOST PAJIJ-Cl111 A, MIH Dee ~ Whitt Mrf. Gl!'Drte c. Scott, Mrs. Thtlrt11 _G.1rtord,..JJ\• Class 8 1'he Mm•'· H. i . IC. Wiii s, 12; W11111m Ltste;r, Het..r Erltkson, 111 CllU (, the MmH. Rott< T11r11er, V. 0 Shltldl. Ed Rladle1 11· MYrQfl Sliew1nl, 111 Cle11 o. me Mmes. Gii Smith, ll; John Jacobi, Wiiiiam
~;ri~10AY, LIAST PUTTJ-Cltll IJ/., Ille Mmu.-GtHD. L!tur, 26; Btrt McHu11h, Jtac Grt r, "' ·c11n B,-lh1 Mmet. Ed Godd1rd, 19; Ptul Rift, lO;
Wltll•, 31; W. L. MtaOowl, Rov H•~beft 13; c11u c , 1'he Mm11. II rl 'utfer, 29: Mvr6n Sh..,..trd, XI:
E ldl Blldnam, Sam How1rd: 3'; CllH 0, ttie Mmes. Ctrl HHlll'"'"o J.
H. Vlflebi., 13; He11rv e .. n1, Berl R~'lffiEs3~Av, MIDAL PU.Y--Cl .. ss A Ml11 White, Mrs Ml(.l'lael o ·ar11n, 1:S; Mr.. Robtrl W. Smith, 76; Mrs. W. R Mlr1m1t 71: c1a11 a, 1'he Mmes. J&~, B ..,.1or, Edward W. Miium, 71; Elh1i Loomis, 79; Erickson.., Ill; Class C; !hf' Mmes. Gl!'Orllt M. ur1n!, 171 RO!llr Turnu , Donakl 8. Maritn, 7t; 8.0ham, ti; C11H 0 , lht Mme.
W1rren Glbborts, 7•: McC<>rd, 15;
Wttt.r "· WIM, Run Ford, n.
HB TOPS Club
Allen School is the nleetlng
place for Huntington Beach
TOPS Pound Pinchers at 7
p.m. each Monday.
On Friday and Saturday, November 14 and 15, 9:30 am to 5:30 pm
For A Spec ial Grand Opening Preview of
-57k
BIDTIQUE
Located al 3467 Via Lido, al Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach
Wh.,e You Will .Happily Find
The Spirit of tho Roaring '20s and '30s, Th~ Harlow Look,
The Garbo Look, The Fun of Grandmother's Attic,
The Playful Elegance of S.an Francisco,
Antique Jewelry and , In Fact, All Sorts of Antiques,
Young -At-Hearl Clothing By
T oolique, Jody, Lady Bug, Joy Stevens, Miss H.l.S., Sir Je,
Denise Are Here, Don Sophisticates and Partout International,
In Sizes 3 Through 14.
P.S. Do n't Forget To Ask For A CompHmentery Qoor Prize Ticket.
.~
' Thursday, Novtmbtf 13, 1%~ DAILY PILOT I§ -. t
Second Series_,,,.
7 -
Play Reviews Awaited
Patrons, charter members
of the Newport Community Theater and their guest!: are anticipating the first Play
Review in the current series,
scheduled for Sunday •. Nov. 16,
at 7:30 p.m. in the Ebell
Clubhouse, Balboa.
Flower:• at the Laguna·
Moulton Playhouse, • • A n y
Wednesday," at the Santa Ana
Community Theater a n d
"Puss and Boots," Childrcil 's
Theater Guild production.
William J_ Fucik, Newport
Community Theater director,
will present the reviews and
comment on the n e w
Grotowsky theater movement.
Open Fri. Evtt.
'tll 9
1414 'flA LIDO
NIW'°IT llACH CAIDS WILCOMI
Individual and seas o nl::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: tickets may be purchased forl~ .
To be repeated on Monday,
Nov. 17, at 10 a.m., the pro-
gram will include comments
on Broadway and area pro-
ductions, '''Ilie Great White
Hope," "Indians," "Butterflies
Ate Free'' and "Coco."
Orange Coast productions
included will be "Cactus
the upcoming and remaining R d
five review sessions by calling ea
~lrs. Stewart Petersen, 548-the Stars With Omarr .
3361.
,
now, the handmade stretch wig
ready to wear, no setting ever
By Jerome Alexao<ler. Jntro,duced firs t an<l excl usiv~ly at ]\·lay Co. nie
handson1e \Vig \Vitry blend ed highlights, so }'OU get a soft, natural look.
Ifs close to the face, wi1h a tapered back. Not bus hy, too full or
un natural., Lightweight too. A bit over three ounces. Permanentl y styled
in Jcrracrylir. No setting ever. 5,~1ish in l'OO I \\'ater, shake dry, style.
Natura l shades, frosteds, !:rcys, blonds, blacks, browns. Includes pouch.
Save 3.50 , .. no extra ( har,cc for ~tylin.~ Ju ring thi.~
dcmonstratloo 39.50
1'1eel the Jeroine Alexander stylist Thurs .. Fri., Sat. 11 :00 a.m. to
5:00 pm v.·ho will style it for you so you can wear it right away.
may co Cashion wig bar 743-
niiddle le vel
at down escalator
(Costa Mesa)
may co. s.outh eoa•t plaza,
sen diego fwy at E.ristol , eosta mesa; 546-9321 .
shop monday thru 1aturday 10 am to 9.:30 pm'
•
• • ?
'l
' t
I
'
' l • • ;
' ,
'
MAYCO ~
,
If D.111.V l'ILDT
Watch Our Dollars and Talents Grow
~-!embers of the \Vomen's Society of Christian Serv·
ice of the ~1esa Verde United Methodi.Jt Church were
given a dollar to multiply w i t b their talents, and
they succeeded so well they've planned a bazaar to
display their money-making projects. The boutique,
featuring handmade Christmas decorations, handi·
crafts, candy and baked goods. cake, food and re--
Ra ilway T rave/er
Author Rushin'
To Spill Story
By JUDY HliRSI'
OI ftll O.llJ ,.;1111 S!llfl
Nurserv '
Entertains
1.trs. Gene Allen \\'iii open
htt Huntington Beach home
for a Christmas b a :z. a a r
benefiting the North Hun-
Hngton Beach Cooperative
Nursery School.
A charge of 50 cents will en-
title members and guesU lo
browse amoog the items on
display and also i n c I u d e
refreshment! and priu:s.
The bazaar takes place
between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. ts.
CHllSTlllAS GlfT
·~ ... BARBIE DOLL CROWD
4 PllCI RDIOOlll HT
s,.cit lly .... 1, .. .4 ' h111dc11ft.
ed fof ... u. , .... 11 "; c.1.,.;
.pi11k, w ....... u-.
l .......... $795 SAU PIJCI •
Cresbments, will be set up in the church fello\\'Sltip
ball Saturday, Nov. JS, from 10 a .m. to 5 p.m. Pro-
ceeds will go toward the \VSCS mission projects.
"\Vatering" the!r dollars are (left to right ) the
Mmes. Gary Smith, Eric Johnson and Carl Neu-
meyer.'
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
To avoid di sappointment, prospective
brides are re1ninded to have their wedding
stories \\'ith black and white glossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart·
ment prior to or withiD one week after the
"''edding.
F or engagement announcements it is
suggested that the story, also accompanied
bY-a black and white glossy picture, be
sUbrnifte<I. eafly. If the betrothal announce-
ment and ":eading date are six ~·eeks or less
apart, only the wedding photo will be ac-
cepted.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding~ and engagement -stories, forms are-avail-
able in all of the DAIL.Y PILOT offices.
Further questions will be ans\ve red by Social
Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466.
The
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM
SUGARPLUM DOLL
FURNITURE
• t7tt Le c.... CIKS. FROM FASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT BEACH
"lfttl..... .... t6J-14t1 [ _______ ...
•
·Horoscope
Virgo: Study·
Leo Message
FRIDAY
'NOVEMBER 14
a, IYDNEY cw•u
MllNll TIP: --...__ ... _ ..
--tac.-· ai.., .....,_ .......... -.
,.....,._~ ..... ---.,..... .. _
AllD!ll (Mmdi ll-'!lril 11): so-pncttcallty. vtllbe ...
perience. t llT~ll lMrned in
poll lbould be applled. A void
the ..... t1ooa1. Stlclc .. wUI
yoo know. Definite oe-
cupUkml lidv•111:"'1JV!I¢ in-
dicated.
TAlllllJS (Ai>riJ 26-May 20):
....._,.anie vten art em-
pb111&ed Obviously; it ii
necessary to plan ahead. One
who urges 1nlt.ant actkn is
misinformed. Heed your own
COUlllel. Take care with what
you p.n in Wl"lting.
GEMINI (May 2l.June 20):
l!oney, practical matters
dominate. News of est.ta,
taxes may occupy attention..
Start put.tin« something any
for day wben you will have to
pay.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Lie low. Play wailing game.
Get expert advice, Clpecially
if legaJ matter enters plcttae.
Fair
Fill
Funds
Camp
Forest Home Women's Aux-t • iliary'.! !Jlnll&I fair, planned
~' with chlldren in mind, will get
(, under way Saturday, Nov. 15,
~' at 10 a.m. in the Shakespeare
Club, Pasadena.
· Booth.! will oller a variety of
rnercband.be and handnlade
articles; prir.es will be award-
ed every boor, and games will
entertain children throughout
the day.
Funds for the benefit plan-
ned by the auxlli&ry, a work·
ing orga:nir.atJoo of Southtrn
Caillomia women led by Mn.
111 arsden Lemon of Lquna
Hlll.s, will provid< S<!>o!arsl!i~
for young people to a~
summer camps in the San
Bernardino Mountains
spomored by Forest Home
Christian Conference CeoW",
14" Forut Falls.
Dtm't try. to be your
.... lawyer. Camplele • pro~
eel.
U!lO (July ZS.A11g. 12): Ob-
tain h!Jit from Aries message.
Stress basic lslues. Atleld to
necesury chores. You can
.mali uclt!ng contads. But,
in order to enjoy yourself,
bow egwntials are com-
pl<led.
VIRGO (Aue. 23-Sept. 22):
Study Loo ._. One who
serves er works with you
makes fine guture. Show your
appceciation. TU. notbillc for
granted. Remember d I e t
re90lutiom.
LIBRA (Sept. ~ 22):
K e e p promises made to
younger indivtdual. Accent.. Caribbean Cruise
creative endeavors. Tonight ii
fine for frank discussion witb On a 28-day Caribbean cruise aboard the SS Lurline
member of opposite sex. Let are Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Astle of Corona del Mar.
others know bow you really Their ports of call will include La Guaira·Caracas,
feel Trinidad, Barbados, Martinique, St. Thomas. San
SCORPIO (Oct. 23--Nov. 21 ): Juan, Haiti, Kingston, Balboa and Acapulco. Home, property, bas I c ....:...c::c.:.c....::..c.:....:.....::..c...:...;_ _____ ;_ ____ _
developments are spotlighted.
Attend to details. Later, there
will be time for relaxation. Be
oblervant. Someone may have
overlooked apparent minor
chore.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 21-
Dec. 21 ): Be flexible. Some
plans llllY .be subject to quick
change. Short trip could prove
beneficial. Be open to ex-
perience. Experimenting today
could provide elusive answer.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Genuine b arga in
available. You find "'bat you
hive been seeking. Recognize
it when it appears. Good for
paying, collecting debts. Ac-
cent on m one y and
~ions.
AQUARIUS (Jan. »Feb .
II): Cycle is high: you can
make definite movet, con-
tact!. Beware. however, of
relying upon ooe who bas get·
rich-quick scheme. Get things
dooe through legitimate proc-
esw.
PISCES (Feb. IH!arch 20):
Cooperate in special project
which promotes charitable in-
terest. Your participation Yt-ill
not only aid others, but builds
own morale. Know this and
rapood accordingly.
IF TODAY IS YOIJR
BIR~~ Y 1~ ~v~ _plenty of peTsOOal magnetism, in·
tellectuaJ curiosity. Afuch has
happened recently to revitalize
you. Now, be ready for basic
move which enhances
-domestic position.
Former Mayor Speaks
Color slides from t h e
Freedoms FoundatJon o f
Valley Forge will be narrated.
by former Newport Beacll
Mayor Mrs. F.dgar Hill in
Fashion I&land Wednesday,
Nov. 19.
Mrs. fill will appear at the
de~rt meeting of C o I .
William Cabell C h a p t e r ,
Daughters of the American
RevolutJon, which be&ins at
12:30 p.m. in Island House.
Mr.!. Hill wUI be aas.isted by
Mrs. Jack E. Moore, both of·
fieers of Orange C o u n t y
Chapter of the foundalloo 's
women's divisloo which
recognizes le.aders who have
cootributed to the American
way of life.
Regent Mrs. Selah M. Reber
will welcome l.S!istant state
secretary Mrs. George D.
Buccola to \he meeti n g.
Assistants for the affair are
hostess chairman Mrs. Ross
E. Heflin and committee
members, Mmes. D a v i d
Petersen, Charles ·c. Gaylord,
Frank H. Simmons a n d
William B. Tritt.
K-MAC PHARMACY
Try us for ·your prescription
needs. Fast, courteous serv·
• ice.
We will 9ladly quote prices
prior to flllin9 your prescrip·
tion. ·
3333.Newport srvd:; Newport Beach
Across from Newport Beach City Hall
Phone: 675-6611
HOLIDAY PREMIERE SHOWING
of a
$500,000.00 DOLLAR
JEWELRY COLLECTION
Featuring A
50 -CARAT DIAMOND NECKLACE
ALSO
llllllANT CUT
10 CT. DIAMOND
WEINERT-CLARK
.. ...
Guild Has the Ticket to Festivities
St. J oachim Parish Guild members (left to right ).
the Mmes. Paul llolfes, Mike Fenchak and Jack
Speirs are· almost ready for their annual Thanksgiv-
ing dinner dance Friday, Nov. 21 , in Costa Mesa
Country Club. Festivities will begin with a 7 p.m.
social hour and dinner at 8. Rounding out the eve-
ning will be dancing to the music of· the Warren
Barker Orchestra. Reservations may be made by
phoning Mrs. Rolfes, 646-3176 or Mrs. Fenchak,
543-5677 before tomorrow.
Funds Swelled
Ta raise funds for an art
Thanksgiving Table Set Pictures
Of House
Valuable
scholarshi p, Torana A r l B L Al
League will spo nsor a night at y aguna · trusans the theater Sunday, Nov. 16.
Members and guests..w.ill..al·--tend the South c 0 a s t Allrusa Club of Laguna will
RepertoryThc a t e r 's high l ig ht its annual
pe~formance of "A Funny Thanksgiving Dinner meeting
Thing Happened on the Way lo Tuesday, Nov. 18, with a talk
the Forunl'' at 8 p.m. Coffee by Mrs. Letha Brown who will
and dessert will be served at come from San Diego to join
7. the party in the Outrigger
Tickets are to be purchased restaurant.
In advance and may be Mrs. Ruth Denhart ts mak·
reserved by calling Mrs. ing arTangements for the din·
Charles Fischer at 544-6296. ner which will begin with a
Sneak-a-Peek
6:30 p.m. social hour. Mrs.
Ann Whitener will preside.
The guest speaker was
district governor and now is
i n t e r national information
chairman for the organization.
Mrs. Julie Bradshaw will
assist with decorations which
will follow a Thanksgiving
theme. Guests are welcome
and . may obtain reservations
by calling Mrs. Denhart,
494--3550 by next Saturday.
NE W YORK (UPI) -
Snapshots can be used to save
time, money and energy in
case or robbery, accident or
tax loss.
One· couple, for example,
faced with proving clairits
resulting from a fire which
gutted one wing of thelr home
produced pictures of the in·
terior and exterior before and
after the blaze.
The insurance company ac-
cepted the snapshots .1. s
evidence and prompUy sent
Uiem. a check.
Authorities suggest these
steps to be prepared for I
catastrophe:
-DAILY PIL01 J 7
Betrotnal R_evealea
Tho eni•,..,ent al Jane
Ellen tnd-u al GGMlo oncl
Robert Wllliam Patterton of
5"nla Barbor& lw been ...
-by Mr. _, Mn.
Arthur Frank Endacott of
Newport e .. ch, """"" of the
brldH!ed.
MIN Endocott. • anduate
d the Unlvenlty rA Callforn.i11 S&nta Barb&rt, also was
arlduotod lrom Whittler Hi!lh
School She Is teochlng
elementary llCl>ool In G<>letll.
Hu flance, ton of Roy Lee
PJtlerbl of North Hollywood
and the late Mrs. Patteraon, ls
• gn4uate ol Hayward High NEEDLEPOINT DESIGN
67~7121 School and UCSB where he J'2I I. c..., Hwt ... CNOH de4 Mw
presently is doing graduate ·------------~-~----work in botany.
'Jbe couple plan to marry tn Read
St. Andn!w'a Presbyterian
Olur<h on Dec. 27.
the Stars With Omarr
See WHAT'S '~EW at
_.,_ _HUNTINGTON_
~e~· CENTER .'rEffa ·
Also upcoming for the clu6
ls its annual Vocational Ven-
tures Day in Laguna Beach
High Sc.boo! Wednesday, Nov.
19, Mrs. Harold Dsenis, voca·
tional g u t d a n c e chairman,
leads the program which
assists coeds in formulating
their plarui for a career. Dur-
ing the day business women
representing a range ol voca-
Uons will speak.
-Take ·a co mplete
ph0tographic inventory of your
home. ' ••
YNor'sHALF-SIZE -SHOP
~ 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTON BEACH
(next to Barker Bros.)
NII 111111
B'nai B'rith
Orange Coast Chapter of
B'nai B'rith Women gather the
first Thursdays at 8 p.m. in
?i1ercury Savings Bank, Hun-
tington Beach.
ES
New Ampex portable cassette tape player/recorders
NEW MICRO 14
Unique "floating"
dynamic microphone,
Recharges Ni·Cad
batteries when playing on
AC current. Plays in your
car with optional 12·volt
adaptor . Nearly twice the
power of~most portables
and bl-directional 3~ x 4~
speaker give you big, full
sound. And would you
believe switchable auto·
ma tic recording·level
control ? $74'5 complll• wttl'I plu1·ln ml•t,
••rphon•, C60 c111ttlt
Ind Cllt
AMPEX
Plays and records on batteries-or
plu1s into car lighter or AC outlet wittt
optional adaptors. Ultra·compact, fits in
an attache case. Ideal for businessmen
and students. Single· lever control and
re mote·controt mike make it great
for dictation.
comp11te wltt>
1nocroiihon1 .tnd
Cl~t. C-60 CIS$etla,
11.pl'lont
COME IN AND HEAR A COMPACT CONCERTI
AMPEX TAPE BONUS-SAVE OVER 50"!
Your choice of prerecorded stereo tapes or blank tape
with purchase of any A_!!!pex Tape Recorder.
J ~ DAVIS -BROWN
411 E. 17th St
Cos't• Masa, 646-1614
D•lly f·f, S•t. f-6
-Photograph each room
from four diff.~r_mt anglpJo
include furnishings. T a k e
close-up shots of es~cially
valuable items, such as an-
tiques.
-Picture lhe exterior of
your home from all four sides
including landscaping, trees,
driveway, fences .
-Write the date , place and
price of purchase on the beck
of photographs showing ex-
pensi ve possesSions.
-Color ·film will help show
the true value.
-Store snapshots In a bank
safe-deposit box or in a
fireproof container at home.
-Keep you r snapshots up to
date.
-In case of an emergency,
get your camera out and start
snapping. The sooner you
photograph the damage, the
better chanct you have of pro-
ving your claim.
-Take snapshots, too, of
replacement and repair work
to establish a guide to current
value.
Yarn Ties
Up Ideas
Ideas In Yarn will be
presented by Miss Nancy
Logsdon w h e n Huntington
Beach High School Foculty
Wives' Club meets at 7:30
p.m. Monday. Nov. 11, in the
home of Mrs. Darrold
Stillwagon.
During the business portion
of the meeting, ways 1od
means to promote the
American Field Service will
be discussed.
Drugs Lauded
By Publication
Ora] contractpUves, VIC·
cines for measles, mumps and
Polio and dnl.p used to trtat
patients with cancer, .even
depression, gout and fungal in-
f e ct ion ll, have been
unanimously c~ as .. m•
jor therapeutic 1dvances" by
luding doclOn and medico!
prol .........
'The drup art amon1 1,514
prescription drugs developed
in the past to year1.
The li!t appwed In the
Medical Letter. a nonprofit professional publlcatJon th1t
evaluates prescription drup .
for doctors1
•
-
R1WW1J1lftUl1tmlilf.The jumpsuilw ilhpa nt _B ·· <,.' '·
leas widenin1 lo skirt width s. Exciting · .
Chinese watercolor prilt on nylon glowing -· 1 1hrou~ a floatingdtilfon Callan collared with uffii ms
beads. Holiday inalic i1 31¥Mll, topaz or ~~lJk ~ ... ~.
. sapphire; &·to U, 121... Dress Sliop,, i.lf'4
••
. I
I • t• ,1 .. i 'J· "
Newport1l fashian lsllnd NewportCenler • 644-2200 •Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10:00 lill 9:30 Olh~r days 10:00 ti ll 5:30
• • '
-
JI, DAILY PILOT Thlll'sdlJ, NO\lefllbfr ll, 1969
YEAR END
SALE.
25% off
·--,----:-,-,---,--:----=-~,...,=-~c:-----,.-.-.. ,,,.... -. -.:.
fAj-oft -=--·F·;:::i-~.L~,.-=~=::: ,• ==:::::::_~:~--i ~::=::;:i:_ftOO·
(;r'ruks D~nee . R~yi:V~I Prens1rinir
7-lwur Maratlwn Plbnnid . r-....,,
Pay o, ff PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The maralboo duiee crue GI VFo_ r .. War_?· the Roaring 'als returns here today in 1 one-oighl. seveD-
d ' ... bou.r wacky revival that could be qalle 1 swinaer. '
RIVERSID,,, C.lif. (AP) -lt'S something now ilial's relilly old. J"~ "u •-'•y's '• offONG KONG (•-· -l'Tbat'I correct, Jimmy," Uo.& _. MAC ..... ' !U 1 •~ yerteryear fashions. , , 'fray~ from the DMjnland leacber 11y1. ''You .. in $40." 1 · • _. 'Everything seems to come back. from }!*. rul ,_,. report verilh •• prepll'a-
lt's the . shth g r 1 d e era," says promoter JOMPh Monte. "So wb7 not dlnclng?" tiona:, Jncludlng large aca1e
classroom rA Allan Haniaon, More than 100 persOns, between ·11 and &O, have siped dilpersaJa of city people and
who i3 pi o Ree r ing a up for the "no-bolds' barred" con&at. It #may be the first factories to rural areu. in
capitalistic a p pro a c h to revival of endurance dancing since i~ craabe(jn ttse sit· Communist Ollna's Futiell
schoolwork. downs, slowdowns and doldrums of tbe Great Deptelsioa: Province, · acroa tbe narrow
He calls It the Harrison "J decMied it would be interesting lo see it again. modern Ji'onnosa Strait frcm the Ht-'
Point System and the idea is style," says h-1onte, born in 19':8 Wltea .the.~ were tionallst Chinese island.
to e1.ploit the old acquisitive at their nutty hey-day. ~ 1be traYeten aaid JPukiea
instinct. "I also want to see if people havt the-stamina of the old &lltbctitles told the ~that
1be money is all 00 paper. days,~ haven't gone soft with all'tbt 1~ livin& fnd fancy "the dispersal ii· for Im·
.bUt in theOry the kids are paid converuences. Maybe ·people should go back to ~ for plementlng M a 0 • 5 war .
(Or •good work and fined for exercise, instead of jogging or golf!'' · -' • strategy of transfarminc the fl~ing off. A shrewd child can The marathon begins at 7 p.m:, and the ~apf> rec. countryside into the ocean or
build up a tbeoretical fortune. ords -all kinds of music -will roll withoul missing a people's \'at lo oUJet Rullian .,,
'M'f system, says Harrison, beat until 2 a.m. "' missile attacks a I a in 1 t works: Monte, of course, has moti ves ·in reviving the marathon. _Qllnese cities.••
,_
scons .. It's an incentive. It has He's a dance instruct.or. and manages .a dance School in "1n meetinls recenUy, the
don< away with grades. 1 downtown Philadelphia where his marathon will be ·beld. Fukien officials announced 7fit Ba' NJ-ht Out
substitute academic dollars." What happens if some couples are still dani:ing at the that "the Russian revw--·--"II
lawn procluds
end of seven hours? 1.11wna The ~year~ instructor "I don't think Uiere 'll be anybody going that long," he have made a semiofficial Being lost can be (un. Scott Steves, 3, ii entertained
gives eaeh pupil a $500 credit says. "But if there ls, we'll judge the winner, on dahcing abU-secret agreement with the by Sgt. Philip Davis in police station after he wan.
to atarl the semester. The nest ity. 1 just don't plan to stick around." ~· , ·-~a i '!' a n .Kuomintang (Na-dered out of hia Qbicago home in pajamas, carrying ea espands or shrink~ ac· There won't be cash to the winner, lik'e those ancient tionalist China) to jointly at· a blanket. He was· found a half block from his home.
-cording to the caliber of h h tack the mainland and restore His th ho bad bee called ad . k od ~ b marat onst atusedtoanteupasmuch as$J,OOO., Kuomintang rule on the mo er, w D napping, SOOD ·to ac emic ww pr u""" Y "We thought we'd give money,'' Monte says, ''but what 1 report a missing son. Ilse now-or next 1prin9. Seott•
mone11 baek satisfaetioa 911...-.nttt·
its owner. have you got after it's all spent." main and," the travelers said.:i;,;:;;;;;='====:;;:============;:;
Harrison says many parents So instead _ tw<rfoot·high trophies. The ~faoist officials said "if
' applicable elthe-r ti...,
WAS NOW
Turf Builder 5.45 4.09
9.95 7.47
13.95 10.47
Plus-2 7.95 5.96
Super Bonus 5.95 4.46
SAVE
1.36
2.48
3.48
1.99
1.49
and educators "shudder at the war breaks out be.tween the
idea or bringing capitalism inL-------------------Soviet Union and Olina the the schools." Russians will destroy Chinese
"But I'm .teaching l h e cities with long • ran g e
Americar:1 .,.way of life," he OCC S d M k missiles."
says. "'!'his ~ the way society tu en ts to -ar The war preparations In
will treat students when they Fukien al.so include building
are oot of school. Wh y not St t ' B • f • } h 1•--teach children about American 8 e 8 ICell elllll8 numecous s e~s. Food granaries thrwghOut Commu·
society the way it really is?" A redwood tree and time Or e C II I nist. China have been moved Students can build small ange oast-o ege-Chor a e from coastal cities to the'-
empires. for instance, a stu· capsule planting ceremony will present v o c a I en· ut-
d 'th h will be put on by the terLainment. land regions, the travelers ent wt enoug theoretical said.
capital can acquire the Associated Student govern-The ceremony will be at 11 -==========
Information Co., a firm that menl of Orange Coast College a.rn. al the new OCC library.:"' _1
di.!penses facts to those who Nov. 25 to commemorate the Two redwood trees will be FAIR
were inattentive in class or 200th birthday of the while planted. Then a time capsule man 's co I o n · l · J F•tt, f1ir, f1etu1!, Th••• didn't do homework. The stu · 1 z a 1 0 n ° bearing microfilm of current
PLANNING A PARTY
FOR THE HOLIDAYS?
C.11 UJ for compl•f• c•f•ting
••rvic•. W• deliv•r for ord•rs
over $50.00.
We C•n serve •ny siz• g•th•r~
ing .•• Very re•1on•bly.
12.95 9.71 3.24
California. th••• woNl1 su111· up f1eton i1t dent can "buy" the right campus and t"Ollnly events will op1r1tio1t 01t th1 DAILY PILOT answers from the Information Dr. Robert Moore. cQ.llege be buried for opening in 100 Hllori•l p•g• •v•ry J1y. 2929 E. CoHt Hlgh~•Y 693 S. Co1st Highway
Co. :\Jfp~c~es~;d~e~n~l,~•~·il~l~s~pr~a~k~a~nd~ili~c_;;y~ea~r~s~. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~C~o~ro~n~•~de~IMl~~r~67~'3'1~.~7~2~~2iiiii~L~•~g~uin•~Bi••~c~h~4~9~4-~9~4~11~ Bonus 9.95 7.47
•ulhorlzed • nol•il:r
2.48 There are about a dozen
other firms suc c e ss ful
students can buy and operate.
They also may earn academic
dollars for helpin& slower
students, for good work habits
and for cooperation in class.
"You can't keep the kids at
home," Harrison said. "They
come even wben they're sick."
Select
the1970car
of your.
chOice.
And leave
the buying
to us.
We'll drive the bargain and you drift the car. Now, for the fi rs t
ti me you can lease a new car and talr.e advantage of,1he bargaining
power of a $950 million bank. Our car le asing is lor people who hate
to haggle and dislilr.e dumping a lot of cash into a down payment. Even
more important, our plan is for people who wanl to lease their car at
low banlr. rates,
We'retheaourceofcuh-themone1 factory!There are no finan-
cial uiiddl emen who want their cut. That's another reason why you can
save as much as $300 on a two-year lease at any of our 90-plus offices.
Get our professional and unbiaaed advice, free. Come in to
any branch of First Western Bank for the financial facts about car leas·
ing. We won't twist your ar111, but we \vill OIJ'cr our advice. \Vc'll even
show you why it's sometimes chtapcr to lease a more expensive car. And
to prove how objective First
Western Bank is, whether you
!caJ1e a car or borrow the money
to buy one, we'll give you a free
persona l -checking accounL'
What else would you like?
J
'
t l <'irs l
\\l' .... lllll
l\ank
Fust Ba near
Lease
WAREHOUSE • LIQUIDATION
OVER $100,000 WORTH OF FURNITUIJE TO CHOOSE fROM
COMPLETE 3 ROOMS W0-$1-495
II ror the homeow11er with dlscrim inati na t1ste and 1n eye for superb wottm•nthlp.
!1ere ~re 3 compli!te ·tooms-ol""Sp1r11sh designed furniture at unslff"Plssed wtues!
The l1.,.1ng room ensemble 1s warmly accented with hand carvtd wood trim on the
so!a a1111 love seat that lully complime nt lhl!ir sumptuous velvet tabrict. A lovely
lf'•n l ree, wall pl<1QUe and lamps 1111 the room with elegant warmth .~ ch1rm.
\'Jalk into ttie bedroom and•you·n immediattly fa ll in love with this araclous furni-
:ure that c.iirri~s tn1ough the rna!tedul hand dtsljl'I al'd 1uperb constr1.1ction. lrispect th!s 1roup.
1ng carf!lully ... from the marrttic mirror and tr iple d1ess.er . , . to ll1e kingsiz.e he1dtloard 1nd
full size 111te stands ... .all deep in oet11I and const1ucted for a l•letime: A live piece di ning room
~et con1plete~ th1~ ~p1!ndod g1oupln11 with intricate scroll·WOfk. on both t1ble P&desl1I 1nd ch11r
1n~•rts, enh<1nced by plush vinyl se1ts. Our ptolesslonill decorator• .!ll't 1t your u rvice. E•1y
1crms, ol course.
RIJ , ... ,, ,.,,; 111 ,.,,
1844 Newpo~t Blvd., Costa Me sa (only l
AT HARBOR Boulevard
fv·'r'/ n.ght 'til 9 -' W (·d .. 5d+. ?, S.~' · r,
Complttt ! ---.Sofa• L-t
• squa11 • W: c..Me
• ~taH tablrl •tree
• t1•1e lamp • Nncint ~lllP
• ~· • triple dreaer • lllimr • 2 ftitt staMs .. ..,.._ . 5,... • .,_ ..
•• J ·-~ i&"" .8 ..... 8 .. 00
MUST
SACRIFICE
Eoch l'iece, can be
purdiased separately
at equal sclYlllCJS
e OPEN SUNDAY TILL 6
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
TERMS e NO MONEY DOWN
NO PAYMENT TILL 1970
Pl
h•
re
ill
ta
b<
cl
p1
ta
th
"
fPt!I' Mu•ff"C!}"e-ut-Bue , -.f'r-~· -------~------,-
lOQ Viet , Women, Wait, Watch ·. Bodies Found
• I •
DAILY l'ILOT
0
,. I
•
For Your ••
LE IA TAY, -.n (AP) lapcuqe,• said Mn. Dan.
-Under a llUrlfd tree Mn. "But they. are without family,
Phan Thi Du wept qilietly for without country, w i t h o u t \ reli&1oJ\. And now we know
lhe vlllted a place where
grimly workmen laboriously
exhumed I.he bodies and young
volurUers meticulously sifted
the remains for ii1formation
that might help identily the
victirtlll.
with bullets and c1ilbs or
burled them .Uve.
She became tomethine of an
expert op tb·e idenWicaUon of
la.ig-burled bodies.
name lies amoni the bones. students and other!," ahe
More often, the only hope is says.
dental work, the shreds of A total of 104 more bodies
clothing or just the Intultlon of have been (ound. 1n several'
the ldenUly' of each noimbtred -
cadaver ia read OYer a
loud.opeaker. Loveliest . :
her h\l.aband. • -that the wt•.._·t h man! Occulonally her '111nc1 <ll'· \¥.'' y .,. -~ u • gravesites with.In the past a wife or mother. week. Some Jay atop one ressed the green pluUc lheet. " It wu a atateme.nt without·
Ued with nylon cant. coo-rucor, even without much
tablng his rtmaim ~ a few 'outward emotloa. Mn. Dao;·a
bona remnanta ol j, I 1 4'-yeet'()ld-11er, hid known I~_.:. and -~·" 'th .!-• for It monlha that her h111-c ........... • ~ wi l .. o NM alD*t certainly :was
prominent gald taeth still In-dead, ooe of more than l,000
ta.cl killed b)'. Viet Cong a.waina-
"The Viel Ccog! We are of tlon oquills durinll the 1911 Tet
the aame race, we have the batUe for Hue.
same hair, we speak the same Trus ·weet.'ror the tfth Ume,
Mi-s. Dan was one of
perttapa 100 women from Phu
Vang district, juat southeast of
·Hue, who have waited and
watched for months as bodies
were uncovered in places to
which the Viet Cong marched
thelr victims, then killed them
"YOl.I can tell the old women
by their teeth and the ~oung
ones by their long hair, ' she
nplalned.
In the case of men -and
the overwhelming number of
victims were men -lt ia
much harder.
SomeUmes 81!1 idenUticaUon
card, a cigarette lishter or
some other articles bearina a
Mrs. Dan's husband, 1 SI). another:, lndlc1tlng that the
year.old government civil aer-Viet Cong executlo:."ltrs lined
vant.. Ton 'J'hat Lang, wu one the ~le up and shot or club-
of 150 people ln his village who bed them so that they fell Into
were rounded up and marched freshly du1 trenches.
away by the Viet Co.ig on the--The bodies a.re Io ad e d
fourth d')' ol the Tet batUe. aboard a motor 1ampan and
She does not know, even now, taken two miles to Phu Thu
why he wu Plcked· district, headquarters. They
"They took many people, are laid out on the ground, and
soldiers, government offlclab, the list of available clues to
Scores . of pereons, mofJtly
the women ol Phu Vang. preaa
around t h • plutle-sheeted
bodies 1nd poke lhroogh the
bones &'Kl c1othea, in hopes of
finding evldeuce of their mW.
la.I men.Few-.
Jn a nearby abed, the
tiulldlng of <Offlns conUnuei. A
wood sbortap wu Pvtd, at
leut temporarily, by am-
munition crates donated by
American and South Viet-
namese troopa t.t the area.
..
Lucky F~atures
TOP QUALITY ''BOIDED'' IEIT!:::1~~,
at LoW' Everyday ~·(: "~
BABY FOOD :~<:,~~~:~~.~'.~~-~ ........... a·
JUNIOR BABY FOOD :::':."~: .... 11 '
SIMILAC llQUID ::~;.'~!:.~'.~ ....... 26• • --M.J.B. COFFEE ""·"' 73'
M.J.B. COFFEE u or. cu .. 1"
M.J.B. COFFEE'"'· .,...1 "
SANKA llllU 01110 lllSTUtT 11s
. (01111, I O!. UI ...... .
M.J.B. COFFEE:~1J:.·.~ •.. l 1'
UPTON TEA ., "' u .... _ ............. 59'
SUNSHINE
23·0UNCE BAG
or APRICOT HALVES ~!:'.· ........ 27'
llll~HTDlT
V.B. APPLESAUCE """' ....... 20'
CLING PEACHES ~:~~~';.:~; ....... 23•
SLICED PINEAPPLE :!~~,','7 ..... 24'
GRAPEFRUIT ~!~~~ ::~~'.~~~ ............ 30'
BLUEBERRIES ~!1:,~~:11 ................... 37'
DRINK "llllPPll-Gl l PltlUIT 35' Dll MDlttl -41 Dl. (111 ................. ,.
CRANAPPLE JUICE ~':1~ ::~~~ ..... 48•
PETITE PEAS ~~~~~~•"· ............ 28'
DEL MONTE CORN ~~~a11."c11t .•••..•. 23'
BLADE CUT
CHUCK
ROAST '"" 39c U.010 IOI rU.YOI &
TINOlllllSS LI.
ANS ,."""""' •11<111• 2S' GREEN BE UICID-14DJ.C411 ....... ..
PORK & BEANS r:~:.•;r .............. 39c
LIBBY'S CUT BEETS ""· uo. ..... 18'
POTATOES ~:':~·.~~~~-'.~~-~~-~'.~ .~~-~. 69c
STEWED TOMATOES ::::, ...... 23'
ZUCCHINI SQUASH ::·.~: ...... 29'
ASPARAGUS SPEARS ::':"ii:\:'. 43'
TOMATO JUICE ::~~'.1i1:~~ ........... 28•
rr'-OYSTERS ~-:::::.'~~ ............. 35'
ALBACORE TUNA ~·:1~~~!~ .......... 36•
MEAT BALL STEW '"""'·"·'" 73' 1,DZ,(111 ,., ... , ••
VIENNA SAUSAGE ~·::·: ........... 28'
HORMEL CHILI :~':.",1111 ............... 57'
,;;, k1; lDW DISCOUNT PRICfS ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUlY AIDS
EtECTRIC CORN
POPPER ~:::~ $J"
Ctniple1t Wiik ••rHf ••• Ct~. ,,.
11!\s 111 h r Mnlq 1H ilta1111.
4S·PIECE jJ> !~.~~!,~!!aR , ....
J!S•Sla~l. t .. ~111til1! , ' '
SIJ llS• ~
S1re11d1 $997 -
11 Aht11,
60" ROUND OR S2"a70" TABLECLOTHS
lltny 1n11 lt•tfftf l'i'Tt "" 1111
111..,1 ~101111:, lllflt ftetll!tl' ttl.
\ 1n. 1tr1•11, •1ttrJrtt!, lt11C·•t11i111.
':: .$211
GLASS
COOKIE JAR
1,
'
WITM LIO -2·5-AL Sill
t 11" 11nt wit• •11111 $199
tr11t Hf !tr '"'
111ca111
=
GILLETTE RIGKT GUARD
7-0UN(t: SPIAY DEODORANT
S1 111-t 111 ''ery 111tm•cr 11 !ht lunilf. St
ialt anf s11rt w11• ertrr s,r1y. $1 l 6 _. ... J l i1ts lan1·last111 111 far ,n.
I ::::,1 t1clio1. PlltE INC. Ile C1f
'--.VICK'S
FORMULA 44 $) 38 ~
COUGH SYRUP ~.-
111itien W11f Clttttf lllWtf tlfl--Sff llt
lkll tll'llS a~f •111U c11t~S. 5·11. •11tl1.
1--RISE SHAVING CREAM,
11-0Z:. RIGUlAR Olt MINTHOL
~ 1kt 1k1'1~1 cn111 !~11 l1u 1s 9 3 C
,....-Jiii llCI ltlilll 5111111. 11• ... __ ,1.~ 1k1111 .•
~· .... PROTEIN 21
SHAMPOO 76c ~
•·OUNCI SIZl IOffLl ~~
LtMS .,.., h11 clu t, tlH 11hl •tw •N.._..iimt~
111 Ultl. c.tlu ti att.. Jiii' .,.., IU1r II/Min .
GROUND ROUND RIB T·BONE
BEEF · STEAK ROAST STEAK .. ., .. 48c """ '" 7 9 c "t:~· 7gc nou $119 LU• AJID tuprr ,:,.i:.o::g. UICIY 1011010 rot IOMOIO JOI
IOflOID LI. flAYOI LB. ru.vot LB. TUfDllMlU lL
CHUCK ROAST""" ....... -...... ·" 47'
RUMP ROAST .............................. 79'
ROUND STEAK ,., ........... _ .. ., ... u.89'
CROSS RIB ROAST"'""' ..... ··"· 77'
RIBT AMlfafmiS •.•. u .. •n ........ ' 1"
LAMB LEG ,..., ..... u .................. , .. 89'
LOIN L.AMB CHOPS =~~~:~ .. ••'l"
DIL MONTE RELISH :~~;. ,. ...... 34'
KARO SYRUP "'"" ..... 37' 1• or. 1n ................. ..
BERRY <YRUP ~l~::C.. ..·--·· .44' lllUWlllllruc••ll•f-IOflfllllhtl
WELCH GRAPE JELL y '"'· ...... ss·
PEANUT BUTIEI :c;:. J11 ............ 11'
... KAflkt~-.....
SWEET PICKiES
lADY'SCNOICE 49c 22.ouNCE JAR
.~. ---~
MORTON DELIGHT""" •• ~ .... ss·
lllffT a CllMl ISTllwtflll .. ClttltTJ BANQUET MlAT PIES ........... 18'
COOK IN BAG :~~~:t·.~~~.~~~ ........ 27' !IU(ID 111r.suc1D lll'll lf.(MIC Ill ltflOJ
CHILI & BEANS :~1f.·~1:~ ................ 26'
SIRLOIN Tips 1010-l llTHClllMID 43' CNl(•lll. 6 Dt. Pll , .. , ,., ••
SUPER SANDWICHES ::;:· ...... 79'
BAG 0 PIZZA ::u~~~~~·:.~;~~~~~~~.1: ••• 89'
ONION RINGS ~!',',~~'., ................ 45'
MEXICAN FOOD ~r:~~'.'t .............. 49<
!111' TICDS.110 Ille Gllll ClllU.IUlllTOIJ
FRENCH TOAST ~:~.':~!~~ ............ 36<
Our LOW Ever)day P1icc!
CIGARETIES
KING SIZE $·306 1 Q.PK. CARTON t•1u1 TAii
, IRS '"oc•l•'' ss• RICH S ECLA ,,. "· ............. .
SWISS MISS PIES MH.m ........ 29' r ~PPll·(WlllT-Pll(fl.1Dn1•••••Y·Ml•<•·•llfllPllltl
TURKEY ::~~ ~~~~~-~~-~'.~~.~'.~.~~~.~~.~~~ ....... 3 8'
RIJOS IOIAllTI 37' BEAN BUR ,,, ............... ..
VEGETABLES PICTIWHTJPIAl·Ml~IO 38' YIGUllllll IC DI. IAG-
CHOePED ONIONS::~~~ ......... 23'
ORE·IDA POTATOES i:::.•;::.'. .... 28'
FISHSTtckS ~·~~:::. .................... 93'
BREADED · SHRIMP ~~:~.·::~~." ......... t ••
MCP ORANGE JUIClll':u ...... 32'
UM'm. liliAM :---... ~.~ !!I!~ .... ,.~
.-• STUFFING MIX ~.'.~~~:~43'
STA-CRISP CRACKIRS o .. 1.0 ... 29'
BREADS ;:~~~~ ..................... : .... 354
Yll llff llplll '"·0..• w..-" , .......... P•hlhl\
•
SIRLOIN STEAK .. ... ....... " 93'
BROWN 'N SERVE""""-""' 69 lll YlllUIH ML PIG. (
PORTERHOUSE ~~~~·.,MQ,ID .......... i1.• 1.1•
FRYERS t .f.J,&,,l&DI I "Hit 31' WllOll IDDT CllKllltl .. .,,,,,.,.,,,,.ll.
cur:up FRYERS ""'''c.c: ...... u.3S'
LINK SAUSAGE .................. 331 111111.US lMlS ........... ..
ITALIAN SAUSAGE .,.,. ......... <o.89'
.. ·KAtlkt~·-........
LINDSAY OLiVES
PITTID,
LARGI RIPE
6·0UNCE CAN 36c
5 ". • OJIELllEMJ_ ~
BON DID
8 STEAK
--'-'~-.
You·n h,..... ,. ~ lh•., ,.to10.. ro oppr.cJ. o•• lh• •••1H11d•111 ~•111•. Thq ••• choice.
o•ltt .. d oiz" • • , Alld th•~ ore dillC6Y"I
pdc•d.,. C:ompore todof. U.S. N1. I l v•t..i POTATOES
... M~~.~.~.~Auow CREME 2s· \~!:.!
CAKE MIX ~:!'!:.:~":~ .................... 35c
MACARONI &OlDllt Gllllt 43' ELBOW J2 01. ,_ ....... .
BOUILLON CUBES ~;::·: ............ 22'
... NESTLES MORSELS~:~,~;;!19'
SPAGHITTI SAUCE ~t~,~~l:.~.~.~ ... 351
Mllf llQSllllOOM
..,-WILD RICE A RONl u•u .... 49'
·~tiT ~mr..-· '
S P&MPll llf,_ DIS'OlllU 11• DIAPER H '" .............................. ..
COLORTEX NAPKINS .. '" ......... 10'
CORONET TISSUE !;!!!'u.oocu ...... 26'
LUCKY FOIL :~~~i': ..................... 241
LADY SCOTT FACIAL:!!Ni:.0.~:~~.128•
BOLD DETERGENT .. OL ............ 82'
Our LOW Ever)dayPricc!
LADY LEE BUTIER
FIRST QUALITY
16·0Z. CARTON 79c
DASH DETERGENT H "· ............ 77'
IVORY SNOW:l';',~:.".' ............. 82'
CASCADE ~~~~~:!:~~!.~.'.~~~~~.~ ........ 69 c
SPIC I. SPAN ~·:~:,, ................ 93'
BIZ PRE SOAK~~~~~:~ .............. 1''
PERSONAL IVORY :::~i::.'.:'. ....... 28'
LIQUID PLUMR !:~'r,:;~~~ ............ 791
IVORY LIQUl!j ~:~;~::~ ................ 83'
PUREX BLEACH ~~ ................. 39'
th,1 ;, 0,.Jy o porliol lloli"lt of Ill• l~o"'o"ch of g.,_.,, lto-.. oilobl• el i....c.~1 $1°'••·
LUCKY LUNtH MEATS ~:: ...... 35' IUUI MlMU. Dl.ivl. M1Ui0111 1 ClllUI, r & P
~,V.f,~l.,~J:l~~!.~~"~ Jctt!~U .. t.8'
LONGHORN CHIESI ,.,,, ....... 69'
MIH W\K111tT1t, MIOIUM MDi' citHAI
OSC&R MAYER ROLOGNA ~::.~74'
HKIO '"Mllf'(lll II.,, ft.or.···~ 11Q
lllNCMIDN ME&JS, ............ 98' Zi •fl[ ••.m"TJall
'! .J
Y AMI YOGURT ~~~,~~.'.~~.·.~ ..... 20c
IMO:,•;~~~:.~~-'.~ ........................ 371
REDDl-WIP ~·:~. ~=~~~.'.~~~ ........... ss•
CARNATION MILK ::';',~,!.'~ ... -18'
U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP
COUPONS
GLADLY ACCEPTED
WllNllS .:f~-r'1T..H, ....... -.......... 73' ...... il1liU (IUPDllS &¥.lolldlf .. ill ltDl•I
OSCAR MAYER FRANKS .......... 79' •ll •11' -l·ls·.·,vc.
4-LB. CANNED HAM ............. '4" WIUOlt, "DlllT (UUD
'llllMAM CANNED HAM il:: ... '4" :,i;:.r-oMt ..
ROD'S PARTY 'DIPS i::;,. .. _,3" iiNliP ,
Thanksgivii:ig . ~.
·' " •
••• Try • clr•mafic touch
of frost on the t ips of your K
curls. • ~
Who hea the tlone7 r
You 091
With our new, FAST cOlor .J.
proce11, •ppliecl by expert
hi1ircolorist1. It takes helf
fhe -time for twice tho
lo•alinassl
HOLIDAY
FROSTING ... _ .. _ $20.00 "
I Complete with cuf, color,
comb-out)
For Holiday
Hurry Days •••
. ..
Mi11 Prim qualitr. Wl&-
LETS I from $6. '9 , comb-
it-younelf CURLY WIGS
(from $22.501, and othat
fine talu•• in · popular hair
9oods. iFlttad end 1tylecl
for Youl
For Your
Holiday
Gi~ Whirl ...
, • • T re•t your1elf, or
someon• you cere i1bout,
to a MISS PRIM course in
•• , Make-up •.. Hair
Cara ... Mod1lin9 •••
Parsonality Projactlon •••
Public lmege.
Taan i1ncl adult 9¥9flin9
classa1. Professional in·
1fructor1,
c:.11 .... "" .............
Miii PRIM ........... , ... ...,.,
11142 ..... -.
lOWl-&C-,1
•MAlll...ilWS
962~2666
' ' ..
f --------,
------------------,.--------------·--------~~-~-:------,---..-.--..---.~----·:---....-... -. -
:t0 DAILY PILOT
THf mANOI WOll9 .. MR.MUM------J!.__~~
Chnrfus~ Will Come of Age ;
'
-And Into Money-Friday
L 0 ND ON ( UP 1 ) -Friday night's 11 I am1 1 y ll will probably be a listen-
SomeUme Friday n i g h t circle" in the • gilded stale Ing, rather th.an dancing, par-
b e net h the g I it t e r i n g rooms or Buckingham Palace ty. Such uustenlng" parties
chandeliers of Bucldngbam will feature a perfonnaoce by have been rare in Buckingham
Palace Queen Elizabeth II will violinist Yeliudi Menuin, whom Palace since the Edwardian
lift high her champagne glass Charles met recently and in· era.
and toast the future monarctl, vited to help him celebrate. About 1,000 gilts for Charles
Ctlarles Ill, who is 21 Friday· All back. tie dinner w ,i 11 have arrived at the palace:
'though future k\ng, he is precede Menuin. A concert Presents Include a polo pony,
now Prince Charles, the orchestra will cater t o solid gold cuff links from
Prince oC \Vales, and the Charles' classical tastes with jewelers in Montreal and a
charripagne is a special vin· a program of Mozart. Charles box. or lucky white heather
tage laid down years ago by ltimself may treat the guests from the royal staff at
his grandfather, King George to a cello solo. Balmoral Castle in Scotland.
VI, for this occasion. jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Once Charles was a shy I
young lad whose clandestine
swig of cherry brandy while at
prep school gave Britons a
chuckle.
Today he is no longer shy.
He is serious, se nsitive ,
unspoiled.
But not too serious. His wit
is sharp, his eye for the hearty
K-Mac.Drug & Discounl Store
Our everyd_ay prices are com·
petitive with all d i s c o u n t
stores. Try us for your health
and beauty aids at discount
prices.
STEREO SENSATION!·
Sl1ark Net Protects
Nixo11 in Florida
laugh keen.
At a recent Cambridge
University revue the future
Charles Ill appeared in a
garbage can in one skit. He
brought down the house.
Cha"rles still blushe.s easily,
yet his composw:e seldom, if
ever, fallers.
3333 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach
Across from Newport Beach City Hall
I
Phone: 675-6611
The colorful sounlll of
Orange County Music
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
...
From Fashion Island. Newport Beach
Charles is a millionaire, but
he gives half his income to the I'!!!!!!!!!!!!! Briti sh people while h I sl::
mother the Queen is finding il KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. IAP)
-The tropical waters around
President Nixon's island home
_ _Ji__RdJ!rivate beach here abound
v.•ith so many sharks the \Vhite
liouse has put up a shark net
to keep Nix on safe while
swimming.
J erry W a r r e n , assistant
\Vhite House press secretary.
said in reply lo a newsman's
telephone ques tion: "There is
a shark preventive, treated
net around the President's
property in lhc bay.''
111 the last week, while Nix-
on v.•as visiting Florida, trap-
pers from the nearby tourist
attraction, Sequarium, pulled
six tiger sharks in the 12· to
14-foot range from the Key
Biscayne area, in sight of
dov.·ntown r..1iami, accon:ling to
Or, \Yilliam r..t. Slephens,
shark specialist al the al·
trarlion.
Other shark varielles fou nd
in lhe area include lemon
sharks, black tips and bull
sharks, all of which commonly
run JO feet in length, Stephens
said.
Teen-age neighbors of the
Presidenl on Key Biscayne
make i hobby of angling for
~JM hl!llLthe....Sj!aw:alls of
private homes.
Dr. Arthur 1i1yrberg, a
specialist on sharks al the
University of Miaffii Institute
or Marine Science near Key
Biscayne, said sharks are
potential hazards to swimmers
but added: "There a r e
millions or people who come to
south Florida waters every
year. Only once every year or
two does an attack occur."
The last .... per'son known to
have been killed by a shark
around Key Biscayne v.·as
skin-diver \Villiam Dandridge.
tom apart J une 24, 1961, by a
tiger shark estimated at 18
feet.
Many other sharks favor the
wann waters along nearby
Miami Beach. Says Myrberg
of the sbaU hazard: "There
are more individuals who die
in the United States every
f~ from bee stin&s or light·
ning t h a n get bitten by
sharks."
h a rd t o kee p r oyal
establishments going on $1.1
million a year.
He probably is the mosl
popular male royal family
figure in Britain since Edward
VIII, not the Duke of Windsor.
So Friday night before. a
gathering of 500 close friends
in the vast palace the Queen
toasts the tr a diti o n a l
adulthood of the future king.
Charles will begin collecting
an annual tax-free income Fri·
day of $264,000. The· amount
should be double bu~ Charles
is giving half to the govern·
ment to help bolster. the
economy.
He also inherits stocks,
jewels and valuable art ob-
jects left to him by his
grandfather, King George VI.
Thei r total value, is con-
siderable, but is a roya l family
secret.
The tax-free status of his
annual income of $fl23,000
from the Duch of Cornwall in
southwest England m a k e s
Charles a con s ide r a bl e
millionaire, for millionaires in
Britain are in the 90 perce nt
tax bracket.
Books as Gifts •••
Beach Clerk
'fo Ge t 1'rip
r
are sure to plectH • , ••
are molltcl with ecne Paul J o n e s , llunllngton
Beach City Clerk, is going to
take a trip to Denver Jan. 21-
23.
The Bookstall Jones will be attending the
executive board meeting of
1he lnter:iational Institute of
, Municipal Clerks, of which he
was elected a trustee last ~1ay
in St. Louis.
333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
548-4611
LEARN FROM THE EXPERTS!
::Don l • 11u,u
Orange County Florists' Association's
HOLIDAY SHOW
Sunday, November 16, 1969 1.5 PM
Jamboree Room of the Newporler Inn
1107 Jamboree Road Newport Beach * Wedding Fash ion Show * Floral Exh ibits * Demonstrations by outstand ing
floral desig ners * Doo r Prizes ! ! ! ! !
ADMISSION $1 .50 PER PERSON
lhiJ lo
fea1n lhe ":J..aJe Secrel:i " o/
Orang.e Coiuil'! ~ lop /foraf JeJignerJ
tvhife galhe1•ing fio&Ja'! deco1·ali11'J ide<M.
SEE OUR HOLIDAY DISPLAYS!
HXJTrish?S 09 .. 111y .,d s.rv1co s;,:. ~94•'·
2640 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA -546-5525
•
•
Deck your halls •
with Christmas MUSIC ,
for One Dolla&
This year,. fi ll yo ur home with the joyful
sounds of Ch ristmas ... with this newly recorded
RCA s tereo album.
"Christmas time in Carol and Song" can be
yours for ju st $1 if you join our Christmas Club or
open a checking or savings account at Southern
California First National Bank.
Decked out in a colorful foldout jacket,
this album also makes a beautiful gift .
Come into any of our 50 llOUntaRN--1
offices for your album . And enjoy ·
holiday music this Christmas and
foryears to come . .......,.,.n __
St0£ 01'1::
ARTllUR nEDl.£R t Med~y: "J"~ TB nt J4'arld,. •
111:. Orc:httlla. ti Choru1 "Ji"'!Jle &/h," fiA«111f be A /.fru{J(;r;R "M',1 Mr,.,\ YOll A ,w, rru C.\r>al.,~•
ARTllUR PIEOl.l::R t 'f·•~ of/~ &/ta • Hi1 Cllona
STF.\"F, LA \\'rl£~CF."-·t,;y r~11 n °" 1'1lc .\(~~/(·• .... ARTHUR FIEDLER"'
His Orcl1enra
ARTHUR f!EOLER & "S11fiil .\"~!,('
Hi1 On:h"tni <l Ch(llut
:iT£VE LAWRE~CE/ "1111."f Hr"'" 10:-!:"~-. .... ,,,· EYDIE GOR:.l>;-
/1. RTHliR flEOl.ER ~
llit On:hrstra
LEOSTYNE PRICF'.-'/ lli;V..:~ "' ,' 1;· .• .r, A RTlfUR Pl~DLER lo:
I lit Ortbtttr•
Cotl• M110: 230 E. 17th Street. 642·1660
-..
'
' t
(
' • !
r
0
n
b
(,
7, v
h
a
e
~
t
a
v
p
n
Ii
I
5
lO
H
15
lb
17 " 20
21
23
25
" JO
J4
35
37
38
39 .,
u
141
' : .. ~
48
50
I,
"
17
"
I ~
"
" I
I ' •
"
I
--------·--·--~--
Banta11i Was Egged On
Proud bantam hen, owned by \Villiam D. Stiles of
Klamath Falls, Ore., checks out three. inch egg
which she laid. Center egg is a normal bantam egg
while egg at left ia a grade AA la r g e egg from
supermarket.
)
Britisl1er Sees Dari{ Clouds
Fo1· World's Plane Builders
LONDON (AP) - A British
authority thinks lean times
C.'Ol'lfronted with huge cuts in
military spending.
may lie just around the come!' "More and more the em·
creasing sophistication and
result.ant cost escalation.'
"The Flll combat and
for aircraft builders. He phasis will have to be on keeir ·reconnaissance plane, after
predicls al!!O that Americans ing all available contracts, an erlended development and
wlll i ncrea s ingl y buy odil" t' be · American and fl y American money, for America's own in· m ica ion, may soon gin
rather than spend U.S. dollars dustry.'' to fulfill its early promise; but
on foreign planes and equi~ He also said the tremendous lhe U.S. Navy and Royal Air
mcnt. costs of major aerospace proj-Force versions have gone and
The predictions 'vere made ects could threaten both the the original plan tG equip the
by John W. R. Taylor in the industry and its customers Strategic Air Command with
foreword to the massive 1969· with bankruptcy. 210 FBll lAs has been cut -----------J
70 edition of ';Jane's All The "The aircraft industry.'' drastica!Jy."
\Vorld 's Aircraft," of which he Taylor said , "seems to have
is editor. got itself into the position FRENCH MISSILE
where it must continue to "Missile designers continue Area Proud
Of Its Fire
The 1,000-pagc record of t k llf nd build progressively bigger and a ma e e more a more aviation development publish-d'{f' It f ti I fa ster transport aircraft to 1 1cu o r conven ona ed today by Sampson Low, 1 th stay in business, even it the orces - none more so an Marston and Co. Ltd ., costs F • N d A · ti "th customer doe3 not really want ranee s or • via on w1 $25.20 per copy. It is the 60Ch th · MM38 E t annual volume. them or is not ready for them. · . ei: n~ , " xoce an-
.. - - -
Volunteers "UJtlmately, this could be t!ship missile, Taylor con-
"At the moment ," wrote just as dangerQUS as the' situa4 tmued.
Taylor, "there is a worldwide tion a ft!w yeirs back when ' "Small enough to be launch-LA HABRA (AP) -The
shortage of production capaci -the industry began to produce ed, frofll: a~y cta.ss of surface firemen of La Habra Heights
ty, due mainly 10 America's such advanced missiles that it ship, this 1s de signed to race \~ay have Jost a house
involvement in Vietn am. almost put itself out of the toward. its target at high Tuesday, but few residents
VIET PULLOUT manned military a i r c r a t t subsonic speed, tn a 11 ~~~.Id dare say "I told you
"Already, however, the business." weathers, a mere 6 to 10 feet bo th t La Habra Heights has the pullout of U.S. forces in Viet-Taylor said the trouble of a ve e. wa er, ()Ver a range only purely volunteer fire
nam has begun, and the na-U.S. warplane manufacturers of 2.0 miles. How . can .one department In Los Angeles
lion's aerospace industry Js have resulted from "ever-in-possibly ~ef~nd a ship against ----------------------such a m1ss1le? County, is proud of it, and
Cross,vord Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Ctase
5 Fruit
10 Sediment
14 Command to dog
15 Al terca tion
16 Solemn
declaration 17 Generous
19 Mr. Harbach
20 Acte d as a
sr1vant
21 Lays in
supplies:
2 wo1ds 23 Olympian
god 25 River of
SW Asia
2fi Accumulated .Jo Strides
loftily 34 Death
notices 35 Artist's subject
l7 Kind of sound
38 Arabian garment
39 Baseball
team
42 Macaw
43 Sma 11 round
marks 145 Ma nxman, I e.g. , 41i Chemical
hack neyed
·1 compound 48 More
150 Item of
summer we<r: 2 words
' l •
"
52 Length Ly
width
54 High raling: 2 words 5) TV sta tions 59 Picturesq11e
t.3 f arm worker
64 Washington
or Ottawa
employee:
2 words
66 Diminutive
suffix 67 P,liod of
lime
68 Preposltion
b9 Drcay
through use
70 Fur source
71 Forward
DOWN
1 Inverness nativ e 2 Dfink
heavily
3 Sign
4 Some thing
suspended
5 Pie<:e ,
of road
, machinery 6 Kind of
score 7 Connective
words
8 Religious
reprrsen ta•
lion 9 One lo whom
11 check ts
made over
10 Observes:
2 words
• '
"' "'
. '
S -L £ ! l {
11 Consumes 12 .. _ ...
Brute!": 2 words
13 Business
estab lish·
ment
18 Dissent
from
domin ~nt
opinion 22 Leopard
or jaguar 24 MedlcinJI
plant
26 Urges
27 Brothers'
superio r 28 Laliat
2' Nobles
31 OisincHntd
J2 Neighbor
of Ch ina 33H ~ad -····· 36 Kind cf Island
40 Atcepls: 2 words
• •
11/13/69
41 ESP
mee ting 44 Cause for damage sui t
47 Do a clean·
in9 Job:
2 words
49 Bird
51 List or
mem bers
53 Qu i vive 55 Quantity
of tobatco
56 Dislike
very much 57 Theatrical
group: Abbr.
58 State of
exc itement
60 Part of
thr neck
61 Rus sian
man's name bl Coln of
USA and
Canada 65 Sunken
' l ee shot
12 ll
"After the experience of the recently defeated an attempt to absorb the department by a Tsraeli destroyer Eilat, sunk county fire prevention district. by more primitive S t y x
missiles in 1967, Exocet must Citizens ()f th i s unin·
be giving the admirals of the corporated community just
world much cause f () r above the Orange County line
thought." formed La Habra Heights
Volunteer Fire Department 25 Taylor claimed a scoop with years ago with a fistful or
"the very significant Soviet dollars and a lot of k>cal spirit. military aircraft known to NATO (the North Atlantic They've resisted change to
Treaty Organization) as professional status ever since,
'Moss.'" building up the vol unteer force
to a membership of 45 This is a military version of residents _ ranging in age
theTUil4airliner.ltcarries a from 17 to 82-and an equlp-
saucer-like early warning ment roster ()f two pumpers,
radar above its fuselage one tanker, a patrol truck and
similar to the kind fitted on four jeeps.
the U.S. Navy's E2A Hawkeye, "Our department Is sup-
20 FL YING HOURS ported entirely by donations
Discussing the Soviet TU144, from our residents," said
the first supersonic transport Chief Virgil Fouts. 1 • W e
to get off the ground and the receive no pay whatever. We
fir!rt. to break the sound bar-are the only s i mo n • p u re
rier, Taylor said: "But it Jog-volunteers in the county, and
ged only some 20 flying hours we're a little proud of it."
in its first seven months of So proud that 51 percent ()f
flight testing, whereas the two the citizenry put their na.mes
British-French Concorde pro-last month on a petition to
totypes amassed more than keep the department from
100 subsonic flying hours in being annexed by the county.
five months. "Jt was simply a conviction
"Nobody now expects the among our 2,500 homeowners
TU144 to enter service before that the volunteer fire depart-
1972. It will still preceed the ment could to the job better,"
Concorde by a year, and both said former chief Robert L.
will have a lead of around five Shoup. ·
years over America's fir st "We arc very we 11
SUJl:ersonic transport, th e organized, and can usually
Boeing 2707.'' reach a fire here long before
"Despite the attractions of county units can," he said,
low iniUal price and early The firemen work out of their
delivery, Soviet commercial homes, responding to beeping
aircraft continue to achieve radios or to µie community·
little success outside the com. wide siren system.
munist bloc," Taylor reported. So what happened on that
"The new 'stretched' tWin· house fire TueJday night.
turbo-fan TU134A looks good "We don't believe anyone
on paper, but the could have saved the house
Czechoslovak airline's (CSA) under Uie circumstances,"
recent cancellation of a plan· said Shoup. "It was too deeply
ned order for 12 m u s t involved when the a1Arm soun·
represent a blow for the Soviet ded." Six county units rein-
industry. forced the volunteer force. No
"ft remains to be seen one was injured. .•
........ WHATYOU OllTa
laYilblJ.qullted 1 ~ IH(. 6 ~ wldl mttnaa
with m1tcbln1 d11I HI sprflp
PLUS tilt ,..plttl ORTllD·PAI. Ill_. If Drta1:
• Fieldcrest no-iron Kini or Queen llleet
• Fieldcrest no-iron King or Queen lltted bottom sheet
• 2 Kint or Queen bolster pillows • 2 pillowcases
• King or Queen mattress pad
• KingorQueenmetaltrama
with easy1ollinrcaster~
Our reg1lly~llttd Kine with 42 sq, ft. ot slttplna: luxury. loYely
decorator tickinr on deluxe
matlrtss and m.ttchln1du1I
box springs. ln<:llldes compldt
ORTHll-PAK listed 111oYa!
REG. $199.95. s1ziu-05
Full 80' lonf, 60' wide for dreamJ
oversize sleep Ing comfort Rieb
diamond-Quilted mattress and
matching box spring, plus your
OR!Htl-PAK listed above!
REG. $159.95 8JJOD5
$
DAILY l'ILOT 21
DOUBLE
BONUS!
Kln1crOUHn Sin QUILTED BEDSPAEAO-PlUS Kin&°'
Qtletn Sin HEADBOARI)
(not IS Ulustrltld) wltn
YC\lr Pun:hase of Mt KlnJ or Qulel'I Slit SlffpSet.
luxurious deep-down quilting,
exclusive decorator tlckhl&. Clloice of Twin or Fulkf%t deluxe mattress
and box sprlna. A super Ortho
special -buy nawl
s501,H
PIECES
DHPIY quilted C0¥1rwltfl Ortho'a
buoyant ""1t~lnr -... Cltolct of l'wln or Full -
Ind matchln& box lllfilll It
..,..iat Oltbo llYintll
888!'H PIECES
whether the tri·jet TU154. ----'------1
sc:heQuled to enter service-----------!
wlth the Soviet Aeronot airline r-----------,1
Jn t970 can present a more Who Cares? FOUNTAIN VALLEY s<rious challenge to the West. ·
~·1"'otmt0MA
LAKEWOOD ANAHEIM
,.,
ll/l)/il I ,
I
•
"Certainly it gives the lm· No""" ""'P'"' In'"'""" 16131 Harbor Blvd. presslon of being an at-carts about your eommun lty llkt 4433 Candlewood Dr. -1111 W. Lincoln Ave.
(Ned t9 lely'sl (Ac,.. h• Ltt:llWMd C.....l {~ ........ ,
Phone: 839-4570 Phone: 634-4134 Phone: 776-2590
tractive, thoroughly modern your community d•Uy lltwSpaptr
design and the overhaul life of dots. It's tht DAILY PILOT.
Soviet turbofans is getting ·-',---------'I
steadily more. respectable,-----------
which should help." DPll/ DAILY tO 9 ·SAT 10 6 ·SUN 11 C IMM<OIAll OlllU!RV f AsY CREDIT IERMS RAtlllAMFhlCARO MAS UR t.HAR1,1
-
•
-------------------,~--------~--~------..--------~---------------~---
p DAILY l'ILOT Fr~ay. November 14, 1'169 .
' . G11lde to Fun
Marche Sale
To Aid Art
..
NOV. II
AFTERNOON CONCERTS :-Presented by sludents and .
faculty of the Department of Music. UC Irvine, Fridays at I
p.m. in room 178 of the Fine Arts Bldg. Admission free .. Re-
citals scheduJed include Chambtr Must~, Nov. 14; VOcal
,Concert, Nov. 21.
NOV. II • NOV.-11-
CosrA MESA HisTORY -The Museum of Science ancf I~
dustry, 700 State Drive, Exposition Park, Los Angeles, is
showing the tiliitory of Costa Mesa in an exhibit of photo.
graphs. The show will run through the month or Nov., daily
from 10 a.m. to 5 v.m.
NOV. \5
TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and
Parks Department will hold a Teen Club Dan ce in the com-
munitY Center, 8200 \Vestminster Ave., '(for Westminster
teens) each Sat. from 8 p.m. to midnight. Admission, $1.
for mtmbers, $1.50 for non-members. "Dr. Tripps Medicine
Bag" will play for dancing Nov. 15.
NOV.15
SADDLEBACK COLLEGE -AU home games-at Mission Vie-
jo High School, 25025 Chrisanta Drive, Mission Viejo ; all
games at 8 p.m.; Play Imperial Valley, Nov. 15 at home.
NOV. Ii· II
RODEO -The Rodeo Cowboys Association will stage a
Rodeo Nov. 15-16 starting at 2 p.m. on the showgrounds at
Rancho California. It is the last rodeo to be held in Califor·
n!a this year. 150 cowboys will compete for $5,000 in prizes
for saddle bronc riding, steer wresUing, buU riding, c~lf
roping and bareback bronc riding. Tickets, '2 for adults;
$1 cltlldren under 16. Rancho Calif. is on 1Ughway 395 mldway
between Riverside and San Diego.·
NOV. ti
CIDLDREN'S THEATRE -"WinnJe-lhe-Pooh .. by South
Coast Repertory ChildreD's Theatre, 1827 Newport .Blvd.,
COila Mesa. Admission : children, 75 cents; adults, $1.00.
Reservations: 646-1365 from noon.to 6 p.m. daily. The A. A.
Milne children's classic will be presented Sundays through
Nov. 16 at 1 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.
NOV. II
CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERT -The Chamber lt1usic So-
ciety of Laguna Beach will present the Berlin Philharmonic
Octet, Nov. 19 at 8:30 ,p.m. in the Laguna Beach High School
auditorium, 625 Park.Ave. Works by Rossini, Hindemith and
Schubert will be performed. Tickets, $3.75 for adults ; $1.50
for students, available at·the door.
NOV. II
LE BON MARCHE -The Junior Exhibits Building on lhe
Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, will
be the scene of Le Bon Marche, a sale to benefit the New·
port HarbOr.Museum. Tickets, $1, available at the door., in·
elude parking. }fours: 10 a.m. to t p.m. with food service
available throughou t the day in the Cafe de la Rue (including
dinner service). The booths will stock creative originals,
Holiday decorations and bargains in many categories. Phone
67U603.
NOV. IO
ROLUNG STONEX CONCERT -The Rolling Stones will
be heard in concert on Nov. 20. in the Forum in Inglewood
(Manchester Blvd. at P.ralrie). Two performances, 7 and lI
p.m. have ticket prices of $4,50 • $7~, available at ticket
agencies and box office. .
NOV. %Z
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE FOOTBALL -All liome games
at OCC LeBard Stadium, o{( Harbor Blvd. and Fairview Road,
C06ta Mesa; all games at 8 p.m.; Cypress, Nov. 22.
NOV. Z%
OC PIUl.HARMONIC -The Orange County Philhannonic
SQclety will present the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra
under-the baton-of-Rafael Fruhbeck-De BurgosJ o Craw!ord
Hall oo the UCI campus, Nov. 22 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets, $4,
,available at the door or from the Society's office, 201 West
Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Phone 646-6411.
NOV. fl.:!
DISNEYLAND -A \hree day Thanksgiving weekend revue
at Disneyland will be headlined by Paul Anka, Jennifer and
"Friends of Distinction," Nov. 27, 28 and 29 when the park
will be open until midnight. Bill Deal and The Rhondels will
perform at 9 and 11 p.m. on lhe Tomorrowland Terrace; the
''Sound CasUe" at Plaza Gardens, and Teddy Buckner and
his group Jn the French Market. All ~gin at 8 p.m. "Kids
of the Kingdom " will present shows on lhe Tomorrowland
Stage at 3:30, 5 and 6:30 p.m. and at the Golden Horseshoe
at 9, JO and 11 p.m. Disney characters will parade do1vn
·Main St. at 12:45 and 4:45 p.m. each day.
NOV.%9-30
PUM AND BOOTS -Properly titled. "The Marvelous
Story of Puss and Boots," a musical fairy tale will be pre-
sented by the Children 's Theater Guild, in Orange Coast Col-
lege Auditorium on Sat., Nov. 29 at 10 a.m., I and 3 p.m .;
Sunday, Nov. 30 at 1 and 3:30 p.m. Tickets are $1 !or each
performanc.e.
Hume Cronyn Pursuing
Many Careers at 011ce •
Hume Cronyn Is, In the rnosl
literal sense of the word, a
"working'' actor: twenty-eight ·
Broadway plays, either as
player or star, a score of films
and seasons otTepertory. And
he still finds time to pursue
three other careers.
Cronyn is -at present mar.
ring in Hadrian Vll, which ii
being presented by the Center
Theatre GrQUJt 'flt t h e
Ahmanson Theatre through
November 22. His role of
Hadrian Vll, the self-created
pope, Is as arduous as that of
Hamlet, and about as lengthy.
Cronyn dominates a b o u t
eighty per cent of the action of
Hadrian VII.
HUME CRONYN
A Worktn9 Actor
duced five and in his earlier
Holl}"l'ood years escaped from
-
Travel
Clubbing It
In London
By STAN DELAPLANE
,LONDON -The sharp American businessmen
who run over here a lot join one ol London's clubs.
It's a way to be sure ol a room in this overcrowded
town. Some London club have agreements with
American clubs to honor each others cards. You
could checlc")"OUr elub;-See whattliey can do for-you.
A year a~o. a friend of mine got me a quick
membership m a fashionable gambling club In
Curzon street. (A dreary place Jo wake up in the
morning, but without it I'd ba've been sleeping in
Hyde Park.)
A membership in any club seems to put you in·
to the posh Balboa Club in Mazatlan. It's really an
elegant hotel -at the end of North Beach. They
were vague when I asked them what club cards
t hey took. I got the idea any club would do if you
' HERB ALPERT
Nov. 22 ForUm Data
'TJ Brass'
Golden N ante
For Alpert
LAGVNA ·B~A~H Ct:tAMB&R MUSIC SEASON OPEN
Berlin Ocltl'.lo bt' H: .. n1 ·Nov.'19 in High School
looked reasonably clean.
* ''Can we gal a house In Mexico for Christmas?
Whet would It cost?''
What's in a name?
Herb Alpert. who brings his
fained Tijuana Brass to the
Inglewood Forum Saturday
night,· November 22, 5ays
"Everything !'' Berlin "Octet Slated
That's a deligll't!ully unpredictable country. I
got a house for $300 a month. But at Christn1a s
they get $700 a week -maybe more. Then th ere!s
a cunous woman who advertises and rents by mail
a house s.he USED to o\vn. J'he present owners are
Herb. an ex c e pl io Ii a I
trumpel playe r whose idols
were Louis Armstrong, Bix
Beider becke, 11arry J an1es
and Henry a.1Jsse an1ong
others. recorded a single back
in early 1962. which he called
..The Lonely Bulls." He used a
pick·up band.
The ·Berliil. Pllilhannonic
Octet will oeen the 10th season
of 'tbe Laguna BeacttChamber
Music ~iety on Wednesday,
November 19, .in the Laguna
Beach High School auditoriun1
6l5 Park Ave. ·
Progr..ammed for the event • . . . I
In the Galleries
'Bit of ·Eve1·ything' ,
At Ca,11ierc~ Gallery
BO\VERS MUSEU~1 -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana.
Hours: JO a.m .• 4:30 p.111. ·rues. · Sal.; 1 lo 5 p.m. Sun.;
Wed. and Thurs. cv~. 7.9 p.n1. No charge. On ~bit through
Nov. 30, special tlf>otogra phic .show commemOrating the Jobn
\\iesJcy PoWell Ccnteitnial. It is part of a·nation-wide cele-
bration of the hi~oric Colorado River Expedition of 1869,
led by Powell.
JIUNTJNGTON BEACH LIBRARY -525 Main St., Hunt·
Jngton Beach. 01\ exhlbit during regular library hours and
Sundays I . 5 p.m. throUgh Nov., oil paintings by Joyce Clark,
Vincent Farrell, No11.ie fliggins, Frank Tauriello ancl Ora
Brimer.
COSTA tttESA COUNTRY CLUB -1701 Country Club
Drive, Costa Mesa. Oil paintings by Shirley Howard will be
on exhibit on the club's second floor during the month of Nov.
CALIF. SAVINGS GA~ERY -2700 Harbor Blvd., Costa
?\fcsa. during. regular....busioeas..hPY.r~. ~.<!!Yersified ~xhibit of
the arts and crafls by Donna, Friebertshauser, UOei:r"Craft~
Potpourri," through Nov.
MU1'UAL SAVINGS AND WAN -2M7 E. Coast High-
"'ay, Corona del Mar. On exhibit during reguJar business
hours through Nov., portraits. landscapes by Sylvia Moonier.
LAGUNA ART GALLll:R·Y .-307 Cllff Drive, Laguna,
Beach. Admission $1. Members and one g1,_1esL free. Hours:
rioon to 5 p.m. On exhibit throuih NCiv., Calff. H&Honal W8.ter
Color Society Show and the America Watercolor Society
ShO\V .
MESA ART -LEAGUE -513 Center St.,, Costa Mesa.
Hours : Sat. and Sun. I to S p'.m. Contlnuoos exhibit of art
'vork in various media by Art League members. No admis-
sion charge. .
CIVIC CENTER GAIJ.EftY -3300 West NeWport Blvd.,
Newport Beach. Hours: 8:30 a.m. lo S p.m. ~1on.·FrL On
exhibit through Nov., oil and watercolor paintings by Hat
Akins.
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive,
Newport Beach. Currently"on exhibit through Nov .• during
regular business hours, needle point will hang ings by Paul
Dilzenbarger.
SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach. On exhibit during regular busines"s hours,
through Dec. 12, paintings by Ora Brimer.
COSTA 1\1ESA LIBRARY -566 Center St,. Costa Mesa.
On exhibit during regular library hours through Nov., oil
paintings by Mr. and Mrs. Borrell Ries. ~JESA VERDE LIBRARY -2968 Mesa Verde Dr ive
East, Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours
through the month or Nov., oil paintings by Ferne Williams.
CORONA DEL l\1AR LIBRARY -420 Marigold. COrona
del Mar. On exhibit through Nov. during regular library
hours, oil paintings by Zoe Smith.
UCt ART GALLERY -Third floor, Fine Arts Bldg.,
UC Irvine. Hours: l ·lo 5 p.m., Tues . ..Sun. On exhibit
through Nov. 30, "An L.A. Esthetic," varied media by lour
contemporary artists. ·
CAMERA WORK GAµ;ERV -2400 ·\V. Coast 11ighway,
Ne,vport Beach. Hours': Thurs. and Fri. 5 to 9 p.m.: Sat. 1i
to 9 p.m.; Sun. JI a.m. to 9 p.m .. Gallery limited to pholo.
graphy, with "little ~t of everything" on view 'through Nov.
30.
are the Schu~t and Hin· constantly explaining this to people who arrive with
desmitll Octets and the C-ma· baggage on the doorstep.
jor sonata for two violins, * ·c e'l lo and double Dass ; A Mexican in high position AL\VAYS calls me
RoSsini. at my hotel in Mexico City. Insists I move into his
The Octet. all .of "'hose house. Use it as my O'vvn. Forever if I like. "l\1y car
personnel ·are leading chair \Viii be there to pick you up in the morning." The
members of the Ber I i n car has never arrived.
Philharmonic Orchestra , dates *
back to the 'era ot the late But -keep the faith. You can get hou ses. Ask
Wilhehn F'urtwangler, then !or a Mexico· Villa Holiday !older fro1n \Vorld \Vide
musical · dlrector of t be Living, 6290 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles. Try
orohestra. The ensemble was Properties International, 2201 Filbert street, San
forined with his blessings Francisco.
because, he', felt the ensemble *
wa$ . well ·qualified l 0 Mexico simply runs slower and a lot looser than perpeluate in GCl'f\"lany and abroad the tradition of his tha]l you are used to -and Lhat's tj1e charm of it.
far'nous orchestra. But I 'd deal wi th one of these U.S. agencies that
The Octet has perforined all have screened the house !or price and are sure it's
over Europe; has frequently really available.
appear.ed at the music These agencies rent houses all over the world.
festivals in Lucerne, Vienna, I 've rented houses in England, Spain, Mexico,
Edinburgh and Salzburg ; has H~\vaii, Fiji -and done all ri,$,ht. Short term tourist
concertized in Japan, Central rental is high. But for a farriily it's more comfort·
and South Arrierica. The group able than hotels. And a Jot cheaper.
11as a. large . reper,tory a'nd *
many important composers, ". , • about renting a villa on the south coast of
such as Hindemith, Henze, Spain?"
Blacher, Baumann, Borris and ' · Hartig, have . dedicated com-Same agencies. Plus English agencies. They ad·
positklns to them. vertise in the London Times. The Briti.Sh travel to
Season subscription tickets Spain for wanner climate. I noticed several ads in
are still available which in· the sou1h. of Spain guaranteed 'Toof does not leak."
elude the Current Concert plus I suspect there's plenty o! jerry.built housing down
Trio di Trieste. January 26; there. Big get·rich-quick tourist boom.
Jtalph Kirkpatrick. February *
23. in his only we5t coast ap-. l·Jere's an odd one: Friend or mine in Latin
pearancc, and the Amadeus Am.erica writes me: "Big thing for P eace Corps
Quartet on April 2Q. Season me1nbers ending tJieir iour or duty is to buy a tax-
Uckets are $10'for all four con-_ free English motor bike in Panama. Then ride home
Born in Los Angeles and an
cnlltus ias:ic frequenter of the
bullring in Tijuana, he took a
tape recorder south of the
border to record a couple o[
hours' \Vorth of crowd noises,
olc's and miscellane<ius
background effecfs \Vhich "be
added lo the record .
But he hadn't hit on a na1ne
for his band when Jerry Moss.
his partner, came up with "Ti·
juana Brass." Herb said. "It
has ·a nice retention value,''-
which subsequently pr.ol'ed to
be the understateme nt of the
year.
This first A&i11 disc. "-Lone-.
ly Bull '' on one side and·
"Acapulco 1922'' on the· other,
' took off like a house arire.
Then came another LP • ·
followed by "Mexican Shuf· :
fie ,' .. "\\'hipped Crean1 and
Other Delights." and their ·
rift.h album , "Going Places."
Herb Alpert had started a
vogue. \Vith scores of imitators
all over the \Vorld. Of course
ifs Herb's great mu.sic_ and ·-
great musicians which made
him so popular ,1 but the
unusual name. ' ' ti j u an a
Brass," helped tremendously .
too. ce-rts. up the Pan American HighWay." The box office at the high ----------'--''--------------------
school will open at 7:30 p.ni.
on .the night of .the concert and
individual tiCkets, if available,
will be sold. Prices are $3.751,------------------------"'-
for .adults, $1.50 for students.
For further information phone
675;-2153 or 494·S262 .
Fonda Picks
Painting
Given his choice betv.•een ac·
ting and painting, Henry Fon·
da one of the great movie and
stage stars, might well choose
painting.
Cover
..Jlai,.
invites you to their
OPEN HOUSE
Wednseday, Nov. 19, 7 to 9 P.M.
3800 Coa1t Highway, Corona del Mar
(across from Five Crowns)
A Treasury of Gifts in our Dra~·in~
GRAND PRIZE -Light Weight, Hand·T1ed \Vig
Styled For You!
Couti11uo11s
Dc111oustrurio11 of
rlair Drcssi na
.4.s Yoii Like Jt 673-5950
A
FREE GIFT
TO YOU
"I wish 1 had tin1e to do
nothing else bu( paint,'' 1-~011d:
sn id on the !lei. or hi s lates~
fihn, "There \Y,.as a Crooked!
J11an .... " .Jose oh L.I
f\1ank.ie\\'icz ProtluLtion for
\\'i1rner Bros.Seven Arts inl
\\'hich he stars \11ith Kirk ~~~~rl:i~g.,','lt's tfemendouslyl~...-.~~.~.§§,""§'~•~-§.~~~ .. ~.,.,.~-~:;;..,,,;:;~~;;;~ .. ~~~;:,~,~'~"""~"'~~'~'~·"§_~.~~§~:;;:~:=J:;._=-• Fonda 1uight do very \Veil as _
a p:.ilnter if, be chose Utal t'
route ili though he re fuses to "
s~ll any of .his v.•orks. •le gives .~
most or them av.•ay to friends. f ,.
A GRAND OPENING IS ONE THING!
AN AVALANCHE IS SOMETHING ELSE!
WE WERE MOBBED ! WE-RAN OUT OF FLOWERS! WE RAN OUT OF CAKEI
' • '
' .
'lhis-Februa"I: carnival ·
•
We even got e cell for 2 doren ro ses from Lake Charles, L•. Our specials wer e
suc h a hit we are repee tin9 them this week.
~roduc•, Dep't. Ftowtr Shop
L••••••••••••••!••••••••••••••
in the . . Cari~sn on , Aa..S---r ...... sa.-wnana WI lquvtu
on deck,
&Jgllsh .~asino Mklht..pints of ale,~ and' crisps ·
·-iincl lllOSe Britisli.
• GREEN PEPPERS • ALL COLORS :
: or FRESH CUCUMBERS : CARNATIONS
• 5 For 10' •
• • • • : 2D••· 99c . . . ' . l imit 5 Of t11Cll Wltti Thi• c •• ,.. Lllltlt--l Demi Witti Thi• Ce11po11 •
• •
············~·················· CoupoM hplra November' 1 t
Newport Is famous for toocl food! You'I otree with us when you try . , •
I . The fresh 1pinach sefed •I Gordon, lot•M Ni9•tl
2. The ituffe d mushrooms with cr•bme1t et the Arclrles. Newport
3, The Prime Rib et Dlllmon's, ....,_
4, The Lobiter Medallion at larkshlra'1 "ow the '4ry"
5. Th e fr esh fruit 9arniture et Rembrandt's, Costa MHCI
These resteurants 5erve the finest foocfs money cen buy, they serve NEWPORT
PRODUCE! -
I;
' '· .
'
Hume Cronyn belongs in the
higher echelon of actors. His ~
stardom. ha been m ad e
teCUre by the 1.,.ards he has
won. His Poloniua in the
Richard Burton "Hamlet"
brought him a Tony Award,
and an 09cU' nomination cited
his performance in "The
Sevnth pro.a ...
the opp~sslon of leisUre by ... ..: now! Ori1n1 let'" loll Angtlft f.'t'b. I. From British setviec )'Oli tanl linll an,).'"'herc tlfie.
addJna authorship to h j s 3i'O. 3 wttb, S SUJU\Y poN: CU:ntcao. La Guaira See your travel agent. Or contact P&:O The "ORANGE COUNTY 'S FASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANIZATION"
i..te In · 1997 he came to
llollywood to appear In three
films -"Gaily. Gally," "The
Arrangemtnt ~There Wu
a ~rooked Man," w h I c h
-pd him unlil a few weti<I
•rore lie undertook I h e ~nuoua role or Hadrian Vil. ln hll o1r .. 1a3e boors ht haa IUiicted twelve plays, pro.
a '"'rt ol Carats$). 8ru:badol. Martinique, St. British Line. '
portfolio of careers. He was .liomu,Cristobal,lsalbc)a,Acapulco. ~~ lftfOrntitn: Oriana, registered in Crt'llt
rewarded by the sale of screen You'U celebrate Carnival In Carata!. See the BnUnn. subtit.antiollY m<:ell lntcrnaUonal S111C•v 'aribbean.AndrelaxonOrianawlthgamedecks, Standards for new shl d I .,.,, 1 ~ ' treatment.I Cor "Rope'' and ·ind-""' pu~·,·• ~1_ ......... , 1.1-"' .1 .. ,,_.... I'S e\'c Or-~" n l""',11n11 "Under Capricorn." .... -. "" '"""' .. ,.. "' ""u""" po:ou mee1sthe.l006FlreS1tfctyReq111ren1on11.
Hii. lint Brood-.ay at:tlng .·-. i b)&:_. I )· Job _ended after t h r e e
perfonnanees. Thus warned Lh3l periods of idleness are "32 Ycors of Produce "\Vhere Quali!V 11 Tlic
natural hazards for actor&, be i.WW:.... ......_ ...... • • I Ir•,'--.....•· t111J •20.1110 Know liow" Order of ilte rluuse"
prepa,..d to deal wllll lllem. -----------...:...----------------1.:0.'""! _____ _.,... __ .., __ ...... ...,--,..
. '
I
"' t:: ,.
t .. " '" '" 1:: "' '" tn '"' '" LK t" " "' tfto "t tit '" '" 'I' '" "" Uo "" "" tlf. 'I" L tt LK L~ Lw 1::: tn UL "' " '~ ~
"' '~ '~ '" '" t,, .. '" M• M• M•· M .. .. M•• M•· M• M• M• M• M• MA M• M• M• Mo M•· M• M• M• M• M• •• Mr
M•: M•· M•: M• M•' Mo· ~~~
Md Mo Md "" Md MO MO "" M<I
~I Md M<I
M .. ... Mo Mo M .. -· •• ... ~ -~~ M" M" ~~ M" M" M" "" MUI M'" Ml• Mio M" Ml• Mo M• ... "'' Mor "'' :::: ... .. ~ "'' ~ "'' "'' -Mo'
M" •• M• Mo Mo Mo Mo
••• ...
N&! ~r
"" ~a~
"" ••• ... ••• ND .. .. •• •• .. .. ~= •• .. .. .. •• •• '" ... •• •• '" , ..
" • •• '" '" ,.,
'"' t·lfl "" ... "" "" "" •• "' ~~
I:: •• e~ " "' .. ~: •• ~: •• ~l ~: •• •• ~= •• a~ a: "'
•
. -
•
Wednesday's Clos~ -Prices-·-<fmplete .. New York -.. -.J .... uw c.. ca..
·Markei ·softens '
In ACtive Tra~g
NEW YORK (UPI) -Stodts Jori ll'OQDd 'Wl6-'
ne&day, but nlectiye iuuos reapolided favora~
to major induatry """''· Tr•dlnl~ wu "'94•ratalY active, btlped by aome Iar1e 1110\:k lran\acUon1
which Indicated more active partlclpaUon by Inst!·
tulidllal investors.
' ' Shortly before the cloee, the UPI maltetwldo
Indicator wu off O.lf percent on 1,588 baud' crou-
ing the tape. There were 730 declinoa and 878 Id·
vances.
The Dow Jonea average of 30 blue chip tndu,s..
trials was oH at S.3' at 8S8.39.,
A voJume ol 12,000,000 ahares ran well aheld of 'l'uesday's pace.
One anelyst commented that uncorto!nty about
the economy probably touched off some nervous
selling, although he added that at thla point "the
market doesn't know which way to go."
Among the most active issues were City In·
vesting, on the strength of an early block of 411 ,700
shares at 29-314 in a cross-transaction, and Textron,
which said that 1989 earnings will be slightly ahead
of a year ago.
Storer Broadcasting, which controls 88 percent ol
Northeest Airlines, attracted cooslderable demand after Nortbeait-and Northwest announced a tenta-tive agreement to merge. ·
I
•
o~ri. Y l'!LOT
Stock Exehange List I
-------------------·--·. -
H DAILY PllOT -· Novlmbte.1'. 1~9 . • • Otes _Naf.'lev Suits." .
Rickover Assails
McNamara "Kids'
WASHINGTON curn -
Adm. Hyman G. Rickover,
pl_oneer in developing atomic
powered submarines, a a y s tenner Defens e Secretary
Robert S. McNamara "and his
whiz kids.. c.ost Amer1ca's
lead in nuclear subs over the
Soviets.
A heavily ce 'nsor-ed
transcript of R ick over's
testimony at a House Ap-
pro priations subcommittee
hearing in July was made
public Wednesday. He said
things have not improved
much at the Pentagon under a
Republican adrhinistrallon so
far as civilians telling the
military how the nation can
best be defended.
Rickover said the Soviet
submarine force n u m b e r s
about 375, compared with
America's 145, but the Soviets
have 65 nuclear submarines in
their total and the United
States 84..
America has 22 additional
nuclear subs u n d e r con-
struction, but, Rickover said:
"By next year the Hussians
will probably have more
nuclear submarines ~"Ian we."
The reason, Rickover said,
Is that military technicians
Mesa Woman Retires
From Library Career
Mrs. Louise Bllnkhern of ~ '."'-
Costa Mesa has retired from
her job as head cataloguer for
the Cal Poly Pomona library,
ending a 37-year librarian
career.
A luncheon recently was
held in her honor at Diamond
Bar Country Club.
Now Mrs. Blinkhem will
assist her husband, Larry, in
his insurance business. They
Jive at 1992 Rosemary Place,
Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Blinkhem was city
librarian at the San Marino
Public Library for 19 years
and cataloguer and audio-
visual assistant with the
Arcadia Scllool District for LIBRARIAN three year before going to
Cal Poly Pomona Jn 1955. Mrs. Blinkhem
~-metliamp&elamfn1-is a 'Vlry daoJwoUI dmt. It u named for the speed with which its user rides to super·
normal kvek ot acitability and wakcluloeu.
u..-i-
Speed ii~ b'f the medical profcalioa for emergencies.
tuch u cootrolhng blood pressure durin& 1urgery and for
diet control.. But widapread abu1e is datroylllr& mare
JOUll& miadl in California than any .O. drug. --A "speed l>inp" ll..,.«tho .-~ollyll!d ~ ~ ~ aperienca a pcnon can have. Over-
.ct1vab0n of Da'YOUI l)'ltmD coupled wilh atrain Oil
internal «gam cm haw drastic eft'CICtl on the speed Ula'. Death. followina acute depreuion and exhaustion, can
come from impuritiol in the drua. or throuab. ~
MIOOialed With tht '*""' psJthotic c:cndition, and tho ~o!olhcr-.. .
Wldely •• • t'r
Speed;, obi.med Imm bid ...rut deolen. Tbe qua!i!f
of the drua: they dilpUtlt ii qullliooable. Oftai it ii "'cut
with supr, or any whiu: powder, to lb'etcb the 1Upply to
the detriment of the Ula'. Coataminatim is common and
produca injurious si<M etfecta. tuch. u ablceaica, blood
pnintina ud lmlDl hepatitis lrom cootaminalcd DCCdh:a.
Fcwsdttltlt Jn1tlmr
In .,..ting !he ">peed frW:" the medico! profession It
flCIOd 'ith both phylical and psychiatrto problems. Simuf ..
taneouily the community k flCCd with the need for aome
Kll'Chiq. undentanding and, aboYe all, positive .ction..
Parents and c:oncemed young people need to dirtct their
cnergiea toward c:aontencting the abuse of tueh danter· om drop u speed, if the trend of~ is to be tcttrled.
Wllolto ..
-.. .. ,.,,_ dnoa """' who .... -'inc ,.;th ~eu cliokal tMml. there are three h.-: 91ep& ill
copioe with the danprodl dnlc aituation.1 ft'lll Ott lhe faaa.
.._. Mab a lled bncd cm diaic:al mdcnc::e, not on ......... ,... In_ younolf. Get --wiui ..-1n.,...
·-.....,. wbo .. tl)'iDa '° eope tritb tbia: JWobliem.
For --1a1a-. en a.. dject, writr. DragAIN•relnh-uu•ttm
Ml --,_ T-c.llf"""" H/o:t
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
----------·-------------
Newport National Bank
offers you the
warm glow of creative interest
you can bank on.
When you're saving money, green is a
beautiful color but Newport National
Bank would like to add some additional
color to brighten. your savings picture.
Newport National Bank pays the highest
bank interest anywhere on your savings
·account, and at the same time, offers its
customers an opportunity to acquire a collection of exquisite miniatu~e reproductions of original
oil pa int ings. These striking decorator miniatures will add infinite 'charm to your liVing room, office,
den , bedroom, or wherever. Also for memorable gift-giving at Christmas or other special occasions.
Framed in antiqued gold, set off by rich velvet, they measure 7~" x s~· overall. (A regular $15.00
retail value.) Each miniature is ready for hanging in decorator grouping or singularly in small areas.
Now is the time you can truly admire every entry in yoor savings passbook.
how the program works:
for new savings accounts only
Open a $100Savings account-and buy one miniaturefor$3.95 (plus tax)
Open a $200 savftigs account-and buy one miniature for $2.95 (plus tax)
Open a $300 savirlgs account-and buy one miriiature for $1.95 (plus tax)
Open a $400 savings account-and buy one miniature for$ .95 (plus tax)
Open a $500 savings account--and buy one miniature for FREE!•
•umrt of two free mlniaturu reprdless of amount of deposit oww $1000. >
for present depositors
• Each $50.00 deposit to your savinp account entitles you to pur·
chase one miniature tor only $3.95 (plus tax).
• A depositor (with no deposit required) can purchase a deco11t..-
mlniature for only $4.95 (plus tax).
• A non·depositor. can purdlase a miniature for $5.95 (plus tax). •
(regularly a $15.00 valile)
-
E1dl ttcOll""'insul'fd IO SlS,000, Member F.D.l.C.
A "'lutlful disploy of -fine decorotor miniaturn are at all offices.
...... MitJ!Uloll It MMMhvf 833-!ttt • a.,sw. Offb llrsldt at Jtll'lborM 642·1141 • Mep"" Otfia Mutwood It Corniiirrwetlth 871·2900 • Sllll"f Kiiis Ofllet H1rbor rt BBi f11·1291
..,.._ Cllfke Suptrtol' It Plitetfttil 642-9511 • U......, lffic:I Etst CIMpman tt Stitt Collttt 879-48'0 • W"atdlft' Oftlct Westcliff •t Do¥er &42-3111
M IHdl orti. l.elllrt WorM,: S.I BIKll 51&·2111 • UpM .... Olfi. ltilllre WGrld, U111111 HUii 130·321»
·-' -----~
•
..
•••
..
/'
• '
. ..
.. ,P
1\1"1
,I..,
bOn ...;·Tl
GO I
-tie : . .
. LI
chaJ
tiQJ,.
'Tl ~ :.:'M
Ila I rron
hole
qua1
So
Tasi
favc
of;c
mon "Iv
<14e
In
goal
Carl
the
18 n
polic
thr«
gone
b011r
Whal wow
He
treaf
rece:
werE
Do
Carl•
ing
JOser
oot c
lato goo!.
Bo
s~y
gunn
Tu
v.'eP.h
JcJck•
popu
'Ob
fmO!
Th
Worl
fine!
,,;1g1
lhinE ...
Ar
On
fu@ .""' porU
IHn:
• Ila
devo
CIF
vlletl
All
ocbol
~~· ,...I
ch!!<
-At .....
trlbu
Bil
bask
freig
inco1 . ""
Ml
~~
I~
and '
'""" !I'h
oUh
horn• s..
be re
Twin
Bu
Leag
''&
•
·~----0--,.,-------~...-··-------·-...-..""""~-.. -~-----·-~ ·----·-· ___ ..,..,. • •·
'
DAil Y l'ILOf '10
Spoiler~ke~s' l!liipps · ~n.aces :.QSU String
0
COLUMBUS, Ohlo ·(AP) -The mu.octe m.. ol Ohio Stale'• No. l ranked football
,;.., m bd;;g put' to bod Ulil week wHh
l>omlr ltorkl. .:lbe ogre IJ a monster wearlna No. 15
,., bis ·jeney. Hll naf." ta MIU Phlppo.
·tta quarterback• tbe ~ Purdue
Bollermaken. who like to r<fer to
\i.m.elves u 1•SpJUerniater1." . · ~ -•"Tbll man 1eares· me," confes&ed Lou ii<Cullouih. defense CO\l<dlll•tor ct the lllllo Stale coachlni llalf. ~ ll yean of
ciliCblng I've never aeen a better ~r.
:·v .n.·•.not,the No. 1p1~1to111>e.im.
"thoR guys have a hole ln this heitl.". 1 Phlppo ta 1pearhead cl Uie • Purdue
team that ;wUJ seek to sna~·~ Buckeyef'
21·8•1111' ~~ stttak and ~j UMm
oil the N~. I ped .... l In collep fooli.,Jl!a
game·o(·the year here~-•
The conlesli will be Ullonall,y tetm.e.t
by ABC,With i10,25 a.m. P8'1' klcko!f. ·
Phipps and Ohio Sinle'1 l[UlirterbOck,
ttexi Kern,· are '.lftding caridldatel, for Pie
Holsman Trophy as tho lo!>' tncilvlduil
· coUeSe pe°rfonner of the l81e'uoo.~ ' < ,.
,
A Riot Baseh~ll's ... ·Richest · :P.ay(:)tf
For Sure NEW YORK (AP) -The richest
payoff in baSebait history finds Och New
York Mel collecting fll,331.11 and !'acb
Baltimore Oriole pocketing $14J04.2l
from the World Series and the pennant
· Literally, next year's World Cup soccer playoffs. .. '
championshJJ15 in Mexico City may be a W!U1 the addition of the new playoff
}'jQl. series for league pennants. baseball had
:.That's like saying it would~ a blut to instituted guaranteed payoffs for the top ~w· ~ J>omb !Qto a d~~te factory . ~ fpur teams. The Workl.5er:l'9 winner was ·
· ·Mexico City may see more combat ~a,p a~ured of $15 000 the Soler· flO 000 'and Da Nang when t e am s and aficlonaaos ' • . 1
from lhr9Uglloul .the .world inv,de its the l~~s of. the two ~-pJayoff11
hotels · and stadiums next June for the $5,000 each. • · .
quadrer.niel soccer c!assic. ·rr the Mets . had not~ 10 1erteroos
Soccer faM are about 8·1 tranquil as with over 35 sh¥es. ~~ wouitI have
Tasmanian• Devils when It comes lo th.etr received more than $20,000. ·
favorite aporl Riots, killings and stoning
0( off~ ~ to be a~ut as com·
monplace as peanuts·at the CU'Cus.
··within the _past .four days twe> such fn.·.
cldent.s have made world news wires.
In iWy, rderee,~ulgl Angione vo1ded a
gGal in Cassano •II 4-1 conquest o(
Carbonara.1When Angione departed from
the stadium ·by car, he wu purs~ for
11 milel· by a trio of irate fiw. ·Finally,
iff•••lltt••••••lfi•
WHITE
WASH
. ,, "" """ """'"'"''
pr>lice intervened ~ frightened off the
thr<e.
Since the goal he nullliied woUld have·
gone to the winning team and had no
be"lll'ing.on who .won or lolt, yoo wonder
Wbilt migbLblVe happened if his decision
wGfildJlai€c"Ost one team a Victory. --
He'd have · probably gotten the same treatmen~ Mussolini and 'his mistress
received in Milan. ·Yoti may Teeail ttief
were-baliged Dy the feet.
Th~ old highs were $12,794.00 fof the
victorio.Ja· Loi Anceltf llodpn in· the
1963 World ierlea"'anCS $1,118.38 for . Ufa
losing Dodgtn in the HM Strit1 with
Balilmore. •
The AUant.a Braves, winners in the
National League's We.st Division but
beaten three slnlght by the Meta In the
plC)'oflt<, each gel l&,9«.10 and the Min-
-T1!1na .. who took the Americon
1taguf1 ·· .Weat. lllvlaloa but w • r e
tllminalejl by the Odoita ln three
alraigbt. e*'!> lake -I&, 480.12.
nie Meta' payday, white high for
, baaeban. llill .,... a bil short of pro ~·
ball:s COQJbinalion In 11117 when each
Green Bay Packer woo 111,000 In the Orsi
Super -I after picklnc up 19~11.113.
The player pool from the .. r1 .. was
a "®I'd ll,!42,JOll.113, topplnc the old
high of ll,M4.0G.li f« the HM Kl
bel .... n tho Orlolta and Doelger•.
The Meii voled 31 lull share& and
auorted part1al lb.are• and cub awards.
Donn ClendtDOll, the Serie& .... .. ..
joined' the club from Montreal June 15,
got 1-full llhare.
So dld Bobby Pfeil, the extra Infielder
who waa not ellgib!e f0< the Serits. Amoa
Otll, a part Ume ouUlelder who apenl
.-of the year on the farm, gqt a hlU
allare.
League!ls _.._;pe~t
-~
tho _. waa lllOWlllnc·
"C.rtalnly -lo ·-"'· -tho _. J_!!I wtn .l!lo --amiool lhl)' ...
lo !mock ,.. ell, .. aald Ille Buckeyll'
[Kida Captain Bup. "Wt llke ll. Wt an
·conaiclous wt· art No. 1. With no Role
liowl lo 10 lo, ll'I tho GOly" lnceati.Yl "'
u .. ~ ....
Jlm Otil,,the team's 111..-ptund
fuUbtek, ~:"We have adlleueobere
at Ollie StaW ._ a :frirmlnl dllule. Wt
don't ~ant kt'kJll ti."
. ' .
to Met~ ' ,., . -,
Billtlmore voted !1 aharet and varloua
other parllaf al1lm and money.
* *
Rose Bowl
Dead, Called ..
Minor Veattire
PASADENA (AP).-"Thll lJ a brltf
report .., the paasing of the Root -I
••• The Root Bowl II dead, you know .•
It Ii now-merely a minor feature far
viaitora who come to town to 1ee the ft9R
parade In the morning ••• II ls. believe
me, being dllregarded lhroupout the
country."
So wrote a Loe Angeles spe>rls writer.
The date wu November 1948.
The premature bur\al of the nation's
oJdeat postaeaaon football game w u not
uncommon two decades ap. Such uuya
were predicted on the 1141 pact llm1Un1
conle.stanta to membtn of the old P•dflc
Coast and Big Ten ·conferences. Crttla
blasted the closed-door contract. .
Even a rhan whG hat bten Uy'OOgh It
all, Uithrop K. l.eishman, a former
ptesldent ol the Tounwnent of Roee,
1ay1 the agree!Tltnt was born DJ
discontent and ••over the years has oot
been constant ll!!'ently.'' He hu been a
member of the org1nl1.1tlon'1 football
committee since 1931 and lta ~an
since IMS. -.-
Down Mexico City way a chap na~
Carlos Villegas popped in four go.:ls dur·
ing a game. A ·disgruntle9 fan of . the .
losers evened the score, however, leaping
out of the st.ands Ind. rtring four buUetl
Into Villegas' legs· -one shot fer eacb · goal. . •
The current ·unrest by 110me authors Is
not new by any means, either -!he gripe
that under the BJg Ten's no re~ policy, Ohio State, canmt return P111dena
·. New -Year'1 .Day ll the Buck es win the
... T .cotperence ~hampionalllp. / . . Both limbs were shattered and doctors
say Villegas may never play again. The
gUnman got away.
TUming ba.!k the calendar a few
wet.ks, a South American offtcial was
Melted lo death as a reward for his un-
popular decisions.
Obviously, &OCCer gen:erates a bit oJ.
•mOll<m· .
The only vt'1Y to take in one of those
World Cup mitches will be from the coo.
rlpes cl. an armori!d car-and_ even that
mlgm · not off"' enough jirotecllon if
things get llalry enough.
* * Around the beat:
Out of %3 Irvine, Crestview and Smalet
Lugue foothill coaches falltd 1e find
enough time to cooperate on the Im· pOrtant Item of selecting ati.teape
teama.
Ray Dodge of l'ttisslon Viejo Is perhaps
devoting bis time to preparing for tht
C1F playoffs In die event lb ttam 11 m..
Vlled 1o participate. I
All·kape selectkla cu mean a c:iei,t:
tcbolanblp to some lad wlie, • ,
otherwise loee oat. Or It cu slmitlJ be
nCognUioa for a job escepUoaallJ weU
dept. -
-At a1y rate, tt "'9111 seem worth
wllatever time %Z CMC'het found to con-
tribute.
BUI Bloom, former Corona del Mar
ba,,ketball coach and no)f a top air
freight executive, has pi«;ked up another
income tax deducUon with the 'arrival of
a .son Nov. 5.
JUNIOR CIRCUIT'S BEST-Hannon Killebrew of
the Minnesota Twins was voted top player in the
,
Uf'IT .......
American League lor 1969, completing his svcce11s·
lul comeback from an Injury last year. ·
Killebrew Rebounds, Named MVP
Mi1111.esota's Ki/kr Tops Powellin BallOiing
I
MINNEAPOLIS.· ST. PAUL (AP ! -
ff<qmon "Killer" Killebrew stretched for
a throw into the dirt at first during the
19l'il b&sebaJI AU.Star game in Houston,
and collaJ)fied with a ruptW'ed hamstring
muscle In his left leg. 'I'he stocky, balding slugger missed hair
oC that sc.a110n and wound up "1lh only 17
homers: and a lowly .210 bitting average.
Sorrre penGm thought Killebrew would
be furced to retire. Even the Minnesota
1 Twins slugger had his doubt.,.
But today, Killebrew is the American
Lt.ague's Most Valuable Player for 1969.
"Some peoplt didn't th!nk I wu going
lo p:JJy at all ," Kiiiebrew said Wetlnesd*Y
from his Ontario, Ore., home after: he-
was informed of the awar,I. "I was quite
concerned. At the begtnning ol the season
I waFn 't quite tu re;"
However, lhe worries were prtmature.
Killebrew played in all of hi! team's 112
garr.<?S in what be called one of hLs btlt
seasons.
lie matched his ca reer high of 4!t home·
runs. dro11t in a career high of 140 runs,
c.lrew a career higb of 145 w1lks, scored a
c1rCf'r high 106 runs and balied .276.
Killebrew gave lht West Division ch1m·
pion Twins the game winning: hit 22
Umes.
"I d1d a lot of work to get in shape dUr·
ing the off aeason," Killebrew llJd. "I ti·
erclsetl the leg, did a lot of hunUna,.walk·
ing over Lhe hills. I really think you have
to go through 1 Mason wlthwt too many
i_njm·ies to have a good yeat.'•
Whal about next year?
"I'm just goln1 to hGpe I c11:n pl1)' llke
last year.'' the :U.year-old ah~uer aald.
"I want lo play as many games as I can
anJ t:·i' aw-ay rrom injur1ea:."
K'I :ow f«tlved ti of •hi %4 nra
plare votes from the B11tb1D WriJer•
.
-'-laUon ~ Amerjc1 ,.lectlon com·
rnlttee,, w~h conslsfed of two writers
from eocb.leque city.
Ball-flr!I butmm Jol1n "Boog"
Powell,• who batltd' .!04, hll l7 homers
and ~ked ln 121 runl, finished tee0nd
tri tM voting arid tot ahr rtrst place votes.
Kllkbrew had 1 total ol 194 points
IWell U'1 Ind Baltlmort's Frank
Jlobint0n -the f90I A.L. wlnrier and 1964
National League.MVP -wu thlrcfat 182.
Frank J(oward, Walhlnaton power hit.
'ter w1th 4i bGmer1, hid 115 polnta, and
ReggJe JtekllOn, who hit •1 homen for
Oakfand, WU Ofth With UO points. . -
OSU DECmNES ' .
"W'e-!Ove Ohio State and Woody Hayu
but.:' commented Leilltman, his voice
lowered almost to a whisper, 11Purdue
would eaSe a feir IUCh problems if It
could win oVer State." '
LeisHman, or as he Is better
known, projtoted ·thought. Since the In·
lt_lal 'Big 'I; series began JIJ). 1,
1H7, a team than the Big Ten cham-
pion bu come t but three Ume1 -and
won each ti A fourth ch1TnptOn In an
optional nt then In effect in the
Big Ten, declined the tnvlt.aUon.
The school? Ohie>· Sfate.
Regardiag the "Illness" ·of the RoM!
Bowl. Lt~hman had anotllet llaUlli<.
"Prior to the Blg Ten pact~ the Roie
Bowl rime actually aold out onlY. five
times. It has been a sellout eaCh Or the
Big Ten years. The bowl 1eits more'than
lOO.IOO.
"We put up 1,700 pairs of Uckell for
fens on a flrst.<:ome wr:lte in application
ehls year. We had over 4'1,000 applications
and of course the fans don't know who'll·
eveh be in the game," Leishman uJd:
As far a1 being "disregarded" by the
nation, the game has been given these
televla:Jon raUnp by the Nell.sen people
for the 1969 New Year's Day 1ames:
Rose Bowl 33.5; Orange Bowl (night)
23.6; Sugar Bowl 17.2; Cotton Bowl 17.t
TV MAllXET IEY
"Mle heavily populated Mklweat u a
television market -plus the invar:l1bly
strong Big Ten teams -were hardly ig·
n<>red In the aareement between the two
conferences.
Lel1hm1n noted the predk:ament which
confronts the other bowl people who do
not have a going commitment between two conf,rencer. -
"Under NCAA ruJea, ne> invitation can
be extended by theae bowlt: until a set
hour on the thlrtl week of November. I'd
ha te to 10 through 111 that, again," Laiy
!ald1 He referred lG the years tblt the
Role people thenllelvu selected the
eastern team before relegating the mat·
ter to the P1clllc Cout urilvenftle1.
Another pol~l' From 19'7 wim 11111.
the Big Ttn prohiblled ii& chlmplon fn>m
1olng to P111dena more than once In
three years. The no repeat hu betn In el·
fett since.
And .the Pacific Coast itattt had a "°' repeat rule lhlt beg1J1 In 1162 and luted
through 11117 lollowlna throe llrafibl 1p-
pearancts in P111dtn1 by coach Pappy
\Valdorrs Callromla Bean.
The fact lhl Beal'I loll all three ·was
not the polnL Waklorl, for once. though!
it wu more hardship lhan fun for hl1
kld1, win or Iott, over a ~year tp1in.
GLE~~:
Spom Editor
Stanford Boss
Nixes BYU .
As Competitor
STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) -Stanford
University announced it wll1 ICheclule no
new athletic. or other compeUtioDI with
Brigham Young Univenlty becauat or
alleged racial dis'crimlnatlon by the
Mormon ChUrch.
President Kenneth Pitzer said Stanford
will play two basketball games in [)ecem.
ber 1970 :with BYU, but will not schedule
any further meetings,· including debates
and other non-alhleti.c compeUUon.
"II ls the policy of ~t&nfonl Unlvtrslly
not to schedule~ts with Institutions
which practice dlscriminaUon on a basis
of race or national origin, or l'fhlch are
affllllted wlt.h or sponsored by ln-
·autuUons which do so," he said.
"Top officials of the Church of Jesus
christ of Latter-Day Salnls, which
sponsors BYU, have told Stanford
trnlverslty oftlclals thal the church eur·
rently has policies stating that no Negro
of African lineage may have the right or
P.riesthood .
"Sc long as this policy rtmains In ef.
fed.f i.t ~ my opinion that It constitutes
dllCrQninalion on the basis of race wµttin ~ meanings of the guidelines eatabll.!h·
t!<l by .the St.anford Human RelatioruJ
1Commlssion."
·nie. racial policies o( the Mormon
Church, which owns and operaJea BYU.
have been the target tn recent ye--'.rt ~r
bOycOtts and demonSti-aUons by black
athletes at University of Texas at Et
Paso. San Jose St.ate College and the
Unlvenlty ol Wyoming.
World long jump record holder Bob
Beamon was tossed oU· the Texas-El Paso
track team last year for•refuslng lo com·
p!!lte In a meet with BY.U. ,
1 Fourteen \YYOmin&: ·f~all etayers
,.~,.. ""pended from !he ."I~ .lhta fall
for wearing black armbands In a rrotest
agalitat the Mormon Church!1 ·pr>llclef.
Blwck football players at San Jose-State
refused to participate in last year's ga_rne
against BYU. ·
FORMER UMPIRE
HURLEY DIES
BOSTON I UPI) -Ed Hurley, who
retired in 1965 alter 19 years u an
American League umpift, ditd ; Wtd·
nesday at·a Boston hospital. He wi. et.
Hurley. who umplrod In fO\I'. W"!)d
SeHe:I' and four All.Star 1ame11 Met been
00.pltslized •inc• becomln& ltI lin Jwie
during a Cape Cod vacation. He 1l,vet1 in
Holyoke, Mau.
Nifty W armup:
King Fires 62
In Pro Classic
SCOM'SDALE. Artz. (AP)~· fttld of
241 profeastonal golfers teed· off today in
• the nrst round ol the second annual
$50,000 PGA Club Pro Championship.
• Club proo and fonner touring grelt&
will· battle. over two COUJ'lel for the flr1t
tll!.'O 1'0\ll)da. They are the 1,990-yard, Pit·
72 Ro9drunner course ln Scottadalet and
the 7,llJ..yatd, par-72: Hotel'San Marcoa
cour.e In Qlandler. The _final two rounds
will be plrqecl' on the Roadrunner coune.
Three gt>Uers Wednesday became lhe
pre-tourney fa vorite• as they fired hot
rounds during the pnFam sectlon of lit
compeliUon.
Tommy Bolt. of Sarasota, Fla.. and
tlavla Love, of Marietta, Ga., finished
ont-two on the Roadrurmer coune. Bolt
. fireJ • S.under·par II with Love rip&.
behind •• 67.
The mosl 1pectacular lhooUng _of the
dly c•me on the San Marcoe ~ •htn
Claude Klng fired a record:eetung 10.
under par 92, Including a 17 on the front nine.
"I should have u vl'd that round for
tomorrow ," u ld King, of Norfolk, Va.
Kine picked up aeven btrtUea and one
ea1!t on the rtrat nlnt holes.
"
I
~Q OAll"V PILOT
Winner Of N ewpmrt~Oiler G8:me May Go to CIF
Wade Watts
Host Saints
BY RON EVANS
oi ... pt!" ,, .... ~
Hunlinfton Beach and Newporl Harbor
w!ll appll'ttlUy be meeUq lor • berth In
tbe Wit ICbooll dlvllloo ol the CIF
playolla wben they colllde S.lunla,y J11C1>1 at thtlormor'1' field. ' •
According to informaUon r~ved from
ClF commissioner Ken Fapns 11 Rems
that the Sun1tt loop·wtll ~ pennlttod -entrant beoldea champion· Ai»llelm in lhe
forthcomin& elimlnatkln:s., .; ,1 t
Chances f<r that hlnae1~ SL Frlllcla
not upsetting Loyola Frlda,y hight; pliis a
mild threat from Pasadena to cro.wd out
the Sunset--nmnerop,
The MAA bas 12 loagues and II
playoffs berths. After the 12 champions
are admitted, co-champions and ·
representative runnersup may be ac--
c.'Ol"ded berths, '
, It appeara tbe Irvine League will have
Uie onlf ue lor~irat;meaning L<>ira and
Fou•liin Valley 10 to 'the playoff a.
Tb. ~ Leque. and Moon Leocue 'midi u,; Jar1t acb®I (°" '..y other for ·wJJI _. lllan llblJ be Invited to ..., 'lbal ~r) Jiloyon,atnce uc. ·
two -(UIUll ml ..._). 'l1lln H'...:.. • .-_ •·-•t "'--'" ·~ •·· .11'1 bettl: .... the ~I ,~ ,..,i · w..,..,. _, _, "' •~ -1•
F90lhtll Leque fer the other spot, with· ochool !llml•aliona Sjoee •4i. However,
::.:~.x,.J:.!illl ' declllye ~· am91>1 the Oil!" did enter A¥, adloo thfee
1e1r1 qo. ·"' s.: 'Saturdai• ..... Ilk... .. ..... 1'19 oilier Cou"'7 ochool .,. "'°" that
!mW ~ being dlllled Lui -'U 'loPJ • wttholil · belq lli JpJe achool
NfWll!iri ml.HUDllnllao wwe uJ!lll •~ 'pli)'O!fl, ". · I
·~ to drop out ol tiUe ~· . ' . 11'1 with the8' ~ la mlli4 thlt the
• l'rlnOlpot -t ~ o r:• oum eOiithlue thib' jfHpantlcm for llle ';w~ llip .llv~ b11 IChool ' 111& . lt)v•!l'n&· ~··~~ ,_ ·· ·~""""' ol. mOli1g the playulf1 11 \be ' COa!'J! '1ten' Moala 61 lluntlqton sayo
Sun.let League's leCOnd ·7epresentative he'll~JllQ.Vig .f'r_iwk Hans& UM tbe
even though·IMrill 1pparently·U.1M Bii-fullback slot and Frank Neal to tallbo!Ck ~r,t aurvoyor for ~p .laurels. iR an efforl to get tbi ~ pau Pro-
'1'1 ~ .,.\ime thet npNleu ti · · lectlOn for hi! Junior alpal callor Girth who' win1 the· Hunllhpm S..Cl>Newport Wile. "
game, that team would have the inside Wise has not been effective in the tract to the playoffs since both those aerial game the pat .two Weeks, com-
tellll3 bell WeatminJter,",be,aayo . pleting only \hree·ol·JI for II yards. •
'Illus, 0.. of • OrltlD CounlY's tw.o With adequate prolecllon be should be
1oi1gest drOUgbla will ezil: Ntwpi>rt ha8n't a great 'deal 'mri effeCliVe ~assink and ~:.
1'1s • attack abouljl alto be moro
txploll~. )
Moala baa had bll trooP1 ..Wklnilwd
on uecuUon ol Ibo olf,..., IU!eo ltong !rith the . klcldn( (llDI bl • an elfor\ to
<»mo lip to ·their full potoilllal.
Moala uy1 'ane ol his ttam'1 blaeal
d.-va ,problem& wllh Newport II the
Sailors' """"" wiea In tbe bacllfleld. :'.'l'belr ollenae IJ di!!mnt from anyone
eJM ·"f"°' PJa,ytd thll year and aJoog with 11¥• IOOd loam •peed Ind overall me the)' pr.eaent 1 real problem," uys
Moats.
lhmtinctcln's fo.rte has been with its
quarterback and the Oflll .. of running or
pa!1ing out of the roltouts.
Wise hu run for 311 yards (it's deceiv-
ing because of kmes attempUng to pass)
and he's passed for 511 yards.
The junior bu tcortd five t.oucbd~. ., 14dtng the tmproutve defenslve'pla-
tbon 0: H\UIUntton are llnebaekh Dan
Moats and Paul Moro. ·
• If ELA Wlns
' '
_.,,, . .,,
'" ..
Monarchs Close Rustlers Have -'.;.
_'1:1•"
Season Tonight Co-title Chance >I .~
-'!-'.
The Angelus League wfapup
between Mater Dei High
School and St. Anthony of
Long Beach is on tap tonight
at Santa Ana Stadium at 3
o'clock.
Coach Bob Woods' Monarchs
take the field with sWI a
flicker of hope of making the
CfF playoffs.
Ir the Monarchs are sue·
cenlul, and providing St. Paul
defeats Bishop Amat a t
Anaheim Stadium tonight, the
Mo.1archs could conceivably
end up in a two or thr~way
tie for second with Amat and
Servite.
Boes Can
Match SD
Strength
Reduced to the r a n k of
ha.1orable mention in the
·c~fol'n1a rating system ol top
junior colleges, coach Dick
Tucker's Orange Coast Pirates
close out ' the 1969 foatball
cam paign Saturday n i g h t
against San Diego C i t y
College's Knights at Balboa
Stadium.
The Pirates dropped their
second game of the season last
week to league leadiilg San
Diego Mesa (31·23) and
Tuck.er isn'i offering any
alibis.
"They have good siu and
they do a Jot of nuning.
Fortunately, we have done
better against the run than
against passing on defense. I
know we are beat up but that
ls no excuse and I wouldn't
\Yant to use it as an alibi."
Tucker said he would go
with much the same lineup as
opened agai.Mt Mesa last
week. This means Mike Tami-
yasu will direct tbe Pirate at·
tack at quarterback with Mike
Hay.1e.s, Coe Meyer and Bruce
~ge also tn the backfield.
Two of the four backfield
slarters have replaced injured
stars. Haynes and Rogge will
open in place of leading
ground gainer Ray Ricardo
and wingback Bruce Hicks.
Both are through for the
$eason with knee injuries.
Ricardo is the le am ' s
leading runner despite misaing
the last two games while Hick.!
has bee.1 one of Ttlmiyasu's
favorite passing targets until
injured.
The Pirate defensive un1t
has been stabl e most of the
season with only Mike Ezell
sidelined with an injury for
any length of time.
lt has given up only 681
yards TUshing this season and
sr.1 overall total of 1787 yards
in eight games. Opposing
teams have completed 91 of
217 pasaes for J106 yards.
TITLE TIFFS
SET TONIGHT
Two key clashes that will
&O I Jongway in determining
league cbamplon and ClF
entries are 0.1 tap tonight.
The Angelus League
decider between St. Paul
and Bishop Amat will be
staged at Anaheim Stadium.
Klckofl ls at 8. St Paul is •·
o ln league actlon ¥i'hile
Amat Js 3-1.
And, at Long Beach's
Veterans Sllldlum th!! ~toore
lA.ague ahowdown is
between Long Beach \Vil1on
(fil) and Lakewood (H).
11 such a case arises, the
league will decide the question
as to which school would a:o to
the CJF playoffs with a coin
flip, providing the CIF invited
the league to send a second
place team.
So it is with those slim
thoughts in mind that Mater
Dei goes into iUi final regular
season game.
The Monarchs boast two of
the top ~acks in the league
with quartuback Bob Haupert
and halfback Mark Dltm.
Along with that pair and the
stiff defense Woods presents,
the Monarchs are 18-polnt
favorites to dispc:u of St.
Anthony.
liaupert ls dangerous run-
ning or passing out of hi!
rollout style and Dunn is
straight-ahead power runner •
who's scored nine touchdowns
lhis year.
·.~ .....
By BOWARD L: HANDY Los Angeles City Col~• °' "" Dt,U1 ,."' s1111 eleven. . ~
WJtb •llm hopes of • co-';They have a good dropbi("C~·.
charriPionahip nickering r_, the quarterback a.id operatt<·'Oiif' burning embers of t h e
ScJuthem C a I i f or n i a eon: of a pro-type <1ffense. Ttley
ference Football fiag chase, have big linemen to protect
G<>lden West College journeys him and we will have to play
to Los Angeles City C.Ollege much better pass defense •.~o .n .• , Friday lll&ht. = The winner will emerge with we did againSt Harbor lf .J!'t
a slight chance of a co-cham-are to win," Shackleford •; ·
piooaliip, pendina the outcome "I_ think their quarterb~k
of Sa&urda:y night's battle (John Bryan) is as good ~a '
befweea Harbor and East Los passer as (Jimmy) Sander..,_o( ~1:· Ray Shackleford .al Harbor but he isn't as qui~~,
GWC ii confident of two lbings Sander sets quickly a1i a
at this stage. He · feeb his delivers quickly. BryaD\~b .
Ruatlen will defeat the Cubs every bit as good a passer.ti:ur
on Frtd1y and -that East ~ -takes longer"'tto set up. Wt
Angeles Will take the measure definitely will have to M il ·
of Harbor on Saturday even-him if we are' to wr.l." :;_~~
ing. · The Rustler coach says 11«!: 'f(
St. Anthony counters with a
passing attack that features
quarterback Jerry summerfelt
and receive.rs Ray LOwman, DAliY PILOT ....... ., P•f O'~I
Mark Magner and Steve Men· WET ANTEATER -Jim Bradburn (30) of. UC Ir·
doza. · vine moves in against Fullerton JC goalie Terry
Lowman is Ure key Saint Klein while Hornet 'mate ChriJ Cook (8) defends,. •
JJCI ·trimmed the Horne ta, 7-1, and cloae OU't regular
sj!ason play 'Saturday against San Diego State. . .
If auch optimism becomes planning few changes in ·w~,
reality, the Rustlers could GWC lineup this week. ln ract,
wind up in • three·way tie he will replace John Carroll!~'l
with the Huskies and the defensive secondary, ·1r
Seahawlca and an entr8'.1t in necessary, as the only switdl:-.,,
the California State Junior The offensive unit is inlacl.
College playoffs would then be with·· no major i n j u r i e s •
determined at the confue.nce Shackle[ord will depe:id on the
table. passing and running , 9--l ..
receiver.~ -------~------~~-..... --=~-·~---=~-~-~=~·=====-;,•.
The Saints carry a roster or
27 after starting the year with
33.
ST. ANTHONY
l?t Lowm•n
11'0 ... d,
11S Whll•
l!S ll ...
11<1 e1111o
11t Ol{nn
110 Mll'>ctol•
Ill 5ummtrftll
190 Cl1yton
HS Conw1'
1711 M1tntr
MATllt Pll
E" e11atiurn 190 T Genllle !00
G Ok'l.IDn 1711
C 8t1Ulord 1'5 G liernt fldtL \IS
T Ktrn-1tS
E Muniz 11S
11 l-l•u"rt 1711 a Gr'1tek1 1ai
II Ou1111 HS
• J1cluolt 1711
Saddlebaek
Still 2nd
In Ratings
Los Angeles Harbor and
East Los Angeles each moved
up a not.eh in the Junior
College Athletic Bureau rank·
ings of California 11 r g e
division football teams this
week ·and their c<>nlrontation
Saturday night. will go a long
way toward dete.nni.ning an
entrant in the state playoffs
that b e g i n Thanksgiving
weekena.
Orange Coast and Golden
West both dropped from the
t<1p 10 but are listed among
the second 10. The Pirates and
Rustlers each IMt tut week.
Saddleback College remains
in second place in tht small
school division behlnd un·
defeated Reedley (l-0). The
Gauchos have two games re-
maining on their I 9 6 9
schedule, the finale one week
away with ninth ranked Mt.
San Jacinto. ·
The Desert Confer en c ~
champlon&hip and a spot in
the at.ate playoffs will rest on
the outcome of. the Saddleback
game with Mt. San Jacinto.
Mt. JAC draws a bye thi~
week while the Gauchos fa ce
Imperial Valley (10th ranked )
Saturday night
LAlGI SCNOOLI
1. Wtd Vlll•Y ............. , IUJ
2. ,lsHtM CC ""'""•••• 1641)
3. LOI M1111t1 Herbor •• , , •• { .. \)
<I. Sen 01190 MtM ...... :.,. U·U s. •••1ttf1eld ..... , ........... 6ol)
6. C~lbot .• , .•. , .............. C1·11
7. F11ll•rfM ................. !•H
1. 1:111 ...,. ... n .. 111 ......... 16·11
'· 0. .Anw ................. fl·U lD. Vt11fur1 1•1 t
liOlllW•blt Mtl'lflon: Olrflto. (J.U,
Orll•M (otll i"21. £1 CtmlM U-tJ,
Gf'OlllfN)l'lt l~tl, C""" f"ll '""",,.CC
IW), con ... of Sin Mall!O (W), Gold·
... Wttl CJ.t) .......... !cell ll:IYtr (t-2)
Ind Lot Al'lllollll C:C (J.tJ.
SMALL KMOOU 1, llflllltY .• , ... ,.,, •. (l.f!I r. 5'4'clltbt<:ll ............ , .. 1•11
l. vube .... ·... . .. c•n
'-Cell"' of tllt l'ltcl'wOOClt •• foll I, Mef'llttey 11...CllMllf ••••• •• (fotJ
t. All911 H1nwta ............ (foll t. Hwt,.M ............... .,,. ($-ll
I. Mife Cotlt .............. 1"11
I, Mt.~" J1tift,. .......... !W l
JI, llf!Hl'llll VI II.,••• .... ,.,. (~I
CIF's Tie-breaker Rule
May Be Used for All Tilts
A tit-breaker wiU be Installed for all CIF
playoff f<dball games th1a year and there
is the pouibiHty it may be Ulld in the near
future for all prep &rid 1amea ln the CU!'
Southern secuon.
Tbe much-needed rule la beine put inlo
effect to eliminate Ues that plaaue teams
in the playoffs, like lut yur'a 20-20 stand·
off between St. Paul and £1 Rancho for the
AAAA title.
Here's how it works:
After a fiv&-minute break, play begins
•••••••••••••••
ROGER
CARLSON
····-·····****·
al midfield wl~ each team pven four cracks
alternately with \lie ball.
Should neither 1eam score, the outfit which
has the ba11 in th6 other team'a territory al·
ler the eight ,plays are completed will be
credited with one point and the victory.
No kicks of any type are allowed.
No converslma are &llowed on touch-
downs. lnten:epUons CQ be refused to take
advantage of better fie1d'l'Olition.
Penalty situations cont\clue in force as 1
normal part of the game. ,
CIF commissioner Ken F'CanS says, "The
tie-breaker rule provides a clear cut winner,
and that'g what people want to see.
l11aperial . l' alley,
"ln the future, thia rule may be standard
at all games, and ties would be eliminated
complettly."
• • •
Lapna Beacll IUP buketbaU cotcll ·Jep
ry · Fair fla't partlcalarly ucUed about tlte
scllechle Illa Ard1&1 mut coat.end wl~ ill
leape play tlda year.
SomelMw, dr.e Crestview Le1pe muapd
to flx It to Illa team plays tu first sevett
loop etnteda at ltome, Utea. mut travel the
.flaal MVel datea.
• • •
Estancia High basketball fans will get a
good idea of just how strong their Eagles'
contingent will be this year in short order.
The Eagles meet Newport Harbor and
Weatminstu iil aucceaalve Fridays to open
the non-league seuon.
• • •
For 1 team tbat wu W 1t the Ume, It
••• hard &o imqtae 1 crowd of only too
Cwona del Mii' aapportert at &lit SUta All•
Vallq same Sablntay lfternooa.
• • •
L:ook for Foothill High to run away J n
Crestview League basketball action.
Despite good opposition from Villa Park,
Piflulon Viejo and Orange, the Knlghta ap-
pear to have solved their only real prob-
lem -at guard.
Tustin standout! Ray Schultz and Robert
Tuvell, both guards, translerred to Foothill.
Schultz is a jWllor and Tuvell· a sophomore.
Mt • .JAC
Last 2· Hurdles · for Gauchos
Saddleback College's root·
ball team, with lhe iiuide lane
to a confrontation with Central
Calilarnla circuit champion
·Pottervtlle or Reedly In the
uocornlng state cbamp1onshlp
playoffs, must hurdle the first
of two major obstacles Sltur--
day nlpt.
The Gauchos of co 1 ch
George Hartmall are 1'orklng
on a atx-iame winoJng streak
but are up qalnst 1 foe th•t
h11 a vtctory ake.ln of tts· own
golna !or 11.
Invading lmpe_ria1 Valley
has won Its last OU'tt tests
w.1d appe1rs ready to Jive
Saddleback all it want&.
Hartman\ crew ls In good
condiUon will only clirla Hec-
tor, the Gauct.os• first string
secondary back, hurUna from
a mild concuulol\
Hartman's hopeM bt1ll be
ready by Salunlay. II be Isn't,
slotback Gary Rupal wiU lie
required to 10 !>olh w~
nie only other m I n o r
casualty ls tackle Bllan
Colbttl, who's sUU nwUla'
&trat.led knee llaamenl.
Hartman says his tiJg1est
worry about Imperial Valley's
Arabi lieo In their ability to
explode with tbe lon11alners.
The Arabs poasess aome U ·
ctllcnt Individual speed but
lack the overall quickness ot
S.ddleback.
"Our lint is much qu.icker,
though, and I thlnk that Yiill
be one or the key factors.
"It's the first 10 or 1$ yards
that ire the most important,"
llYI Hartman.
Quarte.rback Rod Graves
has shown tome improvement
iii timing this wee:k but
Hartman aays his team ii ha:.1·
dlcapped lo a· ctrtaln extent
because or ti& Umii.d aile.
The Gauchoa number 34 so
fley can't do 1 lot of hitting In
Jl(llCtl~ (or fear o( losin1 a
key player by lnJury.
UCI ROMPS
TO 74 WIN
_ __.1.111le _ auch ..o"""11!atlo.!l ~ _quarlerQf<:!<~ Tony_~ !l!>!!W.i:ll.
running through the minds of along with the runnblC~;>-(ir
the Rustler coach and team Charlie Buckland for ·the 'fM.; ,
members ~. they n;iust jor poruon of the Rustler ,ot.
face teJ})f.y in the form of the fens1~e pin. :~: .. ,
UC Irvine romped to Its
17th vlctoiy In 24 alarls this
year, humbllnl FUilerton JC,
7-4, Wednesday afternoon at
the wtnpen' pool.
Now coach Ed Newland's
Anteaters rout .ltnl (qr their
regular seuoa water polo
finale Saturda,y at 11 'a.m. as
they host SanDlego.State.
And, theY'. are · awaiting
word which wlll determine
whether they mate the u~
coming national collegiate
championship tournament in
Long Beach. ·
UCI never trailed
Fullerton. Mike Martin tank·
ed four goals while Steve
Farmer potted two and Jim
Bradburn one for the host&.
Barons Not
Looking
By Edison
The Irvine League foot.ball
championship is at stake Fri·
day nJght when unbeaten
Fountain Valley (541) in-
vades Huntington Beach Hlih
to battle Edison'• Chareera ·ln the final regular se1IOll match
for both schools.
Victory will assure the
Barons ol coar.h Br u c·e
Pickford no woree thin 1 tie
for the tiUe with Loara and
entry into the coveted ClF
AAAA playoffs uert week. . ~
Pickford says his . team '11 0 Teady for another outstandlq f
perlormaolce cefter sbockln( i
Loara last week, 21-11. · ...
"This would be a PPOt timt ~
to blow it after such l ·flDliQI>; 'i
We're nof!ooklng !>Oil EdliOn, "
1 can tell )'ou \hat," says g
Pickford. t'
The Barons, who pfeaenl a ~ ••
fomtidable offense I e a red
around several hard running :
back!, have al.to come up' with !j
tht pfS&lng game lhlt eeemecl
so dormant In the early g<iin&s
of league compeUUon. 1 Quarterback John Svoboda L
came into his own •aalnst • Loar• with a 13 ror 22 ;
perlermance Including three i touchdown pa.,., and 157 l
yards gained. .,
With his paissing 1amc click-l•
tng, Pickford'• crew prf.sent a l
tough offense to lllop.
..--.
.Next toyoullike
Green Stripe best
... -, ..
't.1}t;.
:V,1
''. .. '•
USHER'S
GREEN
STRIPE ~~
Since 1853, the !ll'.!Bin!!
light Scotch
'
' ' Ing; SC
• Ju
Texas'
\'Ille, . ....,,,.
a biit
Tt
banke
coum
tance
Ft
courn
laps o
T<
to mo·
acres
effort
wood• ........
-Te
bein ,. ' 'lillcke
··0r
ciiarli·
lslfed 1
°""' . _Pe
~JI.
''I ~.· the Ou p,
laltesl
'""""lt
dev'elo tltlni .
Ameri
""'4tn
aDd·In
: ")11
with I
driver
•WI
-. "I
~Hmeb ·n nilff:t . ""'1
c:ltea,4
-1d
aile b
p,
that h·
200 m.
body I
put a
as uns
"V
oaid .•
they.
tn0-!.~ or. '1" • . "I
Ii yea cOinpe
ta~~
fiaMr.
·~·r
yWhl;
['iiiJ I
'
"I
cili'calt
know 1 .. ,
yoar ~
cor to
Mo
Can-Al
yet. p,
off lo I
earHel .. ,
"'"" '!'bey I
... e'" ~· real ol
' '
• ---·~---.----~
.Lions.Had
---·------------------·-.___,. ---·--=~~
TI!undlJ, Novtmbtr U, 1969 DAILY Pt\.Ol' fl
..
' c • ~s~
Your
Engines!
• r
F11nny Car
Piloi Earns ~ ··2 Weeks
.: by Deke Hou/gate .. -' ·'
'. . . ' . ,(!.,COLLEGE STATION, Tex.~ The fellow ·Oll Ille liell aljlol
JOObd a litUe llke A. J, Foyt, and all he wanted ·1o do wu talk
lbflitbim1 ;.
~~ell me, il·A. J, goona beiln that race over.~er!" he
o, A.J,Foyt .wun't In the Teuo c ... An). -~
conversation deterierated af'9r that. ''l'he (ellow wu
interested ln au&e 116Ciiig. but _,.,.. a Tenn talking
rilotor aport llndJ It dllflcuK iO .nlate to-.any race that
' 't h.a\le Fojt In It.
y ~-·a mqnlll=t '-· rodn( facility In the pine
· of cen_t~ Teza, ft•e: mtfes touth of Tuu ,A&M, where
, la are deillcated to the thr<e thlnp Texans do best-ranch-
Ing; soldiering and ploying football.
, Juctgint; from the interest generated amoni_ ~hbon of
Texas' International Speedway in oommunttlal like Bryan, Hiµits·
ville, Navasota, Brenham and Cameron-orice the 1if0rd geta
around iha~ big time motor raclng ls here to stay, there will be
a blK Texas following for the sport al speed.
· The race track baa a two-mile oval, very wJde and steeply
banked in the turns. tJfllng the front part of the oval, the road
coorse meanders behind the back atralghtaway for a total dis-
tance of three miles. ·
From high in the grandstand& about 95 percent oC the road
coorse is easily visible, and the entire oval ls virtually tn the
laps of the paying CU1tomers.
To build the facility, said to cost '8 million, lt wa,s necessary
to move 2.8 million cubic yards of earth and to clear away 300
acres of forest in les.s than six montht. It would take the same
tffort to buJld an esUmated 1S.5 miles ol freeway through this
Weoded country, and the natives say about 35 to 40 head of deer
wtrt displaced. r ~Texas Speedway im't nearly as spectacular as the big track
being built at Ontario, but it certainly got into business a lot
qulCker. ~ ' ' * . * * Paraoiu Vnaullfl Bero
"'One of the unsung heroes of the Can-Am drcuit is reliable
darlle Parsons, the 1966 U. S. Road Racing Champ, who fin-
lsHed the year third in the standings behind Bruce McLaren and
Dmls Hulme.
, .Parsons worried before the race here that he wouldn't do
well. " · ••1 &een'\ to do better on counea I have drtven before, he
Wei. "It takes me longer to Jeam a course than it does aome of Uie 'Other fellows ." ·
Parsons describes himself as cautious, but he ls one of the
1'atest and most consistent drivers in thla league.
l'·:Jt might be said that Parsons ls the leading professional
developed by this SOCA aeries, since he declines . to drive any-
~ but a Can-Am car. Mark Donohue, who was the leading
,\merlcan driver the last two seaJOOS, dropped out of ·the Can-Am
riMlng 1n 1969 to concentrate on .Tram-American sedan racing
and Indianapolis. ·
.' 'ftlat left Parsons plus a handful o~ others to to'·~ catch up
with McLaren and Hulme, not to mention the other 'foreign
drivers running on the circuit. ' -* * . * . • Whit doet ·pano111 1tt la the fatare for tlte Cut-Am?
_ "ILwlll .gd..blaer e"vtry yeai'," M ..W. "Pi'obAly ll will
--IM-lolgnl-oerlea-la aato..-S la llle Jm., lllat..la H
Mme~ dlelll.'t chuge H."
" Tiier< lw bee• talk GI Umltlq ftlllae alu ud makla& ..,.
nile.tn1 woakl cJaap die ''ullmlted'' na .. of Can-Am nct."1
· "''nle Idea la tut Hmltlq ..... olae -Id make ndnc
elteajer," Panon1 explalltM!, "•t .. hr u I'm ctl'.'cented tt
would only make tt more expenllve. Te have to Hmlt oa engiae
alze ls the oaly way lo baUd a.atro11er natne dleaply." . * * *· . Parsons also hnpes the wing l!n't eullawed:-.'nle airfoil wing
"'that helps keep the wheels on ~e ground, it~~ approaching
200 m.p.h. is looked on with ~llfavor_....by P.I.A., theJntemaUonal
body that governs racin~. According to Parsons, the F.l.A. has
put a Jot of pressure on officials in this country to ban the wing
es unsafe.
"We haven't had a single wing failure aD year." Parsons
ta.Id. "It would be a shame to have to eliminate them, because
they actually make driving lifer for ua."
Parsons, whose age is somtthing over to, tries not to think
tnO °much about retirement from one of. the most exacting fonns
of auto racing.
•, • 0 1 ju.st love to drive," said the man who bu been racing for
1! years. "I don 't knew how Jobg I can conUnue. 'lllb b such a
cOinpetiUve bu.slners thnt Jf yoo don't do -well the sponsors will
ta~e away your budget and give It to someone else who goes
faner.
'~'I don't feti my ap.e Is a handicap. There: ts no rule that says
You-have to be 26 years old to be. any good at this buslnes.s. I think
r:CO actu~lly drivinf better now than I was three years ago. . * .* * r '"It's hard te evaluate wt.at makes a driver rlpt for thl1
circuit. It'• an indivtdu11I t111a1. U I stut to sHp, I'm sa.n I'D
know 11bout It.
"Raclng's not like buebaD, wltere yoar valae drops when
yoar legs start to &Ive oaL la raclnt )'Oii Uve to laave ta rtgbt
car to do well. Yoa cu ~ wbt happeaed .. Marte Aadrtttl. •1
Marie Is tbe cbamp of USAC, bit 1M II a ......,... tn the
Caa.·Am, became '11 car, 1 McLans Ferd, la't faDJ developed
yol.
Pal"IOltl' Cllf naer, C.rf RU!I, -.... w "' lite mt -
off lo a qalcker alart "1 takl• dell"'ry ao a SI-is.Lola Clie'J
earHei' • Ute ....., atf 1P1•1h& mere time deYeleplq: tL .
'l'f'bt'I wMt Mel.Arel Mt ... to Ket 9Kil 8. jalp a a,"'
p.,_ ..... ...,,. McLara -.. , ..... ..,..,., -
Tltey )nt,ltilrl9d Ute -at a.e polmt ., *"ti•••• .... we .re ..., at 61 nd ef die 1t:lf. It .._ 8e we 1n W..,.
~· a • ., --..,_ .. llnl ....... apndlaJ .. real 11 tlM year ptltq H rtck".
Area Sports
Calendar
-.
·To Prepare
I( coach Bill Boswell •ncl h!S Westmlnater Uons a r e n 't
ready for their Sunset Le.ague
confrontatbl with Mar In a Hip Friday night 'It would Hem an upeet cl the flrat
nlagnltude.
The "Lions have had two
wffks to. prepare for the Vik·
tnp and an ~ed. tncenUve Is
the r<allty that the po11lb1Uty
ol a CJF IOQlball pll)'o!Lberth
could _.wait the Llons If they
are IUCCH!lf'ul 1lalnst Marina.
It will, bQwever, take a tie
between Newpcrt and Hun·
Unliton Beach Saturd•Y·
'Jbe only change in the
starting lineup is at wingback
where junior Steve Grass-
baugh takes over for Walt
Maddocks, who's been Ill with
bronchial pneumonia.
Boswell says the bye hi!
Big Mo1_:1ey
~.u I::!
I ... . ..
l.M ...
team sat thtou&h last week CHARGING DOWN THE STRIP -Pat Minnick of plonsblp finals at the Orange County International
wu the first of~ klnd in his Chi:f:a o will Compete with the Chrysler team in Raceway. Manufacturers' end drivers' titles will be
f.~ 1l :: I:!!
12 y~ of coaching and he Sat · ht' M uf I • Fu c aft '9 Jm't sure just;,what effect that ay rug s an ac urers nny ar ChBm· decided er .. separate races from 7 to 11 p.m.
....
! ...
wjll,haveori ~b players. ----------------------------------------"' ... ·" . Ho~ver ,'it woukl ~m that
tt ~ame •at an .opportune mo-
ment with several key grid·
den sufrering from minor
bumps and Wses that have
been allowed to heal.
After sonle rest, the Lions
wenl throujb a couple of
rekuJar sessionl! and two days
~ light drilla.
This wtek has been back to
the normal routine to prepara·
Uon for Marina.
~eD's biggest concern
over Marina ls the Vlkes'
defensive prowess.
"They have one of the finest
defensive teaJnl!I Jn Orange
County. People have not
scored well on their defense.
"Some teams have capitallz..
l!d well on Marina's offensive
mistakes, but their defense ls
tough,'' sums up the Lion
mentor.
Quarterback F.d Bane is in
top shape ror the Marina clash
along with his best receiver,
KUrt Dedrick.
Dedrick has caught 34 pass-
es for '31 yards in s e v e n games.
MV Starts
Non:~senior
_Backfield
It will take an all~l effort
by an hljury-r:lddled team that
has had lltUe success In wln-nina with a healthy squad for
Ml~ori Viejo to upset the San
Clemente Tritons Friday night
in a•Crestvlew League finale.
Coach Ray-Dodge is well'
aware of th~ situation facing
his Diablos on the eve of the
foot.ball campaign's concludlng
game.
"San Clemente is a good,
solid football team and coach
(Tom) Eads teaches sound,
basic play. They threw a Jot
against Laguna Beach last
week and they beat them,
which we didn't do."
Dodge doesn't feel hil team
will have to ~top a n y
particular phase of the Triton
attack. "We can't afford to
concentrate on one plityer," he
says.
The Diablo mentor may use
a junior-sophomore starting
backfield combination against
the Tritons.
Quarterback Jim Davis is JI.
junior and has played well 1n
the last two Mission ViejQ
games. He will again direct
the Diablo attack with Ed
Gray pla)'inl on defense.
Aundre Holmts, U1e team's
leading rusher, ls a i>ophomore
and brings a light to Dodge'•
eye every time he Is men-
tioned, ~pile the 1-7 r~
Q( the: Oiablos. •
WhUe Dodge Is pretty well
set on his opening backfield
combination, linemen a r e
another matter. Tackle Mark
Fehse mJa8d last week's
game with a knee injury and
is aU1I out this ---.
Laguna Hit
By M(.re
Injuries
Any resembl ance of the
Laguna Beach siarting lineup
Friday night to the one that
opened the season nine weeks
ago fs purely colncldenta~ and
subject to last mlnute change.
Coach Hal Akins has had
one ol the most frustrating
seasons imaginable and one
can hardly blame him for
looking ahead to next week
when the 1969 season is ended.
The Artists play host to El
Modena Friday night in the
final game of tbe 1969 cam-
paign and with a halfway
healthy crew, could contest for
the right to abandoo a cellar
finish,
At the -moment, it isn't a
very likely prospect with both
quarti;rbflc.k Brian Ottmer and
top ruMlng ~ack Mike Abbey
sidelined-ror the game.
-otfuer sU!rerea an injury
prior to last week's game
while Abbey was injured in the
27.-0 loss to San Clemente.
These are but two or the
multiple injuries that have
beset the defending league
cbirilplofts from s e a s 0 n ' s
outset. Many others have
fallen by the wayside earlier
Jn the campaign and will be
watching the action from the
stands.
"We haven't started ou r
first string lineup in any game
this year," Akins says. "It has
really been a frustrating
season.
"We just want I 1 keep what
we have in one piece and not
l~ any more to the flu or any
injuries. If we do, we'll give
them (El Modena) a shot."
Akins pians to use young
Gary Fissette at quarterback
this week. Fissettc opened the
year with the Cee team,
played in one quarter last
'feek, and is listed as a starter
Friday night.
Denny Schmi&, last week's
starter at the signal calling
berth, will take up the slack at
tailback where Abbey played.
Abbey has several broken
ribs.
Jn analyzing the Vanguards,
Akiru: says, "they are coming
along fast now. I saw them
play Foothill and they gave up
a couple of cheap touchdowns
after playing even for 21h
quarte111. They also outgained
and rut:frtst ~ Oran·ge;"
NOVEMBER IS
Winning Year, Third Pro Hockey
At Stake for Corona Standings
B.v GLENN WHITE
Of t111 Plllr f'lltt ll•rt
The difference b e t w e e n
finishing third or fifth In the
Irvine League and having a
winning or losing season is cr.1
the line ror Corona deJ Mar
Friday night when the Sea
Kings close out their 1969 foot-
ball campaign againl\•Estan-
cia at Newport Harbor lfigb
School.
Coach Dave . Holland's Sea
Kings are 4-4 for the season
and as the Corona boss poi'.1t.s
out, "we're still batUlng the
situation here of playing a
good game, then a bad orie.
Estancia. If we can beat them
it will also gJve us back to
back winni.1g years
something that's never hap-
pened here before."
Holland has two potent of·
fensive weapons plus a sturdy
rushing defense to throw at
Estancia. And, he has made
some adjustments in his
""'"'" Nlw Vor1t ,, ....
c.trvlt
Cllk•to Toranto
51. L111111
Mlnnftal1
01-ltnd Phl1talohl1
Plthbllrtfl LMAnlloll ..
WLTl'tl,01"0 ...
12511".U
94210•3'
7Jll1 47 37
141 173'~
J6111ll?I 41!10ll4
S 4414a U
661113':0
412 1021S<I
1 46 \024l6
l7l tl1'l7
a1062Sa
somewhat leaky pm defense w ........ .,., 111_1 ..
In anUclpaUa.i of an Eagle pm11111,.,11 a, Toninto 0 aerial assault. N .. V0111. " c11rv11 1
Leading Corona del Mar's :,,.~\• s,"'o.":i~!:':"1' 2
air game b quarterback Keith T"-Y'• •-
Samuels, who's tut 40 of 101 o.1ro11 ,, &o111on
pass tries for et& yards. P1111bur111 11 ''· 1..oo.111
I R• k p ' d PrtO.Y'I Olllltl Ful backs 1c elros an . No """"" aen.a111..i.
.• , :ll 1.15
l"' :II ... ... 1 -~
BRUIN CLUB
WILL MEET
The Bruin Booster Club of
Orange Cowlty will be
meeting at the Grand Hotel, 7
Freedman Way, Anaheim
after the UCLA-USC 1ame
Nov. 22. There will be a
cocktail hour at 7 p.m. and
dinner at 8:l). ReservaUons
for dinner will be $15 per cou·
pie and must be in by
W'!IJlesday.
All interested p a r t I e s
make reservations through
Shelley Solomon at 547-8226. "A wiruUnr season 'fDeans a
lot to our program, 10 we're
fighting for our live& against Steve Judith, along with a solid i"".~================~=~ forward wall, make the belly I
series click. FLYING FUN' ~ Defensively the Sea Kings •
Control
Key to CM
Chances
have been hampered since b WAYNE CHASE , safety Jeff Reichert was Y
sidelined with ah Injury. 11 It ••ry d ifficult to liir11 Holland says Reichert was a 10 fl¥ 1
cinch all-leaguer before the You m•y hi .... hiircl th•t
mishap and of course it was a It'• 11 •••Y •• clrh·i11t . '"t tkh leaky pass defense that aided 1t1t1m111t could b1 101711"!0'h1t
Santa A.,a Valley in ils 14-6 111i1l11clin11. 1t mi11ht m•k• vo11
· upset win over the Sea Kings thl11k yo11 h1•• to clriv1. Ac·
Satu.rday afternoon . tu•ll¥. you clo"'t h1v1 to k"ow
t-IolllJld __ ca_lls E$lancla a how to cl rl••· You Clll fly •
team that•never gives up and p11111 -.,..itf.oiit kiiiwi11t '"Y· Cha ~• . f ••· Co t thi11g o1bo11I c1u. .,..,r rune o u1e s a lauds the abilities of tailback •~ I I b ii oh he I You '''· th1 pllo1'1 lob 11 Mesa High .x.:1100 0ot a Dave J nson, t Eag ~s· l.icomlnt incr111in91y 111i1r.
story unfo~ds and completes leading rusher with 606 yards, lmpro,,1cl t'lrcr•ft ' dMi911 .
the _1969 book Saturday night an av.erage of 5.5 yards per m•k•• th1 pl11111 111i1r to carr.y-and 44~points for the f.1ncll1. l1tt1r 1qulpm1nt 1lm· when coach Max Miller .takes season. pllfi11 th1 pllot'1 lob •"cl
his squad to Santa Ana "They're tough with him m•~•• 11 11f1r. And impr1•1cl
Stad1um to battle Santa Ana there," saya Holland. "Estan· J"1tructlo11o1I t1chnlqu11 turn
cla has bee,1 In almost every 0111 bitt•~ plloh.
tori. Plo1c1 ¥OU r111f i11 prof11·
1fo"1I h111cl1 for your flitht
tr1l11l119. G1inlnt th1 confi.
cl1nc1 to fly ov1reom11 yo11r
fint ob1t1cl1. Ariel YO• Clll
91i11 tt.11 co11ficl111c1 fr1111
comp1t111t l111!ructor1.
""'' .,... ....,. "" .. ..,. .. "" Wltll -.,... eM-11'1 11allr ...... ':!II !'!"*I _Al NAll•Oll_AV1~T'°" -.,.. '"" .,,,...,. awn-Ill flyllll, Al (l-* rim, .... OW11111 '"" '"" ... :1: llrtllll pllltl WM Clt'I ,.., "9H .... llllll, "ll"N
Ill -~11111 IMI ... ywr Id fffltl llr 1r11r u.•." NA1ta01t
AVIATION, 5141 WtJIMI' A••·• .....
IUO. 0,. I'"' -* 11 -... .. uy.
WATCH NEXT
WEEK FOR
"TIME
ELEMENT" Valley. game but just hasn't had all You •litould •t•rf 111 • toocl
Some are saying the Mesa! ~th~e~b~re::a~ks~·:" _____ _!!b;"~'~"~'~·~1~"~·,~·~ll~ll•~•~1·~··~,~·;-'::,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ outfit's nickname should be l·
Cripples rather than Mustangs
as the Green and Gold has
undergone severe handicaps
throughout the season, losing
key player after key player.
ln all, Miller's team has had
22 Individuals who have miss-
ed at least one game because
of injuries and his entire I
defensive secondary has been
gone for the majority or the '
season.
It's another revamped cf·
tensive lineup for Mesa and
the Mustangs are six-point
underdogs to a team that
tasted victory for the first
time last week with a 14-6
upset of Corona de! Mar.
Miller says he hopes hlS
team can contr9! the ball
against Valley to take away
some of the Falcons' offensivt
threat and his defense mlist.
contaio the hosts' outside
speed.
"We've got lo get to their
quarterback fR.udy Munm:)r -
He runs the opllon well and of
course (Phil) Bland is a fine
runner.
"They've had a little trouble
this yea r but they're certainly
no slouches. They're going to
be tough. They have tremen-
dout spirit for a down team,"
sa.yi Miller.
Reg. Value Up to 54.95 OVERHAUL . ... ~···· -.. 2999 4 wll..tol l •ll11IW wll
ol w!lo"I cyllfl4frt e r,.,.. 4 .... ,,., • c ... c1, .. ...,........ . .". "'' ··"'· . , ...... , .. ""··
' Volbw•9111 Ow
Sp1el•ltr f1H4, c;i.... & en.,INdt
t.00 Addlt, for Cod., Llnl., llul~!I. T·lllld, 5-loil1
l~ -sElTCDYERS-
, .... L •Tl FRONT A• RIA•
GIVE"YOUR ~R LIVING ROOM BEAirr, .. COMFORT
e 4ll WO~lll
PLAITIC YNY\. TlllM
.a.-........
IMllll'IU9M tHWllt ~ .,....,. .......... ,,,. -·-.............. """ -.
TRUE STEREO HI-fl QUALITY
I Tnck St1tH
INCLUDES Z SPEAKERS
-THIS
WHll
Whoel
All gr" ...
loorin9
Pock
·99
UNITED FUND MONTH
Gl·YE AL,L YOU_CAN__
·~~ ...... -..= 59• .~OUS ~' ~of 4 ltnd a Vadl
.. ,.. 8111""*'-
INITAUAnON INCLUD!D
4"
1'he More You Give The Better You Feel! ' 2160 HA~IO. IOULIVAID ' ..... 540-0170
I Between ••••r encl Aci•'9'• I
~1$!11 ... 1!\ I\'"• l!i
. "l
Irvine Eeague ·champio~: ~:
. . . ~
Same Old:Story for CdM
lly ROGll:ll CAIWION ' -All.CIF ,.lection
ot • ..., "*' ...,. Jut year and first lum .All-
i Irvine Leque water polo Irvine ~e plpyer. .
chalnploo: Qrona de! llti. The balance ol the squod 11
SOUDd lanilllar? II oucht to. up l1'<ICri Ihe B<es and C....
To the ~It.Ion, It mllbt The names \hilt bav~ been
vy--most freqqent in aecounta or aeem l1U a Ured, wc:rn out the Sea Kings' victories have Tt· to Coron de! M uo"" -Kur! Krumpholz, David U 1 ar UI&'' and Garth· Btrgeson, Brad Sobool aquatics faithful, It'& a Jackson, Bill Ipitz, Scott
way o( life. ' Newcom.b, Brett B er n a r d • Wednllday 1ftemoon coach ClllfROi>per iiid hll Sta King goallel...llofor-Hughea....Jlod
forcea turned back Estancia, Rlct Walter and Black.
the fin I In ol Ih Doet the unddeated wlnnlng a Irv e test e streak bother CdM! year, 11-3, lo poot anolher undefeated year In league "Oh. I think lt might. •• -but
play, the kids don't lhow lt. Some of
The Sea Kinas are now 17~ tt mljht be t be re sub-
lo< Ihe year aod lhe llJt of coMcioosty, Jhouih. We try to defeat~ ---4Uoa ls im-offset that with I.he poait.ive vr...-lh1nkillr that we've got to preuJve, tO say the le.ut. come tbrouch. with 8{l ez-
. Beaten this yur by COrona cellent effort on each ... occukm
del Mar ate Nt\Vport Harbor, to win. It's a real mlatake to
Sunny HlllJ, Downey, !Aog . tty to look a)lead. I Ihlgk l3eacb Millikan; Lons Beach that'• one of the m·ost im-
Wlllon, An ab e I m and ,ortant values of life that our ~~ :;i!?'in~~ ClF kids have learned:• surmises
"' HOOi"'· playo(fs, Hooper will send his Hooper came to teach water team into battle with El polo In a strange twist .. S~~= :"ac1~~ sOgun· A> Ivotball coach at Glen-
do tonight at 1:30 and follow dale High, he Was receptive to
that with a •..ip to Fullerton accepting the cha11enge of .. ~ starting a water polo program
Friday afternoon. after his football team had
... " "I dldn~ Ilk• loolnl In ~-
ball." quips llDoper.
After live years at Glt'*ie
and a couple of 1e1sona ~as
assltlant swim coach j .at
CreS«n\a V~lley HIJlh, ·he
moved to O>ron1 del lllr,
where after two sea10n1 Gin
assistant under Ed New)Jnd,
he took over lhe bead waler
polo job. '! c;
"I guess I learned mtlltll\
lilrou&fl-the -of bard knock•. J was with F.d for two
seasons and I gue11 if I Hl\re
anything, I owe It to him. He11
the mast.er ... ," uy1 H~r.
Newland b presently' ;.4he
water polo mtQWr at UC
Irvine.
Hooper, 43, resides In
Laguna Beach. ...
His sweetest victory ol-the
campalgn? "Downey. fiadi·
lionally Downey is tough-on
us," says Hooper.
The Sea Kings ripped the
Vikings, 5-1, in the lo~'s
pool.
,
. . ,.
., ..
• '
IRVINE LEAGUE CHAMPIONS -Corona del Mar's 1969 water
polo champions are (front row, left to right) Roger Hugbes, Kurt
Krumpholz, Peter Kemmeriy, Scott Newcomb, Bill Loitz, Bill
How does a school con· ata ed throu slsta'!Uy come up with ·the big gger gb an 0-8
winner year in and year out! season.
Stenehejem and Brett Bernard. (Rear row) Rlchard Hyland John
Holyoake. Brad Jackson, David Bergesoo, Rlck Wilter, 'Bnlce
Black and coach Cliff Hooper, "Our klda penplre. Plua by
and large they are pretty ln-
tel!lgent kids and they art Ihe -Polo .,_0 wn---ra:swi-1e>nnn'Ve-ever-had
'" ' •• • . l
Prep Water Polo Roundup
Tars, Sea Kings Bag Titles
\..d" here. And we've had some
pretty fast teems in the past.
To Rustlers "And all of our kids can
score with authority. But those
traits are direct from the bard
Tritons, .. Barons Outnm
Cross Country Rivals ~:
Gakfen Wat'• water polo work these ll:lda put in," 1ays San Clemente and Fountain Four other Trilons clbeed
Hooper Valley closed out their dual out the top flve with Brad crew took the Southern ..... A Se. a"'•-undergo a w· to di 9" H
By S7EVE ANDREWS
OI' ,.. hllr .. ..., ll•ff
C I" ml Con! h .Lrn:: ~u .. ..., meet seaaons Wednesday with in n secon n :...,. e'1.ll a uo a erence c am-remarkable practice acbedule. followed by Gary Brashears.
Beach, 13-3 in a Crestview Doug Snyder, Matt Greer and only pohit-getters !or Ellan· plonahlp Wednelday wll.h a M Week day mornings Hooper vlct.oriea. The Ttltons downed 9:49, Craig Sterling, 9:511·'and
League encounter. Kevin Charles, one. cla. victory over second place Rio haa his squad working out BMlsslon VleJ<i, 15-50, and the Bill Ayer, 9:56. '
Newport Harbor and Corona
del Mar captured league UUes
with water polo wins Wed -
nesday afternoon. Newport
won the Sunaet League crown
with a 20-3 decision over Hun·
tinalon Beach and Corona del
Mar downed Estancia, lf.3, to
take the Irvine Lea.sue cham·
from 5 " to 7"' and Ihey arons edged Edison, 26-29. Tl F nk f ~ ·1 I TARS-OILERS Blll Rlce, Clay Evans and MU8TANM ~HARGERS Hondo in the Roadrunners' :..., .u m u o r oun an Rlck Henry tallied for the """""' augment that with another San Clemente ended the Valley finished 15 seconds
Newport Harbor ended the Oilers. Costa Meaa found itlelf pool. session in the afternoon from Crestview League year with ahead of Mike Alvarez of
Sunset League season un· down 4-3 at the half against in· Don Lippoldt, who had three 1:45 to 5. only one yearly season loss to Edison. Funk's Ume was 10":27
beaten with its win over Hun-SEAIUNG~EAGLES vading Edison but qulckly a..ista: fer the. day, hit Harry S.turday1 the Sea Kings El Modena. However, Don and Alvarei's 10:42.
tington Beach in the Oilers' Corooa del Mar m•rchtd to dispersed of any upset hopes Noah with 1 picture pus and taper off to one three-hour Jeisy now has five men that Rounding out the top.. 10
pool. illi 20th win without defeat this of the Olargers with eight st-.prictlce in the morning. can break the ten minute were Mike Donovan ,(EJ,
1lle toss put the Oilers in a year, downing Estancia in the cond hall gpals. Noah put the Rustlers ahtad Hooper says this year's ed i· mark and appears ready to 10 :43; Cameron Haney CFV),
tie ror secood place with winnen' confines. Ron MJsiolek put tn six to Illy, M , midway in the tion at Corona del Mar differs give the Vanguards a run for 10 :47 ; Steve Christiano (FV),
hfarina and Anaheim. The Sea Kings led 3-1 ·at the goals, three coming in the f0t1rth period. from put ouUlb primarily their money. 10:48; Wayne Leed& (FV ,,
piomhip. • Newport led only 2-0 at the hallway mark but exploded for third period when lb e Noah and Lance Norris led because of the overall team Bob Lineback paced San 10:48; John Weston '(E),
first quarter mark but upped six goala in the third &ta.ma. Mustangs took I.he lead, M . the GoJden West attack with speed. Clemmte to itl fin.al win over 10;$3 ; Harry Hinton (EJ, In other action, Costa ?ttesa
defeated Edison, 11-' to re-
main in a tie for second place
in the Irvine k>op with Estan-
cia. Marina found itself in a
three-way tie for aecond BpOt
In the Sunset League after a 4-
3 win over Westminster and EI
Dorado dumped Laguna
its adYantage to 7-2 at the half Scott Newcomb pa c' d Other Mustangs In the scor-two goals apiece. Roy Buell COrona1 ~lnlhe yea1rty'"t'et·th hf)ssion Viejo on the Diablos 11 :00; John ~fcClure (E),
and never looked back . Corona's attack with alx goals. ing column were. Dave Ban-on Y one i-~11111 lJCVars -course. Llneback's Ume was 11:03; and Phil Martz, (FV).
Tom Warnecke and Jeff . Garth Bergeson, tour, Bruce non, two; Rod Klnyoo , John r_a_dd_ed_the __ olh_e_r_. _____ l_enn_a_n __ B_ru_llf..:..o.· _m_a_.cck..:,_a_c9_.c'j0:.:..:..W.,=~..:•..cco=ur..:se~reco=r<I:.::;_. _;1..:l:.:'03::·:_ _____ .:;__
Wilcox led the Tar scoring Black, three and Bret Carpenter and Bill McAneney,
parade with five goals apiece. Bernard, one also scoted for one each.
Others scoring were Bob the Sea Kings. Matt Kroona led the Edison
Searles, Jay Ferret and Tom Steve Webster, two and charge Eth three goals. Tom
Warren, two; Jim Smith, Ward S.undtrs, one, were ttie (See WATER POLO, P11e %1) iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil~I
BOOT HEADQUARTERS
:. NORDICA 10~ srnn ~ru
• NORDICA VELOX Pl.ASTIC
• NORDICA SCHUSS PLASTIC
•MOLITOR Pl.ASTIC .
• NORDICA ASTRAL PLASTIC
TltE FLIME IMX>r
38.50
69~00 .
85.00
99.00
110.00
LANGE
SALE
1
•• MODIU
ONLY
• NORDICA ASTRAL "'" 140 00 lAClR MOC£i ,
• Rosemont Flbergl1ss Boot
NEW KILLY
SKIS IN NOW
::::::.Moo.IL .. 200.00
::;e::..~.165.00
This is the sensational new
dovelopmont by Head Ski
Co. -Killy Arpin d0<ignod
of fiberglou -800 Series
reinforced with metal for
longer lift.
SA·NTA ANA
•
150.00
THE NEW
LOOKI
"Over the boot" 1kl ponh. Th•
fa1hion rage thi1 1ecuon and
more comfort tool Eliminates
down pull.
SPORTSMAN
Gin PARADISE
LAYAWAYI INYITTD
• HUNTING • FlSHING • GOLF
• nNNIS • DIVING • IACK·
PACKING • TEAM SPORTS
NEWPORT BEACH
#27 Fo1hlen l11end • 644·2121
SKI
PACKAGES
FUL~RTON
meet our better half
SAVE NOW
AT$ll.79
OCT: NOV. ONLY
• The exclusive Built-in•Polirer
avoida spillinr.
• It's two inches shorter, so it'• eaaler
to handle, easier to store.
• The price makea it even better.
. Addi~al H~liday S..,iap. Stock~ now for the
UP<omin1 holodaya and oave an additional $Ll8
I!"' half 1alio!I. CtN of 6 Earl,TllMI hall ,.0-Each half 1allon $10.6L ..
• . .
• I · .. • if· I:
a • I· "' ,.
' ... 1· .... • 1·
I.
..
•.
tc
: .b>
a1 . ti ... , ...
YI I• ...
•i
. "1,
h
• d
p
c
-. :p
: ; Jo
• ~
b
. l• . . b
. ,h
·a
~
·' • l
• ii
. ,,
-i i
• •
~
r •
d
I
•
;,
\ •
t
' ' r
(
(
I
I
l
•
~--------------------------~-------------------------·-~-
T'S l1RNi-
OUTDOORS?
~, Jodi A_.,
'" For anglers who planned to wait to the last minute
to make that fishing trip to the High Sierras th•r had
better get busy packing thei r fishing gear and-longJohns.
· · · Sunday is the end of the generaf 1969 trout seas~n.
. .and if anglers are hardy enougi. to weather freez.mg
temperatures and snow of the high country, they could
·--&tt i!M some good fishing. •
DAILY Pit.OT .IS
Pheasant LEGAL H<mCS LEGAL NOTICE -tA•·t1• Clllfl,ICAfl Of" Slltllilll•I t.lht. MOTtcl .... a4!M
NOTICI TO C•IDlfMI ,tcflTtGUI tu.Ml HIWl>OaT..MllA. UHll'llO IC"°°'-. lillOTICI fCt U.ID!lDllS
,U,UIOI: co t.1•T IHI 'Tiii TlW II,.,._, ..... ctrllfV M .. -01n111CT
S:Ti\TI OP Ut.IP'Ofllillti\ Hll. tlllctlnt t MlrltM ti 1n1 NfWHl1 111111., NeMn , ....... i i. IUN•toll COUllT Of' f "I
THI CO\l .. TT Of' MAH I COl!t /NM ""21 C.~ """"· !flt HOTIC• 11 HI!• T I I Sfi\TI °" C"L.INltJOi\ Hiii. fldttlow Jlmt -9f llAll"H'I II Ct II H !Mt IM T'MI eetutffT Of' OllAHI Ht. A"'410 l'UftHITU•I Md !Ml .. If 11rm 11 ... ,. tif l!Mttlt>I tif fM ~WM l 1t11t. .. OIOllO• HUOH~L 000-"°""' Ill ._. 1-lltw!M ~ -Uflif!H ~ C:ll•lrlet 9' Ortnet ~. ..... A..Qllt ,.IV •Jat kl\OWll •• 01()1101 H. 000. ~ 1n f\IU t nci ,11Clt .. ,...,._,. w.:-: 0.llfWMI, wlll rwltlw _,.. ~ktt 11t ,. Edlft « EOHA l'OMICIHI IUTt.l a.
fllillV, ~. Po!Wwl• II:• AM. _.. "'* Hiii *' _, Nt'tM\llff DKMleel.
NOTICI! II H£11!1T 01\llH to the tUci11-.I It. Mtrtln. IOH1 C1111Y l&l"l. Jfttl 9' file 9'11Clt flt Ml4 icMol OIWkJ, NOTl(ll II HEltEIY 01\IEH to 1M
crt4lw1 ef lftt Mlovt llWllld ~ Muntlneton ... di. Ctllf9rnlt '2647 *""" Ill luP 'ltc#tl• AYfft\11, c.ttt er.,I..,,.. tit "" •lltlle MltlM df«Ortlt .... , •II __. l\tWllll CllllN ••in.I ,.... O•IM ,..,_...., II, ,..,, • M .... c11'""'1., •• wllldl 1111'11 Mid 111111 tflfl ... -lllwlfit del1n1 -111111 ,.,,.
Mlcl dfucltnt •r• tMl!lrfd lo fill tfWllrl. ltld'lw• It Mllrtln will • "*'k"' '"'*' •rid AH fot1 Mid MCIClenl •tt ~I,... ,. tit• tMln. wllll t ... ~-IT .,,_,,.,. .. In fh4I ol'tke lllltt 01 <.tl~le: Ore-c-t·u l' ... 11'11 '•rtl'llo<lt Witt. 11'11 MeeMllV Y(lll(Mtl. Ill tllt .tfk • The Department or Fish and OI IM tlerll OI ...... ....,. 4111itflfCI citYrl • ., °" """"""' 11. 1Hf, btlor. -• Alt bid$ .... ,. '"' Ill tee'411'c!M(9 Wl'lll of "" (11f'11 ". "°"' ..... ,..., _,.., .,.
G h •~ I th to ..,._. th4lm. wttll IM _..,... Hof•IV 'i.ibltc 111 tl!d tor Mic! 1'91.. Clllllll"""-1111trvct1trw. •nf 5Hcltlcetlen1 te ,,_. ttiem.. .... 1111 f!1f 11eua111"' ame all SCu~U ed e vouc:h ..... to IM 1111C!enl1MMI 4lt fl'le effltft Pfl'Mllt!IY ..... r.i lllc:l\ol'lf lit, M1tti11 wllkl! f~ MW 4111 till In ti. ottlOI ., IM v-..cllt,... to 11'.e ll!ldlff'ilotllM •I ft'll 41!'1lt41
.iocklng of II ~ p•e1····· m· ., MILLl!ll AHO MACOONAt.0 AttotlllY• "-"° ""' lo bl file --"""'-,."~""' AIWll "' .. 1. ~ Ol11tlC'I, OI her """"'"' flOClwtloJ\, HowMf • ,<l'IN " ..... ,~ 1t Uw, 1W "'' (l'l~ll A-111, Sl/1141 Mmt b k111Kr1"4 to "" ""!thin 111> IUJ 'lt<afttle A-, C•h "-• Gttlt nd, 44 C..~ OtlY41, N..,,., Southern Callfornla and Inyo 100, '1111Wt111, c 11tfot111, tu:11. whldl It st111m.n1 w tc:kMwl.oltll 11t NklllW c.11111mi.. 1..c11, c 11Jfom11. w11rc11 11 th• •l•c. ., Cou t f tl\e h ling 11141 •Itel of blitlMQ Ol 11!1 llll0.1'11~ Ill "" !.'f!'M> f lCll blclcltf """"' tllbmlt I llotif df!lell! IMi!l!\1111 ol file !Jflflrll111H 111 4111 """''' n y Of un seaS<r.1 ... '""''" -telnl ... lo N ...... of Mill tOllFICIAl Sl!AL) Ill Ill• ,.,.., " • tlrtll!llf 41( c1Jll1tr'1 11Mhll111nf "' -.. Ill• Of••!• •tc41W!!t,
which opens Nov. 22. dtc:lltlnl. wllt'll11 i..r ll'*'lhl 1ntt !tie Miry It H4111ry Chld: w • •111 lllllcl ....,.1Mflyt111r«nl w1111111 ""11'111111!\e 1thlr 1111 11r11 lllbllc• 11'1f •ublfctlloll 4lf lfll• 111111ao. Hoftry '"'°'~C:•11fwnl1 INJ tf 11141 ._, ef 11141 b!f, miff lloll ot lllls 11tllc1. ·
tmperill Vallel:.i will get °""' NOYOl'lllHif 1. 1Ut 'rlnclNI OfflCI"' ,.~ ..... " ""~"'"" H~M41111 O•Mlf Oclotlw N. lt6f. \4,000 of the b I, Qwe"' Vlr1k>l1 Cl. Godlr•• o,_. Cou111Y Vntlltd khfll Dlt:tl'kt. A ''"""""'11<1 H411111 t.ol'tl !M lllllOI' Adll\ln111r41IOI' CTA M• Gel'Nnlnloll f!l.•ltft kM """bl ""'4Nd 11 .... ·~ (11 E.1:ewtrl• ti IJll Wiit
Valley ln In yo Coutlty will get LEGAL N011CE °' 11141 E1t11t et Nw, ,., "" file 0111r1et. 111 "" 1vt11t °' 1111un to of ""' •boll• Mftltd llKldflll
Release
Scheduled
Most of the lakes above 9,000 feet are inaccess1ble
,.abd the b<lst fishing will be found in roadside streams
and lakes. Ru•h, Robinson and Buckeye Creeks will be ~ -IQOd_11s well at the East &nd·West Wallter Rivers.
· The lower lakes around J une Lake and Bridgeport " Will be bot for pan sized rainbow trout, heavily stocked
3 P I V d V I ·' tllt tOo¥e ~•ll'lfd llKedl:nt 'l.lllotlShlll °"'"" c..,1 0111Y '1141t, 411111r 11111 Midi ct111r1tt. Ill• 111'9CNll• ., •ltllrltM. ....._ a l#llM ,200, a 0 er e • ley 001-------------IMlllltt AND MACOOftALO HOYll'f!btt 13, .. 21 .,..,, DtctmMr .. 11141 clllck Wiii be torlll!tlf, ., hi Cl!I of ..... c .... _ "" ....
-u.e--. Colorado River beloW •one• -oir1Ht•MTIOH TO •JM .... • A__,,•' ltw INt •t1• ....,,. "" NN -~trlw'Ml'-""ltl_be 11tw...t kli<tl, Ct.,......
Blythe will get t,300, and Bsrd ~N.,...T.",.'o1,u.L• °" A1.00N01.ic ~11 g=: = LEGAL NOTICE =~ • .. ~ khMI Ol•trltt" °'111
'' = =-::-M.trl•
last month. ~ .• Sections of the lower OWens River are open all year.
but as is the case \vith all remaining open streams and
Jakes. the trout limit will be dropped to live.
Locally. fresh water fishing ls fair taking into con-
~ideration the weather we have ha~ for· the pam week.
This v.•riter. visited Vail Lake last week and fi~hed.
during a stonn. Even with the bad weather we man-
. aged to pick up a number of nice bass· running to· tvro
·pounds on Smithwicks and deep running plugs.
Vail Lake Is open to the general public every day.
Fishing has slowed a bit in San Diego County at
•Lake Hen shaw and San Diego lakes. but duck hunting
has picked up with the change in weather.
DEER SCATTERED: HUNTING FAIR
Returning from Fresno, this writer spent an enJoy-
.eble weekend hunting the mounteins neer Oekhur1t fer
dHr, queil and duck1.
The party spotted eight legal bucks, most three
points or better, but feiltd to bag • buek prior to the
closing of th1 li1te1ee1on Sundev.
W• did enjoy some fantastic quail hunting as limits
were bagged by most members of the group. The qui1il
.:population in the area wa1 the be1t this writer has'""
: Jrt four years.
Reports from other pa rts of the state were slow in
i1r rlvlng, but generally speaking, d•r were very scat-
t.recf and lt was hard for hunters to get c~ to the
bucks.
The d••r survival, after last v••r's heevy snow Will
, low, but th• bucks which did mekt It ~re strong and
· big. Next yei1r there could be a lot of big bucks taken
in California and the fawn crop, weather permitting,
-1hould be good.
MARLIN ON WAY OUT
Helen Smith of the Balboa Angling Club believes
tbe end of the marlin season is just around the corner.
,.\.s of today no marlin have been checked 1nto the club
since Gil Smith's catch aboard his charter boat "El
Labo" was registered last week.
· A few billfisb \vere seen over the weekend, but the
water conditions were Jess than ideal for fishing and
iiot a single strike was reported.
DUCK OUTLOOK OPTIMISTIC
With the winter weather •rrivlng duck huntint h11
1mprovtd In mott er••• of Southern and Northern Ci1t-
i fornia.
Vern Gilbreath, of W•sco reports that 'ht latest
storm brought down the first ntw flights of birds to the
•r•• since mid.October.
Hunting is poo r in the San Bernardino Mountains,
Hunting pressure has fellen off and the ducks have not
returned to the lakes in any number& since the opening
of: the season.
. Hunters are workint 8i9 Bear and Beldwin every
day of the week, i1nd probably not allowing the water·
fOwl population to build up.
Hunters' would get more ducks if they only hunted
on Wtdne1day1, Saturdays end Sundays.
The Wl1ter area, on the Salton Set, is fair for hunt·
ing, with the best shooting Wtdnesday and Saturday.
Wardens in the er••• report hunting is best when the
wind blows the duck1 off tht sea.
Rain i1nd snow which hit Southland mountains scat-
tered th• coveys of quail and hunters will now have to
work harde r for limits. Chuker hunting i1 11111 rated
very slow all around th• Southland and the outlook is
not too promising this wffktnd.
ROCK COO BEST BET
Most of the landings a J o n g the south coast have
changed to winter schedules. The bulk of fish now being
caught are rock fish, and anglers are filling sacks and
freezers with these good eating fish.
A fe\v landings are running surface boa'ts , but the
action on bass, bonito, barracuda and yell owtail has
fallen of!.
COUNTDOWN BEGINS FOR PHEASANT SEASON
The opening of the pheesant season Is Just eround
the corner, .1nd this year hunters wlll bt receiving •
break from th• Department of Fish and Game.
All of the 19,SOO birds to be released, will be placed
In fields 4 • 5 days prior to the openlns Nov. 22.
~ In the past sonit of the birds were kept for the MC•
oM Wffkend, but the department htl1 birds wlll h•ve'
• much better chance to scatter, and huntint condi·
tion1 will be more n1tur•I.
MOrt on phe•1i1nt1 next week.
Privet• clubs 1round Southern Ctllfornia are thoot·
Ing pheas•nt and chukar now. These elubs ere becoming
vtry popular as tht unposttd lands and the number of
netlv• bird1 dwindles. Write to this writer for a ll1t of
local clubs.
WATER POLO. • •
(Cofttinaed from ragt U)
Liod11s, Bob W1.1rster and Dan
Eddy added one~1plcce.
VlKINGS.UONS
The win ror t.farina ovtr
\'i&itlng \Vestmlnster me1nt •
!emnd plact tie in the SunKt
l.oague and !ho h lllh"t finish
911' for a Vlktng water polo •m-t.¥rin1 jumped to a 2.(1 first
'°arter lead end from then on ~le two te11ms tradtd goals.
Ste\•e ~fcConnaugMy ltd the YJ~~.,83 ~·1th two goals. J ohn
l taltby ind ~towie J ohnson
ch ipped in ont! each.
•
Chris Olv'e, Bruce Baron
and Ken Dsvll did the
\Vestminster IOOfin&.
•" ARm'J'S.EL DORADO
_SI Dorado scored roui Umcs
In tht KCOnd pttlod and five
limes in the third q"8rter to
~'Tl the holt1ng Laauna
Beach Artists.
t.aauna ecored two points ln
each quarter but couldn"L
m8tch the GOliltn R1"1ka' )3 points. ·
Charley Ware, John Enfield
and John Jlarbold potted t wo
goals tach while Biii Brown
iind Scott Sumner contributed
one apiece.
•
Valley on the ~lorado River NOYeffltllr .. 1t6t T.t1 ''" S»-Dtl HOT1c• 01' INT•lill1'IOlll TO I! Nt bidder '"'' WltMttW ~lt ltllf .., • P\OllotUl\td o, • .,., Cwst D•lh' illllol. T• w'*" lt Mtf COlln•n: .. ,,.,..,,, ,.,. Mrnl••lllr.i.. N ., • .. ..... _ ... ., ....,.,." ... (,U) 0.Y• .,,... 1111 OOelltr • ... HeVfrftblf' '" 13. 1'(I
north of Wintethaven wlll g et 111111~r to IMll•M• ~ ""' 11c-'llblllhtd o..,,.. c,,. .. , D111v '11e1. ~ ..... T.~1,sat.a .t.LCOttOt.tC ••II _.i tor tM -""' tt1tr..r. •'--"'-------·-----'""=•:::•;
t 000 lfP41ed tot, nollct It .,_itbf ,..,... !f\tl 11141 H9""1blt lS. 2o. 11 Incl f>Kembet 4, lfff , TM lt1N 4lf Elfucll!M "'11141 N_..,.1
' • und.,1l1ned ,,_ lo •~II 11cohoUc n~t-41 TO WHOM IT MAY c6'.:t~a::" IKJ ~ ... ": ~111~,_,~, !''~:,:'::: LEGAL NOTICE All of the pheasant.s will be ~~" •1 lht ..,.tmh;e!., c1etcri0ed 11 • LEGAL NOTICE klblttt "' 1i_.. o1 11141 nU11M ... ~~·,..1v •cUll the ,,,_, ""' •M ~1-------------
stocked on lands open io THE swu1Gt:a. 1not·• a c IMdl ''"" "'· 1141!1« " ...,...., ''""' t11et 11141 ..,.,,.,. 1n1 lllfonMnty *" 1tr•1e11ty 111 •A•·nn
publ
-h tin &oo.ilev••d. H1111ll110lon 8Mdl ~ltl\f'll ,,_,.. " ••11 tlcllhol!c tllW llllllt P1(411Vld. lillOTtcl TO C•IO••••• IC Ill g. 'unuilll le wtll hWentlool. 11141 11~ lillOTl(I 'TO Cl l Ol'TO•S ~I'~~ tt 11'11 ftwrnl..,, ffKt1bllf .. Dttell ..._.,bit' lt. 1,., IU,eltlO• COUllT O' THI •v "''"" H POii 0 SU,•l tol COU•'T OJI THI All o( lm~rial V•lley's dtt'tl1ned I• '"""Int "' 1111 0el'lr11Mf11 STATI 0, (.At.1,0llHIA ,o. 1of McFldd .. l'ltct l!W 'r-MISA UHIF1E ITATI °' ,. .. ,,.-••• -· , of Altoholk-lllYlf"• CorUl'OI fol lll\llMt TH• COUNTY o ' OllAHG• H-I 8 di SCHOOL DllTlllCT _.. "" .-... 14,000 b1rd1" I be r eleased on by lr4lfllllt ol ... •IO:lllollc btve•••• . HI. A MMJ • 'lll'Wllll t.M-"' Jntt11111n. ""' ~ ~.~i: C-h', TH• COUlillTT' 0, D•ANll
flf onday, Tu e Id a y and ~i:.::1"" lk•lllH) for lhe$f "'""'1'" II Eslllt ., lAUllA MAlllE IHAW, •ll"lllfllcl Ill -IYllll .. !fie o.,..,,,,,..., Oorotll'( HltvWf Fllllei" 11111. A'4tM1
Wed d -IO the S tu 0" •• ,, OEE• OKHHll. ti Alaltlolk l1Yer11t Co!llrlJI tor 11-f'IC• f1itd>esl-•--Estll1 ef JAN• F•"C"ON W U nts If pnor a r-"-. NOTIC:E II Ht:fll!llY GIVE!f ti 1111 4lfl wl1l11tl t11tllc1non ef en 1tcollollc ~11Dlt ... """'" OecH~. " " ll l 't
day openln 11, Palo Verde and Al'IYMI desltlnt -"0t .. I tllt IHUll\U ~llett "' 1111 •llOYt Nrned tl4lelllftll tllventt lk.nH (or llC4111W) fOI' ttlts• , blllMd Of .. , HOTICI ,, "' of w<ll ll«flMlll ""y Ole• vtrllled PrO-!Ill! 111 PCN''°'1I Nivlnt cllllll'll ll•IMI !fie •twrnltlt 19 followsr II •• CMtl t" l"l~I. HEftEI T Gl\IEH te 111, Bard Valley will get all of tHI wllll l llf otlltt ol 11141 o., • .,,,_, OI Hid dfc:416tftl .,. t"lllrell lo Ille thfrn, cm SAL.£ I EEfl .. WINE ~ 11 ..., Nt'ffmbw JO, ,... er"1lol• ol tlle """" lllfnf<ll OK411141111
the ir' bir' ds on ~ursday and ,-.kot'lotlc &"'"'"' COlll•ol, wltllln :io wttll !tit nec:nffry vOlldlll'I. ln tllft otl'lcl C•an& Fkll l"\lbHc E1t111t ~lie•) 20D.ff ""' •II ""°"' h•~hl9 cllllml •ttltl11 1111
111 OIYS of ~ "'"' 11'1• ·-" Premltft OI Ill• clertl: Ol 11141 •bow lltllltled court. Of All,,_ ftslrlM to ........ 1111 I stlol 0.Cfdllll .,. r11111lrect hi tile lllerft.,
Owens Valley will oet all f 't .,..,,, ttrs1 PO•ltd, '''""' ''°"""• to• flllnl. Uh ol ~ •-llC9 LEGAL NOnCE wtlll "" i11ceu 1ry YOUdllra. In 1111 41!'11c.e 111 0 I S fenltl 11 f tavlde<l bl' ltW Tl\ll llftll'llMll to fl'tsent W Ille llM;elnry llc1M41hl t'Nlf t1i. 41 YWl!lld Pt• of 1111 tltrt (11 Ille ........ enlll"'
blr"-Fr"d th d ay bel · """""'"· te ""' u1111e ... i......r 11 the ottlc• 1111 w1111 '"" 41111" '11 II•• 04111 ... 1meoit Of to 1 •--r COll•t, or WI I ay, e ore .,. now llctn1td IOt lflao Wiii OI l lcol'Klllc t i "'' AllOfll41~· l'lttt • ••tMI • ..,, Alcohol!c trier ... c I I. 1•1 . I .II !lff ........ lrnim, wlltl !tit MAIMIV
th bev«•1141•. 7ne "''"" at vert11c1llon mtf ... _1 1 11 101 ..,di If OI on l'O w n 30 _,.,.,... to lfll Ufld•l'llRIM'll •I lfll ottl e season opens. bl ~tit•lned tram •rw •Ilk• ot lflt c..,.r1. c''"""' ....-v1. " • • HiwPOl'I • 1'" 1111 d111 11141 ••OllOM<I •1'4111'11-fll01'1c1 TO c•1D1i o1s °' r.i, Allorn..,1 w.1LUCI! ,,~ " , , (1llPornl41 "6'11, wlllch 11 lfl4I Pl41Ct of ""lrl llrst "°'lld' 111111'11 tr.vncb fat (ll:AIN UJ l)ov · ' y~·" 1-JmpenaJ Valley S birds will l!ltnl, II: J co Int bu1IMlt o4 lfl4I undlrsltnld In 111 mt!· dtnl•f ts pravld~ bY ltw. Thi lf«lllllt tUl •ltlOI COUIT 011 THlf C..i ""°' whlc~''i oj,::-• rewport Bt1cll, be stocked on sultabl f ~· · .,. 1ar1 1V111nlno to 11141 n 11r1 of 111d ,,. now llOt11Md lot 1111 1111 o1 1k:ollollc "ATI 0' U.t.l'OllHIA '011" o1 lflt ,.... 1 1 •.•ct o4 llutlllft'l e 8Tin ,uDll!Md Ort"'I CotSI 01llY Plkl!. ~Ktdtnl, wltnl11 ~ rnetrllll 4111tt lht llfll tioe .... r1-. Tiit fwrn (11 Yltlllt tllon ft141Y TMI COUNTY 01" OllAJMI 111111 U ti llltd In ••I m1tttr1 "'• lands a)! the way from Niland November 13• 1"' "ow' 111Jbllc111on o4 11111 1101lc1. ~ o1111111ec1 trom' •11r oftlct of "" ,... ""'"" .... 11t1k:' .:i, ~;",J'!, ".: f::-n~
and Westmoreland so u t h LEGAL NOTICE 011td L~°':'r ~il:i11,1 E•Kv!rl• '"'"~. l .. ,., •· a. Mor,... J Eil•l• "' CHAll.Lfs • u o o" , H 11(.iloll or 1t1r1 111111<1. .u
through the Calexico area. et 11141 ;.111, °' ""'' P11bHihtd °"'"" coeit o1u1 •iiot. PlOVo. Jlt .. 1111 -now11 •• C:HAlll.ES 11. Oiied OctolMlr 11. ,.,, , • • bo mid cltellk t N""embet U, lfff tofMf FLOVC, Jfl .. Dtc .. Md. E, GfHE CllAIH
Spec1f1c r elease f I 'f Ids . 11\I 2U7 I LATT '& ·~-=Ill II NOTICI! rs HEllEIJY GIVEN "' Ille .ldm'nl•l••llDr of""' t'lll~
select ed and arra.1ged for by su~'i~'ft. ':o~:;o~~o~i. OJI Cl lllJUI Drt .... Suitt "' LEGAL NOTICE ~:1'~rs .. ~: ... ~i::-c~f~~o:~~:i: WAt.l..4~1'.11:-·= rm.~KtG!!nl
the Imperial County F ish and STA.Tl 0, c.1L•F01tHIA 11011 ~:,.":"1~:fA's-~'°'"'' 92"' oao1HAMC• Ho. t9'» uw lllcilcl4lflt •r• r1<1u1r1111 te flle n..m. m °'""' Drt¥t
Game Commission, ~·Ill de-THE co:1:_::~011.1Het 1 Anw"T;i:e.i,.,. :•1evtr1~ 1 D '"' "" 1 ~1~11c°~"/"";9c1~~ ~=·c~:~: !.,~~:; :1i:._ ~.:=::':.': .;."~,~ ~~': ;:'j';;'.~:::!i~''.,... ~i:id on crop ~nd field con· SPEEllN'~~R °b1e!~~ALD w 1 N s T 0 N ":;:::...,.. 1l, ;;,te21 :",.,!, D~=:i ~=~r.:::i: .. :::~~1~1. ~:;u~: ~.-::',. ~ ~~11.~i:-,,,,,r·~~·c'lo ·~ fWo~ ... :-c::::":,, Piiot
d1t1ons at that lime. NOTICE' IS HEIF.iSY GIVEN ·~ ~ lt11 ~I! 011 TH I! MUNICI'"" COOi ltoberl5e11, "°"""'' • G1fl1nd, .-.11c ........ OcfOO.r • Ind ~tilt .. u. 10:
F ed I
"t 'II credllon ot Ille ibcNe ,....-:i cleceotnt LEGAL NOTICE L.ATI ... TII TH I TIMI, PU.Cl, CUI C•rnrtti• Orlv•, H~ 1J11di, ltff mMt
avor as te ease SI es W1 .tfl«_lll ~.oru " ¥l!!f Cllllm$ •••k\51 1111 i\HO COtrllOUCT 0, ( 0 u H c I t. C1ll!wnl1, Which Is 1111 •IK•· OI t-1111....u 1---7:::::7'.:--:'.c:-:,,-,,,,--'::::=-~.1falf a or harvtsted mllo Miii d«edent .,: ,..,Vlrt<!~to-tnrltiinr.' -•u11rrc ""''"" wtlt-tl<I 1111o1 "' -Mll!•TtNU.~-th41 ""••raltntd 111 •" t'Nl1tet1 .,..,.. LEGAL NOTICE
f
. I d wllll the ne<tt$11'Y YWCMl'I 11'1 Ille Olflt41 Cosll Mell 11111111111 Corn111lnlon 1t the Tiie Cll'I' CeuMIT et Ille (ffY ti C•t1 ltlnlllt to lfll nt1Pe ol ,.111 lf"<edfnt. 1ed.s ~·here no crop amage ofllttde•tOlti.e•bo'H..,1i11edcourt.or c itv Htlt. 11 F111 0r1v1. co1•• ~. M~cao.•Ml"4ll>Yef'd1111 1,to11ows: .... 1111111 'ou11 ll'IOlllll1 ""'' tM 11r1tl--------------
would result from hunting. In ,. •'''""' "*"· w1111 111e ""~"111ry c1111ort1r1. 1t 1::io P.M. or 11 -11 Mvrlt T10Nc 1• _, SK!lollc me of Ill• 11U11Mut14111 "'11111 nottct. •A• *'
d
, , , , voueltef'I to tl'le Ulld4lf'lloM'll 11 lh• Olflc~ -•Ible ""'~tier Oii MoM11, tff.vtrnbtr e Ml edl "' 11141 lty Df CHlt ~. Oiled Ott, 11, !Hf. tlOltCI TO C•I Ol'l'O'll a d1t1on to making the field 91 cooKsey SCHUMACHllt. COLE· 24. 116'. Pnlllltd '"N11m1Hir, Tlttll 4l1ICI , .. Cl of ·Vltt1nlt L. Fm•.
selecUons members of the MAN MIHVA11.o .. HOWARO At· lt'911'11111'11 "" ll:tllowl"' 1Nllatlltf$. CDUMll m•lt11t1°', b•llettlrf •fl'llt'ldtd,. A'4toil11l1tr.lrl~ ol 1111 Esi.le SU,l!••O• COUfll 011 THI'
• . IOl'~I ., ltW us Town .. ,._tr1 ' 'l'OllOHd '''"' "111'141 dl•M• ""' ™~.·· IOlloWs: ot 1111 •bow nt mld dtc:Hlt"I STATI' °" CALl,OltNIA tlOlt
county commission v.'ill also ROid orinee c'1111 ""* which •• 111e w,;,,...11111w ,,,ct, bdwffll e:. w11ton ,..~,,. c17~~11 "11141 c11.,. of'°"" •M1•noH. HOWS•• 1 OA•U NO TMI COUMT'r' 0, OllANt l
assist L' the libera•;on of the OllC .. ol -·~·· ol me v~l•nffl ... •II Slrttl ,,.., Hiil 'lie•. Co1!1 M•"· c1n1. 11'1t ~I ... , .. ~!!~!;.'' '"""""'' ell Ille .. (_ ... Ortw• lilt. A"4NI ,, ~ II I I ln9 t lhe I I ef ••Ill ~ fl~ petltkwl H•. lt·l7 ... , """ .......... .._...tfl ... Ille fl~I ~ ltt(h, C1rtlltllllt
birds. ~:.~~1.~1ir.i .. fall~ rnor\~· !ner 11141 ic.r.... A. F-. 1SU ,llcentll AY•.. •1111 lflll'lll TVPSd•Y• "' ••di 11'10ltlll II lef! 1110 ,....... ESlll• ol EOMOND DELANEY. tkl !It!! Pllllllc.11tlon"' 1111• llOlkt NewPOr1 8e1cn, C•lll .• for llftmlHlon to 11141 flour "' 11Dlt 41'tlodt •·I'll· In ............. ,., .. , l.lfmlftllf1•1rts EON.UNO OEl.IHEV. ·-· EDMUND J
The re leases in Bard Valley , Dtltd NovM'lbtr 1 1t6f . relOnt Ill'_,..., clttcttb!!d •• loll 1111111. C-C!I Ch•mllll'I. ··'"'' "'-' wllefl Ille '"1111111111 0111111 CHll 01111 Pltllt, OEU'1EY, •k• EOMUNO llLASlAIC. '] rth f WI Dcnn• M1rl• Sitenc:t r !Ilk. A. tr1d '" 11111 loc:•lt'd II '°" d•Y lo• fllf tMUUlr "'"" ... 1•11• °" • O.C+o~t 2J. JO ""' NOYetMber '· 13. dtce•ted. • seven ml es no 0 ll-.-.dml<llftrt lor of "'' Et,_lt ol Pltc:en!ll "'"•·• Cesl• Mew, Clllt •• 11'11fn ~ltd11, Cllrlstm11 Eve or Ntw Y1t1•1 !Ht, lt11~t N071CE: IS HEltEIV Gl \IEH ta 1111
terhaven, v.·UI be on farm 1t1e •tiove "trnt'd .,ect'!!Mt R•·C~ '"' M-1. v•. s11Ch IM'flll11S11 1~111 bt Mid 11 "'' cr..i11ers ot "'' 1bov• 111mtd· cltcedl'llt
lands surrounding lhe C004(5f'I' SCHUM•CHllt coLl!MAH l . ltt•OM 11e11110~ No. 11·11·"· let •: llovr •lld pW.ce 11r1 tll• 111.i ~ LEGAL NOTICE lh11 111 "'"°"' n1vl11t ct11m1 H ifnil I~• com-h!IN'l'.llc' & NOWA•O • .-.111..i "· Ed•llOlln, 15111 \11n11tr• l lvll.. ~EcT7' dt• not . h0Ud11." Wlcl dlCIOtnl .,, re.ulttd lo 1111 lhtrn.
munJty of Bard. IU ,..,., I C111fltl'Y Iliff SMrm111 O•k•, C1n1 .. fOt ....... 111!&11 fo M I I ~"c.,.'" .. -, ..... Jtm, If Ille ,.,,,It. Wllh Ille lllCeutry YOll(tllo, Ill lh• efllC'41 • Or (l llf ""' tf.ieM o"'"rtY llitscrJ!>ed •t left lf. 10. un c Pl lflf: "' "' 0$11 Mt111, C T PICA OI 1111 tltrll: of IM •bovt tlllltled aiurt nr
In Palo Verde Va llty, the TJ."r,1 41 Stf'.1111 " """' "· ltlld ~1$ 1nc1 1o11 H 1no 11, t11t~··orclfl' et l u11n1n " 11 litre~ 111 ~tCTil~u~' J,."',!~"11'· "' ••nt "t tr.em, wllh 1111 M<.,.,
birds will be stocked (I) on A~t fir .llfmlRltlt•l•r !rid i20ll, klulW In lh41 ,_,,1 ''" •m ltc: ;;. ";:.,:,1 ::1:ii.. n.. 11ncler•'•fltd do. (ttllfY 11\ef •r• VOYCllets.. te Ille llfldt'11•nld ., lht 41!1100 ti lllllllecl °''"'' (NS! f)1 lly f'llot, bet-.<! Conlu ''"" '"" '"' Hl tllc!f • "' II. cllllf tin ti/ti 1140 .. Of hb AllOtnfl', ll:ob~rt ~. 8111111411!, "'~' the West Mesa, 12) along the No .. uemllel' lS. :ro. t7 •!Id oecemhfr "-Auf C1m111ry Incl belwM!I Corti AYtnot C~I! '';:u1\'b, ':(i!:.:•1 f" i!!'' Cll'Y Cotl•llC Me111~ Ctla:~~1=~ ~~°'i: 1'1:." ~· Norw111c 81vd,. Str. Ho. fC?, Norw .. k. outfall drain northeast of the lfft ~ 1ncl GlbttHt r Av.nu1, C•tt MUI, (1111., •i:. V , II D D flr1f, tit'°"' flrll\ l\111'11 el OltANGE COUNTY l lllotnlt 90650, wlllcn It I~• ,•ltCI nf from 11:1 10 11:1.CP. COllll'Mllt I t i 1,lt .-clot-1.m. HOSf COM,AN'I' kl ti I bll1fllffl II 11141 11nclenl111ed.J11 1tt rn11!1rr,
commun ity of Palo Verde and '· 1-••t••Hot1 •e~tt No. tE·»4•. ":.~rt~"· comM~ll el ,.., 1oi':!."':''!,~ ::::~,! ''''••nlM tt1 tt.e n1111. ot uld 111ttd...,1.
(3)
• LEGAL NOTICE ~rneMecl. !er Chtl>nlln HOIMI, Inc .• P, 0, • ..,.,, or Ill• '"'~''' _11,,, et . --11111n follr 11'1(11111\s lt1tr 1111 !Int on farms south, west z.1d le~ 101, c11111 M .. t. c1u1.. fer ";-Cl,.,. coundl 111.111 cammt11C1 1t1:00 n1rnts 111 !"II 1nc1 '""'of rnld4lflt1 ,,. Pltl'illc•llcn 111 !Ills Miiiet.
northwest of Palo Verde "'rm111klll "'C0111ln1e1 11 11111h °" ,,,4'4 ° doc•"·""· eii -nrs1 '""' ri.1r11 ""-•1 1oi111""1• °'""' Oc:t. 1, 1Mt, . I AI t14' "' It 111 111,,., 1,..1 1-Ulllt ,., 1~10 !! 114111 of flch n"llllllll lot 11141 --111 J•rvl11 0. Cr1Win'. 11"' ClllCllll Av1., Leo louft ~leneY .Id In! 1 tor Then will be six release MOT!CI! TO CllEOITOI ~ M: n.' ol l•nd ••t•I WI"'. 'n. 1!d4I vird dll(Ultf... Incl ,,,bl.. Ol'I m•tlrtt Coil• Mew, C•ltl, "''' OI 1111 E1!111! .i llie. '" 'rt . ' $U,l!l tO• cou•T OF THI sttb.tlck Oii -llde °"'' IOI',,.,. IPIM· 1clle!luled for,.,, Two "' l~e """'"'· ,errr.11 J. Crow1e ... 10111 Nl111t111111e, •l)ov• lllmed deced41nt
Siles in Owens Valley. Lone IT.Ill! o, CAlWOllfltlA l'OR '"""' lllllltllll'ls ,,.., wit~ 1 iero 11. •kl• or 011 111r ertw m1tt1r detlrtd b1 "" Fount1ln Vt lle1, C11ff. n111<1. •911wt "· 1.,,,...., Pine area -Alona H"""ack TMI! COUNTT 011 o•AMOE ''"' Mlbldl to• 1111 11tl<IM!ll 1-u• Cll'I' councn. 1n 1ddll1en, ~ Cil'f '"""' Oi1ed Od. n. ,,.,, TPtt t. """"'" '""'· '"· nt • v5u tff ... ..,,,., 141,101 Oii ,,_..,.,. Ioctl.-! tt XllS ell "'-d, ff II so clttlt!'S, ltkt 1cllon on Jtrvlfl G. Crtwle1 folllrw11<, Ct~lll'llll "'1"I Creek on fl.foffat Ranch Road E'l•I• ol EOH.I E, HICKOX O.c11Md Fullt""" .1Yt!ft1141 Clllll MHI-Ctlll In 1ny et •It ot Ille ta11o .... 1111 """"" Forr .. 1 s. C•-~Y T .. , 12111 tM·JJH
south e t f 'I B l NOTICE 1S HEltEIJY GIVEN le 1111. C2 encl RI l'Cllll ' ' " I, A~rwtl ol l!'llftule:i ol "'• •rtvlwl S!t .. ol C1lltem11, Otl 1141t Cl'llnlY: A"9tNJ "' A*'tl111ilrtter . W S O I> anzanar, . g crl!dl!Otl o1 111t. tbo~e ntmed dK9detlt t. l-eJ:ctiiJlon !N'tn'lll Nn, I E·lt7-4t, n'IH'llMI. On ()ctobltl' 21• ''"· lltlott ...,,, I ,utlllthtd Ot-t CHs! Ot l" Pllet, Pine area -Below .Zurich !hit •It ... .._ hlY\ ... ct11m1 1oeln1I Ille for ICt,f!ll ... Ftllll, ISM ,ltcenn. Av-. bl!: o.tnln1 " blob. II U>KlllN Ill tht ::::.11:"~'~!~ .. ''1 ..... '1: A~1·cr!~~'; ~ 23, lO -Hovln'lber .. 13,
Road on the west Stde of 11111 dec«l41111 1r1 rMu1ttd te flit """"· NtwMrt INdl. c1111 .. far perm11,1an 10 , At;lton rOllflSK onll •!Id Fo>rlll s Crowl•1 k_... "' mt '" ,.. '*'-' w111'1 lllt. lll!Ce5'•ry vCllld>en. In 1111 llflct -r111 •n ~ ''°'"' lo! fer llOll• 11 · "" 11 ntnc:H. · blttl"!D-1----,-,::::cc:--,-,,_.-----
Owens R iver. B ishop area -o1 thec1e-r11;ol 1!'11 ·~ PntH1M court. 01 10'7 •net 20" l"l1cen111 .1ve11111. Cost1 ',· ';!''1"ffl1 Coll'un"""•tloni. ti.,. lhtto~'::'1 ""w~11111~!;~.:; •NII L EGAL NOTICE
(t) Al Ow Ri bel 10 ottstt'lf lllern, ""1!fl the M'C'!UlltT Me"' C1IH .• In I -.ed Ml tlllll , ' tf'll'1 It -• I .. Ollg ens V!r OW -..cNln• to 1'lle undert1onl!d fl f11t ofllce t. z.,,,t t•cei>llon pemtll NI. tE·lot.ff. '· Dfl'lrtrnf'f!ttl '"'°"I· 1donaw tllled lhe• tllleUIM "'"'· Brockman Lane, (Z) alo.ig of hi! A~ McOWE:H .. GREEN. S5tl """ A-No FOOCI SIMCK, IM .. t ie Joi!" J. ~ W•rr•nls. (OFl"IC;:,L l~ALJ rr ,411161
South Airport Road off East f , Ch41Jlmlllo o ........ C•Hklt"I•. whkll ls f ltlon. '"'' G1r!lrn o,....... l l'id .. G•tdtn tM 'c'!...!c~r:ulllt '"Ult • ~In" ol Hor:~ ;.u:i:'c. ClllfOl'nll c ••Tl,IC.ITI 0, I UllN•t•
1M 11leC4I 4lf blr$l"eH et !he UNltrl'lltred 1n GrlNt, C1tll., for _,,.1111on lo C9n1lrvtl ?•OO 41' 1 CMll'llMCI! ,,....,,lh' tf llr1nct,tl Oftl(I In 'ICTITIOUS ,lltM HI.Ml Line Street , (3) along east side 11111'1•11•rs pert11111,., to"'" t"S'-1' °' 1•1d •ncr 0Ptr•1e • f.1rrell'1 tee Crt•rn T·uHd•~1:C~ •·;;: .. "",,.:,•~lr~t,_;l!d llllrd or'"'' c ..... m
of Owe"' Rl
"er between E declldenl. wltll!n 10<1• ..,.,...1111 titer !fie '•rklllr resl111r1nt In 1 PrOl>CSed Cl<P otMrwl~ tPKillM b1 11141 Cl ... 'c u111n111 MY CernmlulOfl E~Pltll-$ 1h1 11nclrS1tned do 11ereb1 certfhl 11\e't • • first 11Utlllt1tlan ol thlt 110llc1. t....., °" ~ 1oc11ed 11 1•n Irvine $1\ 11 •• llltnc • N•v 1, 111'! 1'• c"""'ucllnt • llll1 lntu In Tiii rt.ii ot Line Slrfft and Laws (4) one 01ted Nc~emt>er 7, lt11f Av• •. Celt1 M1s1, Cell!. tiu!t-~~.,. 1111 feltawl,.. er!let 411 Publlthtd. O~•n•• CO•st D•llY ''"''· ~t!llol~•· c,ou!!.1! °'o 0,.1111 •• 16311 G1111ry • "'ncl'~ G H!ckow wo~r n ,... ·--· lt " N tit , u •n•, .-.vnt n1..... tld'I '2U7 llncltr 11'!8
mlle east of Hwy. 395 o n Eiu~c:ute• Ot lllt Wiii nf For lurlh•t 1~ormitl111t "" n,1 i bovt !· ~ltcltl i::.. Alfrtl•nee. ?,~~ar !3. •~ evem r 1 ..... f llctltfo\11 lltrn 111m41 ol "ICIH·CAllE Warm Springs Road (hunt Ille •llO•f 11emed de-c:ed~nt aao11c .. 1o111. ttl•Pl!Ont l:t6'.S?8 M c111 ., 3: 111":if~11 ~~~N~ s::1v1c~.1~1 ott.1HGI! COUN·
McOWl!.'i' a 011.El!H !flt olfk:t OI t11t 111nnlno 11w1rt-nt 4 Ml · ,. LEGAL N OTICE 1 '1 rm II COl"l'll>OHlf rA &OU.th) just south of Bishop. Nt •. c1111m1~ .._.. 100. n F•lr D•lve, C01ti M_; 1: o..:;'i" ~ 11~:~""'' Ml!tl!11t1. lilt tatlo""lfll ••"a111. Whftt n•mn In l\Jll
On the day b e f o r e ~~~ti~~~:: c111rv1n11. '· Pub11c119H11rf11ts: nHI !~: P .. '" or ie.lcllnu •rt 411 fo!lowt. 11
-•n'-gl"lng the Rat bow .,,... ........ IOI' l stcll!OI' Calif MtM Pllllll!l\Q Comm\u\oll '· R!'llorll. lillOTIC• 0, IHTI HTIOH TO TlltUllt ,1• Sl!'r'llllMU ll:IF!'lllncl. ttn·~ l•n~ftJhlm IJI ""' ', • ~ f ublltlle<I Or•flllt COis! r'ltll'!' Piiot, Nill llN~t. Cni1'""~ I . Old lull~s. !Iii IULIC AT 'UILIC AUCTKIN ll~d., Ho. Holl~. C1I. ti"°'
SporUimen s Club of B ishop Hovtll'ltrcr u. 20. '11 ,,.., CKttnl!er ~. wn111m L. D11nn, ll1tttt1r1 •NI t. """' l ut1MH., wo11c1 11 ht rttrr 91v111 to tht Cttoifll!I!'• Ltw11rlf l'llllmtn, 1m1 C1111ry L•M•
ili I t loo ol 'ts "" mr~1 Director rll ~111111lnt 10, (11'1' M•1111., 1 l!e11t1rt, ol f'or-1 'letl111 Ce (TGllY Sllllotlel Hunttnorvn lt•tll C•I f11U1
W re eas_e , I Own 'klt!Ulllld Otitnll CH.SI 01lly Piiot, 11, Ort! COll'lmu"Jcatle"'· Tttnll.,.,., wf\Oll 11111r..9n ldd'tst II &is Wllllli• our 111ni1 111i. 21th If•~ 41f Oc·
pheas8'.lls in the Bishop area. LEGAL NOTICE t-1ovtm11« u. '"' 21«-4t c.:!.!::i~c11n11111c Sut1ettlOl'll •11• ,rocru(tlon ,11c1, N•w-1 I Ndl. c0.,,.,.,. toblr. 1,.,,
Legal shooting hours on LEG 'L NOTICE u. Ad1oVr-"' Dr111t•· l ll lw or C111toml1, 11111 • lllllk S11mour ltlml•llll n ' ,~. ' lt1nlftt It ""'9 te llt 11\t O. I I '11111!( leGN,d F~ll
--...asanl.5 are a am to sunset •••••• -romp •• II J:OO •·111• Ol'I ..... ftltht"' Moclloll of .,_.., loCll~ll tu STATE OF CAllFOllH1A , I"~ . . •• ff!Ch '"ul•r mlllll.,. 1114 mffflbe~ ot ••·-'' •---·• I c -c each day of the season NOTICI! TO (ll!OITOIS C•llTl l'ICATI 0, I U11fltl l l Ille Council Ille-City (i9ftl: ClfY .. ,,edv(..... 1<1. """''"" N • 1111"·~ OUNJY OF LOS ANGElllll~l • ,U,.llll!Ofl COUlllT M THI l'ICTITIOUS NAMI tomey C1tv' M nol ,,; t. ol Ort "''' 511!41 at C1llfomlt . 0.. 11111 71111 dtf ol OclObtr, !flt btlo••
statewide. A hunting lictnse ST.Il l Of' CALll•O•HIA POil ~ ... 11Mtr11tllld doe• Ct'tlllf ht h fOI'-• .,,, ;,,,,.1o~n=·!l:ld ~ ·~"'t~;; Seki •"°'""" 11 ftsct!btd '" ''""''' me. Shit Golo I N911ry Pubtlc for .. Id
and 12 I ol ..>.. 111 t fMI COUNTY OP OltAlillOI! S\lc:.11111 t tlvtlne11 11 '· 0, In m Councll $h II bit II: T111b. t:oulllmtlll, flKllllt"-Su•· Countt tncl Stilt. lfulT commlHloiwtl tnd
se t" ... asa ags are ""· •~.m c,,,_ 11et Mi •. C•llfoml•. 1111cier 1n1 nc-•ttiiW 1 ~" ·~!1111'1 11 c~' ''::' rttul•r •""· Ek . o1 m11 l"l11ti.t "'-"' 111ttlt1t11 •worn. IHl"IOll•llv •l>Of•ttd t.nll'IOIW' required. Eill!<I ot WALTER It. STAllY. Otut" Ill'°"' !Inn Mme of IHOfKAP 11\d 11\tl TI'lt en:'et !i .:~~ :.':',,:;,, l bovl kllOWn ''m'~, '' ... ~'-,"•"' ~·· ..'~ Rlmllncl tnd ltot111'11 Fls/lflll" k-n 141 ~-"II be ddi • I Id Wld firm Is comPotMI ol tne tetle'Nl"I m•f 11 1n, _11..,. 11 cluh' locltld 11 'odllCn"" ti, IW,...., mt la tit IM ""°"' wl'lolt ,...mt t rl 1111:r e WI an a Ilona i.roTICE IS HEltEIY GIVEN "" -tte<IClll. -· "''"' ln lull •1111 •lece pf mtdt .... d (lttltd, • .:' :;:.:M Of llflc:ll. County .i o ....... St1t1 ., ~~trlbtd to lflt wllhln lrutt ........ 1, t nd
arche ry-only pheasant season creditor• of tllt 1t>ov<1 ... med deceden• ,.,111enc:1 11 11 lol~wt: WSPtf'l(lecf ID' It'll •tl"lod ot OllCtl C1~1111. 111 ., ,. • J k H 1cknowltd1ed to "" lht1' uecvted th• llltl I ll ~ """" (ll lll'IS 1111111! !Ill lllllMtl L1~lne1ton. ~ Tr....-1 m••tlM A ....... Oll .,.. CllftCl\ICI 1 ., • ltmt. In fm perial County and H!11 decedPnt l te tf<!llf•ed "" tile ""'""· L1111. Cot'Cll\I dtl Mtr. SECTiOH Ill 'Tiiis Ol'!ll11tf'ICI r II• l'•ld-11. AlldltnN,. "" 1111 Hiii d11 of IN WITNESS WHE REOF. I 111'1
e.aSt.e.rn RlversideCou:rty Jan w\11111'1• l'IKH!tl"I vou<llltt. '" "'' otllc• o""' NovemlHir 10. lfft bY dteW.tM ,,; 11,llt!l("f' ordllliln~ '.:"""""lit•. 1fft, •t lt:SO "..!-~":".!' herevnto u r m'I' h•nCI '"" lfll•ecl ...,,. .... ' ' of tlle clerll of !Ill tDOYt ~lilied Ct!llt1. er rtotltrt Llvlng1IOll WU lllCOll'll lfll(llYI • "' lu I..:. GI ,,OlllKlklll ,,,(4, H .... ..,.... .. ..... lldtl •••I 11141 lllf Incl 1Ht Ill !Ills
3 throug h II . Jn the rest of the 10 ,,_111 ""'" w1r1t "" ... ct1111ry sr111 of c1"1ornl•, uPOn "' ICtoptlon Tiie ,..~, et '., t• Cou11" of°''"''' s1111 ot C•ntOl'nl•. c:ertinc.11• ""' •bov• ""'"''"·
tale the h I
... "'lh• ~l•ned ,, IM !1111ctl Ottfllll '°"""' . • U•· Tiii hifll'lt.,"" St ll .... m ~tor tt!ll. (S~ll s arc er y. 0 n y ;r'~ooii:SEV, "scHUMACHEll. Cot.I!:· On """""'i..'.r "· "'' be!Ol'I me, • ~y .. It toli-11 TM r••ld °"""""' So ,,, ........... to"" .l11<llont11. Ill SHIG GOTO pheasant season wtJJ be Dec. M.IN MIMY.ll!D t. HOWAllO , At-Ho'lll'Y f ubllc In •1111 for ""Id Slll'e, l'I ncl lntri til In -l•llotl pf !fie Cl,.,. llu1ll'IM1 114111111 11\d f411tl'illl llStd llY 11'11 Nolttf Pulllic
t3 th h 21 torntV• 11 l 1w us Tswn & (11111\trv ""'°"'"' •PIMlttd ltllbert l lvl,..1ton !~ c•ua:: ':iu ccr-r1lll• lnut•1e 111 "'' l r4lflrhlrot tor 1111 lllrM flllts lett 1141tt, STtlf el C1llta111l1
roug . l!o.d Or1u••te c'111t '1611. wfllch 11 1111 kMWll to '"' to be !flt lttlOOI wl!Mt C1tv~ •nett comlllfl befol'1! '"' .,.: s...... Counl'r ol LOI .lnvel!!s The ..h·asant bag limit Is oli ce' O! llutln~" ot ff.e uncltrslaned In 111 "'"'' 11 iu~t•lbed lo 11'11 wlllll~ 1~ f!c!MCY O\ll!C.!: •nd-IU• ,~-•tml 11141 pf. AllY •ncl 111 c111,."" o4 wll1lsoever,..e1V~e M~ Cflll'lmluloll El!flrT-t !""' " •rhllnl" "' Ille .,1111 ol •~kl 1tri1men1 i ncl 1cJ.nowh!ClgH h• •••cu™! • 1 e 1t9CICl11re ot ••• to be prtu nt M 11141 ~"'"" "' • December 7, H'1 t'it.'0 per day but not more than ~~~;;.! P wl!Mn 'iour "'°""'' t llft tnt 1111! ~ml. cmincll F!'IN!llllt lo II/Ch I~ IM!t1\f 11111 men! et J41dl H. l'•ldmtn Oft flt briOl'I ,ub!l!.l'ted Ortntt CHsl Dl llf Plier
10 for the en Ure season in-first PYb0llao11"" ot thl!. no11ce. !OFFICIAL sE,.11J :nc~::n~:!t ~utb~~ 10 urmKe.~•IV ,,.,,. !!':to!.:" .. ~,. .f 3~0...,.''",.":i'.f. ~~~ ·~11'~:" ~lobtr1 JO •1111 Nt1Yemt11r 1. ii._.10:
1 ' Oeltd NavemMr 7, l•~t M•t¥ • .. enry SECTIO-" I" r•1' -•I ' . • ..... "' '... L 2w,..-61 C Uding the a rchery season A.nil MAe Cr•wlcr!I Noll~ ,ubllt.CtHIO!'"l41 " •· "'"' ntntt thRll tie C!lf ol 81V«l'I' Hii b< """'"'' .,. OS 1------,-,,-,,----------'--' • 1 of wnt <:if ,.,, IPll Offlct !n nubll'M<I ,...,. In th• ORANGE COAST ""''Ill' 5ltlt ol C1ltforn11. L EGAL NOTICE
Pheasan1' of either llCJ: m ay fu•ecv~~ ne;:ii llt(Nlfnt 0,1~oe Coun•Y DAILV llLOT. • 111w1111111r ot ,,,..,,1 0111'41 Nov1mbtr '· lHt,
b e taken in s 0 u t h e r n COOftSl!Y, ,c~uMACHlll. COLEMAN M .. C11rnml111on E~'lte' clttvlA!len. •rln1!1(1 •nil 1ubt11hl!d In "" Jldl H. ,.10 ..... n. AYcn-.1------,c,c.o-c,c,,cc,-----
' MINT.lflO & HOW.11tn !'av. "· 1tn C!,.,. 0• Cost• M<>tt, tottther w!lll Ille l•dl H. , ........ ft
California 8',1d the counties of UJ T-ft. c""'"'" IN4 Pub1hhtd o •• ,,,, '°'"" 0111 ... ,llot. Mm"9 (If '"' mtmbtr1 ol lht Crty "' H. ,11111 Dt. HOTICI TO Cll!CITOltl 1nyo Mono and San Luis 0t4111••· C•llf .. ""' Nevtmbtr u. 1'(1, 'l1 '"" O•C•m~r ~. Council ~Piii iot I nd •••1"5' th•'''"'· '""'"'"' HllK. c.1,,, lU~llRIO• COUi l 0, ™"
Obi
• 'r•I• incl ltr·•lll 1Ht 210J.ff llA~SEO ANO "'"OPTED llllt 10111 d•f ,ubllshed O,..r>OI Co1st Otfl'I' ill llOI, STATI OP Ci\Ll,O•No• •o•
spo. Only males may be "'*"-' ,... 1:~-trl• e11 ov.mllfl. 1flt . Nov111111er u. ,.,, ?O..C.ff
t k I
"* o 1 Ctl1Y ,1101, LEGAL NOTICE A L 'INl(Ll!Y THI COUNTY OP OIAHGa a en e se .... uerc. Pyllllthfll r•noe Ce•~ M.~~, c1 th• C!l'Y o1 Costt M LEGAL NOMCE HllVlll'll:let 1i. 10. 11 ""' Decemw,,...,· 4, ----ciii1100HoT •uS1flt•IS .-.TTEST· HI Ht. A+Ult Ifft ,ICllllOUI HAMI! C. K. P~IEST E111t1 OI .IVJS G. GlllOH, OKtt tld.
Tiit vrllltlli.rtlCI dolt cerlllV lhlf tr• Cl,.,. Cletlr of Ille CllY cl Cottt M~t T""4tr N071CE 15 HEllEll't GIVEN lo IM
Wl'ster Hunt LEG'L N OTICE UH'l<lllClllll • llutlllllt •I "' l'Olh s1 .. STATE OF CA LIFn•rHA , 1u,11•1011,COV1lT 0' THI ~l'ed.'"",, of 1111 •boll, • n•ll'lld lll<;t'!lfnl " Newpert IJttd!. c1111om111. \lndt't ""I!(. COUHTV OF ORANGE 1 '' ITi\TI 0' .ILll'OltHIA ,o. • t Pt.•IOllS lllVM cllllll'll •••lmt ""•
1-------:----:--C"'.'.:""-----l ttt'°"' firm nt"" (11 < lSTOI. FASHION CITY OF COS7.I MIS.-l TMI COUlillTY OP Olli\HG• Mllf 1Ucedt111 ttt IHUlt111I ta "le l?llm,
' ' C N A ~m wllll "" "'°"'"' 'l'Olldlef'I, lfl ""' otl'kt BAl·fUI 10.IT .. VACHT Cl AHtHG Sl!llVICE · , IC. Pll:IEST, Ct,.,. Clert -1111 tJ-fll. 1. -... Ol tht t l•rk of Ille ibovt f'f!llllld co.....t. 0,
fltOTICf TO t •l!OITOllS tncl lhtl ••Id llrm II C.1111'1"°'" "' -llclo Cler1! of lhl Cil'f COllMll of"'• Cll'I' lillOTICI! o~ "•A•lflO O• f l!!TITIOH '" l rtltftl 11\trri, with Ille llf(fUI..,,
JU,l!lllOll c ou•T 0, TN• lollo'Nfnt Nt5ellt. ,.,.,,.,,.. .... ....., In full of Co111 Met•. """"' (.,.,"" lhll "'' 110. '"OaATI 0, W1t.t. AHO l'O• VOllCl'llN. hi ll'll 11111141rtltned 11 ""otllcfl JTATI! o• C•LIFO•lilll.I 1101: Incl Pll Cfl"' •t1idttlct .,. •• lollowl: •boll• 11111 fotepof"' OnlllllllCt He. "'" t.I TTlflS TllTAMINT••T OI MITCHELL HAltl .. 1•1sco us THI COUHTV o • o•&HOll GeM11t w ........ ,. Ill :lfltl SI., NewPOtt ...... lllll'OdllC:ell Ind OlllSilhr.11 ttc:lltll Irr ""'" ol MARY E. NEWM.IH. •IN Civic Ctnl'et orl ... W•ll lullt 211. s. 1
Ht. A"4t21 •••di. C•lllornl•. S«llon ti . TWtVll f •dlourned"'"""' ol k"IW!I ., M.llllY l!LMA NEWMAN. Ant C1!ltomUI nxn .;,,Id! I 11141 ~· Inconsistent
E:ll1lt el IHEllMAH AlWYM SHAW, lltld I'•»· 1601 Ail. 0, 0•11w1,. St., 11141 Cil'f COr.illcll tll 1111 IOlll ell¥ el Dtcto1Nd. ol ~1,_, 01 tf.e unci...tl1Md ~ I ll 1 ~
!luck lrunti'ng on the Wls .. riO•ct e1MI Hunll,,.IOll lltld'I, C4lllfaml1. ~. Ifft. Incl lhlf'Mlllr ftHtd HOTICf IS HEltEIV G1YEN Tiii! -o-ol•I•• lo'"'_,,,,-"···~!.-
-Ho''''
'. "'.''
V GIVEH ft! 11\f D ... N -11 •-1 ''" '"''" -•-1 ' 1 •I,-.. .,_,._ ''"' "-1 .... "'"" ••• •• w• ...., ol the ~ F'-h t ""'"""'"' • "' • n I ....,. I • • re.11 1r JAM c.,. ""' ..... 11 • ~ .... ''"'· w!lhlll '°"" m°"""' •lltt IM fltt! UnJt ....:;partmenl of 16 crt'dl!(ll"• of the 1"°"1 ntrnt'd cltc161o\t Gtortt WtlVlf' ..-111141 ol 111d CITY Cllllllc:ll lltld Ol'I lht l10l'I for fftblhl of Win 111111 for lfWIMt of tullMc•tlon tf lhll llCll1"
and Game'11m ptrlal Wildlife :-i.: ~.~"::!,f,!;.,~ ':i~M,:..:; '""et 1&'111~:. 0r ..... countY: :"1tr-111.!',;: «~r,::.t;"· IN,, "' 1119 ~"=c•'~='T. :._:-:~~,.:; o."" October 31, 1ttt. · Area near Niiand r anged all wltf! 1111. M«l•lrf Y(MJ(l\el'-. '" 11141 ofltlce °" Novtrnlle, u . Ifft. btlort ""'· • A'tES: COUHCll.MEH Wl!so11, Tiide· ••rt!Cllltl'I, ..... 11111 the 1111\1 •NI 111•~· i~~t~:.e: ~~~c: Ille Wiii the • from J." ·-.I·• IO ol Ill• c1erll "' "" .~ ellllllld (OU,,, M Holt,., '111111<: In •1111 !or Mid $tilt . .,, $1, Cl1l1, Jor!l1n, ,lnkflf OI llffrlnol 1111 ,,,... 1111 btell HI fer " 11141 •llew ~ eel Ille: w y VIN • "' ·-' """'· with tht nte11J1rv -IOll411Y IPMtrtd GIO~~ we1ver •nd W'>ES: COUNCILMEN '~""~ Novlll'llltr ,.., ,, .. , It f :Jll ··"'" 111 1111 MITCHl ll HAI T I .i;llCO """" "slow" last weeke • 'IOI/( ........ '~ •ne u~lalM'!I ~· lhl ""1tPI I m Fry• k-to 1'1\1 te bl tllt 'et'ION "'lll!NT! COUNCtlMl!H N1111• cOlltltlllll!I Ill °"'""""' Mo, l " "lei Allwlll'l'I .; .... ~--h -•· II ited t ol COOKSEY, SC:HUMACHl!R, C:Oll!· "''""" 111mes •r• lllbtctlbld le lht ""1111111 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I lltvt tllllf'P• 411 7Dlt Civic Cent., Drlvt Wtrl. '11 Cl<ric C""9t Dtl~I Wnl "'V''rc Un\CT'S m OU C)l'\ MAH, MH!YA'tO &. HOWAltO. .II· l111trum11'11 tnct t ckl!Clwledttd tloeY e,. ~!1!'"1r!la HI ll'IY lll~d tNI tith ed 11141 IHI ftorrn1•1Y WHI llh lltHO In lh41 Clty ti krff• ttJ
p intails Saturday In light wt.id 1ome1s 11 L1w, 155 Town & Country ec~•H 1t1t 11me. o1 fht c1,.,. o1 Cost• Miu. 11111 11111 "''" ""'' A111. c1111otn11, ~-• au. Ci lffwfll• ""1
llotd, Orl nt41, Ct lll., 'l'6", wlllch 11 "'' ((IFFICtAl tE .. LI NoYember, Ifft, Ot!i!ld H0'141!1'111tr S, I'"· T11h 1nc1 Uf.1m u nder an over cast sky, but the •l•c' of iws111e11 llf th, ir>ders19nM In •II M•r"Y ••lh Mor1on c. K. 'ttrrsT w. E. IT JOHN, COVPll'Y C:l•rk. """"""'1 ,., A*"lnlttr1IOI'
average take WM only t wo ""'""" tterl•lnlf\41 tre 111e ntm "' 11ld Not•..,, 'ub!lt·C111tor1111 Crtw c re•k 1nd e•...nlc~ KU1tu111011, SOlOMO• • HAltT l"ub!ltlllHI °'' Cot 1 0,1_ ''"'· dtcect•n•. wfflllft lt!ut -lh• •lllr Ille ,,..MIPtl Ollll;I tn Ctlo'k et' !lie City COll~Cll 11•• ""' llVCN',, ,,.,... N ,,.. I "
b irds. All told, Z56 shooters 11r11 1911fltrutton of !I'll• llOllce. o ... ,,.. eou~iv ""11141 ct,.,."' cos11 Mn• Mtll!IMlte. c1111111111,.... owmMr •·IS. fl,''· ,.., !C61"4'
IOOk '85 duck• no ·gee d Oiled Novtm• 7, ,.., M• C0111ml1slclll £,a,1,., Publltl!H Or11111 ""'" o.o ... l'IM, Tlh 11111 tll>Ull LEG" N OTICE 'I 1 If an ,..,_1141 Sll9W .l~rlt t, lttl NllYffflbff 13. !Ht '°""" Attw-1 ,., , .. Ill-l'U.o
2! cootstaJ'--,;"'88el badg was ~Uy ~'"~=·:: ... ~ ~~· o4 N:..~~~ n?'~~·,, c::.1 g~1e~:~1e:: LEGAL N<mCE H=:~,. r.r~r,.f°''' O•llf ,:;~~~ ..... i n t
pin ~ an gretn-wing· COCIC.Sl.Y, ICHUMACHlll. COLIMAlf lt" ,,,,,~. HOflCI TO Cfl•D•TOllt
cd teal (136). ~N"1"~0a ~~!.. ·IAI 11M L EGAL N OTICE SUl"tl•O• cou11, 0 ,
Sunday, with 1 warm and 0r'"'" c.t11., ,,... LEG AL NOTICE fllo11c1: 10 ci1101101s TH• tTATa 0, CAL1,0,,,, ••• •· n o• ~74111 'SU,ltl lO• COUlt'f ~ TN"I l'-lltn windless light r11.1n fiJllnJ, 213 i;;;:..,. •... ,., """'1""'~"" c ••Tl,IC:ATI 011 I Ulllilllll t TATt: 01' CAlll'OltNIA •01 Cl llfltl lCATr 01' su11111•$S. TNI COUNTY 0, ff:i\JNI•
hunters too\ 142 ducb and 15 Publltlled Ott"'e Coltl O•lh' PllOI, ,l(TITJOUS ffAMI THI COUlillTY O' OllAlill61 ,ICTIT IOUS HAMI ......... M llov.,,,lllr lS. M, 27 Ind Oeumbl>r 4. TI>e ""° ... 114111M doe nrtll• 1111 It -Nt. A ...,, '1'1141 llM"f'llf""' .... COl'lllY 1"11 11 ~ E1t1"' of H.-llOLO IC EN H I! TH cooc.s for lw tha1 one bird ,,.. '°""' dllctlnt • llll1l11t'JI ,, am w. '°''' Mww. Est•ll et 01.AOYS llOOICS lllldllll • 11111111111 "100! I! ..... ''·· """ W1Ll5EY Oe(ff!Md.
per -·~-, ~~~iiii;;~~~~~~~~ila"ltw 700. Ntw!IOl'I IMdi. C•llfol nUI. llEHllfY. AKA Mitt. OUllOOH w. II A111. Ctlfforllll. vlldtr ,,,. l~l'llwt NOTlCf II HEltlBY GIVEN te ,.,. .. ._ • O!'ld~t !11t fltltlklllll flnn n111nt or WHIT• I ENTl.E'I', D«ffttoll,. ""''NI"" '11 ltOTAt.TT EHGtHRlllHO crHU°" fl Ille "°"' """"' O.CllM"' MAN MAHAG l!M!iHl COM,.IMV Ind HOTJCl II Hl!lilll't Cl\IEH ti< "11 a. Of\lllLOPMl!HT CO , 01' 0 .... NGI! 11111 t 11 lltnOl'lt11..,lflt clelmt "tllllt 11\f
11111 st'-! flr..., h <~ of lllt 1olloW· Cl'tlltlers '11 !'lie tbcl"' 1111'1'\N dl(ld.nl CQUNTT 41fld 11111 Ml4 """ II COii'!· Mllf lf~I 41tl """"lr4111 to 1111 lltlrft,
lftll Pt<""'• wMt• -Ill tun '"' •lllt• 11\11 111 Pt'fMlll l'l•YI ... Cle11N •••IMI "" _.. "' !I'll followlrlt """"'' wfloM With "" Neftttt"I' _,,.,,, In 11\e efllc• o1 ,.11dMoc:• It t• fotlo·"": $11'11 dl'C.ldtrll 1r41 fMllfrtf It Ille """'" P111M 111 !ull 1Nll •It" '11 ttl~ "' !flt tlltrtl tit !flt 11"°"9 tl'lllllldl COUr\.• k.1"'1'rl111 M, Wl\""'11\. !Ge' IU\'11' Wllll 11141 11«n111.Y '/'OUCtW,,, lfl .... 4llncll It H tel-" fl M ~ 1fl9n, wllll 1M llttfUlt1' ....... Ptoo'N-' le•'"· Olf!Otllll "'""''""-of 1111 lllon f'lllffled ..-. • ., l!Hlofl '· 1"1\d!fN. '251 HIU~ w_,,_,. Ille llOICll'111!M<ll 11 1111 oftk •
Dlttd N""llTltltr ,,, ,... le -ettl """'· wllll "" l'IKlntrr Orl1t1. HVllll"'"" lttdl. Clllltlf'!llt. of lllt Altorl'lnt w.-LUCl , l lOWH • YOUR Poem ICtll'terlnt M. Wllll'l'rlfll ~ le ... trrldlnltllld 11 "" °"'°' 011N N"""'btt s. Ifft, • CRAIN, m °"""' Gr1"". ff_,-j SMCll. LOS ANGELES -B t1 Rock ~Ith! 8' C11H9"1'11• ...t ,, ... ~ ""'n • Otvkbon. ltll Hotlll 1111111 T. ,lkf"ol,. c.111 .. ""' •lltdl ~"" •ltc:t"' MlntM ~-k, 811 Tujunga ~-• up-o,...., C-IY M11111 5trltl· Stntl A111 .. C11111t11i., Mildt 11,,. er c11111n11-. Ott,.. c.,,.,,.,,. " 1111 llMlnltlltll 111 111 lllB ,.... ...,. ~ .... l>ct:a On flte'r. 11, ! .... """"' 1!11. I Holll'Y 111 1111 •Itel of IMll~t of lllt V!'de.,itMif Oii '"""'"b!lf S, ltff, llffWt •mt, I !tlll)"f .. 1111 .itt i. of 11': ~
per iCCUon. Crysbl Lake, •-t• ·m·--t-• rt-• '"~ I• tl\d lo!' ••kl Sl•lt. l"lf'IOl'llllY I" ·~ ll'lll!Prt ll'erl1tn1 ... ,. Ille ~11•11 .. Not•IT Pllbtlc 111 '"" "" ..... 11111, ,., .... , .... .. -•• ~ r ... ~ .... "" ... ,. •-rtd ll'.1tllt'flne IA. W!ltlmt~ --,, ""' ~. Wllllh'I ,.... l!'Ol'lll'l!i "'-' ,.,_, .... tHt•l'td '""" f , Pllelllr!I "" II _, "'°"'"" ..... 1111 """' ""
Jackson Laite. Legg Leite. -111 be ""' H'"" ""°" 11t"'I "1111 11"11Utlllc111on" 11111 111~. •now~ " ""' ,. ... 1t11 ""°" ""'°" lk1111111 " 11111 tM1llcw. Puddinfltone Reaervoir, "~n wllh a DAD..Y PILOT ,ubK,..~ 1o ti.e w!llllR ll'l11tument ,,.,,. Ollllf Odeber o , lfff. 111111, 11 IUOIUIM<I te "" wffhl•' "'° 0111d oc.1o11rr ,., lff• .,.. .ed!Mwi....,, Ill• 1.uwtm lht lllmt. ltlcllwt Wiik.i-te111111. l!NIJ'~I •l'lf •f..11."""'""'"' "' tlltcllle!I r . GllNe CRAIN
Gabrie River East, Norin a'M C utllltd Ad. ~OFF1c1.11. S!Al t £l«Vtet " ttw w111"' 111t 1111 umt -· --" M1t11t1h.,..1or °' 11141 '""' M#lrv IC, HtnrY •b!NI 111'"'" llKlllllll ,. ' Sl!A l -"""'"""' '""""' d"9lll!!t West Fork$. ·• Not1ry t1ubl1c-<•llloml• HA4f'Lo •l!•AN s Oi\'llOSOM co '1CIAl L WAI.LACI. l •OWilf • c•Allill
,HONE Ml,., f!I'., """""' ">I OO °" SAN BERNARDINO -Ar· Pr!ntl•tl OlllU 111 Hit H-111 Mlf•,llM Hol•nr 'ublle<1111titn1t "" ~ Ort11tt ,_,.,. , ... 1. AM. C•ll"""" PHllt1••1 0111" In "--' ... a , ,,...
rowhead Like, Bia Bear Wk~, 6j2 5678 Mv c.omm1n1tt1 '"""'" TllLi ,,111 ,..,..,,. oro"" <wnlY ret1 tnt1 .....,, Gr Lak S t An 4 • tiw. 11. 1112 .,,,.,..," !lw t.•ffllflf' ,,.. .. c ...... ml1Jlot1 '°"'It" A!tW"Nn fW l'M Mt1111111ir.tw t';ory . e, 11n II a 'YbH•hed Or•-"''" Dt !t. ~lie!, P~tlfllllett °''"" '"'' D•ll, '''-• MO~M'lll't!' , .. 1t'7 Mll~httf °'""'°' CMSI Dlllt ,!ltit. R h•tr, Sooth Fork Santa Anl Nov....,tllr I). 111. tr tlld Ottttnt !I' ~. tobtr tl. • •IHI No1tmotr •· n . 'llllthl"lld Or•"'e co.n 01111 '1re1. Ochlkr a end N1v.mtov &. lJ. :o.
R iver. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~::'.! ""' 'lo.t•'' lfft ''""' Novtm&tt 1. 11, 10, ''· 1Nt 10IU'4t lHt miu'
Trout Plant PUT CASH IN
• • • -• •
' .
I
H 0,llLY PILOT
1\IMILEwEEDS "
~IC ll!JfMLO:
MAY I COMMIT
M'( ANNUAL.
SllEA~WEEK
SNfAI( OfllN ltJU?
if-I
TELEVISION VIEWS
... -~ . ._
Thursday, Novtmber 13, 1969
ly Tom -K. Ryan -----· "
NON Lll<UM LIL.
MANS! HA1tJM PUTS!
PERKINS
' '
' '
""'"' ~uu,'J.511 '"""-'loru WOl!:I ~gz=
,,
JI
:ow;1w ··~ -: -.:I!~~·-:... _,---~~ ---·---_., -
·~~~ .. J.~,, ...
SAU Y IAN.tNAS
Fou1 Shows
Happy, Light
JUDGE· PARKER ' By Harold Le Doux
•• By CYNTHIA LOWRY
'• NEW YORK (AP) -NBC pre-empted its entire ..
lo-evening schedule Wednesday night to sbO'lv four
.. special programs, all on the happy and light side.
, IT WAS easy viewing, but toward the end of the
: 3lh hours, began to seem a little much, like a third
!' helping o1 chocolate mou.sse . ~ The multispecial night started on an imagina-
~ tive, merry note with a half-hd'llr animated comedy
~ about Bill Cosby's growing-up days and made a hero
•· out of his friend Fat Albert. . l The narration was pure, familiar Cosby, telling
: of his gang's football encounter with the formidable
, Green Street Terrors. It had great charm and
· \\'armth -and probably was appreciated more by
: grown-ups than by children.
. Johnny Carson's excursion into early evening
• television followed and consisted of a series of
:. comedy sketches which were pretty disappointing.
THI; )10U_R opened with a sketch about two
: sets of parents with two college-student children an-
• nouncing their plan to live together. It was broad
: and predictable. Another was a much too Ion~ satire
• on the Oscar awards, this one featuring "Oedipus
. Awards" for dirty movies. The idea \\'as funny at
: first but bogged down.
Aiding Carson were George C. Scott, l\1aureen
: Stapleton and Marian Mercer, all skillful Broadway
· perfonners. They did their excellent best with the
• material. Carson, who wore a lot of fright wigs,
• mugged and played broadly, seemed out of his
depth.
• .
THE THREE Supremes and the five fempta.
lions, a fine pair of singing groups, worked together
in the stylish and handsome hour of muSic th at fol·
lowed. The theme 'vas Broad\vay, an excuse for a
lot of great, familiar music, from "Mame" to "Rose
Marie."
Diana Ross of the Supremes was the undisput-
ed star.of the show, leading the clowning, playing
everything from a comedy sup erstarlet of the 1930s
to an Indian princess in a mad spoof of the old
Nelson Eddy-Jeannette McDonald films. The sets
and the co stumes were especially effective.
"Norman Rockwell's America," which 'vound
up the night, was based on the warm. and gentle
humor of the artist and perhaps had more meaning
for older viewers who ~rew up 'vith the now depart·
ed Saturday Evening Post. Rockwell's covers 'vere
ao institution.
THE PROGRAM \Vas a novel retrospective ol
50 years of Rockwell dra\vings, and slipped into
sketches or songs based on the artist's theme. Jona·
than \Vinters \vas effective in a sketch about a lone-
ly traveling salesman. Michelle Lee and Dick
Smothers handled the musi cal sequences and the
show ended witr a nice intervie\v of Rockwell by
\Vinters.
Den1ais the Menace
• ' • ~ i
' •
"
--· ... l_ -•
I'M ALWAYS CArEFUl ~
I PlJiN THINGS, SWEEf·
MEAIZT! I LEAVE
NOTMIN6 10 LUCK!
MUTT ANDJEFF-
GORDO
MISS PEACH ~
Mlf. 6RIMMl~,'IT IS
.A PLEA~URE TO INFOAAI
YOU THA'I" A Fl~T Cl.ASS
U!T'Tat HAS.COM!!
l'OR you.
MY (U T ON TOMOR'll.OW~ Ol'ER'ATION
WILL BE !zoo,OOO! ro YOU KNOW
WHAT THAT MEANS? YOU'LL NEVER
M"YE TO WORK A.6A.IM !
l'M A.MAN ! l SiARTEOT+.115
MOVEMENT YEARS
AGO! T~E KIDS GOT
IT FROM ME! PEACE!
' '.
By Al Smith
~OWTHE~ECK
ISA GUY
.SUPPOSED
TO KNOW?
By Men
•• ~·..-... -1;0,. .,..,,., .. . __,. -----
G "BAD DAY AT BLACK ·* ROCK"-Spencor Tracy
& I.ft M1rvln-COLOR!
ly Cliarles a.rsottf
1;,.. .... ~..;.,
l.J.l.J. ""' lj4", ~ ~~ Ml/,~~?
D Sir O'Olck Mtwtr. CC) .....
DiJ •t llad hU'" (dr1m1) '55-9:00 R QI ([} CIS ,_.., *'Iii ~1nc1r Trier, Rob1rt Ryan, Ann• "li"illlf hdiwllll'" (dr11111) '66-
fr1ncl1, Otan .i.uer, Erl\lll Bor1· Jamu c;.rner, ..11111 Sl111mo111, An11·
nine, LH Marvin. A man 1rtives Jn la L1nsllury, Krtll1rl111 Rm, Su·
a town ~ reward the l1tllet of 1 iannt Plnlltttt. A man lllfflltn1
min who htd und hi1 lift i11 th• from 1mntsl1 purslM:I 1 -.tdl I«
Wlr. His Mirth for 1111 hthlr b hit Identity.
met with aillft!Ce tnd fl1r. D tm Cfl IB r .. i..·(C) (mi
0 Didi: ¥111 °"' (30) Gutsts 1r1 dlulq kr!Mur, M1nu ID reyton ri.u (lO) C1u Elliott, D~t Clvttt tlld Tbt
II) Stir Tr1t (C) (60) HGllits. .
TD Cll .. • -It) l'Ol Ill-•.., llDI
'IJi) Wlllt'• ....,, (30)
l (JJ C1$ -(t) (30)
l) TiHlpt di ,... (30)
lit) Men (C) (60) 11tk HlckeJ
~ I 1:30 D kNIC •h••nicil (C) (60}
l Cl Th .... .... (C) (30) ' m Tt Tel tilt Tnrlt (C) (30)
EE Ottl~ 1t 1111 Ptnldtat <30l
@@ Hunlf.,.lri11klty (C) (30)
~.3011 llll {11 ID -IQ (30) ''D.H]:~lliln1 Ptr30M.'" Wettln!
out of Dttecllvt H11dqu1rttll (0.
H.Q.), s,t. fricllJ Incl C111110n lol·
low 111 WllOOll tl'llD W"'I lllilllll!
Juvenllt.
CJ 1hlln (C) (30) later Wirt. m"' ....,.,.., "" IQ (30)
fl) ll'IWllW. ....., (IO) m•--110J m n. Pnisidtlrr• Mn. 1919 CC> ·
(30) lt.OOlllD @ lll ... -IQ
_/
9 ({) r.. • .,.... (30) (60) Gum '" P1ul1 W,, E1111
Ill Notldn M IP\ (-. Robtrtlon, Pqo L... hUI IJndt
'"' _, and Morty Gunty. m -l<l i10i o m "'"' <'> <!Ill
1:0011 cas f:'ftfliRf """ CC> <30J o till Cl> GI n , .... • nw <Ci (60) Pij0ffl11 th. Pilm.• Alft. D Wlltr'1 MJ lJM? (C) {30) and« Mundy'1 re•tto. wltll m I lM Liic, (30) CG11 wom111 CMrlw lrowt ct1tM
Ii) 1Ht .. Clod (C) (30) , lier tD strmi. Ills rllCW -.,..
-C. men!: of t QuMA. Df'M Opttdla. m •llMllJ/Slock hptrt (30) Rudy Solari, C.r1a Bortlll ind »bit
@@De a..fcatl Well (C) (3il) Ruotll, w1tt1 *P«ltl tuell Susa1'
fl9 Allortl {30) S1int Jtl!IU ti Ch1rJtM (Ch~
QI([) Trlllr " C:.....11e1t (CJ Brown, 1r1 felturtd. • <•OJ D .,.., l<l !!Ill ._ ..,,.;
The Gum Who, C.r11dln llldl f! Tt111 ....,._, (t) (30) 1r11i.rp: DlllJ Glllesple, Jm tltllti
EB 11i1t ti.t (C) {30) artd Ptul Wlndlflll.
ID n. -IQ (!OJ (It) m ""'1 • • .,.. l!Ol 7:30 tJ 9 Cil ,,.,,, Affair (C) (30)
Buff)' 1nd Jodr lllrn aboUt fre11Ch'1
blrthd17 tlld pl1n 1 peity for lllm
-mudl to the dllCOfflfiturt Gf the 11:11 Im C"6e •-(!(I)
propar En&tlsll lmtlllfttn.
II 0 {11 m ..... -(t) , ... IJ !l!Hll uH<li!I -1111 (60) •'flit 1fr1n<1 Alli1ne1." Josti 'IWllw (C) Formtr 1strwut WK
tlld Gtbt trt prtmd Into lirtitt ttr Scllim tnd t:OhltlU!ll!lilftt Wtlr bJ t Spanish plrttt In t tthtme to tel' C'.ronkitt rt,ort on the tp1ca
foll 1 plot to t••• twit th1 Unihd miuion, a:lltclultd for li1t-off W
Stites. C.ur Romero 1nd Armando momiw 1t 8:22 AM. -
Sllvutrt IUUI.
0 stu111;p Ult tan (C) (30) Wer· 11:00 II GI fJ Ill"-(C) n1r Klemptr1r, Larry Kovis i nd U Robtrt Cllry 1UMt. Nfrtll Mltdad:
'
•
D ll7J CllaJ n. '""' "' ""' CIJ 111L ,_ ~ "' -<tl '. ·Mn <C) cao1 "Sllrprilt P•rtJ.H m °"" 1.111it1 .. Carol~n pl1ns t surprlM party tot ~ [J)-~Ill (JJ --tilt Captain but how d11 )'OU tul· WJ -~'LI '"' ~
priSI I atml? QD fll• tiMdil (C) "Chllt hf~
IJ l:lllilw $ MoN: (C) .......,_ l~: •. 12·mlnvtt '"tl~11 .,,.,i.
llltOll N1111" (oomtd1) '64-Rob«I tl'ICI, 11 palted wittl 11:•11'11 Df1
MorJt, Robert Goulet. Compl\eltlcn3 5"cl•I," tn JS:mlllllfl •Urt Ill
tll" when two JOUnl btchtlm II· frtt [llttrpri19 for 81teb.
riYt tit C.ribbe1n lll1nd wflidi Is tml!IG) ..... (C)
exclusively for llt'fl'lyweds.
•
m Tnrtl tr ~111• fC> (30) ll:JO IJ l!llt ()}Mn lrtrtk (t) Sonn;
IDJlldd rtr lie.,....... (q (60) ind Chtr, 811u Briden, direct11f>
ft\ fldlllkte c.r... (30) MonMn .lewtlon tnd tuthor W1Ui1nt
WI Sllll• ltl ICfltdultd fUlltL : m-..., l<l 1•ai .. ,.. nu mm -.._ ICJ: ~•net on t'!' KIHl na Graund." Wit· KIJ'I Bilr.rd, C.rt rtilner. Ptt1r.
lilm H1nlty I P(IJ 11 performed bJ L1wtord and Strlio Man• 1r1.
lht lnf!ewood l'l""°'*. IChtdVl.i iunu. m Clntc• ...... (30) e ....., 1.1111 ........ cm1111>~
'37-Ronald Cotmen, .line W'yltt. •
D ll7JCll aJ )HI lhl .. tci:
cn-1mploft -'*1onrt« C:U.,· Tibk; l\ritlt'lst Ctrlot Mentop, Joel'
Meer.., MDl'll'I Ct09bJ 1M 0:1t0!
i :OO IJ 9 (fl Ji• lftbtrt Hell' (C)
(60) 01111 Cim~ll tuesU.
0 1«1-(30)
Q The bi1 fllht ii on ''' ICl!tdultd avesa. * THAT GIRL tonlgtrtl e,. "';~:> ~,:::;c.~:
Slltrlnc MARLO THOMAS ...., st.<O: •
G ll7J II> m not .., (C) <301 Ill --. -_, ,,,; "Sltlkl H1ndt f!ld Com• 0uc Act· lld" (dr1rrM) '4Z -M117 11th'
Ina." Hoodlll!M lllllrf1t1 ""'• .\1111 MuPet. UoJf "°'"" • !rtu to l'lllp '-:« Tony fflrf11 ~
•tvdJ d~m1, 1~11 Ort Wolft lftd tz:cm m 1i11f1t; °'QMt1t"' (drtm1) •49:
SCOtJ Mitd'lttl flllSl .=tasil Rtdfonl, lflfll ll'OWlli Mtr· • fD Qa-. ,_ 1 0., (C) (30J V)'ll JollM, NCIRI SwlnbllfJll.
ai--' IJ.!'t:~:.1:, ~,O)',': ··!,~~o::·= ::::
"'"' of rrve1y eountly tunt1 ~ a a ... (C) •
flddltrs, btnjo pltrm Ind COlll'l!ry 111 ,_ --~ : binds. ltwn at hfW• Chic _.,, , .. ,
C.nler.
11'1 ftlkiMI! (C) (30)
1:30 B ID (j) Ill •-<Cl l!lll •'fhlMachilmo 81a." The rebt lll·
GUI IDn ol I Malc.tn-Amtriun
l:MBCea•iMJb .... ._.(Cl;
' • l:•m..,._ -·-~ ~·· 6'fp," 'iltw °"'9flt lltJK Dark," •
"Th• CUIM of the CIJll:r Wtmtn." :
!-..,,..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'
f llOt..Y
ID.,,,... "' -<-·; lure) ·cs--.i1n11 Ru.II, Fred •
M1cM11TTtJ. • , .. a-...,. i-i .,. -'.
DAmME MOVIES a .... ,, Cd ... -°"'~···:
11.118 ...... 0-" (Wllltnil '11 •
t:ao D "OI H..,• """"" tdr11111) -•::.:. lrlttlll. wm.. ,.,..,., :
'Sl-J1111t1 SttWll't,. WttW Hrntaa. Z:•,D, ... _ -~~ ~_.!IJ)_
llt11l1h lend!. ,._.. 111oot1, Clwlatil'!I "fir· ; ...
t:JO 8 ..,,_ •ltd Fllltnt" (11~
'C3-Cll1rl1s 10,..., Btrtlfl St••
~
' •
l:IOBIQ"T _ _,,.,_:
(rem1nce) '57-o.i. _.,. :
Ltllit ftltl111t. . '
.; .,.._ .
1
1
----~-..,,--.,.---------------.,.,_ . ----
(JC Irvine Mnsleal
'Roar of tM Greasepaint'
Splendid Ensemble Effort
By TOM TITIJS
Of 1119 0.llY l'lllf Stiff
\Vith the UC lrvine pro-
duction of 0 Tbe Roar of the
Greasepaint, the Smell of the
Crowd," orange Cou,ny now
sums it up -Sir 4, Cocky t.
Stephen Nlsbet's brittle, porn·
pous Sir is performed with
flalr and style, every gesture
true to form, an excellent
portrayal in all respects.
-fllST RUN
Wll6-" ...... -.. ,.. Lhl ''The Christmas Tree" .... ''.If It's Tuesday,
It Mull Bo Bolalum"
wltll Sin•-l'ltteliett4 c ... N11111111 s~ t•• l'.M, , .... ~-=-11'=========~1
•• flAltif '1 COLOR ~·~· "~"-'I
A CROlill tllT!RNATIOIUl l'ICllJU
·' has an object lesson on the three approaches to musical
. theater -professional, com·
'munity and collegiate.
, ' In the professional version
at Melodyland some time ago,
Colin Vogel as Cocky has a
more dlftlclllt row to hoe. His
Cocky is less a downtrodden
rebel than a mlscbievqus;[!:::=:::::::::::::::::""'::::::::::=::='l
·"'"THI ltOAR 0.. TMI OR•AS•· ~, PAINT, THI SMILL OF THI
CROWD"
ii. ''""lc.91 by Anlhony NtwlfY al'ld
Ltsll1 lrkusu , ci>dl•l'tted bv M•u·
rice Altln:I arid Jim" P9flrod, cv ...
lumei llld tc_,-, bY Rk:lllrd Trlp.
left, lecllnlcal dll'KIOI' J ohn fllloft,
•· ll9llllng by Cam H1rv1y, 'pr11e11!ed bY
• • the UC lrvlne drtmt dtNrtmtnl Wed-
' MKl•Y• llll"lUtll St!Urdltl'• un•U """· • 71 al the Studio Tl>Hltr on the UCI
THI CAST
·" Slr ................. 1 .... 518'1hen Nfl btt
'· COCkl' ..................... Colin V09tl
The Kid ................. D«m•· Futltr
Tht GJrl ....... ., •••.. Vlctorl• lkr•tll
$115111 901lm1n
Ttie N.,ro ................ Lt'On P1ltr1
T~ B11llr ............... L1rr'i' Sheldon .,, Urchin boV1 .. llrv~ ll<M:hanl, Thom••
,.. AnthOl'lv, Rlci..n1 Brown, Jim
C1rr. Jtfl GrHnberg, JerrY GrouHmen, Ell Holllr191worth,
ErMSI Hood Jr., Dew Rodrl•
DlltI
Urch1!'1 girl• .... Chrl1llnt llODerd, Ca•· ... Ille Anna Bllnenbef11er, Jae·
'"IHi!ne Cati, Eve Evins, Jec-
QlltlYll GCll'IIll11, Kallltrln1
N1th1ry, Ellubotlll P~I. JIJll'i' Rot>1n$0!!, sv1vl1 Wlll•
evidence or overpopulation;
the dancers perform like a
precision drill team. '
If the UC! version has l)Ol
succeeded in taking the play
away from the principals en-
tirely, it certainly has made
them fight for every inch of
stage. And to make matters
even more interesting, ·we
have a Kid (Dwna Fuller).
who can upstage bolh leads
with the arch of an eyebrow.
This is balanced theater
seldom enet>Untered, even on
the collegiate level. lt is a
credit to Maurice Allard who
shared the staging w i th
Penrod, even though h i s
musical direction is
overshadowed by Penrod's in-
spired choreography.
youth. His movements are
stiff and tentative, and his
singing voice falls to achieve
the potential of his character.
The treat of the evening is
lhe aforementioned M i 1 1
Fuller as Sir's ardent pupil.
This befreckled r (! d he a d
stands out, even in an
ensemble effort, with her
enthusiasm and invenlivenes$:,
not to mention her at-
tractiveness. She m e r I t s
special attention.
Leon Peters contrlbntes a
fine vocal moment as the
Negro who changes the com-
plexion of the game. Also well
done is the dream sequence
with two girls -dancer Vic·
toria Barrett and singer Susan
Boaunan.
ht AREA RUN .
-ENDS TUESDAY-..... --........ __ _
WILLlllM-HOLDBl\l
I YIRllill LISI
BOURVIL
"MCHRtSTu/IS I
TREE" '°'~ iT llM:l.11 •,. Ccnhl• •
Plus The Super Classic
1WIMHlllor6 ACAOlMY 1,WAllDll
~·IMltR AOROIOflllfCD.DOI
DAVID~FLM ·----DOCIOR ZHMGO •=...; ..
STARTS Y(EDNESDAY
HELD OVER
J ACADIMY AWARDS
~~~
PETERO'TOOlE
KATHARINE HEPBURN
-~
~.
STANLEY KUBRICK
PRODUCTION
2001
Thurofay, N"'mltr 1), 1969 DAii V PllOT /J.1
, , J'outh Coa.11 RcJJ('Tl<iIJ'
"Funniul SMw o//ered bu 0. C. Theatre
thi.t VtGr , • ," Tom Titua, O. P.
"A FUNN'I' THING HAPPINID
ON THE WA'I' TO THI l'OIUM"
LAST 1 WllK.S
1n7 NIWl'OltT I LVD •• llNr Nw.r ltlSl•VATIONS • IN,,OllMATIOM -"4f.1JU
"Wlrlllll ... l"Mll" -DILIGllTPUL lCJI CNll.Ollll!N'• TMeAT•I .... ,. .. 1:• .. t:• ... Qll fw • ......,~, ...
eNew ... , .......
...... ._, ... 'It.I!!!~--A......,.. .. , ........
"HOW TO SEDUCI
"''""" Fiii";OUTH COAST Qll(iM PLAZA THSATRS
CDRPOllATION San Diqo Freeway at Bristol • 546-2712.
SPECIAL SATURDAY MATINEE
BAKER BOY BAKERY PRODUCTS AND
DAD'S ROOT BEER PRESENT
TO KIDS OF ALL AGES
THE 3 STOOGES -IN-
,., the entire show was structured
.. around the "star quality," in
this case that of Joel Gre.y and
Muir Matheson . The ex-
ceptional little theater pro-
duction during the summer of
1967 at the Laguna Playhouse
,. ·offered a remarkable balance
... betweeri stars and chorus, and
, '. betwee'.1 artistic and teehnical
achievement.
At Irvine, the fantasy nature
of the Newley-Bricusse satire
has been downplayed (the
"book" a:.1d Sir's field glasses
are normal size) to ac·
commodate the more down to
earth virtues of mu sic and
dance. It is entertainment
rather than satin~. and a not
altogether unwise c h o I c e ,
since the authors' material
hardly approaches th e i r
earlier collaboration, "Stop I
But the evening belongs to
ithe urchins, all 18 of them, as
they perform their Intricate
and eye<atching maneuvers.
The original nine-girl chorus
could pose problems of move-
ment in the confines of the
UCI playing area, but Penrod
threads twice that nuthber,
coeducationally, through their
paces and the results are im·
mensely pleasing .
The most
tmclysmic
1HE UON IN WINTER ... I "AROUND THE P_Offr~BACK . WORLD IN A DAZE"
"Greasepaint" Is an eyeful
-the choreography alone is
worth the admission' price. It
continues through Saturday
and \Vednesday through Satur-
day of next week at Irvine's
Studio Theater, on campus.
mnt in Man's
histOIJI
· At Jrvine, the balance has
been spread a little thinner.
Here the emphasis is on
ensemble effect -the chorus
of urchins has been doubled,
with no less than 18 prancing
about lhe small Studio 'Theater , .. the World -I Want to Get r:::::<,..-------
·.stage. But, thanks to some
--magnificent choreography by
Off." •
As far as the "game" goes, ..... 11111) ....
James Penrod, there is •.10 the final score pretty much •• I
..
,...._., ... -. eon.o.MtSA,. -J• .. J•oa -------·---· ?ND HOLDOYIR WllK
2nd TOP FEATURE
NATIONAL CfNIRAl PICTURI~ ~ "",
A MARK ROll~ON P~ODUCTION
'D~D'DY's Go"l\IE
~-HUl\l1il\f"G
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING
·o..e of the best picbrn of 19691 'lEiu 1
ncwrfarsct tlisoner~-...--'
•
medium cool ·
~-a:iertfcll!ler/vemablocm/pe12rbtm .'
ll'di.m!hil /Moldblrlerdipoo ... -.. _1
: Coming Nov. 15
,. --
Family ~ekly
. ne Path of Sco1lmg
Leads lo · Oater Space
'·
five cwt of six: of our astronauts were Boy
Scouls. The story is rnoinly about Neil Arm-
stron;. Emphasis is on the close relationship
between 1C01Jling and space expbvtion.
e THE BOOK -Five clergymen from as many
different faiths agree on one thing: the Bible is
as \!alid today as it was centuries ago as a
source of help and guidance for those who seek
it.
e SEX EDUCATIO~ -lt should begin at home
and the facts should be carefully selected and
even more carefully presented, says Eugene
Scheimann, MD.
e TURKEY TIME -Family Weekly Cookbook
features recipes for Thanksgiving and all its
trimmings.
ALL COMING SATURDAY IN THE
-[DAiLY PILOT I
CBARLTIIN JESSICA l111b11ro Henhey
BESTON. WAll'ER 2nd OUTSTANDING HIT
All'rlon Lock1b•r is the onlr
f11ll·time boeting editor workin9
1111 env 11ew1pap1r 111 Oren9•
Co11nty, Hi1 e:rel111ive coverego
of boeting end yeehfing new1
·, it • deilr f11tur• of the DAILY
I PILOT.
HAIOOI SOUTH COAST F--6!••~ ox PLAZA TH-TR&:
CORPOltATION San Diqo fl'MWly it 8iistol • 546-271 l
HELD OYER IOX OFFICI O .. NS ''" SHOW STARTS ·7 P.M.
'
A IOadl O'Blarney and a heap O'Maglc
WALT DISNEY'S
Da.rb!JdGt •
.....
li'i• RINfl.A.DINC WRa' LAUGH AFFAlll
llllllEY -... ...... ,,...,
Hi Kids! Roy Gordoll "' -Do11't fo,.et Speclol
llNlw -S"t11rllor No•. IS -12:JO p.111.
ALL STAR ENT!ltTAlf~llt'5 I "MONTEREY POP" 11~==~====~1
Who Listens
To Landers?
i'~ TRIUMPH! ONE OF i THE MOST Af>PEAUNG
' PEllFORMANCES OF TifE ! IEAS01r•• -v1,,c.,,t c11t,,,_
' • Hew Y!Ht' ,.,.._ ,, .
. ;"SHOULD ~,"#AN ACAD= i'.,~l~,NRU
-Tlt-117"-•
" ,...,,, LJI. "'•..o..
OFFIUT AQ ElllEAlllll! UU.
-lllllllflu fl ll•Pl y WO
IT'S THE ll•D OF l'EIFO HDEIFUU
THAT llUJs HEAIJs lllAlfcE IJIC.tRS•" AllDIWI ..
• -Ru R .. d, Hoi/dq Min~
Dk k Yo11 Drlo.• Joell lem111011 & Walter M11ttft••
211d lit HUNTINCiTON I 211d ., HAltlOR
"SOME KIND OF NUT" "THE ODD COUPLE"
WEST COAST PREMIERE RUN
NOW AT BOTH THEATRES
* * BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS * *
tjUNTINGTON BEACH* B47-9608
TONIGHT ONl. Y!
~-J-·"
" * IN COLOR *
11--0NE T'::e-BIG-ONE-S!~--1
~ WILL SHOW AT
7:00 and 10:45
& 5 CARTOONS
YOUR FUN MASTER ROY GORDON
WILL BE AT THIS THEATRE
WITH A BARREL OF FUN AND
A BARREL OF PRIZES
On SATURDAY, NOV. 15 at 12:00
BOX OFFICE OPENS 12 NOON
SHOWTIME -12 :30
WALT DISNEY'S
"DARBY O'GILL AND THE
LITTLE PEOPLE"
&
"PARENT TRAP"
will start Saturday at 3 P.M.
-i~l 1iii¥1hm
THI llST OF WISTIRNS
Gr91Jory Peck -O"'., Slterlf
"MACKENNA'S GOLD" (Ml
''" ' GHNJ• K•necly -J1111M1 Whlt-.N
"GUNS OF THE
MAGNIFICENT SEVEN"
Japan••• Movies Every Tuesday Night
Chorlto• Hett•• -J•lc• W .. tw
•
"NUMBER ONE" (M)
• pin
• Robert Mltch•111 -A11tl• Dlclll-..... ,, .... ., ... .,;, ,,YOUNG Bli.LY YOUNG" (G)
·············--•11 ... ············
l.1clmw. °'°fl9I' Cewllty Drlffol•-
E1t9a,.mnt
Li1e Mlnnelli Wendell Burton
"THE STERILE CUCKOO" (M)
Shawn ot 1:45 p.11'1. -"•
J.,k Lemmon Welt1t Me ttti11.t
"THE ODD COUPLE"
RKoMlll9flded far Ad1lts
S... C•1tHJY-J9Mt M•-
" "DARBY O'Gl~L· AND
THE LITTLE PEOPLE" (G) ....
..... hr4
"SMITH " (G)
• •
--H--•lo--"LAST SUMMER" !Rl-> "" ' Aid COf4 -lrln llln4
"STILETTO" !RI ...........•. ~, ........ .....
CAIUltOI.\. IAll:IJI
.,,PARANOIA" ()() -$rs ..... ::. ...... eAYt.• NWIMIC:llTT
m "EYE OF THI
CAILOAD CAT" (M)
htillv1lt "' tftl llMtl' II Wfll M tfll!lltttd.
•
"' .. " . ' .,
. .
8un -up cmr .Pinter City, bringing onotller hot doy to c.ntomla'• l!llfllrlll Volley.
WorJUnon _,. b!I~ on lotlllNd to kHpporsplroUon out of em-
A cool di)' In Ill• lm(llrlal Valloy, only II cllgr111.
All -Iii.,. v"""'"'" N1rtgol'lloc!
J
I n California's Imperial Valley, where temper·
atures go .over 100 degreea in every month
.from May to October, the crops and csttle flour-
ish while residents work on ways to beat the heat.
The valley's eternal sunshine and abun~nt
water combipe to mllke it one of the most impor-
tant crop pr¥ucing area! of the country. .
But the everla!ting heatwave does pose prob-
lems for thosl. hardy re,eidents who harvest the
crops and tend to the valley's busineail.
Highest official ·temperature recorded was a
119 degrees but oldtimers are quick to ·declare
that lh• weather bureau reading! are taken
under conditio'na which do not reflect the· true
hea~ ,
Temperatures as high as 128 degrees have
been reported and thermometers have space for
readings as high as lSQ. degrees.
Faced with up to 67 days a year when the
temperature goes·over 110 degrees and up to 121
days of over 100 degrees, valley residents have
learned to adap~ ,
The pace of ·work slowa. Laborers drink as
much aa. three nlll>ns of water per day and take
salt-tablets to otl'..lt loss from evaporation.
Sidewalks In valley towns are covered.by ar-
csdel to shield Bhoppeto from the sun.
With the development of air conditioning,
year-round living ha! become bearable for resi-
dents of this natural heat trap.
El Centro, the largest community in the area,
csl!A itself the "most completely air conditioned
town in the nation."
Even the word "air conditioned" isn't potent
enough for use in the heat of the Imperial Valley.
Instead, theycsll it "lefrigeration."
A poroool la• hondy war to be•Hho hNt.
U NIW/.,_ PICTUlU! SHOW &, n... MclotOI~ w 8oi !wMll.
• •
..
-
• •
Ill
!!!!!
Go -
• • • • •
•
pt
"' "' ed
fu ,,
IA
" nl c. .,
E
'
N
Oc ., ..
" "' c<
"' ,,
•
•
ii
t.
' I • r
'
..
B
I
' I
I
L
' ,
l
L
I
f
r-• • -~-~---~----------·---~~~-----------~----.------~-
HOUSll POR SALi
1100 6-r1I 11111-11 . '
RANCHO L~ ,CUESTA
More People
Ge Home
''Than anJWhere," Why not
,et ot1e to'~r Uk1JW ! This
nncho ollen a "Mei>+
llv!nr." Every comlort hu
been emboctied in this home.
1 1101)', ' bed.room, p'I u I
.family room ml formal dln-ina room. , Luae fenced
rMr yard with tire.ring 8..Dd
covered ~do. Quiet c:ul«-
FORl!ST E.
0 L'S 0 N
Not CjlUlfe 121,IOO. S BR 11\ ba1"'. J:x.
Tha-"•-l...r eel. tenn1. Avail. lmmed.
,._ ftDCJ Rib'. 64f'130 E ve .. ~
But owner want& fto "talk
NEW HOME
IMMEDIATE MOYE IN
4 IDRMS 11/z IA THS
If• MILE FROM IEACH Ayres Since 190S Ihc:. Realtors
turkey". MQ& veid. 3 bed-c .. ta Men 1100 room and famDy roQm.J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Oooe "' &bopp!nr IUld lrW· $174 Mo ..;... 5" ., portatioh.. BuUt·ln el~trlc .. .-, 7 4 10
GRAND OPENING UNIT V EAST SIDE
PRIME AREA
$I 7,500 BARGAIN
kitchen. The mott home for Can 't last Jone on a tree Un-
tbe money tn this choice ed cul~ in Me1& Ver-
area '25,500 and lets talk de. 3 ovtirshed b d r m a: ternJ!;. large famll>' room &: kitch-
$2(),990
HUNTINGTON Bl!ACH
CoU Now 962·1353 Sahmlay Nov. 1S & ~•lilly Nov:· 16
10 AM to DGn
aae atreei. ~bl.ic home A rs! OuiJ~u ba:rz'ain!
aru.. $39,fiOO. ' · You,coWdn't.bey the lot tor
thll price! A real doll hou1e.
Immaculate throuchout. Wall
1D wall carpetl.na". Freshly
painted. Beautiful panellna.
Hup 20 ft. livins room.
Shake roof found Oft!¥ in
rnoi.-e f!Xptnlive home., Su~
mlt down payment. Cal!
n::IW! 660303
en, built-in BBQ on patio,
ae~te pll,)' ytu'd, near
new drapl!:1 &: shar catiiets.
Only 127.5QO. caJI 5'0-1151
Herltqe Real Estate (open
e\.·e1).
------------
' .
INmAL OPENING DAYS SHO'(VN 4T UNIT IV PRICES
E11tbluff
SEU.. or Tra.<k, 2 bdr. plus OWNE&.SlnJ:le story condo.
den, 2. ba. Orpt., fireplace. 3 BR, 2 _BA, end unit. ?ifany
Fenced, rar. \Vant unit or txtraa. $42. nul?t. Must
$168/Mo Pays -~
MODELS AT ATLANTA & IRQOKHURST
968°2929 968-1338 TAKE OYER FHA
$21,stlO. Ca11 9f38..6568. move, price reduced $2000.
2 8 to $12.~. 6"-2487 DR. 1 ba. double 1ar. ;,;,;;,;,:""'="===
Large Comer. 245 SAnla
Isabel. 646-4091 -Cht:ner. Coron• del Mir 1250
3 Bdrm• 2 ba, hudwood
nn. Tab over 11lA Jou
with low, low down. PUOO
Tho R11I E•t1t11 M<lrt
Ml-6\l
Refreshments Sunday N-'tll Doitc Colesworthy & , Co. Low.Low INTEREST Coleswortby & Co
Ten11lc low lnte,.•t loan. 3 · ' · ' Moi1 Vii-do 1110 HOME
&
FREE: ... ·.
large bedrooms. 2 be.tbs. De-"J.&tnt" "For A 'Yl&e Bu,•• · RENTAL SERVICE -------------------··~nt" ''For A Wbe Buy'' luxe kitehen with bullt-lna. 63-Tm 4 BR, 2 BA, tm nn, exee ~Hful pandirw, bonkc••· -===-f,'==,..-home. Bltna, iood cond. Pvt
General
Lot Owners •••
A 3-Becb'oom
Home
FOR ONLY
$10,995
BUILT ON
YOUR LAND"
FEATURING: e 108c. sq, ft.
• Double garage e All lath and pluter
• Pullman bath
• Spacious wa1'drobn:
CALL S37.ol80
•In most Orange County and
other approved areu.
STANCO
Builders Inc.
OPEN 7 Dan
10666 Westmln!Jl:er Ave.
Garden Grove
Balanced Power Homem
"Whistle Cleon"
Westcliff
Pride ot o"''Ilershlp is evident
from the gleamlf1i: :!loon:
and spa.rkfu\g freshly paint-
ed interior. One of the moat
functional noor plans with
spacious rooms demlgned for
family enjoyment. Q u i e I
street wlth large lot a n d
nlcdy landscaptd &rounda.
CallnoW fOl' exceUent price
and terms.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & lee
20U Westelifl Dr.
.... 77ll
CUTE 3 BEDROOM
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Only $25,500 & tl1e low inter-
est FHA loan remalnm, Fire-
place, beautiful tl'e1! lined
mtreet of Aliso. o ..... ner will
consider small down. No in.
come or credit quaJlflcaUons
• just $25 to tranller the
loan.
546-9521 or 540-6631 1• J K Nl<ltO\S
Panoramic: View!
OCEAN &. CAT AUNA
$37,950
Delirhttul 4 Bedroom a n d
formal dining room, taste.
fully decorated. Walk to
646-7171
schools and &hopplna".
·o THE REAL,
""\. ESTATERS
Brand New Listing
Lovely :r.Iesa Verde Cam-
-647-TTTI
1011111-CO ... LLE""'G""'E .. PA .... RK ...
EXl'ERIENCID
* * * * ~Eatate~
$22.500. Name )'OlU' temu. "3 Pet'IONlel Needed
·bdrm, 2 bath. Now vaeant • M~t pleasant bide-at the
move in tOIUQJTOW. Jamakii Inn with that Ha-
* * * * MlWl almolpbere. Better
SZ7,500. 5% 7. loan available. than u 1 u a I comml-s\ona,
Immaculate 3 bdnn, 1 ~ many prospects trom the
family room, new carpets '-1unoundlng motel apt1. Lo.
qujet 1treet. -calrd directly aCl'ON from * * • * tbl!! Newport Harbor Own·
$26,950
tboloe 3 Bdrm., 2 bath.
Adult occupied. comer Joe.
compl. sunounded by pink
block wall, with boat entr)'
and rm. also for trailer.
Near new cptg. thruout plus
rumpus rm. · rar., conver-
sion. Call now to aee.
EXCLUSIVE WITH
S32.SOO. Ne..,.'POl't Heia:hts. 4 ber of Commtrce. Member
bdrm, 2 bath + dinina:. ot the NewPort Harbor, Newport
Neeth "-Vrk ··priced for im-Costa Mna Multiple lllttna At
mediate sale. HrV~. * * * * BILL HAVEN, Realtor Vldorf1
S47,0C.O. Gorpou.a RepubUc 2111 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 646-8111
home • like new condition. C•ll: 67J..3211
4 bdnn, 3 bath ~ l...,.i •""':::ii'li~~i=:F"•l,.,;;:;:;;:;:..,"°";;rt~I-;;. :~.,;. ""'' one lillo u MESA VERDE
c.an 54.>M24
South Cout Real Eatate
* * * *
Open Daily 10.5 mo Dolphl'l, 1rv1no tm-
CUstom built 3 bdnu • 2
baths • lb15' formal d1ninl
room • 1 fire'()Jaee + · fam-ny ioom ov~ Miuli-
ful patio fDr entert&inln&'-
All this 1: more in Miil 1t1: ft.'
Best bqy. m.am:. M&.soo.
Lachenmyer
Rl· 1lt11r
1860 N"'P(ll'1:, BvSd., .CM •
Call 646-3928 Eve &U-1656
$1 ,100 FHA t>QWN
to new $20.900 loin wttb pay.
menta LESS THAN RENT!
3 Bedroom, . 2 Bath.' Thia
cozy cottare with attached.
g&l'Sie in excellent location.
Cheery buill·in KITCHEN!
Gleam ing lfARDWOOD
FLOORS! Carpeted lMn&:
room with warm BRICK
FffiEPLACE.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
t..ue-BeauHtul 3 bedroom, 2 bath
home with aparkl!rw heated
and tutered pool, bllll t-lna
1 · ,. ,.
kltchtn. =>brick 11ttp1a.,.. BALBOA DUPLEX Won't lut. Call today, $000
Pft' month includini pool 2-2 Bedroom Units in excel-
.ervice. ~nt condition. Vtt"f close to
'ORANCJE-C()µNTY 'S
, LARGEST
262' HARBOR BLVD. -: . ,., '''° OPEN ·EVES TILL 1:30
EASTBLUFF
MUS'l:_SELL
Lovely view borne, owner
forced to aeD at once. 4
Bd.,,.., form. din. rm,
brk:M. rm. Lute pa.tlo w/
sparltlin,a: pooL Just reduc.
beach &: bl.Y. Owner will
finance at favorable rate.
Low dcnm. $48,SOO
Riddle & Ro11 Realtors
3535 &. Co11t Hl9hw1y
CdM e 675-722'
DIVORCE SALE
412 MAGNOLIA
A ttomey 1ay1, &ell 3 bdrm
Eaatalde, C.M. Vaca n t.
$23,SOO .. ------PERRON
:l'f ... ·.·~ ~··
ed td S<T.IOO. * 6Q.1n1 Anytime * Mrs . ..Harvey
..__._.._ _ MESA VERDE
-$33,900 ~ell llHk• & C.. Lovely home • N"r Goll
c.u U-~' Coonte. Ovrrtl.zed bedrooms, -':"""port Center Dr. 2 batha. Family room. Cov-Newport Beach,. C•ltf. ertd patio. 540-lra> au.oroo --TARBELL 2955 H1rbor
.,..._.._=----
""'1t·ln H>F{ .,...,m, All o1 THREE; UNITS • •'81led • lrnt patio; I<• hld
rieh maple. Enormou, brick $21 950 "'"" pool w/allde & div
INCOME BRASHEAR REALTY
I'm an mra nice 2 bedr0om 16952 Be1ch Blvd., HI • brd.. Prof land6cpng, Jo
fireplace. Many other ex-TWO STORY H0?.1E. Two malnt. Xlnt ne:lrhborhd. tru. $20,000 nfA loan at 6% annual percentage rate, bedrooms + Art Studio and $43,950. 540-7573
L 0 w monlhly payments, FireplllCe, Bachelor Apt.
HOME with a 2 bedroom 147-IJ07
?tfONEY MARKET out back, I 'e"'Y"'0w=::':''-,i-7.,'i;.".:-"2-:,,._,-ner. '-"ll"., ,
Both units are owner oceu-crpta d..... be•--' 11
Only $28.950. Better h""""'' and separate sleep!na-room. College P•rk -·.1 Located in EASTSIDE
1115 Pied &nd flawle11 . Situated " 0
"'
0
'' '_..._.,. t:e • inp. Landacaped, fe:~
on a quiet ttte lined Corona Boat 1ate. "Near -~.
de! Mar ltreet. Once you've Priced below FHA. 10 me.:
seen the rest -Come aee old. 95ll Landfall" Drlw., Dial 645-0303. COSTA MESA ""' •ho!> NEWPORT MODEL
645-0303
at Harb:>r Center
2299 Harbor Blvd., C.?if.
Vacant 3 & Fam. Rm
In by Chrilltmu. Thlli fine
hfesa Verde home is today's
beat buy. 1"-bath, 1tall
shower, all elec bit-Ins +
dishwasher, spacious llv rm,
frplc, new w/w cpt1, cov
patio. Only $27,950 • assume
5'-i. 1o loan.
I' \ I i • \\ 111 I I
~!\l;\\ll\\
k I \ I I I < •
1003 Baker, C.M. ........ === Investment Income
T UNITS, Jure lot ll2x3C6':
room lo build fl more. $90,00Q
Owner will carry 1st TD.
Well1-McC1rdle,-Rltra.
1310 Newport Blvd., C:M .
543-7'129 644-0634 eve•.
BA YFRONT APT.
Vista Del lJdo. Pier a-slip
ping. Scheduled 1ross in-27 Ft. Jiv, rm., 3 Br. Lee.
come or $3,000 ~ year. lot. boat 1torqe. Xlnt area!
Only S250o Initial Invest· $27,200
the beat H.B. :
ment . AMUm e extstlna 6% CORBIN-MARTIN
673-1550 POTENTIAL UNUMrlED
private financln1 and own-REALTORS
er wW c.an·y 2nd T.D. 675-1662 557.9595 Eves.
3036 E. Coe.it Hwy .. CdM
O THf: REAL
'"'\.. ESTATF:RS
IRVINE TERRACE
IM $5,000 Down, owner w/carry ;&,•l,~:::B:::LK.S:..::::..to~oce=an:=,:...,.-w......:l.:B::R loan on "lovely 'hom'e, 2 Br.
ovenb:e DUP~ \\'/all 2 tia, & I~ family • din.
the xtru. Beat I've seen, rm.,· w/aJJ luxury feature!.
$9000 will 'handle. Good $47,500 • Qu~k Occupancy. HOM! PLUS INCOME ..,jiEii..-iiiiiOi'ioiiCallii.6iiT.!1~llii6&1 return. • Remodeled channer on front
URGENTLY need 2 to 4 ot 35 ~ R·2 lot w/newtr
units thal ..,..ill carry 2 Br. 2 ha. apt. over dbl.
thr:m&el\.'el on yr round re~ gar. on rea.r. Apt. lsd. for
tals. 642-2152 mm $200 mo. Lee. tree•; So. of
BAYFRONT
HOME ·
Hal'bor Island Road
Ple1· & Slip
With room for
La.r&e Yacht
2 Bedroom.1, 2 Baths
Plus prage apartment
Lovely, oomfortabie home.
$145,COO
Listed Exchalvcly \Vlth
BLUJo"FS OPEN HOUSE
Sat &: Sun, 10-3. 2ll5 VIit.a
Entrada. 3 Br .. Split level,
\.\'/Bay view ii: green belt.
T-pla.n, Custom decor. Im·
med Oct., 675-2221 or
M7-1&f1 .
Hwy, $42,500.
Oiei;hlre R"J Ena.ti! 675-2503
LUSK RESALE
Vi1-'W. 3 Br. 2\.> Ba, den.
Crpt'd &: draped. La.ndscap..
ed. By owner $64,950 3811
Topside Ln. 644-0411 •
. lo c .L DUPLEX ,9:). or lf\.\'f, 2 Discount r A..-1 h ·~11: "" . ouses, """''000, .,.,,000 down.
·• -Income S415 mo. 615-6044
App. '.4 Acre WestcliU • Dov-CAM:Eo SHOR~S: 5 Bedrm,
er Shores Lot with Gran! De Pool b l7' ~ Deed n, , y owner ,.,..,,,. CALL NO\V • 714 • ~5-7946 675-352() alter 5 pm.
Elegant 4 br. 21,> ha. con2o'.
2 swim. pools, tennla crt,
wlk to shopa A IChoola. 5
min. to heh. Lo &aurnable
FHA loan makes it perlec:t
for family lookinc to fUIUrl,.
JnvffiOn: Dream! ~
Fonner Model H•
20x20' Fomllv Rlil
WI ll1mod C1lfJnt•
Plus 3 BR &: Xtra la ye!.
HAFFDAL REALTY' MU«I
-Priced To S.K
3 bdrm.1 2 baths Royal Home,
1500 sq ft, cpt1/drits; ~t-lfta,
boat door in lt.r'l.P. 61'.b:l20'
lot. Below market at sa.&oo.
Paul Jo"" R11lly
847-1266 Eve. 5.1&&1S8
BY OWNER
1tfumt sacrifice; vaCant 3 BJt.,
l ~ Ba.; kltch . bl.bll, Quiet
cul de Kc· toe, nr. -1eh0ola
&: 1hopptn,, PrestiK'I, .,.,
"fust see to 1ppreclale.
545-5775 Aft. 5 PM
Balboa Penln1ul1 1300 S1nta An• Hgta. 1630
•v•u..•1 .. Sell or l•a .. top. SUBORDINATION tion. Price $28.500. ,,.,. .. ..,...,.,,.....,..,..,..,, Developer's Duplex
OME Buy Extra Jge , R-2 lot, f"'-Y doora Three bedroom upper two * ACRE In Santa Ana
George Wlllf1m1on C to bee.ch. FUll price Oflly bedroom lower Inv~ rood l-Ight1. 3 bdr. .h a•.
REALTOR AND BUY $22,000! rental area N~w tully Jeu. Smaller hie plus 4 CCl"Rltl a-
673-4350 P-w1, 673-I56t This adult occupied&: better PROPERTIES WEST ed Goott irowtb pottntiaL tack bld1. 20101 C¥Jnn·St.
NEWPORT BEACH Iha" new, 3 bedroom, lam· 675-4130 '75-1642 $49,5QO. AdJocent propm;a ova!L -BURR WHITE Owne• &40-4001. Clannlng 3 BR. w I larp lly room, 2 bath, hardwood
1ncd. yr, cov. patio. J-ldwd. Door a large corner lol with PRICED Below Market Ad· REALTOR L19un1 Hills 1700
flra., frpl., bltn. kHch. Nr. cove~ patio, & a block ~ll~na~yl -:-eve ~er ~~ 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. , ,
achools, church &: 1hopc, wall fence 5J>(!clal parking: e · 11 a mm. 6~ 642-2'Z53 Eves. VIEW, 2 Br, l\.ii Ba, lp-Jlv.
Owner w/flnance, $77,000 place klr b·ailcr. Top Costa SALE BY OWNER. 2800 iq, in1 rm. Estate aale. Allwpe
W1lk•t Rlty. 675-5200 Mesa area S29 000 ft. Playroom • pool nn. Lido ltle 1251 5%% Joan. 6T.l-8914
3366 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. 54..2313 ~Ca::::ll.:.64::>-sc.:::150::_____ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:
5 Bednn + 3 Both ~~'{' bl~up~':;, ;:;~• LOWEST PRICE Li9uni llich
DI • R + Both 3 er.' ea, ""1 ~ bll· Home on Udo. 2 8', 1 ba. BEAUTIFUL
ftfftCJ m Ins. Won 't last Iona:. l7141 Street-to-street lot. BEACH HOMI
1705
Walk·er & lee
2790 Hamor Blvd. at Aduna
54.5-9-191 Open '_tU 9 PM
DOYER SHORES
$26, 950 ----673-7861, 67 .... 159 $'2,5QO In lovely Laauna condo. com. l~Do•lr1blo Bir F~•ta JX><i "'°' Rk h IEATS RENTING OCEAN VIEW DUPLEX LIDO REALTY INC. mu"llY: tronttnr on mqnU· 3377 Via Lido 673-1300 I h ~ -• 100 ·•-A CREST wood panettni, handaome Well conditioned 3 bdrm 2 4 BR. + 2 Br. unit. Walk to '!!'~~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!= cent eat.,,,. --.. ..... ,...
B!r enoughto bousethemost Beautiful 3 bedroom home fireplace. Breakfut · bar. ha ho 0 1 $22500 11hops. $39.500. Agent BAYFRONT . PRIME ~m )_riv. be!::.~ .. ~
Big 5¥4,-. GI LHn
tu take over. No increase in
interest! Neat 4 BR on COl"-
ner w/fully equipped ~
fuony Pool. Extra bom1I •
;u.st about 4 blcka to Pacltic
Ocean! Al.king $34.950 but
what'a "your" price? 'Nutt
u.ld'
&546-lllO ---J£f~U
active family. 4 bdnn1, 3 with den; Jarre llvl.ni room, Much more. ~0,.1720 th me . n. 1 ' · 642-3850 or 833-1071 e...: ....... mp. a\u-.;.,,.... ~ .. u• . .._..._ •-•-I I ~ni 3 ~,~ ~ TARBELL 295S H ...a._ Chvner Jeavina area. Nice North ~ blk, • 40' on bay. include w/w carpt'J, -, ........ "" ..,w Y •epua e u• "I artt; ..... '"'· ... ..,..ar •rvur bright kitchen W/w car-"BLUFFS" 2 Bdrm, SO' deck 3,000 + Sq. ft. 3 big: bdrms. kgs:i: master bed· • .,;;:;;;, famfly room openll'll" on to clorselJ I: room for a pooL -' _ ... 1 / prime '!:I... VI e w Broken Wanted pets &: drapes, lmm=.iate w uov • Pier&: allp for 50' boat. Gar. decor. 1 BRI, 2 BAI. RP· coveted patio &: beautifully $87.500.· Call for app't. pouesskln Owner will sell $39,500. Call 6 4 4-2 2 5 9 den t'f\try. S197,500 lv., dln. "'11; laun. with w/d,
landscaped yard, S67.~ 1•ohn macnab Why not work llo_n .. ,you;__own? no down ·vA or mlnimwn eve1/wknds. R. C. GREER Realty stor., 2-ear pr. JoWer It¥· BlrreH Reattr ~ .(7141 642-1235 Sp•e< " ava ~" ~•l&C! down FHA. HUl'l'Y! NICE 3 Br, 2 Ba home. Pool. 3353 Via Lido 673-9300 el. s.. .. appredate. ShoWn
9111 Dov Dri Suite ,.,...DAVDlaDvklSON'°"· Rulty -Owner must &ell. 1518 Sylvia --by owner, call for Qp't.
1605 l_VestclUl Dr .• NB N!,_ ~ach 120 Ln. 54tr3261 or 642--2601 Huntington S..ch 1400 499-2152, a.m. or~.
""1"... ...,,7!:! Harbor!."!!,·.· .f: ... M,~. FORECLOSURE, 3 Br. 2% -64!-S200 \;. 1-~~~:i!'!'~"' ~-L~ --SPLIT LEVEL EXCLUSIVE ·ARIA MESA VERDE Ba Tnh.~. Frpl, pool $27,:!00 4 bdr '" '-r·--t 3 BR 2 both home, '°"'" LI J c 646--07!2 ' n ~. -·' •• ,.;
$33 900 lot 130x180 -add !5 more 11'.93 Bake'!", C.M. 546-MtO a son o. f lIJ Bedrooms, 3 BaUu + fireplaces, lrg: ldtchm. Un-
' -15xl9 lam rm. Hwd tloora excelled Ocean View. PrtY.
Lovely home • Near Go!( Uf\lts. Drive by 1545 Santa 3 HR. 2 BA, famJly room, Dover Shores 1227 thru-out, shake ~ + elec. Bch., playrroun<f. ttnnll crt.
Coww. Oversized bedroom.I, Ana Ave. then call trtc kitchen. Auume 5%. % Only $63,000. CaU Thof; I.
brlda:e home, 1S x 36 Blue !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'"!!l!!!!..,P
llav~ Pool, dreufna: nn,
2 ""'"" Furdly room. Cov· "'anta ..,taffy P"'t decor. 11\ ,.. old-xlnt *Itreplaceablo View* FHA loan. L;ngo Reol Estate, -.urr. ered petio_ M0-172tt :u • cond. $32,500. 2l3S2 neet B•y I MountaJntl
_T.;;A;R;;:B;,;E;,::L;,::L;,,29:;;5S=H=1=rbo;;,_rk===,.:"""°:;,::;" ==='-°==Lane=·=HB=. _;;Owo=:":=.......,.:i:::i=. R...., "Old World" O>otem· f)_ -•. r..... HANDYMAN'S · etc. 3 Real good sized ~
rms, fam I: din rms: Appt.
ooly.
.:;.,..__ porary plctvresque home w/ l'm.t t.IUIU. Sp@Cial! 4 Income 1intta 1lO
Gener1I 1000General 10000.neral 1000 unobatrucW<l view • most )'dm. to beach. Patlot, dec"u
HC-5110
... cinlrnl ttieml
OLLEGE REALTY __ .. _ 1 · 1· ,.
BAYFRONT $46,750
Luxury 2 Bil, 2 BA, 7nd 1loor
apt. with full vM!w ol bay.
-..;;;;;;;;;..:~==================:.::---""'1 rooms. 4 Br's,, 41,> Ba + ~ m ~ w/ooean view, Nd1; paint, maid• qtra. ~deal for enter-e at etc. Should g:rou $$,0»,)'?, C. l'l'll 'O ..i\-,,. .( _ f) 'C ~Q. • lalnln•· Ea,,.,,,.;,l Imm«! p,._ $69.900. Comlder -· •j:'.-\ \:o:, I '.
i 46 -5990
Boat slip Tnl!'l'Ved tor bu>'ft', I -=======
Rlcldlo & Ro11 R .. tton Nim FOR THE DOVER SHORES
Brand n e w Ivan Well1' 4
bdrm 3 bath + powdu
room. Formal dining room•
lam. rm/we t bar It. frplc.
Luxuriously carpeted. Su-
ptrb vl.ew. Pool in Jandop-
ed court yard. Roy J . Ward
1430 Galaxy Dr. &46-1.560.
J: E. c9ut H~';;ls THRIFTY
$23,950
Beautiful 4 bdnn lmnlb
room home. Good Meta
V m1e area. dOle to 1ehoob
l -ping. $21.IOO
JEAN SMITH,
Realtor
'46-ms
MESA VERDE II
LoWest pr!~ home in area
a lt'1 ad~. 3 bedroom1,
2 baths, Oountcy style mod-
em kitchen, Double i&f9.P· l!!!""'""!"'-oi!I"'!!!!••
Excdlent financinc avail-Room '•r EvetyoN
able, 540-1120 2 Separate housH •1111.
TARBELL 2951 H1rbor Fot'COCI air h .. t. N-Helrht1 SchOol dlltrlct. OoM-EXECUTIVE ESTATI .. w .. 1c1w ...... , ... ldHI
Loe. on Ul acre In Nt• ror lnlaws or Income. $30.000
port's most exclu.&lv11 atta. JUsr LISTED.
3 Lee. Br .. Iormal din. nn., RFV• pool. S~;OOO; €all for 1pp't. -
to VitW.
CORBIN.MARTIN -
Jl!!ALTOR 1'1'5-1662 2025 \V. B&ll>ol, N8 6'7MOOO
X136 E. Coast Hwy., Cdr.t 2"9 E. Cotist, CdM 615-«lllO
F.utalde cul de NC home
w1th larre yard 1il1ed with ...
fruit trfts, C'.ozy and ntat
with covered pt.tio. sn.aso.
Try JO!!. down.
-7171
0 T Hf. Rl:l\L .. , LSTATJ:JI:-;
NEAT,liACHY
Jdril7weekender -as ntW
1 BR., block to water, ah:>pe.
ffPnit eta. Mnlmum ~
lrilep, mlnlmilm down.
........ ,.JOO
H1I ~lnd!ln lo A11oc.
3800 !:. Coat Hwy. 675-"392
SPARKLING IRIOHT
Mesa Vfl'de Home. 4 BR, 2 ea. rama,...11m., with 1ot1
of e:ctru. On 1up CUl-<le-
Soc lot $281500
Gr1h1m Riiy. ~2414
N~ar Newport Poat OUice
P\!:o11 1-'CIU ~... 'b pq• v oreup. $178,<KXJ, A I I um e • MISSION REALTY aom
6'~o/o loo.n. 548-7249 171»7 l\fqnolla, FV O)A.!J'AL VlEW'f SolM a Simpte Scrambled WOrcl Puulc for 4 Chuckle
I' I I
IVADIO I I II I Ono Au•Jrcllan llu1hmoo 10
• . . onother: "'I'd llke to 99f a new
.-------~boometong. bur I can't get rid
I
DOYLll loftt.o--.· 11"11 l-Tr,j--nol'-.-1 -.--.---l • C...olm 0.. chod<I• -d
1 ...... fllllflg In '"" •i.lfto ""di . ..., dweloo ,,.,, IMp No. 3 below.
·-----............... SCRAM·LETS ANSWl!R IN CLASSIPICATION 1000
BY ow"'r b 8', 4 Ba. pool. 545•0451 ferr!No loan Ulllmptlool
open patios, ~ frpl, J.a:e view --------Interest rate doesn't in-lot, crpte, drpa. Over $19' PER MONTH creue; nop:>lnta.3B4rma.,
Sl00,000 675-1200. ntA $21,1'50 Jotn, 4 bdrms 2 family rm., 2 be.lhl. 5,yean
baths, carpeta, dNpe1, 1ep. oh.I. Reduced to tu,!loo
University P•tk 1237 tnte private' muter suite PLACE REAIJl'Y Ol-t7N J.;.;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J wlth am.pie closeta. Bull.t-ln •LEASE/OPl'fON•
A MOST SPACIOUS
Dwelling, R.etJ family life
ii no happy acdOent, It 11
planned for and bu.lit forr
Every cor.Qderation wu
&"lven when ~ th1a 4
br and fa.m rm homt, vool
sized Jor: ~dy for Jud.
11Caplng, Jt'1 ltiD new! fp
$43.'lSO.
·•red hill
Rl!:ALT"l
Univ. Pa.iic CeriteT, lrvlne
Call An;yt bne &33-0820
PQN'T JU!f W1811 _ ...
aomethhli to f\lmlth )Ull'
home ••• rind sreat buya Jn
today's Cb11~lfled Ad•.
kitchen center, larp roo1n1, XJ.nt tmns fer thll 5 yr. tad 3
double ~. ftnced, land-Br. 2 ha. homt w/oc.wn
-· view. CIJl ... -• , • p PLACE REALTY 4M-ll0t "\6alf~-L1gun1 Nl9uot 1111
~tOVE In Ibis weekend? Why BUILOJ;RS OWN HOMS not! We have the home• to 1 ~ar old, 3500 aq. tt.. I
sell. ! borne• Jtstm. ~ are story Spanilh. Tile roor, 3
Ylc&r!t A: lm m•dlately car prqe, 4 BR'1, 4 BA'a,
available. If )'OU hav. a 2 frplcs, family room, mi,.
re.ity bir problem •-e have activi!J' room , wet bit.
the eolutkln. Jta i. Hodps Localed on a lar1e
Rltn. 847-252S cul...t!e-uc lot. J:xcellept
LOW INTEREST LOAN! ;!7.· 11u~~.d~:
aiurt. Dot" run. 8hoUld •U
Lovtty S bdnn PR.ESTIGE tor SI0,000-. acritlct for
HOME. Owner wW carey. ll&,IOO (n4) ~ .
1aIJt' 2nd for 10 ~· RENT -SEU.. +4 BR, 2\•
HAFFDAL ll EALTY BA 1m mo. nltt •It..,,
842-4405 i:are rum. &U-'roOI.
•
... -
• . .
,..,.,.7, Novt-13, 1'69
RaNTALS R•NTALI UNTALI
• ~LYPllOT ' . Is FOR SALi lllNTALS """'u,,,_ UAL UTATI °"-DAILY PILOT
'· I •
' .. •'
·' .
Hou'" Unfvrnlsshod H•-U""'"""'"" Aph. l'urill ...... -'-----~--~
.
Ml"'°" Vlaja 170I
General -Hunt!"""" leach 3400 Nlwpart ·-42001;0..~.,.,~'";';;;;;;;;;;;•~11~-0:1;"~,.~·~,...71;•~·~·"'~-;;,nc;,ao~:Mhc. llant1h B1ss10N VIEJO =="------'--M ;3)0. 4 Bt, 2 Bt. Jo)'plc, pr. 4 s.droom•. blt·inl. Newport 8"ch J BR... 2 ba., frDI., blW... GARAGE for nrnt $1J per ~lovtna:. muat i;ell Children 0.K. Blue Beacon 1" be., crpta .t GRAMMJ!ND oa" .• ~TNEING _VENDOME Pl.do. X'.lnt. )ocaUon. t block mo. ms Elden. CM. Soc , .. ,.., "-"In ............. Amlltuc•
"" CLAISIPllD INDIX
Save $$S$$ by ov.·ner 66-0lU dl'll •• cau 5364M2. "' . • from beach. {Tl() t'i'S..'lllD. M;sr, Apt. 6. 548-2921. D D .• ..,IUWI •Al• •
El "°"do < Br hom• • like 117s, I Br, JI\ ex. Stov<, 1111 OCCUPANCY llllMMJJL4TE APTSJ -IAL ,_.....__...., - _
a model. Uved In ' mot. crpta, drpa. A\l&il Wl.5. 2 BR, 2 Bath on beach. ~ LUxur)' prden .,artme:ntl ADULT a FAMILY lno1me Pr!ptrty 6000 Ut.t.ILEllt PA.It.CJ ' .,
\VUJ ~. On fe~. up. Blue BNcon 6G-Oll1 'tU June, uUI incbxled. ou.rtnc complete privacy, SECTIONS AVAIL.tBLE a.ck lly 5240 4 HOUSES $33 958 HOUSES FOil SAL! wsu11J1 ••MfAL ........... .... -·~ ··-t -. '· ...... RENT·L RE ·DIER 499-1926. bff.utl.IUI landscao\lla ~ ~ c1 ... le~ ,.~ VI-" 2 en ·-ii..... ... ' ..... aM. ....................... Oll'llllC• ••11T.t.L ........... ,. .., ... cu~..-"' "' T• c.n ~ cp'°' ,,......,. COSfA Ml... • ....... ,.,,.,.,llM HltOUfTllttAL PlltOlll'llltTY ... , .... n. tand~lne. hreplact, 50392.C 3 8dnn 2 bath home, dole. to pualle*t reoadanlJ·!acU· .. Sptdom s .. J Ba 1>1·--.. n.......i ., .... u. MaA OIL .......... _ ••••.. ,, .. C.OMMllCIAL .......... ..
h',.e patio,• p~miwn lot. bt'ach. Inttrlor complete~ ities in a country club&\. * J 8cdniolJUI ...... -.......... .;,.:=..--Riffii~~MI I mo. • 11•000 Ml» Riff _J .............. tlN tltDU:ITlll~ alNTAL ........ .... .. 9,............, _.., ... C~IM PA•a .............. 11u 1.0TI ........................ •1• ~ 10 &ell with 11mall C"tl -1100 redec:oi.ttd. FamU,y with 3 JnolP~. Now kuinc in * SWi?Q Pool, PuVP"fl equity • 'llt'lnt to trade up • ...,..,. llACM ............ tffl U.NCHll ........ -... -•• -•. fist
-"
"'"'"'tnl. Owner wW children. $235/mo. RJtr. Newport Beach. * Frpt. JndJv"...a-. f.ac'll for unit• ho-ot e"" SU~ fllWPOeT Nlleil11 .......... 1r11 c1T11tUI ••ov11 ............. fin r-.#'"' i uow·.J lilt ltvff 5242 , '·'"" '"· IALSOI. COVIi ............. ltll t.CaaAOI , ................ 629 t'On&ider any o[fer • catTY BEAUTIFUL 2 bdr. duplx, M&-4141 Fum1ahed or unlurnillhed 1MS Anllhelrn Aw. nUt. lt{ay add cash. Smiley N...,..f ..,. ............ 1ne U.K• ll.llMOll• .............. att
TD I ho or N I d Crph d "ode'--· 10 ·-... Pn• cosr·· .. ,.,.eo. • .... _..... • NEW DELUXE. Rib'.·~--... ,.~,. IAVtllt•ST .................... 1m lltESGlltT PlllGl"••rr ,, ........ '1tl :3nd • caiie ·pun: se, w Y ecor. .... rps. JMMAC. 1 Br townhouse, 40' 16 "'r--.. n ·~ .u._ --.... 1.t.nMO••• ................... 1m 0111,.,. •• co. P•OPllTY ····°'"'
renl. Call nt: 830-6S32. blt • int, channln& serried qukt adult community Rent• from ll55 to $310. ,. er. 2"' b& apl w ltue LOW DOWN PAYMENT oov•• JMOan ............... 1: ouT OP lfATlf\PIOP ......... jHI
Dan• Point 1730
'17,950! Small, clean 3 Br. 1
ba, no gar. J\'I' Jiarbor. S3900
dn. J.4032 Copper Lantern.
&IM90.>
Pr! yd •· l OAKWOOD uoo BAY-~NT ·-1_, •-·. --·tt. -·•te, .din ••STCL••• . .. ........... 'AOUMTAIH a Dtt••T ........ n11 p&tio. v. ... 1tar. w/pool $140 or \\ill furn. .-n.v ~ • ., -_... ·--.... NEWPORT DUPLEX. Blir ..... ott Mt...U.NDI ........ 1• SUllllYltlOfll U.MD ....•. ,jilt
child only, no pets please. Call &fter 5, 962-2919 Z Bdrnu. 2 & Unf .U bla: nn. Ir dbl. to fi.U..''''""' u1nv•11tfTY PA•K ........... 1UI' .te&L l!STATI s1av1c1 •.... '1U
65 lat GARDEN ~ ·· · prap, au · ••""6 111v•• ...................... 1m t:a. axcHANOI ............. fn1 Avail Dec lit. $1 a mo. 4 BR. 2 ba.. N ly red rooms, ... l"'c, lust redecorat· door opener avall. Pool 4 cosrA ~feu. home&: 9 unitl IACX a.t.Y ..................... IW t ••• WANf'IO . .. ....... f)ft
A: Jut mo. plus cln& depos. landacped . ewSeek :C; APARTMENTS ed. Sweeptns Yiew of Bay, rec. &reL Nr. Catbollc plus room to bid $125.IXXI =1;uT"lauca··:::::::::::;~:f BUSINESS and
64&-7535 recla!" L .-17~ 1 ..... --one of LIDO'S most attnc-Olurch. Adultl, no pell. ..,.,.,. dn Ow ~ ... .,....... • COi.OMA DIL w.• ........... 1DI FINANCIAL p N I! OCCUp&n -...., v-n .,""""t tJve .... n ..... _ Leue at ·~. • ONLY c<lJ~ • W )O • ner _.......,, •ALIOA ... IOMIVt.A ......... ,. IUEIMISI OPPOITUMlfllJ .. 6* CONOOMINIU~t. 3 BR. 2 968-62tS n•: GU-a170 ~.... --au.co" ••Y ................. 1• iusiw•s• wAMT10 .......... .... BA, 2 CU' a:ar, swimming ===~~~~---* * ll6S Am1&oa Wt;y, N.B. 3 I: 2 BR. houses Oil a lo! IU.Y Ill.ANDS ................. lill INVeSTMIJrtt OHMtul!lllM .. •111
facil. · •'Yin FASHION Simes, 1~1.ll'Y 4 SINGLE Adults L 11 x u r y Call Afr. Ooeel·~ NEW _ 1q ft 3 BR • lam Eaat C,,eta.Mesa LIDO tu.a· ·· .................. llfl tMVflTMIMT w.t.MTID ...... •111
pool ' lft. ilies. ~....... BR, :I b•. w/all desired prden apts with country ol .... w -Fortlrt ~ ... tor 00.SOOO ~~ ... ~.D.AC:ii"'"""""~= MOMIY TO LOAN ........ -... •m
1950 mo. MG-1661 or 5071829 alt 968-4062 541).2960 rm. 3 BA. Owner'• lux apt • NUNTltlOTM Mt.RIOUli ...... u. Pll.ONIAl. LOAMJ ............ mi Condominium 6 featw't!s. club a~ a.nd com-~fullan ltealty 152 Ami"°' W•v • ...,. """". LtNOA llLI "" 1,.. Jli'WILIV LOANJ ............ jut ':::::-:::-::-:--l :C·=~---..,.-,..,---pl--prlv ~·-BAY -··~ B I P ~•• , ALLIT '''' cOLU.Tl!IAL LOANf ......... nu
UNfVERSITY PARK BACK Bay view. 3 bdrms Fountain Valley 3410 CLUB APTS Irvine &t 16th, OR Knts 11.t.L ·llACN ................. IUI MOlltTUGll. Trv.t OtHa •.•. Q4J .c 2 '"'"' acy • .:JA.IUIU HARB G ,1:~~~~~~~~~·~:1~~ .. ~-~~~·~·=,~·r~~~~l"OUNf IM y .......... •EAL l!STATI LOAMI ......... MO , br 2 b Ex-11 _ ..... Caah hotha, with 2 .. __ 1.. ...... in . """ Coron•· .. Mir 5250 IUMllT ••.t.CM ............... IUI MONIT WANTID ............. "'51 -.. a. '"" Lvuu. ,...,,.,... • ....,". Newport Beach. •••DIN oaov• ........... ,,.1411
to 01vner. 833-2379 back yard (Avail tor UBe by 4 BR SP AN I S H TO\VN. (n4> ~ BACHELOR. unf'urtl fr 0 m Black Knight Rest. LON• •••cM .................. 1 .. ANNOUNCEMENTS
RENTALS tenanO S330 per month. .JUtr HOUSE, POOL&.REC. $26$. $30 WEEK & UP $1.10. Aho avail l • J k 3 po E. 11th St., CM. .~~:~um ·::;:::::::::::: ind NOTICES
H F "sh--' 546-4141 LONG TERM DISCOUNT. 11.._ u-...... ,& ~-• (Land A Blda:.) OUT Oft tOUMTT ............. 14411 t •• 1 -ou••• urn1 -..-. ...... -.... IH'ated __...,, cblld 4'\ " .,, • OUT OP JTA1' ................ '1611 POUNO ,,... --.......... . 2 BR ... prage unturn. 2 _........ 1 Br, 2 Br, Bach. Maid sier-tu •• u ... .... STAHTOfll 1411 LOST .................... ,lloMI
r--r1I 200Q cl·"•-n ••••, no pets. •~ ·•-'!V --t CUe ~n '-..,,to :PPin&. -. By Owner nt: 642-6200 WISTMlt0Ti100::::::::::::::::1'1l PllltSOHAU · . ., ........... .... ......... UIUl'C .,....., ....,.. .... ...,, " ,.......... No peta. -• •· FUil """ MIDWAY tlTT '"' .t.MNOUNCtMl!NTI ............ 4411
cleanup It $13S mo. Rds. G1rden Grove 3475 THE BAYCLIFF zroo Pet-W•u s,.. comm. to all bkrs. IMTA loNA .. ::::::::::::::::;,,,. •t•TMI ............. -...... Mii .... _, -ON TEN AC!tES U.fllTA AMA NGTS. ............ 1 .. ll'UMllltALS ................. 4411
ttqd. 646-5637 NEW tri-level 5 BR. cu.st 45S N, NeW])Ort Blvd. Coat& Mesa St&.0370 1 • 2 BR.. Furn • Unturn QAAMGI ...................... , .. :·:E::~T~~::mia··:::::::::::
'BDR •·· . le···• 1•-~-••• / prl TUSTIN ......... ,,, ........ ,.1"41 \I RENTAL flHDERS ·'"""on pnv. '"'~ crpt &: d?J>s, bl tlns 646-3265 uu. 2 Br 4-plcx. BJtns, ~""'-oe1 v. patlol I Butin1111 Rental 6060 Ho•TM TUSTIN ............... 1..s 111L01tlST1 ............ ··""
11XPaUY1 ... IUlAlfTa lot, beam@d cell., 1tove, 1588 w/dllhwasher, blclc wall. OCEAN FRONT J BR. Spac children It pelt O.K. Blue Pools. Tennis• C.ontnt1 Bktst. t~~~*:'oo cAMYOit'''.'.'.::::::;:: f:•:,:i111~~NK_~.:::::::::::::::~
............. _ .. ,._ Riverside Pl. OH 16th St. _,.; ..,., .,.,A~ Bu.con 645--(llll 900 Sea Lane, CdM 6"-2611 15c SQUARE FT, u.ouMA MLLU ............. ,,.1,.. c1M•~,'.',' 'co•"v~,···'"· .. ·····~,'•' _,_ --..... ., ...... _, _ _.., kit &. llv rm. Nicely tum. (MacArthur ,...,___,. H ) Retail 0 Ul 6()0. LAGUNA llACM .............. 1115 Cl •• ... .. ....... .. Al'T.-IOOIUIATI SllYKI HOU5t; in court. Crpts, drpa, Sh t Bae RENTAL READIER · nr. VJll wy r 0 ce ipace. u.GUN.t. MtG\ll!L ............ 1111 CEMITIElltY CIYl"TJ -... ,. .. 4411 t 976-980 c West 17th s t A 3610 a( crp • helor only, ... n. ...... ~ 1200-2400 sq ft. 211 to 213 MISSION VllJO ............ Int c••MATOIUll ............. 4421
OIW. ""-C..t.--···· ""'"". -1~·-·--·-·-----$130 mo. lncl u.til. (213) .,...,.._.,.. COROUOO APTS. 2 Br. 62nd St N wport B h IAN CLIMI MTI ............ 1n1 MEl>\011.t.L l".t.ltlU ........... f.ftl .. • • .. ..._... :'::t;:··=Co="'==M="'=·====::=: -...... ....,..,.,. ., e eac · '"" JUAM caP1ST1t.t.Mo ······'"' 1.uCT10N1 ............ '411 ·-· ~ • ~ •• ,,.,.., 4 Br, 2 Ba, tam rm, range,1 .~ __ .. _______ Lower levels, 1tudios, pent-Key tor entry, N.B, Travel e&.PIJT•ANO 11.t.eM ......... 1ns t.v1.t.T10N 1eav1c• .......•.. '4U
$165, 2 BR, utll pd. F .. -n .. & dish hr .-.. fed COit• Meal 5100 houR Frplc pool dbl Lodp, Qwnu (21312J3...al.01. DANA POINT .................. 11>1 flAVt:L · ····· .......... ; .... iMU ..,......, M9sl Verde 3110 oven, w • ~ ...... roo 2 Bdr. bit-ins, crpts It drps, l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;I , '·• , . tA•LSIAD .............. u• All TlltANM"Otl'TATJOJf ....... ... pct ..... elcome. patio, fncd. $235. 540-5844. No child under 12, No pets. carports, patiol, $180 . $220. ews (213) 246-0700. OCIANSID•'":::.: .... : ......... IPM AUTO TlltANlt"O•TATIOM ..... '4d
Broker 534-6980 dbl MERR1~·c WOODS 613-331' STORE w·NTED I.AM 01100 .................. 111s LE•.t.L NDTICEI .... : ... '4JI 3 en. 2 BA, lam nn. Pool. $155 mo. Call 548-1605 '""' "" llV111'DI (OUNTT ......... u• Gl!IM.t.Jil. TUTOlltlNO ....... 44H
trplc, drpa, bltrui, garderEt Lagune ... ch 3705 after 5 PM. Ju.st completed, 1 or 2 BR, 2 LARGE ~ BR, vJ.ew, frplc, Leue, 'suitable tor salt ol =~~u: MOY•~.:::::J:': SERVICE DIRECTORY
Rentals to Shire '200! Incl. $250 lat/last dep. Im· 3 BR, 2 BA, lrplc, BA with air cond, c:om· crpta, drps, bltlns. Beam liquor. 1.tust have good perk-OUPL1x11 1110111.L11 ........ n1s ACCOUNTING .,..
RESPONSIBLE Ad"lt to -m:=odo,.cocc~"~P~Y-_540-3300_~~""""' 3 Lge BR. 3 BA, 2 hlka to lk pletely soundprooled, sell cell. s·rr-.. Aft 5 pm 67l-6904 ing. Eves n4: 844).2564 •P.t.ITMllln 1110• IA.LI ·· ··"" 1.Nswl!1t1No 11!1v1ca ·:··:::; '* beach, view, nr Emerald dilhwasher. $250. ytly.1 b cltanin& evens wood il RENTALS AlllPLIANCI! IEl"At1s, P.m .. '511
share rent or babysit for LOVELY country club villa, Say. $215 mo. 4!H-Q62 from Beach. 6'13--2455 . • ce · SOUTit side cf hwy, 3 Br, 2 WANTED: Bldg. in C.,.1. ap. Housn Furniahtd ASPN.t.L!r 011t ................. "21 ·--~ • h 2 BR 1"' BA Condo Appl -""'-''-"'--=----1-.,....,===,.,..--~-ina;s, dishwashers, lush Ba tll I bit ~· p-· -ft lta"'-1 AUTO 11!1".t.IRS ·············· &1:11 room & uumt'\I, •• tust ave ' 7t. • • l BEDROOM, near pier. land I Ith Ire I.: • e ec, llS, ........ •v .............. aq • .!IU we or DIMl!l.t.L ................. Hilt AUTO, $Ht •• .,., T ..... lie. fl4t
refs. 642-9197 or 642-9931 pool, gar. $285. 5$3760. Utilities free, 1100. scap II& w • ams crpts, drps, gar. 613-3324 cycle shop. Write Daily lllNTAL1 TO JllAltl ......... JllS SAIYllTTINO ......... ...
M • • Vf • 370I walertalls elevators BBQs Ptl t Box 1.t• tOSTA MIS.t. .................. llH •OAT MAl~TtNANCI ........ '5U
GIRLS need 3rd roomate for 3 BR. 2 BA, family nn, ;.;;~11~·~··~•;._...;•~1•____ * 826-3184.,.. clubhouse.' saunas, j~cw:i.I & BEAur2IFULLY. appointed 2 sroo :~~! ~=~0~1~1 ···" ......... ii• :~~~=~s':-'::::1~·l!r~.:;::::·!:
beach apt. 33rd &: Balboa frp!CIL, bltn!L. $230 mo/lse. 3 BEDROOrit. 2fireplace,lr&:1-~l~BR=~1.,..-·_-..,,N~ .. -,-oce-... -swim pools prlv rar w/ BR, BA VleW apt. $290. RE for lease 1100 sq. ft. COLLEGI! l"AlltK .............. tlll IUILDl lS .................. 111
Blvd NB ~65 67J.-0695 No pela 61U213 lnod·I• -~. "'·/Cond. ••M Upsta•-. $150 Yrly. Utl! pd. ' -.o.i..... . . 2:>'12 Ocean 544-36C6 in shop ctr on 17th St Costa NIWPOl.T Ill.CM ............ mt CAtEltlNG WJ ., . n10. -==="'======= J'LU .n.u· -.... st~. Eve,_, ....... new. . M Call . NIWPOIT MOTS ............... nu CAllNETMAKINO ............. ... .. mo. 837-5616. Sundtck. 673-8088 Startine at $140 Adults 5r.IAl.J. 1 BR. View s. of eaa day 494-9615 n1le HllWl"OIT INOl•J .......... me Ct.IPl!Nft:RINO .............. fstt
N port ... h 3200 . 962-3883 IATJMOIEI ................. nu CEMENT. c.t£r•hi ............ .... OOTTAGE. nr Cleo St. Bch, ;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;c;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, WATERFRONT 2 BR, ti please. Just Eut of 2600 Hwy. New carpets & OOVEI. JMOlltlJ ............... mr CHILD CAll.E. LI~ ........ 4411
' ·-···. with em p Io ye d RENTAL~ pa 0• Harbor BJvd nrxt to Naben drapes $160 615-6354 ROO~f Suitable for gltt shop wisTcL1"" · ·· •••••••••••• nM CONTa.t.cT01s . ······ ..... "21 ............ boat dock. Yearly • · · · · • \INtv1111fY l"AlltlC ........... nn c1.1Pn c1.u.NtHO .......... '4U male. S9D mo. 494-9431 1/1 Apt1. Furnished lease. * 673-0060 Cadillac at 421i f.:lerrimac men's shop or ladies shop. 1av11t1 ........................ mtl CAll"llT LAYING a ••PAIR ttN \Vay 545-6300 Lido Isle 5351 Call Jim Berkshire 613-9'105 11.sT aLvl'P .................. nn 01.t.PEIUES .................. 4431
ROOfl1fllATE wan1f'd, female' TOWNHOUSE ~--•11 -2 BDR. 'lobile Home. Comp.1 .............................. 1 . 1a¥1NI! TllUCI ........... nu OIMCLITION ................ uu v..... •• RETAIL f t COI OM.t. OIL MAI ........... me 01.t.l"TING SllVICI ,. .•••.... 4G7 to share house on Balboa 3 Bdnns., 2"1 bath!. Adults film., adults, no pets, $140. LARGE BAY VIEW 2 Br or 0 c space, e c. IAl.90.t. ...................... :bOll l!LECTllCAL .............•... "41
Island. Call aft 6, 673-1988 F ~1 .........:: l\f The GORGEOUS New Ctll_-67,..161• d bath ,, .1-~· !Ql gq. It. + 50x85' front Jot. LIDO ISLI! ..................... tu1 1ou11"MENT atNT.t.LJ ....... ~
Cost• Mesi 2100
2 BR, gar patio, Quiet tro~
icaJ selling for adulls only,
only. aces.......,., .,...a o, f~inm Villa AptS stu y, )<I, crpla, ... ~. 470 Nwpt Blvd. M2-585l. 11.v ISLANDS ................ na l"fNCINO ...................... 3 . lai "
•--·h VAL D'ISERE OCEAN FRONT ""ch•lor, ... ".I annual, adults, no pet1 .. •"'=""'==:-:-=:co:-7. IALIOA tSUMD .............. w1 l'LOORS ....................... . --OR 3-1502. ·1sroRE 1or Ieue, 1500 sq. ft. l!.t.sT 1LUll'P .................. 1242 ll'u1M1oc .. a1P1.1as. 1k ..... .
It I "·gl·l •-•. br. F"-·unl. yrly fl20 Util incl ADULT a.t.cK 1,1,v ..................... n41 ll'U1.M1Tu•1111T011t1N• e• y, ne. ""'' •· ..... · · · Near Onuige Co Airport A: Oceanfront at Newport Pier. u.cK a.t.Y ... . ............ ,,... • 11,.1w1SMtMC1 "" 901 Dove Dr NB Sult 126 Sauna, Act'y Rm, Billiards ONLY! 813-8088 UC! Ad ' nly 20·-6'1>-7566 HUNTINGTON ••AeM ......... t4H OAlltDliNING . . ........ Ull "A".......,. r ·•Ev ... ,,~:""""" ...._ __ PY •. ~~· ~1, BBQ• · • C!la o · uot Huntington ... ch 5400 l"DVNTAIN VALLIT ......•... 1411 GENERAL 11:1v1c1.1 ......... "'2 """""""""' ~ •• ..,... 6::...... ........ . APTS: 1 BR furn&: 2 BR un-Santa Ana Ave. 54~2196 Sl!.t.L IE.t.CN ................. t4SI G•AD IHG, DISCING ........... ..as 2000 Parsons Rd. 642-8670 turn. No children or -·. 2 BEDROOM' s·~. new"· Offi-·--111 6070 LON• IU(H .................. UOI GLASS .... ·················"" .,....,. ,,.,..,. '.1 -"-9" Oii.NOi COUNT'!' .......•... ,.JMit GIEl!N TNUMI ........ -...... IH 1 Blk to shops $175. 5M-M52 !!!!""!'~ ... ~!!!!!!~'"'J ,'.'~f:!_~'.!!'..~!:....,....!~~
Exclusive Baycre1t 1 BR. lov.·er triplex. w/w, 2405'1 16th St. N.B. 646-4664 1--~M~A-=-:R::-::Tl=N~l~lj)""'U~E;;--I decorated, cpts, drape a, s..t.NTA ANA .................... u11 GUN JHOP .............. ,,.6111
l
_N_sw-'-'--" __ .. _1_ch ___ 22_00_ I HOME •• o~ •• ~-•• lam-B"ilt-•··. 1 blk to 5 P•'•t LAGUNA BEACH WIESTMIMSTll ................ uu HIEALTM CLUIJ .............. fl'tt ...... • ...... ... ~ Ll"C drps. Avail now. ..... ...... MIDWAY CfTT' ................. 2•16 HAULING •Jlf
Uy room & pool Yean Bkr. suroao GARDEN APTS. stores: $140 per, mo. 1681 Air Conditioned SANTA .t.NA Na1•HTt ........ 1ue Housl!cL1AN11iiii··· ............ fm flREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr., 2 ,_ •""""' thl incJ . ..ii.... CoroM del #Mr 4'250 Ellis. Apt. A open for in. ON FORESJ' AVENUE co.t.STAL ...................... ,,.. INTl!110• 01:co11tATiH•·:::::m1
•• .... patio, adults. Bayside ..::UI! ~ mon )' """'16 1120 1 BR Kiil' w/w ....... -----Exet!.llent, ~-.L.·lilre sutl'OWld-LAGUNA ll!ACH ····· ......... 2lllS INCOMli TAX .. . .. ........ fHt ardene pool service & · ' ' ' ... l"", ...,... 11peetton daily. 642-2835 or Desk space available in LAGUNA NtOUIL ............. u11 11014, OrM1M11e.t. Ek. ........ f1Je Village. Until July lsl SXKI. gw•tet. p''ete •·-tt ••tJfto avail now. COZY ground Door 2 Br with in:s for adults only. Near 0~,. "~"" newest ofii"-buildin ... al :"'ISSION VllJO .............. V• lltOMINO ..................... •111 Call 642-621.0 673-5419 Dd.111:: i""' 'ol Bkr 534-6980 Jireplace, clOl!le to 1hop'g. ahoppin• Pool ~ ..., '"" CLIMINTI! ............ 1111 INSUL.t.flNO .................. f1fl
• or . 642"""". 1-=====· ===== Adw'· only. no pet•. . . prime location in downtown SAM JUAN CAPIST•ANO ...... tl'U INSUU.NCE ................... •n• ..... w "' 1, 2 l: :; BR APTS CLEAN 2 bdr. All extras. Lacu Be . . CAPISTIANO 11.t.CN ......... Jllll IHVElflO.t.TIMO, Dtl•ell'tl .... JM l·BR. house ~J blk. 10 occan. I --.--00-VE_R_SH._O_RE_•s -e· Cotto M-4100 Studenta ok $170 mo. im Santa Ana, Apt 113 Kids OK. $135 mo. Daya na ach. Air rondt-OANA l"OINT · ............. 1u1 'AN1T011AL ...... , ..... ,,.,fl'HI
Adult&, no pct«. $150 )T. c ~-tloned, carpeted, beautiful llVl!l.SIDI COUNTY ........ DOI JlWlLIY l:EP.t.1•. lik. ...... ... lease. Agt. 613-1420 BEAUTIFUL, large Med.lier---------,--1 Hal Pinchin Realtor 57.........,., 646-5542 or 642-1465 842.-n1o. Eves. 817-1594. V.t.CAT•ON 11MT.t.tJ ....•.... 2"1 U.NDSCA,.INO ................ me ·~""""'""-""'-'"'-=~-I ranean home. Swimming $30 00 Wk 'up CHELOR A t alk t OPEN G UXE -entrance•: Frontage on SUMMll llNTAU ......... Zlllt '.OCKIMITH .................. .. NEW 2 BR, 1'1» BA. Blt-iru, • • BA P • w 0 GRAND lN DEL 2 Bl·, good Ioc. Forest Ave., rear leads to coMOOMINIUM ................ nH MASONIY, 111t1t ............ 441:11 pool. etc. Avail. Dec. 1st, e Studio & 1 Br Apt::. ~ach .& 1torea. SBO. THE 'VICTORIAN bll-ins, t child ok. $160 .. MuncipaJ parking Jot. $50 DUl"LlltlS FUlltN. ............ ttPI MOVING a s1011.oa ......... .... carpeting,drapes . .UBeacon for 1 or 2 )'~&J' lease.~ 'lV •-·• yrl U .1 pd 6.3-6011 D _.,.,. -• 5 •••-~ . th 1 _ ;._k RENTALS PAINTINO, p,_...,..1111 ...... .u. Bay,-~ mo t!arl •Kitchen A: .u-.;a. Tfl{)/ y. ti . ' 2 BR, 1~~ BA. $.150. Adulta ays· .... .:..., : ..... r . ~ pet mon or apace. ~ H · U I 1 h~-' PAINT•NO, 1111t1 ................. ,
' · Y y. Per month. 645-0283 e Phone Service It Pool BR ti! furn ..,...,, N ts only "---d ...... bltni Sound 2 ... and chairs awllable for $5. OUHI n urn I -PATtos ··· · ................. ....
2300
SPACIOUS 2 story 3 BR, 2
BA. Bay Vie1v. Completely
furn. No students. 546-9514.
1 , u ........ ope . . '-'l"" ···~ · "' 3 BOK.MS. 2 BA. pvt. Business hburs answer;,_ Ol!Nl .... L ..................... ~r::,.0::1~~~.idi;··--lf. .. ::::: WATERFRONT Lu.'\:, Apt. on • Maid serviee avail. So of hiihWllY· 2521~ 1st proofed, prl a:ar w/storage, patio, heatPd pool, wuher -... COSTA Ml!SA .................. JlH
the Penln. New 2 bdr., 2 e DB.)', week• Month A Ftnced yd w/patio, water hook up 962-899( service available for $10 M1s.t. 111L MAI .............. 11• PL~MtlNG ................ ....
d..• t 2376 N rt Bl d 548-9755 ve. -z===· ======'I All tlliU ..... lil .t Ml'Slo v••O• ................ Jlll Pl GROOMINO .,.. ba., pool. Lst. a wlt:. Boa ewpo v . ;x, pd. Gardener maintained. -u es ........ excep COLLIGI' PAIK ............. JllS l'OOL SElltVICE ............... .. ~ avail. Caribe Bal~ HOUSE TRAILER. Ideal tor ---------
4
-300-667 Victoria st. 6.16-4120 Santa An• 5620 telephone Mt:WPO•T 11:.t.CK .......... ,.,,. 111owEa SWEl!PINO ........... m•
310 Fernand o Rd .• Cn4> retired, student or young B•lbo• NEW •pT5• DAii.Y Pltm ::::g:; ~::::i ··:::::::::::= :~:1Ns:•~1:~ .. ··:;:::::::::::::
6'13-3003 2 "' CAN'T BE BEATI 222 FOREST AVENUE •AYSN011t•s ................ nu llt.t.DIO, ''""''Etc ........... ,,,. . couple. $70 mo. 500 YEARLY 1 BR furn apt. $fJ5 ft $175 • LAGUNA BEACH 00\l'lllt SMOlaS ............... nn REMODELING & REPAtl 6'40 c __ ._._d_om_i_niu_m ___ 2_9_5_o_ IBLUFFS: Lovely 3 BR I: Newport Blvd (relll'} or pd ... ,,, WllSTCLll"P .................. ftlt lltEMOOILING, l<ITCNINJ ....•• u Patio, prl bch. Util . $.u... 1 &: 2 bdr., 2 •wim. pools. All PRIVATE-QUlE'T 494-9466 UMIVlilltSITY PAIK ........... m1 5(15SOllS SHA•l"•M ........... ,, ..
FOR R•nt. "··. t• .,...... den. Crpts, drps, poola. Wik 838-1440 mo. -N. Balboa Blvd. util. pd. AdlU. only, -""· APT GARDEN LIVING IVINI .. -·. . ............. 2131 SEWING .................... , .. ~ "-"" ""-. 1 I b k. """' '"' llVINI! TIEltlACI ............ :n•s SEWING M.t.CHINll' lltlP.t.lal '"' ·c ivic Center. Like new. to store!!. 11choo ·cu ·par $15a. ATI'RACTIVE, 1 bdr., 673-6190 Furn. if desired. 642-3535 Nice area, 2 BR, 2 BA all 1000 Square "'··t coaoN.t. D•L MAI ........... UJO SE1"T1c TANKS......,.., •tc. .. •HJ $315 mo. 675-4497 0 r pool, util ..... id, •arden liv-381 A d St CM elec r..11 .. insulated sound rwc IALIOA .................. UH TAILOIJNG ............... ,7t townhouse. 2 car attached 6"4-0449 ..... a.EAN Bachelor Apts. voca o ·• ... ~ • Off" S A . ••Y 1su.McJ ................. :wo TERMITI! CONTlltOL .......... f91:1
gar Patio pool Adults No 1----· ------irli:, adults no pet!. 1800 All util incl $S5 up DELUXE 1 bdr. Range & proofed, lady's dress Ing tee pace va1L LIOO fill ................... s:u1 TILE, Ctnomk .. . ..... ·-···'"4 pe~. 4~0 · ' BAYCRESf. Cape Cod Wallace Ave .. C.?11. 315 E . Balboa Blvd. O\'t'n, dish11o•asher, crpt & room. ltol !tQ tt Door apace, ~~:.~:.,:.s~:S~ :::::::::::::.:g ~~LE'EE \1~;~1!& ~.".:::::·::
Colonial. 4 br. 2 ba. Child. SM, ALL 1 BR ·-"--'--lot. ALBO .,. ~o El Swim I 72 .. ft closet ...... ce r-ta ~= 17th St-t, 11.B. MUHTINOTON 11!.t.CH ....... :MGI TELEVISION, .......... IEIC. ... fl'Q ""' .Da"uc B A .,,.,,.,.,., drps. ec. pd. · poo . ~.-" ...... ' """ '"" MUNTIMOTON MAllOUa ..... :MIS Ul"HOLSTEIV ................ fftl ENTALS pets, OK. $350. Call Util pd. 998 El Camino Dr., & gar. Adlt. liviJ1&:. S140 a drps, All' cond. Forced air 536-l&Ol · FOUNTAIN v.t.LLIT .......... >111 WELDING ........... m1
HOUMI UnfurnisL-..1 64&-la~. c fl{ 54&-MSl Adull.!I mo. 241 \V. Wilson. 548--0745 heatinJ. Patlol. Pool It rec 111.L 111,cN ............... :MM w1woow CLE.t.NING ........... 4nJ ~ . . ' no Lid I I 4351 11~ th OAIDIN o1ov1 .............. >in WANTED! "PARK LIDO" pets. 8 1 • or 61~ area. ~per men • DELUXE 250 sq., rt. o!flce t.0tto 111.cN ............... 3Mt JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Gener1I 3000 2 or 3 BR. Oient& waiting. sru 0 1 bl f 1 t L• p•Lu•s •pT5 HIDDEN VILLAGE sulte in Corona del Mar C•A:o• couNTY ............. Met JOI W.t.HTl!D,,,.,... ············*' DI apt su ta e or or BEACH Apia. 1 BR e • ,..· "' fTV'll "' • GARDEN APTS ~.t.EN •ANA .................... M11 Joi w.t.M Tt:D, w-11 ........ nae l..Y. or buy. Liaison Co. 2 persons. Winter rates. $110 fic\encies. All new furn. N 2 B I,» b ths • prestige loc. New carpets & STMtNSTER ················"" Joe WANTED. 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. Sharp,
Clean home. Owner trans·
fem'd but <.'timing back.
Lease at '189 per month.
Walker & Lee
7682 Edinger
84241.>5 Open 'til 9 Pl\1
Rent or L1a1e Option
Laree home Mesa Verde $275
per month.
546-9521 ., 540-6611
~ J K Ml(H0l5
646.m:J2 ~... c M ew r., 1 a : cpt.s.. 2500 E. Salta, Santa Ana drapes priv ...... kin• ~1~~•Y ~TY1·o,.n···"""'"1' MEN • WOMEN ..... 1n1 mo. 1135 r...wcn Ave., · · Garaae. 320 Nord. l\frs. drapes, dish1vaaher. Enclos· -· .. -.t. .t. AN H 1 .•....... MJO 5CHOOL1 & 1MSTIUCTIOH .... J.ot
CHAR?ltING 3 BR, pool, Mgr., apt 6. Aleck (TI4) 675-l 2 2S, ed garage. $150-$1:>5. ~ at ~ 546-15Z ReaJonomiCB Corp. 615-6700 ~:i'.t"...L tlACH ·::::::::::::::~~= JOI Pa11".t.a.t.TION ···········'"'
BluUs, $325. 2 BR, patio, SUS CA:!tlTAS 838-0228 160 W. \Vilson 54s-6731 S. An1 Heights 5630 CO~A il~esapoUkkle" VA/C, ~~~1~!, ~li~:~.::::2::::::: ll:: M'"'E•R•C•'H"A'N·D ... l.S .. E .... F .. 0 ... R .. ,...
trees, CON. $250. FurnlBR1pt.2lloNewport BRAND New 1 & 2 BR. crp..., ...... s. ar n&'· ery l.t.M CLllMIMTI .............. J711
6T'";HM4 Blvd. ?l!edallion by Hotpolnt. llll•M l1lan4 4355 \Vf\V cpts, all bltns incl. SPACIOUS 2 BR duple:. ~Wees. 1555 Baker, ~~\:~::= 11!.i.ett·:::::::::l,~ SALE AND TRAD!
.... cle··•n p .,__ bltns ....... ts kneed DANA POINf .................. 1741 ,.U.NITUll! .......... ... * LARGE 1 BR, sharp, NICELY Furn. BACHELOR u ...... I' oven. a ........ , • ... ,. • · coMOOMIMIUM ........... ,... OFl"tcl .. u1tN1Tu11 ........ 1011
University Park 3237 quiet. Encl car. adults only. Apt. Yearly •""' nio. util pd. garages. Adults. 64&-2108. $125 * 56-1506 150 SQ Jt downtown C.l\I. ouPLEXls UHl'UIM .......... JtJS OFll'ICI l!OtllPM I NT ......... Mn
----"------·) -377 W Wil frontage Plentiful ""'rkJna SUMMll aaNf.t.LI ··•··•••••1"S STOlltl EQUIPMENT .......... MU No pets. 2452 Elden. Employed adult o/21, · son. · r-..... RENTAL:. :,1,r:e:. llESTAUIAMT ......... tou
2 &: 3 BR. homes for lease. 64&-2768 ............. oker. No hippies· or NE\Y 3 BR • E-kl 1834 Ne1vport Blvd. 1A1. Eou11"Ml'MT ........... 11111 t 285 $ 25 ,,.,,....... •P-. 8 e. L1guna Be1ch 5705 . . A'ts. Furnished HousEMOLD Gooos .......... 1oi1 R:~tl '::"aJ~ to ~ $~ull~6~eyto 1ato:~. :S ~1::1~'::: C2ll) 2&1--0365. 312 ~Its, ~· b~~· ~~h~1:: LOVELY country club villa,
211e~~ce'fum"fst~ed ~rv.·~~ ~:s"T~ ~LISA ·:;;:;::;:::::;::::!r.: :~:E.::~;E:SL:ucTioN ':::::::::
535 Ce te St ( ~, c M MIS.t. Vl!IOI ................. Ill :~TIOUES ............... ·,•,•,•, Pomona Ave. Ms-m28 64U257. 2 BR, ]'' BA Condo. Appl, n r . ups .. ,, .. NEWlllORT 11.liCH ············'* SEWtHO MACHl'N ......... -...• t
Huntington B11eh ~ FOR Rent • $165. Spac. 2 pool, a:ar. $2&5.·549-3760....:.__ MllWPCMl'T Hl!IOHTI ··········•21• Mus1c.t.L 1HSTRUMl!NT ....... 1:2:
bdr. 2 ... Pl"' d. n. I BDR•t. N•. to"•n • bch."l~nd"'.'"us-tr-l1_l_R_•_n-t1·1--~--~~~,."~t~~.·~~··~.:::::::::·::: PIANOS. OIGAMS ...... ::::::11:io " • " VM'TV UNIVl!ISITV l".t.alf ..... , ...... HJ IAOIO .......... ., ..... ,l)OI
3250 Corona del Mir
4 BR. 2~1 Ba. duplex. 2200
RE Sq. fl. mtns. dishwasher,
NT Or lease w/option 5 trpl. S30IJ ?Ito. lea.Al!. 540-7573 BR, 3 BA. 2600 sq. ft. Liv,
2 Bdr. crpts. tl.rancs. Xlnt
area. $150 mo. 646-1891 or
534-146.1
BAOIELOR apt, frplc, cpla.
Pri patio. 1 adult, no pets.
S95 mo. 673-1629
BACHELOR I:: 1 BR furn,
$140 up. Adults, no pets.
17301 Kttlson Ln, M2-7848
(West ol Beach nr Slattrl.
SpackJus 1 Br. New. Sun.
deck. Few 1teps to beach.
$145/mo. 536-1459 anytime
2 BR. furn, trplc. 2 BR.
bltln!, crpts, drps. 222 3rd
St. 536-6321 early .Mf.
Fireplace. crpt. fenced yd I: $150 mo. lnq. 1020 So. Cst ••cK •• Y .................... •H• ~~.~~~s;~:11:i.0 ""'0•••• ....... 1'20J
pr. Adulll Only. 646-9539. Hwy, or 494-68411 * COSTA ,,rESA • IEAST ILUll'I" ............. •Ht , ..... I! IECOIOl!al····· .. ·-····~: 1725 J ~10 CORON" o•L MAiit ........... •ue CAMl!l.t.S • EOUll"MiHT": .. :.,.. LGE 2 Br wfaarage . LARGE 1 Br apt w/w sq I, new,, ... Imo. l.t.L•O.t. .................... MOllY SU .. l"Lll'I
(d,plex) 2 adult children ........ ling, utU pd 1195 mo. 1st 3100 sq tt/4 oUc s $310 . l.t.Y ISLANDS ................. 4lJf l"OltTING GOOOI .. ·:::::::::: rm, din. nn, lam. nn. Elec.
h.it. 5-16-1713 l!VC'S
SliO. 3 BR, 2 Ba duple."<. Gold
medallion. Patio, · w / 'v,
drps, extras. Chi l d r e n
\velcomc. Bkr. ~
$145. 2 BR townhouse, Patio,
\V/w, drps, Avail now. Bk.I·.
5.14-6980
$150. 2 BR houi;e. fenced yd,
gar, PAtiO, \\'/W. Famil)'
OK. Bkr. 5.'i4-6980
Lido Isle 3351
CHAR:.,tlNG 3 Br, 2 Ba year-
ly rental. Just remodeled It
decorated, frpl &: patio.
A vall Dec. 1 $335 mo. Eves
673-7044; days 544.fil21.
BUSIEST marketplace in
town. The DAILY PILOT
Clusified 'Beetion. Sa v l'
money, time '"-effort. Look
now!!!
TIME FOR
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
WANT AD
DAILY l'ILOT
FREE Util. turn. 1-2 BR
apts. Near beach. $125 up.
SJ6....3171 536--7282
BEACH apll: 2 BR, 2 BA,
crpts. drps, pool. Adults. 219
15th St. No. 7.
Orin,. County 4600
SINGLE adults, 1 u x u r Y
s::arden apt.I, w/f\JJJ tterta·
tion facilltil's & complete
privacy. South B1y Qub
Apt:s, m So. Brookhural,
Anahetm (TI4) 77"..-4500
Garden Grove 4610
~.,. 15 18 25000 en ft kJ ~~~J!.L~SUHO ........... :·:::: .. lli~ llNOCUU.ltS, SCOl"ll , ...•... WI OK. SllS/month. Owner k last mo'•· rent. 499-4017 • • . ..., ' sprm ers MUHTIHOTON •••CM ............. MISCl!LUNl!OUS ............. ....
642-4422 RE•L EST•TI 'un· tJmc e"'d !:..~~-e r.ouncy, POUNT.t.lM VALLIY ............. 11 MISC. WANTED ............... 1111 "" " ..,... ... .,,.... . .._,. JIAL l lACN .................. 44M M.t.CHINl!IY, Ek. ............ 11GI ~"'!AC ' b ~.. d ~-I I.ONG •••CH .45111 1.UMIEI ........................ ,,. ~..... . r . -.. ' rps. ....nera c . Robert Nattress Realtor CllANGf COUNTY ................. SfOlltAOE .................. lllJ
blt-lllll, beamed cell. Adults. Co6ta Mesa 642-1485 OAIOfN GlltOY• ............. "" IU tlOINO M.t.TlltlALS ······ 11M
N pets $140 546-5386 Rentals We ted 5990 w1:1TM1Hsfe1t .............. "" sw.t.llls ··· · • ...... ,, ........ ''"
o · · n 2500 Sq. fl. ~ per mo. Incl. ~IDW.t.Y CITY :::::::::::::::: .. 1, PETS d LIVESTOCK DELUXE lie. redc. 2 Bdrm. RENTALS 'VANTED 4 offices. Immediate oc-U.NT.t. ANA. . ................. 4'20 1n frplc carp k dr $175 16 I St N 8 SANTA ANA MllOlfTI ......... till PETS ,GENll.t.L ................ .. ...,,, .,'..,, •• "A" . .,.,.,., ·• · * HOl\fES cupancy. I 1 ., .. TUSTIN ........................ 444t C.ATs .......................... •m ..,...,..w~· .,..,...,...,,.. *DUPLEXES 642.QlO or 613-S-119 COi.iTAL " ... : ............. 41tt o:iGs ......................... 1n1
2 R 11,. Crp _. LAGUNA 11.t.CM ,, ............ l ltl HOltSE.S ..................... lllh B , ~. ts, .. rps, *GUEST HOUSES BLDG ror lelUe, 11.000 sq, ft. u.ouMA M1ou 1L ............. 47" 1.1vesTOCK .................... ....
bltll.!I. Pvt patio, encl gar. * APARTflfENTS Property 00' x 300'. 64>-1133 ~~s~t~MvJ:~: ::::::::::::. !~ CALIFORNIA LIVINQ Adults. Mt 6:30. 549--0133 FREE SERVICE days. Eves. 642-1479. 940 w. O.t.NA t"OJNT ................... ,.
GOU>EN fllPLIX, tff. ...... , .... ,., •• fttll NUISERIES ............. "11 \VEST RENTALS 11th., C.M. r.Of!IOOMIMIUM ............... ltJf SWIMMING POOLS ........... 1tt1
53().6liOO RENTALS PATIOS ................ -..... ltU Mele V•rde 5110 WANTED: 500 sq. ft., one """1Nos • .,,.
ELDERLY Gt n t le man, man mach·shop. Vic Hntg Apt1o Unfurni1hld """'T10Ns··:::.:::::::::::::::·1m
2 BOR?i1S. cpts .. dr&Pt•. elec ..... ..tia.lly blind but am-Bch or 15 min tra\·cl. 2.U: ••,..••AL '" ................ *' TR•NSPORTATION
bl Prl Ad"'" ~· COSTA MllA .................. J14' "" tns. v. aaraae. bulatory, wants prlv. nn .. 477"-8620 M•s.t. VllDI ................. ,,. 10.t.TS • YACHTS ............. ....
only. No pets. Available bath & board tn congeniaJ "'~tALL 1 ho ::::g:; :::::n··· .. ···· .. fm 1.t.1L10.t.Tt .................. tt11 12/1 646--1260 <»• \\'&rt' lOUSe er s p .......... lllOWEllt ClltUllBRI ............ ttH ' . home. General Newpor t space IrV!f)(' Indu s trial MIWl"OllT IHOlltlJ ........... Int IPEll!!D-IKI IOAT ........... MB
ADULTS. :I BR apt. 2864 &relt. 644-5185 A-•. neat olr-~. "'uMrJ,",,",T'T ,,·,··,;·········• ·,".•, IOAT Tll.ILllS ............ mt
.,, ,_, 1 " ........... IOAT MAINTl!NAMC• -······*" Hickory Pl. No children or e LANDLORDS e FORNEY, Broker W-3862 :~c~•:( · · .............. sm 101.r u.uNCHINO ............ ta1 ·-•• ~, ,,. 3209 s Ul"P ............ JMI M.t.•IMI! •ou1~ ............ ·"" pe..,, .,...... mD. -FREE RENTAL SERVICE COIONA OIL MAiit ........... SUI IOt.T SLllll, MOOlltlNO ........ tc. Rltr. Brokl'.r s:w.6982 IAUOA ...................... 10,t.T Sfl\l'ICIEI .............. ttf1 Lott 6100 IAY nu.Nos ................. NJt SOAT 11NTAL1 .............. ... SINGLE Adulb Luxury • }'ttt Rental Servi,-• LIOO llL• . . .............. 1:1.11 10.t.T CHAllTEI , ,.,.
i " ----------IALIOA llLAMO , ........... SUS llllSHINQ tOi\fl ................. . illJ'(len aptt: ,., th country N-...a ht<h 5200 B-"--I •1-I ~·---IN CD'! • • 1 R 2 ,_ with HUMTIMOTOH •a•cN .............. 101.T MO"'"• ............... _ • ..,,...... , · '"'""''" "•'"• vwnc... " · a..cve " IVI ll'OUNTAIM V.t.Ll•Y .......... "411 10.t.T SJOllAOI! ., .............. .... club atmosphere and com-Properties 'Vest 61~1642 ovenlud double a:arage Sl:AL llACN ................. :Mii IOI.TS WAMT•o··· .......... ""' plete privacy. SOtn'H BAY OCEANFRONT APTS ....... ~ I , v. Owner LOfilo •llACM .................. Ult t.1ac11.,T .............. "°'
13 ii),...__ RENTAL SERVICE lu'C~ or ap .. u.z OlltAlfOI COUNTY ................. l"LTINO L•IJOHi ······"·"···.,M a.us APl'S l ....... pman 1911 W. Oceantronl, J Br. FREE TO LANDLORDS $26,000. 673-3084 ••101M •1ov1 .............. s.11 MOtiLI ttoM•s ............. '* Avtt .. Cardtn Grove tnt) Avail. Dec. lat. Adults only. WISTMIMfTlll ............... 11111 MOTOllt MOMl!J ............... nu 636-3030 no pet• Yrly , • ._, 1-. * Blue Beacon 645--0111 * R-4 LOT, Colita ?lfcsa. 40 MIDWAY CITT ................ u11 11cvcL1s ............... ""
• ~ -1-==========I unltJJ. Owner, Phil SUlll\•an :::;: .~lAHiiiiMTi·:::::::::!: :i~=f~~~~.~~.~·:.:_:.:_:.:.:.:.:.:_:,:.:_::;n:
KcN I AL:. ,S1S-2'22l Rooms for ltent 5n5 548--6161 1u1,01 ............................. MoT011tcTtLl!s ,,..
Aptt. Unfvrnlthtcl DUPLEX. upper, ~·aterfront, roASTA\. ................. 111t MOT011t1cooT11s ··· .......... •m
5000
'-k. 2 BR. w/w cp•·, •-•.SIS \'"' • up w/ kitchen. L-~ 6100 l.AOUMA tlACM .............. POI •uTo 1a1v1c1s • PA11tti"'"'"°' . ........ ... ..... Yn 1111: Ut• U.OUMA Ml.Ult. ............ 11tP AUTO TOOLS a EOUll" ····m· Gen•r1I blt.ns. Mulll. '13-4927 $30. wk studio •Pt. 2J16 "'" ft.tMINt• .............. m t flltAILllt. TIAVll!L -....... tm
N UI UN IAN JU.t.11 CAPllTl.~MO ...... U'U r11tAILlltS. UHllrJ ····· ...... .. e RENT e TRANSFERRED! Beaut 2 ewport Blvd. 541-9755. B LO 43 ITS DANA ttotHT , ........ 11a cAMP•lll• ...... ~ ..... ,,
BR 1 BA bl.IN crptt: drps. -City of Ontario; Corner lot, REAL ESTATE, ra~~· ... :.::::::::::::::::: .• ,..
3 Rooms Furniture Av~ll u1i. 67H::l15 ' Motels. Trlr. Crts. 5997 2tO'x180', •ll impnwementa. G.ner1I ~~P111 ai"T•u--··· ....... ;?~
$19 95
"
U,. Onl&rio I ntern. t I 0 n •I rw~>.. .... ............. .,.. OUlfl IUOOll.1 .,,, • -3 BR. 2 Ba. MU' ocean, fTpl WEEKLY ntes Sea I.Ark .(jrpon 5 mlnutes away CONOOMIMIUM .............. nM IMPO•tlD AUTOS ............ ....
1235 _. •· P.I t I ....,.1 N -Bl d l lMTAU Wt.MTID ............... SPOaT CAal ........... MU ?:ontb-To.?ifonth Rtnt.als mo. )·uy, no pt... o e • ~ ev. v ., New htotor Speedv.•ay 10 aOOMI •o• lltlN' ............ '"s A:rio, ~!'· cLUs1t1 ......... tfU
\VIDE SELECTION M3--0&!J7 wkdayJ 9-5 O>sta b.ltA mlnutta. $36.000 cash or l:OOM & ltO.t.lllo .. 1"4 : TO -.... ~ aoo1 ......•••.• t•tl ~8~f}'Ho'..:i'~Lll COIJltT J = .. ~TOS wAN:lo ..... :.·.·.·.·.· .... • .. -... .,". NO DEPOSIT 0.A.C. 3 BR. 2 611. 1133 F.. Balboa SANDY"S TRAILER COURT submit. 0\\-r~r P. 0 . Box 9. ... ~ ~ C•'lf Ph 11' Ml~. lll!:~TA~S "" "'" CAlltS ............ "" ID"RC P'umllure Rt!nlal.s Blvd. on ~lbot Ptlnln. rt. Spacts a vail row. Call """cttmun.;:a, u.o. ( '4) tNCOMI Pao,.11n ....... '°" auTc lt11 11No ............ ",•
517 w. 19th. Of $41-3481 $3()0 mo yrly lit. t,43-8077 646-0081 982-2509 IU$1NISS flltOPll l T'I' .0)1 •isi;o CAltJ ' ............. :.,.
---_-O-"-,'""-.,..=c:-.·;c-;;=,....,,,,=-;-'-------.... ·---·..----_,,,,,"'.==oc--------------
S.2 BR. apts. nr. shopping.
East Costa Mesa. Exchange
tor more units.
Fortin, Realtor 64i·5000
1701-A Wertcliff Dr., N.B.
$275,000 F/C leased indt1S-
trial, D)'er Rd, 10% retu,rn.
For "t-1 land Oran,ie Co.
Owner will caJTy paper or
aasume. 675-0044 Bkr.
25' Owens cruiser A·l, new
motor. Radio, galley, head,
bait tank. $4200 vaJue. Will ·
frade lot" Tl'USt Deedg or
! ! 61"3-3045
'60 Rambler Sia \Vt:n. A-1
thape. Metal oUICe desk·w/
4 chi:•, like new. Trade Ior
carpeting or submit.
847.n76
' .. * *
•
Level view lot, Laguna
Niguel. Trade up for apts.
in Orange County. ·
Mr. Conrad Rlviera Realty
49!J..2800 494-1330 Eves.
* * ----------------------REAL -ESTATE
Gen•r•I
BUSINESS and
FINANCIAL
Mount. lo 0-rt 6210 Bus. Opportunlti11 6300 Experienced BARTENDERS
serving all Orange County.
63>-2233 PALltt Desert -Inqian Wells
Fairway lot 70 x 120 priced
$4(00 _ under market. Long
Beach. GA 4~34
PALM DESERT
SANDPIPER
2 BR 2 bath widen $23,950.
894-5.113 Farrow Realty
R. E. Wonted 6240
NOTICE
High Profit Potenti al
Franchise Opportunity with
Goodway, a 40 year old na-
tianal prtnting company.
Proven concept_ • experience
not necessary, You may
work in Center or be an ab-
sentee Investor. Prime lo-
659G
CARPINTRY
MINOR REPAIRS. No Joi)
Tex> Small C&blhet In pr-
qe!I le o l h I f' cabinlta.
~15, If na l,fllWer leave
rrug at 648-2372.. H. O.
Anderaon
Houll"I 6730 * PAINTING Interlor/Exter.
YARD /Gai .cteaf.IUP ior. Local references. ht\.
S 1 0 I I o ad . Salvageablea 1 ~m~ed="". o-".,rv,.l_oe_,.,.640-365,..,,,..'-'~c
frff! Remove trees, Ivy, FOR Better Palntln&, inter·
grade 962.-8745 ' tor le: exteriOr, &COUltic ceil-
cation now available in this CARPENTRY, Cab inets I haul, clee.n up or what
area at $29,'/SO, financing Retilod. No job too small, ever, Have Pick Up.
availabJe. lj.eply to: Robert quallt)' work. Call ~Zl76. Call 53&--0074 aft 15 p.m.
inl•. 6.(&-4011 &: !Ml.J502
Loew, Regional Director, 670 REPAIRS, ALTiRATioNs Clean ilp ind H1ul
South Vennont Avenue, Los CABINET. Any size job $10 a load. 6*2528
U you have a 3 or 4 bed.room ~eles, Callfom.ia, or call 25 yrs. exper. · 548-8113 l --CLEAN,,;.,:.,c,...;,l!P~l,..c,Ha~-11'-lins;__
Plastering, ReJN lr 6110
•PATCij PLASTERING
All types. Frte estimate
Call5'0-<825
home Ior sale or for rent, 3 • 3S3-l3Sl REPAIR. Partitions sm.au Trtes A lhn:lbbery trimmed
call us today. We ·repre11ent FroCOIN laundries-Frigidaire. Remodel, etc. Nite or da)o, .;o':=:"';;m:,"':;:;"';:·:::.,._::i:US9:i:i===l ~mltlng the employees of a larre m ;6,500 to i 4 2, 5 0 O. Reas! can KEN 540-4879 _
finn moving to the Harbor Anaheim, Ccsta ?i-f ea a, ;.. H I I 6735 TOILET, iink sto~ up ?
619G
Area and tMy must have Buena Park, Fullerton C C --OUIK ~n ".9 Router serv. No extra chg
housing! All cash il deaired. Glil'den Grove, Hwitin,gto~ tmtnt, •ncrett """" SPECIAL One ,veek only! sat, SUn or travel. 497-1~7
Call Farrow 546-8640 Beac~, Santa Ana, Twitin, CEMENT WORK. no job too Carpet &: uphol. cleanin&'.. PLUMBING REPAIR
BUSINESS end La Mirad~. small, rea10nable. Free Guar. quality, Gt~ sq U, No job too ilnall
FINANCIAL Call Charlie 525--1!33 mtim. H. Stufilck 548-8615 Good Guys Cleantnc, e 642-31l8 e
FOREIGN, Wrecker money * CONCRETE FLOORS, .busineas 646-1393; res .
lu1. Opportunltln 6100 maker, Partner with equal patios, etc, Reasonable, c.lJ ;:64;;"""';,.:::=;;.,=...,,,====
capital wanled. Approx Don, 942-851.f BAY&: Beach Janltorl&l serv.
FAMOUS BRAND no.OCJO. 714: 64&-7670 aft 6 C 0 c RE TE Work carpets, wtndpws, floon, NAME N -Block etc. Res & Commc'I
CANDY ROtrl'ES Bus. Want.cf '305 Fences-Planten. Remodel· 646-1401 Now available in Costa Mesa ;;.;.;;.;_.c.;..;.;;;.;;.:; __ _;;;;:;: ing & Addltion1. 642-9852 ..;.;;;,;;_;:;;.. __ =-~-
,.._ · WANT To "''rchnae Ne•........t, House-Apt Cleanini: and many ou....-r towns in th11 ,.u .. ,....... Reuonable Prices
area. AU locations are com-Balboa, Corona de! Mar Contractors 6620 e 54().9'21)1 e
mercial or fac tory. Very prolilable business with
hlah earnings. No selling in-growth potential. Box M691, FRED H. GERWICK NE\VPORT AREA -3 houn
volved. To qualify you must Daily Pilot. Building Contractor onct a week i9. References.
be reliable and have one -Fam. rms. bdrms, patios 642--0296 -548--0356
hour a day spare time (days Investment Oppor. 6310 Licensed-~ estimates e WINDOWS DIRTY'r 673-6041 & 549-2,170
or eves). PARTNER needed for unJ-j========= Frtt eat. 15 yeara exp. $1200 TO'I' AL CASll Johnny Dunn 642-2364 . REQUIRED que real estate venture. % Carpet CIMnlng 6625 * APT CLEANING • ?l-1illion dollar profit return. "
Inquire about our "free Unbelievable opportunity far * Diamonds are meu\Jttd Fam & thorourh 642-81&4
bonll4 rou te plan." Make quick profit. $15,000 to i>y quality, so are '>'-1?! WILlJAMS Cleaning 5'rv.
9 Dreumaking -Alteritionl
Special on coat hems ·-· Alterations, resfyle & ·
Custom Bedspreads
Loullle 548-n04
Altoratlon1-646-5MS
Neat, accurate, 20 Y.H. vcp.
T!LE, Ceramic 6974
* Verne, The Tile Man•
Cult. work. Install k repairs.
No job too small. Plaiter
patch. Leaking 1.h owe r
repair. 847·19:57/846-0n
-----.,.. -·. --~
AHNOUNCIMINri
i nti llOTICI(· -. .
!f'"
l>l!Vfn
ASSEMILEltS
Cell Personnel D•pt.
(714) 494-9401
ENGINEERING CO.
•
JOll J IMl'LO
OUUSTMAS HELP. \Vrap..
peni &: Sale1. Inquire in
Pert0n only.
KmGS FOR h!EN
23«1 Harbor Blvd., C.hf.
COMPANION
& VCI')' ll&ht houaeke!pin&:
lor healthy mature lady.
Live in • salary. can be·
tween 6 le: 8 PM. 613-7365
COOK STEWA,RD
ASS!MILY
DlillUltltlNG
DRILL PRESS on pvt. yacht, muat be tree
to travel, only exp'd., MJber
Pro1rtu1ive metal parts man-to be comidered. n4:
u.facturer hu immediate 67""a-6187
openlna:s for both men 1t1·coo="K""."'11etpo,--nslbl""e-....,.--.-,0
women ln abovt' dasalttca· cook n...t pm Mon--f'ri. F:lab
tlons. Excellent worklrtl • ChiPI Shop 66-1430
conditions a n d comPllJl' COOKlilltketPfr for 2
benefit&. D_ay 11hllt. adulta, 5 di.ya, $300 •tart.
APPLY IN PERSON Live In/Out. Call 673-7177.
Cotmetldan -Drua S<l
lldy, ml.Ill be exper. SHUR-LOK CORP.
1300 E. Nonnandy Pl.,
Santa Ana
ll blk N. ol McFadd,n,
Call 113&-2701.
DllAFTSMAN •••••
Coll PorNM•I Dept.
(714) 494-'401
TEL ON IC
ENGINEERING CO.
hiiitor .•
J. W. ltOllNSON
llAS QPENJNG FO'R.
*JANITORS *
APPLY e DI SMDllD'5 e
#3 Fashion llll&nd. I
Ntwpllr't Beach
JANITOi • Part time •
Couples f i n e; Huntingtcn
BeUb area. Good pay. C4ll
M6-«M7 att'1 p.m.
MAINTENANCE
JOURNEY MEN
MACHIHISTS
"
' • ' ': •
AMERICAN CAN co. • 110 E. Sopulvod1 t
Wllml"9ton ·;.
or coll (2111 t~lt
GALS fol' production ~. MAINT!:NANCE MAN .-
familiar w/piattft'l'll 4 CYt· Neat, ciun a mature.~
tin(. We ~ all ~ + meala. AIPlY: in ~
pltt1. Box M4> Dllly Pilot McDonald's 135 W. l9tb tt:
CM •
OARD&N E R L.t.ndlcape Mainten&noe titALE Help wanted, niebtl.
Perm poal.tlon, Xlnt working prepare p I z a a a n,d
Cond' 40 hn, &'OOd lll&ry, u.ndwichel ,C&IJ : 675-19°' I ~e by Bayside VWaa:e MAN, as ASSEMBiJY
300 E. Coe.at Hwy., NB FOREMAN Exp'd. or -w\Jt
673-1331 train. $80 wk. to ltart. Aluat
1!!!!1!1!!!!!!!1!!!!11!!1!!1!1!1!1!1!1!"'1 be able to do llttlnf .&
General: Expertenced physical work. Apply ~
furniture man A drivtr, full AM. Golden'• Maile Wand
time. Military obli&:&tlo.ns 946 W. 17th St .. C.M. :
filled. ~20fi0 MEDICAL Secretary, l'eC9"
6'10 ~~ blk W, of Gn.n<H ----~~---
your future secure with us, 000 i-• 64• o c RP a Dunn &: Bradstreet rated S50, l'e<tU '""· ..-1571 DIAM ND A ET CAR.PEI'S. Windows, firs, CLEANERS 645-1317 anytime etc. Rea or Comc'L Xlnt TrH Service
COlJNTERGIRL, Over 25,
App. In person, Expert
Clea.nerJ 333 E. 11lh St.,
C.M. HOUSEWIVIS tio•'"· '"'"' 0
-· "'"'· In bkkpne. A maur. fornis.
HA VE FUN 847-2517. ' .
national company. For moru Mon•y to Loi n 6320 CARPET SPEC!""· W .. work ~ul Refs. '48-4lll. lnformatlon, send nam!, ad-i---'--------I AU ._ TREES pruned, topped, '"'"and phone # too 2nd TD Loan vaouwn, shampoo. & lift RENTAL RliADI E R ttmoved. 2<I ,,. ...... "ROUTEDEPARTME.i'n' pile. I ncludes soil !J4().39'J4 Aerialtowerequlp .
P
#2l, P.OCal. Baxi 915!;., Prompt. confidential service retardant! 645-0298cl 4~' 6J8.-m4 _:..o:.."",c_na,~-'-·_;_'.:;,,..-_ I 642·217! 545-0611 CARPET ~ Furn, oaninr; Ironing 6755 Upholstery Aaoc. Partner for 1 day service & quallly I :.;.;.;o;;;,'------;;.;c;
AUTOMOTIVE
DEALER
Servlng Harbor area 20 yrs. work, Call Sterlin& for WILL do ironing In my hOme
Se ttler Mortgtgt Co. brCbtnr:~! 004520 15c a piece.
336 E. 17th Streel CARP:::""°E:;:T=&;::...up::holst=.,:=ery=--,...,.--1 64&-7082
R11I E•t1te Loans 6340 cleantd, aleo carpet in-Janitorial 6790 Active wilh $25,000 to invf:'St. I ;;.;;;:;c.:;;::.::.::.::.:.:::::::...:= stallation. Resulta B¥f· For ;..;;'"-';.:..:;"-----"°'-.;.;:;
Orange County exclUllve. INVESTMENT gn..up h&s fl"ff eat. ca1l 6'8-5911. SPARKLE Janitorial &: wm:
CZYKOsKl 'S cuft. Uphol.
European Craft1nnaNh~
lOOo/o Fin! SC-1454
lllSl Newport 81., C.M.
\¥.~'.'!'..'!' 699S
WELDING shop &: portable.
Ornamental iron.
M&-1815
Top in field, 25 yrs Nation-$$'1 for tru~t deeds. We NO matter what lt is, you dow citanin& Strv. W~
ally. E:ii:iremely high return. make ht &: 2nd & buy ex· can sell it wlth a DAll.Y dows, ttild., corncl, conat.
plus excellent salary. Pl'i11· istlng TDs. Bkr. SU-8381. Pll.OT WANT AD!! MU6i8 Cleanup. Free ut; 968-2991
clpal selected must tu:' rlny or eves. ---------------· -
managerial backll'Ound . .' C1\LL 1-IARDESI'Y
tmnoUve experience 1 For Financing
necenary. Will !rain, • 675-2866 * ANNOUNC •MENTS
investigation wclt•n -nd NOTICES
for appt. for r-· ,Jl gtl, T.D.'t 6345 a
ANNOUNCIMINTS
ind NOTICIS
ANNOUNCIMINTS
1nd NOTICIS
A 11 em b I y Foremen
Coit• Me•• c·o.
ABILITIES
UNLIMITED AGENCY
438 E. 11tb St., SU1te 2'M
Co•ta Mesa 642-1470
Accnh. Payoblo $400.ilii
Knowledp of Book., lite typ-
ing, beach &JU, call Lor·
aine, Merchants Peraonnel
Apncy. 2043 WestclW Or.,
N.B. MS-mo
COUPLE wanted u assis-
tant rnanqtn for Motel
apts. 237& Newport, C.ht.
o<S-mo
-,Day
CoclftaH
Waltreu .-
AND I ARN hM~ED=tCAU,;.,.,~, ,;l\ecep--.tlo-nt.~tl~F4,;,n
$$$ Ume. Must be mature -&
IN YOUR thorourhly experienced.
LEISURE TIME Call 61M461 tor appt.
YOU WILL
81 Hl.~PING
IN 'fHE
Mea
*OVERSEAS * Men jl>bl than J*Ple ~
Call Smitty, tt4' 714-ll!O FIGHT AGAINST
WATl!R POLLUTION MFG
APPLY IN PERSON , "' A ~Nive manufa .... -*".""" f 4 to 6 Houri or r•va•~ ........ ~
·, •' Con.scien'tloWI effort per cOmpany, wilh excellent REUll N.I. LEE woek wlllnetyou workinj"condt.,_ and
ASdhvertilln&S Aa•ncy
1
IJ.51 E. CoutJlwy. SlOO per month frlnle beMflta l\u'imme4!i· arp ecretary o r lttwpOl't Bfach 12'::Jln . .lwk; equala ate openinp for: ;_, .
f•1t -ptced Ntwpert DAY Ce.re or llv&-in, Irvine CM!=:o:..1\'eed) A-Hand Screw machlile
B11ch Agancy. Ty,. area. Have 2 tDts 4 It. L Call operators 65-70. Shorthtncl 100, tV!'I 833--3439 Part lime Clerlca1 ' ~ DrU1 prt•s Operators
or11nlu & f ••• 0 w ~.::.:::...:D::EL:..:;IVE:;:..R_Y_BO_Y_·_.... potltlonl open __ , C.Dtburr & AS8em bly t h r u • U n d 1 r JS. " "' .. .. Details tn Persouaa Apply at
Phon.: 642•2910• 425 C&nyon Auto Supply 1 IntervJaw Only Sta_ Fut, Inc.
843 BnNi!dWl.Y, t.aruna Bch If you are outaolng and 640 s. Sarita Fe ~'t.
lifetime, c.-:l'r
tunity. Ki ~
114-7050. .aT and 2NDS Found (fr" Ads) 6400Lost
N. H.t wport Blvd. DENTAL chaint<1e aaelltant want to enjoy yourAelt, Santa Ana
6401 P~!ton1l1 6405 AITENTION BOY!! experienced onb'. call M!t ~a;tn.J:[ &pQt. MC1J'El. MAIDS
*Alone' ~=s Slal%rhr~= 1; Dt St 54MM4 (10 Ml• 6 pm) Plrt Or FUil time. 1997
ASSOC'
""' OfY,'
I'·
So •. Calit T.O's. Inc. CAT, large male array &: LOST. ln vie Newport
• c it ZENITH 2.eJQ3 • Toll Free white. Injut't'd by car vk tlelihta, on Stt Nov, l•t
:'" of· __ _ AlbertMln'c MIU'ket, Lat. !!mall tan q~ · p I
.1 Bay. MoneYW•nt.d 6350 Bch. UrrnUy n ee ds chihuahua. p/ pek1nrese.
._. • small ;.;.;.c. owners. 494-9697 Alli ''Baby." REWARD.
.;uil'Ml Wlll B.• to 10% on your inveat· FOUNO 2 de,£• -1 co\lle pnp 646-4191
.i·tyl ~tm ment. We can place YoUr le: 1 rma1J · 111orthatrtd brn, LOST: 7 wkl aao, blk, wht &
-fund1 direct to the bomwer t at Ju flopp" •·-.1' AIR .sHOP, Ex· enl o, · ge ·• -.. ...... ..... cal. temale, oo fft>nt on title ins, real ealate.k>ans Mothet' ~pup 5f6..Ji.187 --.. ~ Ea.at lTlh St., CM. r.:'I no extra cctl to the lend· • claw1. $50 Reward!'" Call
.J Glen QUetn 540-llM ci. Stop in or oall, 1323 N. \VHITE Ftmale husky -Uke ~-646-3263~:::;:;·~,,.....,'°'"-
-,ttrltaae Real Estate Broadway, SA (parking on dog, abOut 9 fllOI., no collar. FfMALE Min. Schnaum', i-~srABLJSHED rlft ahOp on our propt"rly) 5U-838l day Vie Bl'ookhu.nt ' Adams, sUver sray, ean uncropped.
Balboa Island for Ill.le. If In-or eve1. H.B. 962.-3689 Rable• tat nbJ'. 173 548-6611
. , ttreated call 613-4851 for ap-I A.;;.;.,N.;N.;O.;U~N~C~E~M~E~N=TrS-DARK E D Nurtertd male or MS-0361
polntmtnt. ind NOTICES Siamese or Burme1elG;REY;;;:;Toy;::~P'"ood"""i.-.-A'°n-,-,..-,,
REST AURANT : MOSf I ;:;;;;;..;..:;..;.""';.;;_.---w/blue eye. Had ftlt 3 or 4 to PE PE. Reward! Please,
POPULAR In this ma ror f ound (free Ack) 6400 weeks. 847~3 CaU -64~J.±-4l.
r.aJe. &4"1!905 --~--FOUND lBfif GlendoM l.fl~h OERr.tAN Shepherd-pUt
FOUND -black cat vie of School aus Rina:. . ' DIAL dlttct 642-5618. Charrt
)'OUr ad, then ait bl.ck and
ll•ten to the phiOrlt rina:l
N""t
Beach ffivd It. Garden Grove Huaky, in'lne fdn. Complex
Blvd, CG &l?-..'380 546-1l4T Ina. CaU 5f5..e6318:30-5
BLACK f1,ta;AA kilttn found SHORT-J:lalred tarae b'3ek LOST ltme.le Bluepoint
on Balboa P e ninsula . cat. Vic 12th A Palm. H.B. Sltmt8e cat vie. m St.,
m-1m 5.1&-61119 cN...;.ec.. -'m-smo..;,,,;."'-----,
' ...
. .
e h1'., Mon • Fn, < "'' S.t. p1 ,HOUi1WIVll!S THE LINDSAY CO. Newport Bl,., .. CM .
YES OUR ~ pmS46-50~L:lwn 3 pm· COLLI OI STUDENTS 474 £.17th St., C..M. MP~r!u1aMfi!~. part tlml.
IT'S y •·-' . CARllll,OIRLS .Hottl * 67>-!Ml *
FAULT Atfracrfye Wollltm I Earn lttra Money tor FOOD CHECKER/ NEWSPAPER Dtltvery
F.%i ~~"':1 )'OU~e~~lthal needed for makeup ins.true-CtfRllTMAS Man or couple. early .\tt!
ORANGE CO. 547.-7 tor. Will train ~r. bw1ne11 Enjoy an excl~ ...ton ln CASHIER dellv. in Jrvlne area. Xlnt
of Yollt own. ful • i~-ed· route open,. $alO ·plus mo. 24 hour recording-Call _,,_1 Cit.I) _..,,..,.0 a beaut! ttort. nun 1-.,....£ """""'"-.. •o" owi t ll..._. d'*»unt Full Approx. 16 hn. "''"· ...,...,. LIC ENSED or write: a~ =:......,. t1mt btdui o ni, eXPerienCf'd need war. or ·van pref. cau
Splritual Reacllnp, advice VIVIANE W00DA1'D 1 _.... ac es, appl)". Relief ahifl. 96J...4633 ~',! =:~~l~tO:;:te Dept. ~!~1~~lt¥ SI. da~;nc'lOLYTOen:~. EL ~~tln S::'"~ '· RN
492-9136, 492-0078 P O"· Calll.:91"•" ........ , Director lO'AM -10 PM ......... V• ~ J w ltOllNSON -• A1TENDANT at Ch<vron ' • . Tho Nowporttr Inn 3 11 AL.COHOUCS Anfm)imout Station • Hertz f\tnt-A.Cu FuhJon llland •
Phoat IG-'1211 o.• wrl'11 to in t.quna Beach. Collere Newport Bach +iotel fnvUVtment In:
P.O. b 1223 Oo9'a ~tna. 1dlJOenC pret., XI hrt per wk, Dffltal La b·ora t0r)' • N~trc " lR(luct . * If.ARBOR· CRUISE * mutt-be u. le no ionr hair. _cha~aut. lratnet. MWJI 1J07 Jam&otee nd. rffeli'Ch.
Dally 2 Pl\!, !"un ZOne Bott S.lary ·1c corn m 111 ton ha~ d~xterlly --to ~\;end Ne1~.-port-Beach. Callt. •-Queet, for qutJ;lty nurailfc
Co .. Bilbol * Gia-0040 w/ht.i8tt. 494-9003. \\ires. 644-0811 CdM HOUSEKEEPER • child cart. C1B ROYALE' NEWPORT Stach 'i'eMil .ATTENDANT -Htekeepln1 ,DRAPERY Workroom -cart. 5~~ day wk .. $t!O wk.
Club fam.Uy membttahlp. For Blind Lacy. 2 hra. day, female htlp. Mt:l Moa'rlton + rm A J>oard· Pd. vac. CONVAJ..ESCENT HOSP;'
Make offer. 494-2193 · ·5 days wk. Ct.ll Lt 8---1922. Draperlc~. 543-Z3S ·...;:-"-'=------, ___ ::-::..:;::.:... ___ ,
• -.
"
I
'
-. Wark and Play
THE
• Western Girl
WAY
Earn mon@Y on interesting
iemporary, &Ui&nments. and
be ell&ible for our. fUn di.
<:O\Ult tickets.
.· Wntem Girt, Inc.
4661 McArthur .Blvd.
Suite 314, Newport ·Beach
~111
PART Tbpe. male, wiring &
1t1ldering organ kit&. Non-
,-amoker. Newport Orpns.
.-• 645-1530 •
PBX Anlv.·erln& Service. ~-Ei<peri"""" •""'"""· tf.B. Atta. 536-S881
P•rsonnel A.s1i1t•nt
t'op spot for a ght wtlO really
'likes people, Mmt be lamll-
·1a.r with penonnel proced·
..r , Um · -hiring, insurance,
~record•, e!c.
Good-typiJW, th helptul. to
,$5ll . .. · . · N.wport t _ PertonMI Agency
~ 833 Dovtt Dr., NB 1!,<z.3810 .... ,,.,
~POLICE OFFICER
:$111 to $872 Ptr Month.
. CITY OF
· NEWPORT BEACH '·
• Several newly created
; positions available with
., progressive police de-
; partment expanding In
: siie and .cope of activ·
;_-it)'. RequirMlenll In-
• Clude S'9", 1!iO pounds
• D)inimum; 21 to Sl yean:
:· i>f •It'; 20/30 uncorrecl·
• N. vision; biih school di-:;,,1oma.
•
--------· ... --------~-
•
MIRCllANDISI FOii
SALi AND~I
Mll CHANDISI i'Oll
IALI AND nADI . FREE TO .Y
1i
' .
T~"!?ltTA~!!!! -TWmoottATloH ~ · ~sPoHA'10N • TWlll'OITATION • TUNll'OllTATl..a:= ,.,_.,!J, ~ 8j , ._. L l -·.;.:::;.:::::.;:=~=--
hltl. I Yllhla Jllal · _ . , Now C.. '~ · ··· .... lltw Con -"'°"j:ln ;:,~,;==~ :::-:D .. = ...,.,,._ .. ~" 'NE\'l "'CA' R TDADf IN SALE! I. lilj.i:u.:; ... :_;c"":;.:... __ .,.:.:;:i.-...,...,.---~l,,..,...OLDS__,.".'",MO"'-."fllLI--:::.~• ::::= a. wi TVa\1,_ ~~;...,"~ s.~. AU$nN HIAUY'. 1
' • ; . 1 ~.. • ·• CADILLAC COU6AI "~ ~.. ~· -" llA OQ!IGAI\ XR.T. Lime UIS OUlS r.g -
Victoria St, CM. No. 16 ACJSTIN· >..MERICA \ 1Kf ~ILLAC lMt.(.AOILLAC lfff CADltllAC> '•SEDAN Do VW..-. -w/ Wk Y!a>I ..... /o/C, W-pwr lb',,....-..
Sal '°'°' -•ee-flonda-ScftmtilU. Xlnt ~Siles Sc~ fU1I --~ ....... ~tr-.,Mi. '""'·-... ,........., ............... , • ., ~,, ........... --., Mei. w r dlik blow. ~ -PlL lUW au.. .. .. luaap ndc,, Jow .... I ~ SnlP! ~ tnilu condttkm, ms. l~te Diiuv wht+. , .. ..,., l•tt ,..1.~11. wAlk. ylftyl .. , ' lllk. lthr. WM w/4r•. w •• "'"'' .. ,. . l!4t OODd. iuJ1 pwr •. Qd. Nit •• --MM. ' ip!iO, blP ma a..t ,,
Newb' rebuilt CJ...ic See~ 6G-OS28 aft 5 pm. All Model. '9 vi~ .. t; ftL 1lr, ).M /fM. litt. ,,._.·•If, AM/f:Mi , .. ,., 1111 ltlir. l.t. J1c. 1lr, AM/ control. tut wbl. AJl/JM. 'CT Cousar XJlT. Loaded! b)' Nov. lT taket. 07---~
btlleve! $1000 494'-tst S '9'J BSA ilG.HTNNIJ 650 cc . S\•r••· •·w•.•'•••t, ttlt a ,,,., •·••Y ••••· flit l tel. fM. st.;,,,..._,~,., u1\ tQe dock sm. .,.... er One owim. F&e11ary war-ST• -•A ST1••1 • -~ ·•
6
• , · • t11i, '*'"f• whl., pwr. 4oot ttr1'9, whl,. pwr, 41., 1..U, tllt I t.I ttMt ~l.:..\P'w' -..-"' "'"""' IUo ,.-v..-$, ••·n ::.>. (l} 633-<1162 LI ke new, .Sell or lock·•.#LIC. VWY •~s etc. UC, XWY 12t 4,, l"k' .... Lf(:, Yn'r-404 ,_ tWI fat)', .,000 mt, t7l-5SG '95 ,. .. \fbt W ... ~
D8;'S trad•. * 546--0309 $6695 $Ut5 -$6695 '8lCAD.SedonDoVUfO.NJ Orie -· ~
NEW TOMCAT '6\ CL 90 SCRAMBLER. Sot ' pwr .. flM:t air ......... All . DOD61 $1010. " '73-Ull
16' Glau Catan!uan Up for Dirt. """' Logal. 1969 CADIL'LAC lff7 OLDIMOllt'" lff7 PLDIMOBILI· ......, 1.0 ....... · Low mi, ,,.2~~YT $900 IN~ TRLR. 6,000 mi. Call -536--9814. .,~~ .. ~,,;"·Coast HW}'.,~.B. Fl11twoe4 lrouthm, Ilk w/ Vi•f• Crultet Wii. JW...':t y,.,111114 .. ••14 w/t.I• • ...i11vr =t~~-or beat ~ ~1 .. ~EP/ Comm!P b, ~. PLYMOUTH ',
<>•.-......i. * · 6'154400 l967 HONDA S "" ~ 1 540-1164 bl• vi11yl tep l lk-lthr. i11f. f 'II to DI "lk 1 1 f • .. -,,1: "'™ • -.ii-, I, I aood , JV Aulh _, __ .. ••G ~a1 Fat . •lr, AM/FM St•r•o mih:ll. ilt. ''· ,i lr,J. fit ,. x. • ' 11 • ,,.,.,.,,, cond -....__T ·-VEN'l'Ul\E 21' Xlnt cond., 3 MANY EXTRAS• . ........_ · 0• ~ ·~ v..-er , ••.• ,.,. wl-4-ffb _, • ,.,,, .tM., •·••v ••~•. tilt CAD l9el convert 1:1,000 acc. · • -~ -BARR.ACUDA. $135 Utt I •-I red., •.wey i11t, tilt l t•l• ~ I . •· -11.a .I--~ ~. 2 autboarda:, * 548-0220 • t hi d I k LIC WOD 121 •• •fMt· wtil, Le1al •• ,, ....... like new. hll JOWet • ...... • T«el price $190: I
tll'I '· extrJS, Of ~er '68 YAM A HA l DO BENTtEY :.~~'L1C. x,~w;·,. r. oc '· $Zits .~. lew ..tu ••• Ltc. Ultt ,,, alr J.nc. Steno. Pb. t6MMa FALCO" Good •OOQif, Cil1 50-ml-Ot: -
543-39S5 . $6695 . $2H5 · .._, · " . Trallmui.r xlot oond. $295. CLASSIC 1949 ll<ntl•y 41> CH.EVIOLIT '62 FALCON, •tandNd. !
LIDO lt., Hwy tta~er, u.ils, 548--1618 after 4:30 pm leader • .chic black u.lh~ 4 .1"6 CADttLAG. • 19,61 CADILLAC .UOOarbeatotter. PO.rll&C ~ .. "Good cond. M~at aell 66 HONDA JOO Scrambltt. dr, aunrf, Madrid Embdsy 1967 LINCOLN c.11,. De \/Illa. ·e.w w/ C•11111rtU111t. SI"''' w/bl• '66 aa:VROLET CQrloe t\11 ~aft I PM ":' ·~ ~ $625. ~ Tuned pipes, new tires, $300, car, orig. leather & 1na}M)g. Sil11•r .w/bll, tip I lthr., kit• 11i1.,1 .. ,, l+hr. lilt., t•p. l.tl 1 ... ,. l11t, '''· alr: One owner car with ~ lfii 'ALCON SPECIAL Equll', for ,
NEGLECI'ED''Trimaran 24'. 547-3182 Eves J. Wkcod! 675-6983 F•'· •tr, lo•JH w/•11 th• F•c.. •ir, P.I., '·W li-f-414 l••4•tl w/••tr•• l•c.•l c.1r, U.(IX>mllel,buillpower+ Prv prty, IG-019 aft 3:30 ~.(hand operated 1 ~~' · IJlUt up. Payptf 11tr~•· LfC .. T0o 167 w/1dr11 UC. UIL l~.t .,.,ry 1l1a11 LIC WIJ 419 a1r condlUoal.as. n.oluteJ,y drivlnr ontrilla) U5I Pont. 1
.•. ~Ii AliM·1erw1 1 .' tA7'UN .. ' .. ~l~i ·:t . .,' ·~2t5 " $4495 tho dlt,llltl -ID...... ,,_._RD Catallna2Di..,".,, ....
I?" ~·lalJbool. '"' ... . -· "·i".. c /llMvO!Mlff LatiMoclelC•dlll•c1 ' OlnlSloinoowlohrcedea . r\I P/o, /b, aufo. Gillll .-.1 ~:!:1r ~ ~· ·~.1 ,..ti·}· , '4oo . olWICl!.f~NTv:s ., . "' .... · .. • :i,"().' ..• · ·, '.fi,°"'m~oitlt~l·-,..e'1 .. _"~91~,l~l-~l•c' .• '°'".,/.nc •. ·, ' . ~ -· -ua; ... Ford'~ !J ~ ~ .. '4.tW:~; ... i .. ~ · ~fii"::.t~· . .. . .. :;pt~l=!!fr! ~' : -..•.• ~' ~~.~ l;liboa1.'x1n• Auto~ Siipp'ly ,· llwtu::::·· ~.o:a •AiliPW · ..: lblllM ..-,,,, ,
c:ond. lnctudos oustom ' • 342-T181 o•M<M!MI 494•1(184 Auth.,;.,d DHI•• 547•310J 'lrt;;r1mpa1a ~. alt 5 Cordova top, pieo. ~: ,cover. $295. 67~ Whofe~le -----w . . , ~hNro. V-8. P/dl9c '62 ECONOUNE Van, R,yan O\Vnel'. 546-65t4
. · !
LIDO 14, no, 61. Good mnd. 2 Pri--1tl ~" EN GUSH FQ, ~-'.~ 1110 SOUTH COAST HIWAY IN•xt to the l'offtry Shacll U.SUNA <.;.. ~· W/I, AIC. Vinyl top. re.can tly reblt, xlnt 19113 BONNEVUJ.E, fUlb : ~ts of sails. 'owner --· ,_ _ n. -,-WMI 95. 496-65n mechanically •. Sharp look-flJUip. Small down a: Tallt I
._ __ , __ .. "~ .,.....
2750
Complete Machine Shop AZ ,_ n •••• ,. HT ina:I Must ' .ell thla week. over payments. Xlnt tern1'
u-...,"'""'""'1· ~-.,,,,.... SPEED EQUIPMENT ORANGE COUNTY'S ;_. ';""'283 • w/l'a~'. ~st oUer -drives away: 144-1387 ··,1 I
Power Cruloers 9020 REBUILT ENGINES VOLUME ENQ~!ltl . frnporled Auto• -Imported Autos -A•tos Wanlod • a !'Ml IJaMpllon. $400 ,....,., '64 BONNEVILLE, PW? I ~
18
, LARSO 1125 Victoria, CM · 543-6.:60 FORD DEAL.It' WE PAY • • • ' · aJ;.~ , 196o Ford. Ga!Uy SO(). P/1, P\\'l' brks, pwr windows, 1t'6 1
N •trailer. 1&161BoachB!'d HB847.IJJ91 SALES. SERVlrl MG VOLICSW. A.GEN CASH 1s<~·CllEVY Im··•··, P/b, r/h, new tires, ne-H, auto trans, looks &-1,
l2JHP Mere Cruiser. Sold * OPEN 7 o' AYS * ·~. Moo~ .... ~ .-, @1'1111 .-.... • A·~--~ ·~. ";: ~ ""-....,. b.lcecf for -·'clc Int. RUl'll lf'Od. S225 or best a:real! ...... .., $ow, "'"'"'~ 1
new for $4400. Take over YW BUGS ~ '~· ,.... otter ·5t6-o714 a.ft 5 50 ·bal. of loan, $2600. Must Sell Immediate dellvtt)' r. 'llr"'"--•t IUOo·· 534-5290 · _ pm. 4 '67 .PONTIAC LeManns, fu1:t 1
Immed, Call 839-&IDt after 6 FINEST -IMPORTED !;!AR LARGE SELECTl()H JP65 tiJG Midget. T<>p Sba.pe! 111· cr;v;; Impala O:inv W. Victoria st No. 16, CM equipt., ~e. air, best <>OW. 1
PM. Anytime wkends. Service ih Costa Mtaa Theodore }Vire wheels. h1ichelin tire,. F'RO~i for med can I\ trucN NII * Ci4!9d TraruJportatlO~. 'U F.alcOn Futur• 494-9390 aft. 5 p.m. "~ I
MUSf Soll! 17\1' Fi.., ... w Speciallst& ID r.i.rc..i.. : ROBINS POIP r '"'" !16&0650 $399 call us for -..... c..!1 642--0914. Ful4' factOry equipped, Dir. • .. CATALINA Waa•m, p~ "
inboard. Very SeaWClrthy, 'Benz. Jaguar, "'.Volvo, MG, 2060 Harbor BlYtt .... ' ' GROTH CHEVROLEI '86cditO'i' Impala l Dr $695. P/B, Air cond. Uke new ·i
D . cond. Sl.800 <>r Best Of. Fiat, Triumph" VW'1. Costa Mesa-tiMQ!o ' MGA GOOD SELECTION . . HOT. BD'1' OFFER. . p~ 64UO'J3 conditi()n. can 642.-2708. :: .,
fer! 673-93Gl DAN'S AUTOMO'PNE Aak for sales MaMIW •646-1234* 19G9 Fml Country Sedan, 'SS LE MANS, -lport coo• 1
SERVICE Call . 642-ono .... _FER.RAii . ' ji MGA, XLNT COND. No ~ ~~h ~ "'Ii ()ltEVY'-NOMAD m\fon wqon. loaded. Pri<> S.. to boll•""! $100 ..V : S~ki Bolts 90iM) EDLEBROCK Hi·R!se • paint & curtaiM, lvg. state 0 ~ ... ,.-.-.... ftatioft wqon, Clean! ed tor quick sale. $2800 Blue Book. 968-'40U ~ ,
,. . manifold &: Holley carb. ,nust sell. 67f>-3821 ~ IQ 9-33:U nt * ~ ~ '64 BONNEVD..LE conv. X1nt I
21 CAMPBELL Crutser, Most tncines $99.9.5. Na· FERRARI 0 WI: PAY ratu • 'IC V4. auto PIS. BEAUT~ '61 Country Squire. cond, New tires, paint I
completely reblt, nw. bot~ ti<>nal Speed•.Center, 2110 Newport Import. 1.&1. Of. MGB ~. i's "' \11111 PIB. ooO mi, Xi~t. All p~. ah', lo mi. Fr.1/AM I-Owner 6?&-1800: ~-] :~·::ti~:' ~n';w 4~v~c..! Harbor, CM.' 6*-6700 ~· d=~·· only Jll~ 'v 64-~ ys, 96&-2818 eves. itereo. Make ofr 673--3823 '63 Pontiac, xlnt i:ond .. PC 1 "" ,..n ,1 2.105 So. M..,. Porsche • Mere •• v .w. o. SALES·SERVICE-1'.\irrs '64 MGB .. ..J FOR YOIJR ~ '" FORD Cty Sq Waz. Xlnl & air, r/h. $800. ~ )J
chest"" Anaheim. Buggies, llew & used P""'· 3100 W. Coast a,.,.. ''' . CONnNENTAL c:ond..ir. M'11t ..U, mako 968"4564 ' •
Call _ ,,.~~ '"'"" Wholesale to all 64Ull50 Ne"-~ ~ . CONNRI t otter. 175-4331 '67 G p I Sh ·1 ; ~. · .. ...,. ~ , • Speed wire wheels ex~J. :>19. 3031 Ext 66 · 67 .... · r•n r X· •rp " l ICLASSI'"""=c""'11"'·"Chrls~. "'. 0.,-oockp~~it. MFAGrdS, M2 i; _ _,$ er, ~" for ~~~riz.ed F erran 1784 ·Jent co~1tion. Will help fin· 1970 HARBOR B~Vo. CHMOLlt . l98f OPNTINENT AL MERCURY lAaded! $1995. 846-116.5 .• •
runabout. 16 coats of 0 • ...,~-20. 64:.-2246 • tnce. Small d<>wn. PRI-COSTA MESA 2128 Harticw myd. SEDAN · '
vatm•h. ll<'1 off..,_ 2.105 So. ""' 6 p.m. FIAT '.-VATE PARTY, 639-3617 VW Squaroback '67 Loaded Com ,.,.. ~ ~; Xln'~ Cond. • 1913 M..,,m'Y M•lor ~talion STUDEBAKER '· l
M8JlOheCallster, 6Anahe1m, Trucks 9sOQ chrome rims, nu wide tires, WE PAY TOJ Call -546-1843 · Wqon. $451), ~
• 33-<820 '66FIAT1500Spyderoonv .. ~ PORSCHE w/extru., Tapo, "'""·"'· DOLLAlt COR' VAIR * 5'&-lm * '62 Studebakor, noedo worti,' ~
17' GLASPAR, Seafare GMC TRUCKS spd, radials, R&H, Gd, Oind, chrome runs,~~ ttre1, tor eoo<t. clean ullll ,.... · will runc:'·67" '>107 ;: ~
Sunl iner, 100-horse, volvo Oranae Qlunty Sales and $850. 548-32lO. 1967 PORSCHE -912 m<>re. Must drive. 543-6466, all makes. See G~-h:' ,85 CORV"R M .MUSTANG .r.u lj
inboari:l "! outboard, w/ "-· H d 1 .1 s..-...1 * slate '""'Y * ~1944 N<>w, ·:-.-~ onu. coupe. -. ~Mee ea qUar ers. " p=u •·~ . Theodore Rqbtnl I~. eond. 46,000 actual 1915 Htdtp Mus•·"-, air T llRD '." ~ ~1:~~· 673-3449 <>r NEW -USED JAGUAR = :~:: N~~:~ VW '63 Senu-camper, mint 2060 Hadxir Bl¥d. mt; '"'114. $750. 6'6-4T8S 1 cond . 31,000'
16
mt . • :~
UNIVERSITY 3 """"'' Rim" Good """'· Only 12.415 ml. Fae C.M. ~ a.111. ,.~I .m. """· 642-4225 Hydrom&tic. Immao. $13l0. ,66 T•llRD •, ~
Bo T 'I 9032 OLDSMOBILE C<>Mition -F<>rced to sell re-blt enc. Stereo/ndio, pri. Will B C01JJ. . 4 dr 199) -...... 675-1783 .,.. ~ at ra1 ers 2850 Harbor Blvd . JAGUAR-~ , pty. $1800/btat C>!fer (213) UJ '-~• , 2 Or HT full -ai• d~ • -p ediately. Beat <>ff er 592•1932 <>r (nl) .,.10• 17 , wMlf. XlJt,t nutJWll cond. lo 61' ?.tuSTANG Must Sell. -' ' """ ' ~· '
18' to 22' boat trlr. torsi<>n Costa Mesa takes it away. Week days ...._ m1a • ~769 Ex I nd Lo ii Like pwr seats, brakes, windowi. '•
springs, good buy. 67.>-3341 540-9640 ~Authorized ;.11 .. r 4 P.M .• all day Satur· 196,; pan!!ll!d truck, l owner, Your Volkswa,zen or~ hSia ai ne: ii;, ~11.-S: e. Blue Book $2500 -Take $1980 ~
after 6. FOR SAL't: -1967 FORD Dealer ~; & Sunday 543-4070 c<lOd cond. $115(1: See at 595 &: pay top dollan ~ llr ' ' ~ or toreta:n car in trade. ;;
ECONOLINE, """" dty. U"hcli"""' Sa~&! ~ 1955 Por"'"' Con-Grand Havon Cittlo. C..ta or ool Call Ralph -CORVETTE bLDSMOllLE NPV!32. Coll Pbil ...,.113 .,
Marine Equip. 9035 iruper van. Sl9'15. 630 W. Large Stock Avail4ble! «ziental, al! is, Gd. fDr Mesa. 673-09!XI 'II l'M'l'l"CK hi or 545-0i34. ~; :1
,-ey-l"ili-es-el-'e"'n"'g."3-io_l_red __ .;.u;;.;;C' . !7th, C.¥. e The ALL NEW XJ.'!<'04N I.storing. 181JJ, S<S-1605 alt '55 VW BUS, now ,..bit '"i· ~~ ~·"' IPll·,rn::t,..~~ ~~t~! BANK 1964 T·BIRD, Pis, Pl,, :•l
ti<>n unit. Fresh water '60 FO~ P/U, % ton. reblt available for dem<>nst(ltion, !\.. Needs work <>n tram. Make ...... _.. S3tJO .,._._..-REPCfsSJSSION Plw. clean. Prlv pty $83:1 :
crate. Faclru'y =t. 673-2910 642--mO dayo; 6fS..l4'8 '""' ' l$ . liso<> Pri'"te party. Call 549-3313. 11811 Boacb ~· COUGAR hardtop, power """"'· """"' •: 1 oooll!d. Brand new, still in trans. big bed, runs good. ~ ma·r .... 'fl. P<>rscbe super 90. Clean. Otter. 49'-5419 eves. Daya 8lLL TOP:auk _ ~ , 1969 Oldmtoblle, 40, 2 door <>r Take ewer pa.yni.enti. it
aft 4. . .I: wkends, Mit.cb $too. lll-' , )lel<>re 8 p.m., 839-5440 or ·~ VW Camper, new ezwtne, R. Beacb. Pb. In• r ~r bra.keEx•, 11e""t cond:, '57 PORTHOLE T-Bird, ~: :I
68 Oiev % T<>n P.U. "'"' ~8 lights, FM I stttto. $800, . ~ 118f CO\IGAR XL-7. G<>ld au,., tn.ns. ~ n ('Olldi. cell cond. Nu. inter. ·a: :I
But Slip Mooring 9036 Fully equipt. Prlv. Party , ,... 'bl 'th ........... ~ Olpper Lantem, Dana Auto LM1ln1 ,.-I wf b1k landau .. Immac tion. Low mileqe. 6'U1ll pa.int. Reblt e~ C"l1 ! 494-1553, &AM-lOAM 900 So C t H' h • Converti e WI ,.., ... ..,p Po t 496-9806 ~ "1lJ.y N Ext 237 or 241. 838-7675
80' SLIP available for boats
f<>r s8le. (2) 40's or (ll 61}'
t<> 80'. Call Chuck A very,
673-5252 or eves c a 11
49'-3916.
L.9, un'•' Bo'•~:Y floni. leather. radial" rack, '"· ~,.:. •• .;_ , ~P· tryu ·-,...,... ...... __ .. _ ll :;:;.;:;=;;,,~~~-...;,!· ;1 ~ ·53 Chev. P. U. ~ T. 8' bed, au/FM "''"' ~ 1960 vw _.,..,.Or B••l L •iP .-. ...__ •"'· L.CaV I en . v. ... v,__,, ·~ a tUe '67 T·BIRD 4 dr. air cond., :
rad. t<>p cond. $750. MZ-1554. 494-7503 * JQO 11-''" • ~ Otter. c.iJ' 540-J>58 El'W'E • RI T .,,, M'8t see to appree. bit ot wot)(. brand new full pwr. Nu. radialt. exoeD ~1
5">9331, ext. 580 For Sale . Jaguar~ ROLLS ROYCE Allor. PM. orJ>oE.ro~~ -=r 10 am '"''· wUl run. $00. 175-3107 oond. '™·Cal! il41-9079 :1
1965 Chc"Y, 6 cy!. Ii ton, P. 195.5 x1«1<0. ~. 69 vw Bur. 13,000 mi. Many FOR EARLllfT U'"" ~.. . 9900u.d C,rs : 9900Utl0d C•rs 9900 ~
u. 43.000 mi. $1050. 642-3812 Cali . 67, ~t. apu.s '39, side rnou'Qta, new Extru S1900 <>r tllre sood DELIVERY 1;""'~~="'"~iiii~~~~;;~ii;iiiiijiiijii:ij~~~~iiii~iiiiiiii~~iii ~ WANT: Rent or buy, moor-after 6 Ptif. """"" ,aint, new wsw tires, $4950. pickup <>n trade. LI 3-455.1 ina: or slip, Peninsula <>r off '63 J XKE Riter MUil Itri All popular makelt l'ut1 =~~~.~ VRSll CHEVY P~~uo .. :~:tof?~:~. Ex·. '·;;~7 l'OO~~i·l!~.r.. My~ w1·11!S~,,;c,{fiuAiY!~!J;tL.,: ~
WANTEP,:'!lllp or. buoy to Joops 9110 celfOnt .~itjoll. Phone " ·< '61 VW BUI · · 10 IORD fHAT ~~Ill · " ' · :1
mDOt" lll'. salfbo&l Newport . ~ ;~ ORAl'IQI . with nblt -· ~ :AD ~ j'I area. Prlv-jriy. Pleue call '56 Reblt el!I'. 4 whl dr. Top, " ~ · COOT'S Call m-rftl9 Cotta Iha ... 'l..NPia '
..y, M""57 """· 1133-2&15 roll • mw bar, radio, hitch. KARMANN GHIA "Ci.DEST' ,65 vw Bur. Muot Soll! '"77 'H CONTININTAL $4395 · :, 64&-5568 THIS WEEK! $975. LE ·SE ·NY MAK·~ Alt••Ctlff 1111111 dlfOml Y•llow whtl bltck '.· 1'
'• ·b'I H 9200 '69 JEEPSTER Co and J ta Deale "' "' • 1Mth1r lnt.rlor •rid .. ncl•u roof. Full me I • ome• mm 0, 1965 K•rmann Ohl. oya r 968-1964 after 5 OR MODI~ w-., ... eqvlpm111t, flC!DrY air, ef(, ••
4 whl drive; Warn hubs, pas--BAY HARBOR i · 6000 l.door Coupe, Xlnt "nd· '65 V\V Squareback. 1600 el!I', Let our teue exi>ertJ 1boW 1 Mobll• Hom• Sales ·tractl()n; mi. 543-9853. fmmaculate inside Ind out! lmmedl.te Delivery 5000 mi, xlnt cond. Aakirc yoU tht best pla.n ffr )'01!f 11
Cua L<>ma Roll • Away • Campers 9520 One awner. See at 480 Broad. on HARD TO GET $1150. 675'-5763 peraonal need• withqut o-i61 CONTININTAL COUPE $ 1 5 :1
Sheraton Manor . H<>mette . way, C.M. MODELS-c•ll for ·~ vw Sed. New tirea & bat. &adonU.NIVERSIU Mlllllu'" ''"'"'11' mst1t11<: Un11h wl!ll 4 9 · 'I 1968 15 foot Northwest '5 infor-•tion XI nd "'·-IMklllllf 1111w1er. Inlet: l11'1d•11 '°"· Klt. Prestige . Sahara Coach Campin ... trai l er. 6 KARMANN GHIA ,,_ tery. nt. C() • ~totter. OLDSMOBIL ~~,:rte,'::;,'.'~tt!::•· 11 NOw~1N ~~y slerps 8 ~Pie. used 6 Good condition. All Qriiinal. ~ • ~· _ 2850 Harbor Bl~ ~ ... .ic. lY'1lt. 1?
1'25 Bak" St., C...ta Mo,. lime" like brand new!! $400. 968-4966 1Mlf,llS VOLVO "o:.~~~aa-"
%blockEast<>fHarbor Bivd. Cost $1595, sacrifice SUDO. PRICED for Quick ~el 65 tll'°'m '""'llll'IV '67 CONTININTAL $3395 !,
Costa Mesa (TI4) 54!,}.!l470 can be seen Sat & Sun at Karmann . Ghia, Im· "' • ~ LEASE . :;J 15953 Mt. MatterbOrn, }', maculatc! Origi nal owner. II"""" r ~~'r:ii ~ !:.:'t:flll =~ ~~':r;::.111111:: ·•
•',",', J'1m u"s'•WD Valley. Call -5.11--0380 See at <180 Broadway, C.M. '°°So. Cst. Hlghw1y VOLVO 1969 l'.flllltang, 2 dr, JtT. v.ai lltdt llMlll fOll'':'t.111tvxury111ulpptd •/Id: I L•gun• Be1ch SORRY' t•etetr 11r Cttlllltllnlftf, AM·'"' l'l'dlo, 11,,. ~
C
'59 CHEVROLET P/U. 4 4f4-5404100 • air, p~. auto. trans., wn. ,,,. Mii. OM-cer ... 11111\1111 ~~ ooper .... 6 cyl. $595. 8' cab'"" MERCEDES llNZ 75o3 * $1'.00 mo. """'"'"'· TTH... I
TRAILER SALES 0pon Rood Camper 5695 0r ALL '69's SOLD! SOUTH COAST "Buy from • man both for 11195. 22'l W. TOYOTA CAR LE.o\llNG ., CHECK OUR DEAL 300 W c.t Hwy NB= who lives in one I" Wilson, C.M. '"8--0343 ON 1970 Modtltl · ' =
\VE SERVICE 1968 36" Camper Shell for 8' SPECTACULAR
WHAT WE SELL! bed. Romo,.bl• back door, YEAR END SALE ~ 11 . • IUICK
324 So. Harbor, Santa Aoa rost 1365. Sacrilke $250. ALL MOD!LS lf\1\1
1 Blck So. of Bolsa 531-1006 531-0380 YOUR BEST DEALS • m-'-BUICK 1963 Special 4~ l:>tj
SPACES! ,64 DODGE Van Family ARE STILL AT •Wll< Auto trans, very ~
Move in today \Vgn. air cond., side awning, DEAN LEWIS 900 So. Cst. Hfthw1y :is
7~ ~
New 5* Park gd. cond. Aft 6 p~ 968-2729 L a .. h 1967 250SE Mercedes· Bens -vun• -c '63 Buick LeSabre.. ~
Oloice of models <>r custom '66 CHEV Spt. Van rlh, •Harbor CM 6f6.fl303 494-7503 * ••• •110 .,... buil t in smog free Costa coupe VJG083 air, ~· · · · -cond., ttblt. enc. Ortf,
Me91l·Newport Harbor. ~!~· u~6n=~~s~tc. et c. c u st<> m pa Int BIU.. MAXEY o-.vner. 64J..OOOO .,..
Adult l'.-tobile Home Parle wlleather interior o 11 l y YOLYQ ..c';.,;":;,'·""==-==,..;,.,.
G · 9525 $6750 full price. J i ., ~B!IOI IAJ •65 WILDCAT Bui~'' !'1't reenleaf Mobile Home Sales Dune Buggies Slemona Mercedes Ben•, 121 T 1750 Whittier, CM 642-1350 •----=-_ CLEARANCE NO\YI equipped-air, f\'W ._
. . '57 Bug • Rail Job. 10" wbls ~; ,;!',"""'· Sant& ~ " IM1 BEACH BLVD, 142. 144. 145. 164 party owner. 89U.11f. • CABANA (easily collapsible) In back, nu tires. Recent ............_. --L•""'•>=-7 alwn,, 10 x 20. louvered . & valve job. 548-'7540 MERCEDES Benz nil 1£1ee, 1tfvnt. Beech M7.au THE LOWEsr PRICES '56 BUICK, stick l llll'r 111111111
picture wtnd<>ws, Roof rein-Air, new tires. X\nt, ~Btl& flnl N. of Coad Hwy. on 8ch YOUR BEST DEALS ·wor~ $35.00. 2233 AftlOfl
forced. Walnut panel int. '65 VW ~ll&· &: Chaasis, glass offer over $600. 548-79: ~~-Sell, brand new '69 ,.\P.E srILL AT St., sta Meaa. ~
Must m<lVe it! Wkdys 213; bdy, Licensed. Good cond. ·!VJ'Uu.. Land Cruleer, f.whl DEAN LEWIS ·~~!.tloXlnnl-':'.',Ji(f.i..t (jOOI .. ~l. \Vknds 673-9314 Must Sell· 8.10-3448 MG .fr· Qinv. Complete ....... .-... ..-.
'fi5 Spartan 8x42, alum awn-MANXIOORVAIR w/robar & tobm'. Under UM lla&b'lr, C.M. MS-9303 ~1;:";· ;875-5342;;;:;;_~_,,....-..,.....
In(, located adult park CM, Make Offerli:peratc! MG 1(irr. Best offer over '2550, 1968 RIVIERA, fully JDICill
Xlnt cond .. priced low. • 646-• Sales •·-"-p..... f'S-1753 • ~ ClaUla 9615 leUe eiPltinr.' ~ 6*-8400 call after 4 <ll' all ' _......... .... acrlfiee. Call 613-119
day weoken<h. lmpomd Autot 9600 Immediate Dell-. • u.oucsw•GIN "" MARK u ContJnental. All Modelt 1 ~ w, " Bronze. Brown I: white int.
Mini 11.k• 927S ALFA ROMEO BLUE v-cn. Ex· Xlnt cond. 51~2851.
'197"::;,;o..;BOO=N;;;lE;.....B_i_ke_. -,"",tras..;..;., • clean! EXTRAS! $1650. 193lr.fodel A
CADILLAC~
'65 CAD DE VW )t}nt cond. $190. ?tflckey B-tt Al!I'HOR!ZED Aft 5:30, 67M806. $400
l dirt oqulp. new parts, xlnt 'ALFA ROMEO •i1 VW, Good M•chanical ===962-"'167====== I All orisinal. full Pl'r• fu! '°"'· 1110· ""1'" DEALER 3 ' · """'· Le•Ynl· .,.,,, ""'' RI .. C:•rs, 11..i1 9620 ""· tllr, ..ir. ... ip cu Ir! 3\i HP Mini Bike wls park 642-9405 MO-l'lM a,n. Make OUer. 5'8--'725l. trade or .mall down QPA!
Chriatmu gUt. $115. 968-WS 1r,1is nME FOR' 9000 ml. Radial tlre! Pontiac .... •nd. 327 Cbt\')I -·
'67 CONTININTAL
'H MllCUlY COLONY l'llK.$3295 ' ""'"'*'' -.ur.r cerdlMt nd tlrlbfl '""'" 1ta.H, ttw .. t ... flck, flctorf • wllh •IKll tomftrt _.,.. vlnyl lntwlor, '
1lr condltlolllne, P'.S,. P'.t ., d1,11t lttlen
'IM STllNMm
1111 .. , •• onty lt.000 mlttt. Tiit
CtnflMnt.I ff '"''°" Wqln1.) No, a"" i ·1
:1
;1
!
llLL MAllOLI , :i
JObD&OD•&GD ' ~!
LllllLI lllTllEllTU • ua1m. IUUIY ···-· UTHter, like new. Great ~ 11 Authortzcd 11-fG ~ 1969 VW BUG 1957 CHEVY, tube front end. 32lLB, Call Phil ~ CllJ'
HONDA IO, 1005; -(On. tntt•'n 9UICK c...-•H --"1lnl Cond ,_ eng. $800. 84W22I ··"'57;:.._;;;:Cad:;;Wa,,....c . ..,De"'v"'.111e"";-_"'iiill""
• ••~n 1100. ...., '". VW, sunroof, Io w -r ·-s ExcellfM -.. ~ THROUGH • " Au1<11 W1nlod -9700 ~"' -· · •· -' ~1400 900 So. Cot. Hlthw•y ,. ~age. Clean! one .....,, dftlj>n, 548--0149
I: : 2626 HAltlOlt BOULEVARD, COSTA MISA I ! '------~-------~ ... ,
llJW CARS I Mlle South el the UllD CAllS "' f40.56JI ~m.r.elko. • mo.' old. Cal Lo9una &o•ch DAILY PILOT . C<IM 573-4923 . 1969 CADILl.\C, from '61 CADILLAC. N11'<iii! ..
300X 3 HP. Xlnt 0>nd. 1100. 494-7501 * -3100 W NT ... ~56 VY/. Extr• parts pd"''' patty. Cal! fl. 6 p.m. BEST OrFER. Priva!o pu>
Cal! 6f6.6948 A .. D Cal! u 84U1 S1M111 "'· -
642.0ftl S•n DI ... ,,Mway 511561S
\ ' . I I
) • •
• ~-----·-·--•
r
I
I
'
KEEP A WARM HEART .
FOR CHRISTMAS
Long Quilt
Robes ·by
Gossard -
Artemis
$35
SHORT STYLE . . s2e;
. '' Polyester
Fiber. F;rr
With Lavish
Embroidery
PHONE
642·1197
SILVER
~~ ,.1'1a*M "°" ...,,,_
Here are
trouaera for
70\IDS America. Thi clualc beJtl ....
model dlstfnctively
cat for !la tiering fit
over trim patterns.
Veta's
lllTNAn AnAIEL ,,_""" ..... _._
............ ,. 7
' ~rejl.with . ~ .... IXJ) ... t7 :•far the.initlcUlo..lo17v.
Wo-llaft'tllom
: ,-incjUalccol!F,a_,
: 1. andbltndll
• $12.10 .
WESTCUFF PLAZA, NEWPORT' BEACH . .
. ~· • ... •• ••
' --
.:-;; I . ' .. , . '
•one-st0i::»·;Sh'Oppllig · · , , . . . .. I
. · ·at its--.tirieSt! . ' . ' ..... . .. • • • •,j • ·{, ,, ~I ' I,.
OPEN THURSDAY, AND!!Mt:>NDAY EVENINGS
' 1 • • • • ~ •• • r ~ '~:r :, 1. ' ' ' ' • , ' ::~:1:1:. :. ,J
. .. . .
::be X{jo ::bet
Annual Safe
* HALL!DAY'S *
T
REG. TO $24.95
<111. ·1>1~ ri..Mf 0tt. . SH~ES
FOi THI IMTlll IAMllY ... ,
• WestcRff -~,-Newport 8-h
-THE CLINGY, SWINGY LOOK:
OUR BOUCL£ KNITS lhty ~lint
I• you, hug you , th •P• you lonf
end letll • , • t!!d thtv 1wi119
encl 1wirl right tlong witli yo111
• • , tht ytt r'1 gtt tl 1kinny -rib
k11ih Dy 6trltnd, i" • 101! •nd
wh!1pery 1011'1' t1•ture •I Du•
pont Orlon. W1 h•v• th11" for
i•" i" t~•:Jithl ".•)" .(.olort:
'·' .. . ..
. .. ' '
~1 . ' ' . . .
I vernon s SPORTSWfAlt
WESTCLIFF PLAZA, NEWPORT BEACH
I .. ..
,.
'· .
.
f.-j) ...... n ......
. .
. MEN'S TIWlmONAL CLOTIDNG
17th I 111.VJNE AVE.
NEWPORT BEACH
· WESTCLIFF PLAZA
PH. •45°0792
a -a erta · ·
... ~ .
I < ,
. I . " ·. J " ; '
.... : : ·.~-· Ponv-· · _.,:·
• ~I , . , 1 _ , 1 ,
... ·I I,.-!'•.' l
-Chinese' tomb
. ·"" -
Tuskany Lamb
-~Calf.---
Kid Paw
Fur Trims
WESTCUFF PLAZA
"
,1
•
--. .
. . . .
'
I! I
t
1
ii
Your Community
Gollers teeing off where oneUmt bean fields more recently bad raised only dust
In tht rotor wash of a Marine Corpe helicopter • • • '
Trailer boats going down to the lea oil concrete ramps where onct only marshes
and bogs bordered the ocean'• tfdelands •••
Children frolicking on shiny new play equipment that is blossom.lnl amlcbt tht
creen teas of "parks" which were parks In name only until the monkey ban, teeter·
tottetl and slides arrived •••
These are tangible signs of the beginnlngs of the "Recreation Era" In the com·
mlinlties of the Huntington Valley. · ';
With approval from the voters to Jssut '6 million in bonds to finance coo.structlon
ol parks and recreation facWtte1, the city of Huntington Beach can, indeed. loot to
1170 optimistically and label lt the Year of Recreat.ion.
The.major achievement expected to come out or the "beginnings'' ol 1970 ls, of
course, to make Huntington Beach Central Park a reality.
Its far-reaching plans for turning H7 acres Jn the heart of the clty Into a f2
· million-plus recreational complex and wUdllft preserve already are well formulated.
Meanwhile, Fountain Valley'• own 11wilderness-within-the-city" project, River
Park, ls nearing completion. 'nlankl to much volunteer effort, Its ovemlght camping
facilities on the west bank of the Santa Ana River soon will be finished.
And the county is moving rapidly on its two regional parks in the area -Milt
Square tn Fountain Valley and Sunset Aquatic Park Jn northwestern Hunan,ton Beach.
These are signs of growth, pf'QIPtrlty and maturity. While 1t Is ot>vtoualy true
that not all problems Involving shelter, employment and education have been 10lved,
that these communities have reached a plateau In their development.
Tht DAILY PILOT is prood to have this opportunity again to share with you
eb1t report on the progress oi the past and promies of the future -the third annual
tdltton of YOUR COMMUNITY.
~t/~
hbUlber
Oruce Coast DAILY PILOT
. , . ' .
Retreation:
Riding Nig1'1
Ona New Wave·
Where to Find it Inside
Btacltes . . . • . . • • • . • • • • . • • . . . . . • . . . . . . . . f
Ctlurches . . • • • • . • • • • . • • . • • • . • . • . . . . . . . I
CoUeiea
Golden west College . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l5
UC1 ...............•.•••••...•...... 27
Fouaiai• Valley
The City ............................ 3
Chamber of Commerect .•••........ 31
Fire Dept ....•.•..•....••••.•....•. 3
Government • . • • .. • . .. . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 6
Industry ....•.•••••••• , •••.......... 19
Library ......••••.••••.•............ 26
Parks, Recreation . . . • . . . • . . . . . . 10, 13
Police Dept. . ........•••.•...•....... 6
Planning Commlssl<m .. .. .. . .. .. .. . . 6
Freeways ............................ 17
Runlin&toa Beack
The City ............................ 2
Chamber ol Commerce . . .. .. .. . .. . 31
Fire J:>ei>t ............... , •••••••••.•.• 14
Government ....................... ·. 2
Llbrary ...........••.•••....•..•..• 13
Plarming Commission .. • .. .. .. . . .. .. 2
Police I>ept ......................... 16
Public Information Olfioe . . . . . . . . . . 14
Recreation. Parks . . . . . . . . . . .. . . 10, lS
Huatfngloa Beacb Company .....•.... it
Huntln11oa Harbour .................. S1
Industry . . . . . . . . . . .. . • .. . . . . .. . . . . 11, 11
Oil laduatry History ............ : . . . . !I
Orange County
Government ........................ 3l
Regional Parks . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . ll
Telephone Numbers ................ 31
Realtors, Board of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sl
Recreation (Family Roundup) ........ %t
Scbools
High School District ... , . . . . . . . . . . . . U
Fountain Valley ..................... 27
Huntington Beach City ............. 2i
Ocean View ........................ 27
Sports Roandup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . U
Theaters ....••...•••...•.....••.••... zt
Y oatll Clubs • • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . !I
1111 ... Mlil .. Milm~~ ·~~-~~.~-,~~xg:;~MMlP~·-=:1111m1 .. ~·m•¥~~~ .. ~~~~·-~BZ!il3lilm .... ~IJg1ls&°'R•~~·~li:lE.llai ...... iflir:Ust·C·:lli'ar.l.iiiilB!lRillaiCE:Ji::iml~.S.:~~~.-·--:;;...~~
YOUR COMMUNITY Magazine Published by Orange CNst DAILY PILOT
Huntington Beach, • Fountein Velley, California
1969
Rob~rt N. Weed ...... Publisher Tom Mccann .. Edi~rlal Supervisor
Thoma! Keevil .......... Editor Anne Hamblin .......... Statt Artist
· L~ Payne, Richarcl Koehler, Patrick O'Donnell ...... Staff Photopapbera
About the Cover
PhotographJc tour of the Huntington Valley and Us oceanfront should be enough to
convince anyone that the amenities that make an area a great place to play and w.ork
have arrived. Cover shows (left to right, acrosa top) golf pro Richard "Skip" Whittet
at new Mile Square links, kids playing on new equipment ln Lakt Park, resident'•
sailboat In Huntlnaton Harbour's bay. Family launches boat at Sunset Aquatic Park
in center photo and (left to right, across bottom) mom snoozes on 1unny sand w 1 t b
toddler safe In playpen, Huntington PacUlc Apartments complex Is foe-al point of re--
Juvenated beachfront, JOUDI flshermen try out lake which wlll bl part of proposed
new HunUngtoo Beach Central Park and a surfer ftndl 11tb1 croove."
CIVIC CENTER -Growing Huntington .Beach
Deedl more than just a "city ball" to house the
many functions ol. its city government and this clus-
ter ol buildings, parking areas and palm trees bound--
ed by Main, Orange, Fifth and Sixth street! In t h e
downtown area is doing the job until a new Civic
Center can be built.
1970: Year of Recreation
Huntington Ready to Laurich Plan w Change Image
From the municipal pier at
Main Street in HunUngton
Beach south to B e a c h
Boulevard stands today a
veritable forest of palm trees
rislng from a flowered, grassy
center divider in Pacilic Coast
matiway.
Already 1be lnternalk>nally
famous arcbltectural firm of
Edtbo, Dean, Austin and
William of Pasadena has
bem employed to design the
central city pa r t at
Goldalwest Street and Talbert
Avenut.
funds lo ajd In buying the land
for central parl.
Another "3.247 will come
from the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Develop-
ment of oat View Park and
yet another $300,000 ls ex-
pected to be.Jp pay for some or
the development costs of the
central park.
HuntiJJ&ton Beach. Some day
visitors and residents alike
may dine a thou.sand !eel out
lo sea la JDOdern, new
restaurantl, browae in amalt
shops whicb feature the pro-
dooe ol the world IDcl stroll or
fish. day csr nlabt. on the ••new•• municipal pier just now
beginnlnf to take shape with
each impr09emeat added to
the el'isting atructure.
Huntingtoa ~ bat a
council·adminJstntor form ot
city govenunent with a lf!\lt!)e
man council elected to fOW'o
year terms biennially at·laree
Crom the city.
The mayor Is elected lo the
pdsit.ion each year by ft.now
councilmen. 'lbe curr8Jt Jnaf•
or is Jack Green who Is ISV•
Ing his first term 1n the pasi-
tion. George McCracken II
vlce mayor.
Councilmen Alvin M. Coen.
7-inan Tea1n
Donald Shipley, Ted Bartlett,
Henry Kaufman, and Jerry
Matney complete the couneiL
Councilmen appoint a city
edministratot. It hll been
Doyle Miller for the put 1J
years. '1be admlntstrator la
responsible for conmct of tbe
day....ay buslnea of the dty
under policy set bJ tbe coun-
cil and undet' ruie. Id by a
city cbarta' I aplJl'OVtd In ltel
by the voters.
Also elected to office ..
the city dert, treuunr and
atterney.
Councilmen receive a JDClldh.
Jy salary ol $17S and .. re-
imbursed for travel and otbet
expemes for offidal bu•tness.
Three councilmen are elect.
ed in ·one electioo: four two
years later. The next council
election will be in April 1970
when the terms of Coen.
Green, Bartlett and Kaufman
expire.
To be eligible for the coun-
cil a candidate must bave
been a resident and voter foi:
two years. Vacancies are fill.
ed by council appointment
and a successor ls ~ at
the next election to fill the un-
expired term.
Main duties of the council
Include adoption of Ins, tet-tina standards, levyin& ~
ta~es. adoption of a dty
(Pleast 'hr1 to P11e •>
Buns
City
What; by admission ol city
officials, used to be one of the
~g!Jest stretdles of the coastal
bi&bway bas been transformed
Into one ol the ahowplaces
between Seal B.each and San
DleBO u a part of the
municipal effort to convert the
Oil City lnto the City of
Recreation.
While the construction or a
$2.5 million parking lot on the
beach!ront and the la.ndscap-
ina ol the parking facility,
coast hJghway and the inland
sUS. of the street has been a
spectacular undertaking, u~
iroverblal ''you ain't seeh
nothin' yet•• well may apply to
plans for the early 1970s and
partleularJy to the next II
man~.
The firm Is engaged In
designlnc lcr the city a unique
part complete with two Jakes
and a wildlife refuge.
Envisioned oo the U7 acres of
the initial $:2.13 million park in
the heart ol the city is a com·
plex offering recreational opo
portunities for everyone from
the camper to the boattt lo
the bir'dWatcher.
THE PLEDGE
Construction ls to be com-
pleted early in the decade ot
recreation a n d youngsters
whose parent~ in 1963 voted
for the bond issue will sail,
ride horses or bicycles or
stroll along the nature walks,
stoppinc now and then lo fish,
before they are too old for
chitdreo•s activities.
While the park program
moves swiftly ahead, so do
plans for completiQg the
recreational environment oo
the waterfroot. A new parking
authority project couJd clear
aome of the bli&hl ol the past
and make way for new
development to provide places
for shopping or just strolling.
A coordinated development or the beaches including the
stale owned Bolsa Chica and
Huntiqtoo, the clty beacb and
the privately owned strands is
being eyed by city leaders in
an effort lo make maximum
use of the city's recreational
asset ror all people who misbt
care lo refresh themselves by
the sea.
City's Growth Kept in Line
As Shape of Things to Come
Jt.YEAR PLAN
TM upcoming decade will
bqin with the Yea r or
R«rution and continue with
the recreational theme until it
closes with the city's being
known nationally for i t s
recreational opportuniliNi for
young and old, resident and
noo-resident, visitor a n d
homebody.
At least, the city's Harbors,
Beaches a n d Development
Department, Urban L a n ti
Citizens Steering CommUtee, cltJ planning a(encies and ad·
mlnlltratioo are tD1agtd in an
aJkut effort to mah lt hap-
Jlell.
Vottts have approved • St
milllon bond issue for C..'On•
sUuctlon of a network 6>l
pMb to btciA the process.
2 .a&Y"LOT ..._m ...
t •• .__J ..
This Is the pledge of those
who are in _charge of im·
plementin1 the ambitious park
procram approved by the
voters in 1161.
Within tbe nest 1a months
some M00,000 will be spent on
bu.yq new part sites, about
$430.000 will be spent on
development on nine parks
alr~ady owned by the city,
nearly '300,000 will be spent
on develofment of seven
school land parks under joint
· city·school acreemeots and
'518,000 ls to be spent on seven
new n~ parks and
two new community parks.
Not all of tbla program Is to
~ financed by bond or local
propertf tu money. Already
the city bu Ulllll'IDCt of some
'10t,4ll In ftderal opea space
Coordinated with the park,
beach and c ommer c i al
developments Is completion of
a central Ubrary to be perched
on a hill overlooking one of the
Jakes in the central city park.
The $2 million library, to be
designed by well k n o w n
arcbitects Rkbard and Dion
Neutra. is to provide resident~
with library services which
ttxtend much further than the
usual circulation or books.
·cmc CENTER
Now being planned i!I a new
civic center complex to house
the administrative offices and
the poUce department. Thb
center, too, ts to reOect the
new outlook of the city toward
recreation.
Drums er planners are
beinc turntd into reality in
Huntington Beac-b has
been rated A m e r i c a • s
fastest growing city, swiftly
changing from an acriculture
and oil town to a city of peo-
ple, homes, bcsinesses and
industry.
Just a year ago, the
population was recorded at
J04,l24. It stands now at
111,846 and within the next
two years. some 125,000
persons are expected to
reside in the city.
If HuntingU>n Beach is lo
meet the challenge posed by
its rapidly c b a n g i n g
economy and the demands
of its citizens, its planning
commission must insure
that this growth will be
orderly.
To the seven men who
meet the first and third
Tuesdays of each moath the
view of tbe city ill not
today'& look but what it will
look lite decades from now. ne citDenl lfho l«'Vf on
the comnuss100 in an ad-
visory role to city council
are appointed f OI.' f <MU'· year
terms by the council. They
are assisted in matters of
zoning, land uses, sub-
division planning and civic
b<'autification by members
or the city Planning Depart-
ment.
Btcause of the !ull·scale
planning program under
consideration by the Urban
1..and Institute, made up of
representatrv~ Of c i t y
government, school district.!
and citizens, P l a n n 1 n g
Director Ketmeth Reynolds
is ~voting hi! eUortJ to the
delalls of r e b u 114 in g
downtown, improving the
waterfront and planning for
a new civic center.
Ricsard Harlow, assistant
plaoolng dirtctor. Ids as
repreoseotative of the Plan·
ning Depariment ldvia.ln&
the citiu.ns' commlu&tll.
'Mle comtn1uioD calla and
conducts public hearin&J
regularly on zoning changes,
building variances, master
plans and use permits.
Regular meetings a r •
scheduled for the firat and
third Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in
the city council chambers of
tbe civic center, Fifth Street
and Pecan Avenue.. PerJodic
study sessions, wblcb are
open to the publ.ic, also •e
scheduled.
Members of the com·
mission are: R.cer Slat.es, cla1lrmaa
(Term upltts June Jt, 1'71)
C.R.Miller
(Tenn uplres June 3t, ltn)
Beary Dake
(1'erm e1plrtt June It, Jt7%)
Roben Bull
(1'mn expires J•ne 38, lt73)
MlcbdWor
(Term erplns J• .. M, 1173)
1tidart r ..
(Term uplres J•.. It, Jl7t)
MAl'ftl~r
(Tsm ~ , ... •. 1rzu
TOM COMMWN11'Y-1Ht
•
F ountai11, Valley Keeps
Past, Future in Mind
For Today's Decisions
f;ity~s Master Plan
Heralded • ID Sta.te
As Key to Progress
17 TERRY COVILLE
Of .... ......, """ ltaft
"Good planning when the
clty was first iniUated ls re-
•ponalble for the aucoesa wt
have bad," says Fountain Val·
ley Mayor Edward Just.
Slnce the city's inception In
· '1957, the fact that Fountain
Y alley was master planned
before it was incorporated
bu been trumpeted tbrouP.
out tbt state. lt's boasted u
a unique quality which ln·
IU1U the city of steary de·
'elopmeot.
Fountain Valley bas reach· tel Its ball-way point in pro-
tected-population at 30,000.
Attempting to peer into his
trystal ball, Mayor Just pre-
tt.lct.s an impetus in Industrial
and commercial growth over
the coming year, while over·
all apartment development
may be limited primarily to one central area designated as tht ucity center."
PARTICIPATION
"Citizen participation is al·
lo on the upswing," n o t e s
Just, Pointing to the lilcely es·
r.em committees to advise the
cound1 and freer pubUc par.
tldpitioo in council meetlngs.
Four prime elements In the
t l T l c center complex have
no. been completed. F l r s t
· Wll the city hall, followed by
• Ubrary facility. This year,
the police department was al·
lowed to move Into tts new
headquarters and only a few
IDontba ago the huge commun· tt, center was opened to the
public,
Further expamlon of the
JK>Uc. headquarters and other
dvlc center units will come u the population demands
It. All have the flexibility for
txp&mlon.
"We have a good staff and
a ftscally responsible council
~ttempttng to get the most
• lot each dollar spent," says
the mayor, lndlcaUng a brtgbt
future ahead.
Put, present and futlft are
lndlvlaible In Fountain Val·
ley'1 phllosophy of govern.
meat, E a c b step takell ll
1t6t-YOUI COMMUNITY
done with one eye on previous
atept and ooe eye on future
paths.
To a11ure sound and or·
der)J development of t h •
city, thert la continual up.
daUng of master plan ele· menu for land use, water
dlltrlbutlon, a a n i t a t loo,
drainage, traffic clrculatioo, 1treet names, fire preven.
tloo, ~· protection, and parka and recreation. •
The concept of planning
ahead obvtously permeated
the thl:ntinr ot"Fountai:n Vat.·
ley citlzeDJ when they had
the notion of incorporating
a city in the mtd-1950s. First
a committee was organized
to study incorporation.
Robert Wardlow, whose
family ties in the area date
back to 1896, was chairman
of that committee. Serving
with him were T. V. Tat.
bert, Elsa Hoffman and Jim
Kanno.
But the origin of Foun·
tain .V a 11 e y &tretch back
even before the 1957 incor·
poratloo. Hi&tory for the
communlty began ln what
was once known as "Gospel
Swamp." The area was de·
acrlbed u a "rich and well
watered section" lying be·
tween Bolsa and the Hunt·
1Dgton Beach Mesa.
TBESWAMP
Wide open country, it was
covered with a thick growth
of wlllow1 and tule pads.
The Rev. Issac Hickey, an
ex-Baptist minister, select·
ed the spot .for rousing evan·
gellcal meetings at which
he preached. Local youths
qulcklf gave the area its
name, "Gospel Swamp."
From those begionlngs,
there eventually emerged
Talbert, the commUllity that wu forerunner of today'a
FountaJn Valley, A general
aton wa.1 built by James
Talbert at the corner of Tal·
bert and Bwhard roads.
aomt of today's maps still
with a dot at the same in·
tersectlon.
At that time, Wesbnlnst.er
wu the nearest post office
and to go there was greatly
DAILY rUT lllff ..... Inconvenient for Fountain
Valle7 farmera. .Jamu Tal·
bert petittoud Prel1dent
WUllam McKtnJey for a post
offtet. It na granted and
Talbert'• aoa Tom became
th• llrat po1tmuw.
THE FOUNTAIN -It may not be the grandiott water display some realdenta h~,~~~ '"in their city, but Fountain Valley does finally have an "of.. ~ Cl~ Center ~::S,~x~ nlght-Ughbcl view ot new Community Center. pan
For JIVI. the area wu
naqbt but Peaceful beet
and ceterr fll'Dll, gruing
laDdJ for 1b19 and catUe
and amall poultry ranches. City F~e Department Uses
NEWBOMES
Then thlnp began to hap-
pen. Todlf, thole fields of
farm cropa are glvini way
more and more to homes,
shopping centers and major
~riangle' Pr-0tection -Flan -
thoroughfare1. The change Learn1ng training and
rate, or growth rate, w a 1 · plannJng Ir. keynotes of
so great for the first two the Fountain Valley Fire
quart.era ol 1964, for in· Department's philosophy for 11.~ce, that the city was of· citywide f.lrt protection
f1ctally recognized as being .. , • the fastest growing in the It s ~. continual learning nation process, says Fire Chief
• H. C. "Mictey" Lawson. As And the changes continue. new matedals come on the
During the last two years, the market he adds firemen face ol the city changed so 1• b ' much that the city slogan must earn ow to handle
coined by the Fountain Valley them.
Junior Chamber of Commerce And learn they do. All
-"the city where progress Fountain Valley firemen
shows" -seemed to be now are taking college level
com.Jng to life. courses. Tiler study a va·
with .city olllcJab to deter·
mine what the city needed
by way of fire protection.
App1icanta f « the Job of fire
chief were eougbt from
throughout the nation.
Chief Lawson, with ex.
perience datinl back to 1946
when he wa1 a member of
the Los Angeles County De·
partment, topped a list of
125 other appllcanta to be·
come the city's first chlel.
Then a master plan of
fire prevention and protec·
tion was developed. On July
1, 1964, the Founta.ln Valley
Fire Department was of.
Today, land 1ultable for rlety of subjects including
residential development that fire prevention, explosives
years ago might have and, in U.pinl wltb t h e
been sold for '3,000 an acre tlmes, radiological reading
ls going for pS,000 ID acre. (or monitoring), ,.......~~~~'!"""':!"~~~
B1 AprU of 1962, the city The chief emphasizes plan-was ready for lta first sub. nlng. And that means not .,
division, a 120-acre tract at only plannlng by being pre.
Newland Street and Warner pared, but planning for prop·
Avenue. That moment came er location of hydrants and to the year after the city'• fire statlona.
ori&1nal muter plan wu Following what baa been
adopted ill 1961. nie tract called a "triangle plan" of
of houses rose, and people protection for the city, there
began moving into them 1n now have been built two fire
the summer o1. 1962. statioM. One b in the west
Today, city officlala list central part of the city and
over 100 tradl ln the clty. the other ta ill the north·
Bes1d.ent1al development eastern part of the city. For
ls not th• on)J area 1n wblch the future, a thlrd atatlon
the cbanget or progress would be placed in t h e
1how. Opening of the Gem· aoutbeastern corner of the • ~:r°l=e~i::O:~~t ~~ ~,!ed tba: pedareat ta euf·
Street on an 80-acre region· ranftt~ eve 0 0 war·
al shoppl.n& center aite was Planning isn't aometh1ng
heralded. that started yesterday 1n the
The apot la In tht geo--city, In 1962, a cltt.zena' com• FIRI CHiii'
{Plealt Tua te Pace I) mi~ wu fonned to work H. C. 'Mickey' Lawson
ficially placed Into service.
Development ol the city'1
own deparment meant the
elimination for city taxpay.
ers of a bill for county fire
service aid, It also meant
a savings in another way:
Fire insurance rates went
down a s fire risk ratings
went from class nine to
class six.
The fire department baa
20 personnel, Including the
cblef and his fire marshal Floyd Warr. There are four
captains -Harlan Johnson.
Bill Williams, Donald New•
man and Lou Burkbart-
four engineers and ten
firemen. With two sh.ltt.t at
both stations, t h e r e t.
round-the-clock alertneas.
Equipment includes two
1,2.50 gallon pumpers, a res·
cue unit, a utllity-service
unit, a reserve 1,000-gallon
pumper and the chief's car.
The departmept, 11 others
ln Orange County, belonp
to the Orange Count1 Mu·
tual Aid Pact.
Tbe departmeltr
Fire C1dtf11 OfOce
11m au1aan1 a&.
Foatata Valle1
Telepbtne MUUC
Wardlow StaUoa
1773'1 Dubard St.
Foutala Valley
Abel Steans Statloa
lf717 Newl9ope St.
FoutaJa Valley
Emerceac1 calla onlf1
ea..tSIJ
Blllbieu ealla1 ea..wc
DAILY PILOT 3 MA9AiiNI
t
Council~ ~dmin•str~~Qt. -Run HUntington . ,, . ,
COUNCILMAN
Ted Bartlett
lome six million pffple -
men than tbe population of
all of Los AngelM County -
f1nd delight 1n the sum-
mertime on the shores ol
BUDtington Beech.
Sunbathers, surfers and
tD&Iers -touruta u well
u residenta -flock to
Macbes that at OM time were hidden by · murky
IWDlPI and dense thicket&
'lbh ~ before the turn
of the century, when the
cleaa white beach came to
VICE MAYOR a .. ,,.. McCradc•
COUNCILMAN
~Matney
be known u Sbel1 Beach bJ
the bsdy mr who vmtured
to It. Lat.er, it wu named
Padftc Beach, unUl the CitJ
WU l'nccJrporated in 1909
and the name wae chanced
to HUDUngton Beach.
Toda)', vbiton bave no
trouble ceumc to the eight mn. ol beech within the cl·
ty limlts of Buntingtoa
Beacb.
Pacific C o a s t Bigtrw11
l'UDI the ~ of the beach
aoutb from Bolla Chica
COUNCILMAN
Henry Kwfman
COUNCILMAN
Alvin c....
Stat. Beach te the Santa
Ana River, ud Beacb
Boulevard (Route 3 t )
depolita vialtms by the
mUllons at the entrance to
Bunttncton· State Beach and
the city beach.
Fw 11 YfVI H\UltinitOD
8.m'• ltraDd baa been the
1cene el the United Staat.s
8urtboerd Owpmloasbipe
wblcb lllDU8lly brings to the
city tbl world'• most eut· at.andlDI aurftt1 and their
1-.
6 Million Visit Bea~h
4 eAtll MOT MA•AJtNI
83 Lifeguarth Share Job
·Of Prot,ecting Swimmers
-'
COUNCILMAN
Don.Id Shlpley
. .
Cl.TY ADMINISTRATOR
o.i;te Miiier
Thia YW' the CG'Vettd Dub r.....,.... .,...,.., for b¢
Oftl'll1 M'ft!r Wll won ~Y CortJ Carroll el Dana Peint who dlllelitiM _,.... from as
far 8ftJ 11 Jlawail and Aus-
tralia.
R..,,.,.,Je b suardin& the
city'a beecbet are M life-
guards, H ol wham are re-
talDed ~
I--Capt Doug D'Ar-
naB .,... up tbe staff, which
II part ti 1be dty'a Dtpoirt-
meat of Bartlon and Beaches,
under tbe dlrectioD ol Vincent Moanoate.
Woning out of tbe heoid-
qoarten b1llldiq at 103
OcNll Blvd., lifeguards man
l9 towers stationed along
1be beach. nm jobs entail
mot ool7 tbe obviOOI duty of
lif esavJng, but they also ad-
mlabter flrakid for cut!,
1Crapea llld d 1 s l o c a t e d
Deel, help reunite lost
dlildrtD wfth perenta, Md
even give resuscitation and
heart mauate to heart ~t· tact v1etilfta.
Obviously, the c l t y ' s
llfeguards are a well-trained
cttw. Earning e bertb on
the staff is no e~y ac-
compUhment.
YOODi atble~ -boy1 oYer 11 years of age, m:my
of wtaom ue alr eady
f~ fnm Pace I) council meeUn&s txcept for
budCet Del .ialtlilbmtnt of sessions called to dllcuaa
policy. pa-sonnel matten are OPf!l
The ftrst Tuesday after a to the public and couocDmen
cooncilmanlc eledlon the have invited activ• publi•
council ele.cts ooe of its mem-participation.
hers to serve as mayor and
another to serve as vice COUNCIL MEl\mERS
mayor. The mayor presides Mayw Jack Greea (term u-
over meetings of the cOWKil pi:m April mt)
otherwise b i s position is Vice Mayor George McCrack-
largely ceremonial. ta (term upirel Apdl lfi1)
The city ldmlDiatrajor is Ted Bartlett (tam esplna
the city's full.time executive. April lf'Jt
While the council provides HeWy Kallfmu (term e1pirt1
p o I i tl c a 1 leadership and April 1971
m:.ikcs policy the administra-Donald Sblpley (term uplrca
tor directs operation of the April 197%) ·
cily departmentl and Js chief Jerry Mat.Dey (tu. aplres
~rsoooel officer. Ho baa a Aptil tm) non-voting post&n on all Ahia C... (term nplrf 1
boards and commissions. April mo)
lie is chosen for executi\'e OTHER ELECTED CITY apd administrative ability and arrves at tbe pleMure el the OFFICIALS
.council. Re IUJ be removed City Ckrk P .. l Jones,
from office on COUDCil de-(tttm explret Al'rll lt?2)
and b -'"·'-d C'fty Attoney Doa Boafa, m , ut not wnwu 30 ays (term e:rplrea April mt)
following a councll tlection. City Treasurer Wal'ftD Hall, The admlnistrator need not he a resident of the city at (tenn expires April 197%)
the time of his appointment, APPOIN'nVE OFnCJALS
bul must establlsb city resi-City Admhdstrator Doyle
dence within 90 daya of the Miller
~ppointment. A s s istaat AdmiDlatrator
'nle City Council ls involved Brander Cutle
deeply ln implementation of Public lldormnoa Officer
the recomrnendaUool of the WUtiam Reed
\Jrban Land IDltitute. In ad-
dition to appointing a aeven-DEPARTMENT BEADS
mao steering committee the Cbid of Police F.arl RMltallJe
cou.ocll itaelf Is the city's re-Fire Cltld Ray Plearcl
development ICeDCJ and its Finance Dlrec&.r FnU B.
members tab an active part Argaello
ih planning for the Mare. Public Works D I r e t t o r
Conndbnm lro hhegular--J:nuer1t"'1ftRla
meetings on the first and Director or Beadltt and
third Monda)'I ol the month B-a rb o r 1 Vt• f e D t
at 4:30 p.m. ID the council Moorhouse
chambers ol the civic center, Bulldiac ucl Safety Director
Memorial Ball at J'1ttb Street Ollln C. CltvelaM
and Pecan Aveaue. Pia.m.c Dlredlr' Xemtdl
In additioa, council.men A. ReyM)dl
ftequeo&1J bGld ltudJ Ind Wa&tr s.,t. EftaN R.
special Huiou to ba.ndle SWf
poUcy-rn•klQI mlltters. All 1tttftaelell ... Pub J)l..
recopiled lwimmera on
blth ldlool md coDege
teama -11JP11 t r o m
JanUUJ to Eater l'acation
for tbe IUllUDel' jeba. Tbey
must compee. m tine tests,
At the end of the summer
laSOD, a w a r 41 are
pre1eoted f(W team com·
petition, and 1ht roekie
lileguard of th1 year 1t
apotligbted.
a •meter lw1m lll'oqla
the 1lD'f, a 1,000.mettr mm
around tbt p&er ud a 1,500-
yarcl l'UIHWtm, 11llHWbD, nm.
Canclldatet no pw that
trio ef .-. uderlo a •
boor tHbllDC JftlNlll dar·
int Eaettt week, iDcllldUll
first lid, ben NKOe,
beach repliltlCIDI, c i t '1
ordinanctl Ind dlpatment
policies. FiDdltl must IUC•
ceafullJ complete written •
exami•UOlll 1D ftnt aid
and infclrmaUoG and a prac-t.
tical test to apply what ttie1 f
have learned. f
ODCe on the team, they do k
more than watch over the •
~bes too. i
'Ibey compete In swimming, ~
~ddlillg and dory radn&. As
sw-1, Life Sa VlDI Arr
sociaUon, the entire Hun-
tington Beach stall com· ,,.
pe~ with other chapters in
water events. 'Ibey even in·
dulg~ in land~ com·
pet.ition between the rookies
and senior filecuards aJSd
hteguaroa versua the police
f~e.
BEACH 'BOSS'
Vince MoorhouM
YOUI COMMUMnY -'96'
NABERS --~·
~
2600 Harbor Blvd.,·
Costa Mesa
540-9100
SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN
. • ,i. ... 'f ••
8:30 am to 9:00 pm Mon. tbm Fri. • 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Sat. & Son. ~....a.,;,;,;:;;..;;;:;.;...,;;;;=:;~~---'
UH -YOUI COMMINITf
t
f
-----------------~ --------
l Beeall Vo1e
~ater: (;ore
At City Dall
Stays Sa111e
A recall election recently
changed the external face of
Fwntain Valley by placing
&bree new men on the city
council, but the Interior core
ol dty personnel will head into
ita fourth year with few
changes.
IJJ>e city Js hovering near lhe •.ooo popuJaUon mark, about
balfway to its e i p e c t e d
uJUmate population, and is llelinning to cope with some of
tbe problems of disappearing
usable land, apartment booms
and industrial growth.
The city is a general Jaw
city with a council-manager
form of government. It la
guided by the City Council,
a five-man legislative board
and the city's sole elective
body.
A mayor and vice mayor
are napied by the council at
the first meeting followine
each councilmanic e\ection.
They serve two-year terms.
Tbt responslbillty of the
Master Plait • • •
---------~C..dn11tcl from Page S)
O"apbic heart of the city, lo-
cated within a half mile or
what will be two major traf-
fic Interchanges and within
a sear-shifting of access to
tbe San Diego Freeway, now
completed through Fountain
Valley.
nvE OTHERS
But 1t is no longer the
tole reeional shopping cen-
1er. Already risen at various
ID'ltqic place.s throughout
the ~ity are five others : The
Village Center, Fountain Cen-
ter, Alberbon's, Market Bas-
lret and the Golden Triangle.
Industrial growth h a s
mmftroomed to the point
where more than 30 facilities
MAYOR
Edward Jud
are either built or pl~d on
the parcel near the San Diego
Freeway. And bright pros-
pects h a v e recenUy been
revealed for about 300 acres of
land in 'the i n d u s tr ia 11 y
master-planned area to the
north.
City center, the portion
bounded roughly by
Brookhurst and Ward Streets
and Warner and Slater Avenue
is destiried to be tbt heart of
Fountain Valley.
Geograpblcally it already is,
and the dreams proposed for it
include the area's bigcest
commercial, professional and
apartment developments.
Tbey started planning ahead
tor Feuntain V.U., In 195'1 -
and they haven't stopped yel
VICB MAYOR
JGhn D. Harper, Jr.
av CewJI eeat.a ......
......... polleJ lnftaeec..
... tbt ~. nfetJ u4
nlfart ti 11..,ert, nMn m citllen1 In tbt
community.
APPOIN'DIDn'S
To carry out the legiJJ.ft-
tw policy, the City Coullcll
appOJnts a city manager,
cffy attorney, city clerk,
city treuurer and c l t 1
auditor.
Councilmen also concur ln
t.be appohitment of flve de-
partment-beads u well u
five commissioners for plan-
niDC and five commission· «• for parts and recrea·
tion.
Residents are encouraged
to take part in council ac·
tivities as well as the ac-
tiviUes of commissioners
a.nd committees.
Regular council meetin&a are betel the first and third
~esday1 of the month, at a p.m., in council chambers iUi City Hall.
'l1Je planning comm.tSSlOll
meets the Ont and thlrd Wed-
nesday ol each month at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall, 10200 Slattr
Ave.
The telephone number of
City Ball is j62.2Cf.
I
COUNCIL MDIBER.1 ...,.
F..4wn E. J..t
(Tena """' Afdl lt?t)
Vb ...,.
,,_ D ....... Jr.
(Tena eqilret ... Im)
OOVNCIUIEN •-w ••ban <!ena apra AJ11 Im)
Gelt&e SctU
(Tera Uf&a A,nl lt7t)
lenleP . ...._.
(T-eqlra A,nl mt)
APPOINTED omCIALS
Qty Mauter
James E. Ne.,a
City AUonq
n....L.Wtldnff
City Auditor
Diehl & Evaas, Suta Ana
City Clerk
Mrs. Mary E. Cole
Fire Cllld
Harold C. LIWHD
Ptllee CMef
Cbarlu W. MJcb1eU1
Fountain Valley
PD Now Boasts
'lbe Plannlng Commission
waa eatabl••hed by elty ord·
inance OD March 2, 186t.
Home of Its Own
Commbaloner1 are appo.iJrt..
ed for four-year, staggered New Facility· term1.
Tbe commtaslon meets at
7:30 p.?D. each first and Prov! ;i __ for· third Wedoftday of the lUe:J
month in the council cham-
bers in City Hall, lalOO
Slater Ave., Fountain Val-Expansw· n ley. Members encourage
reaidentl to attend.
CommilaloDerl are:
Jama W, Die~
(Term uplrea Feb., 1970 >
ReUea Alcala Fountain Valley's police de-'
(Tena eJllltta F•, mt) partment now has its own
Dr. mm ........._ home in the civic center af-
('hna a,lrel Feb., mt) ter sharing facilities with the c.n. 8. Mellr fire de~nt at 17737 Bush..
(Tma es,fti Feb., Im) ardn!t. new facility features
The Parks and Recrea-bright, modem decOration and tiGa C.mrniaslon wu crea~ a chance for the police de-
ed bf a clty ordlnaDce in pert.ment to espand Its ~uip
April 1IM. Five members, ment to keep pace with a who serve tmee-yeer terms, growing city. '1be new bead·
are aPDOintN bJ tbe mayer quarters 'can be' nearly dou·
witla tile concurrence of the bled in size to meet the future
atJ CoanclJ. population of the city. ·
Tbe comml11lon meets on T h e 3 , 7 00-square·f oot
tbt fvurtb Wednesday of the pollce headquarters ls an in·
month at I p.m. in tbe coun-teb'fal part of Fountain
di ---.-.i-Qty~v a 1-1-e-y...' a_ millio,!1-dollar
imt .slater Ave., Fountai.IL buUding· program to eiil e
Valley. Meetmga are open the civic center complex at
to $e publle. 10200 Slater Avenue.
,,_. commluiOll ~ts Activation of the city
a para aD4 recreation de-police deparbnent brought
,...tmtnt of ID permanent an end to police services
perlOllllel (~o admln1'tra-pro'fided J>y the Orange
tlve ud four in parka). The eowity Sheriff's Depart..
depu1ment hu. • budget of ment during a perlod when
'85).16 for,,. 1l8Mt year. the city was shedding its
Current commission mem· character of field and farm
l>era are: and donning one of shopping
Albtrt lloDiadtn • centers and homes.
Mn Jue Boykin ~aced with more local • residents demanding more
Robert Tally localized police attention ~rge Crosby and with an estimated an-
Jtm PlulOll nual bill of over $250,000 for
Advisors to the commis-s b e r 1 ff ' 1 department's
alon a r • Lee Moetelltr, &ervices, city officlall be&an
Charles Moore and Ed La-studJes on 'the feulbWty of
velle. forming a city police depart·
POLICE CHIEF
Charles W. Michaelis
ment. Their studies ln·
dicated service ci>uld be
fiven by a local department
with $60,000 annual savings
for the year 1967-08.
The estimated sllerilfs
department bill for 1968-69
would have run to $.125,000,
wl\lch meant an expected
$30,000 savings In the current
fiscal year under city poUcing.
The 28-member force, up
from a total staff of 23 for 1968-
&9, watches over a community
described as having a crime
rate that's "about average"
for cities in bustling Orange
County.
Heading the department is
Police Chief Charles W.
Michaelis, who left the
chiers post at G a r d e n
Grove to lead the formation
of the Fountain Valley
d e p a r t m e n t. He was
selected alter Tl applicant.
for the job were screened.
.....
TOH COMMUNl1Y -1''9
1 '6t-YOUI COMMINITY , .. ,, ~ ., ~\ .
: ·~ ·~
I
i
! .,
: a ·ptan f for people
with 'the-beginning of ~ r.,,W popul.tion trowth in 0rMp County tht mWeMs
-of Fountain V ... y incorporatecl 11 1 City In 1957 to insure thlt future · 9owtk ,, ..
gressecl In lft orderly maMlt'. Ow City ts unique in thet 1 &.Mr1I P'an w11 Hoptecl
prior to any development occurrin9. Our p ri~ery 90tls art:
1r Protect and beautify the City's. most import1nt asset • th. single family rtslclen-
,;.1 neighborhood.
2) M1inhiin I balanced community of ind us trial I commerci1f, ancl residentiel develop-
ment •
. 3) Provide efficient, eeonomic1I, service.o riented City government promoting the higl.-
1st level of community MrVices consistent with the nHds of the pto.ple.
These art b~ few of the go.ls th.t wiff truly mi~• Fount1tn V1ley Or1n9e County's
best-pl1nned community.
EOWARO JUST, MAYOR
JOHN D. HARPER JR., VICE-MAYOR BERNIE SVALSTAD, COUNCILMAN
•ONALD ScHENKMAN, COUNCILMAN 6EOfl6E scon. COUNCILMAN
.
11
• .
..
DAILY NOT 7 ~ ,. llA"-W .
-'
Doors Open at Wide Range
Of Places of Worship
In Your Commu1iity
. Duniingt.on Valley
Chur~hes Help You
Keep Fai-th of f;hoiee
No matter what your re-
llgion1 your community
probably provides a place of
worship for you. The Hun-
tl:agton Beach-Fountain Val-
ley area bas at least one
congregation or almost any
faith you could name meet-
ing within its boundaries.
The community's many
doors of worship are open
to all c o m e r s, providing
church homes for all who
care to entA!r.
Here is a list oC Ute com-
munity's m a n y churches
and schedules of their var-
ious services:
ASSE~IBLY OF GOD
CommunJty Bible Assem-
My, Fountain Valley, 17575
Euclid Ave., 962-5412, the
Jtev. Daniel Grubbs. Servkts
a& t :45, 10:50 a.m., 7 p.m.
l'lnt A11embly of God,
1'1&11 Newland Sl, 847-6079,
1 er v 1 c e s at 10:50 a.m., 7
p.m. Family night every
Wednesday with Bible Study
and Youth Program at 7:30
p.m.; the Rev. Don L.
Hedges.
Cb.rial Cbucla of Westmln-
lta, H061 Che st o u t St.1 Westminster, ~. the
Jtev. Floyd Westbrook. Serv-
ices at 9:30, 10:45 a.m.; 7 ,.m. Family Night 7:30 p.m,.
Weds.
BAPTIST
Calvary Baptist Cburcll,
mt Gartleld Ave., Hunting-
loo Beach.~; Sunday
Scbool 9:45 a.m.; servicet
U a.m., t p.m.; Wed. 7:38
p.m.
Cea&ral Baptist C.attll,
1661 Warner-Ave., HwtiD;g-
ton Buch, 842-3917, the
Rev. MaJDard Nutting. Ser·
vices at 10:50 a.m., 7 p.m.
Ctt~M Baptist Ml11lon,
16783 Graham St., Huntine-
ton Beach, 847-2015; the
Rev. Thomas Ray. Servkes
at 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
El11I A v e a • e Baptist
Cllarcfl, 1121 E1.Ua Ave, Hun-
tington Beech, 147-7413; the
Rev. Jobn crumpler. Serv-
ices at n a.m., 7 p.m. Sunday
School 9:•, 7:00 Family wor-
ship, 8:00 Bible study, 7:30
Wed. Bible.
First Baptist Church er
Foutain Valky, 17415 Mag-
nolia St., Fountain Valley,
8C-1Ga; &he Rev. Dan a
Hawkes. Services at 8:30 and
11:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
First Sea&lrienl 8apdst of
F1t111tabl Valle.J, 9Q) Tal-
bert Ave., Fountain Valky,
9617415; .. Rev. HonN 0.
vis. Srenlcf.8 at 11 :00 a.m.,
'1:30 p.m. Wed. eve. prayer
~7:30.
Flr1t Baptist Cluarell of
Hada,_ Beac' -401 Sixth
St.1 Huntlngtcll Beacb, 536-
3524, the Rev. Willis J. Loar.
Services at 11: 00 a.m., 7 :00
p.m. Bible ltaadJ Wed. 7:•.
Ftret Baptist Ct.arch tf = Vlllaie, 16032 . St., Htmtlngton
Beech;-,...; 10 a.m. Sun.
Sdlool; 11 a.m. morn1n& wor-
lhip; 7 p.m. Sun. and Wed.
prayer meedng.
Gnce BapUA Claudt,
9'l91 BannlD.r Ave., Hut-
tngton Beaclt, 962-1011, th• Rev. J a m~-s Herington.
Services at 11 a.m., 7:"30'
p.m.
Octanlew Geeeral Bllptlst
Chmd. 1'1101 A St.1 Hunting-
too Beach; 142-4951; the Rev.
Virgil Painter. Savlces at 11
a.m.; 7:30 p.m.
Waner Avenue Bapdl&
a.rd, 7380 Warner Ave.,
Huntington Beach; 847-7373;
Dr. Edwin Greene. Servtces
at 11 a.m., t p.m. Sun., 7 p.m.
Wed.
CATBOUC
St. Beuvt•taft, .1'302
Bradbury Lane, Huntington
Beach; 842-2914; the Rev.
Michael Duffy. Servk'es at a,
9:15, 10:30 l.JD.1 DOOD and
I p.m. Sun.; 1:30 and 7:45
a.m. Moo. thlU sat.
St. l'n9dl .. Aa1s1, ...
'.Magnolla St., Hwmn.gton
Beach, ta.mit; 7-8 daily;
Sunday •:30,. a, 9:10, 10:40,
noon, 5:30 p.m. Fr. Ronald
CoUoty, 1bomas Scbnetder,
O.F.M. and Robert Ul't>&M,
OF.M.
Boq Famil1 C a t • t II e
MAaiu, 17091 Ward St,
Ftuntain V67; ~;
Fr. Ronald CaDoty, Order Qf
Friars Minor. 1 a.m. Sunday
taly.
St. Sbnoa Del Jade, 321
loth, Runtlngtm Beach. I
a.m. daily; ~Y. 7:30, t.
and 10:30 a.m. Fr. Ronald
Colloty. -
CHURCH OF amIST
Cllard el arlat, 301 Hun-
tinet«l A v e., HuDtingtoa
Beach; W-7212; tbt Rn.
LeRoy Posey, Services
10:45 a;m.; .e~ p.m. -
at school an ages: T p.m. Wei. Ave., Huntington Bea,c,b;
~v~. 962-5005; the :Rev. Dale B.
Wfft ..... r ~ti
Olltlt. 13852 .Newland Sl,
Garden Grwe; 193-5Q6;
Rev. J. P. SaDdera; Bible
school 9:45, StiDUJ aervk.u
lt:«i a.m. and I p.m.; Bible
study, 7:30 Wedaelday.
CHURCH OP GOD
~ ti Gtd Sallbltarlu,
'1m Warner Ave., Huntington
Beach. Bible Study Sat., 10
a.m. Wcnblp 11:15 Sat. Mid-
week 7:30 Tues. 141·2M7; Eld-
er W. S. Dornberger.
~
First Cbrlatlu Cl111rcb of
Huntington Beac•, 11 t '1
Main St., HUDti.Dgton Beach;
~2589; Pasten 'ntomas w. Overtoa, Dan Moes.
Servkes at 1:30, 11 a.m., 7
p.m:; •~• Bible Scboo1,? p.m.
Weds. Bible atud)'.
Ftnt Qrtdam Claurda of
F•••• Valley, . tt.<t 8
Talbert Ave., Fount a 1 n
VaDey; M2-teai Dr. Arlhur
~. Senica at 9:30,
10:30 a.m.. 1:-• p.m. Sun.
EPISCOPAL
5t. 1'DfrM.'1 ~
Oarclt, G36 Ellil, Hun-
tlactoa Bea; •~12; it>e
Rev. Jame. C. Cater. Holy
Communion at I a.m. and
services at 9:30, 11 a.m., 7
p.m.
EVANGEIJCAL
Evu&e11cal Free <-"udt,
1912 Florida, Huntill&ton
Beach; •'1915: the Rev. Al-
fftd L. M1ller. Senice1 at 11
a.m., 7 p.m. t :• a.a &naday
GOSPEL
F • a r 1 q 11 a r e Gospel
Claurcb, 715 Lake Ave., Hun-
tington Beach; 536-1614; 1be
Rev. Gary R o b i n I o n •
Ser\oices 10:45 a.m.; 7 p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES
Ba~ctoa Baell Coa-
gregadtn tf J e 11 .. y a • ' 1
Wltae1se1, 7851 T a 1 b e r t
Ave., Huntington &acb;
847-4006.
LA Tl'ER DAY SAINTS
CBURCll OI' Jaus
CHRIST
OF LA1TER·DAY SAINTS
Ward U LaUer D a y
Salatt, 14271 Locust -st.,
Westminster, a 91·o9 4 5;
Bishop Justin E c c 1 e 1 •
Servicea at 11:15 a.m.
LUTHERAN
Falt.la Lldkru Cllvcll,
(Mlaturl Syatd), mt Ellis
Ave., Huntington Beadl;
962~119; the Rev. James
DtLug. Servkel at 1:15
tnd 11 ~.m.
Grace Latllera•
tA•erlea• Ldleru
tlaafttl}, 8931 Edinger A\le.,
Huntington Beach; 882-9534.;
the Rev. Robed Linea.
Serv~ at I:~. 11 a.m.
K1q tf Glery Amer. Lllib-
tl'M Oiudl, 1T191 NewJlnd,
Huntineton Beach, M'l-WS;
Rev. C. E. Shoemaker. Wor-
abip 8:15 and 10:45 Lm. Sun.
school and adalC class I :»
a.m.
Luu.traa CArcll tf· tbe Jtenrreeu., •12 Hamiltoa
JohMOn. Services at 8:15
and ll a.m.
Redffmer Latbttaa Clmd
(Missouri Synod), 16351
Springdale St., Huntington
Beach; 147-7270; the Rev. E.
R. Schramm. Services at I
and 10:45 a.m.
ME1110DIST
C o JD m unity Methodist
Cbarcb, 6662 Heil Ave., Hun-
tington Beach, 842-4t41; the
Rev. Charles Rose. Services
at 9 and 10:30 a.m.
Ftnt Mdbodist CUrdt el
Baatiagtoa Btacb, r7%1 11th
St., Huntington Beach, 636-
3537; the Rev. Edward Emy1
Services at 9:30 and 11 a.m.
First l\l~thodlst Cluartb of
F o a n t a I a VMley, 18225
Bushard, Fountain Valley;
962-2593; the Rev. ~
Currie. Service at 9:30 and
10:45 a.m.
PRESBYTERIAN
C la r ii t P r ttbyterlu
Oaud, 29111 Magnolia St.,
Huntington Beacb; 53&413t;
Rev. Donald E. Roberts. Wor-
ship service. t :30 a.m. &loday
school 10:45 a.m.
RELJGlOUS SCIENCE
Miclou Sdeace, GO loth
St., HuotiQgton Beach; 636--
2120; the Bev. J. El'nest
Pete. services at 11 a.m.
and Wed. eve. at a p.m.
SYNAGOGUE
Tnaple 11111e1, eec eea
A-.e., Huntincton B-e a cla;
893-3577; Rabbi R ~ 1 p h
DeKoven. Serv~s at 1:30
p.m. Friday.
YOUI COMMIMm -1Mt
1t6t -YOH COMMllMITY
These are yours at Rancho La Cuesta! Ex.
citing homes planned and constructed for
~ ultimate in enjoying I if e, plus ·cool
breens from the nearby rotting Pacific ,
make Rancho la Cuesto THE place to live
for people who appreciate tJ.e finest. The
same car~ and ~oughtfulness that have
made Frank Ayres & Son renowned for
fine quality and value in home. building
have go11e Into these luxurious 3 and 4
bedroom, 2 and 3 beth homes. Rancho . •
La Cuesta, Huntington Beach, is design~
ed for gracious living for the entire family
.•• separate f amity rooms, ideal for teen
age retreats, inviting patio kitchens, for
informal coffee klatches, and 3 ·car
9arage1, large enough for a workshop or
boat storage. These features and many
more reflect over 60 years' experience in
building homes fo·r people to take pride
in. V i 1 It Rancho la Cuesta today •••
you'll be proud to live here. $25,"0 to
$34,200.
Aff91 sa.. · 1905
. .
IAILY PILOf ' MA~·
. 'i
...
JUST WAITIN -Ricky Flores (atanclliii) on'1%2
Poppy Circle, and bia buddy, Paul SavaririO of 10719
El Sentro, both of Fountain Valley, may be just
waiting for a bite, but if they wait lq enough
they're going to be riibt in the middle of Hunting-
ton Beach's Central l>art (model lhown, upper •
.right) which will incfude two =..i lakea and lots
»f other good stuff in 41"ea roughly by
Slater, Gothard, Ellis and Edwards streetL
~ KID'S EYE VIEW -This is the way youngsters
crawling through pipes and things in play area at
·Huntington Beach's Lake Parle see the world they
play in. New equipment has been added during past
• "year to rejuvenate park.
1 O NILY Pft.Of \ .......
DOWN ON RIVER -Scouts of Boy Scout Troop
560 sponsored by Fountain Valley Junior Chamber
of Commerce, demonstrate ways they can make use
of camping gear in nearly completed River Park, a
city-operated facility which bas become df>.lt-your-
sell proJect for Scout.I and others interested in help-
ing get it ~Ji· Park is located on Santa Ana River
bank, near a Av~ue. Lelt to right here flank-
ing Scoutmaster John Lambden, are Mike billard,
Brian Lambden and Danny Nelson.
YOUI COMMVNnT-... UH
--~------------------------------~._,------~----~---~~-----~~~~----
Marina ro ProvUle
· 300 Boat Slips,
Restaurant, Campi1ig .
2NewParks
. -•sited!' By
Land and Sea
Chances seem escellent that
Huntington Beach a r e a
yachtsmen and swimmers will
have a public park and marina
all their on by this coming
aummer.
Leases recently were let by
the Orange County Barbot
District to a developmeat firm
for Sunset Aquatic Park's first
marina egmeot with room for
300 boet 1llps, a restaurant,
almost certainly trigger park
expansion.
A3 usual, a hefty list ol pro-
spectln ll1p renters already
bat ll'OWD at tbt Harbor
Dlltrid amce.
BtdlclDC and slip main-
te!llDC9 m rental will be ad·
minhttred b)' the leaseholder, Goldrtdl. Kelt and Grau ol
Sherman Oeb.
PLAYTIME-Dad gets
ready to launch family
boat u Earl Keil fam-
ily of Huntington Beach
maku use· of facllltiel
now available to gen-
eral public at Sunset
Aquatic Park. ID addl-
Uon to launching rainps.
part IOOll will Offer pic-
nlcting and camping.
-00.t JaN..and-eve~ WD·
ping area.
And Harbor district
IPOkesmml have. agreed that t6e boat lllps abould be com-
plete by IUIDlller.
Lakes, Meadows ,
Work on parking lots and
the other coavenJences at U..
fledgllng recreatloo area -.
will begin.
At Mile Square
TM quatic park, wbJcla How do you mm the va-
eventually will hOUM 1.ooe ~ .:b~~::d boats, wm ·be the first pUbllc useful 1 ->'achtlnc center in~ -area.
Small boat lamidiinc from CountJ pub deticners have
trailers already la available at ~· :Ota1n ~ey~ the park as la public parking. u•
By next summer, however, And the new rtglonal park,
the area will look like a real whlcb already hat • bead start
park. with an Jt-bole solf course
I comin H bo completei and a clubhouse un-n ' years, ar r der COlllltruction, eventually Dlstrtd qkleers p r e d l c t , will IUl'hund the Marine aeaetildooa with the Navy sbould bear fruit and more Corpe llllicopter fid.HtT ·
Sand wlll be available for boat UltimaW,, the p 1 r k • 1
1llpe. bordera wlll be .W a r n er
Ne I o Uatioos progressed Aveme, Euclid $ tr• e-t ,
nicely, they related. until the E d tn I• r A v e I u t • n d
Vietnam buildup about two Brooktunt Street.
)'earl ago. Tht ~ ealrmce to
U the proposed Pacific Coast Mlle 8'ua.re Past la off FreeWl1 route LI adopted lot Warner, 'but wltbla ._. •st
the area and I& is built few !Dlntbs, u _.. coo-
{probablf ln 10 )'ear&), it structlln tat. ~ t,b.
would split the navat statton1ln penn.-t entranct elf ~d
Anahelm Bay ind would will be ope... ·
CoaltrUdloa--. the newest
segment or tbe put -
landscaping: an adm1nlltntloD
building, a lab fer abarellDe
UJe, a chlldren's r.oo area
I playO'QUDCI -wtJ1
within Che am few weeks.
After that segment is com-
plete, county spoasmen said,
the circle ol development will
run counler-doctwise areuncl
the bellcopter flcility l a
regular mca.
A time ICbedule tw the
tf tbt eomtnrctioa ........
... upon fin ......
county budgets, tlley ml.
WbeG the entire .......
part .. Ollnl>letect. tlllf
It wHl ...... nel'wld fl ......
moandl and ,..., mtellWll.I
an area ftr model pllM
fl}'ial, pl~ fteld enal IOcadanl, .,._ 10.. crouP a
tivttla, I flsblas like, cutinl-pradlcl lqooa and a netwcrt
of pallnraya.
'OCEAN VIEW
MUSHROOM GROWERS, Inc.
e ONLY 6' CALORID PEI POUND
' e I.AT MORI MUSHROOMS .
11196 Golclenwest, H• .. tOll l••cll 147-1120
IMt-YOR COMMINRT
SABIATH SERVLCES
. R£1.1610US SCHOOC
HAllOI IEFOll TEMPLE
RallW lemlnl P. King
Meeff"I •tr
It ................ c..-. ...... aw.. ... .,,... ....
. hr ........... c.lt 671-?JM ~·ICHOO&. -I II EIW ICHOOI.
~ ................. _,11lp.a.
Reminds you . t~t. your FIRST JEST IN·
VESTMENT Is.~ IR. ... SiRYICIS Of, A . -
I .EAL TOR wt.en making your SECOND
· llST INVESTMENT, Real Estate
· .OWaershlp.
Cll£CI THE YDlOW PAGES
FOR YM RFJLTOR U80S,
HUNTllTON IEACHIF•All
VAWY •nu llSTll
SEIVICE.
Maf NOi 11 .........
,
•••
J2:= . , . '
.
. Our bankers may not know much
about hammers and nails, but they're in on
a lot· of building.
We've been working on the devel-
opment of Huntington Beach through
the many banking services
offered by. our two local
offices.:
. Our Escrow Pepart-
~~-..c:::~· ment at the Beach
Boulevard office has been a
source ot much of. the
area's· growth. · .
-Soutbern Califor-
nia First National Bank is
.proud to be a part of the
Hunti~g.ton Beach com-1
munity and we have great
confidence in its future.
·· ttiat's ·wby w~'re getting ·
··in -on ground level.
I ..................
'\
. :
YOH COMM•'"-1 .
Valley ·Kids to· HaT~-
Parks
Foumala Valley 11 crowing
Galore parka wUbout plJlng a penny ping by reservation.
to 1>91 lallll. Iru lllique pJan _ Tbe_ city's ............_ J.S
that proml8el an eventual nejghborboocl Darb wUJ 1*ft ·
system Clf · u neighborhood located near el e m • n ta r y
parts and Rtver Park, • ~o-=s~i:~a
acre slte ltrlcUy for campmg Stanley st.attn. · Neqbbor.
use. hood perks wU1 ranee ID~.
River Park la the standout from two to Ila ICl'tl.
proJed. beiDI de V e 1 o P e d Fountain Va1Je1 cumlltlJ
mostl;v bJ VoluDteet labor. ha.'I two JUCh ,.a, Harper
Memberl al the c 1 t Y ' s Part on Bluebird A-. ad
Firemen'• AslodatJoo have Westmont Part OD &l Bancbo
volunteered to build i be Avenue. Two amrt,. , Lo 1
restroom &cllltin while scout Alamos and an unnaawl park, 15!1~~
group1. JOUtb dubl .m other are 9Cbeduled for development civic orpnlndml bavt pitch· . thls yeer.
eel ln to plant the terrain in a Park land la acquired by tht ~ dmlllr to fmb moun· city primarily from 8djacent
Wln c.,,.,.. areas. schools, Soutbera CaJ!amia
'l1ie put II on property Edison Co. e&Nn•a or tbl
leaMd tram the ltate and park dedication enHunce and
bounded bf tbl Sama Ana is either given or leald, but
River, tht Siil Dteao Freeway. never !told, to the dtJ.
ElliJ Aftlllt and Euclid ConsequenU1 all clty er·
Street. pencUtures OQ pub p for
Rlver Part will be open to development a n d mabl-
any Fountata Valley sroups tenance, Stafford,.._, out.
$3 Million Library Eyed
Mailing System AIM> Goal of Huntington Librarian
'
A proposed $S m ll JI o a
library facility for Huntincjoll
Belldl ls the dominant thoupl
ta U. miod of city librartaa
lfalter Jobnsoo, even thougll
~ project may be two yeart
Or m6r• away.
Currently the library ba.t
Jat.000 · volumes available ..
tht l)Ublic. lf ·tht new library
.. buUL at the comer of
F.
albert Avenue and Golden
tit Street in the propoMCI
olral parlt il will provldt
8*1dents with 3t 0 , 0 U
volumes.
Tentative architect for tbt
library ls Richard and Dioa
Neutra ol Los A n I e le 1.
)ohnson 1'ants a •.CICIO-lqulno toot boildinc with "all tbl
tnultt-media e~ devlcel
ff• caa get." But detdl
haven't yet been worked out.
BOODIYMAIL Huntlneton Beach circulatiel •
about •,008 boob DOW .... ywallJ. and Johnson bopel tt
Install a mailing system fot
clrculaUon in the future.
Tht city system also is part
ot a cooperative s.yslem if\.
eluding the Orange CGunlJ
Publlc Library and the dllel bf Placentia aud Yorba Linda,
making available more tbM
400,000 more volumes to local
residents.
Th• city library system ll
centered al 525 M a i a i3i
Witb one annex •t
Gr.oam st. and amJtber OM
at &ht Eader School, 1291 Bao.
nlnl. Each of the IMIUI
tontains 18,000 volumes. A
bookmcibile also makes week-
ly or semi • roor.lhly itopl
throughout the city.
WHERE IT BEGAN
Tbt current net!ds of the
bureeooing population could
never ~ve been foreseen iD
1909, when a group of
retidents renovated a D 41
furnilbed a little buildinl M
Walnut Avenue and Main
Street. donating :m volumet
to start the library.
Those first lib:irry aup-
por1ws migbt nol have beeta
..,. to explain a popu1atloll
tbat now reaches the 100,00I
tnart, but they knew tbt ~
ty would soon outgrow itl
belinalnJ library.
Today, the library ls 1up-
Ported J>y a 12~ent tu rate.
It offers, at no charge, a
\.ariety o( strvjccs includio,
reference, circulation o
books and periodJcals, a
teco1·d and film colleclion
and contemporary forttgD
language novels.
It Ilse bas 40 silent I mm.
ftlms that may be cbecke4
out !or home use.
One unusual future at &be
library is the "honor col· lectica," a library-wittiiln..a"
library of tM>oks, papttbacb
ud NCOrds donated ti. •11 llbr.,..
P90ple can come in ancl
check OUl· tome of tbeM
boob, take them borne to
nad and return them or
IUbltltute a book they h1cl
and want to get rid of in·
stead.
'nit main library also
offers a free film seriet,
"1llcb is screened the flrst
ud third F'rid1y1 eacb
month at 7:30 p.m. Amons
the filnu ere "The Silent
Worlr by Jacques _cwa-teau. five films writtelLUd
put togetber i y New York
teen·aters on "their woi:UJ"
and "The Twisted Cross,''
story of the riJe atld f aU ol
aJllctat.or with actual aeenea
from a captured German mm.
THE STAFF
Working w i t h Ubrarian
Johnson is Kenton Whiter
asslatant lJ b r a r i a n, ;;.I
Mrs. G w en d o l y n Talbert,
cblldren's llbrari.n, Mr•.
Sara Glas, In c h a r g •
of circulation and audio.-
v 1 s u a 1 departments, aod
Mra. Edna Kaae. head of
technical processing, com·
plet4 the pro£ess.ional staff
and are aided by 19 full·
time employes. ·
D a v t d Wickersham fl
cbalnnan of the libr•f
board of Ui&stees.
l'6t -lCMl COMMYNIT1
.
This Commission's
Specialty ls Fun
The Huntington Beach
Recreation and P•b COm·
mi•llon ii tbe .. ,.. ....
YilorJ board in tbl dtJ wltb
11 members, m of wbom
repretent lc;cal 1 c h o o 1
district..&.
'n.e commlaslon, whlcl\
meets the lecond Wed-
neldar. of each mODlh ln city
councU cbamberl at Fifth
street and Pecan Avenue, ls
charged with m at l n I
recommendations tA> t b e
council on all part and
recreation matters.
Tbe five re&ular members
of the commlalion are AP·
pointed by tbe counell to
represent the city at large
for fow-·year terms. &bool
4 I 1 t r 1 c t representatiftl,
recommended by t h e l r
respective district trustees
for appointment by tlal
council, lel'Ve o n e -y e a r terms.
School districts repretenW
on the comminion and ~
•ppolntecl members are Or\o
ange Coast JID\iot CoDece
District, James Curran; Hlm&-
tngtoo Beach Union B 11 ~
School District, Lee MOltellerf w estJnhwter School Dlltrict.
Ada Clea: Ocean_ Vie" Scbool Distrid,-keot McCllab; J'OUlt •
tain valley School Dlltriet.
Dennis Mangers and = ton Beach City School
Orville Hanson.
7 Schools 'House'
Recreation Events
Fountain V a 11 e y • 1 buay
Parka and RecreaUon Depct·
meot finally IDO¥ed bU new
headquarters this summer Jn
U.. recently complet.ecl cam-
munlty center at lall Slater ue., where all nglstllllba
fees and business rutten are
now handled..
Recreatltaal prolfUll
are beinC'carried·oniD MY·
en dlffenat adlook tJR:ou&b·
out tbt FoWIUUa Valfey
area -TamYra Elementary
Sehool, 1'1MG Sata SulanDe
St.; Fountm V.U., m..
mentary School. 17921 Bush-
ard St.; James Mor.roe Ele-
mentary School, Newhopt
and Primrose; Arthur D.
Nieblas, 9300 Gardenia Ave.
James 0. Harper, 18685 San-
ta Inez; John C. McDow·
ell School, 17250 Oak, and
Allen School, 16200 Bush-
arcl.
· 'W i .n t e r recreational ac
tMties l n c 1 u d e acrobatlcl, tumblinl. tennis. ballet, albr1
aod trim, junior high ICboel
dances and other l n d e o r
events.
-··I ..
Hun1i•g10n. II.Uh lor :Fire Cris~
Communications Center. Durpatchu Units to Neighboring Cities
Buntil)lton Beach tbll faD
became the nerve eenter for
aa emergency communlcatkm
lletwort Involving fire deplri-
...menta 1mlLSeal Jkach. Wal-
mtnater and Fountain Valley.
All ftre unlta 1n thele aelgti-
borlnc dtiea are now d1to
patched from· the HunUnatoi
Beach Late Stieet Station, S:'$~=:
center WU atabliabed. ne ~t, the 11rst
Cine formed when the cUy b
eorpcnted In llOI, ta ao mm
~and bas «» voJunterre
lta chief, Ray Picard, tooW
the top fire Polt In 196'1 when
Delbert 0Bud" Hiainl r~ eft.er 17 years in -t6e poelttCll.
Picard admita HuntinCtoll Beach bu one of 1M blgbest
fin 1n.suraDce rate• ln lit
coody among cities of Ju me, due to bi,:h fire louet.
U. 11 workiot at Sm-
)ll'OVing fire prevention tn4
firefighting methode ln tie
city, so that these .. iJn.
)ll'oved fire defe11ses" will
lead to a rate reduotioO
wbln the city ia r • • evaJuated 1 om et l m e tbfa
JNI', lie said. AJanc _with h 1 • ln· /
DOVliiciu, Chief Picard baa
----JI ..... lala 4eplna mmt. Alld, la two yem, ht
.... ---the .. Cl( the fire prevention unit lnlD a
JnlD to four and bM )n.
ltaJ1ed a new tlrt alarm
1y1tein.
)UINING ARENA
City council bu also
purdaaaecl a five acre lite
CID' Gotbard Street north of
Eilll Avenue to be UJecl bJ
tb• ftre depwtment u a traJ.nmc arena. Equipment
will be let Up theH to driD ~ on practice on.. crw and structure fires.
Within the coming year,
the chief aald he hopee to IMlU4 a five-story tralnlnl toww, clulroom b~
and &1 station at tbe alte~
A ~ capta1 Jmprovemetltl
proeram eurrel&ly ~ ..
llla'""nc atace• would boost
fbt dep.mient'1 number ~
p'OtecitiGn vehicles, remodel
some existing stations ed
add two new facillties. ~
adef Pioord said new &ta·
l!rona 'Tlaem' • • •
UCIU .-e needed a ' MapoU.a S tr ee1 and
Hamilton Avenue &Del •* SliriDldiale Street a n d
McFadden Avenue •
'!be iln cllMttment ,..,
creeted one m~tb aft« the
dJ lnCCll'pCll'ated 1n 1909. Jte CJrillnal· fire bell, mounU4
CID top of city hall, It DOW Jn a Rlace of honor at Fifth and
Main Streett.
Remembered fond!~ 11 the
cleplltmeat'• ftrK plfCt al
moCarlr.ed equlpmeat, a 750-
pllon • Seagreve pumper.
l)Ul'Chaeed 1n mJd.Nomnber lm, 1n the middle ol IM oil l>ocn.
VOWNTEERS
Members of ibe local
Amertoao Legion post f~·
ed a volunteer compeny to
ciperate that pumper. Jamea
K. Sarsent, wbo retired
from the . department Jn
19C50, waa the city'• ~It
pl6d fireman.
Today ile department baa
NVeD pumpers, one snorkel,
a tanker and one rescue unit.
'lbe clty'a Department of Har-
bor• and Beacbea also bu two tireboats that can be 1ISed 1n
ca.,e of emergency.
Deparbnent headquarta'•
are at 71M Lake St. '1bere
tb• department bal II*•
I« three sepaNte dlvilt•
-a battalion fire ltab
equipped with OM pumper,
ont ladder truck and GDe reserve unit; a section fOr
general offices and ceiltnl
dl!patching eqnlpment, .S~
lbope where all equllJment
Sa inventoried and malQ.
tained .
other statiOOI are at
Garfield Avenue and H~ 6
1.iogton Street, 17211 BMcll
Blvd., Bu.shard Street and
Cape Cod Drive, 6891 JfeO
Ave., and Ocean AvtnUt md
Anderson Street, S u n • t t
Beach.
CREATES NEW POST
Ohiel Picard eliminated
his ~vious po5'UGD of
assistant fire chief when he
took over the department.
He appointed William ADIOll
lns1ead to the new podtiOG
of executive officer.
The city fire marshal fa
Douglas Splckard, a D cl
James B. Watters 1a trilnln8
officer. The thfee ah1ft chleft
are Ronald Beard, Jamti
Oerspach and Frank Kelly.
-
IN NEW ROLi
Fire Chl.t Picanl
• •• To 'V•' ___ ....;__ ____ .
New Official Moves Information
IN NEW POST
Wllllam C. RMd
In ID effort to strwnllne
communication between the
city pernmmt ol H11ntlngton
Beach and 1ta mldenta the cl·
ty councll last July created
the ciflce ol public in·
f ormatfoo and a p p o 1 n te d
WUllam G. Reed u its direc-
tor. .
Reed, SS, a former West
Orqe County tdltor of the
DAILY Pllhl', has worked
11 a reporter for other
publlcailona in the Huntington
Be.acb area.
Primary duty of the public
lnfonnation dtice, u Rffd
aett It. ts ••to a1d the prw in
obta1nlng lafonnatlon on city
operation 10 It can be puaed
on to the relldenta of the com-
munity."
To do so the PIO, a one-man operation at present, 18 en-
couraeing an open-door policy
in city departmenta for the
press, radio and television,
and uribll clty department
heads to report promptly their
actlvtUea on behalf of the
cilif.eDJ so tbt lnformaUon can
be quickly reported to tll•
news media.
'Ibe PIO la financed by t b e
clty•a musio and promotion
fund. Promotion of tbt city
a n d lt.s activiU• locally ls a
major activity ol the Office.
Preparation of an employ•
newsletter, eatabllahment of a
speakers bureau and coordina-
tion of city publicalioos are
among other dutlet.
Reed allO ii Involved In
releue of crime news for the
police and reporta of 1ctlviti~
ol the flrt departmen t.
Consultation with department
heads, admlnlltraton a n d
councilmen on publlc relation.I
matters also la !ncluded tn the
policy statement formulated
by Reed, the admln1stratl6n
and councilmen f or ad·
ministration ot the PIO.
"Huntington Beach C 1 t 1
Council and "admlnlatratton
are coocemed wJth b rltbt
of the people to know bow
their g o v e r n m e n t 1a
ope ra t ed,'' NJd City
Administrator Doyl• Miller.
Reed said similar olftce. are
operated In Anaheim Ind
~veral cities In Los An&ele•
County and thal Orange COun-
ty ts in the proctaa of
establishing such an office.
.,Our alm Is to help thi new•
media keep the publlo tO:
formed and when po.s:sible to
furnish information on the ~lty
to civic, business and thvfct
organizations, the Chambtt ot
Commerce and to etlc6uraci
complete citizen awaNmttt Of
what ls happenine Jn City
Hall," he said. ·
~························ ·······~ ~ ~ ''The Ocean at . : . ' .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
~ your table!"
Seafood, Steaks & Gourmet Entrees
'
Dine & Dance witli
JESS PARKER
AT THE HAMMOND X-66 Phone 53'-2555
TuHd•y thru Saturday 1:30 • 1 :30, Sund•y 7 to 11
,(O,_" 7 Deyt From II A.M.1
DAILY DOUM MAITIMI HAPPY HOUl 11 :11 TO 6 P.M.
BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE * llllllfATIOMI ACC...U * 317 PACIFIC COAST HWY., HUNTINGTON IEACH
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• 14 MILY ftLOT Mf•,-~ .. : :
COMPLETE PLUMBING' SERVICE
-Visit Our Modern Showroom -
GEERS PLUMBING
222 Adams -Hmtfnttoa leach
Telephone 136-.1449
lOUI COMMUNrTY-tt&t . •'• .... , .....
w s
. • . NOW SERVING THE ORANGE· COUNTY COASTAL AREA
NEW HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE
TOWN AND COUNTRY. SHOPf'ING CENTEll
18582 BEACH BOULEVARD
TELEPHONEi 962-555 I e 9'2·SSS2
You'll Find New Convenience Here in One of California's Finest FEDERAL Associations .. :
Savings Accounts for Every Purpose ... Home Loans ... Money Orders.:. Travelers Checks ...
OPEN EXTIA HOURS FOR EXTIA SERVICE
MONDAY THRU THURSOAY-t:OO to 5:00
FIUOAY-10:00 to 7:00
SATURDAY-t:OO to 12:00 <NOONI
--AMPLE FREE PAitKING--
~Marina Federal Saving
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
OTHER OFFICES: Wesfched.r (Home Office) 1750 So. Sepulveda Blvcl •• lot An9eles , • • Torrance • • , Lawnclafe , , , Marini del Rey • • •
la Tijer1 (North Westchested . • • , encl Avalon (Cata fin. Island Agency 1.
C:HARTERED AND SUPERVISED ,BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERN.MENT
1'H -TOMI COMMllHCTf
.
1
j
l
f
l
Earl R-Obl.taille la on. ol ~
JOUDI, modem-look c r 1 m •
figbttn coming to the froot In
the' nation during the past
7ear.
As t he n e w Hunt·
lngton Beach chief of police,
arepping up from head of the
detective bureau, Robitaille
ls concentrating on Improving
modern techniques to meet
the city's heavy populaUon
growth.
Robitaille suceeeded John
Seltzer, who retired last July
alter 30 years of service to
Huntington Beach. Modtrn
problems no\v face tb9 city
where policemen once onl1
had to watch boistel'OUI dril·
Jers, land speculators and oil
well roughnecks.
That was a short thre•
decades ago.
Time has brought a wGrid
of change to the city and to
the department.
In the past 30 years tM
department has grown from
seven to 1Z1 sworn olf1een,
backed by 23 clerlcal and
ether personnel.
Former Chief John ~ltzer
witnessed at first hand the
changes in t.be city ot rectnt
years. The chief joined tie
force in 1937 and was gfven
badge 7.
Then tbe boom hit.
Somehow the city began a
spiral which has today
resulted in a population ol
more than 115,000 and a 151· man police for ce.
From fewer than four
square miles the d ty bas
lfOWB to more than 25
1quare miles in area.
••
1
I
5
3
2
•. 'J'bl IM>littNue *Ulen
and oil rough.Deck• are ,....
replaced by two potenUal
trouble artaB, traftlo aod
kids.
Patrol of the beach Js an
1 m p o r t a n t summertime
fudon. More than llvt
million persona UM Ult
beecbel ill th• tummer
time, I
Tratftc la a 1ear.-mmd
prOblem, bUflt; t.oO;ll more
troubleeome in the 1ummer
when the car1 brfnC tM
tbousanda ot YOUlll penoGI
to the beachee.
Other peak trafflc le&IOU
are on July 4 wi1h it• b4c a.
aaal parade, durlnl ~ ..
United S t a t e 1 Surlbolrd
Contest IDd durinl -Qu1Jtmu ahopp&nC teUOli.
An anotment o1 up to • reeene of1lcert are dr.,..
from Bmtlagton B e a e Ja
JM'denta to help out ~
1be peak pertodl.
Tbe depetmed la divided
JntO three .. aectlom. N.d1 Jed bJ a PPtafn.
JD t b t bmstipUonl
division espert oftlcera de
the roaUne work Of tn-~ ol mme. IDd the ~ catddq of ertjnlnela.
Tbe work ra often tx•
haustlng, 1 e 1 d o m ••
dramatic .. portrayed bl
t1ct1oa, alftys appt"Mehed
ICi'entifically. New chief of the
dMBicn. as of Nov. 11, w 111
be Capt. G. L. ••But,, Payne.
Capt. Grover Paine leedl
the Servicee Divt9oa. '1'bt
Jail malDtaU>ed by the dty'
Jlun1ington Beaeh
~ity Poliee Given
pr:operties and r~ art
bandJed b1 tbCa divkloa.
equipment, the deplrtment
can offer a free fingerprint
.,,._third ~ ia"1bt
Unilorm Divj_.to,n led b,
Capt. Harold May1. 4lb1I
dlvWOD ii in charge of the
Off1oen in .,.trot can Who
control traffic and mike
JnllminarJ c rim t m.
veetiptiom. Tbt m o t qr
patrol aUo la under ..
dlvWon.
-~.-
Directly Jn charge of a-
torceme.ut ot vice Ian SI
• ~. _ _Robitaille, who at.o
aaowa tbe admla61traUvt
dutie9 of planrdnC a a 4
budget formulatica.
'!be Jdetltificat(oo Mctioa
1a a apeclalty of the ~
meat Organbed by Ode!
Seltzer and the lat. Sgt.
Hemy Archer 15 year11COt
the sectioo la one of few
such d t p a r t m e n h iD
Sciuttaern Callfonia that
bootJ and recorda tta own -
arrests and mat....... {ti
own finleI pdnt me..
ID Speclallst R o b t r t
Marks and Sgt. Robert
Soremon, ~ tbt
depa11ment'1 awn polylf1pb
("lie detectm").
Because ol tMle facOitiel.
plus a pbotoerlpblo lab IDd
Facilities at the police at&•
tion on Fifth Street ancl
Orqe Avenue i'nclude four
tella, a large boldiOI tianl, a
eecurity area for bookin&
and flogerprintin& a D d
quarters for 1ix trusteet.
Chief Seltzer pcjnta wWa
pride to the high ltandlrda
maintained by the depart.
meat in recruitment of of•
fk'era.
Candidates first mu• t meet the bade requirementa
ol the Cali!ornia Peace Of·
ficen Committee on Stano
C)ardJ and Trai.ning, in•
eluding a written and oral
. a t a t e -administered 6 •
aminatioo.
Physical standardl art
high also, and all new quali·
fyiDg offi~rs must complete
b 29e hour, aeven week
Orange Coast C o 11 e f • developed by the Oran&•
program of basJc trainlnC at
C.ounty Peace 0 t fl c t r 1
Alsociation.
Continuing education bl
police lcleJ)9e is requlrecl
once officers have joloed the
ioree.
-Modern-
Image
~'NEW LOOK' CHIEP
Earl Robltallle
•
I. Benlt of Americ:a·-·-·-······847.35'4 I 19. House of Ven's····-··----.. 847·'4400
2. Alplte Bet• Marl.et ....... :.. ... 847,9077
3. Permatreu BHuty Saton .. 847-1063
4'. Five Points liquor_ ..... _.8'47-4473 5. Five Poiots Leundry ... ____ ,8'47-9214
6. Five Points CIHners_ ...... 8'47-2466
7. Five Points Barbers ___ .. 847-9080
8. Household Finence ..• -..... 8'47-3577
9. Optometrist Office __ .847-1271
10. W. T. Grants_: __ ······-··847-3575
11. The Mele Box .................... 847-061 S
12. Huntington Photo Supply .. 8'47-6'41 I
13. Holidey Heelth Spe ..... -•.. 842-1 '45 I
14. Trend O' Fuhion .•..• -... 847-7214
15. A Toy Heven ...•......• _ .. 842·6'468
16. Fiv e Points Pet Shop-.. -.842-6313
17. Allen Drugs ................ :. __ .847-3525
18. Jack's Jewelers .• ·-··~-··847-6380
20. State Fum lnsurence-.. 842-5587
21. El Dorado T.V •. _ ........... -... 847-5939
22. Duke's Donuh .................... 847-5315
23 . Pa l's Vecuum Sewing Ct r ... 842-3662
24. Merle Norman Cosmetics. 842-30 I 0
25. Center Shoe Repiir.-....... 847-6440
26. Piccadilly Peddler .8'42-6370
27. H. 8. Auto Supply ___ ..... 842-2519
28. Trev'lin Music .. ·-·······--· .. 847-9148
29. H & R BlocL •.••. -·-·--·847-1907
30. Mulin lnn ........ -.... _ .......... 847-6066
3 1. St1ndud BHuty Supply .... 842-5551
32. Manolios Music·-···········-··842-2531
33. Five Points Hardwer•.--.. 847-5028
34, Huntin9ton Cineme -........ 847-9608
35. Five Poinh Enco ........•....... 847-9216
36. Denny's Restaurant ...... _ .... 842.2112
WHY · ·WALi · A .llLE? PARK .CLOSE TO OUR
--------' DOORS AND SHOP WITH A SllLE
16 DAILY PILOT
~AZIMI
\ t• • _,,.
TOUI COMMUMITY-1Ht 1
Citie1 WUl Have .
Lil elinu to AU
Parts of Southland
Freeways Put
I
Area Growth
On the Traek
Acce11 to the
metropoli&aa areas ol Loa
Angeln County and to the
rest ol <>rua-County la a
critiC91 fldol' if a com-
~ ta to _.. to be the i.eelt ID Onnce OountJ,
HunliDltm BMda and Foun-
tain VdeJ .. to be well
esved db freeways. Tbe San Dieeo........, em dl•p.aUy
llll'Gla fcadaln Valley and
• ebel Buattnctaa Beach on tt. ncrw.a boundarlel. nm
hewaj WU campleted last
'1f6' tD a junction with the &-. Ana Freeway 1n El
Ten.
Tt the weet is the Sen
Gabr.lel Freeway and Aeeell
.. ... Mrth encl cealral
pata If IM Aacelel Olun·
ty, T4> tht tut 11 the Newport Frfffty and ac-
cua to th• Mtlllern section
by the Stat. Divilion ot
Jtiebway1 and l n t e r • 1 t e d
ciu.n ~ tram · Fountain
Valley, ~ Beach and
Costa Mesa on Cht tuturt
alignment of th1I freeway. It
1st SElllES A SMASH ·sucCESSI NOW HEAR ·THISI .
Grand Opening! A Whtie· New Series!
HERE YOUR HOME ACTUAU.Y EARNS YOU INCOME!
BllAllD NEW 5 a 6-UNrr BUILDINGS .
You rectlve
lncotN front 4,hrmott tenta! units,
Ea'h building inc:ludes a glamorou• private owner's rMidence of up to 2,000
sq, ft. of living arta, many a1 4 bedrooms, l baths. Paneled den, fireplece,
luxuries galore. ·
Each building also includes 4 or 5 attractive 1p1rtment units frorn which you
receive rental income.
HOMES
WITH AN
INCOME
rul\ from $1 01 ,500 to $113,500 · · \!:!:) 7 ~ ~. lo1n1 1vailabfe. Subat1nti1I tax benefits foo.
From the San Diego Freew1y, t1h Beech Blvd. south I bloclt b.yon4'
Edin9er Ave. Model1 open deify · I ct•·~ to dus•. ( 7t 4, 142-11 II
ltH-YOUI COMMUNnY
may terminate at tbt San
·Diego Freewey in Fountala
Valley or eontfma ICIUtb to
Plclflc Cout Freew1y.
During the past year
cltiuna' groop1 IUdl as the
Cionce11ned Citiiens. Council
and tbe Huntington Beach
Freeway AssodaUon have
done much to 1 n v o 1 • • resldenta in treeny plllo-
nlng.
• -0
Cootinued pressure bJ these unofficial org.antza..
Uona and by ~ council,
boards and commluiona
coWd aid materially in ret-
tt.ng lie ronstruotion goiD(.
,,,., """ "'"' ,,,,, If/It •• i ft IHllU, ,.. .,. llll·Hlt /Mii/Mi iHli••lt .,.,,,
,.. ·"' """' tit Hit ~,,,,, "' t.11. .... It JtM4 ,_.,, 1111 ~ 1# ._,,t ,,.. , .. ,,,,. """'".
-I I
I
t-
•.
Buniing~n
BeaehWhere
For Indastry
Cooalderable growth ~ ll cl
expansion bas marked ~
trial development in the City
of Huntington Beach during
196t.
Among its m a n y in·
dustrles, the city beutl
*nuhsroom growers an 4
makm of artificial flowers,
tnlssiles, c o m p u t e r a ,
•urfboard racks, tape-type
1>lctw't hangers and pool
outs. 4 It t ven has a firm that
bu11dl concrete flMts.
l Mort than 40 maautacturhll
and 1Ddultrial firma open1&e
withill the clty. HuntkCtele
Beach has 2,563 acrea ol
land 1ooed for tndustrial
u111e, most ol which ii
loolttd 1n industrial pub.
' TllE BIGGEST
t By far the l.M'gest of BllD· tlncton Beadl's industrleJ la
tht sprawling McDonntll DouCW Airt"raft Co. plaa.t
ln tbt northern part of l>t
city.
Tht Douglas S p a c •
Systems Center (now part
of McDooneU Douglas' new
Astronautics f>ivisloo),
which makes the S·IVB up-
per stage of NASA's mighty
Saturn rocket, covers a 245-
acre area Qlld employs 8,500
persons. Its tobil invcstm«it
in tM city to date i s mote
tnan '42 million, virtually all
of which was p r i \'a t•
oapital.
The center was opened in
1963 and dedicated by then
Viet P1•esldent L y D d o n
Johnson, after company O(·
fie1als cons.i.dered and tt-Jectd 2:1 other sites in Soulheru ~allfornia.
Anoeber of the city's large
18 Ma,f,'Jl.DI .. I .. ._.. ... ·"
D1anll It the HuntlngtOO ~ ltab of th•
Southern Olltfornia Edison
Oo., whkll opened in 1959 on
Paclfto OolUt , Higbw'ay in
tbt toaebeast part of the ci-
ty.. SCE m.tnhlns service
trom hert to tht 1areest por-u. ar eutamen 1n th• ~. IWVfnl a percent
of ttl rtlldences.
OIL, TOO
lwlf ouual obsecve1· can
.... too. lat GI production
II a ---tadaltry in Hun· ...........
Two IDlla oil c001panies • .,._ tmcel ln the city
~ Oil and Gas .od . Oil Co. 0 f
c.lllondl:. Tilt two com·
palM ......... emplo y
...,,.,....~ ..
..,. ant oa wen w:as
IPQlllll4 la Ill tbe area in 1-. and ddUm indict the
•1Uak ...... wm apew forth
hen ,. lllOtber 50 to. 100 ,......
u.Jol' lndustrlea a n d
IDlllllfactUnl' In the city
u4 lal·IAJ'btr of workers b7 employ, laclude:
-AAlu • AAbls Elct• eerlac Servlet (lndUstrial con·
IUICaat) 7111Yukon.1.
-~ Beta P9dda1 Ce.
(meat pack:lq), 17311 Nichols.
GO.
-Amertea B.n&c Ca-ter (budding material), 19240
-.... Cerp. (oil produ.
cers), m 20th St.. 2.
- O.L. Belton Co. (oil pro-
ducers), 327 17th St .. 4.
-Bniet Broe. (trucking),
7212 Talbert Ave.
-Cllllbn Mfg. Co. (fiber·
gtasa food), 7&01 Cl3y Ave.,
125.
-Oiet ,.,.. (vtee&able
packer), 17101 Nichols, 70.
-CmdbltJ Ullllmffetl (in·
terior decon.t1Dg), 21592 Kan-
eobt Lan .. 1.
-aart-Orlftl~ he. (ma-
chint abop), lllG Gothard, 50.
-.,... C-pslw Corp.
(CCllDP*'I), 7'57 Lars• Cir-
cle,•. ·
-Dt Gaelle " ... Glass A A ate U ........ (com·
merdal 1ta11, auto 11-s),
lilt AWwN, 15 •
-..... aelrldldel " I--. a., PrM. ot.. (cer-.u.•v-. l>IY. ti l'tnt Clrp.
amio fPld .. ). 1'M Fi·
ber Glut llold. 14.
-"11'116 Pr-1 .. et. (ma.
riot hardnn), ll117tb St.,%.
-Pfln C.,.1 d11 Plttr <a. IJh! Sn (I lb tr 111-~
mMerllll), ml1 fter Glass
M ., IS.
-Glr&M ....... (seTV·
let weldbe>, um Holly, I.
-Gertel ......... PrN.
Cfibertlut toollna>, 7312 Mur·
dy Clrde, 11.
-GtWelwat Fe rt II h ·
el (fertllilm. JUnt foods &
soil mtltuns), 11191 G<sldfn·
welt St., 7.
-Gonle'I SarfboarU (CUS·
tom IUl'tboards), 1308 Ocean
Av~s. -Bal'• ti Ranllqton (car-
pets le draperies), 210 Adams ,
10.
-11.aret (corrosion control
eJll)neer1Dg), 7453 Lorge Cir-
cle, 10.
-H. B. Blueprint (ser\'ice
blueprinting), 1617 Alabam3,
3.
-Baattncioa Bu~ Co.
(developers), 2110 Main St .,
15.
-.......... ~Oil C..
(oil producer),11192 Main St.,
•• -R. B. ftMJ Mb: C.-
cfttl (mix coacrete ), 'ml
Talbert, %5.
-a a. Tm 1: Sterace,
7671 Liberty, I.
(coacret. ftolitl • dortirC
ayskms), 7SZ Slater, 21..
-Bau.ct-v..., ......
(graphic am), 7412 Lorp Cir·
de, 7.
-Jam.esoa &lptlJ (tilfield
Indus. suppllea), m 17Ul St.,
3.
-J...S. t1•11tr1ee (flebra
mini bib mfc.), 11U1-B Goth-
ard.
-Jet Bailer .,..._ ~.
(oil tools), 1111 Lab St., I.
-,...._,, GIMt Ct. (ter-
v.ice auto & la II fl ~r
glass), 111 FUUa St., 2 .
-Larkey Fua ...... Ii Fia·
tsMI. 7511 Clay, No. 1, a.
-IMde " S&u1e1 (pool cues), 7460 Lorg. Circle, 7.
-Lott• F.qlMtrilc (ma·
chine shop), 704 Lorr• Circle,
60.
-t.Mb, ht. (construe·
tion) 17610 Cameron, 3.
-Mariaa Reaearcll, In<!.
(research), 16131 • H&J Goth·
ard, 6.
-Meadowlark A v I a t Ion
Cait·cratt broker 1, flying
school) 5202 Pearce, S.
-iliracle Grip Co. (tape
type picture bangers), 909
Tenth St., 5.
-Mcl>tueU • Dtqlas As·
tronnlics Ct. Missie Is Space
Systmls Divisloa (missile &
space components), 5301 Bol·
sa Avenue, 8,500.
-Modern Decanters (In·
terior decorators), 712 York·
town No. 12, 1.
-Oeamnr
Grewen (mushroom crow·
en), 11111 Goldeaftlt, iO.
-~ .... o,entt ..
al ldleel, 507I Warner Av .. nue. s.
-O'Neal Trader Se"lce,
19191 S&ewart, $.
-Onqe C-*1 CenaJe
Tiie llfl. Ct. (ceramic tile),
7471 Slater, 'II.
-O. C. Seppllen (oilfield
aupplim), 1• Late St., 10.
-Orp..oa Pk Co. <fDNrslm m a t 1 f« muf.
f1en), 712 Yorktown. '-
-....... PlllMa (formi-
ca topl, floGI' ccmrlnp), 175G
Gothard. 11.
-P.... P1d1dl, lat.
(hospital equip.), lMI Goth·
ant. •.
-P..a Ult...., Ce.
(pet 61UPPlla), l1U Warner Ave., 11.
-Pena..t ...........
(mfa. beadne" air condition·
log pl p. It fittiap), 11171
Springdale, 27.
-Pierce Madllu C.. (ma·
chine ahop), me Murdy Cir·
cle, 10.
-Planablg Researcll Corp.
(systems eoiioeerin&>, 7tll
Lorge Circle, to.
-Pneamadc Electric Co.
(mlg. electric panels &c switch
boards), 7511 Clay Ave., 12.
-Ram·Alr Ca&om Air·
craft Interiors (corporate jet
interiors), 16131 "L" Ge>tbard,
ll.
-Ray • 0 • lJ&e, IH. (high.
way renectors), 16102 GoUi-
ard, 12.
-RobertsUw C ta tr t ts
littl·Lioe Dlvllloe (control as-
semblies). 16072 Gothard, 60.
-Saldblal&ic It Met.lb·
ln1 c.. (sandblast, meta1i7,...
Ing 4' shot peening), 8'71 F.d·
ts.on Ave., S.
-SuUatJ PifellM Ct. <• 'DlkT pipe8ne comtructlon), •Speer. 25.
-Sipal OU &: Gu Ct. (pt·
troleum producb), Pac. Cllllt
Hwy, and Goldemrtst Ave.,
350.
-SmeUlu Llaa .._
Grewen Ana. (~
" ~ of llma ~>. 7642 Edloger Ave., 3.
. -Soatllera C.W. E4isoa
Co., 531 Main Strut, 370.
-SeldMni Coutlet Ga1
Ct., (natural 111), 311 Maio ·
street, m. , 1 •
-Spedlley lltldm (mold-' 1 ed rubber prod.. IUl'fbwj .
racb), '112 Yorktown, 11. . ' ·
-Sper\•llM .... , ........ '·.:
Tice (printlnc, maiJlal), -Calli, S,
-...... bh 11111,.....
el 6 Ullf-11w1J (reatal
towels Ci unifOl'!DI), at Mala
St., 17.
-JtaMaN OU Ce. ti Call.
(petroleum producU), Orqt
Ave. 4' Goldenwest, 121.
-Stevena llrN. C.. (oll·
field truckinc " acrap yard),
18062 Gothard Ave., 22.
-Sadltriak'• Amit,.,., '11J
Yorktown No. 20, 1.
-Sally MHler Ctetr. Co.
(asphalt products), 7221 Eltls
Ave., I.
-Ted'• Electric (eleclrl·
cian). 1116 Pawtucket Dr., t.
-Truran Company (mfg.
circular saw plates, maclliM
shop & welding), 1980 Late
St., 12.
-Tully E1terprt1es (deveJ..
oper), 82.S-B Via Alhambra,
Lagun:i Hills.
-Uaiversal Beauty Col-
lege (beauty school), 18530
Beach Blvd.
-Wea.er'• Procl1cdM Su-
'ffoe (oilfield equipment), !.
YOUI COMMUNITT -tfft
-
M~r.e FiJ'ms Looking
I • ,• } t • . '
For_ Sites·: i;n Valley
l'GUDtain Valley's 7~
lndmlaia1 J*Ple bu musb-roamed ovw tbe put YIU' ~ the addition of nearly '° appllcationa for industtlJl zri:·.u of the • baa
place near the SaQta
~ River. Bigai request :.a. for penpiaioq to bulld a ~ (I}! atqM) b7 Ounn Corp. Of $aDta Ana. •
Prollucta springing from t:;tatn Valley plants_ ranae
..._...;_ IPICe age equipmtlllt to
VIWll bugglee ~. bathtubs.
It wu nearly a decade ag0
of the t!Jen..tiny rural ~E,eut~~.b~·
commun1.¥ Idea -to tn.
tlude Industry along with
f anu, bomes and abopplnc ..... .
From ... &Ilk__.,.. born tbe
clty'• muter pJu ol 19a. City tathen elMsioDed a ribbon of ~ aJoag the city's
eutena bouncl.-J 9djactnt to
the Santa Aria Rmr.
Wblle tilt 700-acre area was co1ortd ~on Ptanninl ~ ·bu llding
the valley'•
corporate pwth. 7bm. SD 1M7 f o u r com-_., locatled factOr)'-dOce.
In tbt dty. 'l1le trend stepped
up tllll JW'. New members ol
the lncbtrla1 family Include:
-l1~foot addition
to t_ht Brown)'ard Steel Com-
paD)'.
-U ,IOHquare-foo& faclllty
for dual bala bullden 8. F. Me,.. ... -co •. <the Meyen
Mau flCtclrJ).
-11,00Hquln-foot factory
built by apecu1at1on builder
John ·~ -15,GOO-tquare-loot Luco
Indultrlea_ abowefl a D d
batbtubt.
-10 ,000·•quare-loot
machlne abop tor William
.Vlmoa Screw Co.
In lddltJon Salf ell and
MacAdama bal purclwed 10
acrea tot four addlUonal
buUd1no and La P o l n te lnduatrlea ( eJectronlcs) bu
Jocat.ed adJactnt to the Vol·
Shan Corp., an fftoSJ>IC9
firm.
Big . Moose May Be
·spa~~· Goony Bird
Those who remember World
WU: II (flying the Hump lo
E ' pmtroop drops In oUand. courier -nms tn the
aclflc) or the ·war's af.
termath, the Berlin AirWt.
"1U remember· with affection
the Gooey Bii6. -
Civtllans labeled it the DC3:
the Air Corpe and, later, the
United States Air Force, call-
~ It tbe c-47; the Navy and ~ Corps referred to It 11
""R-ID. But whatever Utt ungai.nJy,
carao • trlnlpart,
-ustl airplane WU
Jt became t b • =rse of all ·military
In all kinds of
. and tn every theater OI operation tn 11>e world.
Built by DoiaJas Aircraft
the Goony :1Jlrd perhaps
(and maybe still ls) the
versatile and rellable
l1rplane ever put aloft.
And the record seems to tn-
&1.lcatt that the company whlch
~ecttoda~:!me~~
Corp. -well may .,.
way to building the
~ Bird" of t~ space
JiJQ MOOSE 'l'bla one is nicknamed Big
1 )fo6St, It was conceived. =loped and tested In Hun-
Beach and ls being
In the community now by
\ lht Astronautics division of
Mcl>onntll Douglas.
~
~
BuUcHna and modifying Bia
Moo 1 e, the 8-IVB roe~
occupla tbol111Dds ot wonen
ln the Humtnctm Valley area.
(n.. fadllty In Hunttngton
Beach bu UGO employes, not
all of wham are working on
the S.~ program.)
They llelped put the first men OD the moon and DOW
t b •1 are J o o k I n a abea to new adventurel
Jn apace, always findiq new
'Wayt to UM the space >
".Workbone," the S.IVB.
Wnly wun't tH S.IVB's ftrst
job In ll*t IDd even more ctrtalnlJ wU1 not be its Wt.
Work eaadmaH OD additional
S-IVBI lot UM cootinutd hmar·laDdlDf Procram.
Tbt Clinpey'a CODtinWna ~ ID the U.S. man.
necl apece procram wu atven
further tmpe_tua when NASA
announced SD July t b a t
McDclaneU ~lu WU one of
two ccmpulel awarded con-tracts to ClGDduc:t design and
plannlnl ltudlel of a manned
~ lta&SGD. Al tbl third itage in the
Saturn V launch vehlcle wbJcb propeDed Aatronauts N e t 1 TWO 'IOllES'
Anmtroar. •'Buzl" Aldrin and In Its announcement NASA
M1cbae1 Colllna to t b e moon, aa1d that the study contract
the S.IVB bad one of the most awarded to Mc D o n n e 11
crttlcal Jobs In the m1salon. Douclll Astnnautlcs Com-
T ht .. made-In-Huntington pany (MDAC) will be directed
Beach•' component lint was by NASA'• Marlhall Space tred to put the Apollo 11 crew Fllaht Center, Hwitaville, Ala. to a .. parting orblt° above 'lbe other firm aelected was
ht eartb. It abut down while North American B o c k w e 1 l
tht ettw revolved around the Corp. Ita ltudy contract will
tartb prepuina for t h t be under tbt direction of
joul1le)' Into detp space. NASA'• Mli!led Spaeecratt
Center 1n HOdlton. Jt&tl'.utTS MDAC lftd North American 'nieG tht Blg Moose was RocWell Will ~ct parallel resteted fer the burn which 11-IDObtb llfOO'am atudies,
teht ~o crewmen roaring each nlued at· approxlmately off '°'° epaet bound for an $2.9 millloll. brblt lrcund the moon. Major ettort of th• studies
That •u la.st July. It was 111Ul bt preUmlnary dest111 and the fnOlt blgbly publlclzed job plannlnl of & U.man earth
the S.IVB bu ever done since orbital .pee._ ttation which
McDonnell Douclu b e g a n could be deVeloped by 1975. It t>uildl!IC dJt rocket at its 2-4&.S. would be ~ to have an
aort 9'1oe Syatema Center In operationll Ult oC 10 years,
t.i ~ Beach. But it cer· ~ s u b j e CJ ~ resupply of ex-
rM, STAT& & VETERAN APPl6viD
F.f:IGHT SCHOOL
HAR• AVIATION
EDOWLARI AIRPORT
11· PRIVATI & COMMERCIAL
,I ~. FLIGHT INSTRUCTOR
1 , AIRPLANES & INSTRUMINTS
1 •• MULTI INGINI a141 w .... " .. ...,. a..ct.
I u..1100 1
tt6t -YOUI COMMUNITT
~ AllLINI TRANSPORT PILOT
~ All TAXI -CHAll'RR ~ '· PAA A,,..OVID HOUN_~ iiii:?L
BIG MOOSI ~ Riding 1n the middle of the Saturn V "stack,, in this unusual
photo taken at tht moment of liftoff of AJ>otto 11 la the S.IVB rocket 0 B t f
Moose,'' madt in Huntington Beach by McDonnell l>ouglu Astronautics Com.-
pany. Con•lhlPtd capsule in which Astronaut. Nell Armstrong, "Buzz" Al·!.
drin and Mltt ~ rode to moon can be fttn rt.aht at top of photo. lmmed· i
lately under command capsule housing for lunar Jandlng module and just be-
low that 11 the a11embly 's thfrd stage, the S.IVB.
pendable1 and rotation of
crews with loetltlca fthlcles.
The space station II en-
visioned u the lnlt1al tlemtnt
of a large IPICt but and u a
means for in~ the
problems UIOClatid w l t h
manned habl&atJon ol apace
for extended perlodl. IUCh u
would be encoUntered In future
manned plmetary mllllons.
its unique features, auch u ding at precise locations and
weightlessness, vacuum, earth would be reusable.
viewing an d unobltructed McDonnell Douglas also
celest.ial viewing for a Jara• received two contracta total·
variety of re 1 ea re b an. Ing $184,790,000 for work or\
r the Saturn V workshop and iq
plications acllvitlet, airlock module which would
Logistics systems to resup-result ln work for more than
ply expendables IDd rotat. 1,000 employes at program
crews to both the apace n. peak -1,400 in St. LoulJ and
tion and the space but will be 1,850 In Huntlneton Beach.
Included lo the • t u d 1 t I • 'Ibe awards were made b1
SPACE BABB Modified exlatina IPIC*fl.ft the Marahall spa c . Flleht
ni. work will alao Include designs will be OOnafdered u Center of the n a t I o n a 1
conceptual dulcn of a 60-man lnitial logistics •)'Item.I for tht Aeronautics and s p 1 c t
apace base made up of early phases of the space Ila-Administration . One contract
apeclall!ed modules assembled tion program ln the event an for ft'l,340,000 is to modify a ·
in low earth orbit In tbt late advanced space sbuttl• would Saturn S-IVB stage to be UJtd
1970s and early 1980s. 'lbt not become avallablt ID t1mt u an earth-orbital workshop~
space base would bt a cen-for these operations. fte other is 8 $87,450,000 con-
traliud fadllty 1n orbit com-Various concepta ot ld-tract for continued work on
parable to a IC1eattnc and vanced space shuttles will be two airlock moduJes. Work on
technical research, develop-evaluated to ideoWy the molt the Saturn V work.shop wlll be
ment and operaUona cemer on economical means ~ aup-performed at H u n t l n I t o n
earth. plying a large apact buit. Beach whJle the airlock work
Scientists and tnllneers or Each of the ihuWt conctpta wUl be done primarily at St
many disciplines coi.tld utilize would be capable of land S.. Lou.ls.
Where in the World do you want to go?
See
HUNTINGTON BEACH TRAVEL SERVICE
222 Maia St. ¥ 536-6548 .
DAILY "LOT ., ,i.
MA•AJIWI ·.
..
.
I 'I
!
I I
.-
.,
-
Co111e True
B wuoi t.o be aco tat
)'Oil couldn•t see the treel
(the few theft were to aee) la
HunttnetoD BMCb f• tM for.
est ol oil well denicb a D d
pumpe.
But the Huntington ..m
Company made a V"'1 ID -with aDMIDCfllW'!i& ol a ..
year muter pla far •rl•
mtri ol Its 1.• acftl ..
oceanfront and inland Jll"OP«•
fa'.
Trees, (lots ol them), er-.
shrubs and deluxe Mil!Pdlll
and recrelticlDl1 ~
were lcUc te elDf!'le fr'Ola
that weod and ltetl fonst.
That Wll tile VOW.
'lbe annouocemeat WM met
with a measure ol cllWW.
lt was such a marbd deper-
ture from past operatloal ot
oil Interests Utiat IOIDe ju It
slmp1y didn't believe tt ftUW.
ever bappeo.
The H.u.ntlogton Beach Com-
pany, itself, warned \hi& lt
would take •· Joog timt to pro-duce visible results.
The disbelievers w~ wont
to say, "I told you so," as
the first few years o( the 20-
year plan slipped by.
But all o{ tlm WU
w b i 1 e the company wu
speodin1 millions to clear
tbe way -moving oil wells
into concealable islands,
wresUing with the enorm·
ously complex undergrOUlld
aystem of pipes. clearing
equally complex land titles
made so by the sale ot
counUess 25-foot lots as an
encyclopedia sales gimmick
many years ago.
TIME TO BEUEVE
Now the way is cleared
and the disbelievers c a ll
start believing. This t h e y
should have been doing all
aloog, for the company's
whole history bas bees ill\'tlv·
ed with Huntlllgton B e a c h.
first ln fanning, then ln oil
and now in upgrading real es-
ta~ as an antidote to t b t
downgrading the old oil re-
covery methods prodDced.
Consider some of this his·
tory:
The Huntington B e a c It
Com~ny began shortly be·
fore the turn of the century
when Col. Bob Northam
b o u g h t tbe HUDtington
Beach mesa land from the
Stearns Rancho Company
and began larm!ng. A few
yeara later, a group or Loa
An19Ie1 ud Lone Beach
area 1*Jw1mea provided
r1IDdi far lat purchue of a
tuwlllbw a.t wu to become
H1et,.._ Belch. (It'• ne
wGlldlf, tbeD, Chat tbe Hunt.
biltml Belch Company. OD
-...,. lellerbead, ideati·
&cl -U "'Owners Of JlunH .... Beech.")
The .. ., years of t h • B'1llllllOla Bacla Company ,,.. .med by .. of Iota
far bmMI ud businesses
and bJ .-.. 'Ibis led to
611 ..em• IUCh as aper.
atiaa of & teilpbDDI COIDpa·
llf, a ,.... CGlllpP)', and
ena a CllMterJ.
But t k e 1 • enterprises 1*ed into lmipifleance
wbea oil wu discovtted.
l1Rl'l' WELL
Tbe BUDtin&ton Beach
CompaQ1 leMed 500 acr~
of land to Standard Oil Com-
,_, ta Ult. Almost imme-dlateJJt the first producing
well WU brou&bt in. In the
.. ,, 11111, Standard pur·
cbaaecl a M percent interest
1n tbe Huntington B e a c h
Company, aod that same
ownerlbtp 1tands today.
'1111 company's agricullu·
ral brterestl continued into
the lMOI, however, princi·
pally 1n dairy farming.
Manapment Of the com-
pany wu lar1ely a holding,
or bouleteeping affair until
ear]J 1n 1912 when one of
the brl&bt youne atan in the Standard OU management.
E. A. Hartsook, took over
the nlna ol. the company.
Soon, speculation was
coa6rmed and Hartiook an-
nounced that the Huntington
Beaeh Company w o u 1 d
apearitead a major depart·
ure from traditional oil
company policy. Instead of
.Uckiq exclusively to oil
and Pl and related activi-
ties, bt 11ld the company
would co Into surface real
estate development.
Before the job actually cot
under way. BaNook was join-
ed ln the upper echelen oC Ole
eompany by J8Ck D. Fro<·
gatt. whose extemive exper·
lence both in Jeg;al work for
oil companies and ., an ad-
ministrative assistant for a
Cclagreaman (itted him for
tbt job ol 'f1ca pl"5ideot a n d
feDl!l'I.} manager; Stan J.
Dont, a 11-~r veteran at
MMllAI oil problems in th•
U.._. 86'99 and Caoacla,
...W, a pl'1ae« cammnnit1 eomp&IJ' .a-.. 1-1. Tile . Tile wboJe oceanfraat U.
al I# llDlle f.mnll1 lllomes weJ11 ce="IM .ti luotilla 1teea ripe fW Cbl ~ el _. ..-...,. clwtlllll ta "9PMe blrmOll1 with dnlllpm91t wb&da ...W
unll. · the ClOlllMrda1 dne!Op--· bdBC tbt clt1 tu IDeolM
It will take .t 1eMt ts years ment. ·amt the public tbe service1
to mnplete tbe oampls wbich The Huntlngtoo Center, lt abould havt while keep-
49\'ellltDallY wUJ ba99 a popuia-tia • ......... ~ \Ila IUlf and 1aad wide opea
tion of apprOJimaaetJ •• lhoR>iOI feday. 1t 8eac9 fCll' the eaJoJmeal ol. t h e
persoN. Blvd. and .... San J>lego ceaerat public, fndldln1
'Jbt DIW ... 911111wbed
tht.project .. tbl ...... ..,..... '""511.. •• ............ ,,. ....
dl'f't"" lllt 1f'llW mo•• rilb& ........ qllkt to
,... -tblt adult u-. .......... ,,, ..... *ldl1
bJ maniet neept1oa.
FlnaDy, the ~"
project sfacecl wHldn the
Lots In the lnitlal project Freeway ii & joint venture millloDs ol aummertlme vU.
will be sold tn fee limple of the Hu at I a 1 ton iton from afar.
-Mt leased. U eooqh in· Beach Compuy and Gor· Tht Honttnitoa ~ach
Yest.an 11.te um araqe. . clan L. lkDoaal4 or Santa Company ii ID a prtme po.
melt. aJonC... with lift la a Barbse. 1itio11 to provide the kJDd
fine home hard by the Huitt· MdltlaaJ11; -the F 1-v e-of bi&tHauali~ 40H8front
tngtoa S8Kliff cbwptmsNp PoiDtl Shoppf91 Center 1t development tbe dt7 10 bacl.-
10U coane aDd ellbt miles Beada Bodl8nnl and Main lY needs. The COIBPdT
of the world's fiaat. beach, Street, ancl ·a Dent light bas j o l n t owuershlp of
then H..ungtGa Beacb DOl'Ul lndul1rial ooapla, -9 sue-the 1dd between Pacific
ol 23nl (acnr Geidenest) cessfUDJ ahartaa oil lease Coast Bith"l1 aDd t h • Street wUl IOClll enoup joim 1and belonlinr to U.. com· mean JalPdde lilM from th•
ltl ne1'bbot to tht DOJ'tb, puy. HuntiD&tOD ~ P 1 e r
Bmdlnstm Barbour, ai a · Al if all this ~n not ~oritln,estward te> tbt cltJ
abcnrplaC9 of quality. lmpreutve enOU&h 11 a be· limits ..
Thi compuy U:.. ID fact efnnlnc 1n real estate ee-· Man1 obltadtl have beea
already demcllstrated tbat velopmellt far a company OV~Dlt throqh extended
surface deftlopments of totalJJ new to fb1 field. negoti.atlou w1tll tilt state
1ood quality can be com-there ii more -much more. <agreement on ibe meaa
patlblt with a4jace11t oil 'rbt ctty of HUDt1neton h1gb tide llne) Md the dtt
drill.iq and pcunplne. lb Beach bu tone lpellt more (IODint). Ground WU brot· Huntmcton Sbal'es area at on lb beacbfrOnt services en J~ 2. 1917, and COD-
1'irtt Street and Ocean Ave-~-UflCQl1tla clean-•troctioll ts now camplete4 -v-6&. •• it b' t k for ""111e H1.lldJqtm Pac-nue has a motel. restaurant up, ~tc., -IUAllU as ·~ -ific ., a '2 mlllloa, lCJl.unit
and mobile homes park on en in, by a wide margin. apaitmem complH Oil the
beach below Padfle Cout
Bllbn1 between '1tb ant ltll streets.
The f 1 u o r Corporatioo,
Ltd., is a partner 1n the
quality de'Velopment wbkla
ii "lhowiaa a. Wl1" ....
the city'• laeadllnat.
CLEAR VIEW
)Mt,,_. '6 IO.
1'le ~ Seacllft .,..
'Ibe famell architectural
firm of -wlDiam L. Pereira
aind Alsoctates wa the de·
11gner. · The· Huntlqtoa
Paclflc bu a cucadlnl
Mediterranean motif wta
jts fiYe le.ell atalr-steppJnt
downward to the tmf. -By
this meau the btli1dlnC wu
held to no man tbla tine
stories higtl al uy pain&. It
rises leSI than 35 feet above
the higbwaJ at lfade level
chvnf' Hp .. count and
its cl11bh,_ -ant GI die
man (MlllUlR ,._,. ad eat"
spoa ar'GUDd town -w e r 1
cmnpleted.
'!be Ont locremesrt of lOS
1'omel .. be coomucted by
John.J>. Lust " Som IUI'· fla-IZ:t• rwndbC tbt CCIW'le is neartna
compleb. An eclctiticul 200
homes art acbedided far com-
pletion ID lt'Jt.71. ~~t Tbla wu the altuation at ~-r
mid-Jtm' when a pair ol new · ~:..:?
executiV• stewed Into t b t • Hununcton Beach Company's ,,,· ':"
front office to ftnllll tbe work 't. laid out b,y Frogatt a n d c.,.i, ,_,,..,
Dorat and to add their 0 W D • .,.
Idell to tbe ''DeW look" of tht
historic CCJIDPID1•
NEWUW>ERS
Wllllam E. FOILer, ooe of · .,
the brilht Ji1bts of the Chev·
l'Ul Land ·Coq>lny, a wholly . ~
owned aublldiary ol tbe Stan-\ ·
dard OU ~. came to '.1 • 1·
HuntinltoD Beech to ISIUIDe .
the vice ptelldeat and cmeral '*· manager poliUoa Frocgatt
left.
A1 the same time, Richard
J . Mlelcke took o.ver the vice
president for operatiODI a n d ..
~ post formerly '.l.lll.M~.v-·.
held J>J J>orst. I
They take over just as t h e
Huntington Seacliff develop-
ment is beginning to be rec-
ognized as a harbinger of
'tbloll to come 1D Che Joal-accs
armouat'ICI ''Dew'' lludqtta
Beach Company'• Huntlngtoo
Belch. ii"
De¥elopen envision in \ht
llvlltlap. &eacliff IJti UIU·
Montb.ly rental.I r a n 1 •
from SUS fOI' effideDq
units to ttOO Jar tbree-Mcl-
room apartments. A ma.
jority of the un1b have all
ocean view.
A p a r t m e n t s are fur·
nisbed with carpets, drap-
erie5' and full electrlc kitch-
ens of the Gol4 Medallloa
class. Heat.mi and bot wa-
ter will allo k electric.
A swim.mJDt pool OD the
beach aide, uuna baths.,
recreation room, patio• an•
roof deck areas overlootio1
the ocean a d d to the
atmosphere Of luxury.
As the fastett cro"1D1
city In tbt futest growlna
county 1D .tht lutest ere>•·
tng state 1n the nation, Hunt·
tncton Beach has a multi·
plicity of problems due te
it_, growth ratt alone. But
it has more problems than
most outer cities dut to lta
oil boom pist ,and tht UllT
scarring p'toduced over th•
years aince 'the first oil
• strike 1D 1m.
Thanb in large measure
to the long-term investment
in and commitment to th•
city of its birth and growth,
the Buntlnlton Beach Co. of·
• f ers tbt one best hope for
making tbt lat. William
Gallienne's dream (11 IO-
year Chamber ol Commerce
manager) comt true -to
coavert Hunttniton aeach
tolo th• -.Mlaml of t b •
Wtst."
YOUl COMMUNITY -1t6f
. t
~-~~~~~----------------------------------------------.... ----
OPEN YOUR
ACCOUNT TODAY!
Choo s t whichever high•
Interest Mer·cury Savings •C•
count fih your own personal
program ilest. Nilkla ""'
lnttrtd from d1t1 of rtceJpf
•t M 1 r c u r y S1ving1 with
lnftrtd c.ompoundtd cleily.
Famcl1 rtcef vtd by tht tenth
tara 1nttrtd from tht fird.
1'htrt'1 • Mt r cur y
S1ving1 pl• n to fit ...
your specific needs. T
OPEN
SATURDAY
':Nt'rt open fron'\ 10 1.m: to
4 p.m. EV E RY S.turd•y.
Th1t11 tht Mercury S.vin91 .
Wly -edtndin9 every poi•
tlbft convenience, tvtry pot•
alblt 1trvict to our
cudomtr1. Stop by .... _
soon I T
TOTAL ASSETS
NovtlftMf, l•tit
Juft9 ao. 1969
Dt .. If. 1961
Dtt. 11. 1967
Dtt. SI, 1966 o... ,., .. ~us
Dtt. )11 1964
Ul,500,000'
20,751 ,100
16,'60,434
12,740,611
9,446,70)
-t,4't;440
4,1 10,041
•~0111olldet•cl wiih H•rmet Fin•n·
•1•1 C.rpor•tlon, • wholly owntcl
""tvlct corporation" 111b· +
1icfitry of Mercury Sevln91
end Lou Auociation. •
Max-Int • Super Max-• Super-Six • Super·
Growth • Super-Int • Bonus Accounts •·
MW-Porticipatiows • Interest Compounclecl
Dilly • Free Sah Deposit loxes •
Frte Loan Collection Service • and t
. .
Tht Mtreury $avf "9* luildh,9, Huntin9fo11 lt.ach T1te Mercury Saviftft hilcltil91 luel\a Parle
'.'THE 'ME1cu·1y STYLE"
Mercury S.vings •nd L~ AS5oci.tion hta built its repui•tion on a f~ation of
servic~ to our custolMt's. You sit lown Md r.t.x in comfortably uphohttred chtirs
whenever you fr•nwot &,u,iness et M.rcury S.vings. You enjoy • friendly cup of
coffH during every visit. Your v•kW>le w.ltt docu'menh ere permanelrlfy ltminefed
in pl•stic for you -free .. You get 1 frff a.ft deposit box (with niinirnum bwnc•~
And if you cen'tcome in, we~re 1s ne•r •s your m1il box-Mercury Stvift9S provkles
poltag.p.td envelopes for add~ions or w ittY.lr1w1fs, new accounts or a1.nilar frtns•
actions. Th1t•1 t~• Mercury Sty1*!
. .
DIC"!'Y' OMCIS1 1?tt MtreurJ $tvin9s l11ilJin9, Etlf119tr If lt1c"• H1111tln9fo11 l et<h
•MOfH OfflCf: Tht Mercury $oin9t luilcliftf, Valley Vftw et Li.tCofn, i 11a11t ,.,~
.-:: ~·: ~ : :MERCURY S~VING$
' ' \' t • • • ' -~ : -~ ·.: · · · · . , ond loon os1oclatlon
\.
'
. -· . . " ...
Opt1Mon..Thurs.91.m.·.f p.m.; Frid.y 9 a.m.•6·p.m.; S.twrdty 10 •.m.•4 p.m.
+
,.
_ .... , .... 21! ·-~
I ..
.
Name ·Game And
l!ou"U ·Find lt'.s
Avail.abk Here
.Good Sports
Like Life
Along Coast
Where b the foremost
recreational area in the United
States?
Any objective analysis ol.
lpoU which cla1m the distlnc-
tioo would encounter difflc:Wt,
1tactlnc up their ofterlnp
wltb \hose of the Orange
Cout.
• ' Whether your tastes nm to
Jan bowling, Alo clYlna.
flsblag, auto racing, tenni1 ar
any ol the myriad ol. recrea-
tiooal outlets available, the
Orange Coast area bu it.
amateurs, as wen as to
coastal area bulls.
Golf? Take your pick:. There
are 12 plf courses dotting the
area.
Leanh11 back and laking a
brolder view ol the Orange
Cout area aporta spectrum,
JOU lee the Newport Harbor
Lan Bowlen. lhe S u ~ •
MarlDen Skindiving Club, the
Coast Rancen soccer team,
tbe UCI Rugby Club, the
Newport-Mesa Junior A 11 •
America Football Assocla•
tiaattbe Orange Coast YMCA
ad two braacbes ol the
Barbor Area Boys' Club.
And it your preference Llll't
lmmediately withln reach. it'•
a relatively abort ~
to winter sports areu IUC.il
u the San Bernardino JDIUDo
taint or to fresh water flll*IC
lpob Uke lntDe Lake.
Heck. you•re only 'IS mlautet
from Torrey Pines lf yWtl
looking for a place to Oy
)'out sailplane.
Bowllna? Koaa Lanes, ln
addWaa to offering • 1anea
to tbe cmua1 area bowler.
ba1ta two ~ events this APPL YING THI! SToPPER -Edison IDp School
Jeat-the west Coast Match talJhect Jim Moxley (24) ii aboUt to be jpW.et 1'J
G11m1 ElbnJnatlom and the HunU.ogton Beach pant GU C_. (11). Modey bu
oaced the first-year Chargers to a strong showing
lor a MW IChooL Hunti.ngtoo Beach woo seven of ita
flnt eight 1ames. ·
Callfona1a Women~ Stat•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---
BoatJni, flsb1ng and swim·
ming have always reigned as
king.a of recreation along UM
Orange Coast but another ac•
Uvlty ts coming on stroagly
-tennis.
The development of the
sport bas reached the pain&
where Newport Harbor Hlgb
players, who learned the pme In area youth tennls programa,
are anaually one ol tbe C 1 l l f ornla lnterschollldc
Federation's (CIF) ltrqell
teams.
The stature of the tw.~
old Newport Beach Tean1a
Club bas reacbed tbe palm&
wbert the club came wilhlD
a whlslcer recenUy ol -.....
the 1• world Daris Cup
llnals. And the Balboa Bay
Qub la a f amlllar site to the
world'• leading pros and
Toumament A n d Mes a
Lanes also offers facilities
boCh for open and· league bowl-
ing.
Auto racln&? Orange County
International Raceway baa
been galnlng recogilitton 11
America's claulest drag rac·
lng strip but now also offers
.. ......._. racln1 for Volbwaaen and sand buggy ......
Major League basebal! fans
alaac the cout are G017 • mlmates •• ., from Anabelm
.......... ... the Callfornla a,-.eat ltadlum wm house
• major leape pro football
team.
l'oar blcb acbools, tbree
juDlor coUeaa ud a univenl· tJ protlidll tbe area with an
abundance ot Interscholastic
aports competition.
Here'• a rundown oo what
thoee acbools b te v e ac-
SERVIN& ENTIRE OIANCH COUNTY
w Mushroom <:ompost * PIMtel' Soll *Ba.de PMt Humut
FE111LIZEI
* Golf.._ T., Di'uall I * Multt PurpoM Mulch * Gild• Welt HuwM
CO .. ANY
HUftlY •'1CI 14J:t04J 0,. Jilt && .. 4sJI ~ ....
111'1 GOLOINWIST. ITUST, HUNTIHGTON "llACH
2Z llULY MOI ...... ·i -.,u., ....
powerful U n l ' e ra It 1 tf
Pennsylvania.
HUNTINGTON a BA CB
WGR -A tradltionll basket·
ball power, the Oller• have
won two •tr at1 b t SUnJet
League and one !nine Leape
championshlpl ln Che l 11 t
tine aeuons. The school also
la bolt for the Soutbem Coun-
ties Track and FJeld Invita·
Uonal.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -Tbt
Baroni have woo two comee-
uUve Irvlne League wrestling
tltte1 and coadUct Che P'iYe
CounUes wresUlll tourMment,
constdel'ed to be tbe sport'•
best tuurney In Southern ~
fonala.
WDTMINSTD -Winner ol !he Sunset teque fllCball
champloosblp las& year, the uona made tt to u. ar .m.
fnlak belon flnalJ bing. The
Uom also are a cross countrJ
power and haven't lost a dual
meet ip tbe 1ut five years.
MARINA -The Vlk:J.p•
YOCBll buebaU team finisbed
CJllrd In the &unset League
lut leUOll ... figure to be
a top cont.ender Jn lrrt. M• rlna also bad a atrq ~
team, taking aecond in league
competition.
EDISON -A new acboo1
.. .,.. for 1M1aJnea'f for tbe
first tlme In the 1989-70 acltbol
7ear. Edison'• Cblrgen cot
"" lo • ltroal ltal't tn foott)all (an tqlllt lf·H tie aplnst La
Qukta Ill die team'• flnt-ner fOltllall pm) Ind ta water ~ out HantlQllon lleadl to taD third place In
Cbe l'...taln Valley lavttalion-
al aeet. ftt tcboo1 will field teams ID al majer prep sports.
UNRED CMCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE
420 10th STREET, HUNTINGTON BEACH
..... Pate, Mhllster
Adult and Youth S. fices -10:45 a.m.
ht Year Claq -Wednesday -7:15 p.m.
For ........ _536-2120
TOR COllMIMlf-tKt
-· ~ 5'-' <-r.
~· ect
lit
be ra-
D,l ue
.. ,
?f
-----__ ___, ___ _ ·•:-:• .. ,, ... .... ~ '";, .
. ftt ..... " .. b;eP.11 .. atlftlt&&ld•
... -,. Ml CN'll to IUI 8lreet Wltbill t>ur' ailcdi
CIC 1tuq cto.eq buliJllll
ldon. <
NEW OIL FEVER
'Oil Brou1.tit 'l1le Gil fever h1t •Ilia • ,_.. lattt et AtlQ.Uc end
HmltiDttOO Aveaua. '11ne
•Glib later It ... ccm-1Md
to a crowded ll'M -Meck
I w I h . Al d .-~Olll-.::·t:-.; to
t ea t .c-.D =: !:': re~c:i4
put •beJr' blDcl out ol • win-
dow and touch • derrick
located ;rbere a Jl8l'o clWr
~Graft to f;ity Ud ttGod.
New model *1Jl1n& rl were a port.ble liMl that
~be~ in three or
foUr wetb wWa more lilbt·
In the days be!'ore 1920, a
favortt. parlor wick in Hua-
UDtton 8-.ch wu to till a na bottle 11t the kitchftl
tap and bold a hand over St .a l>obbMI rose to tbt top.
It exploded aatllfactorily
ftell a match was struck .....
: A cberililt Lor a local
.... Hftnina COIDpa1!1 tald iJ ,... jUlt marsh pa illd
~'t ~an that there wa1
Ga in tbe area.
• In Uiost pre-<lil day1 ··m·oftep wondered why ae, eouiadn'~ set a perfectly
eleanrwub.
· ~ -iii M.; iil.o. stan-
dard Oil Co. atruck Gil 1D H~ BfaCb at I depth
ol 2,381 feet. · It wasn't a iushu ana cm.Y proCtuced 10 biarftta ·a clay but It was a
promi.ae ot tbiqe to come. . .... . .
PROMISE FULFIIJ..ED
The-promise WU fulfilled
one late November al-
temooo when Bolsa Olica
Number One blew .in, wildly
.,oudaC cas llld"otl . crowila pthered, children
were let out of tcbool and
aQO men rustled to tie Ille to try and CODtrol tbe gusher.
Days pu8ecl before It was
flnil&ly capped.
· Bolsa Cbica reached a
~udion Of 2,000 barrels
ot · oil and more than 4
million cubic feet of gas dai-
ly.
· Overnight the q u i e t ~de Village became a
b<>Om town. One Orange
COWJty magazine w r 1 t e r
'said: '
"Seveoteem m<>otbe ago,
Huntinaton Beach was a
sleepy )jWe. town or 2,400
~s. Today, there are
•bout 1,500 p e r m a 1u n t
rffiden~ ~nd a ~g population oC about 4,000 ...
/DRY' OJL TOWN
i Prior to the discovery of ~oil, a looal newspaper had
'iboe.sted, "There are n1>
i"aloons or drinking in Hun-
tington Beach and the moral
&1mosphere is ol ttie hjghest
order."
The high moral tone
• quickly dissipated in the l face ol the oullu&bt ol a&
rich-<1uict types, drllttu. ·, gratter. ~ promoten.
ly and ama1ler pumps.
VJNE-00VDm RIGS
TOO., derricb a r ,e
1oundproof 1d wlt~ As soon u tt>e pred'oua fiber.._, IDd pludc that
petroleum appewed; people camouflaie them. 8 om 1
leued piOta Of llDd M 11Dlll1 reeembt. sretn b o u 1t1
a.s dt.Y lota and ued them covered with vlnft a
as tbe 1-ia f« or1M!!lzln1 llbrubs.
C>tI companlet. By l!Cudying cioe heavU,
Hunt In It O ll Beacb'1 prodddng well by ttle beadl,
atyline w a• com]li)eteJy d.rilleN surmised that tie
eltered by row upm J"O'W ot botUlm ol the well was
Jdentical oU rill. k>ceted a quarter-mile out to nae profi'table cbaDee tn tea .
HontiDCbl WU • D 0 the r H. u. lrfcVloar and "Doc"
chapter Jn Oa1U«nfa'1 black . Rood _ ~ame important in
gold-Wea 1*tory which ~ oil mdultry at tlU time
beean with tbt lndlana. by e • t a b l l s b l n 1 1be
INDIAN MEDICINE ~tock method ot drill· ma. 1M red men wwe 1be 1'D involved lluact drlll-
flnt to diJcover a bllck Inc, angMnc trom the lbclre
lubltance oodDc from the to vast oil !OUtteS uncl« tlle
ll'OQDd. They \lied It 1n a ocean.
variety ol way1 -to caulk Today, mor. thla MO
seams 1n tbefr canoff, wbip&tock wells produce 11
waterproof their baHeta millk>n barr~la of oil ID·
and u a cure-all for colds nuaUy from tbe HUDUn&ton
coutbs, cute, bunia and · Beach Tidelands pool.
brlWee. U n f o r t u n a tely, lie
QW.fornla'a Int drilled whipst.ock method could not
well wu on U>e Daw ranch solve the problem o f
in Hum~~ in !Ml. Before reac001g the oil pools which
that ti.me, oil was dredged lay at a depth ol 4,000 and
trom hand-dug pit!. 5,000 feet under the surface
• Jn late 1907, a Stmndard ol tbe sea.
<>,it pipeline olJlclal wrote to 7WINS' BORN
COIDpfUl1 vice preeldent D. Off the Huotingtoo. coast
G. ~ that ott m11bt be stands the at>5wer to this
mO!'e ~eslful)J produced problem-Emmy and Eva.
in Calitoraa_if more sclen-The two 200 too mamnade
tifieally attlicked. Scofield lslandl contain equipment
..-eed and b&ed a geologist W'bidl •b used to drill
to loot fw Mure oil·pro-thoutanda ol feet into '1>e
dudag lites. ocean's floor.
The geoloelst, Howe 11 A helicopter ferriec the 42-
Gener, advised that Jt look-well Emmy crew Crom a
ed likely that oil would be heliport near 22nd Street to
found at a location "seven ttie Sjgnal Oil and Gas Co.
miles up th• coast from rig.
Newpott and OM mile in-Eva, constructed In 1964
land from Hunt I n g ton by Union Oil Co., is located
Beach." about two and a half miles
STANDARD NO. 1
The weU which tetulled was Standard11'Number One
and the •tart of on pro-
duction -in H u n tl n g l o n
Beach.
The excitement of tbe oil
disci>very t>ecam.e a way ol
life tor th& beach city which
experienced two more oil
boon'\s and exp,JoraU.on . of,.
offshore drilll.og for the
·valuable mineral.
In 1926 aod again in 1965
people moved b o u i e s •
~eotis.. ltortt and
Ciemaelvea to maq way for
drtlJl'nc l'J&I thet would IMJp
seaward and west o' Emmy.
She will eveotually hold 30
wells.
Huoongton Beach's-*
year petroleum bi.st.ory 11
capp00 today with these
figures. A t o l a l of
79'l,713,294, barrels of oil.
Jn 1967 a total of 20,713,294
barrels oC oil were pro·
ducecl.
lil.mtington Beach ts the
lo.urth largest oil producfog
field in the s t a t e .
Califomia'1 tq> oil pro-
duali:oo h maintained by tfle
Wilmingtx>n field w h 1 r e
more than 35 million barrela
were teeorded lad.,._
Shop ltt tho ,.1.,1.4 ohf111phero of olo9•nt old
Spoinl Tho followl"f •hopa offer bettor ..,.,.,.. I
wicle price Hflttt. You'll flncl plo11ty of froo p•rl·
' ..
Int._ tool -__..._
JEWEL Ry
.,.~co
71+968-1705
~ t(~ ru~oN -~~~ ~
f; CUTE, KICKY, HIGH FASHION ~
DRESSES • SPORTSWEAR • ACCESSORIES
AT THI 116HT PllCIS sms s to 11
All Mejor Credit Cerda Accepted or
Use Our leyewey Plen.
t62-l121
<!~~~~ •:•~u;,CINTll >
e FHturin9 ~
RCA Rutherford
TV' I & STEREO
Fest, E11pert Repeirl Salu end Service on Alt M•••.r
Ant.nn.1 lnstded t62-55'7. Fr" atimatfl '
----°Jeri's Florists
~2-0013
J--~·
Canplete Floral Service
Major Credit Cards
Accepted
Flowers Telegraphed tf : .
Worldwide ~
AT el.JS. ·~~ :840i . ... , .... ·~· MMAllNI ~
MR. CLYDI JOHNSON . .._DICK JOHNSON
FOUNDER end PRESIDENT EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
_. II All SEE US SOil AT • If ·SOUTIDI CAUF•'S llTSTAll• .tlD.ll/rBCUIY DEALERSHfS . '
,, , '
YOUR HOME .Of
fine car SERVICE
• Factory trained teehnJclans
• Genuine parts and acceasorits
• Special tools and ~ulpment
John·ao.n •. s .on
~ooo®®~~ ©®ooir~~moov~IL .• ~£rm~ m ~.1rnoo-r~oolrr\1 • ®®lill@~ml
[ 2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, CODA MESA . I
NEW CARS
540-5630 642-0981
1 Mlle South of the
San Dl .. o Fl'Mway
-------------------------
USED CARS
540·5635
----
--...----------"----
SehoOls lleel . . ,,,_ .. ._ .
Big -Gr~wih;
Hun1i~gion
tJps Tax Ra:te
:t ·new lottimeOJite achoo1.
named after Ernest G1aler
former mayor of She cJty
marked the open.mg of this
IChool year in tbe Huntington
~ City Scb:IOl Diltrict.
Once mown as a wealthy
from .C,678 atudenu at.
tendi.n& laat )'Mr.
A tlcbtednc ot state aJd for
acbool construcUGn h •.•
distrlct educatcn w or r f e d
about future. upamian but
unable to do anytblng deep&
hope for a dumge In the now
dim outlook GD boGd aaJee.
I
NEW FREEWAYt-Its architecture1w been call·
eel 11Early Freeway" and thouah the modern build·
ings on tta campaa .:f' be a tar cry from the ivy-covered, cloistered of the Ivy League, Golden
West College in its abort uistence alre&dy baa be-
DAILY PILOT Steff,._..
gun to be regarded aa ·a fouDtalnhfied of 'COIDlllunlty
_ knowledge ud an iznPortaot focal point of commun-
ity tile. It's a valuatile pert of local area'• public school system and ts open to all.
IChool aystem, the city d1atrid
bad to raise its tu rate 'Y 15
cents last year to meet boom-
ing growth in the aru.
ThecURlictbuf1Umllllan_..--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~--~---
With seven ICbooll, the eity
school cl.IJtrict now counts
l ,8'11 I t U d t D ts in itl
classrooms to man l u Cini
ol the county's s ma 1 le r
districts. A total ol Mt
teachers opened tlill IChool )'ear.
The district waa formed 1D
1902 ae the Pacific Cit,
sdlool dlstrid. Huntinstoa
Beach then was cded
Padllc City. In 1909, the ci·
ty changed ltl hame to Hun-
tington Beadl. and the
school distr1ot took on the new city name.
IUobes to raga sums up
the financlal atary Gf the ~. It covers a 12-
&qt.me-mlle area across the
lower half of Huntington
Beach between S u n 1 e t
:Beach aod the Santa Ana
River.
After the dl.lcovery of oil
1n H~ Beach, Che
distrlct had a large •e•ed
Valuation per JMqJil becaue
it bad few ltudents and •
valuable industry.
Jn recent years, the vast farm )aold.... OD t b t
eastern ~ ol tbe diltrict
have been used for houlinl
• development. and fr o m
these bomel have come
more pupils. A 1 1 e 1 1 e d
valuat.ion cl.id not rile ••
quickly u enrollment.
A PHvaluatlon et tbe oil
property rn Hu D t 1 n' t 0 D
Beach last yeaz added to tbe
district'• 1iMDc1a1 woet.
Asst91ed Yd&atlGn w a 1
decreued '11 million 1D the
move.
The dlltrtct truateu noCed
a 21 pereent tac:rwe ia •
deut emoftment tldt yar.
t-YOOICO.......,
ln achool bondl 8flll'09ed bJ
the vaten, llut none ti tbt
boadl bave been IOJd becaUll
their five pereent tatera&
doesn't meet martet
demands. CCllt ol nmninl tbe
district Ju& year WU f3.1
million.
TRUSTEES
Rectr C. ••en.. term u-plm Jae ae, mt)
see,._ F. .... (TU'ID O•
Jilrtt J1H •• lt'11)
Jack K. 0.,, (T-upiret
Jue•, lt'7f)
Orvllle Ra1-, Jr e 1 I• eat
(Ttrm eqlra .... at, U'H)
lvu LlaeU (T-aplret Jue•, U'lt)
SCHOOLS
Etbel lhr7ft 1*rmedla&.
Sdlool (7-1)
UIZ Aallll Aft., •1511 Bany ...._., friadpll
Joha E*r kW (It .. )
tzllB ....... Aft., ... 7111
Dea R. Pate, J119dpa1
....... R. PerrJ ..... (S. •> lttllB ..... Lw~--7
MarjtrJ c. ,... .. .....
JebR ............. CS. •> lllllFw..U.LIM, ...
im
Robert~Jl .... al
AJDH L. s..111 w..,I (K.f)
~ P• Aw., -·-F.Alwa v. Xeelq, ....,_.
.... ... llllrJ LeBn
Se'9el tK.f)
!Mil a11wr IL, •mt ~ ...... ,.., .. ,,.....
Enelt CW I trra1l1t1
..... CU) • r ,... nr. • ... Miii .,... _..
dJll)
District Serves 4 Cities
Edison High Bri11gs School Tot.al t.6 Five
Huntington Beach Union
High School dlatrict oilers a
four-year prosram to 7oung-
lterl ID-four dtttet -Hun·
t i D I t 0 D Beach, Fountain
VaBey, Seal Beach and
Westmiuter.
It covers an area of 52
IQIW't mllea with ltl pres-
ent ftve blab IChooll and a
onntln11tlola ldlool. 'Jbe fiftb
fuD·llze school -E d 1 s o n
Jll&b School -~ for
elaaea In September.
lncUznent weedaer u wtll 11
.... iD tbe comtndloD n. ..., Jlaeed tbe CGatpleUoD
:.::::=:.~
Uodllded bJ the 1oee of a
-ecllMllencel IUda u *'Mill f-Uhw, w toilet
........ .,udabop
lacUltlea, tbe °*la'I moved ta • tbe ant ., ., ICbool .,...,,
FOONDBOllE
Before JfaatJapm Beacb mo Scbool .. a.. &trtct
lftleas load a bame at
-llala St. tbt bl&t. tcbool Wll Don bJ • dlftrellt
..... -.... ltdeDed la • ••letJ., lecatlw.
.. tint Jaome ,,.. bl Loi
Allm*t. bat -..,. ,.. ........ tD jadJ ......
mainlng. Se sobool was set
up on 40 acres at Bolsa, only
to be moved when local op-
position brought an injunc-
tion which removed the
school to the ball of the
Talbert Garden Grove gram-
mar ICbool ln ltOf.
Former Superintendent
Raymond M. Elliott. writinJ
in Merton Hill's "100 Years
of Public Education ln Or-
ange County," recalla that
the school, first called La
Bolsu Umon High School,
went from Garden Grove to
Winteraburg in the old Ar·
mory building.
JN BASEMENT
The nut tettlement was
in the butment of the old
Metboc!lJt Cmlp G r o u n d
Audlterlam ID HuntiqtoQ
Beada, ttl bome until 1909.
'lbat year the school mov·
eel bltO new ·facillties OD the lite of the prestaj M·a in
Qreet caJDP.UI and there It
c1111e to reit. All of . tbeae mo.et .... place betwHD
l90S and 1909.
By 1910 the name wu
e b a n I e d to Huntington
Beadl UBlom JUgh School
Diltrict. Within t&e diatrict
are five ekmentary ICbool
e.trlda -BuatiQltclll Bodi C1tJ, Ocean View,
Fountaio Valley; WestmJn..
lter and SMl Beach.
Now the diltrict ii com·
poeed of Huntington Beacb HiCb School, 1905 Main St.1 Marina Bi8h School, 1589 Springdale St., Westminster HJCh School, 1432.5 Golden
We at St Fountain VaJ. ~7,'81 BushVd St., and 21400 J1aCn6J1a St.
D1atr1ct &lpt. Dr. M a a
· J'orne1 Sa a.a... lty Dr.
Etllan · Ji'oDmer, lnl!ineas:
Scott E. Flanagan, educa..
tional services.
Mort than 14,000 student•
art attending the district'•
ldlooll this year. ProJtc·
Uona ftve years from now
tsUmate a student enroll· ment of 20,000.
The 41atrtct'1 $13.t millioa
)udlet is #IDanced maiDly wttb a beilc tu rate ti $1.31
IPJll'Oftd Q YUs J.1arch,
1968, for a three-year per·
lod eodlnc June 30. 1971.
TRUSl'EES ............ ,.. .•
(term ~ Juie •, Jt'Jl)
.., II. • D '11, ...
(tenl aa*w Jme •, Jl11)
Dr.Ml*Ba.er
Oen• aplra Jae at, 1171) Dr.,.,. ...
(T-~ lat •, 1171)
MaT • ._.,
< .. ..--...,un>
' ~ I
... • • ~-~om~~--____,----...---
1
Signal Oil and Gas Coriipm!Y
•
m saluting otir Friends
•
·m Huntington Beaeli
Through Signal Oil and Gas Company we have been
a part of the growth and prosperity of Huntington
Beach for 31 years.
We are proud of this heritage and proud of the
active part our company and our employees have taken
in Huntington Beach community service.
. Now, with the development of over 1500 residen-
tial units, another one of The Signal Companies, Signal
Properties, is fast becoming an important factor in the
dynamic growth of Huntington Beach.
We are the.ref ore particular! y p le as e d to join in
saluting our friends, our employees and our neighbors
in the Huntington Beach area.
The Signal Companies•
Signal Oil and Gas Company, The Garrett
Corporation, Mack Trucks, Inc., Signal Equities
Company, Dunham-Bush, Inc., Signal Properties,
Inc., Signal Investment Con1pat~y
26 MILT PILOI M•W .. • ......... __
fiiitiiret one-wee mount.iln the Y hM Procnms hr
CllDPlnl • trtol to b SM restdeata of tiadlrllltw kliMdlM )(ewittim for • I• and up. ,,_. ... •
~ and elrla age 8 to 12, a "ttlbes" of lndtan Gul4ea, a
ODl4'eet caravan for boys. club. fw fatben and their
age 12to14 to the Hlgb Sier· 1on1 .,, t to a. ant-• na, and an elgbt1reek. claf • ''tr1a.el" of l9dl& Ml'b••
camp for cblldrea ai• ·I to a aimllr ~ for motbst
U. -and dau•ter•.
Durln& the achool year. 'Rle Y el.so has a program
_ :.A:. '.A. '.A:. ~ '.A.: '.A:. for e~n~ and high .
l-< 11 x x x x scbool 1tudeilta1 and the.Y'• B h Y -··Club,.-.-_, eac · Program :~75;·a,v~
Aims at Everyone
fices at 14776 Beach Blvd,
and can be reached by phoo.·
tng 8H-4548. Mel R o o t II
cnairman of tht board of
Jll~gers, and J a.me ' Yamanaka is executivt
Growing up ......... can More than 500 Fountain dlrector of the HuntingtOm ~ Beach branch. aometlm.es be pretty rough. Valley fatbm and sons and Leaders of tbl Huotin(tOQ
One organfzatioo dedJcated mothers and dalJlhters are y. Beach YMCA currently a r •
to smoothing the road to lndlan Quldes or Y-lndian aearchlng for headquartm
manhood Is the Fountain Maidens. ItJs 1 program for within the city to handle activ·
Valley YMCA. the youngest Y age level, 6 to · ttles of its mON than 1,509
One of Fountain Valley'• 9-year-olds. members. A YMCA premise Is that oldest clubs -the Y's Men's athletic atfl1I and physical
Club, was organized tn 1963 -fitness help build sell-con·
tbef ~ptboutolzatloocl t'L... ooe of tht fidenct.
ew "' • WAM.UJe. CUrrent officerl Include Bob Library
Doubles
• :!""
'lbl Y thla year bat pro-Marplles, pnaldent; BUI
vided prop'llDI for more than Bubier, vice preeident fOll 1.ooe Fountain v a 11 • r membenb1£;.rt1obn Galll&her, ~ IDd ,.......t. vb ..-for Jll'OlflDli a.rt. Baltl for operatba.,. Doa ket.on, ~; and
a number ct pr l ' at • Fred ltlleber, treuurer. s
nlldencel, clwrchel and Lut year tbt \"1 Meo'• Jn ;'64 ICbool fadUt1ea. Club ralted nearly .... from ALAJ
Professional IDd Jay leaden aemn, JuJr tih ftrewora and
ltrlvt to capture tbl eaence Cbrlabna1' tree.. Mt t t I D I ct Character and pb,alcal ml datel .... t .. l8CODd IDd
mental fitness and then to . f ourtb Saturda)'I ~ the month
tailor the y proeram tO the to-at Topper' I Restaurant, pogn..
dtYidual. taiD Valley.
~ '°....,le lts for-mer me ·.u tll e bllj~ ·
cbaDCI fn the ~ .Vllle'f
library over tbt pUt year. ,
Tht facillty • 10109 ·SW.
Ave., now bu 18,411 IQUll'•
feet ~ space. The wort wu.
completed last May under .•1
Joint powera agreement· wi\ti
the city and tAe County 11·
brary system. · '
"We added a children'•,
story hour room, a re(erence
room and an addiUonal ~ as well as more windows,'
says librarian Ron Rice.
Expansion has always been
planned for the library but it
came the paa year because
"the city grew faster than we
expected.'' he said.
Carpeted In gold, with olive
green shelves, the library
houses M,009 volumes a n d
subscribet to 158 perlodlcats.
Nearly half of the collection ii
children'• boob.
A comprehensive y o u n g
persons' program is activated
each summer.
Children are encouraged to
read a minimum of 10 boots
over the vacatloo period. 'ftleJ
are rewarded with a pm1y ml
prizes when they ftntsh.
Members of Rlce'a ltaff In-
cludes children's llbrarianl,
Miss Virginia Kennedy, M.111
Marsha Tufford and the
Mmes. John Thompson, Bot>-
ert Reed, Je.91e JCMW, ~
Levin and Donald Dudrey •
• YOUI COMMUNnT -H6f -"-•. .. .,. I#.,, t,~J
---. -------
At 1JCI: Conv&eaiion • • •
DAILY PILOT Ste" Plltte
• • • Instead of Confrontation
By THOMAS FORTUNE The campus opened in the
o.itr r11• ~11e11te1t Wri1tr fall ef 19&5 wi1b ID emollmeat
'Jbe UC lnine campus came of 1,600 sblden&l IDCI a facu1tJ
d age in June when it gradu· of 114. TtdlJ more tban 1.-0
ated the first of its own-stu-students, Ill of them med5cal
dents who obtained their tntire stu®lts, are taucht by 513
higber education at UCI. professors.
Graduate1 previous years And evmtually, around 1980,
have all bffn t r a n s f e r UCI will rival ~ ~
students. 'l'bere were 13 Jn UCLA as a general campus
19ee, 168 1n '11, and Ml in with a sandent body ol Z7,50t.
'68. Frtshmen from the char-Small u 1t is, tbe campu
ter class were among the 7lt bas made lb presence felt
students gncNated last June. Jn the surrounding cmnmunity.
'I1>ese few call It alma PubUc lectures, UC ~
mater. BUt thousands et courses and eemlnan bave
Orange Coast residents take · been well attended. <>the?
pride in having a university drawa are sporting eventl, art
so near home -particularly abows, pcaetrJ readings, plays,
one with tbe r e s p e c t e d cooceril' ad ftlml.
University of California name. fte UDivtnity'1 library of
·1rv1.ne, a' baby in the nine-over .... v,aumes may be
campus UC system, i8 located used for an annual fee of
three mlltt inland I r o m $1 pa penoo...
Corona del Mar pi_ 1,000 acres The CIJllPllt lib a park,
in the rolllq San Joaquin hills ts open for w~, pic-
of the Irvine Ranch. nicking, or jus1 1itttn1 and
enJOYt.ng the view. Master
plamied &Dd biased . wttb an
abunclnce of land, univenity
buildl .. art IWTOUDded with
&l'ffD. '
Sis cllllters of builclino,
four of them built and a fifth
under coastructioo. are to
make up tbe eentral campus
ring. Tbe bu.lldblp, ol modern
arcbltedwe, are impoliq and
can be seen from a diPance.
At the main eatranc. to
c a m p u s art the .cl·
ministration, library and atu-
dent cealer bulJdinp, The
library currently la beina ex-
panded to twice the JlftSeDt
slu. Acroa from t b t 1 e
bulldlnp i.. the CMDmel'Cial
town center wltb Mele' ltcft,
?e$taw'aul, buber abop and
otber ca~pu1-orlenled
bus1neaes.
Moving counter-clockwise
around the rtnc are tlMt
humanltlft..flne am complez,
a biolo,kal lclence building
and lecture hall, a new
physjcal sciences building, and
tht job site of the eaclnetrio&
complex to be completed early
.next year.
'l'be flnaJ unit will 'be a
IOcial sciences complex to be
comtructed for opening in r.it.
1'10.
A! the campua develope.
satellite buildlap will radiate
frCllD. the central riq u
spot.es from the bub of a
wheel.
A fine arts village to be
completed by spring, 1970 Is
bne such project.
On-campus b o u s t n g Is
located nearby. Verano Place
apartment.a house • ltudentl
and staff and there will be
apa-tnienta for lllOCba' 1IO
In the fall. Mela c.o.irt
residence balls ~te
• studenta. Ground IOOD will
be brobn to add apace for
400 more.
Schools ~earn by. ~_rowing
Fountain Valley Will Have 24 Facilities in 10 Years
~apid growth is the recent
stOry of the Fountain Valley
School Diltrict which lasted
ne&l'.ly ooe whole century
witb only oae school but now
nncM it must double its
13cillUes (1J schools) within
1'he next lO'years.
School ieaders op e n e d
tt!Ur 12 achools to 9,476
studeote Uiis year, an in-
crease of nearly 2,482 over
last year. a, 1'18, lhe district
that 1n lta only had 38Z
studentl Uf*tl an enroll-
ment of 17,700.
1Mt---COMMllft"rY
FrOll) 1111, when the
district ~ formed, until
1962, i t only needed oae
school to house tM children
of the primarily agricultural
community. As far ro t n g
began to give way to new
11ousing tr~ts, the distri,ct
began J.o grow -so fast that
five schools were under con·
struction in 1983 alone. ~-
Two n e w ~lemenW')
gchools -John C. McDowell
and John B. B~ard -
apeoed la S917. n. HlrrJ
C. Fulton ScMol was ready
I~ stude°" in March, 1968.
Robert Gisler School <>~ned
in March or this rar; James
H. Cox School 11 alated to
open thia winter.
District officials are plan-
ning nearly to double their
lacllitlea to keep pace with
the growth, '11 tba& 19 aew
schools art • to b8 ·con-
$tructed by. 1971. OUi'cials
claim thla wtu · matt tile
district a "walk-In'' 1ystem,
wi II a IChOol tn virtually
evay quarter leedon of the
district.
The school d i s t r f c t • 1
phil<l'S'Opby of educatioo -
stressing the individual -Is
carried out through unique,
but practically d e s 1 g n e d
school buildfngs. The new
concept features a 10,000·
hqUMe·foot central lee.rnlng
center surrounded by five
.satellite claisrocm anlt&
Its individualiud in·
1truction ando the dellp of
fts buildings to complemmt
that philOfOPbY have at-
tracted n a tl o n w 14 t at·
teution.
•
llOARJ> GF TR\JWWW
Dr. ..... Baatt, ,,.....
(ten. uplru Jue JI, 11'11) , a. Jmma aauer, den (tem
eqilres Jae •. 1171)
lebert Kiios (&trm erplres .i..•.1m> llehn Ziugrabe (wrm o-
plres Jue st, It'll)
Geerge Logan (term expires
Jane 30, 197S)
. .
Schools at Oc:ean. V itw •
School District, their prin· 1
dpals, a d d r e s s e s and
telephone numbers are:
Circle View School
a61 Hoo~er, 893-5035
'111omas Grtffftb, priltdpal
College View ~boot
8582'1..ennox, 847-3505
CttJl Klee, prlncipaJ
o~ean View
Keeps
Pa~e
The adage "you can't
teach an old dog new tricta"
1::1ls apart when applied to
the Ocean View School
District, one or the oldest
school systems ha Orange
~.
Founded in 1174, 15 ye&rs
belore Orange Oou.nty waa
formed, the distr!ct b&I had
to keep pace with a srowini
community oC people with
young ideas.
Arnone ita latest educa·
tional experiments b a pro-
gr:un to f each reMiDI to
.tindergarteners, living the
children a year'• jump tD
their contempcnde1.
District officialJ estimate
they will have a erowtaa fn.:
crease of 1,300 atudentl a
year until 1980, when, they
""Y, tbe district will· netd IG
schools
A! J:>te as 1950, Ocean
View needed om, 1 5
teachers f~ its 350 student$, an boUled at ooe acbool.
Ten years later, th e
4iltrict bad two ICbools for
1i. 115 madenta and s1
t e aC'ben. Administrators
espected 1.hla fall's enroll·
ment to reach H,000. They
are emptoylna m teachers
to carry tile load Utls y-.r.
Dr. Clarence L. IJall,
formerly of Pacl.flc Grovt
Unified School D l 1 tr 1 ct ,
became SUpcl'.iDteode.nt u
Ocean View in July, ~ Bil
administrative staff ii IMCle
up of Milton R. Berg, Ullltaat
superintendent for business;
Woodis S. Chaddick, asst!·
tant supe-rintendent for cur-
riculum, and James Carvell,
asslstnnt superintendent for
personnel.
The district has a tax rate
of $3.71 per $100 valuatJon to
support an $13 m 1111 o n
budget (including the state
aid building fund). Offldals
~timate they spend $57UO to
eduoate each dlJld 1be7
enroll.
Crest View School
1815% Lisa, 847-1271
J0tepb Diamond, prlnclpal
Rarboar View School
'343 Pickwick. 84!-2*
Wllllam Le1cber, prlaclpal
Raven Vlew S<-hool
l•l Waikiki, 141-U!S
WIWam Wernett, principal
Hope Vlew School
171%!. FU.nt1tone, 847-85'11
Wllllam Gubardt, principal
Glea View School
Mil Glen Drl~e, IM-lW
Perry Cltapman, priadpal
Lake View School
17'51 Zelder, 14%-%589
Btturd Dorf, principal
Lark V~w St'bool
17Zlll PiDehu.rst. 147-M:il
Claaritt Arnold, priaclpal
Mame Vlew School
MU 'l1lbtt g, uz..449'7
Kea Me~r,, principal
Meadow View School
,. Clan, "7-1%17
Geor1e Williul1, principal
Mela View School uen Ad'a st., m-M01
a.M Blabep, prlKlpal
OQ Vltw Scbool
l'JIU Oak, 84M45t
lllenau EWott, prl1cl,.&
P•k View Scboel 1.,. 'l'Mltan Drive, 147.-
Dta Miier, prlnclpal
Pleasut View School
1"9! Ludu, 847-ttlS
Willlaa Leedte, prhldp•J
RueM Vlew School
HNI B St., 847-1.%51
Patr'lm Moaahaa, princlfel
Jt.wawMd School
11'11 lleFadden, 893-3$31
~n BarrUI, prlDclpal
Sprta1 Vlew School
1.-i Trudy, 147-9609
•Leo. Bouse, prindpal
Star View School
8411 Worthy, 19'7-1089 .
Mel HemmiJJ, priacf paJ
Son View School
7'121 Juliette Low, M7·9"S
Leon HJlton, principal
Villate View School
5361 Silsoa, 847-1%73
Claade Beasley, principal
Weatmont School
m1Beil,14'74Ml
Dtuld !>nor, pn.tlpal
• ... , M.OT ., I
MA6AW Al
•
...
r·
f'-;
I
. .
..
...
. -
=Government and Business Cam_paigning for a G~eat .Citf
..
1tHome of the U.S. SurfboarC:I Cl1ampionships ·* Population growth'. up 2000% since 1·950 * ·,350 acres more indus~rial land this year to help lower taxes
·-
* Retail sales up $15.5 million in 1968 to help schools. city government '* Vigorous park program for our childntn
ff Progressive planning for a new prosperous wottrfront
1c Finest fishing pier tn~outhern California * Three beautiful public 9olf courses * Everything.in recreation for residents of a clay or a lifetime
HUNTINGTON BEACH,
CALIFORNIA
ttW~ere Recreation· rs King"
City of Huntington Beach
Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce
• : i
~--~--~~----~--~~~----------------------~~~~~~~----------------28 MILY PILOT
MMAlllll .
Var"ieiY of Leisure
Ae1i'1i1ies Off ere
In Huntingio.P Area
u lSl.h hours for adults 3:30 p.m. ailldrtn 17 and
and children in Hunttncton ullder 2S cents, adults 50 ctnts.
Beach can be fllled with ac-FAMILY S W I M M I N G :
tlvitiea ranging from sports From 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at
to painting to dancing. the City Pool AdultJ 50 cents,
'{he Huntington "Beach children 25 cents.
Recreation end P a r l a SWIM TEAM: T e a m Department, headed b y .. _ _.a H-.ia t b h Director 'Nonnan Worthy, Worauuwt •VllWllY r OU ' 'nluraday fram f :30 p.m. to • spoosors a ye a r-r o u n d t M · u1n .. School schedule cf things to do in p.m. a arina ... au Pool. Fee '5 per month.
the city. GYMNASTICS ""·-I His staff is made up of 12 £ : '-MU:\t'S n
fuU-time employes and u amnastfca f« boJt and girls
many as 160 p a r t • t J m e from 11lird through sjxlh k c1ur· ak grades. B,eginnen meet Tuts-wor ers mg pe ~ns. day· or W e d n t 1 d a y , hr Permanent staff members are
Mrs. Vivian Borns and Gary ~1e:=:a7Tuesday
Davis, supervisors; Mn. Fay and Thursday classes for fout
Mcintyre, Mrs. B o b b i e and five year olds. $3.25
Sweger, Vave Evers, Robert re .. 1...,ation fee for e'..w --.i. 'Jbra1J and Sherry Shipley. ~ ...,...__
eighth grades at local play-
grounds. Fee 111 Sl.25 for third
and fourth grades, $2, fifth
through elgbth grades.
OPEN GYM: Bunllngton
»each and Marina HI I h
School! art open Wednelday
nights fnml 1 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
to high IChool Students or
older persons. \
0 P E N VOU.EYBALL:
From 7 p.m. to t :30 p.m. Wed-
nesdaya at lkmtin&too Beach
and Mariu Higb Sebools.
• TENNIS INSTRUCTION:
Classes for chlld:ren a n d
adults. Nine one bout teaione
for $3l50. Classes meet Satur·
days at Marina High School.
TENNIS UNDER THE
UGlrl'S: Marina High School
tennJs" court.a are lit from • p.m. to lt p.m. daily for pub-
lic use.
DAILY "LOT Stefl,...,_
ON YOUR OWN -Some kinds of recreation, you find on your own in a com-
munity with a 20,000-mil~wide •'pool" at its doorstep. Surfing is one of the most
popular "dcryour-own-thing" pastimes. Just ask this happy fellow riding the
•·soup" off the community shoreline. ·
recreation. leaders; Mrs. Addie cc;:r:L LET AND AC.
Stein, Angie Ramirel and ROBATIC: A ccnbloatioo
Bunt1 Wuncb, eecretarlts; class f • fint, leCOllCI and James Hall, Clyde Blair and third --a-. Eight week MEN'S BASKETBALL:----~~------------------------~~-------------------
Tom Bushard1 ttettation and e.a.-;a ...
park maintenance. cauoeT&D C08&1DANC$.1E.25~. ts f All activities c e o t e r ~ : mee rom around the City Recreation 1:45 p.m. tD 4:30 Jl.m. each
Ceirter at Orange Ave. ao4 Wecme.day l.Dd easts fS.15.
17th Street 1n Buntingt.oa KODE811 DANCE: For ~ tM city om and '°1• and J1rta ta tiPth srlde
pool .and the elementary and ar oJder. Meet.I from 4:30 p.m.
two hlcb IChools located 1n to I :• p.m. in the Rec:reation
tbt c1tJ. Ctnter. ~fee $8.
The Recreation C6ter, CHILDREN'S SQ U A RE
which boule11be recreation DANCING: Mmaday e\lltD1ftg d~aJ'tmiellt officft, ~rs cWsel at Lamb Stbool from
aft• r. ldM>ol • hours pro-1:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. For boys
grams, u -.. ire city gym and &irll In feunh Ustoup
and th• !Hotington Beach aixtb sradu. '2 fee for 10
aty Sdlool Dlatrict tcbcw. week coone.
Gamet and equipment can GUITAR LESSONS: Pre.
be C'beclled out at ilM city teeas and teenqen may vm Mondays t b r ·o ugh enroll to thla 10 week coune
Fridays frem 2:30 to 4:30 for $1%:50. aa.. meet at the
p.m. and e to 9::.> p.m., ud Recreation Cata becinnlnl
oo Saturdays trom t a.m. to at 9:30 a.m. Satunlay1.
J p.m. WOMEN'S SLIM G Y M :
Tbe city gym and pool is Each Monday .and Wednesday
located at 1802 Palm Ave.-~) from 7 p.m. to t p.m. at
For fall and wintier, Ule Marina mp S<:bool. Fee la $4.
recreation -4epartment is Cf· WOMEN'S VOU.EYBALL:
faring the following ac· Clasles an bekl TUeadays and
t1vities: Tbunday1 fram 9 a.m. to
YOtml SWIMMING : Alter· 11:3' a.m. No ehar .. to Huo-
nooo aes.Wns twice a week for 1lnltClll Beech NtHiellll.
fivt weeb through ntc. 11 at P OR 'l'BAIT PAINTING:
the City Pool Fee ft. LetNnl 8daal Instructs e~ch
ADULT SWIM LESSONS: Monday at the RecreaUon
Beginning swimm1ng lessons Center from 7 p.m. to t p.m.
are offtred at the City Pool through Dec. 1~. Some tx·
through Dec 11 Meets at a perience in oils required. • · Course fee i! $25. p.m •. Tuesday and 'nlursd3Y. ARCHERY· Classes at the
for five weeks. Fee $5. Reertatlon ~ter are open to
HAND !CAPPED SWIM· boys and girls seven or older.
MING: Lessons for ~.M.R. Beginners &boot from 3:45 an~ T. M • R • ba~capped p.m. to 4:45 p.m. each Tues-
children al the City Pool day, intermediate students at
through Dec. 11. Meets at 6:30 the same time Mondays. $1
p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. registration fee covers equip-
RECREATIONAL SWIM· ment.
MING : C"rty pool Js open tacll FLAG FOOTBAU.: League
8aturday from U:30 p.m. to play for boya tn tblrd througb
I '6t-TOii COIUIVNnT
From •:30 to t:30 p.m. 'fuu.
days ud '11mndays at amt-
irtgtOD Beacb ud Marina Bilh
Schools. .
POWDER PUFF VOUEY·
BALL: Hi&b IChool girll Jlay
games WMDelday emdnp at
the City Gym.
YOUNG M1SS VOLLEY·
BALL: For F.ll In the ltV·
enth and tiehtb 1 rad es.
Games art pla)lld Sit.day morninCs at tht Marina Hltb
Scbool om and at 1:30 p.m.
at the C"rty Gym.
PONY TAIL VOIJ..EY TEN·
NIS: A combination came 1-0t
girll in the fifth and abtb
irades, p1-yed Saturday after·
noons at Marina and Huntinf-
ton Beacb Hlgb Schools.
CHURCH MIXED BASKET·
BALL: Ltque play 'I\Jetda7
evenings at HunUntton Beach
High School Pradlce .JamtJ
start at the end of October.
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB:
Meets each Monday at the
Recreation Center, beglnnln1
~t 10 a.m.
SQUARE DANCING: Adult
adva.nced' claneera are tllgtble
to join the "Guns 'n Gart.n"
or ''Lace 'n Leather" clubs.
Dancing is $2 per couple.
Dances held the first, third
and fifth Sunday nights and
the first, third and flilh Friday
nlgbts at the Recreation Cen-
ter.
YOGA: Renee TayJor teach-
es yoga from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
each Wednesday at the Rec-
reation Center. Ten week
course costs $10.
BATON: For girls In fourth
through eighth grades. Meets
each Monday at the City Gym,
beginning at 3:30 p.m. $U 5
fee for tight week course.
Playhouse Growing
'Barn' Successful Little Theat,er
By TOM TITUS
Of .... ..., ,.... .....
OM ~ the mOlt 1Uccmf ul
cooununlty tbeata' operaUons
1n a county rich 1n live st.gt
emenatnment 11 th• J1wl.
t1ngton Bdch Playhouse.
Orpn1zed 1n lMS, tlle Hun-
tlngton Beach lfOUP mOMd In-
to lts permanent home at :mo
Main St. a year lat« when an
old building wu ctven to the
Jlaybouse by the HunUncton Beach Company. The players
1eno.-ated Jt, CGD'lerted k Into
a theater md nlcknam~ Jt
·~Barn."
Since "Stalag 1 7 ' ' In-
augurated the Barn Jn 1984,
the playhouse -and !ta au·
diences -have grown steadily
until now the theater stretches
its productions over a period
of fi ve weekends to ac-
commodate the heavy demand
for tickets.
The playhouse ltlges four
shows a yea.r and recently
completed its season opener,
"Pools Paradise." Tbt second
show, "JnvitatJon lo a
Murder," operlS Nov. SJ,
lollo\Ved by •"lbe Jm,oaiblt
Years" In January and '-Waltl « tbe Tlreadon'' In Aprtl.
Another playhouM operating
In the West <>ranee County
area is the Westmln*r Com-
munity Theater, wbk:b tb1I
year will stace itl 1tUOD at
Fialey Scboo1, 13521 Edwardl
St. 1be popular comedy ''fte
Odd Couple'' wW be IM tint
produdlon, opening Nov. H
for two weebndr.
Outside the area, little
theater abounds. Largest of
the community groop1 la the
Laguna-Moulton Playbcme at
eo6 Laguna Canyon Road,
Laguna Beach, which l a
presenting slx amatAlr and
four professlonal productlona
this season. Tbt next produc.
tloo will be "Cactus Flower,"
opening Dec. 2.
The Costa Mesa C l v 1 c
Playhouse stages five shows a
year in the Commlllllty Center
auditorium on the Orange
County Fairgrounds. Its next
production will be the musical
"Stop the World-I Want to
Get. Off," openina Nov. 21 for
three weekends.
A semi-professional group,
South Coast Repert«y, 1taae1
productions 'nlW'Sday throup
Sunday at Jts '11llrd Step
Tbeater, 1827 Newport '3lvd..
Colla Mesa. The current SCR
offering is the c o m t d J
musical, "A Funny nun,
Happened on the Way to the ronun."
Newport Beach olfus two
thea&er groups, both opeoinl
productions the third wed of
November .. 'Jbe Lido J.sJe
Players will stage "Poola
Paradise" Nov. 18-Z2 at th•
Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via
Lido Soud, while the Open End
'Jbeattt pens T e n n e 11 t •
Willlams' "Lonely People"
Nov. 21 and runs Fridays and
Saturdays through Dec. 20.
Goldtn West Co I leg e,
Orange Coast College and UCJ
all offer aclive d r a m I
departments, w b 11 e the
youngsters are served by the
Children's Theater Guild of
Newport Harbor.
Elsewhere wlthin a few
freeway mlnutes are the Santa
Ana Community Players, the
Fullel'Wn Footlighters, the
Rancho Community Players oJ
Mission Viejo and the San
Clemente Conununity Tbtater.
...
•
""
•
I
I
I I
' I
I I
I
t
'
• ~ ..
" 1.-..
.
~ ..
I,..
l 1 ~
! I .
. ,.
I
.
,, .-/
. ..
•
• • -wor in~
. -
~
on tomorrows
tee noo .
to · a --at
-.
I l , llllCDONNELI. DOUGL•·· ~
1
'
. IO eAILT PtLOt
f , llM,AllMI
YOUR COMMUNITY -1t6t
•
The. ~ood . :Life at Huntington· Harbour .. ••
•1 JODEAN U8TING.t ..... ,...., .......
Huntington Barbour, tbt Cllt-
Jy marina-resideutlaJ com-
munity In Western Orqe
County, continues to offer a
changing panorama ln keeplna
with the growth throughout
HunUngton Valley.
Expected to become a realJ.
ty during the comina yur are
the completion of the develop.
menl of Humboldt 1aland, CClft-
atructlon or 21 acres of dlJuzt
ap artments , two new
parksltes, an addiUODll IChooJ
and a $55,000 envtromnaital
improvement program now ID
progress.
Construction acUvltJ o a
Humboldt Island, llfl'Ul In
11everal years according to
Ray Loaan, sales director. Is
focused on the last large plect
of undeveloped land bOrderlna
Mistral and Hwnboldt drives.
Changes
Keep it
-umque
provides boaters with t• mlJet
Gl waterways and direct ac-
cess to the open sea under tbt
Anaheim Bay Bridge de> pro-
Yides additional recreadcNI
facilities ln the form of Inland
beaches, parks and teanll
courts.
There arc yacht, Cishlnc and
tennis clubs, a private belch and t~s club, and property.
owners' a n d condominium
owners' associations.
DAILY PILOT ltlft ,.._
MARINA LIFE-TWO CARS IN MOST GARAGES, A BOAT AT EVERY DOCK
Ground has been broken fGl
the deluxe apartment.I OD a
site llCqUired by L 1 n c o l n
Pn>perues and loct&ed off
Saybrook Lane between tbt
BoardwalJc Sbopplfti C.-
and Harbour vn SChooL One
of the parksites will bl loclW
adjacent to the achool l»etwelD
Calhoun Drive ud Ht l I
Avenue.
'!be Huntington Harbour
Yacht Club spon&0rs a Sea
Scout Ship for lill area youth,
and in addition to IDIDl
pll'tnt-youth groups, femlnlDt
ftlldents are active In tM
Huntington Harboui
Both Chamhers
Huntington Beach
Leader In tbe drive to keep
the Bum lnaton Beach
tcODalllJ 1aelltby b y en-
COUl'aclac business and tn-
dustrJ bu been the Chamber
el {".olnmerce.
Led Illa Jeer by BiJl .
Wood1, tbe chamber
moved fr'Cml ltl downtown
locatlcll to the Town and CountrJ Sbopplnc Center at
Beach Boulevll'd and Ellis Aveime.
New !IUUNlll" cl the cham-
ber Is Ralpb Kiser', longtime
civic leader. Be took office
Oct. 1 el 1bil year. He and
the Board· el diftctors are
the cbambet In the forefront
mating a stroac effort to keep
of tbe business and industrial
scene.
Committees ol the chamber
look into all propoeed city
legislation and report findinp
and recommendations to the
city council. Freeways, llChoo1
finance and lmprovtnc tbe
local econom.lc climate bave
betn major UDdertUings of
the chamber gcMllll.
Directors are Stan Botelho,
C. William Carlson, Jim De
Guelle, Jack Feehan, Mu
Forney, William Foettr, Jack
Groth, Jack Higey, ~ve
Holden, Pet.er Berton, Fred
Kalenborn. A. C. Marion,
George McCracken, Robert
Merriman. R. M. Morgan,
William S. Peterson, Leonard
Shaoe, Mart.in Snow, Frank
Richmond, Ed Thompson.
Thomas Welch, George West
and Woods.
Business
Fountain l ' alley
Two major projects handled
each year by Fountain Val-
ley'• <Jlamber el Commerce
u. the ltlecUon ol Miss
Fountain Valley and the cHy'1
annual Halloween festivities.
'tile HaDonm project In-
cludes a perade, a barbecue
and roundinl'up ol more Ulan
·30 cqanlzationa to participate
with booths, floata and pr<r
jects.
Chamber business ls haodl·
ed by a Jone secretary who
also works part-time with the
parks and recreation depart·
meot and i.s hi that office.
At on• 'time the chamber
had a manager, but he was
recalled Into the Army and the
workJoad fell to dwnber of.
ficials. Plans do not call for
another mana&er Co be hired
in the tmmedlatt fulme.
One el the blallt. and
newest proJfdl pJllmecl by
the chamber ... tbe CCllDlal
year la tbl pab'Jclflcm of a
~Guide~aDoflae
city's commerdll opmattans.
organiz.ations and e l Y l c
groups. Dm1nl the put year
the chamber Illa let \0 a
women's cllYllSan with Ml'I.
William Pulford u prelldmt.
Chamber olficlalj fat -are: Charles A. Db.on, Jr.,
president; Dr. Manin Adler.
vice president; Mike Ortale,
secretary• IDcl Daa Edwards,
treasurer.
The board of dJredon. con·
sists of Dr. Paul llrter, Don
Blakely, Joel RolenltJt and
George McMillan.
T h e environmemal Im-
provement now in prosrem ID>
eludes refurbbblnl farmer
llpa and the inCaDltlcm Gt
directiooal ind brldft .....
Jn addition, ltrMtalcall1
located directories to 114
ludborne viaiton ID tbllt
navigation throutb tbt nr1m11
Ja1ands art · befn~i aaid Don Byrnea,
manager. The '°" have been permanentlJ DllDl4
after their vatlou1 acc.
atreet!, .be added.
The island community wbJcla
PbUbarmonic Committee, ' IQppOl't group for the ~
County Philharmonic Sodety,
potWca1 organizations, and aa
art uaociation.
The c o m m u n It y en-
COIDpllltt some m acres and
Wll cre*d nine yean qo
frGm marshland that previoul-
~ llUbmerged during hip
Developer is lhe Hunttnaton Barbcur Corp., a subsidiar)' of
CbrllUana Oil Corp.
Offlcen Jnclude Martin Fm.
tcm Jr., president~· BJ"l"MI, vice president; flllll P. Antonow, •
IDd EbM:r E. Tague, trellUI'·
tr.
'Unknown' Board
County Seat Has Plenty of Chairs
Fuels Racing
Local Economy
'Jbough the avera1t dtlzen
may have no reuon IVG to
be aware of it, one ol tbl Y1tal
17931 Beach Blvd., .. and
work for the betterment ef
our community."
There is 90f'Mt.imes a feeling
around &be Orange County
CourtbouM that government
tl, for and by the people is
a sreat Idea that might be even sreater Lf the people
we.re pnsent to s~ it func-
Uorq.
That ffflinc particularly ap-
pliee to whit happens in the
meetinc ~of the county's
Board of Supen1Jon.
Tbe five board members
meet ~ Tuuday and WedDe:ld.aJ and it Is eoly a rare oo:"M69a aDd a ''red bot
topic" tbM wtl1 lmure more
than a ICltterinc of spec:tatArs to ,,..... .. IUpsvisen"
delkaltlaal.
Ott. the-.i, ulience the
1ttt-.Yotl COMM•Nm
board can auracl is the small
group of newsmen at the press
table, the board clerk, County
Coumtl Adrian Kuyper and
Chltl Admlnlstr'ltlve O!Cicer
Robert E. Tbamu.
Jl's not the way they want
It, supervison aay. but
decistoos affecting the lives
of nearl) 1.5 million people
can't be delayed because a
few ol that number aren't
preaent at a mteUng.
But newmnen will readily
teltify to tbl difference that
an audieaee will IDUe to tbt
bollrd'• dellberatkm. It may
weit be .. tblt audimce
had DO flfect upoa the out·
nme fl die •pa:;tellt but
IUlll"1-I lllNl' 1111 to react
ln 101De way to the stimulus
pr.widtd by a 0 1lve'" meeting.
Only one face on that board
baa chanced this last year
but It b a board that bas
West Orange County repre·
sentative on the board L' Sec-
ond District Supervisor David
Baku. Hia office number al
the county Civic Center Is
834-mG.
Other numbers of ltey coon·
ty departments are below.
Admlntsfl'lter • tu:lW .-.rtcutture Center 77..,... "''"" .,...... "'nlmet b lt1r o.llll ~ .._rm
~'-~'"' ~ ...... fff ....,.a.,, ... JI. ....... -...,..,. .,...... ..... lentlml IMalt
Ci.MO..... ...... ~an .... ~..... ..... c-.,,.,
e..rc:-e --Dl-..ct....... .....
== forces In the ecODOmJ Gt the community is the mmtmctm == Beach Board ol Raltarl.
.,... I t s membership la near1DC :::= the 250 mark and, u a U, to •111• gowth in the community, CCJDo
aider the fact that l t I
members in 1961 ftl't actlvt
In real est.ate tr11118C6Jat In-== volving more than t17J5
.,.... · million and that t• II an := even bigrer year In dolW:
m.nn volume. = A board of realtort la to
_,,., Individual realtors what the ::= bar association 11 to lawyert :::= or the medical uaoc1at1on 11
~ to physicians . == "We maintain I ttrtd
_., ethical code," UJI Mn. := Evelyn WUeos, tucd1't == 18Cretary or tbe Bmatlqt.cm .... Bean 8uN of aeaM-t,
One of the specific jobs of
the board is continually to
Upgrade i t • "realtor1;•
ltate-llcenced brokers whc.
also are members of the Na-
tional Board of Realtor•. lt
also provides residents of an
area with lists of its
member realtors who can
belp tbem in their real
estate traDJactions.
Roger SJata is current
president ti tht board. Phil . McNamee. viee preaidtnt for 1-.., will step up to the
~1n1t70.
OCblr offkers include Bert Blnllnc, leCrdar)'; RObert
McBmln, tteaauftt; & D d
Qlrlel Dalby, Ted Way, llrl.
!Ml Buttm and Jact ~.
~. Bomd'a p boa• ..-r lllC7.as.
IAILY Ptl.01' 21 MA~ f'
•
•
..
•
....
··: t~
tbt ·
YOUI COMMI""" _,,.,
Orange Coad
DAILY PILOT
~)
~
-I
Are• lip
lnli~e
PUBLIC RECREATION is served with the top-notch
Huntington Seacliff Country Club, one of the f111est 18 hole
public courses in the We!>t. Complete facilities include
locker rooms, bar, and,, fine restaurant. The perfect place
for business meet1ngc, and d relaxing round of golf.
> ~ ::t
d > .J
CD
::t
(J
AVE.
~ w CD
N
s
rclogn1tion and cuc;tomer
.1ttC'ptance. Forcmmt among these
1~ the Huntington Center wtth over
ttlty c;tores. A mult1-mtll1on dollar
inv(•,tmenl ranging from leading
dC'rartment !>lores 10 individual
c,erv1t £' and acccc;c;ory buc;inesses.
HOMES AND APARTMENTS
tnmpleted Jc; part of the
I luntington Be.ich Company's 20
y<'M master pl.ln to develop 1,400
acrcc, of land arc iuc;t the beginning.
Pro1cct1ons tor The Huntington
)e,1tliff Planned Community are
dc.,.gned to fulfill the housing
nccdc; of the many firms locating
1n th" .Hea.
PROGRESSIVE PLANNING is the
key to Huntington Beach
Company's land development. As
we build today and plan for
tomorrow. we invite you to visit _,
I lunt1ngton Beach See what's
h.1ppen1ng in the uty on the move.
Things develop when a company
makes them happen.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
COMPANY
Huntington Beach, California
;:~ :;;:
• "I• ..... .. , -· .. •\ti -~·-:;•,;
;~ ; , . . .... . .. ~ .. . .... . .... . .
. , • ::'1 ?:. ·1 .. L:i 11.,.'
! =·~ . ~!~: ~;:
. ..
~
.. . ...
:::~ '• : ;~ ... =~::
. -~;:
~ · .. ;;· ... ·r· ~~.
:-1.
·;:. ~~ji ).: ;:~:
" ... . . ..... . . ..
I "o•f ...
s
:•t. :::1 .. !. ::;~ f !"' :: II ., . ...,,,
~1==~ ~1: ~,: I' ~1' :ii~:( ~-~·1 l• ··' .. , ., . ... :)..!' ~-;r.t ~i1-lli: ;1 ~ii ~-:m ~!!.~!I ~11:: ~' ' .. ,.
=·1 · :n1 . t -·1 : ::
!1.-:ti, :11· !';11 :''-~: .t. -·1 n:: ::h :i1 :Ii• ~ :,,1 :11 =i:I ~-~1·1 .. ,. -:is :=h . ···i ~i!. :ti! ~,,,. ~i
--·' -~ -~1· -• :$1 . m· ., ..... , ~· :.: t -'I -.1 11·:!11 :tt• ~1· ·1 ... i : ::it : ~:
T R E E T D I R E c T. 0 R
J M 0
,
y
.::: r
\ ::' . . I:!:; !i ::
u . ... , ~1·~· '· • ·1·~· .. ' ..
y
! : '!~ ·I!·:·: .
y
'Z
:!I ::,;~ ......
ht ST •
Ill • : ~:
lrd ST.
':: .. . ,,, .. .
4th ST •
:1 .. 11 >1 •• ::.;:
5th ST •
!l.1! ~· ~!!
6th ST.
ltll ST.
!I:!~ + ~!!
ttll sr.
10tti ST.
111-11 :r. ~;;
11th ST.
Utlt ST.
l!J; l! ~!1. :ii!!
14th ST.
l:I~ 11 ~l• :·11 ;I· I ;t,. :1!1
Utlt ST.
111: II ~ ::;1 , • cl ; t. ;,,:
16tll ST.
)Y. ~·11
;y; :f ?~ ~ ......
17tll ST.
1'tll ST.
1H= I
20tlt ST.
11: !I :i. ::!i
Zht iT.
Hll cl .1. ::.11
22"4 ST.
24tll ST.
Utll ST.
26th ST.
~ ,,
r-----
..... ,-:r •. ,.: .
:-''-----.--.. --; ... -··--------·--~-.. . .
. · ...
' '
~------------':'$ ....,., --SI.ti.to
I
' ,. •• ,x. ... h, ... a .. ,.. ,_ .... ,.. . .... L•O-O ... -""'-"' •Ot-•t
"""'""' ... 0.'t •(1,.1) t •• t ...... \, .. ,, ...... •J•r-,~ ... ·· ....
··~··· .. ~ . ..,,,.,, ... , .... ,.,.._
ICAU
-""--===--·--cl
.... .,...,........ ... 1'11 ,.._ ... .,. ,, •• , ••• ,
T~ ., ...... T"lih1 ""41• •• Ui''''t"' ... It ti_., • ...,..,, t• ... , ... ,..,.. .. _.•"Ir .. ,, .......... ..-...... , ............... .i• ,, ,... ....... ....,. ... -...... ..
•
~ ... ,.,., , .. ,.,., .,,,,
11 / "'~"''
I
POINTS OF INTEREST
Stale Beaches
Bolsa Chica ML75
Huntington Stete MQBO
Post Off ices
Huntington Beach M07 I
Fountain Valley MT72
City Beaches M079 MM76
City Ha I ls
Huntington B~ach M078
Fountain Va lley MT72
Parks
Huntington Central (Proposed) M073
Lake Pa rk M07 6
Mile Squore MS-MT70-7 I
Sunset Aqua ti c M H6 7
Greer M069
River Pork MU74
Los Alomos Pork MT72 -73
Colleges
Golden West College M070
Golf Courses
Mile Square MS-MT -MU70-7 I
Huntington Beach M076
Meadowlark MM7 I
Huntington Seacliff Country Club M076
-Daily Pilot 17875 Beach Blvd. MP73
(After Dec. I, 1969)
McDonnel Douglas Astronautics ML6B
High Schools
Edison MR78
Huntington Beach M076
MMina MM70
Fountain Valley MS7 I
Inter /Communi ty Ho~µ1tal MP73
Huntington Center MP69
Huntington Harbour MJ71
Meadowlark Airport ML? I
Municipal Pier M079
Police Slations
Fountain Valley MS73
Hunt ington Beach M078
Islands have never been plentiful. And when island property
has been available the scarcity of it has brought prices
that more often than not only the rich or the very rich could
afford. And why not? Island living is incomparable,
decidedly luxurious. Hence, dearly priced.
There is, however. an exception. The islands of Huntington
Harbour. Southern California's mosl exciting new home
community. Fine island homes surrounded by the sea. Private
marinas. A Beach and Tennis Club. The Harbour's own
Boardwalk Shopping Center. A get-away-from-it-all
great place to live.
Near-the-water and waterfront homes are now available.
The designs are as exciting as the sea around them. A living
room with a loft, a second floor dining room that looks over a
waterway, soaring vaulted ceilings, massive fireplaces
surrounded by a conversation pit. These are
homes for individualists, for island people
Be rid of look-alike st reels and dull neighborhoods
Wend your way down to the sea today. Sad as it is, the
world's supply of islands 1s l1m1 ted and so is Huntington
Harbour's. The price today is the be)t we'll ever have to offer.
Near-water homes from $42,450
W aterfront homes from $71,500
Waterfront homesi tes from $33,000
Huntingt2~m.J4t .. !J!~£!!!
listed on the Amftiun Stock h ch.1nge
45
louted six miles south of long Beach
on the Pacific Coast Highway
Phone (213) 430-3571 (71 4) 847-2531
Huntington
Harbour
~-.