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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-10-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• • • e en ~ • ' a1 South Coast Safari County Okay·s 'Africa' Farm Near Laguna By TOM BARLEY DI "'-O.llJ Pli.t St•fl Plarill for construction of a $10 million, 500-acre !Jrican animal preserve on leas-- ed Irvine Company land in the south Irvine area wert approved Wednesdaj by Johnson Asks Warren Stay At eouri:u~ . W, ~ljl;i<!TON,· . ,, / UPl~ .7., ~ JolinSOn, 'rebullea ~rr.-.. s.rialO'• rO. jeCUon. of Abe Fortas a~ chief justice, .to- day asked Earl Warren 'to stay on as hea.d of the Supreme Court "unUl emo- tl~ subsides, reason and fairness prevail."' The President said he would not aubmit a new nomlnatloo. Warren, appointed to the high court by former Presldent Dwight D. Eisenhower 15 yean ago, was at hi! familiar apot on Chi liiitnch when the ·court opened its new fl'f.tn last Monday, indicatin( be would relNlln. Warren had no immediate comment but he ii expected to go along with the President's wishes. Senate leaders last week were unable to break a filibuster against the nomJna- Uon of Fortas to the natloo.'s highest judicial post and the associate justice, a friend of Johnson, asked the President to withdraw his name. Johnson CQmplied. la .a statement issued by the White House, Johnson said: county planning commlsslonen. Harry Shuster, pre!ident of Llon Coun- try Safari Inc., said development of the preserve will commence in about two months time. The )eased acreage ls located sooth and east of the iritersectJon of the San Diego Freeway and Laguna Canyoo Road. Shuster and the planners tangled over the ntnnber of llgns to be located on the property before 15 conditions drilwn up by !he planning c0mmlssion could be hammertd oaL But Shullter bad to bow to the cmunlssion's lnslst<nce that only . !oar alp relating to ·the )>art «>uld bo posted adjacent to the free\vty. . · Shuster ..hopeo to have Lion CGuntry Safari completed in late 1969. The finish- ~ preserve wm inCorporate an Afrlcan- jfyJe, three-story TrettOpS Hotel, a motel, a restaurant and a commercial shopping center. On opening, the preserve will provide parking space for 3,150 cars in off-street areas, with 3,000 parking spots in the · park and apace earri)arked for a further 1,800 autos. CONTINUING PROJECT Shuster said his animal preserve will be a continuing type of project, "very much on the lines of the Disneyland operation." His Orange County project will be mod elled on what he saya is a highly successful Lion Country Safari in Florida where same 150 African animals -among them lions, zebra, im'pala, springbok, wildebeeste, giraffe, gnu, eland and ostriches-roam 640 acres that were cut from Everglades country. Visitors to the Orange County park will drive through the preserve and will be frequently warned not to alight from their vehicles. The aim of the enterprise, (See PRESERVE, Page!) ' • • • • I ~ ... . . ,! ' or. ' . DAILY PILOT . ~ -.! . TH URSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 10, '1968. 10c VOL '1, NO. 24'. C l•CTIONI, 6' PA•ll Uf'IT ........ ' LOOKI NG AH EAD -While Apollo 7 astronauts prepare for hlast-0ff Friday, Apollo 8 c~p­ sule already aboard this giant Saturn 5 rocket is being prepar· ed for December orbital flight around moon. Apollo: Crew;, Set to Go . ' . ,, On Fri,iay ~ ' CAPE KENNEDY (l!PI) -Tbe Apollo ' utronaut. aad thelr5-~ to. day were pronounced y tc).10 rriaay in Ill 11-day, 113-«b ahak-run. w .. -. -;J;· . . a~ mart, . · -d>le!• -... -Aid •al .......... ·~~IM toun":~·ilfrlN!ai* "iii ... cceUdenl: frame .m eacv to go." ,:, '· - Wialfi!r, boftvei'~-~ iflli the ICbeduled • a. PS1: lalllCh ii Apollo'• Saluril-\11 . !lid, Von Braun -~ f "", · ~ 10me rain showers hi the n;anlng. He old hl(h winds , auotjl!<d wl~ them mJgbt force the astronauta to leave their ship during the 'llnil hours of the countdown. This could..result in a 24-hour launch postponement ~ · The pllota attended· a final review of their mJsalon With top .project olflclals at midday today and ~e told that all aspecta of the countd01'D were "Co·" "Everytblng ii rigbf on the money," Von Braun said. Command pilot Wallor Schlrra, on. the verge of his third and4final voyage into tpaee, WU IO cool be·spent Wednesday dove-hunUng on a private prew-ve eo miles from the spaceport. Schlrra went wlth a party of 30 persons, a troop movement. wbJch evidenUy unnerv~ .UM! doves, for only about a dozen were blged -none by the utronauL "In ordinary Umes I would feel it my (See COURT, Page %) BRUNDAGE KEEPS OLYMPICS POST Honorary Okie His crewmen, Doon f:tse1e and Walter Cunningham, stayed In their Julllrious quarters at the 11pace center, poring over details of the planned \83-orbit flght. Neither Cunnin&hanJ. nor El.sele has been Ire «pace tiefoi:e, Schlrra, one of the two original utrqoauta ltl11 active, haa been up twice. He IJ\DOURCed recenUy that be probably woulol retire after the voyage of Apollo 7. MEXJCO CITY (AP) -Avery Brun- dage, 81-year-old apostle of amateurism in aporb, won re-election today as presi- dent of the lntemaUonal Olympic Com- mittee, defeaUng Count Jean Beaumont of France, the only other candidate for the pre9tigious post. Ex-publisher to Receive Honor The ballot "" secr<t. Brundige waS re.elected to a four year term which would carry tilil presidency thr,ougb the 1972 Game!: in Munich, Germany. Former Newport Beach newspaper publisher Ben Reddick, credited with coinblg the nickname "Okie" during the Depression, Friday will be named an "HonorarJ Okie" by Oklahoma Gov. Dewey Bar$1ett. Bartlett'• spoclaJ, emissary,. Mike McCarvllle, la currenUy in Los Angeles trying to find Reddick and g!" hlm the Honorary Okie certificate. "When Reddick coined the nlctname, it Explodes on Stand was in a very sympathetic new• atory and had none of the connotations tt later received," McCarville uplained. "We don't know if Reddick ls still alive or if he 's still in California but we thought he'd get a bang out of an honor over teh name he coined," the governor'• aide ,said. McCarvllle will find Reddick alive and acUve as publisher-e:lltor of the Paao (See OKIE;. Pqe I) Wallace Aceepts EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) -George C. Wallace uld today be bu accepted a televlllon debate offet from NBC and CBS. L The li1lnl party -tlal candidate desJanated two top cllilpalgn aides, BID ~9001 and Cecil Jocklojl, to work out the format • ' Mrs. Tucker Convicted of Murder By ARTlllJll R. vrn,EL Of .... .,... ......... ,, Carving bl!e kill"{ l"'1e )I. Tucker wu convicted of second de,fte murder Wei::tneCQ-, after' cold fwy like an Iceberg ·-to pen:ont hidden beneath a calm IUl'fact cJurln( trial -bw.d out u lbetestifl<d. The defendant -1110111enWl!y lm-paulve alter the vmllct, then npldly dlleriorated Into hysterical clalms of unbearable Jail torture u a balllff -Ille courtroom cleared. . "Why did be have' to do that?" Mn. Tucker niumr.nd Iller Jodp Ronald C..Okshazit, bearlll( Ibo .... witbout a fllly In Department 8 Orange County Superior Court, set Cd. Ill at I a.m, u bor -1erioo elate. •'Why can't ~ ten me now?" she wail- ed, her voice rialng uncontrollably, "why do I have to tee.p being tortured?" Augustine demanded that I coort aide get the\ defendant'• husband, Colla Mesa City Colmcilrnaa George A. Tucker, and the (riDHaced civic leader moved quick- ly to biJ weeping wife'• aide. dlct. at S:U p.m., ti.ting leu time than be ml(ht to onler 11""'11, alter °"'111 Dls!Hd Attorney James G. Enrlahl con- cluded the proeecuUon'1 arg\imenta:. Mrs. Tucker I •• of 1142 Minon::• Ortve, stabbed her not-doer neli)lbor, Mn. Harrktt Wettphal, 118, of 1141 Mlnorca Drive, Jut June JI tG cUmu a aeries or vloler.t ac11 sgalnlt olhen. Sbe pleaded lnnocenl llld lnnoceol by reason of lnlanlty, with lour psychlattjsts enough to nducl the Cjlme from lint to who testified splitting 2 to 2 on the blue 1«1111f deg;ee -aadJ!hal la ,1111 Judi' of ber meJ\181 slate. . ' • ·. ri llld flndlnc," .$daa °""bhank "'lbere'I very, very little dllpute of COlicJllded, ' facts In tbiJ due," ,sal<f Ju d'r • · Mn. Tucter ...., tJea a 11a1a prison exoouhank, a veteran of years on the tenn of Dve years to • _ •""""P sbe mental health calendar, bearin& cues bt~ 18 to receive ·~ tr-t:a1.t ii volvlng lnlanlty and mental dlaonler well -Jor •mi.. a -* iild ... 111 pleas. ' ~-.......... "The Jssue la: \Vhat WU lloli>a Oii In w~~T la aot' 11M4 • Mrs. Tucker's mind," be Mid' i ' far~ bad:~ '!1,= "As tlfe latter Issue, ~ which carr1a1 a,......,. of Ille bfprllin, don1 agree," the judge lald, OdCllal lhat ~-u ~-. ""~ ho Dally reJects11Ddlop by ~·Jl!m"\'d -wio 'tllled maloloualJ, . , Komrick and Dr, Pbllllp .......,.., wbo "!llltlo~mealalapndlllcli,whldln testllleil Mrs. Tucker II• Anel 1 bave coacedejl au aloaiL ,.. an not ul:· "SlWI psycboUC.'' he aakt. In( the dU:tb ~.~'De Wd, ~. iJl9 '"1'e menial lllnea II, In m:t' opinion, (laa TllCll8f P ... I) , :~ • • Gqil1y-.of :r"q~d"r ' -. .. . ' . . . ,, . '·~.·\1••· DAILY PILOT "'°" ...... JUDGE PONDERS PENAL TY FOLLOWING CONVICTION Mn . lrft f ucker Awaits Oct. 30 DKftl on ' .· Bill Doomed. GOP Filibuster Threa t Ruili$ Debate Chances WAS!DNGTON (UPI) -RepubU~ filibuster lhre•tl forced the Senate .... y to Joy< ul!lt '!Ogtlja!I<!!> -to permit televidoit clebafe!'~ ~ma­ J« pmldenl'lf·ll'I!'·~· ... ;; 11>' bill la the _...,~!, adJoutnma!I l'lllh, • -Actor A~-call tbol lasted .one 1iour· aad ~' iiilriotoi, 5ena!O Democrallc Leader ,lljkef ~eJd llMOll!lCOd the contt.venlil'l(.U..Jiused. blli 'WO!ild be Iild aslde·to 1"1Plt the Senate to debal<! * aupplernen\al.wroprtaUo,ns bill. The Ooor'manager for the TV debat.e measure, ·Sen. 'John Pastore (D-R.I.), virtually concided there was no chance for passage befQ?'e adjournment because . of the Republican opposition. "Tliey know they can stop It," the Rhode Islander told the Senate. "And they know I know they can stop it." Mansfield 1ald the measure was being put aside "indefinitely." The hW would have permitted Richard M. Nb:on, Hubert H. Humphrey and George C. Wallace to debate the issues on television without requiring equal time for minor party candidatea. The measure w.._tbe subject of a prow longed House batUe thlB w e e k as Republican delaylDg tactics kept the chamber in aeelon for 71 houra before administration f(ll"Ces could pus the bill .. Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen, who Jed the GOP flght against the hill, noted that Democrats bad block- ed almilar legtalaUon In 1964 to provide for debates between President JohnsoD and Republican R!ln'Y M. Goldwaler. ' "If It waa fish then, it ou1ht to be fish now," he aald. "U It WU fowl then, it ought to be fowl now." Putore said that .IO DlW Democrall U.S. Splas hers Ready fo r Soviets The ~lanl drew Drat blood - literally ·-ln their "undeclared · war. against Am¢c:al\ ath\etes in Mexico .c~ ty. nie blood In the pool II expected to live U.S. water polol.ata a tr&nduston:for ihe real thing when the Oll'mplc Ga!Des begin. • . • . Meanwhile, Oranf• . Couf College'' hamm!!Mhrowlll( h)stoiy . piOlt'I"<, .11 Impressed by the competlUOn · and LogWia Beach'• Bill Toomey II cooling' it, 1'allin( for the rul G1111es bel6re be mal:el ..,. real effort In the decathlon. Thal'• how tt ts In Mul1:<retty tbday, acoordin( In DAILY'PILOT SJ)orll'Eilltor Glenn Wblte'1 mluilve dlspalclies. Thief Cashes lb,· . . ,. . Steals Register · Laumct 1'larU ClllllPl•lnad ., •• -""'*' theft W-01 to a.ta Mtsa IPbfloa.-llloJe 'Iba ...,. ......... . . nn..lllld"" ~ .... iil<cliorP of tla fallllly dzy ....... • lllore II 1117 -lllvd,, .... bed ~ to the ...,.,, t11t 111ore.i.. a-n .. .-" She -Ibo ri.stnc of Ila-·· boll,. aodJ 'fi!mlJ .... !.~ .. ~· Ila' -Clllcoivld Ibo ~ ......... bid -taken flm1 ·the CfO/lller· Total looo' of machlnl ind c:onleiits wu placid at f/01. .... ~ hOme campalgning !or' l'Hlecljon 1hlt it would' be impossible to break a Repuhlltan filibuster 01'.IUCC<Od qalmt dlWory ta<tJ<;I. " . ... "I.realif.e that If we Pf"8 *'111," ~ old, ''IU)luhllolJll would. ha,.. enough troopil to stagger 111 lo~­calls Oii they could 'tall:. •11.~m:r: corbpe~U,Stto·i.f ove\'~ , , .,·~·.'! · . ... ' ' . '• ( . . . . . . . , \ ~-~ . ~ • .. : J ' ! ~ •• car nits Kills " I : ' > • I 12:.'y~r-old Boy Twel'!e-ye.ar-oJd Richard Copt of Hun- tington ·eeacb was fatally ' lhj~ Wednescla.y when ~e-was !truck by ·a car after he got off the schOol bus • and ran acroai the street, police rtpOrted tod•y. The coroner's cffii:e reported the b6y died at. 9: 35: P,.m. at Huntington Intercom- munlty H.,Pllal from · head Injuries""!· fered in the accident which occurred ab: hours earlier.' ' • Poll"!' said · Richlin! of !«% Alvarado · Drfve wlis hit on Magnolia -Aveni.le a:>utb of Ocean'l"ood Drive bt a car driven 1ty Mr1. V~ene·GeOrge-, 5921 Don;!yn Dtiv~ Hun.Ungtbq Beach. Mrs. ·George 1was nil dtecf." I " I' ! Deadline . Nei.its . • I • E:f>'r 'f!Jiig P.~ai& Saturday ls the last ~ay area golfers can buy seuon ticjeta for the Haig Na- tional ()pen , (OU iournam4nt at MeO Verde COimtrj,CJub OcJ. 11.:7. : The 115 and 110 tickets ore ohtainal>I!> . ' . . at any cowity golf ~· ! Gederal admission tickets will be ca sale thrwgbout the.tourney. But boat pi\, 'Ron· S,eJ I points out tbat the<ll5-~ represents a, f13 aaYings ii a spectator ~ tends ail ~Ions of the .ev'"1L The weattierman;1 on • broken record,. and Frila!i'• !Orecut lol- IOWI the pattern <.... cJoud1 moi'n-j Jnp. and .,,,.Y arier-with the· mercury stuck In I 7' tut. • I I I . 1 • • ------------~ ~ ---~--- • Tloundel. oa.i.. 10, !lJ6lf" --- =~Humphrey Needs Nixon Debate·, McCarthY Nod •. NEW !ORX (UPI) -Before Ibo .-e:'' oloctlool, lll!btrl H. • • • -and probl))Jt •••dill ... =·· ...,._, ~f... debates w fl h 1llcl!lrd M. NI>"' and an endontmenl ... _ pal, s... E..,tna J._ ..; . Neither, at the moment. are withln h1s P'UP but Humphrey, tbo e\ln!al Oi>' rtfuM to abandon b o p • -ethlnli will happen be!°"" Nov. 5. Wherever he """' Humphtty keeps ,,_P ... J OKIE ••• RohlolNOD1'ml. Reddick colned "Okie" wblle treeJ&n. d!!I a pbolo pklure page for tbo ol\f Loi Mples Ewnlner when he covend migrant, campo dorlng Ibo cleprealoa yton o1 the 111111. He !!Ollctd 1bat ell ol the mlareta' llcenM plltM hid 110K" .on them -tllul he devlaed the nickname. Novellat John Slelnbeck fl said to ha"' later plcked up the "Okie" ta& ta bis boot, ••Grapes of Wrath.11 "I doni ,.11\y k!lOW whelher I came UJ> with lt first or Steinbeck dld," Reddick told the DAILY PILOT today. Then llWIP" Ing a IJne from Mark Twain, Reddick ed· ded, 0 But you can tell Gov. Bartlett that tho reporll ol my death -U oey -are grutly exaggerated." Reddick nolod that 1t tho tmlS!ent comp near Blythe to the !POI, Oldlhoint Jtot Cftdlt for many m1granta wbo CllDI from ellewbere. ''They puled lhnlush Olrllbom1 wit' Wegally registered can,'' Redd1ck recall ed. "Olrllhoml give them I licellle-pfllt a tranalent certJflcate, tank of pa and r meal, then uked them io move on." Reddick does have one ru.l Oklabom.., connection. His wlfe, Dorothy, ii a naUve ol Slpulpa, Okla. "Because of the Okie nickname, once in 1956 they almost made me an admiral in the Oklahoma navy," the publlsber quip-ped. . Marijuana Injection Costs Youth Spleen . DENVER (UPI) -Docton at Deaver General HOJpital said Wednesday they bad to remove the -!pleen of a 19--year- old boy who injected marijuana into a vein for "a quick high." The unldentl!ied youth was undergo- ing treatment in the intensive care unit of the hospital. Dr. Gerald Starkey, med- ical coordinator, said the spleen became enlarged aftu the yooth took the drug. pleocflnl for tolevbed debates with W- -offering to poy 1U Ibo coltl tven tbou&b the Democratic CQff.-s an emp- ty. And he paUenUy walte for McCarthy, his long.time friend and old poUUcal all,y, to .. -ato. J:::phrey ~lml a McCarthy .,. dorsement r:eally would not have that much of an bn~t of his c•moel&n but 1t the same Ume he wiltfUUy-loolcs Hr the support of the Ututar leader of the u- tiwar proteators and di.S.s.ident youth. M !Gr the debltes, Humphrey cflal~ Ni.... w~ver he goeo. He cllreo GOP tandldate to places like Erle and wllk ... Barre. Scranton and Utica, Washington and New York. Bu\ be candidly ooncedes, t h a t rtgardless what Congress doet. the chances of a nationally-televised fact-to- face coq{rontation are small. Asked Wednesday whether he thought Nixon would debate h1m lf Congress clears the way, Humphrey replied, "No, I fi'igaro Closes Opera Season Perlonnanees at 8 p.m . Friday and Saturday In Laguna'• Irvine Bowl pf "The Marriage of Figaro" will wind up 1968 Lyric Opera season. Att rehearsal ·Count Almaviva played by Marvin Klebe (rear) dis· covers his hiding page, Cherubino, played by Andree Jordan, in chair. At riglrt are Karan Armstrong as the maid and Bruce Yarnell as Figaro. At left is stage director Bliss Hebert. From Page 1 MRS. TUCKER CONVICTED .•. coorl. TriumpflaoUy, Enright noltd that Mn!. Tucker's at Umes-uploaive . testimOny Wednesday aftemQon almost exactly sup- ported his hypothetical theory of bow Mrs. Westphal was slain. No one questioned that two women fought bti\erly in some backyard con- frontaUon triggered by a stimulus which died wllh the vlctlm and ls evidently buried in the killer'• brain. The defense riia.intained the idea that Mrs. Westphal, a robust, 170-pound woman, wu stabbed in self-Oefense by Mn. Tucker, who drove a carving knife lix incbea lnto the victim'• right side. Enright charged that Mrs. Tucker tllailted the dazed and badly beaten Mrs. Westphal out into Minorca Drive in a vengeful fury at being disflgur<d -and fatally wounded her Ibero. Tbe ooly surprise dilclosure from the defend.an\ on the witness stand wu that ohe went after her oelghbor with not one, but two knives. Police never considered !Uch a poosibWty. . Describing events leading up lo the slaying which stunned the quiet Mesa Verde area, Mr!. Tucker repeated her version of being senselessly attacked and beaten with hands, a garden hose and noule. Reciting tDe lnclden\ -sometimes us- DAILY PILOT """"*' IHcli c.m ..... H•llflttp• '-di L11pM 1Mcat w ........ , ,. ....... ...., CAUFOINIA OltAHGI COAST l"UILllHING COMPANY Rob•rt N. W.H '°1'1'11141111 •1111 ,11t1U1Mr J•ck R. C11rl•y Ylce ,,_ldt!lt Ind Gtneor81 ,,...M.., Tho111•• k•1vit Edr.r Th111111 A. M11rphi111 ,,...llffll'lf E•ltor ''"1 N l11111 Aotvtf'tt.lnt Dlrecl'lll' t -C:.1'9 ~; J:llO Wnt llJ ltrMt N""'1 ... Cll1 ttll Wat l.llbol loullV1rG 1.1..-..._,., m ,.._, ,.,,._ ~ atldl: -lltl 1"91 , Jng oddly turned pbr8aes u a child might -then slipping into the impeccable English of a cool, cultured lady, the pro- secution'• concept unfolded along with her story. Mrs; Tucker, diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic with little hope of recovery, said she was going to the garage with a load of laundry when struc k in the back of the neck by some object. "It was a hard hurl and I said 'Oh,' and went forward. 1 dropped the basket," !he said, "I said to mysell: 'I hurt very badly.' .. "I heard noises after being hurt from behind. I ran and got the soap -in the container -and threw it at the fence. I heard running feet, a scuffling sound and cackling laughter," Mrs. Tucker testified. "Then I ran around the fence to see _who it was -that was probably very foolish - I should have gone Inside the house," she added. ~The two wamen collided while rounding the fence. Mrs. Tucker said Mr!. Westphal smasbed her wllh a garden boae and knocked her down, falling on top as the two women wrestled ln what neither knew then would be a death duel. "She looked horrible. Absolutely hor- rible -the look on her face," Mrs. Tucker testified, "she kind of screamed something at me. She looked clearly out of her mind. , .'' "She was holding me down with her big body, with her knee in my chest," Mn. Tucker said under oath, "I was beaten up at leas\ five or 10 minutes. It was a long time I was being hurt, hurt, hurt." Mrs. Tucker, who i.s believed to have struck back with a rock she picked up, said she escaped and ran home after Mn. Westphal had yanked on her jaw, mangling her lower teeth. "My teeth Wen! hanging out. I looked awful," said the defendant, mentioning she had glimpsed herself in chrome on her kitchen stove. "I was shaking like a leaf. Crying. I tried to decide what to do. I called the bank," Mrs. Tucker testified. "It was hard to talk but 1 told the secretary lo tell my husband to come home immediately," she said under oath, but Tucker was away from the United California Bank branch only blocks away. Here, Enright declared in swnmallon, came the turning point as Mn. Tucker'• tragic tendencies were stimulated by some unknown ractor -maybe a word or tone. \ "What were your thoughts con:Cerning Mn. Westphal?" Augustine asked. "I fell I bid to defend my>elf," Mn. Tucker sa.ld rrom the stand. "Did lht eo\tt your house!'' "I don't know.'' "U I bad been thlnklog rillhl. I would have Cllled the police," Mrl. Tucker 11.id. Gradual1y beKinnins to weep, the clef ... dant rtlllod how she w.nt lo the Im· rnaculate kl\C~n, picked up • roast knife and a partog knife and !ell the hoo!e, armed. "For some reaaoo, she started ecuUlln& again," Mrs. Tucker saJd, 1111he kept kick· Ing at me, we were fighting in the street. I kept going around and around her. I had lhe knives in hand." ·A woman whispered sharply In the courtroom. No one Was outside to see the mad , whlrUng scramble or Mrs. Tucker and Mrs. Westphal as the Tucker pups, Butch and Fluff, danced about, barking and whining, "I thought -as I lunged at her, 'Thank God', the knives onJy went through the clothes and nicked her," Mrs. Tucker said. The larger blade, however, bad sliced between Mrs. Westphal's seventh and eighth rib, an autopsy showed, cutting a pulmonary artery in the lung and nicking her spine. "I went into the house and it was then I reallied the enormity flf what had hap- pened •• .'' "Mrs. Tucker . . • Mr!. Tucker," Augustine intem:ipted. "It could not have gone inward because I didn 't push it tn," Mrs. Tucker declared on the stand, her voice rising and her reatures sharpening. Enright arose, stem-raced. "Your Hooor," be said, "may the record !how that it occurred in the mid- dle or the atreeL" "Did she scream?" asked Augustine who argued Mn. Westphal had been stabbed in the struggle between the two backyards. ' "No, I said 'Ob God' -or a\ least I heard : 'Oh God' -I don't know," Mrs. Tucker testUled befort the lilent au- dience. Her husband, father and two listen showed no emotion, although Tu c k e r bowed hi.! bead it his hands at the later verdict \ "Had you thrust at Mrs. Wel\pbal1" Augutsine questioned. "Nosirree!' just that once," the defen- dant exploded, "I don't believe that woman ls dead. l know what I did and it could not kill her or anyone else." Visibly redden1ng and r I s i n g at the witness stand. Mrs. Tucker bitterly rougllt the concept ol Mn. Westphli'a death, indicoUng ohe believed the murder charge to be untrue. "Why abbuld I believe what you say ••• JU81 bec1uoe yon showed picturul Lota of people loot alike," sbe shouted, "even to jali I .._..tered U.... women who looted and lalicod llke Mn. We.sl!>hai." Judge Crooklbant watched the defm- dant next to him with renewed intettst a1 ohe espklcled toto briW..vo!ced dialribea dlnct<d toward Augustine, who Ill tlrod-Jt. "l havt nothfni men," her defeoder ~d when ohe hid flnflbed. • • "No questiooa," ldded Enrjlh\. Newainen la the c:oartroom, waftlq to -how Mn. 'l'llcker WOllld rucl to Enril!>t'a ..-am!DIUon, glanced 11 each other. Sbe had luat le8tilled fer the pro- llec\ltJou1 wbile the defente tried to make lte .-. , ) don~ ~ be woull! 1!111• he -he fl btlol eaql!t up on." Humplny tcheduled I typJaD,. busy day toclay in New York City IDcluding a rally, two motorcades, Joel a gpee:cb to the IPPl"I induJtrle1 diiMiittee. Bui the public events cloated prll'ate meetings designed to rabe money for the last lour weeks ot the campaian -cash the vice pruldent badly l!eedl. Humphrey flew into New York Wtd.nes- day' afternoon, heart~ by ~ ~ * * * Wallace Sends · Le~ay to Viet To 'Find Facts' EVANSVILLE, Ind. (uPI) -George Wallace aa1d today be ls sending his v1ce presidential running mate, Gen. Curtis LeMay, on a "fact-finding rn.15.!iOn for me in Vietnam." "I om particularly toterested to getting the vlew1 of th' American wvlcemen in -IJld;fJI ~ -LeM•y will -11 1-. , ol the vutous -of mllltary -""'-· ed in the Vietnam ffcbtina." Wallace uld. ' ' · 'l1le Plrti pnl!ld .. ua1· candid1t, 'laid U!at wheo J:.e*1 ' nturnect he. woWd "mob a fllll >-' to Jiii and I will then llllka .. 1 '-'to Ibo-.. people." It wu lltllnad Wallaco woWd lllih biz report on nationwide teltvision. Wallace Aid LeMay'1 trip was ex· peeled to take place Oct 15-19, Md he . would be accompanied by three of his staff members -Ed Ewing, Joe Fine and John DeCarlo. Wallace's announcement recalled Gen. Dwight D. Elsenhower'a pledge in 19$1 to "go to Korea'' if he were elected presi· dent. Wallace apparenUy aought to broaden b1s appeal to voters by making use of LeMay'1 expertise in forelgn af. faitll. From Page J PRESERVE •.. Shuster aald, fl for vlslton lo watch some 500 African animals enjoying a mode of Ufe and simulated terrain that will be, u nearly a1 possible, identical to their natural habitat. Game rangers armed with tranqullif.er guns will keep comtant watch on the aafarl trafla, Shuster said. They will also be available to tow driven in dilficulty from the area, be added. Sbul\er OWlll, in addition to the Florida animal part, p.......,., to Johannesburg, Sooth Afr!CI -his h9Jne town -·the Netherlands and ln England, wbert he controls the Marquis of Bath's "LiODS <If Longleat" attraction. AdmJsslon charges have not yet been detennined, Shuster said, but he hopes lo fix prices on the lines of fees set at his Florida part -Sl.50 for adult& and $1.25 for chlldren. • . A considerable acreage will be devoted to young vlsitors, Shuster said. He plans to have a Pet Corner when! smaller African anlmala, among them many which can be handled with complete safe- ty by youngsters, will be on view. Future plans, be said, may include eon· structlon of a replica of an African village with presentaUon of authentic tribal rituals and dances. Sbuster expects to have more than 300 persons on his Orange County payroll when the aalari project la completed. Tongue-in-cheek 1 p I a n n i n g com- miuionen, dl!cu&slng the type of aign that Shumr hope< to erec~ indicoltd they already knew the wording of one s1gn that wa splaced in the Flortda part~ "No Trespauing. Private Property. Violators Will Be EATEN." In -<I -edl <I COU. ljudente -IGrtner -. ol McClriJt, Sen. R6blrt F. ltemiedy, and .New Y•k Gov. Nellon Rockefeller -who ... thu&l&>!k1lly,pleclged 1 oew lllqluce. U HumphnJ'I sptrlte ,..,. -.it in Bottoll, they !!!Ill! hive been dlmpened in New Yor~ City. Tbe antiwar demon.slratora, ~ abient 1n gfqf number for more than a week, ·were around, but police and tbetr horteA ~ lh<m out of the vi_.aidenl'O! ~ Nor did ... Hum-'I ilPlldi lo I lll>enl paly -'Wldiioodo;, n!Cht ......... , pt ovtUons. It magnified McCarthy'• mull! lo .., done Humphrey and, even . before he ruehed New York Ctty, Humphtty told repaners "we'd like to have Genel1 belp. "He'a an old and good friend ..ct rm a UtUe sad be doesn't feel bJs way clear to do i\ now. But that's th& way tilt ball bou-and there'a silU a loog Wr/ to 10." * * * * * * Wall·a~e No. 2? Monitor PoUSiwws Humphrey Thud BOSTON (AP) -The O!rtaiian Scleoce Monitor said today ~ fw-the fJnt tl.lne Its state-by·stale survey ol °"' pnaid .... ~al candidates' otrollltb ol!iJw1·~ ty candidate George C. Wallace running second to Republican Richard M. Nixon. Democrat Hubert. H. Humphrey has dropped to third place to the analysis by the newspaper's political writers, but the survey views the outcome of the election as a toss-up in six states with a total of 172 electoral votes. The survey estimates that Wallace will win in six states with a total of 58 elec~ toral votes, and that Humphrey will win four and the District of Columbia with a tolaf or 311. _ Nixon, the leader \broughout in the paper's estimates of who wlll receive the 270 electoral votes needed for victory, ls aeen as the winner tn st atates wt.th a total of 361 electoral votes. Maine, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Virginia were listed as the six toss-up states. The October survey added Arkansas to the anticipated Wallace victory Ust that earlier included Alabamii, Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, &nd N or th Carolina. Humphrey, listed .., the probable win- ner in 10 states and the District of Columbia in September, lost four states in the October poll, which lilted his pro- bable victory states as HawaU, Mfn.. nesota, Massachusetts, and W e s t Virglnil. * * * * * * Nixon Declnres Moscow Holds Key to War's ·End MOLINE, ru. (uPI) -Richard M. NI>· on believes Moscow holds the key to l\lC- cessful negotiations to end the Vietnam War. According to sources close to the Republican presidenUal candidate, a !eries <If diplomatic moves involving the Soviets would play an ~port.ant part in Nixon's efforts to end the war U he is elected. Nixon has been retictnt •bout what he would do speclflcally to "bring the war to an honorable conclusion" u he has repeatedly promised in his campaign speeches. But he bas strongly hinted he would increase milltary preasure ln Vie~ nam to force Hanoi Into meanlngful talka. Coupled with !hi> would be I concerted effort to bring Moscow blto the con- versaUona in the role of a peacemaker. To accomplish this, he would use the whole spectrum ot dlplomalic weapons, the sources said, taking advantage of the Soviets feud with Red China, its desire for trade with the West and its vulnerability in !Orne areas of Europe and the Middle East. Nixon bas confined hi.a discussion flf the war so far ln the campaign to criUclmt of the Democrats for "dissipating the greatest milltary power on earth" by gradually escalating the war, and for failing to mobilize South Vietnam In !ti own defense. The reason he has been vague about what he would do In Vietnam, he says, is because he doesn't want to compromise the negotiations In Paris by malting Hanoi think It coold get a better deal from him than from the CWTent ad· ministration. But he also Is very much aware of the political fallout derived from taking Vietnam out of the campaign as a postUve Wue and conctntraUng the dlscu.ss1on on the mistakes of the past. 1be GOP campaign moved back lnto Illinois today, one of the tey states now the targets for Nixon's maln efforts. He lost It -some say It was stolen -by 9,000 votes In 1960. He criUclzed the Democrats on his ar· rival In Moline for condoning a prison system in wbJcb "six out of every 10 men discharged ... return within five years.'' This "institution of lower learning" must be remedied, he said. "The federal government should take the l~d by reforming the federal penltentlarl!s, and providing separate facWtlea for treat.IDg the violent, aggressive or dlstuibed of· fenders. "The crime rate in the United States, which hu been increasing 10 Umea faster than populaUon, w0uld be lOd deal lower U convicted felons were given the training to beeome useful rpemberl of society.''· · From Plljfe 1 COURT ..• duty now lo send another name to the Senate for this high office. I lhall not do so. These are not ordinary times, we are \ h re at e n e ·d tly an emoUonalism, parti.sanshlp, and prejudice that compel us to use great care If we are to avoid in- jury lo our constitutional system. "Our distinguished Chief Justice hu fn. dicated his willingneSS: to serve.unW his successor qualifies. U n d e r the circumstances, the foundaUom of gov~ ment would be better served by the present chief justice remaining ooUI emotionalism su bsides, reason an d fairness prevail." Officer Kills Self BONN (UPI) -Maj. Gen. Horst Wendt· land, 56, highest ranldng mWtary olfi· cer In the West German intelligence corps, committed !Uiclde TUesday, IU· thorltaUve source! said Wednesday. 'Ille sources said Wendtland shot himself while in h i s office ln Munich following ''depressive illness." :Jina/ Clearance/ PltOFESSKMAI! IHfMIO« DESilles -LOOK FOl lED SALi TAGS - .......... M_ ' 1211 HAAIOJ ll'fO. COSTA MESA, CAI.If. MM271 6'4M27' ( -_,,,. ___ -e.rr --• ----..,,, ... ~---·--····· __ ,~ .... ~·~ -- D1ln.tington Beaeh ' ~ ~ • ' t Your Bometol\'JI DaUy ·Paper voe 61, NO. 24"4, 4 SECTIOlllS, +4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1968 TEN CENTS ------------------------------.....,.------------------------------------------------------------------------------~. LBJ Sticl{s to Warren A·sks Chie.f Justice to Stay Till 'Emotion Subsides' DAILY PILOT Stiff Pllett If It Burts, It's Good First nighters at Fountain Valley Recreation D~artment's karate class learned that physical conditioning .comes first. Students .were led tllrough exercises like tbi~ o?e by instructor Harry Umemoto and discovered muscles they did.n t know they had. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Prellident Johnson, rebuffed by t h e Sef?.ate's re-- jection of Abe Fortas u Chief justice, to- day asked Earr Warren to ttay on as head of the Supreme Court "until emo- tionalism tubsides, reason and fairness prevail." The President said he would not submit a new nomination. Warren, appointed to the high court by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower Beach Adds Teens to Rec, Parks Board By SANDI MAJOR OI tM O.ltt """" Stflff HunUngton Beach Wednesday became the second city in youthfully-populated Huntington Woman's Club Urges Co11trol of Beaches · Orange County to add a teen..ager to iU Recreation and Parks Commission. A movement to secure local control over the two st.ate beaches in Huntington Beach has been joined by the Huntington Beach Woman's Club, it was announced Wednesday. Members or the club are beginning a letter campaign designed to acquaint state officials with the reasons why Hun· tington and Bolsa state beaches should be under the a~mhtl!lration of the city Department ol llad!OrS al\d Bepches. The announcemen£ ot ~the Woman'• ·Club parti~Uon '#'Qade '67 '11rs. Wllllun McCo.\,t. 'M1e organlation jolM the Eader Schciol Pr A ·bl· l'l''hinr fOI' local control. Admirllstration b! local departments of the two st.ate beaches has been asked by tbe city and Director of Harbors and Beaches Vince Moorh<..ise. Principal goal woul\ be l~ . put t~e beach operations on a s~ustaining basis through parking lot fees \nd to use. the money for increasing the {lyel of safety services on the beaches. · ln addition, a single administration locally would enable a unified develop.. ment of the waterfront from one . end or the city to I.he other, said Moorhouse. '11te n e e d for increased lifeguard personnel has been ~essed. ~Y U~se backing the idea of city IKlm1ni.slrat1on. Suite park officials have pointed out that Car Hits, Kills 12-year-old Boy Twelve-year-old Richard Cook of Huo- lington Beach wa1 fat.ally injured Wednesday when he was struck by a car after be got off the school bus and ran across the street, police reported today. The coroner's offl~ reported the boy 1968 County Traffic IM7 160 Death Toll lP died at 9:35 p.m. at Huntington lnt.eroom- munity Hospital from' head injuries sur- fered in the accident which OCCU1Ted six hours earlier. Police said. Richard of 11442 Alvarado Drive was hit on Magnolia Avenue south of Oceanwood Drive by a car driven by Mrs. Verene George. 5921 Donlyn Drive, Huntington Beach. Mrs. George was not cited. they are unable to have the top level of safety services because (If a lack (If mooey. In additl<m, Moorhoose said the phil()S()phy on the state beaches is m()re (If a "park ranger" type while oo the city beach it is of lifeguarding firsl The matter has gone to the state and Moorhouse said he bas not. heard lately from State Director o1 Parks and Recreation William P. Mott on city takeover. ThiiitaJid Fights U.S. Bomlf Halt UN ITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - Thailand declared today that a one-sided halt to the bombing or North Vietnam will only encourage the Communists to make new demands that, if accepted, would amount lo a sWTender oL South Vietnam. In a speech to the 125-nation General Assemb ly, Thanat Khoman, the foreign minister of Thailand, asserted the coun· tries of Southeast Asia want no attempt by the United Nations to aid in the delivery of free nations to totalitarian regimes. Thailand is an ally or the United Stales In .the Vietnam war. Khoman declared that the statements o[ the North Vietnamese at tht Paris peace talks and recent declarations by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko make clear that a complete bombing halt will not be sufficient to bring about serious negotiations. BRUNDAGE KEEPS OLYMPICS POST MEXICO CITY (AP) -Avery Brun- dage, 81-year-old apostle of amateurism in sports, won re-elecUon today as presi· dent of the Int.ernaUonal Olymplc Com- mittee, defeating Count Jean BeaUJnQnt of France, the only other cand.ldate for the presUglous post. The ballot was secret. Brundage was re--e.lected to a four year term which would carry his presidency lhrough the 1972 Games bl Munich, Gemmly. Commissioners, in fact, outdid the city or Placentia, which last month added a high school senior to its board. Huntington Beach board members ad- ded eight students to their commission. The teen-agers, students from Marina and Huntington Beach High Schools and Golden West Junior College, are to meet Oct. 23 to organize themselves into an "advisory board" to the commission. The eight students were invited to Wed- nesday n i g h t ' s regularly-scheduled meeting or the commission. Chaltman Tom Cooper admitted he wasn•~ sure how tbe ~mmlssion .Jhould go ab/Iii 'lddlng u;j.<youthlul oplnioos" to the board. .• "Jc•s bwe *f wta,t· w, an,. db,!" ht aald. , Cooper. .,ho fin! propol<!i! dill Hun- tington Beach do something almllar to what Placentia did. pointed out that '45 percent of Orange County's population is under 21 years of age. "It's probably a Jittle higher than that in Huntington Beach too." he added. "It could be that you yourselves would like to set up a group of students at.your schools to advise you to come to your ad~ visory ccimmlttee with Ideas to advise us," the chairman suggested. · "You know, we're really an advisory . board to the city council," Commissioner Bruce Williams said. Members of the city Recreation and Parks Commission are to meet with the teens at 7:30 p.m. in the Recreation Center, 17th Street and Orange Avenue. to help them establish their organization . "You're going to be setting the pace," Cooper said. "A lot o1 other cities are going to be looking at you." Initially, the teen advisory committee will be made up of Sandy Brockman and Ron Campbell of Golden West, Cheryl Haun of Marina High, and Dod Bateman. Brian Hanrahan, Tina Hannah and Karen Pitt of Huntington Beach High. Masked Gunman Holds Up Store A masked gunman eacaped early ,today with cash from a HunUngton Btach li- quor store located at &Ml £clinger Ave. His Nib's Liquor clerk Wt Gerrie Walen, 21 aald the gunman entered shortly after midnight wearuc a large, papeMbopplng bag with eye holes and br~ a plitol ot an tqlltnown make. Mf4' W1ten said lhe handed over ap- proo1mately llO lt<m the Ull and that the bandll then eocaped .. fool. Talbert Issue Unresolved LAFC Studies Dissolution of Beach Water Distri<:t By JACK BROBACK Of ftM OaMr Plitt 11-'f The Local Agency Formation Commis· sion wresUed with the propoa:ed dissolu- tion ol the T~rt Water Dbtr:lct In Huntington Beach again Wednesday, tall· ing to come to a deciaion. The coounilsion In effect granted more time for the city and the water dbtr1cl to WCl'k out a negotiated selllem,enl Ruldenls or the area object to paying taxes to the district and receiving no benefit. Tbc district WU formed in 1964 when the enUrt area in the soothea!tem part. or the dly was agricultural lands. Th.-: district now bas 13 metered con- necUons lO farmland but only clght land· owners arc: U!lni lrTlgaUon water, ac· ,( cm'ding to testimony given to the LAFC. Joacph Boyle, 20300 Beaumont Circle, told commiuioners that 4,000 homeown- ers pay tues and get no bmt!ll. 'Ibey must p.iJ for operation of tbe dilbict aI1d i~ b!>oded indebte<leo..,_ "We pay a percent o1 the taxoo bul In an attempt to get two seats on the di• trlel boJrd we were frustrated by the votiJ>c l)'llcm which II buod on ..,. vote for each $1 of. 8.Slle88ed valuation." Boyle ar111e<1. "In the election water 111m had I million vottl and rcsident.s bat 2 millkm. ln actual people votJng lbe reakientl Md 500 vota to 25," t.he ' homeowntt con. Unued. Huntlniton Bead! city cwncilmaD r~ Jen'J' Matney Hid the district could aa- aume. all operation and bond payment costa at a lo r»e of onI1 eo cent.I. ~ti..ne, Rodgu Howell repre>enUIJI the dist.rid urged that the city and d11- trlct be li"en time to work out an asreo- -l "It w"'1d lake yean to legally dil- 90Jve tbt d1ltrict.." he &aid in ouWninC the plan. The propoooo •iJ'<'ment ca111 r ... the dlllrtct IP turn over -•U\lPI to lht city on July I. 00 f« a trW poriod ol one year. It w"'1d them be decided fl the city had -the belt ljltei'olls "' the lumen. U 1ucceafUl the "orderly" dl,..JuUon ol the dillrk:i W"1ld follow with the tut bond debt paid oil b)' 1177, 15 yean ago, was at his familiar spot on the bench when the court opened ita new term last lt!onday, indicating he would remain. Warren had no immediate comment but he is expected to go along with the President's wishes. Senate leaders last week were unable. to break a filibuster against the oomina- tion ol Fortas to the nation's biihest judicial pm and the associate justice, a friend of Johnson. asked t;he President to withdraw his name. Johnson complied. • In a ·statement Issued bf the White House, Johnson said : "In ordinary times I would feel it my duty now to send another name '° the Senate tor this high ofllce. I shall not do so. These are not ordinary times, we are th r e a t e n e d by an emotionalism, partisanship, and prejudlce that. cmnpel us to use great We' if we Ile to avoid bt- jury to our constltuUODal ·l)"stem. "Our distinguished Chief Justice has in- dicated his willingness to serve unW his succusor qualifies. U n d e r the circ:umstanees, the foundaUons of govemo ment would be better served by the present chief jusUce rema.lning until emoUooalism sutwdes, reason a n d fairne"!s prevail." Missing Check May Put Pipe Bid Down Tube The low bidders on a gigantic pipeline for the Orange County SanitaUon Districts remained in a cold sweat today, awaiting the outcome of a legal.ruling on what wlll go OOwn u one of the biggest bloopers in high finance. Peter Kiewit Sons of Richmond, Calif., submitted a low bid of $1,498,000 to build one of the world'• largest sewage outlalls jutting miles out to sea from the: Huntington Beach side of the Santa Ana River. But the construction finn forgot · to enclose a $50,000 cashier's check with the bid. T~ of , speaking up for the job call~ for such a check to accompany every bid. Direclon of !be sanilalion dlatrlcls ' Tuesday night gathered Jll Foontail) Valley headquarters to open the sll bida reetived for 1the job. · · • .. .• .._ ... •. ~-' _.,11.y ·'"'°' ... ~; ..... JUDGE PONDERS PENAL TY 1'0llOWfNO • Co'NlilCTloN Mrs. lreM Tucker Awaits Oct ... a :Declilon ·'l'!ll''llnly>-Gll•'°'IU 'l'<Md ""' eond, ...i ,.17:.dA..1'bml fljo ~ -, "l!Ot fllrl!id; ~ •llolMr Bimi, llall memi>B' of tht Jollit <caioJJo enciJteerlnc !lmr •lilch ~ Ille plpellne. Mrs. Tucker Convicted Teen Club Owner Facing Police Interference Rap Of· 2nd Degree Murder ·· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 Ill• DllMf l'U1f Stiff Carving knife killer Irene M. Tucker was convicted of second d~gree murder Wednesday, aft.er cold fury like an iceberg -90 percent hidden beneath a calm surfaci! during trial -blazed out as she testified. The. defendant was momentarily im- passive after Ute vetdict. then rapidly d&riorated into hysterical claims or unbearable jail torf.ur!: as a .bailiff ordered the coortroom cleared. "Why did he have to do that?" Mrs . Tucker murmured after Judge Ronald Crookshank. bearing the case without a jury in Department a, Orange County Superior Court, set Oct. 30 at 9 a.m. as her sentence date..· ~·Why can't he tell me now?" she wall- ed, her voice rtaing uncontrollably, "why do I have to keep being tortured?" Alliusune demanded. that 1 court aide get lbe defendant's husband, Coata Mesa City Councilman George A. Tucker, and tbe grim-faced civic leader moved quick· ly to his ~eeping wife's side. . Jlidie Cfooklhank aMouneed his ver· diet at J:U p.m., taking less time than he mlghl to order lunch, aft.tr Deputy District Attorney James O. Enright con- cluded the prosecution's argu.menb!I. Mrs. Tucker, 38, of 1641 Mlnorca Drive, stabbed her non-door neighbor, Mrs. Harrlelt Westphal, 63, of 1616 Minoroe Drive. last June 28 to cllinu a series of violent acts against others. She pleaded innocent and innocent by reason of insanity, with four psychiatrists who tesµfi"CI splitting 2 to 2 on the issue of her ~\l1 It.ate •. "There's. very, very little dbpute of racta in this case," uid J d d 1 e Crook1b1Dk, & veteran ol ytm on lM mental lioallh calmlar, bearlni cases In· v()lvh1i1 insanity and menlal disorder pleu. '1'he l111ue ii: What wa1 going on In Mts. Tucker'• mind," he conttnued. "A• to the latter lAIUe, psyehlatrilll do~'t agree," the judge said, lldcllng that he OaUy rejecla llndlnp by Dr. Stcm&md KoaewlC!t Mel Dr. PhlWp -· wbo tesUIJe<I Mn. Tucker II 11ne. "Sbe'ipsychoUc,i' he ai.ld.' · "The mental lllnesi LI, bl my opiniOIJ, enough to reduce the erlme ftonl tint to _,.i ~ -and thal LI 11\Y Judi· ment &Dtt tlndJns," Judge CroOkahanlc concluded, Mn. TUcker now tacea a state prilon term of ave yem to life -a!lhougll U. is to receive psychiatric treatment u Teen nightclub owner Gilbert Covell of well -for killing a womaJ! she insisted Newport Beach was arrested by Hi.m-. Wednesday is not dead. tington Beach police. on a municipal court Enright had asked Judge Crookshank bench warrant. charging bim with in-terlering with the duUes of police. for a first degree murder convlclioh, The warrant was issued in the wake of which carries a sentence of life in prison, recent police allegations that Covell, describing her as a vengeful, but rational optt-&tor of the Syndicate 3000, wu hat· woman who killed maliciously, .. assing 1Pol1ce in the line of duty. "Due to the·mental conditiori, which wt Detectlvu Aid the most recert m. · cklent and the one wblcb k!d to Covell'• have conceded all along, we are not ask-arrest We<inelday wu bis alleged ing the death penalty," he said before Ult flashing at close range of camera'bolbc court. while officers tried to load ·a drunken girl . TriumpbanUy, Enright noted that Mrs. into a ·paddy w.agon ollt.dde the club, 301 Tucker's at times-e%plosivt test.lmooy Ocean Ave. Wednesday afternoon almost esactly sup-Bond wu set at $315 and was posted ported hill b,ypotheUcal theory M bow Immediately. · Mrs. ·Westphil wpa slain. Na one questioned that two women fought bliterly bl oome backyard coo-lfottlallof! triggered by a stimulus which died With the victim and II evidently bUrled in .the illlel-11 f.lraln. Tbe defense maintained the Idea that Mrs. Westpbal, a n>buat, 1\'G-pow>d woman, wu st.ebbed in &elf-defense by Mr.s. Tucker, who drove a carving -knife air inches inlo the vletlm's right aide. Enrtghl charged that Mn. Tucker rtalked the dazed and badly beaten Mrs. Westphal out lnto MlnorCIJ .Drive in a vellgl!ful fury al being dllllgw'ed -and fatally woum:hid her there. Tbe only surprl!e dioclosure fmn the defendant on 'the witoela stanc:t· wu that she went after: her neighbor with ftOt one, but two lmive.s. \ Police never · considered luch a Po&!ibllity. ~lbing events leadln&: up to the slay!ng which llU...., the Qldtt Mesa . Verde area, Mrs. l'u(:ker repeated her • veraion of be"1c MMe!ealy allacke<I and (See 1Vcu:R, Pqe II Deadline Nears For Haig Ducats Saturday t. the tut day ana (Olltl:s ,can ""1·oe_, dckell f0< the Hali Na- tl<lial 0pen aou , toumamen1 at M ... v...-Cow!tey Club o.:t. 21·2'1. , The •II 8lld •10 Uckell are oblaln1ble at .., ~ golt c:oune. , Geftl· -tlcke!I will ba on aal• lhrvocbout the tournoy. Bui bolt pro 11o11 a• If JIOl!'ta ~1 ,lht\ lht •t• u.w npr<ROLI a Ill 11vlnp U a Qedllo< 111- lendl all lltlllooa cl !be evtol. .t • •. Wallace Accepts , \ r EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) -George C. Wallace aald today ·he bu accoptod a television debate ofltt from NBC mt CBS. The third party presldenUaJ candidate designated two top·~ampaign aide.s, Bill Jones and Cecil Jack80D, to Work out the_ format. The-wealberman'• on a broken record, alld: Frida,.'• forttast foJ.. lows the pattern· -cloudy morn- ing• ancl lllMY alt-with the mercury stuck ln 1 70 ni.L INSJBB 'l'ODAY As ,POIUltn ioo. al l)\e OJ> prooching p•'<Pdenlial '""'· 111<r am't 1eem to aare• cm a sofflfttT. &och polta anrwcr' 1tr.n1 to df'o P<nd om ,.,..,., a1k1ng 111< qu<,. Ilona. SH Pao< 5. I ..... ' __ _...... Thursday, October 10, 1968 -; DAILY PILOT ' ,.. . . . ,_ . ' ·-· .... ~~ ·~ueker -1\itor~e1 · Re ·fl .OP' ext .. ... ...;r' Jleoi ...i roOectlon was on the calender l!l!llr. lor i... -murdlr lllll ~ · 8it«ney Paul AQllUlilne Jr., -his clleot'• conviction Wednelldq In ~_, S.perlor Qluil._' "I never-pur1Ue a course ot action, or ~ rwltbout sufficient rtOecUon and -" evidence, the law and the •:aa:m:tt•• said Augustine, a f~ friend of Mr. and Mrs. George Tucker. =-:Mfi,.,.: Tucker faces probation and aentence bearing OCL 30 at I a.m., allow- • hle'Allplllle JO dl,y1 lo wltlch to -lllllnle lit ~. _ _._ -11aey-whldt11111 ''!>•,_ Wllo -Uta a cr1ma 11 be -at thal tmie. . _..gy ID.")-~''"'""' If DOlblat .... _at the -Gt the WNIUlll', mllJ .... lllllliDC 11'11. beVlai, Jlld$0 llaaald' l:rooui>ant II 1'1qlcw aaD17, qutte likely to impose the mulmum HBut we're not talting about •that kind' eentence qt five yearr to lite on the se-of crime," he added, pruumably speak· Cond degree murder conviction. Jng lD the umtext of minor infractions !tin. tuaot:A811 been declared terious-ouch ._ lhoplllllog ...i «her chronic l,y .OO'cbotlc following 1harply confllctlng acl5. . . testimony from psyclUatric evaluations · • Augustine argued the caSe for Mrs. done durtnc the three months llhe has re-Tucker's inwllty plea be!ore lbe court, bl' Qf''!iiial~ ~ •• ~Noele --, • i!Mdlng line ../r.i.i..,. and 11*. ._,,~ W.)J. · 1111r.:.i'zll!!lfM•!fOMdabo1 '"!!i:'r:.1:'1e11 tl~~. ~ w'll ll~ilboetheleol· ; w1to ~lff:lliO ~ll!l"l1er "Mn. Tucktr just~ lo feel ·llhe !liollflaliil!!Oi!~ui'l"th\l·k, ol hll~·, """'' . , , ·~e had to deleod bmeU." • ~nt lo be !"!""1 not iptUty \i Ume ~n· . lie ,.., alieijf le , • The test of bo~. ii lbe -_bllity lo kaow ~~~17• tllat 'he be-una~le fo T1je · :tncrllr!Jl a~·~ oon--IJlll underslaili! -ihii quality .and aim~.ttUier Ot,~ t~ Conct~ta; · victioU ~ tJlh ~~"}~~ever,. nature of one's act -and understo.nd - · ·.,-~ p!!IUre'and qiialltyof Jils.act..:1 ' ~~ w,;.wa.r~·lll<ipible ,!hat H lo a wroogful vlolotlon of anotli<r's '-Tbe' di!!.....,. betweeo -ria~.;q,. or · '.' .. ,:u.. oon~~to an ~ Auglllllne .aqpfid!: ' - Wftml. · , ,.; adtQUI aep-MC ~··--.. ?~ Judge Crookshank decided that lnif.he: I AUSUSW>• ~'.ltll argument .on"l1o . ~ ~lbt. llel' lo .... of Tile People -Irene Tucker, prior ca.seo, the·~p1e1 ,.._ Wollf,·and ., . .-.. ~om tbe lbe deleadant uoclerstocla. : · .. , ~ ·.fr ,,. ... !.;""'1~ __________ _:_ ______ --"---""'''--,--..-~ ........ ~·~.•t·~;r * * * . ;x .. 'I\'.-,,., x,,. ... Apollo <Xew Set to Go On Friday CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Tile Apollo 1 astronauts and their new moonshlp to- day were pronounced ready to go Friday in an 11.cfay, 1631)rbit shakedown run. Weather, however, remained a question mark. Rocket chlel Wernher von Braun said at an afternoon new11 briefing that he found the three astronauts "in a blgbly confident frame and e'ager to go." Weather, however, could interfere with the acbeduled 8 a.m. l1ST launch of Apollo's Saturn lB rocket, be said; ' Von Braun said forecasters Predicted some rain showers in u.i.moiDJ.dg. He uld high windl assoclalell with them might force the astronallts to leave their lhlp during the final ltOUn of !he countdown. nus could resu1t in a 24-houf launch po!tponement. The pilots attended a final •review of their ml5slon with top project.offlcllll at midday today and wer.e ·~ld_ that au aspects of the countdown were "go." "Everythirig 11 right On 'the .money," Von Braun said. . _ . ; DAILY l'ILOT $llff Pllfte Baeklng Lions All the Wa,, Command pilot Wal(er Scblrra, 'on the verge of hls third and flDal voya1e into apace, was so cool he · spent Wednesday dove-bwiting on a private preserve eo miles from the spaceport. . 'Thf•. tel!lll al Westminster l!lgh School yell queen& will be whipping up enthuslaam !or lllelr high fly, Ing footballers Friday when Lions club with Hunts ington ~&ell Oller&. Girls are <l>ottorn ffYW, from. . J~) Kathy Woesner, Carolyn Kilpatrlcl:,, (middle row, from left) Jenise Jsaacs, Cathy Albert, Candy Simms, Cindy Harris, (rop row, from left) Gloria Martinez and Marin Theodoslon. G·ame is set for 8 p.m. at Huntington's Cap Sbeue Field. Schlrra went. with . a ' party of ·~ persons, a troop ·mo~t wblch evidenUy \llUIOl'V<d the · dov.a, for. only about adozenwl:re baaed-none by the v ll F 0 R a~~~ana~ a ey iremen escue quarters.al Ute '1'8Ce C<nW, Por!ni O'f.er . details of~ l~ fllgl>L • . . ~~:r-:~~b;~~~llit,ow'· ·ning Girl in· Pool the two .. . '~ ~~ ' .... ,..... ..i.;;; ." • '" ". • . ~ .~ bu been Up -• toai:J~tectnt!7('. _, ·t.~ .wt~ ·~-j,~, ·i-4. that be prollii'blJ wo<tfd • al!« tbe Fountain Valley firemen were credl~ lion. voyaae of Apoll6 7 .. • ed with saving the life Wednesday of a Diving fully clothed into the water, En· Coaches N~eded For Volleyball, Tennis Teams Coaches are needed to work with girls' volleyball and volley-teonls teams this fall in Hunttngt.on Beach. Girl• fn>m filth grade Into high achoo! are forming the teams now for league compeUtlon, and parenll or Interested in- dividua!.t are needed to work with the leaml. ' ' To-· with lllth IJlll sixth 1tada lirls in Pony Tall compeUtlon, s1an up Satur· day at 1 p.m. at Marina lil&h or Hun- tlllcfOO -High. Penons wanting to coach Young Mias lelllD&, for lirll In .. venth and <l&hth grades. lip up at t a.m. Saturday at Marina Hl&h or·S:ao p.rn. Monday at tht' City Gym, 16th Street and Pabn Avenue. near-drowned 31h,year-0ld girl who was gineer Verne Carlson pulled Joann John· pulled f(Otll the deep end of a backyard son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Miles Le· swimming pool. She bad apparently ped· · Roy John$on of 9312 .El Vista Drive, t died her tricycle Into the fey waters. Downey, to the surfac~ of the pool of The girl has remained in critical condi· Mr. and Mrs. Ra1ph Smith, 17019 Laurel St. Floating Meeting Policy Retained MeeUngs wilt continue to float fron1 icbool lo school In the HunU-ilea<h ,Union High School Olatrlct, trU!lee• have peclded. The aecond meeting of each month will be held at • place other than the diltrict boardroom at 1902 17th St. The meeUng on the AeCOnd Tuesday of each month will conUnue lo be hold at the boardroom. AU meetings are at 7:30 p.m. Mouth-to-mouth rt1uacltaUon waa ap· . piled by Fireman Bean Bacon before the ch1Jd was rushed in the Chief's car to Huntington Intercommunity HO!pital. At preu time pollce were sUll trying to piece ~ogeth" the facts surrounding lhe tragedy. The child and her parent! were visit- ing the Smith$ who are relatives. Th e tyke appt.reotly slipped unnoticed 'through an open gate into the pool area. It was sWI UnknOWn how long t h e chlld wu in tbe water. Her mother at~ tempted to rescue her but was unable to reach the child because of the water's depth. The l'eftUe tl;ne wu logged by the fire statlon. at 3;15 p.m.. Officer Kills ·Sell Which End's Up For New Park? As 1t HuntlJ1gton 'Beach doeln1t ·have enough to worry about with .the u~m.lng 16 rnlllJon bond prop(iia! lo bWld. lie cen- tral City Park, city recreation and j>arkl director threw in another poaslble headache. Opponents tO the bond issue might now be .able to accuse the department of not knowing which end ls up, . Recreation and P:arks; Director Norm Worthy displayed a styrofoa,m model of the proposed 350-acre park for recreation and parks commissioners Wednesday night, noting U may "pose a problem." · It seems the model. ls upside down, sort of. "North ia facing south," Worthy said laughingly. He explained that because o.f a large vacant space· that would show up at the top of the model ll north were north, planners decided to face the street let- tering "readable from the south." Standing at the base of the table model, one reada from the top down EJUs Avenue, Talbert Avenue, then Slater Avenue, whtch is reading from south io north. As Worthy pointed out •. when the model ls displayed to "show north up, It wW make all the reading material upside down." • ., .... ~. '1;•lW'· \o~ • j 1 · . n•"'·' -~,. ... ,.... Page J :1 ' • --71' lt . ~RS~!-~y~' CONVICTED · ••• tieaien with ·b4ndl; l.: ~ Ticlli IJlll · whirling 11Cramble ol ¥1'9. Tucker•and noizle. · ·· · .; · ; Ji} Mrs. Westpllal u tbO Tucker pups, Butch . P:"~~~ ... ~: IJlll Fluff, .danced ·~~ blrilog and ~ tbei 1Upptni t::' lbe · • imp.cc.1>1e whining. , Engllsh of a ooof, ~lady !jte. pro-"I thought-u I l1mged ~t her, "11ian1t liocuUon'• =pl ~~·~··with' Qod', the ltnlves only went ·lbroulb the her 1t.ory. . ."' ... ~. • .... ;t> clothes and Dicked her/' Mra. Tucker MrJi, Tucker, ~ ;#'lpuplold uld. . :tebliophrenlc;w)!l\ ··!t"i" ~ir)'. The larger blade, however, had sliced s81«1 she· waa &olnl tbe '"':with a &tween Mrs. Westphal's sevenUl and load of laundry l!heO . .true .ln:the back eJihlh rib, an aulopay showed, cutting a of the neck b)I some object. pulmonary artery lo the lung and nicking ult waa a hard bun .~. I said 'Oh,' her spine · and went foioward. l dropJ)ed the buket,'' .. 1 weni lnlo the bouae and it was then 1 ~ sa/d,', "! said lo ll\)'8'U : 'I burl very realized the ellDl!lllly of what had hap- "I heard nolaea after being hurt from pened • • ·" behind. I ran and got the soap -1n the "Mrs. Tucker • . • Mrs. Tuc;ker,1 ' container -and threw it at the fence. I Augustine interrupted. . heard running feet, a scuffling sound and ''.lt ~uld n~t ha~~ gone inward because cackling laughter "Mrs. Tucker testified. I d1dn t push 1t ln, Mrs. Tucker declared "Then I ran ~ound the fence to see on the stand, her voice rising and ber who it was -that was probably v_uy features sharpening. foollllh - I .should have 1ope inside the Enright arose, sterµ-faced. house," ahe added. . "Y0ur Honor," he said, "may the The two women collided while rounding record show that it occurred in the mid· the fence. die or the street." . Mrs. Tucker . sald Mrt. Westphal "Did !lhe acream?" asked Augustine smashed her with a ~arden hose and who argued Mrs. Westphal had been knocked her down, falti~g on top a~ the tabbed i lhe struggle between th .. two two women wresUed 1n what neither f_ k dn • k the Id be d th'd 1 IUIC yar s. new n wou a ea ue · "N 1 ·d 'Oh c~• t I ~ 1 "She looked horrible. Absolutely hor· 0: , sai , ......... -; or a 11ea1n rible _ the look on her face ,'' 11-frs. heard . ·Oh~ - I don t Imo".', Mrs. Tucker testified, "she kind of screamed ~ker tesillled before the silent au· .something at me. She looked clearly out dience . of her mind. ; ." "She was holdlrig me down with her bJ& body, with her knee in my cheat," .... Tucker said under oath, "I was Dea1Wlfup at 'least five or' 10 minutes. It was a long time I was being hurt, hurt, hurt." Mrs. Tucker, who is believed to have struck back wlth a rock ahe picked up, said she escaped and ran ·borne after Mrs. Westphal had yanked on her jaw, mangling her lower teeth. Big Creek Charge Stirs Up Wrath Of School Chief "MY teeth were hanglng out. I looked For many years Sothuem California awful ," said the defendant, menUonlng Edison co. has tak!n prominent le,ders she had glimpsed herself ln chrome on of the communltiea it serves to the Big her kitchen 1tove. Creek lnltallations of the company to "I was !hakirig like a leaf. CrYlng. I observe and learn about Edison .opera, tried to decide what to do. I called the tions .in the High Sierra Mountains. bank/' Mrs. Tucker .testwee. . 1 . .·The last :trlp. ,ftyldeMly, Jncludeif a "It was ilar4 l~ '11\lk, 1nit I loJG. the · me~bet of th~~~ )leach 'Uhion secretary to tell my huehand to come , mgli' Sciioa\ • · £( ·.. ( illld a member home lmmedJately," she aald under gath, of. the Board . ~ a'i a time '#hen but Tucker . W<l! away from the United a school was about to be named Calltornia Bank branch only blockt away. "Edison." Here, Enright declared ln summation, Tuesday night Trustee Joseph Rlbal came the turning point as Mrs. Tuckt";r's brought up the attendance at Big Creek tragic tendencies were stimulated by by "a member of tbe adminaltrat.lon .00 some unknown factor -maybe a word or a member of the board." tone. The board member, Ray Sclunitt·, .ad· "What were your thoughts concerning mitted he went ~ Big <:;reek and de!iJed Mrs. Westphal?" Augustine asked. that the trip had anything to do. With "I felt I had to defend 111yself," Mrs. naming of the dl!trict'1 fifth school Tucker said from the stand. Edison High School. "Did she enter your house?'' iThe "meIPber of the administration" "I don't know." was idenUfled in the Daily Pilot Wed· "Jf I had been thinking right, I would nesday aa. District Supt. Max Forney, but have caUed the police," Mrs. Tucker Dr. Fo111ey said today he did not attend said. the Big Creek alfalr. Gradually beginning to weep, the defen· "Or. Forney dJd not go, neither did dant related how she went tO the im· Scott Flanaaan or Dr. Ethan Fullmer maculate kitchen, Picked up a roast knife (otlier top admlnlstrators)." he said. and a paring knife and left the house, "Dr. Ribal did not name me. He dld not armed. use my name." "For some reason, she started scuffling Dr. Forney ' adnlitted lhlt the 0 ad" again," Mrs. Tucker said, "ahe kept kick-ministration me·mber" of the statement Ing at me, we were fighting 1n the atreet. by Dr. Ribal was actually Will Otto, I kept going around and around her. 1 director. of penonnel, who "took three had the knives in baiid." days of his vacation" to make the trip. A woman whlapered sharply ln the "He had nothing at all to do with nam· courtroom. ing this school Edison." said the district No one wu outl!de to aee the mad, superintendent. High School girls' Powder Pu.ft team are forming Saturday at 9 a.m. at Merinn High, and prospecllve coaches are aske1.. to meet with them_then. DAILY PILOT The new schedule is Oct. 22, Marina Ugh School Ubrery; Nov. 28, Westm.1nater Hl.gh School main cafeteria; on Mondi}' Dec. :18, Foutain Valley Hilh 3choo1. Room 301; Jin. :18, Wlntersbur( :ugh School Rootn1. ll and 15; Feb. 25, HunUngton Buch High School cafelerja; and March ~. McGaugb Intermediate School, Seal Beach. Purpo<e of Ille floalJng meelJng1 It lo :\llow residents all over the district an OP,- ·:i.rtunlty to at_!end a. meeting 1n the!T en locallly, trustees said. .. BONN (UPI) -Maj. Gen. Horst Wendt- land, 88, highest r~ military ofli- cer ln the West German intelDgence corps, committed suicide Tuesday, au- thoritaUve source. 1ald Wedneaday. 1be sourua 1ald Wendtland 1bot himself wl!Ue In h I 1 offiCe· in Munich following "depreaiv, Jllneu." .~inaf ::binin<J Clearance/ ':J./oor Samp/ej ORANGE COAST PUILl$HIKG COMPANY Robort N, Wood PA11d91lt •ncl P~flllltl'lff J.c1. R. c11r1.1 VlU Prn!denl •1111 G-• M.ll'lolttr Tho"'"' Kttwil EdllOI" • Thom11 A. Mu1ahi110 Mlll'lltl!ll Edlfor Albtrt W. lott1 Wil1tom R11d Anocl•l9 Hllftfl~oton 8eecll •1111or Clfy fdllw H••tlllff•• Ind Office 309 !th Strttt Mtili"f Addreui P.O. lox 190, 92~41 0---N...,.,. ... di ~ 7111 W•t .. lllOI IOll ..... 1r• CHI• "'9N; :uo Welt ''' Stmt Le9u,. ltlell: m '"'I" Avtnut Teen Center Bit ' 1 outh Needs Oivn .Place, Says Mom Mother of e HunUngton Beach teen- :.ger ts meeklng: a plaot for teens to ;:ether, declarlng that students "don't leel llke an wsUng teen center II their place." In a letter rud by her daughter, Sin· dy, Mrs. WIWam Brockmann uked Hun· Ungton Buch l\ecruUon IJlll Park com· missioners Wedne8day night to consider building a teen center exclusively for teen.agers. "ll the Huntington Beach Park& and Recreation Commiu1on will secure an odequate INilding for a teen center, we have a juke box, ping pong table, games and a wbole !lit of chapuonei rudy 1o go, 11 Sandy re1d rrom her mother's let· ler. 1'be \eelM.ger, a yell luder at Goldtrl Wut Junior' Collete. II one of elaht studenl5 ntmed Wedneadl}' nlghl lo ihe commllalon.'1 newly·formed "teen ad· vllDey board." Ber mother 11 a member of the Christ Preobylerian Church gr<>11p, which wllh Ute Methodlll Church, becked the atablllbment of a teen .,...ler In lhe !/l- ytlr .. ld bttlfdlng at Main SU..t and l ' Garfield A venue onct houi!ng HoUy Sdlar Co. offtca. '. '!'he teen center, which O!)ened In December · 1or ua by teens otj weekends, ahartd Ill hulldllil with the Community Action Council earller thll year, but thlt agency moved out. Now, a Community eou-tlng Center, part of the Com- munlly .Chell llencl'!i Is movin( into the back half of the bull-. Mrs. Brockmann aaTd lo her leller lhst "the leeJ>qen didn't feel like 11 WU their place" because pampblelo and notices from tbe welfare qeodes "were all over lhe wall.I." "It's not Jara:e enou&h. for llve bands dlher," the mother uld lodl}'. She Aid oho wrote the letter after h<r church pvup C011111lled With Jim currar, recreaUon s>rocram instructor at Goldeu WW. Colleae, who told them ulhe building II not adequate for a teen center." R~eatlon and Part commlslloners lccepled S.ndY'1 IOtler, not!nl ·ll WU Ille nm recommtndation from (httr youthf'Ul advilorl end referred It to Nnrm Worthy, rocreauon department director, for .,,. Uon. 20°/o TO 40°/o Opf • -LOOK FOR RED SALi TAGS - ij.J.GAl\l\ETf fURNflURE ei@lllloo..,._lM .. -. llfl W.no. II.VD. COST A MISA, CALIF. M..0111 Mi-0176 ' ---.... _..,,. __ -.. ---~. : : -----· _..._ __ : •/... . ·: ---. ., --r-,- • • . . ' "' -. . , ... .--, ..,. Lag~na Bea~h ·roillly's" Ooslnf EDITION ' N. Y. Stoeks vot g-r, NO. 2"'4, ;c SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THIJRSDAY, -0CTOB~R. 10, 1968 TEN CENTS ~ . County Approves Africa Farm Near Laguna By TOM BARLEY Of 11141 DllUr Pl"' lltft Ptam for consll'Uctlon of a $10 million. 500-acre African animal preserve on leas- ed Irvin< Company land in the IOUth Irvine area were approved WednwJay by ~ounty,_ planning cnmmissioners. Harry Shuatu, president of Lion t;oun· try Safari Inc., said development of the preserve will commence In about two months time. 'Ibe leased acreage is located south and east of the intersection et the San Diego Freeway and Laguna Canyon Road. Shuster and the plamien lallgled over the number of llgna to be located on the property before 15 condiUons drawn up by the ptanntng commission could be hammered out. But Shuster had to bow to the commissjon's insistence that only four sf&nl relating to the park could be posted adjacent to the freeway. Shuster hopes to have Lion Country Sslari completed in late 196\l. The finish· ed. preserve will incorporate an ~ican· style, threwtory Treetops Hotel, a motel, a restaurant and a commercial shopping center, On opening, the preserve will provide parking space for 3,150 can in off-street areas, with s,ooo • parking spola In the part and space earmarked foe a further 1,800 autos. Shuster said hL< anlmal preserve will be a cootinuing type of project, "very much Oil the lines of the Disneyland operation." His Orange County project will be modelled on what be says is a highly successful Lion Country Salarl In Florida where some 150 African animala -among them lioos. zebra, impala, springbok. wUdebeeste, giraffe, gnu, eland and ostriches-roam. 6fO acres that were cut from Everglades country. Visitors to the Orange Cow\ty park will drive through the preaerve and will be lreqliently warned nol to alight from their vebiclel. The aim of the enterprise, Shuster said, ls for vi.al.tors to watch aome $00 African anlmala enjoying a DJ.ode " 11'! and simulated terrain that wm be, as nearly aa possible, identical to their natural habitat. Game rangers armed with \ranqullh.er guns will keep constant watch on the safari trails, Shuster said. They will also be ·available to tow drivers in dl!ficulty from the area, h' added. Shuster owns, in addition to the Florida animal par~. preserves in Johannesburg, South Africa -bis home town -the Netlierlanlli llld In England, where lie controls the Marquis of Bath's "Lions of Longleat" attraction, Admls.slon charges have net.yet been determined, Shuster said, but he hopes to fix prices on the lines of fees set at his Florida park -$1.50 for adulta and $1.25 'for children. A ccnslderable acreage will be de.voted to young visltors, Shuster Wd. He plans to have a J>et Comer where smaller African animals, among the:m many which can be hancn.d with complete safe- ty by yO'.lllpten, will be on vle\f. . . . Future plw, he said, may iDclude con- Btructlon of a replica of an African viDJge with pmenlaUon of authentic tribal rituals and dances. Shuster e.xpecll to ]?.ave more than 300 persons· on his Orallge County pay,\,U when m< aalarl project ls ~mpletea.~ . Tbngue-in-cheek p I a n n .1 n g com- missiOneni, discussing the type of sign that Shuster hopes to erect, indicated they already knew the wording of one sign that was placed in the Florida park: "No· Trespassing. Private ·Property. Violators WW Be EATEN" eac ar e Canyon Annex Disputoo "T feel that ft Is morallJ wrong to forte people ihpt worked and slaved all t1ieir lives to come bito the city fust to aatls- fy a bus~essman who will ~bably be In . ths" gone B1X mon . This was a statement of Mrs. Robert Kellogg Sr., who opposes armexation of her property at 21572 Laguna Canyon Road to the city. On Ute other side of the coin, business- man Richard Massen, who favors t b e annexation, asked city planners: "Whoever is elected president, a! e you forcing him in or are you electmg him?" He referred to the fact that the owner- ship of 79 percent of the property (by u- sessed valuation) being considered for annexation favors joining the city. The property in question is about 400 feet along the westerly side of Laguna Canyon Road and contiguous to the north city boundary. FIGHr ANNEX After the three plaMers present recom- mended the annexation, Mrs. Kellogg aak4 ed how she could fight the annexaUon. She was told the matter will go to the ~ity council and also would require ap- proval of the County Local Agency For4 mation Commission. Mrs. Kellogg said their property has all the services in the county that she and her husband want and said lax· es would go sky high if they joined the city. Mrs. Kellogg, a postal employe, s a 1 d her husband ls on a pension after fight- inl{ two wars and said she hopes to retire this year. She said they might lose t be prooerty it taxes increase. Massen has received approval of the County Planning Commission for a 5,000 souare foot structure to be a storage fa. cility of the P~ Office. An existing building Is to be converted for we by a glass finn. Massen s&id he wants to join the city (See ANNEX, Page ZJ Festival Looks At Facility Plans Festival of Arts directors will be loot- ing at bids en their 230-seat puppet theater and multi-purpose building Nov. 12. The board presumably then woold decide if it is going ahead with the theater and, if so, would select a bidder. Archftect Don Williamson is also to com- pile cost estimates on cost of stating, carpeting and stage llghtlng equlpmenl , Directors Tuesday au t b or I 1 e d Williamson to ask for bids. He rticom- mended six contracton which they ap- proved. They are Beach Construction Co., Schoenleber Construction Co., CMrlea Benton Constructke CO., Landreth ConslnJctlon Co., Nat. Gre<n and Aw ConstrucUaa Co. Aw curtt:ntly II building t1ie playhluae acijacent to the FesUYal .,,,.00... ' a ers Bows to Rermtf City Hears LBJ Won't Pick Budget N _ Ch• f J 1. . Prop.osals ew . 1e us. 1°~ :..:.-~-"· .. _ '· . . . . . ,, ·~·, '~ ·-·:---~~ifilb:~? ;:-' · 't: ·,:.:.,. 1:,!:"~-~J\.l" "'?'; 'i. . ·• DAl&.Y' PILo,.•...,, ..- 4UDft ii'OHii~~Sf~ENA(TY FOLLOWING CONVICTION ,. ':'i~· .. "· f • • .... -/4J.' AS16,Un":f1'Jft~~ pUZzte ·~ WASHINGTON (UPI) _ President Senate leaders ·wl-w.et'were unable ed completion, It appeared that acqulsi· Mra. lrenli Tucbr Aw•ita Od. 30 Decision Johnson, rebuffed . by th'-Senate's re-t b -·• fill·~·-·· ·•-t '"· -1-~ tion of a Main Beach Park would be o rCOA a uwi1.c..i-q..,... 1.1• nuuw1.11-relatively painless to the ,.,.,..11.,er for at ., jectlon ()f Abe Fortas u chief justice, to-., of F --· to th •: • l.lnM.+ ...... t'..., day asked Earl Warren to stay on as .... on °•wui e nai.i.on 8 ~· least five ·years. head of the Supreme Court "until emo-judicial post and !he associate justice, a This was the assessment of City Man- tionallsm subsides, reason and fairness friend of Johnson, asked the President to ager James D. Wheatorl who !aid today MrS.-Tucker Convicted prevail." The President said he would not withdraw bis name. Johnson complied. the city has lined up for purchase all submit a new nomination. In a statement issued by the White but one of the properties in the 1,000 feet Warren, appointed to the high court by House, Johnson said: of beach frontage. former President Dwight D. Eisenhower "In ordinary times I would feel it my Only the AUantic Richfield gas staUon 15 years ago, was at his familiar 'spot on duty now to send another name to the is missing from the city's Main Beach the bench when the court opened its new Senate for this high office. I shall not do package, Wheaton said. Of 2nd Degree Murder term last Monday, indicating he would so. These are not ordinary times, we are. The city manager alJo had the budget remain. t h re a t e n e d by an emotionalism, picture nearly in hand. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL . Warren had no immediate comment partisanship, and prejudice that compel The city will pay $2,720,500 for the but he is expected to go along with the w to use great care U we are to avojd in-property that stretches from the Hotel Of rM 0.lty Plltt Sl•ff Carving knlfe klller Irene M. Tucker was convicted ol second degree murder Wednesday, . after C<>ld fury like an iceberg -90 percent hidden beneath a calm surface during trial -blazed out 8:_S she testified. President's ·wisbe&. jury to our constitutional system. Laguna to the Boys' Club. The bond issue Lake, Park, Convention Center in Niguel Plans Plam for a 53-acre lake, a county re- gional park and a hotel-convention center are included in the third revised Laguna Deadline Nears For Haig Ducats Saturday is the last day area golfers can buy season tickets for the Haig Na- tional Open golf tournament at Mesa Verde Country Club Oct. 2M7. The $15 and $10 tickets are obtainable al any county golf course. • General admission tickets will be on sale throughout the tourney. But host pro Ron Se if points oot that the $15 ticket npresents a $1S savings if a spectator at- tends all sessiODI of the e.venl Festi.,al Plans Niguel general plan which would boost the community's ulUmate population to 80,148. The revision was approved by the Board of Supervisors Wednesday. The updated plans also indicated con· ventional construction of 14 elementary schools, four junior high schools and one high school. A breakdown shows 3,900 acres for sin- gle family homes, 450 for industry, 974 for open space and 371 for commercial development. The overall Laguna Niguel development covers 7,710 acres. The general p I an was developed by Victor Gruen Associa- tes. Stoek Jlfarkets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market declined in heavy trading late this af. ternooo. (See quotaUons, Pagea 18-19). for the ;.urchase will be $3,135,000. The difference repre.sents acquisition costs in terms of appraisal fees, legal (See MAIN BEACH, Pap ll Jurors Picked For Festival Four jurors and two alternates have been selected to judge art for the Festival of Arla In 1969. 'Ibe sll, e.Jected by artists, represent both the modern and traditional view· points. They are : , Modem -Jack Dudley and George Beau Mann with Neal Butcher an alternate. TradiUonal -Dixl Hall and William A. Mo.tta with Phillp Freeman an alternate. The Festival board now will select three jurora who, with the four chosen by artists, will form a panel of seven. That panel will judge the work of new and resubmitting artists In the spring and will judge the. work of exhibJUng artilta on the grounds during the 1969 show. Festival spotestrien nld of about 25(1 artista eligible to vote, ~ballots were returned. Those eligible ·lncludOd ex- hlbiton and appllcsnls to t In 1961. The defendant was momentarily im- passive &fter the verdlc;t, then rapidly deteriorated into hysterical claims of unbearable jail torture as a bailiff ordered the courtroom cleared. "Why did he have to do that1" Mrs. Tucker murmured after Judge Ronald Ctookshank, hearing the case wlthou} a jury In Depattmenl a, Orange County Superior· Court, set Oct 30 at 9 a.m. as her sentence date. "Why can't be tell me now?" she wail· ed., her voice rtslng uncoOtrollably, "why d1> I have to keep being tortured?" Augustine -anded that a court aide get the defendaJit's husband, Costa Mesa City Cooncllman George A. Tucker, and tbe grim-laced Civic leader moved qulck· ly to hls weeping wile'• side. Judge Crookshank announ<;;ed his ver4 diet at S:43 p.m., taking less time than he might to order lunch, after Deputy Dlstricl Attorney Jamea G. Enright con· eluded the pros~tion's. ar&uments. Mrs. Tucker, 38, of 1642 Mlnorca Drive, stabbed her next-door neighbor, Mrs. Reagan Slated To Dedicate . College Tuesday Unauthorized Talk Chided Ray Johnson called it the ooe voice policy. Clarence Young called It 1 gag rule. Bill Martin calls it voluntary cooperltim for cooUnu!ty, clarity, l)'!ltu and compo.siUon. Whatevu the name, It boiled down a1 'l'llesday's Festival of Arla board meeting · to an old bugaboo: unauthorlled com· menl 11f directon are going to give com- me!lla to the pr.,., T think they should be cleared through the puhlldty c:om- mitlff, '' said ~ new Festival board president. Martin nld he hoped to have open I l' mettinp but Mid this would not be the caae in some controversial situations. Director ·Paul Griem suggested that any communicailons in the name of the FesUval should be cleared through · publicist Sally Reeve. . The policy, suggested by Mn. Reeve's predecessor Ray JohMon wu called the one voice policy aod was adopted months ago. Clarence Young, fonner director, said at the Ume that It sounded like a gsg rule. · Don WUllamaon, Papan! of the Muten prod0$er..ilrector, said that board memben ind stall lll'e ofltn aaked apeclllc questiona by the press, ' Gov. Ronald Reagao wtll dedlC'lte Sad- diehack College Tuesday aneri-dur- Martln wggeated clearing with Mn. Ing a week.Jong aeries of special· .. enta. Reeve. II ml&bt take a change ol habi~ Reqao Is to sp;.at at I p.m. during a he said, but .,ould bring conUnulty. Mn. publlc open-a!T ceremony In front of ihe Reeve, on the other hand, IUggatecl ft la -;:~;:.. ~=~ aomeUmea better for the prea to lalJt oetop Jn Sf daya ls In Mlaloo Vltjo. Jusl directly to the official In char,. ol a -ol the San Dte10 l"reewa1,-11 II ec- funcUon. . -bl• rr.,. the Crown Valloy Parkway Martin said "' WU trylq IA a..W ... Offoramp. ' ' unfortunata atmoaphere and dllference of • Other events will Include a l nolball o~ln!ona, nOt trying to be a.m.,or. · · game· ag:aJMt lhO llodlanda froeh Ocl. 11 .lllroctor Verner Beck aald -U•m . ' at I p.m. It will be at M!aalon vt.Jo High everyone on lhe board lalfw what l!hQQld Schoo!. • ,. , ~ put out. Marun,s,ld, "theY•hfren't lj. An -bouoe and J1Ub11c loon of. the ll)e past." S«k nkl, "1, k\10.W: in Ila~ campua will he held Oct. JO rtom 1 to 4 Jw1 aome leaks 1n. here." 1 p.m. • - Harriett weStphat.: sa, ·of 1648 Mlnorca Drive., last June 28 to climax a seriea of violent acta against others: She pleaded innocent and innocent by reason of insanity, with four psychiatrists who testified. splitting 2 to 2 on the issue other mental state. "There's very, very little dispute cf "facts .. in ' this ·case," said Judge Crookshank, a veteran of years on~the . mental health calendar, hearing cases in- volv}rlg insanity and mental disorder ple~.. · ' "The ~e is: What was going C>n in 'Mrs. Tuc.ker's mind," be continued. · "As to the latter · issue, psychialrists don't agree," the judge said, adding that . he.-fl~tly rejects findipgs by Dr. Sigmund Kosewick ·and Dr. Phillip Kramer, who , testifi~ Mtos. Tucker ii sane. "She's psychoUC," he laid. "'Ille mental illness iB, in my opinion, enough to reduce the crime from first to seccnd degree -and th.ail hi my judg· ment and finding," Judge Crookshank CO!lCluded. Mra. TUcker now faces a sta~ prison term of five· year1-to life -although W is to . recfive psycliiatric treatment u well -for killing a ·Woman she insisted I~ TUCKE!\, Page Z) Orange Coasc Weatller Th~ wealherman'• on a broken record, and Friday's forecast fol- lows the pattern -cloudy mom- 1"88 and sunny aflernoona with the merCury stuck lo a 70 rut INSIDE TODAY A1. pollsten look ot Ill< ·~ pr:oachi1'g pre1{dtntia1 race, tM11 cun't •tem to ogre• on 0 winntr. Each po.U't P1'lfWtT itl'l'IU to de· ~ oin who'• 41kfng the qua4 tfOnl. Ste P00t 5: ' . C1lfl"'ll f Mftl9t ' '6 C,..,._..._ t-WI NI.... '""'1 M ~IO 1, On"" CM11ty 11 c~ . '' "'" u ! 0... ~--ti S'l'Mt ,..,... 11 . ··= ,... = . = ...... lt~ l • ., • ._... lf . ...... .......... •1• Plllt~ 1•1t T1~-11 •n c.• '' ,_..,., 1• , Ntf'ttfffllt 14 w..,_ • , ·Mill t....-n 11 WW'w.... M ·-• ='""" ~ """''"' 1t ...... .. ; ' \ • • 4 5 0 0 • 0 • I 0 5 0 0 0 0 5 5 0 5 0 5 0 • 0 ---· --. . • . ' . . . . . • • --. = 4 = ... I II • a a a -·----- • 0 . I DAll.V i'll."1' -· -10.191! Tue~er A-(orney on Next · Move dlvldln1 lllle betften aett<lelenae and \n..tng bu! ~ ;...unp whldi l111hmd ndoetlall w .. on Ille calmler ...., .. ----1:111 --"'1 1'1111 AICU!lb ~ .• -bll dlmt'a oooYlclloo WedDeod&;J In •• L;PJule Oollml7 i!operlar COll't. \.--4 "I never pursue a eoune ot action or ·5-aufllcleot rdleetlon and ~ of evidence, lhe law and the • 1• aid Augustlne, a family frteod ''"' Nr. and 1111. ~ Tucker. .. ~~ MrL 'l'\tcker tace:1 probatJon and 1tntence hevtng Oct. JO at I a.m., allow- .,Joa ~ Ill dl;Ja In which to ..,,,. lldor new mollonl -111111-which may bt !Dido al that Ume. FleM P .. e I MAIN BEACH 0 • ~ to the llOl>jltO(lt corporation handli!ll the leue-purchaae and bond -It alao locludes a one-tear reserve of the D)Uimum annual p11menl. PAYMENT $115.IM -, -aald tbla payment wU1 bt 121$,000 1DDUlily for Interest and prl& clpal on the bonds. However, the first two years the city will pay interest on only, '170,000. Of this amount, Wbeal<>o aald, the city will prol>o ably cover $115,000 with bed tu and Festival <i Aris recelpll. The remaining "56,000 would p-ohlbly be llW'I)' covered by city receipts from renli!ll the bualneal propertl.. II bu acquired. Wbeal<>o said tbJa part Is IOIDeWbat spec:ulaUve )'t! unW be bu all the -In hand. Standord OU, for lnlluce, '""1id pay Laguna Beoch a minimum of fl,lllO a year f(lt lease of the llat!Clo U Is lldl· Ing. This Is on the bull of two cents per gallon of gu 10ld and a '7,200 annual minimum. DEFl!ll WORlt The city plan! to defer development of the park for at leut five years and ac1 .. landlord durln.< thol period. After two yean, ufd Wheaton, lt ap- pears that seven or eight cents addlljonal m. the tu rate would be all that the city would bava to levy for the beaeb acqulJlllon. After five yean the matter ls some-lhlnl <i a question mark. It would d .. pend on how much useued valuaUon bu Increased aod Oii the other city I& come, such u growth in bed taz reven- nue and revenue from the Festfval of Aris. It would alae d.,,...i. of coone, on just what de~ plans the city comes up with, how rm they are Jm. plemented and wbethtr a portion of the beaeb Is uslgned to eommerclal uae to help aupport the 1cqulsltlon C<IOI. • I ' ' Fti9.;,, P .. e I ANNEX ... for city le?Vlees IDd is willlng to pay the taxes. He aid the city can use the sales taJ:es for commerclal development of the property and would be able to control the signing. The area is part of an annexation that was defeated by residents of the a r e a last year although favored by the prop- erty owners. Commissioners Joseph Tomehak and Robert French voted 1n favor of recom- mending the annexaUon. Commisslorier Howard Holden oposed il -· 'Santa Claus Special' Vietnam Ship Carded WASHINGTON (UPI) -A vast carl(O ship dubbed the "19'111 Santa Claua Special" will leave Oakland Nov. 21 or n to carry Chrlatmu packages to Vietnam, the Pentagon announced today. "In order fOT Cbrlstmu packages to be Joaded aboard this ahip, fourth clua parcel.I must be mailed by Nov. I - preferably earlier -and must be labeled "Santa Claus Special" below the stampe, the announcement Wd. DA ILY PILOT QAANGE COAST PUllL1$HING COMPAN'I' Aobm N. We..l Pr.ldlnl oM Putlll"-' Jtck JI.. Curley VICI IJnlldlrit ..... 0.-ol #.tM"r Tlu1111•• K11¥n .... Tho1111t A. Murphln1 ,.,..,...."" 11•11or Ric hord P. Nill Paul Nl111r. L--..ct! Advertlll"9 C~ ~fl!Ot Dlrtttor ,__,_ 222 For•1t A"•· Mallt119 A,4ro111 P.O .... 666, •2~52 .,__ c. .. M-.: 1111 Wtft .. y ltrwt ......,.,, -...ct!: !711 Wiii ..... 9"1ilrva111 H~ htiol; ., .... S\f'Mt Ii lllllllil cbllllea Ill u. limo of h llllilll.~RonaldO.Okalllnkll -... b:apoll u.. ••' at!ilil' a 11 11t1 ,_. lo 1111 • .. • codi----·-Mn. 'nlcter bu been declaltd aerl'"11-Iy poycbotJe followln& lharply confi1ctJ"I lestim011y from t>-'Ychlattic e•aluaUona . done during the three month! lhe bu r&- maloed in custody. "Everyone who commill a crime 11 menWly W," Judge Crookahank otKerved Wedneoday, ohortly before finding Mn . Tucke!' gullly. ''IM we're not talking about 'that kind' of ...... ~ be lildld, ""l\llllllW, liltll· ilW la Ibo "'!'*t ol -ln!t•c'lloaa -· ........... ud---A•-...... llit -I• Mn. Tuct;er'I lrmldty plea before the """1t, but California's long-used McNaugbt.on Rule, a narrow definiUon BS11ailed bY. psyehlatrlsta, was applied nonetheleSI . The McNaughton Rule requirea that for a de!eodant to be found not guilty by reaJOn of insanity that be be unable to comprehend tither of these two concepts: -Th< naturo and quallly ol his act. -The dlllereoce between right and -A .. 1'1M .... 1111 •i -rt• lft --u. """* -olll, ..., '1111 ...... vert\111 e..t. 'lllo l'llople '"""' Woll! ln'IOlved a.,,.,, wl>o premeditated the u ·handle murder o( b1I own mother, refltctina for aome tlme on what he was •bout to do. The CIM ended In a second degree COftoo vicUon rather than first degree, however, because U)e boy wu mentally incapable Of reflecUnc on the comequencea to an ade<iuata ......... • Individual clro\mlslances me the key In The People ver1111 Best, which aaya the LAGUNA TEEN CORNER BY. TOM GORMAN WALKING DOWN FOREST Avenue the other day, Yours truly came across one of thole old LBllS grads who was wheez.ing hysterically and hiding behind a parking meter pr<parlng to grab me. Knowing be wu discovered by bis potenUal victim, he prematurtly stood up and boldly walked forword, Introducing himsell as the phantom of the class of '45. SUD coughing (the way phantoms of the c1aas of '46 coqh), he grabbed l)IY lchool boob. Ills cold ., .. looked blinkly Into mine. 0 Look, miater," I aald .. "H you want my boob, you can have them." But the old man had something else on hls mind. He was disturbed. He pulled hlJ shak· 1ng hands back, then spoke. His quaver· Ing vOlce revealed hls panic. "HEY, YOUNG,MAN/' he said. 11Wbat'1 happening at LBHS? First you Laguna Police Arrest Five On Narco Rap Three young men and two young women were arrested at a residence by Laguna Beach police Wednesday nlght on swplclon of marijuana possession. Police Lt. Frank Schopen ldenWled the l\l!pecta: u Karen Jean Betlen, 21; her sister, Kathleen Sue Beelen, 19; David Bruce Dekker, 20; Robert Frederick Roper, 19; all of 1140 Kellw Way; and John Baywatd Dunn, 22, ol 331 Third SL 8chopen said the·ure.sls shorUy before midnight were made at the Keller Way address after police went there because a neighbor complained of loud music. Officers became suspicious, Schopen aald, after the occupants of the hoW!e at- tempted to hide marijuana under the stairwell. ' The officer sald a search of the house turned up addJtional marijuana and dangerous drugs. He said a complaint wou1d be sought today alleging possession of marijuana by the five. Unemployment Drops SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Callfomla unemployment in September slumped to Its lowest level since December, 1959, while the number of workers holding jobs set a new record, the State Departments of Industrial RelaUons and Employment reported today. painted the school a Ught lbow or colora. Now you dare change the name Artists? My boy, that's been our name for years. What's this New Prestige up to, anyway"?" "WAIT A MINUTE," I told him. And I looked at the old man, still wheezing. Yeah, isn't that what Laguna needs now, a new emblem. One we aren't ashamed to display? We shook hands and went our own ways. "Although you may have been led to INSIDE TIP: The Youth Council is betleve that the name Arti&ts Js up for -planning a weekend trip, open to any review, that's not the cue. What's being teen. There will be a meeUng Sunday aC diacuJsed is the achool'a emblem. You Jam.le Barron's house. Her nwnber ls know, the sweet guy wiUt shoulder length 4~1832. ' hair gingerly holding his brush and palel· te." "Egad," he said. ''That was out of date when I was in school. It's embarassing even to display that emblem on my windshield. How about fearsome Artists, like our football team? Something like a modem Artist holding the palette like a shield, and the brush u a lance? Isn't that what Laguna needs now -a new emblem for the New Prestige?" MEANWHILE OOWN at the Kiwanis Club meeting Wednesday, attended by Key Clubbers from the high school, State Senator John G. Schmitz (R-Tustin) didn't draw any great cheers from the high school types when he came out favoring Proposition 9, the Watson Amendment. Doesn't do much for school finances, ck>es it, Senator? Sen. Schmitz S.upports Watson's Tax Initiative State Sen. John G. Schmitz (R-Tustin), Wednesday backed the controversial Watson InlUative in a Laguna Beach talk. "Machinegun Schmitz strikes again," quipped the legislator, predict Ing "another DAILY PILOT headline," In a speech to Kiwanis Club members and their high school Key Club, Schmitz also : -Said 1n answer to a reporter that he could not as a Republican support Wallace for president and that U he sup- ported Nixon, Nli:on might repudiate him. Schmitz is a member of the John Birch Society. -Labeled the legislature 's Proposition 1A "an attempt to buy off the voters" by offering temporary financial relief in hope! of defeating the Watson Amend· ment. -Condemned the educational system for breaking down the belief of young persons in absolute values. -Suggested the drive to register firearms ii a prelude to confiscation of lirearmJ and totalitarianism. -Declared that those who would hear raclst·felon Eldridge Cleaver speak should rent a hall or start a unlversity. Schmitz Aid the Watson inlUaUve to be decided by Callfornia voters is not a tenth as bad as opponents say and not as good u proponenta uy. The speaker noted that the State Constitutional amendment would phase out property taxation to support welfare and education. He did not mention the sharp curtail· ment of bo~ing capacity in political sub- divisions such as schools, water districts, cities and counties. Schmitz conceded that income ta:z: or sales tax might go up sharply to replace the lost revenue which he estlmatde would be about '5 billion within five years. Schmitz was asked by Robert Reeves, principal of Laguna Beach High School, about the amount or revenue that would be lost from large landholders which pay property tax. "Okay, the Irvine Ranch Is going ~' gain a lot," Schmitz conceded but said the legislature might recapture the funds by taxing large landowners for leasing property. Schmitz opposed gun registration but said in jolting that he rtally does not favor setting up machine gum with in· terlaclng crossfire on front lawns. ' Officer Kills Self BONN (UPI) -Maj. Gen. Horst Wendt· land, 56, highest ranking military offi. cer in the West German intelligence corps, commltted suicide Tuesday, au- thoritative sources said Wednesday. The sources said Wendtland shot himself while in h i s office in Munich following "depressive illness." • 1 ad' ......... 11 ...... -···-&bl rm& r::..... "In llor -of mind," A111'1'11no llld, II t lM "Because <i tho tremeDdous lmowledga "Mrs. Tuck,...jult happened to fool Ibo of Judge cr'Wsbank and Deputy Dlmict had to defend ..... U." Attorney Esllht. we had a eompact 'l1le test of both ls the ability to know trial,1 but nothlnc was neglected.'' -and Wlderstand -the quality and Augulllne aald. nature of one's act -and understand -Many boun were spent before the trial that 'it ii a wrongful violation of aoother'a opened, poring over evidence and rights, Aqgustine argued. establishing procedures to avoid a long, Judge Ct'oobhank decided that Jn lhe drawn-out session, he said. cut of Tbe People versus Irene Tucker, Jury trials -especially in a capital the def-.it .-ease such u Mrs. Tucker's -frequenl!Jr Despite losing out on Mn. Tucttr'• In· take several days just to secure a panel sanlt;y pies. AQ&Ullllne prw.,t the . ..,UUy of 12 penons to hear the cue. * ·*. * * * Frem Page I MRS. TUCK.ER CONVICTED ••. Wedne!C!a.Y Is not dead. Emjghl. bad asked Judge Clooklhank for a first degree murder pxivlcUop, which canies a sentence of life in prison, deacrlbing her as a vengeful, but raUdnl.J. woman who killed malicloualy. "Due to the. mental condiUon, which we have cOnceded all along, we are not ask· Ing the death penally," be said before Iha court. Triumphantly, Enright noted that Mrs. Tucker'•· at-t l m f! a-explosive testimony Wednesday afternoon almost exactly llUP' ported hla hypothetical theory of bow Mrs. Westphal was slain. No one questioned that two women fought bitterly in s o m e backyard con- frontation tr.i.ggered. b) a stimulus which died with the victim and is evldentiy buried in the killer's brain. The defense maintained the idea that Mrs. Westphal, a robust, 176-pound woman , was stabbed 1n self-defense by Mrs . Tucker, who drove a carving knife six inches into Ute vlcUm's ri~ht side. EnrJght charged that Mrs. Tucker stalked the dazed and bad.1y beaten Mrs. Westphal out into Mlnorca Drive in a vengeful fury at being disfigured -and fatally wounded her there. The only surprise disclosure from the defendant on the witness stand was that she went after her neighbor with not one, but two knives. Police never considered such a possibility. Describing events leading up to the slaying which stunned the quiet Mesa Verde area, Mrs. Tucker repeated her version of being senselessly attacke<I and beaten with hands, a garden hose and no:u.Ie. Reciting the incident -sometimes us- ing oddly turned phrases as a child might -then slipping into the impeccable English of a cool, cultured lady, the pro- secution's concept unfolded along with her story. Mrs. Tucker, diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic with little hope of recovery, sald she was going to the garage with a load of laundry when struck in the back of the neck by aome object: ''It was a bard hurt and I said 'Oh' and went forward. I dropped the basket,:' she said, "I 'said to myseU : 'I hurt very badly.' " U.S. Spl.ashers Ready for Soviets The Russians drew first blood - literally -In their undeclared war 3galnst American athletes in Me:l:Jco Cl· ty. The blood in the pool is expected to give U.S. water poloisL! a transfusion for the real thing when the Olympic Games begin. Meanwhile, Orang11 Coast College's hammer-throwing history professor, is impressed by the competition and Laguna Beach's Bill Toomey Ls cooling it, waiUng "for the real Games before be makes any real effort in the decathlon. That's how it ls in Mexico City today, according to DAILY PILOT Sports Editor GleM White's e:z:cluslve dispatches. ' "t heard nolles alter being hurt from behind. I ran and got the soap -1n the container -and threw it at the fence. I bean! running feet, a scuffling sound aod cackling laughter," Mrs. Tucker tesUfied. "Theo I ran around the fence to aee who it wu -that was probably very foolish -I should have gone inside the house," she added. The two women collided. while rounding the fence . Mrs. Tucker said Mrs. Westphal smashed her with a garden hose and knocked her down, falling on top u the two women wresUed in what neither knew then would be a death duel. "She looked horrible. Absolutely bor· rlble -the look on her face ," Mrs. Tucker testified, "she kind of screamed something at me. She looked clearly out of her mind ... " "She was holding me down with her big body, with her knee in my chest," Mrs. Tucker said under oath, "I was beaten up at least five or IO mlnute.s. It was a long time I was being hurt, hurt, hurt." Mrs. Tucker, who is believed to hive struck back with a rock she picked up, said she escaped and ran home after Mrs. Westphal had yanked on her jaw, mangling her lower teeth. "My teeth were hanging out. I looted awfu1," said the defendant, mentioning she had glimpsed herself in chrome on her kitchen stove. "I was shaking like a leaf. Crying. I tried to decide what to do. I called the bank," Mrs. Tucker testified. "It was hard to talk but I told the secretary to tell my husband to come home immediately," she said undetoath, but Tucker was away from the United California Bank branch only blocks away. Here, Enright declared in summaUon, came the turning point as Mrs. TUcker's tragic tendencies were stimulated by some unknown factor -maybe a word or tone. "What were your thoughts concerning Mrs. Westphal?" Augustine asked. "I felt I had to defend myself,'' Mn. Tucker said from the stand. "Did she enter your house?" "I don't know." "If I had been thinking rlgli~ I would have called the police," Mrs. Tucker said. Gradually beginning to weep, the defen- dant related how ahe went to the im~ maculate .kitchen, picked up a roast knife and a paring knife and left the bouse, armed. "For some reason, she started sculOing again," Mra. Tucker said, "she kept kick· Ing at me, we were fighting in the meet. I kept going around and around her. I bad the knives ln hand." A woman whispered sharply in the courtroom. No one was outside to see the mad, whirling scramble of Mrs. TUcker and Mrs. Westphal aa the Tucker pups, Butch and Fluff, danced about, barking and whining. "I thought-as I lunged at her, 1Tha.nt God', the. knives only went tbrougb the clothes and nlcked her," Mn:. Tucker said. The larger blade, however, bad 1Uced between Mrs. Westphal'• seventh and eighth rib, an autopsy showed, cuttfna: a pulmonary artery in the lung and Dickins her spine. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil :J.ina/ Clearance/ Figaro Closes Opera Season Perfonnances et a P-111· Friday and Saturday ID Leguna'1 lrvlne Bowl of ''The Marrtaie of Figaro" will wind up 19ea I.yrlc Opmo ae&IOll. At rehearsal Count Almavlva played by Marvin Klebe (rear) dis- covm hil hiding page, Cherubino, played by Andree Jord8!'1 In chair. At right are Karen Annstrone as the maid and Bruce rernell as Figaro. At left is stBge director Bll!.s Hebert. · I I '])ining Room .'[--; -LOOK FOR RED SALE TAGS - FMJHSW 141WOI DMellll•llll •ml .............. ._ • ----------- • 2111 Hot.aoll II.Vil. OOCTA MlSA, c.i.l.lf. -71 MM276 I 11-day l,oarraey I Cwaver .Crew for Apollo Returns Ready to Launch To Form CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Tbe Apollo 7 utronautl and 1t.belr new moonsbip to- dll)' w"" pl'OllOWlOed rea<ly to go Fric!8Y, in an llilay, lU<>r\lit thakedown nm. Weather, however, remained a question mark. Rocket chief Wernher von Braun said at an afternoon news briefing that be found the three astronauts "in a bigblY, confident frame and eager to go." Weather, however, could interfere willi the acheduled a a.m. PST launch rl Apollo's Saturn m rocket, be said. Von Braun said forecast.en: predicted some rain showers in the morning. He &aid hig)I wind! associated with them might force the astronauts to leave their ahip during the final hours of the countdown. This could result in a 2i-bour launch postponement. The pilots attended a final review of their mission with top project officials at midday today and were told that all aspects of the countdown were "go." "Everything is right on the money," Von Braun said. Command pilot Walter Schirra, on the verge of his third and final voyage into space, was so cool he spent Wednesday dove-hunting on a private preserve 60 miles from the spaceport. Schirra went with a party of 30 persons, a troop movement which evidently UMerved the doves, for only about a dozen were bagged -none by the astronaut. HJs crewmen, Donn Eisele and Walter Cunningham, stayed in their luxurious c:uarters at the space center, poring over details of the planned 163-0rblt flight Neither Cunningham nor Eisele has been into space before. Schirra, one of the two original astronauLs still active, has been up twice. He announced recently that he probably would retire after the voyage of Apollo 7. U"IT...,..... LOOKING AHEAD -While Apollo 7 astronauts prepare for blast-off .F'riday, Apollo 8 cair sule already aboard this giant Saturn S rocket is being prepar~ ed for December orbital flight around moon. Nixon Declares Moscow Holds Key to War's End MOLINE, Ill. (UPI) -ruchard M. Nil:- on believes Moscow holds the key to suc- cessful negotiations to end the Vielnam War. According to sources close to the Republican pr'esidential candidate, a series of diplomatic moves involving the Soviets would play an important part in Nixon's efforts to end the war if he is elected. Nixon has been reticent about what he would do spec ifically to "bring the war to an honorable conclusion" as he has repeatedly promised in his campaign speeches. But be has strongly hinted be would increase military pressure in Viet- nam to force Hanoi into meaningful talks. Coupled with this would be a concerted effort to bring Mosc'ow into the con- versations in the role of a peacemaker. Ta accomplish this, he would use the whole spectrum of diplomatic weapons, Thailand Fights U.S. Bomb Halt UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - Thailand declared today that a one-sided halt to the bombing of North Vietnam will only encourage the Cominunists to make new demands that, if accepted, would amount to a surrender of South Vietnam. In a speech to the US-nation Genera] Assembly, Thanat Khoman, the foreign minister of Thailand, asserted the coun- tries of Southeast Asia want no attempt by the United Nations to aid in the delivery of free nations to totalitarian regimes. , Thailand iJ an ally of the United States in the Vietnam war. the sources said, laking advantage o! the Soviets feud with Red China, it8 desire for trade with the West and its vulnerability in some areas of Europe and the Middle East. Nixon has confined his discussion of the war so far in the campaign to criticism of the Democrats for "dJsslpating ttte greatest military power on earth" by gradually escalating the war, and for failing to mobilize South Vietnam in its own defense. The reason he has been vague about what be would do in Vietnam, he says, is because he doesn 't want to compromise tile negotiations in Paris by making Hanoi think it could get a better deal from him than from the current ad- ministration. But he also is very much aware of the political fallout derived from laking Vietnam OW of the campaign as a positive issue and~n~ntrating the discussion on the mistakes of the past. The GOP campaign moved back into Illinois today, one of the key states now the targets for Nixon's main efforts. He lost it -some say it was stolen -by 9,000 votes in 1960. He criticized the Democrats on his ar- rival in Moline for condoning a prison system in which "six out of every 10 men discharged ... return wlthin five years." This "institution of lower learning" must be remedied, he said. "The federal governmen! should take the lead by reforming the federal penitentiaries, and providing separate facilities for treating the violent, aggressive or disturbed of- fenders. "The crime rate in the United Slates, whirh has been increasing 10 times faster years in prison f a t killing an Oakland lower if convicted felons were given the training. to become useful members of society." * From -s.rvteeo Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver, who aurpriled critics with a "scholarly" lec- ture on racism at UC Berkeley, resumed his obscene attacks on them Wednesday at San Francisco State College. Wliile blistering "all the Plia that make UP the power structure" Cleaver led IWdenll In singing chorsueo of four-letter obscenities mentioning Gov. Ronald Reagan. . During his talk, Cleaver siqied out one man --not participating to the in-termittent applause. "You, pig, lllancllng there in the bu.sinesa suit aod crewcut," the Black Panther leader asked, "Wby aren't you clapPing?" Cleaver said this wu the kind of person who would go against the wall when the shooting starts. He called for freedom for Huey Newton, recently sentenced to two to 10 t h an population, would be a good deal policeman, arur said It would be done with guns if necessary. Cleaver said there were 30 million black people in the United Slates who woold fight. Looking over the crowd or 2,000, be added : "And from all the beards and long hair I see here, I think we'll get a few divisions from the white com~ munity to help us." Meanwhile. Gov. Reagan is telling pro- test.ors of Eldridge C I e a v e r ' s a~ pearances at University of California to write the school's regents. The governor sent out a farm Jetter Wednesday replying to what his olfice said were more than 12,000 letters with 20,000 signatures. The letters -all but 200 -protested Cleaver's being allowed to lecture to a UC course. Cleaver began hls lecture series at Berkeley Tuesday, outlining the roots of racism in a 90-minute lecture completely devoid of obscenities. It was received as "scholarly" and "boring." Students at Berkeley Wednesday night voted down proposals that militant action be taken against the Board ol Regents' limitations on the CQ.urse on racism. About 700 student! attending a Strategy meeting voted instead to ask the Berkeley professors to continue their fight to allow credit for the experimental course featuring Black Panther Cleaver. The governor in his letter said that his tnnuence on the regents "consists of my one vote, my ability ta persuade and, to some degree appointment& that I am able to make to the board. ThWI far, I have had the opportunity to appoint directly only two members." Noting that regents have 16-year terms, be added, "it seems that the only way to ensure accountability under the present structure. of the Board ol Regents is th.at the people speak direcUy to them." With that, he included the names and address of all the regents in ttis Jetter. Car Hits, Kills 12-year-old Boy Twelve-year-old ruchard Cook of Hun- tington Beach was fatally injured Wednesday when be was struck by a car after be got off the school bus and ran across the street, police reported today. The coroner's office reported the bay 1968 County Traffic 1967 160 Death Toll 15' died at 9:35 p.m. at Huntington lntercom- munity H~ital from head iqjuries suf. fered in the accident which occurred aiJ hours earlier. Police said Richard of 8442 Alvarado Drive was hit on Magnolia Avenue south or Oceanwood Drivf! by a car driven by Mrs. Verene George, 5921 Donlyn Drive, Huntington Beach. Mrs. George Wa!I not cited. Marijuani: Injection Costs Youth Spleen DENVER (UPI) -Doctors at Denver General Hospital said Wednesday they had to temove the spleen of a It-year. old boy who injected marijuana Into a vein for "a quick high." The unidentified youth was undergo- ing treatment in the intemive care unit or the hospital. Humphrey Not Getting Aid He Needs NiXon Debate, McCarthy Help NEW YORK (UPI) -Bef0<e the presidential elecUona, Hubert • H • Humphrey wants and probably needs two bonuses: face-to-face debates w Ith Richard M. NiJon and an eodoraement from his -anged pal, Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy. Neither, at thl moment, are within his graap but Humphrey, the efmlal O!>' timi.st. refueea: to abandon bop e aomething will happen befon Nov. $. Wherever be eoea, Humphrey ketpl' pleading for televised debates with Nison -o«erlng to Piil' ail the COlll even thollg!I the Dmnocratlc colfn an emp- ty. And he patiently walll !er McCarthy, hia Jool-llme friend and old political al17, to jOln lwld> qotn. HIDDphrey clalms a McCarthy "" dortement really wcukl not have that mocb of an Jmpaol.,t hfi campalan bot at tba amo time he wlllftllly loob fer the mPtol Ibo Utal= of tba ... u"f proleltol'l .and d• 1 )'Ollth. M. for the debates, Humphrey cbaDengea Nixon wherever he goes. He dlres the GOP candidate in placea like Erie and Wilke.Barre, Scranton and UUca, Watliingtoo and -New York . But be candidly concedeo, t h • t r.gardl.,. what Congreaa doea, the chancel of I naUooally.U.ievited face-to- face coofrootafton are small. Asked WedneodlJ whether be thooght N aon wOllld debate him u Congreaa clean tbe way, Humphrey replied, "No, I doo't tlpect be WOllid WI! ... he feels be fa belni cauitit up on." HIDllphrey lcbedw.a a typically buay day today in New Yoi\: City inclndlnc a rally,' two motorclldea, and a apeech to the apparel industrtes eommlllee. IM tho pol>& ....,ta cloaked prlvai. meefJQ(I deolgned to raiae money for the lUt four weetstof the campiJp -~uh the vice president badly needa. llllln@ey llew inlo,l!l:w York W- doy afternooo, heWilOd b1 tho tumool , ' in Boston of hundred& of tollege students -former backers of McCarthy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and New York Gov. Nelaon Rockefeller -w h o eo- thw.Jastically pJedied 1 new allegiance. U Humphrey's spirill were boosted In Boston, they must have been dampened in New Yort City. The anUwar demoMtratm, absent in great number for more than a weet, were around, but police and their horaea kept them out of the vice-p-ealdent.'s light. Nar did Humphrey'• apeech to a liberal party dinner Wedneoday nilbt arouH any great ov1UOQI. It magnlfleci llfcCarthy'1 rol\Jaal to ..,. done Hmnphnoy and, ..,.. before he reached-New York City, llllmphrey told reporten "we'd Uke to ha\'e Gtne'a help. uHe'a aq old and good friend and I'm a UWe tad he doetn't fee.1 hil w•y clear to do it -• Bot that' a the woy the ball -11111 !bore'• alfll • kq .. ., lo ,.. .. ---------~' --- ' --Thtlnd«.J, October 10, 1968 DAILY Pilaf f Nine Suspects H eld 2 Girls Rape.d ·Tortured LONG BEACH (AP) -Nine yoong igalnat a child. adults, lncluding five Wt>men, were ar·. The victims, not Identified by pollce, throogb. .Monday D11!1t The attacu becan 'lllelday _...,. reated on variot11 sex charges after two were a U-yea.r-old from Bell and a t+ tho clrfa told-·. they ..... -and gagged, than ~ npod, teeoa1e 1lrla told police they were year-old from La Mirada. repeatedly raped, beaten and tortured for Racobs 1aid the girls told him they ran nearly 24 hours. away from their homes SatW"day and Sgt. Jim Racohl said the nine, Long while at the Nu-Pike, a Long Beach beaten, bUrned 11111 acalded. Tho &!!lo llld they ..... ,ed lo -... llad nude into the atroet but tllelr ..,_ Beach residents aged 19 to 25, were book· amusement park, two young men invited ed Wedneaday on suspicion of rape, ac-them to a party at an apartment, where went unnoticed and they ""'" ....,... back into·the apartmenL cessory to rape, assault and crimes the girls said they i.tayed, unharmed, • TODAY AT BUFFUMS' .:.FOUR tim:AT rems AT ONE WW PRICE ' 333.00 Now's tfle time ro sel~t the eoat of.your lft'e:ni!!1t Bll!rtiil!S'! lleieeie lotr °"\ tfle most wanted furs of the new fa ll season ••• each one a1u xceptl01H1l 'lllliit. A. Natural mink cape or stole in shades from pale l!Lat11Qi19111 "-All with double fur collars. B. Black dyed braadtaft prooessed liHtib 1n.tlfll!e4llali !lllllllirt1111t. e. Natural mink.gill, belted sp<irt •oat in 32" .s!Joller ~J D .. Natuial grey Persian lamb jackets w~h ceruleat1 ~ loM. Ask' about B~urns' pian with 36 months l!i pay, wlten YI* eane 11111 see Oil furs. fur S<ilon,L.,_ F~'""'o:Jslllillll.,..AMllP'~-. • U UJllS' • '• • DAILY PLOT The town of Ondarra, Spain, is looting for a street sweeper. An ad In today's edition of lhe oIDcial pro- vincial newspaper 8'1)'11 applicalila· must be decenUy Christian and politically above reproach. In ad- dition, they must take dictation in a 15--minute test, read from a modem book and solve two arithmebc p~ bl ems In 30 minutes. Finally, Ibey must give a demonstration before a jury of town officials of lhelr atreet sweeping ability. The job paya $144 a year. ' • Muriel Humphre11 ..,..,...,....,. took on Jane Mm· kie atld Lady 'Bird John.son in a bowl- ing match on the WhiU Howe lanes. "'Oh, 1ta11 up there," Mn. Hum- phrey said a1 her ball edged toioard the gutter. Aa 1ht niode a 1trike 1he said, ''That 1DG1 mi accident ... Rnnark- ed Mr1. Muikie when she bowled two l>aU! and 1tiU had one pin ~ft standing, "That'1 the story of my life." The score after four frame&: Humph.rev, SO, Muskie, 44, and Lody Bird, 36. • The town council of Goroka In New Guinea announced a ban on betel nut chewing bec9UJe of the risk of cancer of the mouth. The b3D, which lhreatelll •to cnat. a major disturbance among nativea fond of beW nuta, problb!W natives from selling at dining betel null in the town area and -merchants from selling the nut Natlvea may still chew betel iiuta In lhelr homes. • Th< G•or¢a P<ace Olflccn Assoda«mi commcnd<d Moyor Richard J . .Dolcv and C1tlcogo poLi<e fOI' the 10GV U..v llandld demon1traton during the Dtmoo cratic Conwntion. A retoiuHon read in part "Thfi e111oci4Hon here'by Qoil on record GI CDm- mendi'nQ the ChicaQ'o police for . • . preventing tncious riottn and demonstrator• from achiev- ing their destructive P".f'POSll. • The resolution oomfMftdtd DaZq for "unflinching 1upport of tht Chicago police force and for hfl actions in preoenting i7ljUf\' and death to the manv promincni out·of·state ofjiciaU attending the convention." • Volunteer fireman W 1111 • m Germann was JOOnny-oo--the-spot while on a door-to-door fund drive for Fire Prevention Week. Mrs. Charles Newman gave him $5 for the Old Bridge Fife Co, then she smelled smoke in her kitchen and discovered. tile cabinets were on fire. Germann grabbed a pot off the stove, filled it with water and doused the cabinet!. --. ' . - Troop• Ring Palace ~hieu Says Coup Reports SAIGON (UPI) -President Nau1•• Van Thieu, qieaking from a palace rmf· ed with troo911 and armored cara, told hia nation In a lelevlsloo 1peecll lut olght that rumors of an attempted coup agalnlt the Saigon government were cOmpletely untrue. South Vietnamese troopa were in the third day of a coup alert 11hlch placed an- t!alrc:roft gunners atop fhe Prooldentw Palace and jetploads of troopo as well u armored can around the building. Adding to a growiQ( air ol ID)'llery were report.! a coop bad actually been a~ tempted and a fooNteur blackout on outgoing Saigon communlcaUona before and during Thieu's broadcast. The com· mlllliC4tions began '\forking again ahortly Bomb·ers Hit Enemy Camps Near Saigon SAlGON (AP) -U.S. Air Force B52 bombers blasted enemy hue cami- threateolng Se!llOO with htaYJ raldl Wed- ne!day and today boosting to """" thao '/00 the number ol mlaslom Oown in the put four months In dofeoae ol U. <apltal. '!be B52 C811lp&lgn to blunt,an enemy attack on Saigon has become one of the bt.gest and costliest of the war - perhaps costing 12SO mllHon sin« June I. The eight-jet Stratofortreuea have dropped more than 1251000 tons of e:1- plosives tn 'TOI miuiona against but cm:qpe, Infiltration eor;rldor1 and other targets in the oullylng provinces of Saigon. Each mission averages about six bombers each carrying 30 tons of bombs at ID average cost of $2,000 a ton. · The c10IOt raids to Saigon were 24 to 11 miles northwest of the capital. Other ltrttes were west and northwest ot Lal Kilt, the headquarters of the u .s. lat Infantry Divilion. They were 44 m!lea ~est of Saigon. But U.S. IOUrCtl aaid there were no lndlcatlons that any of. tbt three enemy divilionl - the 9th, 7th and Ith -based north and IJ.O<lhwesl of Salgoo were moving oo the capital Untrue after Tbhu finished bit apeecb. "I wlab to make clear lhat tbenl bu been no arrest of Marine olflc:era, no ar- ....i of gtntrala, and lhat there aro "" generala who will be forced to retire and that Vie<! President Nguyen Cao Ky did oot do thll or Iha~" Tbieu aald In hil broadcast. The rumors sweeping Saigon for two days said Marine ollicen l<>yal to Ky had been amsled and that dis$1dent Bud- dbisll might be involved in a plot to restore to power Gen. Duong Van "Big" Minh who returned recenUy to Saigon from exlle abroad. Ky and Thieu carried out a power struale for months but Thieu triumphed and baa control over the army and police. Some Marlne m:Uta were thought to ffV<r Ky, elpedally Lt. G<n. Nguyeo Kbanc, the Marioe commander. 'Jbere were rumon Khang might have to reln. "ViCI President Ky was in the Central :~blinds yesterday and he ii back in on today,•• Thieu said. Altbouib Tbleu dlsmlaaed the coup reports, It was obvious something unuaual wu 1olng on. South Vietnamue troops manned two antiaircraft I u n a on the roof of t b e palace and the buUding ibelf waa guard· ed by jeeploada of police and armored ..,._ U.S. War Deaths In Vietnam Drop SAIGON (AP) -U.S. combat deaths in the Vietnam war dropped lasf week to their loweat total 1lnce the week of Aug. 17 while tbOl8 of South Vietnamese forces went up, weekly reports showed today. It was the 11th COl\llCUUve week that deathl among government forces have e:iceeded those of American military pertoMel. The U.S. Command 1ald 190 Americans were killed in acUon lut wetk and 1,328 were 1'ounded compared with 24.7 killed and 1,771 wounded a week earlier. The toll raised to 28,Ma the number of Amu:lc8JIJ killed 1n action in Vietnam alnct Jan. 1, 1961 and tht nwnber of wounded ln that period to 179,561. Another 1,214 are listed aa missing, cap- tured er interned. Siberia Sentence Due For Russ Protesters? MOSCOW (UPl)-The prooecuUoo to. d11 uted priaon seoteoces for two ot five Rusaians who protested the Jnvulon ol Ctechoslovalda and banishment to some remote area such as Siberia for the other th?ee. The Savtell tried to keep the trial In- side the courtroom tod11 bat tt lpllled outatde onto the street where debateJ Oared between Communist party wortera and lllpPOrim ol the delandanta. Tbe proeeeut<r asked a aentence of. five yean internal exile fer Dr. Pavel IJt- vlnov, !Ill, leader of the group which lllag- ed the abortive protest in Red Square Aug. 25, informed aources aa.ld. Mrs. Larlua Danit!, wife of lmpriloned writer Yuli Danit!, ahould be banlahed for four yean and lllerary crlUc KOMtantln Babitsky, 32, to three years erlle, th e prosecutor said. He called for prl5oo sentences for the other two who bad had prevtOUI con· victions. -For Vadlm Delone, 21, who had a one-ye¥' SUJpended aentence: for dllturl>- lng the peace, two yean plUJ the umerv- ed one ye.ar term. -For jobJess l ab ore r Vladimir Dremliuga. 27, previously convicted of blackmartet cumncy dealings, three yean imprlJOnm.ent.. NATO AIDE HELD FOR ESPIONAGE BRUSSELS (UPI) A high Turkish omclal in the North AUantic Treaty Organ111Uon (NATO) has been arrested "for a aerlous breach of security," a NATO spokesman announced today. NATO did not name the official, but NATO IOllt'a!S said he is a Turkish of· flcfal in NATO's international secretariat in B?Ullf:ll. TM sources said he was caught photographing documents CQn- cernlng NATO force strength in his office on Stpt. 12 with the Intent of passing them lo Soviet agents. Hail Pelts New Orleans Rain Extends From Great Lakes to Gulf of Mexico CaHforala V•11able doudlntN ..,.,.,. - Soult!Hn (alliomllo todly, ,......,. tu ......... 11ou1 , .............. Mr'lllo eM deN'rtl ....,.. llurtftlf "' "'"*· 111 Los ~ 9'11w """ """llY """""' In Ille 11i. moml"9 •nlf '""' -. wittl !tie •cellflon of -v1r-l1ble dovd!Mta. Todl'Y'I lllt>l'I w11 11. It W.I Wednndey'L TO!lltfll'I kM 9hauhl bt ..,. Tiie Ah' Pall11tloll c .. trat 0/"11d ~ 119111 to ""'°'"''-tfMI ,. Ml' Ill Ille L8' ... _... B•ln. a..dlet _.. 1Ulflt c.laoJ4'/' Ill tM morn!"'' dNrl111 In ""' .ttfmllOll. Hltill ~rw-. l'IMr 1f. tM .... ,......."",.. "-Mou!lt.tt. .......... "' .....,. .,_,.., -wl'!tl -v.rleble clOulli!NM. Mlluntlolll '"°" ,..._.lurw -Ill ... -.... 'flftlle -*"""' -~•11111....-......... .....,.I"'• """ '-"''""' •ftd c ... ·-• ....... ,.,._, INXlrnulftt lnduMll: .... ~ '-di n.n. ...,.,. Molll(:t .,. c...., 11111 '"'"""' rtft'l•llllflt ",,. 10, lw""* -.16, Ml. W-.... ..... tt' ~I ,..,.... \et. 1niw-~ .. 1Mt. lltwtnlde JS.11, '"" trodol,, WINll Ii.flt 11'111 fll'tible, • to ..,_ ft-M. W'""81 n.1', left u m,,,11. r.-n 111111. ., to 74. a... ,.., ........ a.Mn ...... Ya!WnMy't -....iurw1 r I". I. Lo& AfitGELU AHD VICIJftT"I"-"-I flllll « 71 te I low « "· I~ v....... tll Aw ..... ,.rtruy 14'"11 ...._.tw. ,..,.. -· 71 ...... M "*""-._,. ............. """""" ,..,_ .,,. ... ""~ -" ... .,..,..... ... l!llldt ~ --~~~"-=..~ s • .., • ...., l'Wea ·AL IJI~ INT•IUMDIATa VAL\.rYS nntUDAT -l/Wtlllll9 d• ••• ...,..... ,~ ._... ................ 11:1111.m. .... ........ _...-"'"',_WI COi" I.cw low ............. 4:• ".rn. t.7 ........ ....... '-"' _.,..,.. f'ftlDAT ..... ...,._, ,.., mud! ......,.... ... !"ff 11i. .•••••....•.•• 11tl '·"'· ,,, """' -. H• 1' .. a LNt • ,.,_ tow ............... 4:.., '•"'· t,7 ...... • .. & ~ NtiJ1 ............ tl!IJ' l.191. I .I IOUTMl•M CAl"°"HlA QfT'llt-a..1111 lclw ............. 7:• it.fn. 1.t ta. NfD ...-r «•CJION~V .... _ 5 .._. ...... v ..... ,... ...... , ................ :,. '""' ..... ...._ ............ -......... Wn,. .... t !MU\; ... .....,., '""""' •rm- ...................... -&.Mt •• ... ...... .. ''" .... • • • ..... ...... OC1. N Od. II oct, • How. t v.s. s ... _.,, Coal •Ir feM11'11 M•MN M fl tfll 'lllrlt Kati.,... no111 fnlm ltll WIPfl' Gt11I Lill" ""'-' to .... OV11 fl i'Mltke .. .,. °"""""'°"" " "*" """ 1\t' ...... -«Ill Nrt. flf "°"'"""' T-..,,,,. tfll 111fM, IYI llllCtl ft -. ..... ....,..... fl Mld\11111 ., llt ~ .,.. fl "'9 nolll blll. "'_,.Wt """"" lflu'*'•lwm• 9Wlfll HIW on. .. Wiiii .... , llllflt, "'""' ·-....... with .... .,... ""'"911'11 Nrt flf "'-dfy ""9 •rt. _., 111 llllOl!lotl te flll 1~ ....... 11llunt. ............... _. knodllMI ellt llftfll W. •Pl"r ~ ...... MedtrtlN NIN 1111 """ .......... ,I 1~ flf t111 '.clfk HM1f'IMll, Lltflt ~ •lllklf' -llW'll '""' .... ' ·--...... ia.tr.1rwtltNI '''"""* .... _ ... °''°'" C""1-._ .. ..,._ ...... _ ..... """ l"ort w~ ·-..... "-· "-'"' ~· CltY U• YIMt L•-Mltll'l'll MllWellk .. M--H".,_ ._ ... -...... ,_ ll"*'t .. _ -· --11.W City ll:lf '""' ·--St. Uui. SlllM• "" '-* City ... -.. .. P-nontltw :."':. ""'9r---""""'' W1Jlll"'ICWI H\tlll .... '1'9C. " ~ .... .. .. " " " n " .. .. ~ " "' .ll Tl JI .n n -.... .... " .. ·"' ... n st I.fl n • .... u 7, .'7 a " ·" .... " . " .. " -• ., :tt " :w .n 17 ,, ... " . .... • • " a " .. ,. a • a ,. .. . • • .... " . " ,, ·'' n ., ... " .. n • " . • " .tt J7 '' .II " .. .. " ----------· • Ul'IT ......... fi'iremen All Wet \ '. These San Francisco firemen, so accuS!o!!W to do-struck a fire hydrant at Ocean and Cayuga str~ jng lh• aoaking, !Ind tllelr .Job jsn't alwaf•Jao hot Wednesday. One passenger of lhe car waa reported as Ibey get drenched In trying to move a that Injured. - Doctors Ready Tiny Sextuplet For New Surgery BlRMINGHAM, England (UPI) - Doctors today worked to build up tht strength of tiny Lynne 'nlorns, one of five surviving sextuplets who mWlt face a se- cond major operaUon soon. Lynne, only two pounds, si.J: ouncea when born and 18 inches long, was opera~ on Tuesday night to remove an intestinal blockage. The operation was so delicate and Lyn- ne so small the surgeon, Dr. Keith Roberti, had to use inltruments normally ' used for eye surgery. Lynne'• condition early today still was causing "considerable concern," Roberta Aid. "One ls always hopeful but 1 would not Uke ti put it any higher than that," he uld. 11Yet 1 have never ceased to be IUtpl'1sed at what the human frame can atand." An amfno.aCld (protein) aolutlon was added to Lynnli'a intravenous feeding to boolt her post.operative energy intake and to blllkl her ~ for the se<ond major operation which will also be ab- dominal. Ust your HIF option1I aeeounf •I•• llankAmerlc•rd or M•ster Ch1rg1. P.;--'-=---2:=-=~~~-.~~~~~~ P~ce Arrest SO Students In fittshurgh S'Chool Riots By Ualled Pren lllteraattonal Police arrested more than 50 high school students near a Pltt!burgh high school today. One school fu New York and two tn Philadelphia were clMed, and Chicago officials reopened a hJgh school closed Wednesday after fires and fights broke out. The Pitt.burgh arrests came at the north side Allegheny High School across the street from a police station and near the Oliver High School. The OUver school has had radal trouble for a year, and last Thursday a Rries of brawla occurred in and near the school. Tension and in- cidents between black and white students spread to other Pittsburgh 8Choois, parUcularly Jn the last three days. Platoons of police ln "arrest teams" swept the streets, giving students one - only one -warnlng to go to school or go borne. Those ignoring the warning were arrested. Many were girl!. In New York , the board of educaU°" 1vofded a third teachers"' strike by okJi.. ing Junior 1-ilgh School 271 1n the Ocean Hlll-Brownsvllle Dlatrlct In· Brooklyn. The enrollment is mostly Negro and Puerto Rican. ~~·action followed a day of trouble Wednltday in which police u 1 e d nigh~ks when 200 anll'Y realdentl tried tOi plLSh by barricades. At leut three 1*°sons were clubbed down and seven ,persons were arrested. W·ilson, Smith In Tough Talks GIBRALTAR (UPI) -Premier Jan Smith 6f Rhodesia and Prime M1ni*r Harold Wilson of Britain talked for 3~ hours today on ways of ending the ~ year.old Fplit between the two countries. The talk1 were tough and neither aide gave g\Vlllld. A B~tlah spokesman lald Smlth and W~_iq.et for lS minutes aboard the Royal lfAvy assault ship Fearltu moored in Glbriltar Harbor and that they wen joined for the rest of the ta1ka by their neg~~ating teams. Harris & Frank siNCE US 112TH ANNIVERSARY MEN'S CLOTHING THOUSANDS OF NEW FALL SUITS .... $ts a $100 A 9r•at 1el1c:tion to c:hoos• from! Classic:, $7 9 Forward Fashion, Natural ShOuld1r and Shap1d Models. Evan a number of our popu· l1r TWO PANT SUITS in All Wool Worsteds ar• includ1dl REG. $J JO FALL 2-TROUSER SUITS ... ,_, ...... This sp1c:ial group inc:lud1s th• busin•ss man's $ 8 9 f•vorita, hi9h fashion Wool-and-Silk SharJc- skins •s w•ll II 2°Pant v •••• c1 Naturtl Shout .. d1r models. REG. $55 to 59.95 MEN'S SPORT COATS Selection inc:lud11 Hi9h F•shion and N1tur1I Shoulder models. Tw•1ds, Sh•tlands, Hitting· bon1s, Plaid1 and Ch1ck1l REG. 16.95 to 18.95 MEN'S FALL SlA(l{S Savi h•ndsom•ly on this 1p1c:ial 9roup of fin1 quality Slicks -auort•d patt•rn11 c:o!Msl Annlvorury Prlcod '46 '14 2t..$27 SPECIAL FEATURE VALUE UG. $35 l'llMANINT PRIS$ ALI.-WUTHIR COATS $28 KORATRON® PERMANENT PRESS COATS of D1cron •nd Cotton Popli.-with Zlp-o,.t Pila lin1r for ••tr• w•rmth. DON'T MISS THE EXCITING SAVINGS IN OUR MEN'S FURNISHINGS, SPORTSWEAR, S H 0 E DEPTS. AND IN OUR WOMEN'S SHOP Harris· & Frank 8NCE MM 'A, I COSTA MBA S.•th C•1lt f'llH Op•11 I O •·"'·"' p.• M•11. th,. Fn. IUINA PAil Shop11l"t C.11,., 0~11 10 ''"'""' , ..... M111. fhN ,,.t. ' SANTA ANA H1111t ,,, •• C.RtW o, •• 10 ...... , , ... M11t. fflr1 Fri. ii I I I I I ' I I t ' ( n '1 P. ~ D •' • s ~ .. ~ < ! m fi " 'll I ;; l!o.! Iii .. JI! ! •.!<t •'l'M di Iii &ll m I I ...-1 ::iil ~ .,._. ·Ma ~j'.11 ~ :>itu ·flol 'WJI :-0."'l );ji ~ 'tllo Ji>! .~ ··- ' LB Tl••l<ll)', Octol>tf l0, 1968 DAILY PILOT Jl ~ed Chinese Military Now Wielding Immense P~wer ~ . \ ':." '' WIWAM L RYAN by the ez.;esses of the cultural a u a p I c I o u 1 l y like a much of Ill original enera. UtUe can ttmaht, however, -AP Special Correspondent revoluUod. catastropbJc test failure at the Apart !tom the continuing of the party and government Two milllary men In this end of last year teems to have denunclaUons of them in the structure u lt existed before Official Peking accoWlts of Politburo listing are connected interrupted the bucle.ar pro-press, there hu be e n 196t. Much of the bu:reaucrasy Red Otina's 19th anniversary with the nuclear weapons pro-·gram. There bis been qnly no evidence of Mao's major in the gent:tation, w h 1 ch celebraUQll this month bolster gram. one is Nleh Jung-chen. mild bouUng aboUt nucleai' eDemles for months. President ' fO¥&ht for the communist an impression that t b e who bad a marshal's rank weapons from Chlnele letders Llu Shao-chi, whom the pro-r e v o l u t l o n 1 has been I Y1.... before the abolition of all ln recent momba. But wltb paganda calls • ' C h I n a ' s destroyed. military is w e>Ulil6 immense ranks ln 1965, and Yeh Chien-Nleh and Yeh rankiq u Khrushchev," and bi! allies There seetJll to be a firm political power. The same ac-ying, also a former mai'lbal members " IO bl.Ch I body, appear to have bee D link between the t;tatoraUon of c o u n t s d an 1 I e before and vice chairman of the N... aod with a prllJ*'l "-the tbotougbly defeated. order ln Red ~ and the Westerners aome tantalizing Uonal Defense Cwnci.J. Tbe cul&ural rtvolutbl lhnmlriDI clues to a variety of Chinese former bas 'been in general t:.1':'~ wpUayon n:J~~~ p~es. charge of the nu e I 1 a r . jlmong the puzzles: Is the weapons . development pro-'l1llro have -llpl 'fcreat proletarian cultural gram. The latter ls praldent recently, doopile rtpOl1a ol H\tOluUon" be.fi .... 1 .... to fade of the Military Se 1 enc e cont1nul4g v1oleDce1 that tbt •• ... -.. Academy. -,.volutlon bod turned ~w).y after two violent ye{U'!? Something which 1 o o k e d a corner, u 11 lt had IPtnl 1i:~aprocessof eompromise',;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j ;..i; In among lop leadersl1 ~h can bring political ~lllty? What has happened ~-'Red China's nu e I ear ::Mei'.iions program after a ·~4Uz,lingly !Witt pace up to ::mrc1-1967? : ::l:hlnese press arUcles make '~f•.t:!ear that an elite group of ,nm.embers is ruling the na- ·:~s 700 million. It is equally :;~ that the military, under , ~se Minister Lin Piao, At~ Tse-tung's heir apparent, 6ectlpies a dominant role in gOVeming the country. At the sa'1te time, people are popping up ·m fairly high places who might not be expected to be there. Accounts of the celebration d~_.f.ll'ted from recent custom b7=&nnouncing the presence of '1tie political bureau of the central Committee," and J1li!l<ing It clear that this body Lsioieparate from and greaUY. s£ibQ!dinate to the ruling elite, llfJfte of whose members are ~Juded in the Politburo lllting. Be!ore 1966, the Polit-®to was -the all-powerful! ~verning body of the Com- niunist party and the oaUon. :~t least six of the 10 listed akmembers of the Politburo ti@. at one time or another been denounced by Red Guard r@.Jes as foes of Mao's think-ini; Their appearance as Pj>Utburo members could point ti> a process of compromise in ~ upper levels which could ~it Red China to stabilize hi!t.Self after the vast disrup- tiQf!· of the party and govern-niint bureaucracies wrought .. Polls No Worry IoTrnman ·:W-~ i~~ D E PENDENCE, Mo. <)ll'I) -H.,-ry S. Truman did not believe the polls when he ~ in the thick of pcesldenUal ~lttlcking two decades ago @ii he does not believe them now. ~.iJihe former President, now Qi.~ 85th year, ls watching tnii-current election campaign ~ 1'!lb avid lntere<l, a friend l aM:frequent cmifldeqt said to @ r>AVIS RRO\\N( ' YOUl tOCAL HIADqUARTllS RCA Month! • • • Prfttnh tho Ultimot. in ·HOME ENTERTAINMENT COLOR TV, STeREO PHONOGRAPH, FM-AM, FM STEREO RADIO •• , in h••uliful D•ni1h 1tyl• w•lnufl lV h11 •11tom•tfc Fine T111nin9, 25,00 V111ft N•w Viii• C1111111r ch•1lt. Twe 12" 1v1I .111 .. con1 1p••k•r1 pl111 four ] 1/J" tw11t1t1 f111r ••q11ltlt1 1011ntl wh1th1r for TV, r•dio or r1cord1. F11th1r Actl111n Tone Arm 111 pl'lei1iol'! •11l111m1tic ch•n91r •1t11r11 long lif•· for yo11r r1c0Na. lnclud11 if1r1111 h11dphon1 j1ck I lnp11t, c111tp11f f•pe t•c111rd•r i•ck, I t1rmin1l1 for 111t•rn1I 1p11k1r1, THE ERICKSON Model JIL.818 23" diag. 295 sq .. in. picture EASY TERMS WHERE SlRVICl IS OUR SPICIAUTYI .~TAKE 1'HE GUESSWORK OUT OF COLOR TUNING! ~ rislng influence of the armed forces:. 11lls month, the army WU 11ngled out (or H• travagant pralse as "the pillar of the dictatorship of the pro- letariat under the direct com- mand of Vice Chairman Un Piao ••• a great steel wall defending the country .•• and defending the great pro- letarian cultural revolution." Whatever bu taken place, It has not lessened the hosUlity « the current Red Chinese regime to lhe Soviet leadership, The tone toward Moscow it as defiant and pro- vocative as ever, Red Chinese leaders have predieted that the cultural revoluUon would end by 1969. That Ume ls close at hand. Tbe regime now ruling China bean llW• -lanco to What WU charted ID the Communl•f -. All thla miles pmled Cllflla watchera: wonder: .wi. MIO. now . 71, _. Olll Of the pl., lure, wW·the rqlme, wblle,.. ta1n1n1 Commualll trepplnp, beer. cloee --to. mWtary cflctatonblp! '• ... " " !'? , .. -::· .. :~· :,"': .~ ... :~i-.... " ~~· '~ •• ~-: .. .. ": .. "" ·~· .. . .. • • ·$ ::-.... \ ~e'1 keeping Illa views on \fil~ outcome to himself, at '9lilt: u far as I'm conctrned, flliteverybodf knows what be rAUTOMATIC FINE TUNING (AFTl ~.,: :t . '·-~· ·~ .,. . 11 Oiliika of pollil," the friend ~· ~-111 winning te 1913 election, 'ftUrnan demolished t he ftedibility Of poll-taken: who ~cted 'Thomas E. Dewey in ~·lpldsllde victory. ~:?·He didn't believe the polls g:i' 1948 and you can say for· Are he de.sn 't put any stock in aJJ.em" now that they tab IUchard Nixon as the favorite ~tr Hubert Humphrey, said the: friend. ;j'ruman accepted honorary ehalnnanship of a Humphrey- lia:-Presldent Committee lm· ~ately a f t e r President Jijtinson announced he would ~be a candidate for re-elec- llQD. Before t h a t an- 1'2!Wcement, . Truman h a d Jltdicted Johnson · would win :J(te nomination and,rHlection iaMs down. ~ former chief executive, :wTose activities have been ·~icted 1n recent years, $_l,rely makes p u bl ic ~ments and has taken no ;ioft In the campaign except to ~ve party leaders, in- :9'.r.""'1ng Humphrey, at his ·Mme and to appear briefly ~ them on the front porch. > -Truman ls in goOO health for ~~n his age, and from Ume -to time when weather is ~t goes for a walk along ~ familiar llreell o I iiiilependence. Wltllt p'rt fin!: In Color TV, tflm't IDt 111 be I I r11son. Uk• AIJ!omlllc Fina T11nina that locb Jn $529 Ult pleh1r1 sip!, And l!IW RCA-tubt with S8% brlihttr hittill&hb thb y11r. You pt these-and rnort-frorn RCA Victor. DEPEND ON DA VIS-BROWN • • • for expert, factory authorized SERVICE! e S l"'-DllpCltehM Senke Tn1eUI e IO '1111 tt-,_...., tftl .... S.,.lce Technldentl e A Mp ,_,.., of fllctlfJ perts! COLOR TV -5Tlltl0 -RADIOS - RICORD PLAYERS -TA.Pl RECORDERS - TUNERS -AMPLl,IERS In Our 22nd Year! Stnlot Ille Harl>orArM @DAVIS -BROWN 411 E. 17th St. --Costa Mesa SAW: 646· 1614 -SERVICE: S4t.J4J7 Dolly. ,_,: Sat .• '" ~"Artistry in Moving" for +lie BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE CaU: 1' ' ~94-1025 580 BroaClway • :~ "'. ·"· " ' ~·( ···~ .. l"J ' !' BUFFUMS' OWN 'CREST BLAZER • !flewport C111ter ~ .... ., • SAVE 15.00 , ftoe, 11.IO 1fql .. lnHltf cnt II H'IJ1 inu • _Tllill •111 1 11 • • 1 49.99 • R11. 10,M fntll• 11rtan1t ceat la ••VJ •..••• , •••• , •••• , ••• M.m Try our Jl'eat blazers. You'll .like the patch pockets, the center venL 111e attention to detail. You'll app1eciate the hopsack·texwred blend of wool and Dacron• polyester. It keeps its shape. Of coorse, the saving Is important, too: And, you can match ygur blazer with our Z·ply wa1p all wllol pant by Hap. Beltloop fllOdel ' in 11ey, black &ass, brown, olive, blue. Rag. 20.00 •.••• 11.11. ' ' · Siore for Men .. ' Mon., 'lliurs., Fri. 10:00 till 9:311 otei ~ 10:00 tin 5:31 . . . 11 Fashi111 Island • 644-2200 • (' p I - I . . I ., 1 I ·-.--·::::-::-..:::".=:;::=.:.:.===.:::~~__::. ... :__ . .:::.___! ... _. -=----. •-.. =.,_,=,,,.. ____________ _:_ ____ :._ ____ _,_:::_ _______________ _.. __ I I j • • j h J i: v .. t p b ~ " " "' •• u " h SI u lj ~ R J\j b N b Ii b lJ le fl ill fr st l G wl fol Ch ti. srr di: rir lht do1 .. .. ~ ~· m •• .. ... ~ .. I ~ "' .. • u .. .. -' .. I ~ ----·~----. . . . . - t% MLV PllOT Archeology · Meet Topic A lecDlre -Gft '"!be WOOJlerlUI World d Blllli<el AtcbeolotlY" will be beld at tile -of Mr. """ Mrs. N...,_ Bin& 2D15 Seadrift Drive, OoroDll del M.ar. 'lbe -· _ ... t..i by IJliC and .,. Trojon Leaglle of Or-Ooud;y, wl1 meet · six Tuesday evemnp m.n 8 p.m. lo 10 p.m. begkmlng Tuesday. -will be Dr. GenUic: Larue, r e c e n t 1 y returned frcm a summer expedition lo tile Holy Lend. Fee for tbe six lectures ls $25 P"' penon er "5 per cwpe. Teleyhone 7(6.26U "'emd. . AREA CODE DIAL'- DIRECT ITS TWICE AS FAST { . . And you save money when you call station . to-station ..• on out. of.state calls, even more after 7:00 PM or anytime during the weekend. @ Plcific T 1lephon1 Kida Lik• to 'Aak Andy' v ---.---· • LAY AWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS • Use our convenienl la y-awoy plan e Just 20°/. down holds any cOmbi notion of toys totaling I 0.00 or more until Dec. 2~ MATIEL'S BABY SECRET DOLL WHISPERS YOU A MESSAGE 8. 99 orig. 13. 99 Savo 5.od on this cufo littl thing tliat tells her secret. Just pull the secret chatty ring and watch her lips move es she whispers her '11 phrases. 18"· of bouncy baby dressed happily in red flannel pj's with her name on the collar. iT oys, 28 MICKEY MOUSE TALKS AND RIDES WITH YOU 2.99 reg. 5.99 Attach the Mickey Mouse head to any trike or bike ond listen to him talk. "Let's toke fl ride'' is iust one and there are many more phrases he soys. Ba ttery operated . IDEAL'S FURY RACERIFIC SET ... FOR HOURS OF FUN 4.99 reg. 6.99 All the ext:itement of a big ra ce is i•mpacke d into this high speed layout. It's the route you toke that makes a winner. Includes I sports cor t track ond accesso ries. 1---~l , ____ , ANAHEIM 4H N. EUCLID e 515·1121 Mon. thru Sat. 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m. •• NEWPORT 47 FASHION ISLAND e 6~·1212 Mon. thru Fri. I 0 •.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sit. 10 1.m. to 6 p.m. ' MATTEL'S TALKING SNIFFY MINT SKUNK 8.99 orig. 14.99. Save b.00 on the sweelesl smelling 14-" skunk in town. Just o hint of mint to let you know how fr;endly he is •.. and he tolks too! Says I 0 differer.I phrases. Plush ploymate hos bushy tail. ' HUNTINGTON BEACH 1111 EDINGER A VE. e 892·lJl I Mon. thru S•t. I 0 •·'"· to 9:30 p.rn. " J • . ~ . . . • -. . . • . - • . . . -----. . --. -. -. ---------.. " ; -' . . -.. . . -. " - • • . . . . • . . " . . ; : . . . . . . . • • . . . . • . ' I . . . -. . . . -• -• • . . -. -. . . -. . . . . . . . . . . .. .. : • " --. - . . .. .. -.. • ~ . ,. . ~. -: ---. --• £. -· --: . . . . • . . . : . . • • . . . ' . ' : • ! . . : . : \ NB-CM . LB ThW'Sdll, OCtb ... 10, 1968 Parent-teache.r School Units Back • Swing (Edl1«'1 Molt: A M• OWO!tf flG COJll MtH, Newoort e..dl ,..,., L .. elll'lt had! Nr91'1"'!Mdler _....nln. "-wlll ..,_r In Ille 0AllY l"tlOT ..ch wtei';. lntonnttlon """" "" ... Qlwd b'I' "'' *i.ty dtHrfl'N!ll, or b't' !'IMllnl\ll or 0.11...,lfW Clll"I' ti. Mn. Gl.W lmlltl, lie ani.ii. Pl1a-, H~ 1t1ct., lw J .,m, frtclty for 11UbtlaitJon Tttul'ldar.> Adami PTA Mn. Carl Lead President COMING UP: Family Fun Day from 10 a.m. to S p.m. Saturday, Oct. 19, on school grounds. Fun and games for all ages. Mrs. Charles Lamb and Mrs. Duayne Steputi&, co-chairman are b e i n g assisted by room mothera. REPORTS: P13ns for member!hip drive w e r e discussed by Mrs. Lawrence Poston, chairman at board meeting. Mrs. Louis Ghall Jr. and Mrs. Fredrick Svanson, room represen- tative chairmen, armounced the list of room mothers. Mrs. Wendell W i Ilia ms, hospitality c h a i r m an, reported that mothers of students in first grade hosted the Back-to-school r Night. Canyon PTA Mn. DeDDis Miller President REPORTS: ·Ways and means projects, programs a n d year's budget were discUS&- ed at board meeting . . . Assisting with inoculations of students were the Mmes. Jack Webster, A If red Ducharm, Robert Phillips, Roger Davenport, Donald Brendlinger and Ken - Wagner ..•• Back-t1>-school' Night was last Tuesday and Capt. Dave Teter, Costa Mesa Fire Department spoke on btme safety. Ice cream social followed classroom visitation. College Pk. PT A Mn. Burleigh Bursb:em President COMING UP: School pictures will be taken Thursday, Oct. 17. Mrs. Dale Jeffries and Mrs. James Schaier will assist. . . Carnival Satur- day, Oct. 26. REPORTS: Membership drive will continue th r o u g h October .•• Mrs. Bernard Faubel, Mrs. Robert Stettler and Robert Bruns met with room mother to discuss class parties and carnival. CM High PTA Mn:. Om.er Isner President COMING UP: Back-to-school Night and .association meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 17, in the boys' gym . Clas.sroom visitation plan· ned. Refreshments will be sold in the caf.eteria . Membership drive will be kicked off ..•. Contact Mrs . · Harold Hohl at 646-6302 if you wish to donate a pie or cake for Oct. 17. Harbor Vw. PFO Mn. Richard Bechtel President CO~G UP ' Back-t<>-school Night and general meeting at 7:30 tonight , id Cafetorium. • • Special in-terest meeting on Learning Problems, Dyslexia a n d W Gt d Blindness.'will t a k e place at 10 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 17, In the Oorr>na deJ Mar home of Mrs. Stephen Fryer. Mrs. otto Schif[, from the Mardan School of EducaUonal' Tbefapy, wW lead the diacuSSioo. Harper PTA Mn. Barry Itohool President COMING UP : lee cream social at 7:30 p.m. tol'(lor· row, at school. Tee shirts, sweat shirts, bike bags and name 'sticker1 will be sold. SUrrey rides and carioons for the children. Refresh· ments are 50 cents for ad- ulls and 15 cents for dill· dren. Kaiser PTA Mn. Normu E&li Prelident REPORTS : At Back-tcHchool Night Sellin Franklin , member of the Newport· Meu Scboc>t Board spoke oo the ll'•-tu Initiative. Elvin HUl<l!lton. prindpal, welcomed Jll"lllll . . . ' Killybrooke PTA Mn.-aa,..... President REPORTS: Al Back~ Ntcbl ofllcm and chairmen were fntrodueod. • • Bicycle alety Jl'OllUI wu ...,. ducted Jul- lindbergli PTA Mn. Robert Vlndk President ,. COMING UP, Meml/enhlp drive, Time to Re-Member will start tomorrow and con- Unue through Ocl. 18. Mn. David Crouse ia chairman. REP o"RTS , lmmuniaalloc program took place today. Mrs. James Iverson. was cbairman. • • Chairmen ratified at last b o a r d meeting were the Mmes. Paul Gage, insplration; Claude Barnes and Sam Wray, newsette, and Ted Selby, telephone. Mesa Verde PT A Mn. James Man1111 President COMING UP: Halroween carnival at 10 a.m. Satur· day, Oct. %6, on school grounds. Special attractionS will include bumpi bike rides, haunted ho u s e , clowns, jack~lantem carv- ing contest and a giant four· foot pizza. Public is invited. REPORTS : Safety award was presented to students by Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth. In the last year there were no accidents in· valving a Mesa Verde stu· dent on the city streets. Green safety flag will be flown at school to signify students are continuing their perfect record. Monte Vista PT A Mn. David Goodsell President REPORTS: Due to the resignation of Mrs. Dale Ada.ms, Mrs. David Goodsell was . elected president and Mrs. John Turner, first vice president. . .Bicycle safety program was C<lnducted and assisting were the Mmes. Covel Allen, chairman ; Don Greene, David McAleer, Bob Cantu, Brian Breckenridge, Goodsell, Alex Harvey, and Richard Firdlu. Newport Ele. PTA Mn:. John Scapple President REPORTS : Ralph Frietag, principal, introduced the faculty to the parents at Back-to-School Night. Mrs. Les Kephart, library chairman, announced the opening of the library. Volunteers are needed for morning or afternoons twice monthly. For further in- fomation contact-M r s • Kephart at 675-3959 .•• Mrs . Jack Root, health and wel- fare chairman, and Mrs. Walter Semeniuk , school nurse, expressed the need for used clothing and shoes that would flt. kindergarten and first grade children. There will be a box located in the office for donations. Paularino PTA Mn. Nigel Batley President "COMING UP: Country Fair Carnival from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 19. Booths featured will be wet sponge throw, fish pond, plate breaking, panning for gold, sweet shop, country store and other food booths. Clown shows are Scheduled for 1 and t :30. Costume parade at 2 with prizes awarded. Assisting M r a • Harry Lambaa, chairman are the Mmes. Don Diaz, Ronald Nichols, JGbn Graver and William Brannict. REPORTS: Membership drive now la in progresa. USS Paularino iJ theme. Pomona PTA Mn. RmnU Scheidel Mn.RebertMlller Presidents COMING UP: hnm.unization shots for kindergarten, first and fifth grades Thursday, Oct. 17. • IdenUficatlr>n braceleta and necklaces will he sold Monday Oct. 14 through Oct. II. M rt . 'fllomlS Cate Is fn charge ••• Clarence Ned om, prtn. cipal, and bGard members will attend the F o u r t b District Conv!ntionette next Satunlay. Rea PTA Mn. ltdlll Kellog President COMING UP: Speci.J board 0Time Has Come. to Clown Around "l\'ll""llll"'l""lr""':illl""'1 "" may eonlact Mn. Freddie Jones at $48-8828. REPORTS: s.rte1 of Walt Disney cartoons were aho\f/Jl for students Jut wff.k. Wilson PTA. Mn. ·Fred Sim po'" Pruldent COMING UP i Film on Marl· juana will be ahr>wn •at 7 p.m. auociaUon meeting Tbµnday, Oct. 17, in the multipurpc)se ~m. Pai-ents and students in f G u r t b through llllh gradu are In- Would you believe a four-foot pizza and bumpi rides are in store for youngsters attending tbe Halloween Carnival at Mesa Verde Scboot on Oct. 26, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Clowning around on thetr bikes are lerry Englehart and Cindy Wilson (left lo right) while Gail Sloate pops out of a pizza. Among many attradt!ons will be the Crypt of the Black oat Cafe, a pumpkin carving contest, haunted house and game boot1hs. meeting will take place . tomorrow in teachers ' lounge ... Paper drive Oct. 17 and 18. Profits will be shared by PTA and student body. REP ORTS : Back-to-school Night was hosted by the Rea Pep S q u a d . Department heads gave a brief talk about the curriculum. , . Mrs. Robert Sankey has completed the parliamen· tarian C<1urse given by Harbor Council St. John Aux. Mn. Robert Rold President COMING UP : Sister Margaret Clare, of Mt. St. Mary 's Ccl· lege and specialist in chi!· dren's literature, wil~ the guest speaker at 8 tonight. Fantasy and Fun will be her topic. The Mmes. George Do_ubledee, Robert Pace, Thomas Dallape and Ray- mond Budzinski will host. .• Thi.rd annual book fair' in the school hall Sunday, Oct. Carnival Tickets Change Hands 13, after all masses. Mrs. Carl Ma:urik is chairman . . . Holiday! Around the World, table decoratic:m and setting C<lntest, Thursday, Oct. 24, from 12:30 to 3 p.rp.. Church groups, civic groups, service clubs, PTA and in- dividuals are invited t.o parUcipate. Entry forms must be returned by Tues- day, Oct. 15. For further in· formaUoo call Mrs. John Hartl at 546-.2572. REPOR'r.l' 750 attended last week'! ice cream social ..• Paper drive contlriues to Mrs. Don Diaz is selling ducat. for Paularino ScltOOl's Country Fair Oarnival which is. Scheduled for Oct. i9, at 11 a .m. Micael Baldwin and 'Leslie Lambas are ahead of time and don't want to be left out. According lo l'l!l'S. Harry Lam· bas, wa}'6 and means chairman, gamel!i, food and handicmft booths, a sweet shop country store, clown show and parade are slated for the delight of youngsters . Dec. 15. • • , Mn. Vidor Clarke was ap'.pointed to the library committee and will operate the I am in a ting machine. . •. Mn. Dennis Walz, formei'ly publicity chairman has been ap-J pointed Demarillac chairman. Mrs. George Ce- jka succeeds her ..•. Great books program started for seventh and eighth grades. Discussion leaders a r e Mmes. George JG hn! on, Paull Doutt, J e r o m e Vandewalle and John Schulist ..• Orders are being taken by ways and means committee for Christmas candy. • • • Mrs. Emil Deyden is in charge of Christmas card cOffees. TeWinkle PTA • Mn. A. A. Jollmon ~ President COMING UP' Brunch at 10 ,30 a.m. TuesdayfOct. ZZ, at the Edison Co.'1 Eleclrlc Living Center, Huntington !leach . .Ticketa $1 per person. For _, ... ...,atiw contact Mrs. I. &iPb Boege! at 515-u18. ' Y.etorie PTA Mn. Fred WoodW-ortll! Prealdent COMING UP ' Bowling league ts being fonnecl. Those In- terested t n participating Newport Bet~el Young women affiliated with Newport Beach Job's Daughters, Bethel 157 gather the second and fourth Mon- days at 7:30 p.m. The Masonic Temple 18 the setting for meetings. Information regarding membership is ob- tainable by calling M r s . Walter Tuz, 515-1755. PENETRATION N••rfy •Y•tyen• ''''' ffi., DAILY PILOT, hem•town "'"''" p•p•r for tho F•bule1u Or•nt• c ••• t. WE HAVE STOCK FROM BACH TO ROCK IDENTIFY THIS TUNE 4. I 1t 20 p•nen• t. ••tr•c.tlr hl•ntily tlif• tun• wiM $1 lfi r•rch•1111lis•. e IAND ' e DRUMS e GUITARS e LESSONS e ORGANS e 1'11'NOS e REOORD5 e 'RENT A.LS e REI' AIRS e ' SHIET e MUSIC e RADIOS 6% fllAllOllG AVAIWU .. INSTANT CRIDIT .. LAN er IMkAIMrkanl er Muter ct..·,,. oowNTowN Costa Meia HARBOR AT NEWPORT 646·0271 SCHOOi. INSTRUMENT RENTALS ·-• Pim Quellty • llftt ., Mtlnth e All l'I" -loo·to -· AnWUllD · MARTINI AND Gll&ON \ OUITAU SAft 150'° l UP 4 NIW Stlll AMPl.llRS vitecl. Baby-sitting will he available .•.• Cllrnlval from 10 a.m. to • p.m. Sa~day. Oct. 16. Board memhe!W and helping, parents will dlUs fn oostumu. Mrs. A ~i 1: n e . L<ughborough II chalrmall. • ¥e,1a Rebeka~· E-,. flrWt and ~third Tuesday of the . m o.n t b menlbers Gf 'Mesa Rhk:ah l'.!9dg-~ ,ss..em'bJe" in· 4 Odd Fellow• Hall, Costa lf:esa, at8p.m.-• 99 - • :: •• •• • -. • •• • •• :· . • -· . . "' ---- .,. .. , ... San Clemente 3 DOORS SOUTH OF DELMAR 492-4642 25°/o ·OFF LIST PRICI COSTA MESA, 1601 ""''°" llM. II 1fll; ' GARDIN GROVl-12372 GARDIN GROVI IL'VD. ------!.~ ~I I I' I I .. -------~_..:..__--=...,..._ ---'-~---'"-"'-'-'-"'-="-'-------------- ' JI DAILY PIL'!f ' Coast ~inger iBa~k Ilome~ for Opera\ 11J P.t.111111.\ POWBU. S1nce then Ille llN IUlll ot .. DiMr ,_ Slilff leading rolet in "The Desert Me~. tfarvtllee ~ Song" and "fiudigore" for the cArtala. a naUvt Oranae COunUan, rtlled and IChooled ~l Orange Couoty la Newport Beach • rt turns t.o Li&ht Opera Co mp any , tjie °'1114" Cout ilm week lo "H•~I and Grelel" wilh tho 1ppear tn· 'tho Lyric 'Opero Guild Opera Ot 1-<ll An&eles, AllDClaUOn'• t1Marrlqt ot ''11he Barber of Seville" with Plpro" 11 tho bv1n1 Bowl. lhe Redlands Bowl, plUI many J'or tbt J'llUlll tln,pr the others. She also has been a reWm to Lai~ Beach'; out· soloist with Dr. Ric,hard Lert11 door theater · hu an added Pasaden.J Symphonj on thre. Q'J.tai11ne -for It was 'tn this occasions. bowl, to the aummtt ol t958, Oratorio singing, a field inlo t&at aha rude her stage debut which lhe firl1 delved as a i. a prod\lcllon or "1be teon-11• 10lobl 1t lhe Balboa Vlbcb" Island Commlll!ily Methodist CbUn:b, rema1nt a.n imporUnt parl or Mra. Carioga's pro- ~"'111 IHe. Last year sbe received wide acclaim for her appearances at the Carmel Bach Fesllval when the performed u oratorio sololtt in several dlf· ferent proirama. Th e 1 e prallel followed her roles 1n Handel' a HSaul," "Mtu)ah,'' and "Jephtba," for the Pasadena Sym~. She also hu pl1yed Azucena in "U '!Tova~." Cllpra in '"l'he .GfPIY aron° and , La Cieca ln '11.A Gioconda," for whidl W nieeivtd the Euterpe Opera's outstanding perfonl)U Award !or t91H8. Mrs. Carlaga sang recently wllh the !·~ttJe Symphony, lht Queen illiJal>elh Tboot... In Vancouver and t h • Hollywood Bowl Symphony, and bu been heard u a con- temporary ting~ •t the OJ1i FetUval. The ainaer married fomer conctrl planltt Danial Cariaga In lNl. He it now mu1ic critic for the Lona Beach lndeJ>Ondent J>......Telearam. Together, the Car I a & a 1 toured 21 cltlM wtlh lht ,,. Nonnan Lubolf Choir ill 1111, he as assist.ant condudor·ptan. lit and she u alto soloist. Mn. C&riq• ll I h t dlucJttlr ol Mn. Marv.U.. D. Moody, a repraenta'ive of Equity Securitlll CorporaU.. and a mident ol Colla M .... Jl'ram tHI to 1911 Mn. Moed1 lived Iii eor-cit! Mar. 1be --will retum to her home county Friday and Saturday nllhlt to perform lht role or lhe -. dJlns, ap!Ntlrlah Mmelllna in tbe Mourt opera. RITUllNS HOMI Merv.It.. Carl.,• Vegas in Paris? That's Liz' Grune Compurer Uncovers Talent • lly VERNON llOO'IT HOLL YWOOQ (UPI) .,.. Now there'• a rq_ Ulbtr: a compute.. to ,diJcover mow u.. bullneu -.,.. , By BOB TBOmAO mark! the return to filming by He IJ &ert Ttlcbm.an, • "p ARIS (AP) -Why would Stevens after a four-year penonal manaae who arew IUl Azl)ericaD film company lapae .. His last picture wu dilenchanjed wJtb Hollywood _. Jo Paris to mab i and_ tul'Jled Jo Ibo computer • ·•-bout • --v "11ie Greatest Story Ever _ _ _ nJOvlC a ....,.,. egas. dodge .... Then, -hapolbicauae "To please the lady," M· Told." he is a cJt;ge graduate, pfalm famed director Georre "Once before I laid off for Richman put two and two Stevem. four years," he commented, together. When the lady in question is "and when I came back, I Ht decided to rtturn to Elizabeth Taylor, )'Oii can ,found lhat I did my belt work. Jazz F ete personal managing uatng • understand why totb c.entury. So maybe it's not such a bad computer to dllcover new ~ox is anxious to please her. idea after all." talent. Besides paytq a m.Ulion He was speaking of hil Slated for So he tent out tomeWhere dollars for her Ml'Vices, the service during World War II, between 500 and 5,00D ques- company -su ..... pr .. •hon be mad• films 1or tho UC lrv:ne uOlll\alru ... lllCCellful ... ducer Fred Koblmar and Army, including documtn-ai tertalntn -adon, lingers, various technirla• to fUin taries of concentration camps. dancers and comedians. If the "The Only Game In Town" at Stevens bad special memories Shelley Manne aOd his Men 5,000 figure Is right be must the Boulogne ltudiol here. ot the Boulogne studio. team up with a group of also have sent them to oboe French tedmidam have Oranp Coast Jaa · 1t.ar1 players in Schenectady. I ericted a reproduction ~ a lDERATED m.JDIO Saturday nJaht for a benefit mean, thert just aren't 5,000 Las Vecu molel on a movie "We liberated it," he reca11· concert at UC Irvine's Clm-stars around. stage. In the bacq:round ii an ed. "When •• •rrlved here, pus Hall. Anyhow, he rented a com· amazingly w:cura.te minlatur. the Gerinalll were loadJng The a p.m. event is being co-puter and fed its memory of the Vegas Strip, with casino equipment into trucb and spoiuored by the ()fange bank with all the qualltles that signs glltteJina in neon. trym, to 1et away witb it." County Partners for Progre55 10 into making a star. Koblmar uplalned th • The withdrawal of Sinatra and the Associated StudentJ at Some of the categories are a euentlll reuon for filming' from "The Only GIUDe in UCJ. . little far out: here: "El!qbetb hu the Town" prevented a con· J~ Minne on the stand Richman included abuse the computer and. wlita for • at this time., Inttead he is """"'· It the -ful !alb into cbooofui h II opportunities the range from O.to, be ii Illar eanfully. Jn1.terl1l bllrld on a ICa1e d One thing for lllf't, com· 100. puter or .no computer, So far lUchman bu pro-Richman is not about to fold , · duced a t1nC1t potenUal star mutilite « 1piDdle Steve who rated IO on the acale ,-:::At=Jen;:;,======;;;:::=;,! which II cleae to perfect. Ir Was the potential Nr a beautlful bloodeT A hlgli-wln walkerT A bronc rider? Or maybe an obOe player from Scheneclad11 No. Rlchman.11 tint p1)lpeCt ii Sieve Atlen, a lumbering Welahman who ainp for a llv· Ing. Moroover Richman firlt caupt bil act Iii a Beirut, Lebanoo, night club. "Steve ts one of the most eJ:· citing artists I've ever aein," ---. Lu,1L11z . ..,.,... 1''' _. ......, , .... , ... .., ........ "GUESS WH9'S COMING TO DINNlll" .... a.t ,_, ••• "THE SWIMMER." aid IUchman. "But r .wunltJ"::=::=:==:=:=:=:=:~I! counting on the computer J;: atone. He's more than a good rilk. but a penonal .,.,,..... mu.st. apply biJ own etperience and corislder the variables." Richman aaki be ii against booking bil boy inlO LU Vegu NATIONAL 9f-NERAL c:::el"IOJ,I Fifi~.!'!! S111 D .... l'rwt. 9' •rllt .. • M&-1711 THE LUXURIOUS NEW ?f,u'tcd ,.r/7(1,'t.' · ,w "" •·'•f ~.r. ''"• ~. "' ,~; ' 'I ACADEMY AWARD WINNER peculiarity of not wanting to frontation that Hollywood bad will be Udo Isle'1 Jack aaturatJon, aPIJety, 21tagnant leave her husband. And a1nce been anticipating with relish. Marshall, the Harbor Area's trend, bias factor, enthusiasm, he it maktna a tUm ('The Sinatra is kn<>wn to some of Mark Davidson Tr1o, Jack career concentraUon and Staircue') In Paris, she want.I his fellow workers u "one-Shlildon and 'the Senior Souls. creative conce.lt among other11 ".--------- mft llRRNtt-M• ":'C"OLt. JOll~ E. LEVINE -• MtKE.N1CHOLS to be here. So WI lboot ia 'take Charlie," being notorious-Tickets ranae. from $2.50 to human qufrks. Paris." Jy impatient with repeating '5 for adults, $2 for college Now when a hopeful talent Open Todoy 6:4S AVOIDING.TAIEI -hl11 dialogue. Stevens is among student.II and . fl.50 for hiidi shows up, Richman has the in· A further.._ wy be Jo lhe moot meticulous ol direct· 11Cbool ·1tudenls. They will be dlvidual fill out a ques-"ELVIRA. MADIGAN" avoid American taxes. on and has been known to available at the door and the tlonnalre·wbJebisthenpunch- Kohlmar aid the matt.er order~ or more takes of the •-:::U;:;Cl=atud=•"':.t.;;store=;:;·====;:;ed=on;:;to=a;:;card=;:;· H;:;e=sllpa:::::!;:;it;:;in;:;to=;ll ................ never came up. M1ll Taylor tame scene. Ir will joiD the comPID,)' for ... J didn't expect. any pro- tbree weeb ol lllmlns Iii the blenlll wilh Frank." said real Lu Vegu, but that may Stevem. "He is aware of his not affect her tu st.Uua. ,respcmibilities and " a 1 To add to MlM Taylor's prepared to do three, four or pleasure, Foz hu decc:rated five takes or whatever wa1 her studio dreaalng room at a neci!llW')'. But J.iBten -I'm reported cost of '30,000. Tbe not fond of a Jot of takes same wu done to please her myself." "S11p•rbly •ctM 111d tllr1ct1tl." l. ltoch P.T, "THE HOMECOMING" 11Hln4rf tin S.My -l:JI P.M. ...................... _ .... ,J,J .,1127 ~,_ ....... c .... .... CfllJdrtfl•s TllMtni -"H-11· 9ftll Gret.r" SUnH1111:••l'lll l::JO,..m. ~ostar, Frank Slnatra. But 'l'he director e I pre s s e d when Miss Taylor's recent disappointment at Sinatra'sl~===~=~;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;~11 operation del1yed the start ol withdrawal, but wa.5 delighted the film, Sinatra bowed out. that Beatty, chose "The Only His replacement: Warren Game in Town" fnr his first Beatty. film aince "Bonnie a n d "The Only Game In Town'' Clyde." Crossword Puxzle ACROSS "' 'Re50rt lo regularty l Kind or blHI 50 F1111lly n111e 6 Ve11t l pref111: 10 Statuary: 52 Vold'• Abbi. partner lC Flighty J3 Sargasso, 15 Troubldow'I for onr love song 54 Alrplwit 16 Clf'CIU:sar •t111ber 17 RtQU•t to '7 lake ready be Pftstnt tor action 1• Olp tn a 5' Certain lh1vtd •a9ati11H 20 Sacked H. Super1111 .. 21 Curs• postd durable '4 '"""'' fabric 67 P.f. "ttrl' 2S Great MOUnti 61 l1rked with ZS Drink tllfftrent 26 Offlct of eolors Strategic 70 Uttered Strvlces: In ffords Ablir. 71 eoy's na111t 21 Follow a n --nous: curving Confident• coursr lally 29 Certain wlter 7' Nortt1u111ber• currents land rivtf ll Margin l-4 lh'81ber 33 Cln. prOYhtce: 75 Has an Abbr. oplnfon 34 Aittltnt ""'"" '' F'fnlshtd, In Eng land "' Bes t •Z Non·flowlnt substlnct t.f Show displtnure 45 Loaf on Utt Job: l words 4' Asian coVntry ' " '. 1 lak• •outltful ook ry 1-0 .. ~1 j St111r1tlnt1 lnaw~ 4 ...... --· superior S Rends .... 1/ SNC:IAL llDDll WATINll IATUIOAY • SUNDAY ONLY 12111 ... 1111 , ... ALL SEATS 50c , I ' '~ ~-,....... ......... -.. " l'~' : I ' -·. ' IJ I ' • ' ~~ l • I INCOLOll Hl·WAY 39 DRIVl•IN SHOW STARTS !>T 6:45 P.M. ·1HE GRADUATE PLUS Jlt4 PIATUU_... S..... "THI PAITr' U.IT COMPUTf SHOW ITAln AT 1:415 P.M. CAIOL wHm ~ "POOR COW" Wlllk~o ...... loth f11f11r•• lo Color ., 111111 ... fall " ... wrl!I 111 llllir llu••-11• .. 11111111 I IMl......,•\M ...... "NO WAY TO TR.EAT A·LADY" LAWRENCE TURMAN - THE &RADUATE Ml NICOEMIASSV 11..t.t ca.OR .. --..,,._- Pin P•t•r S.ll•n i11 ''THE PARTY" FIRST RUN 1l--.t 1ci~9ht., is ~ ju.t for llf<f~. \;It fer' II 'tiflld,r JAMES GARNER DEBBIE · REYNOLDS ~UR1CE RONET • ALSO DIAN MARTIN JOIY llSHOP ~ "TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER" ..... 'SMw ..... ,:41 Coa1laa••.....,. h!'l I , ... ~-" Mancini Subs at Benefit lllNl7i~~ -~ -~.,-.--.. t.-lrflll• "' HILAllOUS C:O•flATUll .................. ,...,. COMl!OY e ACTION Julie Anclr_. "THOltOllOHL Y MOO•ltN MILLll" Elvfl l're!llY "IPllDWAT'" ALL COLOll SHOW DllAMA • ACTll»il IHllC_,. e ~llfWI ......... l wt Lenc.tllr "'lkSwf_. •l.L COLOlt. SHOW ---"":::·" • 147·19'1 11:acoMM1Mo10 l"Ott ADULn ........ ,,... ..... •Clbfft W11Ur --· ALL COLOI. lHOW ·~,,...~ Aristocrat of SPANISH FOOD Delectable Steaks & Lobster Lunch 0 DiMer Open 10 a.m.• 2 p.m. Two Locations 19t22 Ntwport 1t P1li1ttl11 M•n·fr•di• 'Du• 1t Pi•n• '•r 141·1579 2510 w ••• C111t Hwy, Ntwpert ···~· C1llf. P111cti• Lop•• o •• 1t Pi•no l1r Lfl-1177 MllCll"• "°""""" c.Qlrj\i.on... l'ltONl~lot -------.. ---. 10th SUPER. WEEK ACADEMY . AWAIUJ WINNER llU1' ... trOll ~ MIH lllCHOc.I JOSEPH E:. 1.EV~E-.... • MO([ NICHOLS LAWftENCE: TURMAN - THE GRADUATE AN ~'!'CO EMBASSY fUI Exclusive ArH Run BRIGITIE BARDOT SEAN CONNERY "SHALA KO" TECHNICOLORll ALSOt ...,-. ..,. ........... JAMES DEBBIE ~RNER REYNOLDS IAAURICE RONET I I I • • I 1 1 I I • I ' '1""""1, °"""' 10, 1968 DAILY PILOT ly Charffl M. Schulr ' ,---,,,.-----.....----, 0C100ff 10 .,.. • s m "''""' llltl< -, (?) •1fi1il!m lottoli loet'" (coin. tdy} '86-l)o(is 0.J, Rod TIJlor, Arthur Godf1.,, Dom Dll.Olse. A JOllll wom111 poMS 11 1 flllflflfld to h•IP tiff ftthw whO " tltt UP· Qitl ff 1 eta• bottom bMt oft c.it~, Siii bMomt1 lfl'lfMd 111 1 hH1tioul doak tnd 4tllfl' tffllr -.,. sht II fish .. out of ~ wtltT ., I ~ tnlifletl. 1:00eDM If&._: <'1 <eoJ ,.,,, !l.!~~~·~14 ~ c~ DunpflJ. ' All!! Marit, •rvl111 011 1 flllJ tGr flit 11 H_ . ....., '""' (C) (SO) ""' ""'· ""'' "' "' ..q.itbL n""' u.. -. tc> (SO) 111 lllW ,_ ,_ -""' ~ .... •• 1ueet1 .,. Joa1tl).11 Win 1111 lhritnthal loots et tctMS frtm Glori1 Lotfna. aM Chlldl 81tris. Ult L.Q: Pal• TliMU. productloll B THE 6 O'CLOCK MOVIE '" "Tiit Im"""" y,.,. bJ "' flhr end Art11ur M111. £ddl1 * "Fi'fe Fincer £xerclH0 Mlrehoff, ac1or, •rid "°" """"" ROSALIND RUSS!LLI """"· ., ... 0"' ·-M""' --~JOllU ,I,,_, (C)(!<l) "M•• &.ciw' (dl'lllll) '62 -Rosani'id 1pmtnt~~R-ll." Sat. Fri· RllSMll, M.ulm11i111 Stlltll, ltlcllanl Qy 1ftd Offlctt G1nnoil work WD'• s_,mer. Jtck M1wklna. • Emerpncy Control C.nttr lrrnntdl· CJ I S,, (C) (*>) ll:tly followln1 tht 1msslnlllon ti • a.tan (C) (30) Dr. Mlftin Luth« Kini. Tht tpllOdt ....... ...., pewldM YiHtrS with • look tt th• ftlt oplrtt!On put lntG matlo11 when e AM' 111111• dlAsttr or ttirNt If tlslsl« strikes '''° D MK - -(C) (IO) m•...,...,(30) I i • .,. " ......... (C) ·--~­·-34(0) 1• • Ill) (I) ... "'""' -(C) (SO) -W11ttr Cro11klte. 8 Mil'• .., Ullt! (C) (30) Soupy hlN. ... """· ..... Coil!W -. •-ttt (IO) the Loe Aqtles Mil. . a ·l!Z IJl "'"" " "' •~ liiOWi: lC) (60) "JIM Brown'• lody." Stll1nlt Powtr• ind D•'l'kl lilCll •1 ill the Ito!)' of I )'011111 •11 wtlo llllillb Jtne Bfon ,.. ltlrn lht funilunentlla of llf• 1fter ft hll btltl "l'lrivld" Ind bfou&flt blcll to lif• lfttr com111 itt1111 .. 1. ""· II,._.: (C) (30) Tld Me)'tll. • c.r'I WorU: (C) (30) "Bl· loid Ctty of the lRCIL'' ltilllfltt lmt: C.r ~ lll'lfl:• hit u.. " rllfl9Dovlr thl lk!IJ tflll: ftl tlM Ince emplni 111d to re1r1o1 tM tnll blb5 by P\zami ... Ill ea,.. -• DDU'T .... '-Tonlaflt's 7:IO. 9 {I) ..... : fQ (30) llllft• ""11111 IS th1 tint In I .-1• ef ... eut .. I fltJwer c:hN ..... 8trm1• ...... lllllM HlllMI· llM dlltl9ltl II 1111 lhl f1M117'1 1-llaW BlfWllll Is 1110k111 1Dd17. uwtJ ,.,,,..... llDDl'lll -.. • ,,. tlfDIFlllll .,. drlllllt!N lftu· .,.,.. " lllpplet. ... In wNcll tmWni IUOCled Blll<ll--lll,l:I ,. .....,, • .,..,""' i..t • n •• '1Th1 -n.Mi/." Dtnill .,._to lted bllw:!Mtl Ill CenMll. I hllfllJ tdueltld )'Olltll tit. llillt of front:ltr llf1, ~Ill: 11t lndltn cllllf 10:00 , e1ptur11 t111 bClf' In nr to 11'11111 D DEAN MARTIN: Vince Ult Clf his 1rtldle lllenh. Dt'lid · Wtb:ln 11111 JoM111 C.fdos tullt. * Ed'ftfd1, Phil ijlf"ri1, 8 ,... • -<Cl <Mil Roeer Miiier. Color. n IHl m '""" ,., • , ... , tc> • p rn-"'""' <CJ <IOI (lll)"A i5iis In TimllY'1 T111n111J." O.n 1 COJ11borlt0rs 111 mlrtli 1iMI Aft ftttdl flf 1ppW1dlcftk l1Nh Tim music .,, \'lllcent EdWtnb. StlllllY othy In tht women'• Wlrd ef· 1 llYl'lll Htnclllman, Prlh lftrrlt . llOspltll Glorll Lorln1 ind ROIW Miner. ... ,.. , _, ....... ,. ·---(C)(IO) ......... (dl'lllll) 'f7-Dlkfjfl Ktrr, C.ry Grant, Rich1nl Dtnnlns. llhmtlll laM {30) m '"" • ..__ ICl <30l m,..."""' -ICl <.., m .. ,. ,., ut• tQ (60) m • ~ fCl '(30) Ill !£::! _ ... _, Jolla ""°': (C) ·LOI Anni• Enai""•I Our Cjtles.d' tit critic H1111y Seldb lntaMtws GORDO JUDGE PARKER 11' 60IN6 TO <:MANGE, JU"'6E PAP:l(ER! ~ OllE 'n-HN6, "JfM NEV!R 60IM6 TO Tell ANOTliER LIE '6 l.OM6 AS Z LIVE! • \ . ,_ __ .... I . tlastblowtr·PhllO»Phtr .klhll Bllr· Or. Alblrt Hlblll ind 1 """ al ton. Sublffl (If the <:oft'ttfNtlon sysl:amt rna111(lmlnt apecl1lllb dis· '--..l.::Z::>---- 8 ' ·-· .... ,,,_ cuss Wlfl (If h1ndlint campllClttd • IS MJ, urton 1 UUlllli • flfDblllM In the dtlel. Gunb 1n phy i r.d Methad." Aobtrt Coa, IXICUUVI ··nlstlnt ta I!) Mlpl ._... M1yor S.m Yortr, Dr. tlwanl Erath, Jmldll'lt af lat .t.n,.1 .. 'r-=t!nlctl .... " Ill) [f) -.....,, (C) HO) ...... """· . Jack loiif; st1n1n1 ... Steve MC. IEI LI ttenu111 M JM Mt (C) carntt, htad or H.,,.1r1 '°" po- lice unit. ln...tlptli ttit'tidnlp!n1 tit'.»· ~.!a m:1on.t~ =~11~1\J!:: D "T.H.E. CAT'' IN COLOR ' ... "'' .... , .... '""" '" * llarrlnc ROBERT .LOGGIA. tlnslnt ~l'Mr Medi a publlcitr~' boort Ill ht plOtl I phany kldn1p D T 11.L C111: (Q (30) stunt with two trl1ndt. Whtn hi • I ptla l•m he 11 tlt1 ion rA 1 mll· Ii> llwlr. ~ n.n111 llJtt" • \ llonalrt, they decldt ta 11111 tht fciilftl4'r) '62 -M1rc1t10 M11tro-"11me~ for ml. 1nnl, Dlnllla lto6ca, Stll1nll Sin· I.I ~ [)) """ "'" (C) (30) '"'"· ilfh1lt1ilil 1M t1t1 flun." Siner! • ~ (C) (30) IHI John&. lertrlllt lrrvltts I Rabbi ta llold ., '"'fl 1 JllW!th weddln1 Jn the OOl'l'tlftt'• , prdtfts. Htrold Saukl l'llltl II H:OO 8 EM• 9'Clld; 11:.-,t tc; ('°'> tht Rabbi. Jtny DunphJ. m 1tm1 CC> (30> • n n. 1u11 ""' ,.._ fCJ <SO> ll!l """I llNI 11~ "Thi F1111I f'Om llroklw. lestOft." ndllick MOid of'ftn 1n, 8 Mnol Hit (30) lntreduetlon of whit Ru 1h1ad far 1 ckitQ; studlnts wlla Pit• to follow tht' fJ Nin: (C) (90) Butar Wirt tkond Jtl1ll af Playln1 tht Gllltar. II DMll• O'Ctnrlor (C) (90) er111c1111f (C) ll'fWDer. (C){30) Joan MYlll. '''° D 1111Ill1..-(C) (IO) "Roi· e -J4 trt "Plillfijl va. tht Min." Chltf lronsldl ts 1111antd to PfM tht ll:JO B ~ "tt'1 • Wtltdlltllf Ull" lnnoctnca II 1 H81JO mUlttnt •c-<lnirrt1) '47-Jtl'llll Stlwlrt, Donni custd of murder. Ptill Wlnfllld Rttd. 111.m u Rabllt PllHnpa, teeulld a a (J) TIM T•ltM .... (C) of murd1rl111 • tlonkffPll' tl11rln1 1 riot In 1 flttro nll&llboltlood. e lkwll: "hrilln KDlld.,.. (ad· J1ck ttofln, Dllne l.ltld ind Donni wntur1) '46--ht O'llrtlfl, A11n Andert 1l1t llJISt. Helt. e ..... <Cl (90) a illJ ill,... - -(C) n11Zm--(C) (30) m-. ..,,,.. <.,..,,.,. ·~1111it!Jil tn lht KIJbotnl." Whtn -Jll'l'lll CqneJ, Liord Mol1t11. Endon rfvll M' lflne.qhtet I tor plllll>-lfllll • t11ent ror p1.,i,.. it:m m,.... "Hltllt" (drtnM) 12- tach-Oarrin !Misti tlllt """"'"" fldi1n1 ... h•rl tt-• ,.,,. Ind l•rii tht llOrtll wtY • 111 •1111pl1 for thllr dlQh· ~II 1111911 .., "" ..... _(C)(IO) l .. fjj-""" -...... • hnr ..._ '(60) (d111M) '!7-J1mes DI""', ~ ...... • lllCt "'..U.: Ml)IOI' S.i.I D llhwll: ""' ..., ..... fiitY II Quudontd by I jMntl of1 5-. .... (holTOI) ·~1t b~ ....... ffonrl tM Ioctl 1111d11. The MIYDI' ..W tllk tlloul: SontltrpeN. th• dtJ'• ,,.. for bttel ,,..,.., • Cell...., ........... ·-·-·-(C) l·-•111-.... ""._ _ .... (.-0 ,.,_°"" "- • Htwr. -·""""'""'"""<-,1 ...... Mintier! • .., I; 111.- (4NIM) ......... rbah .. """'*' ,,...--(opto") t:J1. ••Sil wit' (OOflltlbt 'II -'11 P1illlon irtlhf. $ltM HUIO. ----.... (0) ... -....... ( ... Mwl) ... ,.,.., Orift. ... -·--•-boo .. lllM._, ... _..,.. """·-·--......... _ ... _ ......... ) '17--·en.twt, ..... .,..,.. 221l Wool ...... lhd. Na• ........... TUMBLEWEEDS l'M !()MESICK , llOY- 'SMATTER, nus DfSEKr BIT AIN'T PUNKUTUNKUS? FfR ME ... l'D GIVE 'tOO LOOK ,l,NYT\!IN' JUST10 HEAR BLUE! A LEAF DROP OR THE CRY Of A LOON FLOATIN' NJlDSS A LAKE, CJ!. lOGO SURFING AGAIN- Mun AND JEFF SURflNGIS WHERE aiE GUPES /Jl$llSS THE SURRCEOF A LAKE IN ONES CANOE I ' • - I l.a.'ED tJOEI JOE AND I WERii ME WI& MY LIFE, GOOD 'FRIEND6! MY SB:URITY/ DO YOU +IAW·IOME· ""51 l'IACH I I I CAN'T 1.11/E 1lltl60F~'Ttll!r WITllOUT Hit.II I COULD HA\IE NO A MEMENTO? • I I i.lE WJQ(PI f\N(StS MATE ~ltiR'{~/ "'la ... .,j ., .... Arr111i11 • ' VARIETY -Roger Miller, a!Jiw9. --, • appe.ianUJCe M tht1 ''Dean Martl.n.fll<:Jf/,'' foolltit ijf -at. 10 "" Chlinnei 4. dtbec. ..... ""'"9,1*.i! hour program include VinceatEdwjr<i• :Pbii'Hardl!i: Gloria Loring Ind' Stanley Mriiir! lfbdlll!nq. !: TELEVISION Dori8 Day, 'Julie' Score ly RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Imtlal ,teleYflJlm rat. ings Qy both the national llld tJie 30-m&i;kefsuwoyo claim that NBC-TV's \ou~ "Julia'' series and css.· TV's Dom ~·shows are olf to falt .lreidiman -· Both new entries &isbed in lb~ top 10 p10jl'8llll ot ll>e recelitly-isllied national rankinl1,,oJ~ with the 1emi:•De'W· uMayberry R.F.D.," CBS-TV. oft. shoot of' !he Andy Grtl!ith 1bo1". · Since '·'Julia," which stara Negro actreu· Diabem Oaroll, ·began a week before MIH Day, it can cloim a slight edge in consistency al lhi1 arly date. Tb• rating covered only Miss oar•· premiere: IN THI NATIONAL ratings, Miss Day's sari~ C8J1le in sixth, •W'htle "Julia" finished lotb. C:::urioua-_. ly, though, a penual of all the vartooa1 early ~ : · ings -those emphasl:&ing New York or fbe,30 key markets or the national statistics -indicates that "Julia" seems lo have a more ·firm trlsia of ~ around viewing particlpatioll. · · · · · · -.. .. Julia, >I for instance, has conslitent,11 come m with impressive 1tali1Ucs in all surveytl!ken, wb6tt!' as Miss Day -as an ·examp1e -bas 119\ beeli dolnt particularly well ~ New. York. A!th90&b lhe <l!4 show up strongly bl the SO.market •~Y ·th.e na. tional ratings prove again Ilia! Miss Day•s·h~c •P.'· peal Is in the grassroql.s . · Misa Carroll's 1bow, on th'3' other ~, w.il coosidered pretly sure fire stuff ln urban &real boo cause ol. the Negro-white relationships. But Ill ap, parent all-"""11ld receptloo -in ouUyftlg areu it well -has surprised some . ONLY TWO OTHER hew series ftnisbed in the top ll1 shows of the l!rst national survey of new program competIU~. They .are CBS-TV's 11'nle Good Guys," a slapstick outing with Bob Denver and Herb Edelman, and ''The Ghoel and Mn. Muir," an NBC-TV offering with Hope Lange and Edward Mulbare. For tbcoe wbo claim sltuatioo com...nes were on tbei.r way, lo extinction, it should be noted. that all five ol the new 1eries that placed in the top ll1 .,.., situation comedies. The other new shows !ID!sblng in tile· top 40 - which is_ more or less video's · ettte ·circle -were 11Here Corne the Brides," an NBC-TV western ad· venture-comedy ; "'Ibe Mod Squad/' an ABC-TV youtfl..oriented police series; ''Land of. the Giants,'' a science-fiction program, also on ABC·TV; '"The Outsider," an NBC.TV private eye epic ; and· ."Lan- cer," a CBS.TV western. "Lancer" did better in the national ratings than in those foculing oo city mar- kets. ' ' THE FRESHMAN series D)ost definitely in I trouble are NBC.TV's '1The New Adventures of " Huckleberry Finn," a cblldren's out1n1 that placed .: 86th among 89 raCted lliloll!; AflC-TV's Don Rickles : program which came in 83rd i And. NBC-TV's. :J ' Phyllis Diller comedy bour, which ranked 72nd.· : "The Ugliest Girl in Town'' and "That's Life,'' ~ both on ABC-TV, didn't far.a well nationally either; : but "That's Ufe,0 a .weekly mllli~, indicates more : pull in the cities. · . Over at NBC-TV, meanwbile, U>e_much-touted "Tbe Name of the Game" thut far I•· below ratihgs expectatiom, gotling squ-.by l'IBC-TV'1 "Gont- er Pyle" and Friday nlgbt movies . Dennis tJae. Jfenue t I • • i . 1·IF1 wllGllt1llllW,l'OS1111.a~•• · 11a1t /lf(fJllJ °" c:#IJIOr . -. I " l ' 1 ,• l& l>AILY '1LOT I 1'11und.l1. Oct-I0, 1!1611 •' •• Yomr Money's Worth I Equality of Sexes ' By SYLTIA PORTBB ,,.. ]>rlnc!ple d equallty between the Mel In employ· menl, written lnto wr1ewt ln the blstoric Clvll,RllbU Act d 1984 ond one d the proudOot achievementa ti. women bl the ·U.S., ii in grave danpr. 11 will be oerlously uod- ermlned, in fact. if a 1Mlltl'D· liigly lnlioeuoua, appannl]y d!Jll rider ·-lo the ."Christmas Tree" LU bUl b: n.. ellmloated belon 11 becomes law. TRIS RIDEii wculd provide for an uemption under Tille VII Of the Civil Rlg)lta Act In order lo permll dHferut C0111· puJsory llld opllooal ... IJre. .ment ages for men and women Solely an the buis ol. sex.. As an iDultrafioo, the rider would allot1 a corporation to create ·or to continUe a re~nt pJan UDdei' which all erpployea would retire at age '5 but with women permitted Cl' compelled to retire at age C. Under today's guidelines lo Tide VII, this retirement Plan'• distlnclive "conditions" would be a violaUon of lex equality. Simple ond dull enough • • • and the measure I\"' been hti1ed u favoring women and favored by ........ But actually, this o n e amendment would strike at the heart ti. equality between the telel ln employment. Whether the condition or employment is .starting pay or retirement age,. what we have been batWng for ii equality in tbe cond.Jtlon, and any bac~g ·away from thla must be ,recognit.ed as retreat and defeaL Rebuttal: It does not. The normal retirement age under Socla1 Security Is 85 for both men and women. In 1958, the act wu amended to permit women to retire at age 62 with reduced benefits. In 1961, the act was amended again to permit men also to retire at age 62 with reduced benefits. There is no se:x differentiaJ in retirement ages for men and women mnployes under the FederaJ Civil Service Retirement System. Claim: T h e amendment refers only to optional retire- ' ' Tl1 From Outer Space Despi1\~ cramped quarters of Apollo capsule, views from outer s~ace wiU be televis\ )'d, back to earth when craft. with three astronauts aboard 15 launched Frida . RCA's Dick. Dunphy aims the camera that 'will enable all three net· worksY\.o receive and transmit the space pictures. Camera was developed to perfon\· 1 functions identical .to those of cameras that are 30 times as heavy and 85 timl s as large. · ·· LINED UP behind the .amendment have been the Bell ·Telephone companies in porllcu1ar, leading employers ·of women ln leuer paid jobs. As Mkblgan Representative Martha w. Grilfllhl puts u in :a masterly analysis or the ·rider, the BeJI Telephone com- panies "fear that the ellm.ina- tion d. 1ex dlfferenUal! in "i·etirement age m11y result in ·earlier retirement for men, or longer 1emce and increased credits for women, a n d thereby inert~ the com- panies' costs." menl ---- • .. :: . ·' .. . IJned up agaimt the amend· UCB Earnings Increase 19% United California Bank's third quarter earnings moved up sharply to reach a new high of $6,914',369, a 19 percent in- crease over the $5,792,770 recorded during the same period In 1987, Frank L. King, board chairman, announced. Per share earnings for the third quarter of 1968 we.re $1.15 compared with 96 cents for the same quarter of 1967, a gain of 20 percent Rebuttal: The amendtnent • would permit the sex dif- ferenUal In either optional or compul!Ory retirement. It is entirely ):>ossible that it would pave the way for forced earlier retirement of women under existing pension plans. It certainly would make it erusier for employers to deny promotions to qualified women on the ground that they might be retiring at an earlier age or exert pressure on women to retire earlier so they could be replace with younger, Jess ex· pensive workers. But all these are details ; important, but still details which pale against the ract that this amendment would represent a retreat from the equality for which we have fought so long, so hard. No matter how well in- tentioned the amendment's backers may be, this fact alone demands that the rider be wiped out of the bill. how thriRY are you when you burro' money • " Southern California Thrift & loa1 speciaJizes in personal, business and Trust Deed loons ••• Stop in today ind see hoW WI can solve your imme • dlate money problems from depend. able funds available right now. The Thrif!Y 'lfl'I am sovo you money. " • : .. J . · -SOUTHERN c;ALIFORNIA THRIFT a LOAN 1JD EM 111k lt. c.i.. Mal ••••• 546°5045 --l!W..lot""pln ... •53-1220 • Bufifums' Acqiuired l By •\;imhel Gimbel J \lrothers, Inc. and Buffums' a -e to combine, the . I --• companies Q nnoun .. ~. The agree\nent, approved at meetings M·!I nday, is on the basis of ~1.65 shares of Gimbel's corrunon stock for each share tlf Buffums' com- mon stock (et •ual to one share of Gimbel's ci 1mmon stock for each l .538 sh.~ res of Buffums' oommon ). Gimbel's C•l •mmon stock closed on the I iew York Stock Exchange on I \londay at UlAI per share. The exchan~e will involve about 505,000 a 1ditlonal shares of Glmbel 's cor 1mon assuming the conversion! of Buffums' outstanding con1vertible deben- tures. The pn ~ posal will be submitted to ti•? stockholders of Bufums' " t an early meeting. Vale G. Younft , President of Buffums', will continue as chic'f executive 1i ffi cer of Bur. fums' which :will be a subsidiary of Gina be! Brothers, Inc., which now 11perates four autonomous Glml'>el divisions in New York, i>hiladelphia, Pllisburg)I and Milwaukee, and Saks Fifth A~enue. PENETRA Tl ION Nttrfy •w.ryo11• 1~•td1 tht DAILY rlLOT, hol'lltt•1w11 ntWI• ptptr f•t tfi• F•b11lo11l1 Or1111• Co1d. I . - \ I Antisub Aircraft Has BURBANK (UPI) -The Navy's newest antisubmarine aircraft looks the same as ila predecessors on the outside but carries a computer which ushers in a new era in sub- marine warfare techniques. The prototype model of the YP3C "Orlon" was unveiled Tuesday by Lockheed Aircraft Co. which will deliver 100 of the $4 million planes to the Navy starting early next year. A data processing system is the major element which distinguishes the new aircraft from the older, four-turboprop P3B which it resembles. Inside the Orion are more than 300 pieces or equipment, 200 of which were not incorporated in the older models. Use of the computer , developed by the Univac Division of Sperry Rand, will enable the IO.man crew more effectively to rletect, locate, classify and attack enemy submarines, the Navy said. Vice Adm. Turner F . Caldwell, director of the Navy's antisubmarine warfare programs, warned at the unveiling of the threat of Soviet Union seapower. "The Soviet submarine forct is the primary offeruive arm of the Soviet Navy and is a weapons system that can seriously challenge the primary of the U.S. Navy," Caldwell said. "The Soviets have a current inventory of about 350 ~\). marines. approximately 50 of them are nuclear powered. It I See by Today's Want Ads: • Have tnl.iler will tn.vel -°"""" ....... ""' -onl,y 5 timet! • Woutdn't llelxf • dl:v out on a day like thlt! Giw him .. luae red1">0d hol.me • bnmd -· • Badl to .cbool barpin ... Boys' and Youths' dot!). Ina at a W!I')' low price. • <Yul GoP ret 'IX'n! IJw m an art pll6)' -trMlt! )'OUl' car tor ~ beMrti- tul European OU ptlntblll . e RAID dkm't aitt tb1a t:q .. But ~ can -for rale b)' ...., ... • Neftl a k>t d .mrta't 3'19ce? Htte'I a pnc:t! for fe'lt In Cbata M~ would be a grave mistake m. deed for us to underestimate the rapldly grOwing Soviet submarine challenge at sea," he said. The prototype is the result of a research and development program begun in 1960. Tbe plane is ei:pected to be an operational mainstay for the Navy for the next decade. S&L .Bares Nine-month Results ------· -- ---------- -A· Thursday's Closing . Prices -Complete New York: Stoc;k Exchange List " . , • __ , --.. ---' ... ..., ~":: -.... • .. - -• ~ .. i -~· H DAIL y PILOT lnlH'SdQ, Oct.obtr 10, 1%8 ; Satisf ttction ·cuarantee~ .or Yo~r M~ney .Back! . .... . A~w~y$ at Sears • • Brawny and Tough ••• for Safer Driving on Any Road ••• in Any Weather! . 40-Month Guarantee Silent Guard· FUIL 4-PL T NYLON TIRE BllJ l~ '&e II R.,plr TN+s .. Priee.t'H• Get~,... ... ...,_ 'Illa A.e sd ----... '",,;,c' ~ ... 1 _, __ ----...... -= ...... - ~· ... 97 l'h• UM F.Ji:.T. M>d Old 'fire Yow AIMute 1'IPe Pam-lnthdtw FREI: :-t!'"' FREE C"J:.t:"'" FREE 1::%.;-: .. NO MONEY DOWN on s..,,. Z..y P.,..,..,. Pio --·~ --------'-- NO MONEY DOWN on s.,..... Ea&y Pat'mem Plan Santa Ana l n7 S. Mola St. J[J 7-11571 ..... ... ' ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE TREAD Lll'E GUAR.<NTEE TREAD WEAR-OUT C•onmlM4 Api..i: All hilutft oldie Ure,. GUARANTEE. •hi"f 1.-......... ....d liu.ord. or dtfttn i• -w ............. hip. Coontlkool. Api..i: T...! _,_L ·r.,.H-1-n.,..,mbu.-~o...,uli ... 'YUt Sein Will Dr. I• ~ lar die W. """i.u ;~ d.tJi• u... cwnm ....,1c ... u~ pt•«• plu• fodortJ Ea<;.. Ta is. tM ran.,.;._ lllonou. F• S.w Lo-.: For tM Ji~ ol rho ..,;,;.i 1.-L Y!Mt Sun YUi n.,, l.epoir ••ii ,...,.,. ... "" "° cN,,... I• IM C&K ol foildlt. ia acloonf< fat ""' a~. ,.,.1 ... ;, .i.u,;,,. ""1' m. ....,...._ e1 camnc rt:111Ltr •lli .. price plu1 fcdcnl &eior Tu door icpn: ... ., mod .....i. on. Sll••I C.onl S..la., a..! 1M SileM Mootlto Coororde .. c • ..i ill i1f rn1":td ot1'J•hlrF iflr,bu•9<· 11 101( --, .. Clll'l"i•r t""W-llu.1 11Hl1~ ti[J olrtt :Tt•l9 11111 per" •t •ill be rep ~ ... poly\~ ~•lent Co..! a (1ll'ftllt rq,,1or oclhnr ''"" p or L .d101reprneouun<f,...d. , 405ilmtC....,S.,U--"" "" Any Size llited 9 88 ..... Pf .. r.u. hdOhll'ft • Long wearing, wrap aroand 1afety ahoulden • Exelu1ive Dynatuf rubber 11sb •nd laeta Whitewalk Only n More Per'Pin 12 BIG REASONS WHY SEARS BRAKE RELINES ARE BEITER! >" Inspect Maater Cylinder >"Bonded Linings Inolalled on 4 Wheels >"Rebuild All Wheel Cylinden >"Are Grind lfrake Shoea >"Resurface All 'Brake Dnm1 >" lnopect Brake Hoses >"Inspect and A<liust ParkinJ Brak .. · >" Inspect Greaoe Seal. >" BleedAllLineo and Add Fluid >"Repack Front Wheel Bearinp >"Road T .. t for Bnke Reli1bility >"Free A<ijuotment for Life of Lininp Coeta Mesa Briotel Ill Sanllower lot Soatlt C-rl'la. $40.S3SS All 4 Wheell Only 88 .. t ::s 4: •= PfOMOfllWl"DOWll•._•scru 'Nw 'Chrysl• ,...i... ..._, ......... .i. .. w! ----"' I"' h;,her. ~ Aliy •«<""'Y odditiomol )11111 n W... "9ilabl~ • s.... low, low ...-.: • ' ' I J ( ( , ' ' ( r ' • I n 1 TI F 0 l l a c s • 0 p v • d b • • d • ~ T • r r • • • ------~--~-• -• ~. ' ' • ----- Newport _' H~rho:r EDITIOI'+ VOL 6 f, NO. 244, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' THURSDAY, 'OCTOIEI!. ro. l968 LBJ Sticks to Warren Asks Chie.f Justice -to Stay Till 'Emotion Subsides' W AS)llNGTON (UPI) -President Johnson, rebuffed by t h e Senate's re- jection ol Abe Fortas as chief justice, to.- day asked Earl Warren to stay oO as head of the Supreme Court "until emo- tionalisn.t subsides, reason and fairness prevail." The President said he would not w.bmit a new nomination. Warren, appointed to the high court by !«mer Presldeol J>wl&ht D. Eisenhower 15 yeara..qo, was at bis familiar spot oo Missing Check May Put Pipe Bid Down Tube 1be low bidders on a gigantic pipeline for the Orange County Sanitation Diltrldl reitalned in a cold sweat today, awaiting the outcome of a legal ruling on what will go down as one of the biggest bloopers in high finance. Peter Kiewit Sons of Richmond, Calli., s u b m i t t e d a low bid of $8,498,000 to build one of the world's largest sewage outfalls jutting miles oot to sea from the Huntington Beach side ol the Santa Ana River. 'But the comtruction firm forgot to enclose a $50,000 cashier's check With the bid. Terms of speaking up for the Job called for su'ch a check to accompany every bid. · Directon of the sanitation dis1ricts Tuesday night gathered at Founlaln Valley headquarters to open the siJ: bilk received for the job. The Healy·Ryan offer wu opened se- cond, and set aside whep the ~eek could not be found, according to Harvey Hunt, staff member of the Jolpi Carollo engu,<ering firm wblcb dellined the pipeline. -. 'i1ie attorney !or the board of directors methodically opened the rest of lhe bids. rtie highest 'came in at $18,000,095, sub- mitted by J. H. Pomery, Inc., ol· San Francisco. The second lowest stood at $10,'74 ,000, cffered by Healy.Ryan Constructors of Long Beach. The board room fell silent, as represen· tatives f o r Peter Kiewit Sons Co. were asked what bad happened to the required cashier's check. The constructiOn finn spokesmen replied they were certain it was enclosed. There ensued a few awkward momenl'\ or fumbling and shuffling through the bid papers ,and peering into an empty en· velope, in search of a piece of paper that was needed to close a $9 million deal. Finally, a Peter Kiewit man was dispatched to the motel ol hi! delegation in search of the missing link. He returned at l;UI p.m., and banded the check to the sanitation dl!trict's attorney. At Ulil point, officiaJs reported, lhe 81)0\esmaft f o r the second lowest bidder rose \o bis feet and lcxlged a formal pn> -Steck Markets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market declined in beavy trading lat. UU.. al- ternom. (See quotations, Pages 11-19). Losses outnumbered gains by some 200 issues on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average was off about five point,,. ON:• (fit \:-n We•daer Tbt weatherman'• on a broken rec:u'll, one! Frlda.Y'• lorecut lol- lowa tbe pattern -cloudy morn-· inp one! llUIUlY al!ernoom witb the mercury atudt in a '10 rut JNSIDB l'ODA'l' A1 po11m,. look at I/If •!>' proochl1111 """idtntlal ..... IA<~ can't #tm to agrtt on a wfnM+. Each poU'• an.s10er sttmi to de• ptnd otn who'• ukino the ·qut,.. lloni. Set Pagr 5. ' ..... " .. .. .. n M , .. ,. " •• " • " -" ,..,... ....... ONlllllo~ 11 "" , . ·--.. ....... ..... . .. ==-r.:n -" -M =-. -" --~ --.. • the bench when the court opened ils new term last Monday, indicating he would remain. Warren had no immediate comment but he ia expectt;MI to go 8.1.ong with the President's wishes. Senate leaders last week were unable to break a filibuster against tbe nomina-- tion oI Fortas to the nation'• highest judicial post and the associate justice, a lfpper Bag Swap friend of Johnson, asked the President to withdraw bis name. Johnson complied. In a statement issued by the White House, Johnson said: "In ordinary Umes J would feel it my duty now to 'send aoo:ther name to the Senat. !or thla hlib oflke. I shall not do so. These are not ordinary times, we art t h r e a t e n e d by an emoUooall!m, part~ansbip, and prejudice that compel ' Supervisors Try Land Deal Again Supervisors will grapple with the com· county for 157 acres of public tidelands. plicated Upper New1X1rt Bay Tidelands It is cont.ended I.hat the county would exchange with the Irvine Company again sain $8 million on the swap deal but to be Tuesday after agreeing to go ahead with certain everything is legal, a court test ol it and then backing off this week. the proposal is pending. Action to be taken is aettpting a deed Supervisor David L. Baker contended to 282 acres of back bay tidelands from last Tuesday that no dredging could be the Irvine Company. Purpose is to done now becaU..'ie of the pending Superior facllitate a dredging project which pro-Court suit ~ ponents say would save $2 million. Supervi..s<r Alton E. Allen backed the An estimated seven mllllon yards of proposal so that the dredging can pro- dred~ is planned in the upper bay. In ceed. the original plan two dredging steps were "The Irvine Company haJ agreed lo outlined. reimburse all tuing agencies invOlved The latest proposal combines the two for any loss that might occur," Alltn plans and resu)t,,.in a saving of $1 million noted. , to the county and II million to the Irvine "But the m.aln thing is that tbe Upper Company, a~ to County Bay development must move forward,'' Administrative Officer Robert E • Allen added. "Failure to do so would be a Thomas. catastrophe. It will provide a recreaUon us to use great care if we art to avoid m. jury to our coostituUooal ayst=. "Our dlstlngulshed 6iiet JusUce bas In- dicated bis Willingness to serve until his successor qualifies. U n d e r the • circumstances, the fouodations of govern- ment would be better aerved by the present chief jusUce remaining unUl emoilonalism subside!, reason a n d fairness: prevail" Irvine Company Asking Annex At Home Tract The Irvine Corr1pany wanb to ~lose the gap between the 500-bome Upper Harbor View Hills tract now being built and the rest or the city of Newport Bt.ach. It asked the city today to annex lOS acres separating the new residential development along Ford Road from l'fower" Harbor View Hills. Both tracts tie east of MacArthur Boulevard. Irvine's land development vice pres!· denl, Ray Wal!on, txplained that the company believes "the entire planned community" should be associated with and serviced by the city. With the an- nexation. huodttds of additional homes presumably would be buill Councilmen will be asked to adopt a resolution of Intent to annex the area on Oct. 28. The county's Local Agency Formation Commission will then be uk· ed to rule on the uninhabited annexation. Affirmative acUon is expected in bOt.h cases. The original land swap in the area calls area for all of Orange County as ftll as for the company to deed 4.50 ~ to the Southern California." Tig~r.s . Seri~ BadhamChar~es Watson ·:V!ctor~~~tjffi--,:: ~ ~--· -_.;. Wms Fi:Iii&, 4-l Seeking Governor Ploy By JACK CHAPPELL Of 1119 O.lb Plltt. Stiff Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach) charged ·today that Los Angeles County Assessor Philip Watson is using the controversial Watson ameOO.- ment as a stepping stone to the gover· nor's office. Badham made the observation in a talk before the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors meeting this morning Rites Saturday For Rev. lkast Of Harbor Area Funeral services will be held at tt a.m. Saturday in Bell Broadway Chapel for ~e Rev. Jens P. Nielsen lkast, active throughout hJ• life in the Church of God and a long-time Harbor Area resident. The Rev. Mr. lkast died at the age. of TT Tuesday at Hoag Memorial Hospital after a short illness. Born in Denmark. In 1891, he em- tgrated to ttt e United States when be was 19 to join an uncle in Arlington, S.D. He was ordained as a minister of the Churdl of GOO (Andenon, Ind.), one! returned to Denmark in 19'Z3 to serve as editor of the Gospel Trumpet until the early lMO'I. Returninl to the U.S., tbe Rev. Mr. lkal\ bad conSl'PllDnl in Columbus, Neb., one! Rlpld CllY, S.D. He retired In ua. H1J wife, Cora, alto an <rd.ained -in the Churdl ol GOO, died eevm years ago in Costa Mesa. He is survived by a son, Dr. David I. Nielsen ol N~ Beach, • phylidan an the Hoag atall one! presldent..iect of the OraDge Coonty Medical Auodatlon. Dr. Nieben 11 a (ormer mld-west chairman for the Youtb Fellowship Movanent oI the Cjlurch of God, in II llat.a, one! bas "" been actlYe In HarlMr Am com-munity aHoin. Other a u r v I T o r s include ther!e daugbtm. Joy 8arn<s, of WeslmiMter: Esther Fair of WiscoMin one! Rutb Leedom of Co8ta '.Mesa. them&elves ac-- UVe in the Church of God : three 1*thers. Carl naat ol South Dakota, Martlnus nut one! Nl<ll nut. both ol llenmlrk; 14 grandchildren one! one I re • I • CJ'll1Cldllld-Tbe l!tt. AMn Sbakleton one! tbe Rev. Wilbur Denton l"W olflclat. at Saturday'• .-rices, lntennct will follow at Falrbaven -Park In Santa Ana, A lamlly opo!tesman .._-tbat '"' mtmOrial contrlbutlona could be m•de lo tbo ()nap Cciw11J u..rt -•Uon. at the Balboa 'Bay Club. Badham admittedly was still licking wounds suffered ln a debating scrap with the assessor ln Tustin two weekl ago. He. aaid be had been trapped into the Sept. 2$ debate and bad no time to prepare for 'it. Wat.ion. however, as the author of the consUtutional amendment to limit property la.I:, was familiar with the measure, he saJd. ReaJtor Roy Ward, while Introducing the Newport 1egis1ator, said Badham was 1till shaking the day following tl\e debate. Badbam wryly told his politely at· tentive audience that while he may have had the shakes, Wat.son went to the hospital with heart trouble shortly af. terward . The legislator said that If the Watson amendment Is passed in November, the legislature will have to seek the ad· ditional funds from saJes and income tax· ••• "Watson says that the legislature won't have .the guts to raiR Income and sales taxes, I tell you that they will raise the taxes. It's a fact of life," said Badham. "When you release land and industry from paying their share, you soci it to the people paying income and sales tu· es." The Wemb11man sald be thought the people of the llat. were "being taken" by Watson. Watlon II aetting the stage for a flUbematortal bid In 1970, he declared. Badham explained that Wataon is con- fident the legislature will have to raise taxes in 19'9, thus angering the voters who would then tum to the aueasor u governor. Bldbam said he supporta Proposition lA, another property t.u relief meuure. He noted that should both of the opposing meuures receive majority votes. the one with the most votes would become law. Sex Symposium Set For Harbor Forum A sympalium on proposed lft educl- don counes for the Newport-Mela Uril· Oed ScbooI Dlltrlct Is ICbeduled durinl the 10 a.m. meeting ol the Harbor F'!.1!11" OCt. 15. Sj)eaken 11W Include Dr. Jolin Dun, curriculum clltoctor of the lnbool diatrlct; Or. Plul AlldleJI, I lM All(eles pby1lo ' clan, 1nd Dr. Paul G. Nl!UmaM. putor ol tbe Finl Blptllt Church ,,. OoolA -. ST. LOUIS (AP) -Mickey Lollch, working with only two days rezl, beat the mighty Bob Gibson in a seventh.game World Serles: duel to 4-1 and the aroused Detroit Tigers completed a smaiblng comeba<k by detbronlng tbe St. Louts Cardinals .. Only three previous teams had ?allied to wilt-after losing three games -t b e 1903 Boston Red Sox, 1925 Pitt.burgh Pi- rates and 1958 New Yor~ Yankeell. When the Red So:i did it. the Serie. was belt-of-nine. . Gibson, setting a Series strikeout rec· ond with 35 tn three games, .and Lolich matched scoreless innings WlUl the Ti· gers broke through aµldftl}y with two oo~ in the seventh, just u they did a 11 season. Norm Cash singled to--rl:ght field, the """"1 bit oil Gibooo. Then Willie Hor- ton drove a siflgJe to left between short and third. Jim Northrup; whose grand slam hom- er capped the big 11).run-inning Wedoes-- day, lofted a long Dy to deep center. Curt Flood first started in on the ball, slipped as he tried to change direction and the ball sailed over bl.s head for a triple, scoring both Cash and Horton. Bill Freehan followed with a double to left, a fiy ball that Lou Brock barely touched in a desperate try, and North· rup scored w1th the third run. The ngen added an extra run in the ninth on singles by Horton, Northrup and Don Wert. Dtck Tracewakl, running for Horton scored the run. U.S. Splashers IJ.eady for Soviets The Ruaslana drew flnt blood - literally ..... in their UDCSec1ared war against American athletes in Mezlco Cl· ty. The blood In tlje pool ii upected to give U.S. water pololsts a transfusion for the ,,.1 thing when the Olympic Games beg\n, I Meanwhile, Orange Coast College's hammer-tbrowinJ blstory proleuo<. is lmprused ~ "1lle compeUUon one! Laguna Beadi'1 Bill Toome1 ii coolini It, walling !or the ttaJ Game1 before he mak,. Ill!' real effort In the decathlon. '!'bat's bow It is in Mexico City today, acconling to DAILY PILOT Sport. Edltor Glenn White's excli181ve dlapalches. Officer Kills SeH . . BONN (UPI) -Maj. Gen. Hon! w-. land, M, blgbnt ranldng military oil~ cu In the Weot Gtrman lnl<!llgenco -d>mmltted tuldi!e 'l\INdly, au-tboritaUn aouroes lald Wtdnetday. Tbe ...-lald Wanc!Uand lbot hlmlell while 1n b la olllct Ill Munld> lollowtnc :'depmalta tu...•. DAILY PILOT ll9ff .... JUDGE PONDERS PENAL TY· FOLLOWING CONVICTION Mrs. Irene Tucker Awalt• Oct. 30 Declslon Mrs. Tucker Convicted Of 2nd Degree Murder By AR111UR R. VINSEL Of tfl.i DllllY Plllt Sl.tt Carving tnlfe killer Irene M. Tucker was convicted of second degree· murder Wednesday, after cold fury like 0. Iceberg -90 percent bidden beneatb • calm sufraco during trial -blued out u ahe tes1illod. Tbe dairpdao! -~ Im-~·lftef' 111t ~',,.;,;. r.t>l<iIY ~~-.. ·~···.ol ~lali~~ ~~ onJered the courtroom cl@ral -- ·~ did. ··f~~ that?" Ml'I. ~·altu Judge'•Jlanald CnlOksbank; hearing the ·-wltbout ~ Jury in Deparfnient ;a, Orange Oounty Supttior Court, stt Oct. 30 at 9 a.m. aS her sentence date. · "°Wby can't·be tell me now?" 1be wail- ed, he!' volCe rising ubcontrollably, "why do I ~veto keep being tortureci?" Augustine dem'lnded tbat a court aida get the delendant'a busband, Costa Mesa gty Coundlman George A. Tucker, ;""!I iiie grim~aced dvk leader moved quick- ly to his weepl,ng wife'• al.de, Judge Crookshank armcnmced his ver· diet. •t 3,43 p.m., taking less time tban he mlg!jt to order hmch, alt.I' !)epuly District Attorney Jamea G. Enrlfhl ...,. duiled' the, prooecuUon'1 argument&. Mn.: 'l'Uaer, sa, of 1"2 Minorea Drlvti, atabbled Her next-door neighbor,• Mrt. lllnietl Westphal. 61; .ol 11148 Mlnorc1 Drive, last June 28 to climax a IMriel al violent "'"' qalnat alhers. . She pleaded lmo!:ent and Innocent by reBS(IJ of inlanity, with four psychiatrilta wbo testified splitting 2 to 2 on the iBSue of her mental state. "There'• very, very little dlsf!Ule of facts in this crute," said J u d g e Crookshank, a veterah of years on the mental health caJendar, hearing ques In- volving lnsanlty and mental disorder pleas. · "Tbe lsaue 11, Wbal wu going on In Mrs. Tucker's mind," be continued. "As to the' latter lsaue, psychiatrilta: don't agree," the.JUdge said, addlJlfl 'that he flatly reJecta Dbdlngs by Dr. Slflmund Kosewick and Dr. Plulllp Kramer, who teatlli.ed ¥ts. Tuc'ier11s sane. "She's psychotic," be &aid. , . •:nie mental illness ~ in my opinion, enougb to reduce the a1me from lint to seconil ·d--one!· tbat is my judg- ment and finding," Judge Crootlb.ank condudeill Mu. Tucker now race. a atote p<iaoil t.nn ol five ~·to tile:....~ Ibo II to r-pjyd\latric trealm.liu, u we!L-Io.·~a woman · ahe inllatod Whfneaday is not dead. ·..:~\... Jiod 'llW· ~Cl ' I '. -11..... .. ....... J_E ~ for a first, degree murder · IOl'lrietbl• whtcb ~··~tence ol Ula Jn~ desel'lbing her as a vengeful, .¥ raUoaJ WOJllll;l w,ho,killed mall~: ,· I "Due to -the·meo~ condWOO, whicb n haye conceded all.along, we are not ask'· Ing the deatb penalty," be sald belon>the COljl'I. TriumRbanUy, Enrl&bl ~ tliat Mn. 'I'UC~er1s at-t ·l me s-e:rploslvei lHtlmaoy WedneSday altemoon almoot euctly 1111P- ported b)a hypollietical u-y ol bow Mn. Weatpbal was alaln. No one qu.e.sdonid that two worrien !ought bilt.rly' in •om e backy•r•t""' frontatlon triggered b) a stimulUJ whid died· witb the vlctlril one! ii evldenll1 ·buried in the klllert1 brain. ' • Tlio del....e ·main~ the idea ~ Mrs. · Westphal! • · rotiuit: 1ro.po11n11 wqman, Wl)S stabJ>ed in sell-de!-bi' Mrs, ~er. ,w!Jo drove a~.CarvbiCuiilf' Iii: ~ into U}e v,ictim's right si~ · · Em:iiJ>1 ' charged tbat M'rs. Tu<:\er stalked' the da...t and badly beaten Mrl. Westp)lal • out . iii.to Miriorea Dri•e in a vengl!lul .!Ury it being disligtired -and fatally wounded her there. · ~ T!ie 'oiily ~ disCIOoulo'frtm the defendant· on· the wftniess atand was that ahe went after ber neigbtio{wtth ~one, but two knivet. Polle, .never considered such a !>"".lblllty. llescrlblJW ••-· Ieadlnl . up to the •laying wblch slu!me<t the quiet Mesa Ve~ area, Ml'I. ~k~ ~P.N&ed JJer version ol be)n&, -1essly. Mtacked and beaten with hai'ldS', '_r gafdt;n hose aoo (sM TUCKER; P11e l) • • '1 • ~ . . ' Rest, Reflec~on ~head • ..... 1 • For Tucker :qef e~~~(:~tnP.'. .. '. ' . . . -. f • _ ___,_ 2t IWl.V PD.OT 'lllunday, -10, 1'168 Collnty Approves . Africa Farm Near Laguna l'reM P .. e J MRS.TUCKER nozzle. R.edtlqlhelnddont--.... In& oddlY -phruea u • cb1ld mldit -then lllpplng Info the lmpe«ablo Englllb ol • cool, cul-lldY. the pro- -·· coocept unfolded aJoq with ber alory. Mn. Tucker, d1ift:'::: u a paranoid ICbimphrenlc with hope olrocovery, said llhe WU going to the prage with I load of laundry when stru<:k In the back of the neck by aome object. ••Jt WU t hard hurt aod j uJd 'Ob,' U1d went forward. I dropped the bul<et," she Aid, "1 said to myteU: 'I hurt very badly.' " "I heard nolaea alter being hurl from behind. I ran and got tile aoap -In tile container -and threw it at the fence. I heard running feet, a 8C1llf11ng llOWld and cackling laughter," Mn. TUcker testlfied. "Then I ran around the fence to see who it wu -that was probably very foolish -I ahould have gone inside the house," !he added. ·The two women collided while rounding the fenci!. Mrs. Tucker said Mrs. Westphal &mashed her with a garden hose and knocked her down. fallirl8 on top as the two women wrestled in what neither knew then would be. a death duel. "She looked bodible. A'*>lutely hor- rible -the look on her fa~," Mn. Tucker testified, "she kind of screamed something at me. She looked clearly out of her mind .•. " "She was holding me down with her big body, with her knee in my chest," Mrs. Tucker said under oath, "I was beaten up at least five or 10 ·minutes. It was a long . time I was being hurt, hurt, hurt." Mrs. Tucker, who is believed to have struck back with a rock she picked up, said she escaped and ran borne after Mra. l'{eatpbal had yanked on her jaw, mangling her lower teeth. "My teeth were ballging out. I looked awful," aaid the defendant, mentlonlng she bad glimpsed hersell In chrome on her kitchen stove. "I waa &baldng like 1 leaf. Crying. I tried to decide what to do. I called the bank:," Mrs. Tucker testlfied. "It was hard· to talk but z~toJd the secretary to 'tell my hlllhand to come home hrimedtately, '' she Slld under oath, but Tucker 'wu away from the UnJted California Bank branch only bb:b away. Here, Enright declared In summation, came the turning point as Mrs. Tucker's tragic tendencies were stimulated by some unknown factor -maybe a word or tone. "What were your thought! concerning Mn. Westphal?" Augustine asked. 0 1 felt I bad to defend myself," Mrs. Tucker said from tile !!land. "Did she enter your house?" "I don't know." "U I had been thinking right, I would have Cll1ed the police," Mrs. Tucker said. Gradually heginnlng to weep, the defen- dant related bow sbe went to the iJn. maculate kitchen, picked up a roast knife and a partnc knlfe and left the house, armed. "For oome reaaon, she l1arled aculfling again," Mn. Tuck<r aald, "she kept kick· Inc at me, we were fighting in the lftreet. I l;ept 1olng around and around her. I bad the tnlves in band." A ......., whispered sharply In the courtroom. No one WU outside to see \he mad, wblrllog acramble of Mra. Tucker and Mrs. WeattmJ u the Tucker pups, Butch DAILY PILOT Olt:AHOI (OASt PUBLISHING COMPANY R•O.rt N. W•1d Pl'9fldwlt e!ld P~l"*" Jtck R. C11rl•y Vice Praldllnt tftlf <>-ti "'-"' Th•mt1 Ktt'l'll .. ,,, Tho!l'ltt A. MMrphine ~llQl119hlllllr Jero-F. Collini "'"' N!ntn N-1 IMCll Adwi1lll111 Clt'I' l411w Olrwctw ............ °""' 2211 We•t l•lboe 11111•.,•rtl M1ilrn9 Addr1111 ,,0 . loir 1171i, ,2,•J --, ... "'-'t »O Wnt "r strMt L."""41 1MC111 m '-' ..,_ H\lltftllltclrl .. ltd!: D 1111 lltwt • .. •• If .... to be loclt"'1 °" .. W..liaa3!tt ._. • y .. ,. 'Li ...... -.... . .... Iii .. ,. .... . the .. four llgna ttlatlnf to the put could be J>0$UJ4acijaC0111,to·lho lnleway. , Shllller hopeJ to haYI . Uon 'Ccl<mUy Sllarl·compl.ted In late 111ee:'llle !lnJsh. ed _preserve will incorporate an _ African. 1tyle, tbreHtory Tttelopo llotef, • motel, a rutaurant and a commerclal llhopplng center. On opening, I be _.-.. will proYidt parting apace for 1,150 can 1n oa-etreet area, wttb 1,000 ' ..... ~ In the park .... lpaee --... ·-1,19--~-prll!JN 1'ftl .. • '"'" If liUcl. ''twf lllllCb ... Ille "' Ifie 'Dlliiorland operaUon." Ills Or1J1ge County project will be modelled on what he says la a highly IUCCOA!ul Lion Country Sllarl In Florida where some 150 African anima ts -among them lions, zebra, impala, springbok, wlldebeeste, girafte, enu, eland and ostriches-roam 6'<I acres that w..., cul from Everglades country. Vlsli<ln to tile Orange C.unly park will drive lbroogb the preserve and will be More Romn at the Inn This ls artist's rendering of what 118-room expansion of the Newport- er Inn will look like when completed next March. Project -$1.5 · million worth -is already under way. Two-story cabanas will sur· round pool plaza area to be built southwest of existing main buildings. Pavilion (right) will be for banquets. From Page l DEFENSE ATTORNEY • • • prior cases, the People versus Wollf, and The People versus Best. The People versus Wollf involved a boy who premeditated the at·handle murder of his own mother, reflecting for some Ume on what be was about to do. The case ended in a secoDd degree con· vlctioo rather than first degree, however, because the boy was mentally incapable of reflecting on the coMeqUences to an ad<quale degree. Individual circumstances are the key to The People versus Best, which saya the dividing line between seU.<fefense and . manslaughter ls the presence of malice. "In her state of mind," Augustine saJd, ''li-trs. Tucker just happened to feel abe had to defend hersell." The test of both is the ability to know -and underatand -the quallly and nature of one's act -and understand - that it is a wrongful violation of another'• and Fluff, danced about, barking and whining. "I thought -as I lunged at her, 'Thank God', the knives only went through the clothea and nicked her," ~ Tucker said. Tbe larger blade, however, bad 1liced between Mn:. Westphal'• seventh and eighth rib, an autopsy showed, cutting a pulmonary artery In the lung and nlcklng her rpine. "I went into the hOllle and tt was then I realized the enormity of what bad ha~ pened ••. " "Mrs. Tucker • • • Mrs. Tucker," Augustine interrupted. "It could not have gone inward because I didn't push it in," Mn. Tucker declared on the st.ml, her voice rising and her features sharpening. Enright arose, stern-faced. "Your Honor," he said, "may the record show that It occurred in the mid- dle of the street." "Did &be llCl'eam!" asked Augustine who argued Mn. Westphal had be<a stabbed In the struggle between tile two backyards. "No, I said 'Oh God' -or at least I heard : 'Ob God' -I don't know," Mn. Tucker testified before the silent au- dience. Her hu.sband, father and two sisters showed no emotion, although T u c k e r bowed his head in his hands at the later verdict. "ll>d 1"ll thrust at Mra. Westphal!" Augustine questioned. "Nos.irree!' just that once," the de£en· dant exploded, "I dOD 't believe that woman Is dead. 1 know what I did and it could Dot till her or anyone else." Visibly reddening and r l I I D g •l tile wltoea stand, Mra. Tu<ker bltierly !...Pt the concept ol Mra. Westpllll'1 death, lndlcotlng she believed Iha mW'der cbarfe to be untrue. "Why should I believe what you Bl)' ••• ju!I becauae you showed pictures! Lots of people looi: alike," she ahooted, "even In jail I encountered three women who looked and talked like Mn. Westphal." Jodi• Crookshank w1tdled the def,.. dant oat to him wtth renenc! loiereal u she Hp)oded Into hrlttl•volced dlalrJbes cllrocted toward Auiult)ne, who 111 Llrocl· 17. "I hive nolhlni more," ber defender llld When oho 11.a llnlsbed. "No quut!ona," lddfid Eartcbl Nrnmen In tho <OUl'ln>om, waltlni le ... how Mn. Tucl:er W<lUld ruct to Entf&bt'• cna etamlnallon. 1Wlced at ( ril>'til". An~stlne argued. Judge Crookshank decided that in the case o. 'lhe People versus Irene Tucker, tbe defendant understood. Despite losing out on Mrs. Tucker's in- sanJty plea, Aueustine praised the swiftly moving but thorough proceedings which were the result of inten!lve pre.trial preparation. "Because ol the tremendous knowledge of Judge Crookshank and Deputy District Attorney Enright, we had a compact triaJ, but nothing was neglected." AugusUne aald. Many hours were spent before the trial opened, poring over evidence and establlahlng procedures to avoid a long, drawn-out sesa.loo, he said. Jury trialll -eSpeciaUy in a capital case such as Mrl. Tucker's -frequently take several daya just to secure a panel of U persons to bear the ca~. each other. She had ju!I lestl!led for the pro. secution, while the defense tried to make ita: cue. Man Gets 6 Years For 'Trip' Murder LONDON (UPI) -Robert Lipman, a 38-year-old New Yorker accused of murdering a m1niskirted prostitute while in a "ghastly" LSD nightmare, today wa.s found guilty of manslaughter and sen. tenced to all" years in prison. The jury at London's Old Balley reach- ed a verdict after relatively brief con- sideration. The sentence wu handed down with the recommendation that IJp- man be departed after aervlng hi!: senten- ce. He was convicted of slaying Claudie Delbarre wblle batllilfg " ! I re • breathlng snakea" in a flt brought on by taking the hallucinogenic drug LSD. 'Stretched' DC-9 Plans Told Today Provisions for a "Mtcbed" version of lhe new Mclloonell Douilaa DC-9 jetllner were dllCloeed today. The three.engine DC-IO, acheduled to enter airline aervJce In 1971, will carry 270 passengen ovu routes up to S,lOO miles. !ti llMlclled venion, anllctpaled for "metlme In the late lf!O't, will allow for •ccommodatlool up to 409 -The butc DC-10'1 17'-loo! lqlll will be lncreued up to &S feet In lhe longer vm11.... F'Ulelage dllzneter In both models will be lO feet. Auto Stereo Burglar Hits Fashion Island A wave ol tMftl of automobile atereo equ!pnient aplubed onto Fuhlon ill8Dd'1 Plrtlnf lo! WedbHd17. Newport Beach police Aid I CUllOmel' and 1 atara omploye rtport.t Iha 1oa o( llereo playen and tlpeo from their ..,., • • fill.: lea .: ct"u.. '!'~ -said, Is for vlsltora to waLdl -Ill Altlcan llDlmaII enJorilll a -cl Jlle Anc1 slmulaled terrain that wW be, as nearly as possible, identical to their natural habllat., Game rangera anned with tranqulllzer guna will keep constant watch on the safari trails, Shuster said. They will al.so be available to tow drJvers in difficulty from &he area, be added. Shllller owrui, In addition to the Florida animal park, preserves In Johanoo;burg, SOUth Africa -bis -· town -Iha Mynderse Back As Newport's Services Chief Fonner Newport Beach G e D e r a l Services Director Jake Mynderse's suc- cesJOl' begins work Monday. Hll name is Jake Mynderse. City Manager Harvey Hurlburt today explained that Mynderse, who quit the $151000 a year post last Sept. 1, is return- ing because he had changed his mind about a private business venture. "We're absolutely delighted to have him back,".aaid Hurlburt. The General Services Department en- compasses BeVeraJ divisions responsible f« municipal housekeeping chores, rang- Jng from trash pickup to emergency beac!} sandbagging. M)'bderse, a 55-year-old retired Anny colonel, was credited by Hurlburt w i t h bringing about ''treme ndous im- provegient3" 1n tbe department during his five years with the city.., His resignation last summer was received by city councilmen with genuine reiret. Told that he Is returning, Mayor Doreen Marshall chirped : "Wonderful wonderful." ' Newport Building $12 Million Over Rate in 1967 New construc~on In Newport Beach thll year puahed past the $32 million mark last month. Buildipg Director Oliver S. Grant reported today. He said hla office approved permit! for $1.3 million in building projects in September. Total for the year to date, he noted, ls $12 million above the nlne-moolb figure for 1967. Helping swell last month'• totals were permits for four new home& on Unda Isle, Construction costs averaged $80,000 each. Land values are not figured in the estimates. A major cOmmercial permit was also is.med for the Newporter Inn's llPrroom expansion project, now under way. Grant said the _valuation for the addition wu $700,000. Again, land costa w.,. DOI Jn. eluded, be emphaslzed. 'Santa Claus Special' Vietnam Ship Carded WASHINGTON (UPI) -A vast cargo ship dubbed the "1968 Santa Claus Speclai" will leave Oakland Nov. 21 or 22 to carry Christmas pactagea to Vietnam, the Pentagon announced today. "ID order for Cbrlstmu packages to be loaded aboard thl! shtp, fourth class parcela must be malled by Nov. t - preferably earlier -and mlllt be labeled "Santa Claus Special" below the rlSmps, the announcement . p· I Ii ... llDJI l ....... cootrols Iha Muqula al llath'1 "trim al Lcm&Jeal" attrliiion. Adm1a.sioo clargea have not yet been d1lermlned, Shuster said, but be hopeJ to Iii pricts on the lines of feta set at h1I Florida park -11.l!O 10< 1dult1 and IU5 fO<chlldl<n. A considerable acreage will be devoted to young vis.ltors, Shustel' Mid. Ht pli.ns to have a Pet Corner where 1maller African animals; IDIOOI thOm many whJch can be lhandJed'.with complete safe· \Y by youngsters, wlll be· on view. __ .; ·~-. ........ alnidloo ol 1 ttpllca of 111 Afr can village wt tatlon of authentic tribal rltua!J One! dlnc<I. Shuster expocls to have more than 300 persons on his Oringe County payroll when the u!arl project Is completed. Tan,ue-iDocbeek p I a n n In g com· mJssJonen, dlscuasing the type of aign that Shuster hopea to erect, indicated they already knew the wording of one sign that WU placecl In the Florida part: ''No Trespas,,lng. Private Property. Ylolatota Will Be EATEN" ,_,_...._ Honorary Okie Ex-publisher to Receive Honor Fonner Newport Beach newspaper publisher Ben Reddick, credited with coining the nickname "Olde" during the Depression, Friday will be named an "Honorary Okie" by Oklahoma Gov. Dewey Bartlett. Bartlett's special emissary, Mike McCarville, ls currently in Los Angeles trying to find Reddick and give him the Honorary Okie certificate. "When Reddick coined the nickname, It was in a very sympathetic news story and had none of the connotations it later received," McCarville explained. "We don't know 1f Reddick ls still alive or if he's stlll in California but Wt- thought he'd get a bang out of an honor over teh name he coined," the governor's aide said. McCarvllle will find Reddick alive and active as publisher-editor oI the Paso Robles News-Presa. Reddick coined "Okie" while freelan- cing a photo picture page for the old Los Angeles Examiner when he covered migrant camps during the depression years of the 1930s. He noticed that all of llH\ nligranl!' license plates had "OK" on them -thus he devised the nJclmame. Novelist John·Steinbeck is saJd to have later picked up the '"Okie'' tag in his book, "Grapes of Wrath." "I don't really tnow whether I came up with ft first or Steinbeck: dld," Reddlck told the DAILY PILOT today. Then swip- ing a line from Mark Twain, Reddick ad- ded, "But you can tell Gov. Bartlett that the reports of my death -if any -are greatly e:a:aggerated." Reddick noted that at the transient camp near BJythe in the 1930s, Oklahoma got credit for many migrants who came from elsewhere. "They passed through Oklahoma with illegally registered cars," Reddick recall~ ed. "Oklahoma gave them a license plate, a transient certificate, tank of gas and a meal, then asked them to move on." Reddick does have one real Oklahoma connection. His wife, Dorothy, ls a native of Sapulpa, Okla. "Because of the Okie nickname, once ln 1956 they almost made me an admil'al in the Oklahoma navy, 11 the publisher quip- ped. Newport-Mesa District Workers Oppose Prop. 9 From the rank and file to the top brass, employes of Newpart-Mesa Uni· fied School District are of one voice in opposing the Watson Amendment, Pro- position 9 on the Nov. 5 ballot. Supt. Wllllam Cunningham today stat- ed his opposition, reinforcing stands prev- iou.sly taken by the school board and the leachera. Cunningham warned that U the Wat- son Amendment passes, the financing sit· uaUon will be chaotic and the school dis- trict will surely suffer. "As property taxpayers, resident! pay only 30 percent of the amount that goes to schools," Cunningham said. "The other 70 percent comes from business and industry. If schools are removed from the property tax rolls that 70 per- cent Is goln& to be paid dlttctly by the ta:a:payer. "That's not tax relief u I see lt,11 saJd Cunningham. Last week the school board urged cit!· zens to vote "no on Nine" to preserve local control of schools. If financing is assumed by the state, board members argued, the state govern- ment will determine educational stand· anis. The high standards of the New- port-Mesa Dlalrlct could then be pulled down to the common denominator, they suggested. Newport-Mesa Education Association President Raymond Snyder, in speaking foc 1,085 district teachers, argued that the Watson Amendment la "a cruel hou" that will benefit large, commerclal prop- erty owners and real estate speculators at the expense of homeowners. Thief Cashes In, Steals Register Laurence Flores complained of a cash register theft Wednesday to Costa Mesa police. Someone 11tole the cash register. Flores said his daughter was in charge of the family dry cleaning store at 2117 Harbor Blvd., and had stepped to the rear of the store for about five minutes. She heard the ringing of the customer's bell, and when she went to the front discovered the cash register bad been taken from the counter. Total IoSll of machine and contents was placed at $701. Reagan to Attend " County Luncheon Governor Rona1d Reagan Is schedcled to be the special guest Oct 14 at a fund raiaing luncheon to honor assembly can- didate Bruce Ne.!ltande and congreWonal candidate Bill Teague. The luncheon will be held at 11:45 a.m. at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. All pro- ceeds will be divided equally between the two Republican candidates. · :J.ina/ Clearance/ 20°10 TO 40°10 OPf r rlloRsSIOIW. -c« Dl•ll• _, " -LOOK FOR RED SALi TAGS - 0,... ..... Jlllll, • M ._. 1121 HARQ llVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 64M111 ~17' r - j ( I I I I t t ' l I t t j ! ' I c ! ' t ~ l i i • c r r ' f c t ' ' ' I I t c c t ----------. ~ . . .. . .. . . . ' • r • . ' ' ' . . . • • ---------------~--- ,. TOtlay's Closing 'EDITION N.Y. Steeb VOL 6f, NO. 2+4, 4 SECTIONS, ·44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • :THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, '1968 TEN CENTS Mrs. Convicted Protests Jail 'Torture' After Murder Verdict By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille C.llJ ,. ......... Carving knife killer Irene M. Tucker ·:as convicted of second degree murder \Yednesday, after cold fury like an iceberg -90 percent hidden benealh a calm surface durlng trial -blazecf out as she testified. The defendant was momentarily lm· passive after the verdict, then rapidly deteriorated into hysterical claimB of unbearable jail torture as a bailiff ordered. the courtroom cl~. "Why dld he have to do t.bat?" Mrs. Tucker murmured 'after Judge Ronald Crookshank, hearing the case without a jury in Department 8, Orange County Superior Court, set Oct. 30 at 9 a.m. as her sentence date. "Why can't be tell me now?" she wail· ed, ber voice rising unoontrollably, "why do I have to keep being tortured?" Augw:Une demanded that a court aide get the defendant's bmband, Costa Mesa City Councilman George A. Tucker, and the grim-faced civic leader moved quick- ly to his, weeping wife's side. Judge Crookshank announced his ver- dict at 3:43 p.m., taking less time Uwn he might to order lunch, after Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright con- cluded the prosecutioo's arguments. Mrs. Tucker, SB, o£ 1642 Minorca Drive, stabbed her next~r neighbor, Mrs. HaITlelt Westphal, 68, of 1648 Minorca W ari·enAsked Lolich Triu:naphs, 4·1 To Reniain As Chief Justice WASHINGTON' (UPI) -President Johnson, rebuffed by the Senate's re- jection of Abe Fortas as chief justice, to- day asked Earl Warren to stay on as head of the Supreme Court "until emc-. tionalism subsides, reason and fairness prevail." The President said he would not submit a new nomination. Warren, appointed to the high court by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower 15 years ago, was at hls familiar spot on the bench when the court opened it! new term last Monday, indicating he would, remain. Warren had no immediate comment but he is expected to go along with the President's wishes. Senate leaders last week wert unable to break a filibuster against the nomina- tion of Fortas to Ute nation's highest judicial post and lhe associate justice, a friend of Johnson, asked the President to withdraw bii iwne. Johnson complied. In a stat~ent issued by the White House, Johnson said : "In ordinary times I would feel It my duty now to send another name lo the Senate for this high office. l shall not do so. These are not ordinary times, we are t h r e a t e n e d by an emotionalism, partisanship, and prejudice that compel us to use great care if we are to avoid in- jury to our constitutional system. "Our distinguished Chief Justice has In- dicated his willingness to serve until his successor qualifies. U n d e r the circumstances, the foundations of govern- ment would be better served by the present chief jusUce remaining until emotionalism subsides, reason a n d fairness prevail." Deadline Nears For Haig Ducats Saturday Is the last day area golfers can buy sea:t011 tickets for the Haig Na· tional Open golf tournament at Mesa Verde Country Club Oct. 21-27. The $15 and $10 tickets are obtainable at any county golf course. General admission tickets will be on sale thnughout the tourney. But htm pro Ron S e i f points out that the $15 ticket represents a $13 savings if a spectator at- tends all sessions or the event. Officer Kills Sell BONN (UPI) -Maj . Gen. Horst Wendl- Jand, 56, highest ranking mllltarr offi· cer in the West German Intelligence corps, committed suicide Tuesday, au- lhorltalive sources said Wednesday. The ;.ources said Weodtland shot blm5ell · ·~·hile in b I 1 offlce in Munich following ·'depreuive illDe.u.'1 Watson Detroit. Tigers Win World Title ST. LOUIS (AP) -Mickey Lolich, working with only two days rest, beat the mighty Bob Gibson in a seventh-game. World Series duel to 4-1 and the aroused Detroit Tigers completed a smashing comeback by dethroning the St. Louis Cardinal" Only three previous teams had rallied to win after losing three games -t h e 1903 Boston Red Sox, 1925 Pittsburgh Pi- rates and 1958 Nev; York Yankees. When the Red So:s: did It the Series wa.s best-of -nine. Gibson, setting a Series strikeout rec- ond with 35 in three games, and Lollch matched scoreless innings until the Ti· gers broke through suddenly with two out in i.he seventh, just as they did a 11 season. Noan Cash llnllel In r1&11t field, the second hit off Gibson. nien Willie Hor· ton drove a single ·to left between short and third. Jim Northrup, whose grand slam hom- er capped the big 10-run-inning Wednes- day, lofted a long fly to deep center. Curt Flood first started in on the ball, slipped as he tried to change direction and the ball sailed over his bead for a triple, scoring both Cash and Horton. Bill Freehan followed with a double to left, a Oy ball that Lou Brock barely touched ia a desperate try, and North· rup scored with lhe third run. The Tigers added an extra run In the ninth . on singles by Horton, Northrup and Don \Vert. Dick Tracewsld, running for Horton scored the run. Tiger• FlnH Cepeda leaned into the seats and grabbed McAullffe's foul pop. Stanley lined to Gibson. Kaline was called out on strikes. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Cardinals Fint-0 McAuliffe threw out Brock. Javier flied to Northrup. Flood punched a sin· gle to right center. Flood stole second. Cepeda walked. Shannon flied to Kaline in right center. N'o runs, one hit, no errors, two left. Tigera Second I .. Cash flied to Maris. Horton struck out. Nl!<1J>rup llriJck OU~ • No runs, no hits, no errors, none left Cardinals Secoad t Mc<:anv walllld 111 a ftaJI ""!IJll. Mll'lo grounded Into a double play. Stanley step- ping , on second and throwing to Cash at first. Wert threw out Mu:vill. It was Maxvill's 21st at bat In the Series wltholit a base hit, tying the record held by four players and last done by Gil Hodges of the Brooklyn Dodgers In 1952. No runt, no hits, no errors, none left. 'llgen Tbird-t Freehan lined to Flood. Wert struck out. It was the 31.st &trlkeout in the Series for Gibson, tying his own record set in 1964, against the New York Yank- ees. Lolicb took a third strike, giving (See TIGERS, Page l) Newport-Mesa District Workers Oppose Prop. 9 From the rank and file to the top brass, employes ot Newpart-Mesa Uni- fied School District are of one voice in opposing the Watson Amendment, Pro- position 9 on the Nov. 5 ballot Supt. William Cunningham today stat- ed his opposition, reinforcing stands prev· iously taken by the school board and the teachers. Cunningbam warned that U the Wat· son Amendmeol passes, the financing sit· uat.ion will be chaotic and the school dis- trict will surely suffer. ··AA property tupayers, residents pay only 30 percent of the amount that goes to achoolS," Cunningham aakl. "The other 70 percent comes from business and industry. U schools are removed from the property tu rolls that 70 per- cent ii going to be paid directly by the * * * taxpayer. "That's not tax relief as I see it," said Cunningham. Last week the school board urged clti· zens to vote "no on Nine" to preserve local control of schools. If financing is assumed by the state, board members argued, the state govern- ment will determine educational rtand- ards. The high standards of the New· port.Mesa District could then be pulled down to the common denominator, they 5\lggested. Newport-Mesa Education Association President Raymond Snyder, in si>eaking for 1,085 district teachers, argued that. lhe Watson Amendment is "a cruel boas." that will .benefit large, commercia1 prop. erty owners and real estate speculaton: at the expense of bomeownera. * for Governor? Badham Charges Prop. 9 on'Taxes Bid for Office By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. °""" .. ..., ...... Aaemblymon Robert E. Badham' (JI.. Newport a..dl) d>lrged tod>y Uiat Los Angeles CGunlJ ~ PhUlp "allon is using the controvmlal Watson amend- ment u a lltpplnc atone to the IOvtr- nor'1 office. Badham made the --In a talk before the Newport ~ M.,. Boord ol Realm m«i1n1 this marning al the Balboa Bay Club. Badham aclmltledl1 .... llill llckinl ' woundJ su(fered tn 1 debatina terap widi the lllltUOI' tn ~Tusttn two wetb ap. He uld be had !>em !rapped Into the Sept. 15 debote and had .., Ume lo prepare tor tt. W1taon, however, u the author ol tht COMlltutlonal •menament ( to limit property i.aJ'., WU familiar With the mtUUl"t, be llid. RtaJtor Roy WU<!, while lntn>du<ln1 tbe Newport lelislator. uld lladham WU llilJ ahlklni the dllJ' followtnc the debol<. Badbam "'117 told bi.I politely •~ tenUve aucUence that wbile he may bava had the ohal<es, Wau wtni lo the hospital with hem lniuble lbclrlly al· tmrud. 1111 lqillator aid that II the Wallon amendment lo pallOd In Novtmber, tbe iel!<Jature 'll'IU have to .e.t tht ad· dllloaal fundl from Ill., aod Income tar· ... ';Watson 1111 that the Jeglatature won't haft the ruts to raJoe 1ncc1mo and ales ,..,., I 1<11 you that they will ral!e the taxea. 11'1 • fact of life," aaSd Badham. ! "When you r<leue land and lndullry from paying their share. you aock tt In the people paying in<:ome and salea tar· u." The l.llelDblyman uld he thoualll tbe -'"" tbe llale ...... ''belnl takm" by Wataon. Wt-II ldtlftl the &tap for a rubematorW bid 1n 1m, be decJa...t. Badhlm aplalned tbal Wailon ii ...,. lldOlll the Jeglota-will ban lo rallo tan1 In ._.., thus angertnc the voten who would then turn to &he 1aeuor .u aoven)Or. Badham u1d be ouppor1I Propooltlao IA, IUIOther properfy ta ,..lief llle&IUR. He noted thal lhould boll! al tht oppooil11 me...,.. rec<Jve ...iorlt)o .-, the_ with the most votea wwld bocome !11ir. ..., Drive, last June 28 to climu • series ot violent ads against others. She pleaded Innocent and Innocent by re880fl or insanity' wlth four psychiatrists who testliied splitting Z to 2 on the iMue of her mental state. "There's very, very little dispyte or facts in . this case," said Jud 1 e Crookshank, a veteran of years on the mental health calendar, hearing cases iQ. {See TUCKER, Pase 2:} Death Suit Filed against Mesa Hospital A $250,000 wrongful death suit has t>een riled in Superior Court by the parents of a 9-year-old Fullerton boy who drowned in a nood control ditch on the Fairview State Hospital grounds in Costa Mesa last April 2. Defendants named are the hospital, the state and the county. The civil suit charges that state employes at the hospital acted in a "negligent and careless manner" in supervising the activities ol John Joseph Sheridan while the child was committed to their custody and care. Parents are Edward W. and Mary Jane Sheridan of 1411 Diana Place, Fullerton. Complete list of defendants includes the State Department of Mental Hygiene, Fairview State Hospital, the Orange County Flood Control Dlstrt<I, the Costa Mesa Goll and Counlry Club. Donald E. Stevens Engineering, Inc. o! Costa Mesa, and J. H. Waddell~ Go. The boy ~as committed, u a pa~ patien~ to Fair'(Jew Bowital on May Jl, 1.U ill~ he was foornf menially mani. ed. tho parents 1181< In the complaint. The hospital agreed, 1!fates the suit, to provide proper care, treatment therapy. rehabflltation and supervision of the child. It further argues that lack of pro- per supervision resulted in the child's death by drowning. Doctors at Fairview, at the time of the child's death, said he was rapidly-pro. gresalng toward overcotning his mental deflclences, the parent! claim. Supervisors Try ' Upper Bay Land Swap Deal Again Supervlllor& will grapple with the com- plicated Upper Newport Bay Tid~ exchange wltb the Irvine Company again Tuesday after agreeing to go ahead with It and then backing off this week. AcUon to be taken Is accepting a deed to 282 acres 0£ back bay tidelands from the Irvine Co1npany. Purpose is to facilitate a dredging project which pro- ponentl say would save $2 mllllon. An estimated seven mllllon yards of q...dglng i.. planned In the upper bay. In the original, plan two dredging stepl were outlined. The latest propooal eombines tbe two plans and results 1n a saving of $1 million to the county and $1 mllllon to the lrvine Company, ae<Xlrding to County AdmlnistraUve Officer Robert E . Thomas:. The orlgJ.ml land swap ln the area calls for the company to deed ~ acres to the county for 157 acres o£ public tidelands. It is contended that the county 1'0Uld gain 18 mllllon on the rwap deal but to be certain everylhing I! Jegal, a court test al the propocal ii pendlnji. SuperviJor David L. Baker contemed last Tue!day that .. dredging could be done now because of tbe pending Superior Coutt suit. Supervisor Alt.on E. Allen backed the propooal oo thal the dredging can pro- cee<J . "The Irvine ComPlll1 has qreed to reimburse all \Hing agencies involved for any Jou that m!Jbl occur." Allen noted. "Bui the main thing ii thal the Upper Bay Mvelopment must ~e forward," Allen tdded. uFallure to do ao would be a catastroplla. Jt 'll'IU provide a ....... u..i area for an al Or~e Counl1 u well u Southern CalJlomla. Sex SympQsium Set A IJlllpollum on.~ -ldnca· Uon cwnea !Or tht !(~ Upl· Ded School Diltrlet 11 ocheduJed dl!rlDg · Ille 10· a.m, mOe\lq ol Ille Haliior l!'olum Ocl. 15. Speahri will lllcludl Dr. ~abn Deon. <Urrlclllmn dlrodor al the -dlotrld; Dr. Plal Alldi011, a Lot Anpleo ""1JI. clan, And Dr. Paul G. N-, poJlor .- the Finl lloplill Cllun:b .-Olola -~ OAIL"r' 'ILOT ltltf ...... DEFENDENT BOWED -FOLLOWING CONVICTION Mrs. Irene' Tucker Aw•lts Oct. 30 Decision • Defe11se •nests~ Mrs. Tucker's Attorney Reviews Case Rest and reflection.was on the calender today for Irene Tucker murder trial defense attorney Paul Augustlnt Jr., after his client's conviction Wednesday i,n Orange County Supd!O!" Court. - "I never pursue a coune Of ac;tion ,or conduct wlthdut iumde.1 ~and­ review of eYid'eaal{~··tiW' iADd u. re<Qt'd," said AU(Ualloe, a lamlJy friend of Mr.' and 4'0-~ ·Tuc:Mr. Mrs. Tueker faC.. probSUon and sentence hearilig oci. 30 at 9 a.m., allow~ Ing AugusUne 20 days in which to con-- sider new moUqns -ir any -which may be made at that tlnfe. U nothing changes at the ·ume or the hearing, Judge Ronald C?ookshank ii quite likely to impose the maximum sentence of five· years to Ufe on the I& cotxl degree murder,convict1on. Mrs. Tucker lw been declar<d seriouJ. ly poychotlc following sharply' confilcting testimony from psychiatric evaluaUons done during the three months she has re- mained in custody. "Ever)'one who commit! a crime ls mentally ill," Judge Crookshank 01-rved Wednesday, 1borlly belor< lindJq Mrs. Tucker fU)lty. "But we're not talking about 'that kind' or crime," he added, presumably speak- ing in the context of minor infractions such as BhopllfUnc and other chronic acts. · Augustine argued the case tor Mrs. Tucker'a insanity plea belo~ the court, but Callfornla's long~ed McNaughton Rule, a narrow deflnlUon assailed by psychlatrlst8, Wu applied non~less. Tho McNaughton Role requires that for a defendant to be found not guilty by reason of' lnaanlty that be be unable to comprehend either of these tWo concepts: -The naturo and quillty ol bi.I act. -The cJllfmncO between right and wrong. Augustine hued his lll'flllllenl on two prior cases, the Peop1e versua Wolff, and The People: veratll Best. The People Vel"IUI WoW involved a boy who premeditated the u-llandle m~ of his own mother, reflecting for IOl'DI time on what be wu about to do. The cue ended 1n a aecond degree con- vlctlon rather than first deiree, liowe.ver, becauoe the boy WU mentally -peble ' . llEW YOJl!I; (AP) -Tllo 11nc1: marltt -ill ~":"' Jato 11111 al· -·(lee ' .._,11-11) •• b bf reflectlug on the consequences to an adequate degree. lndlVidual circwnsbmcel are the key to The People versus ,Dest, 'lthJch iaya the dlvldlng line between aeH-defeoso 'lllll man&laughter ii the presence of malice. • "In her state of mind," AQg\lBtlne aaid, l'jllrs. Tuck .. just happened lo letl ... • had •lo_ defend beneU." ThC lat al boll) Is the ablllty In know -and underitand -the qualilJ 'and nature of one's act -and WlderstaDd - that il is a wrongful violation of another'• rights, Augustine argued. Judge Crookshank decided that In the case of The People versus Irene Tucker, the delendant understood. Deaplte JOslng out on Mn. Tucker's Jn. sanity plea, 'Augustine pral!ed the swi!llJ inoving but thorough proceedings which were the result .ot intensive pre-trlal preparaUon. · "Becawse of Uie tremendous knowledge of Judge Crookshanlc and Deputy District Attorney Enright, we bad a com_pjlct trial, but nothing was neglect!d." Augustine uld. Many hours were spent before the trial opened, poring over evidence and estab\iS}llng procedures to avoid a long, drawiH>ut session, he aaid. · Jiuy· ~•Is -: especially Jn . a capital case such as Mn. Tucker'a -frequently take several daya just to secure a panel of 1~ 'persOns to bear the case. • BRUNDAGE KEEPS OLYMPICS POST M!:XJCO;CITY ·(AP) -Avery 8nJn. dage, 81·yeai'"9ld-aPolllle of amateurtmi in sporta. won re-election today u preai· deni of ~ lnlematlonaJ Olympic Com· mittee, defeatlni Count Jean Beawnont of France, the oaly other candidate for the prestigtOUJ 1>0SI. The' ballM was secret.· Brundage was ~ected to a four year tenn which would carry hia presldenct tbrougb the 1972 Games in Munich, Gennlllj'. We.tfler The weatherman'• on a ~en record, and Friday's forecut foJ. lows the patt.ero -ck>udy mom- tnp arid llU01IY allernoons with the .........,, -la a 7tJ nit. lll/SIDB l'ODll't' A1 polllkn look al Ille ap- proach(ng pr<Jid<ntfol nica, tllev con't 1erm to agr11 on a IOf'PUIU. Ecch poU11 IJ7ll1fff' 1e1m1 to ct. ~ ... ,.,..., 41kiflg Ill' QV<l- llonr. Sec Page 6. ,_ :;:-, __ --··-....... IP• ..,.., ....... ~~:: ... .._ --.. ' .... " " .. M • " U·r: " • . " • • ' . • • ,. 'P':a • • -• •-" .. -...-~ • ...-• .. . . ~ ~ . -. ~ .-..--,,_ .. ------------------------- I DAii. y l'ILOT Tllund.i7. -10, 1968 County Approves ·.Africa Farm Near. Laguna! ...... _ ..... _ ......... PllDI for c:omtructlon of a 'Jo mllllon, SOHcre Atrlcan lllhnal preeerve on leas. ed Irvine ""'-' !And In tho -lrvlna-,..... appro...t Wednesday by coum, plarmln& c:ommlalooen. IWTy -· president of !Joo Coun· try satart Ine., aald development ol the 1: pruerve wW commence 1n about two months time. 'lbe le~ acrtaae Is located -and -ol tho -ol the Sall Diep Froeway and Lquna CanyonBoad. . '--IDll Ibo pluaera taqled over :-..::-..:.'r' ;~=: '= by Ibo ,._.., _.. ..... could ... ha..-.d..t. But-bod• ...... the comm'"'m'• 1nltltenot U..t ontJ lour aignl ttlalij11 to the park coold be polled adjacent to the freeway. Shu.ter. boJ)el to have !Joo Coontry Salarl completed In lato 1969. The llnbh· ed preaerve will Jncorporete an African· style, thrte.ftory Treeto{>a Hotel, a motel, a restauract and a commercial abowlni centor. On opening, I b e pruorve will provide parkilli space !or a,uo can Jn off~ areu, with J,000 F,.... P,,.e J MRS. TUCKER ' vol•lnc Inanity and ~ - pleu. "The laue II: What wu Pinc C11 la Mra. Tl.tcter'i mind," be c:oOUnued. · "Al to tho latter lllui; poycblatrllll · don't agree/' the judge Aid, lddinc that be flaU, .. J .... !lndlnp by Dr. Slplund Kosewlel< 1D11 Dr. Pbllllp Kramer, who testified Mn. Tucker II 1181\t. "She'• psycbotlc," he said. "The mental ll1nea 11, in my oplnloa, enouib to reduce tho crlme from !Jn! to """"1d dearee -and that II my Judi· ment and flndiDI," Judge Crooiahant concluded. . Mn. Tucker now facea a state Jd.son term of five years to life -although she is to ncelve psycbiatric treatment u well -for tillina: a woman she losilted Wedneaday ii not; dead. Em1gbt bad uked Judp CrooUhanlt ror a first degree murder conviction, which carries a sentence of life in prison, describing ber as a vengeful, but rational woman who killed mallclousJ,y. "Due to the mental condtUon, irhlcb we have cimceded all along, we are no!. ask- ing the death penalty," he said before the court. Triumphantly, Enright noted that Mrs. Tucker's at-t J m e HJ:plOllve testimony Wednesday afternoon almost exacUy sup- ported bis hypolhellcal thecry ol bow Mrs. Westphal wa.s 1lain. No One questhmed that twO women fought bitterly 1ri • o m e backyard con- fronlalion triggered b) a stimulus which died wllh the vlclim and 1s evidently buried In the klller'• biatn. 'lbe deleoae maintained the Idea tllat Mrs. Westphal; a robust, 170-pcund woman, wu stabbed in seu..ier .... bJ Mn. TUcke.r, who drove a ~ tnlfe ab lnchell lnto the vlctlm'1 right llde. Enrlcbl. Charged thal Mrs. Tucker llalked#lla -and ~1 ~Mn. Westphal out Into l\llnoi'.<&. ~ ID a wngefU! 1'111~ belni ~Oij.1'_ 8Jld fatally WoU'Ddi1 her there~ ' "' ' 'lbe Giiiy IAirprlle dbcl...,.. !rom the defendant oo the wJtne11 stand wu that ahe went after ber nel&bbor with not one, but two knives. Police never considered such a posslbillty. Describing events leadlng up to the slaying which -..cl the quiet Mesa Verde area, Mn. TUcter repeated her venion of be1ng senselessly attacked and beaten with bands, a garden hooe and nozzle. Reciting lbe tncldent -aometimes us-Inc oddly turned pbr .... as I cblld might -then 1llpplog Into the Impeccable Engll'1l ol • cool, cultured lady. the pro- secution'• coneept unfolded along wllh her story. Mn. Tucker, diagnosed as a paranoid IChizollhreDlc with little hope of recovery, ll1d ahe wu 1oinl to the garage with a load of la.-Y wlien struck in the back of tho neck by '°""' object. "It WU a bard lut and I aald 'Ob,' and went !onoanl. I 'dnipped the basket," she aald, "I aa.ld to myaelf: 'I lrurt very badly.' .. "I beard noiles after being hurt from behind. I ran and got the soap -in the container -and threw lt at the fence. I beard running I.et, a llCUffltog ICUJld and cackl1ng laughter," Mrs. Tucker tesWled. ''Tbeb I ran around the 'fence to see wbo lt wu -that was probably very loollab - I abould have ..,.. Inside the home," lbe added. DAILY PILOT OU.NGE COAST ,UaLllHIHG COM,ANV llH..rt H. We-4 ,.....,.,,, .,.. ........ Jee• ~ Curley vie. ,.,_'°'"' '"" ~11 ,,..,.._ '"'''"'' IC'•nil .. ,., Tho"''' A. Murphlfte Me!Wlnt EO!tw '•111 Hl11•11 Adveftllfll• DltKIOI' c ........ Office 130 Weit lty Street Mtlll119 Ad4te11r P.O. lex 1160, t26J6 The two women collided while rouodlng lhe fence. Mri. Tucker l8ld Mri. Westphal mnubed her with • garden hose and knocked her down, !alllni OD top .. lhc two women wrttUed. in what nelther knew then wOuld be a death duel. 11Sbe looked horrible. Ablolutely hor· rlble -the look on her fact," Mrs. Tucker tesUfted, ''the kind ol ICft&llled eomethlng-at me. She looked clearl)r out of her mind. • • " "She wu holdins me down wit.h her big body, with her knee la my chest," Mrs. Tucker said under oath. "I wu beaten up at least five or 10 minutes. It was a long ttme I was being hurt, hurt, hurt." Mrs. Tucker, wbo ii believed to have atruct back with a roct ahe picked up, aald she eacaped and ran home after Mrs. Westphal had yanked on her jaw, mangllng her lower l<elh. "My teeth were banging out. I looked awful," said the defeodant, mentioning she bad glimpsed herself in chrome on her kit.cben stove. "I was shaking like a leaf. Crying. I tried to declde what Lo do. I calfed the bank," Mrs. Tucker testified. "It was hard to talk but I told the secretary to tell my husband to come home immedJately," she said under oath, but Tucker was away from the United California Bank branch only blocks away. Here, Enright declared in swnmation, came the ,turning point as Mrs. Tucker's tragic tendencies were stimulated by some unknown factor -maybe a word or tone. "What were your thoughts concemlng Mrs. Westphal?" Augustine asked. "I feH I had to de!end myself," Mrs. Tucker Aid from tho stand. "Did she enter .your boUle7" hJ don't kiiow." 0 U I.had.been thinking right, I would have called the police," Mrs. Tucker Aid. Gradyally beginnlne to weep, the de!rn- ~ rel11¢ ~,oi.,wenl.Jo tho Im· maculate kitchen, prc1ceij up a roast knife and a parJng knife and !ell lhe bowe, anned. L "For some reason, she started scu(fllng again," Mrs. Tucker-said, "she kept k!ck· ing at me, we were fighting in the street. I kept going around aod around her. 1 had the knives la hand." A woman whispered sharply In the ccurtroom. No one wu outside to aee the mad, whirllng scramble « 'Mn. Tucker and Mrs. Westphal as the Tucker pupa, Butch and Fluff, danced about, barking aod ·whining. "I thought-as I lunged at her, 'Thank God', the knives only wenl through the clothes and nicked her," Mrs. Tucker said. 1be larger blade, however, had sliced between Mrs. We.atphaJ.'1 seventh and eighth rib, an autopsy showed, cutting • pulmonary artory in the lung and nlcldng her spine. "I went into the boUle and it was then I realli:ed the enormlly of what bad hap- pened .•• " "Mrs. Tucker • • • Mrs. Tucker," Augustine Interrupted. "It could not have gone Inward because I didn't push it 1n," Mrs. Tucker declared on the stand, her voice riaing and her features sbarpening. Enri&bt arose, lllotn-faced. "Your Honor," he u.id, "may the record show that It occurred in the mid-- die of the street." "Did abe scream?" asked AuausUne who argued Mrs. Westphal had been stabbed in the struggle between the two bacqardl. "No, I said 'Oh God' -or al least I beard : 'Oh God' -I don'l know,'' Mrs. Tucker testified before the silent au. dience. Her husband, father 1nd two alstera showed no emotion, although Tu c k e r bowed his bud in his hands at the later Verdict. "Had you thrust at Mrs. Westphal?'' Augustine questioned. "Nosirree!' just that once ," the defen· dant ezploded, "I don't believe that woman is dead. I know what I did and it could nol kill her or anyone else." Vlalbly reddening and r i 1 In g at the witneu stand, Mrs. Tucker bitterly !ought the concept o! Mrs. Weatpbal'1 dealh. lndicallng she beUeved the murder char&• to be untrue. "Why should I believe what you oay ••• just bee-you abowed plcturu! Loll of people look 111ke," Abe shouted, "even ln jail I encountered three women who looked and talked llke Mn. Weslpltal." Judie Croobhank Witched the defen- dant next to him Wilh nnewed -u ahe "!'loded Into .IJrttile.volc:ed dlatrtbel dlncted towanl AlliUlllne, who sat urod-ly. "I have DOthJnc mar.," her defender aald -ahe bad llnlobed. "No queailons," ldded Enrlghl Newsmen in lhe cwrtroom, walUna to ... bow Mn. 1'ld<er would react to £nri&ht'1 ct011 °V'l\ID1Uon, &lancld at eoob other. Sbt bad juot IOllillod lot Iha ..... -.tian, Wbllo lhe def-tried to mab ID cue. ~ J ....-..... In the part """ lplC8 ilanuil:aol .... !urlla' l,11111 auloa. -aid 1111 aUnal~ wU1 bl • ur: ....... "" at •'very much oo lhe !Ina ol Dbnoyland operaUon." Hla Orange County project wW be modelled on what he says is a highly 1Ucoesstul Lion Country Safari In Florida where 50tne 1$0 African an1mals -among them lions, zebra, impala, springbok, wildebeeste, giraffe, gnu, eland and ostrlc;hes-roam 640 acres that were cut from Everglades country. Vislton to the Orange County par~ will driv• throuib the pmerve and •Ill be From Pqe I TIGERS •.. Gibson a Series mark or 32 strikeouts. No runs, no hits., no err~. none left. Cardlaal1 Tblrd-t Wert threw out Gibson. McAullffe threw out Brock. Wert threw" out Javle:r. No nms, no blts, no errors, none left. 11gen J!'om1h t MoAulllle hit a towering fly to Marls. Slanley beat out a roller to deep short for a aing]e. Ka1ine took a third strike. Shan· non went to bis left for Cub's bouncer, and threw him out. No runs, one blt, no erron, one left. Canllnala Fourth I The attendance: 54,69%. Stanley took Flood's am.ash oo a 1hort hoR,, bobbled the ball momentarily, then recovered and threw him out. Wert knocked down Cepeda's hard grounder and threw him out. Shannon struck out. No nms, no hits, no errors, none left. 11gen Filth I Horton popper to Javier. Shannon made a fine running catch of Northrup's fly foul down the left fleld line. Freehan fli. ed deep to Brock in Jell. · No rum, no hits, no errors, none left. Cardinali \ Ftftb I McCarver grounded a single past Stan· Jey i,nto left. Marls struck out. Maxvlll fouled to Cash, a.etUng a Series futility record or 22 consecutive trips to t h e plate w\thout a hit. tlibson popped to Mc· AulifJe. No runs, one blt, no errors, one Jert. Ttpn Sb<th t Wert to Flood. Javier threw out LoUch. McAullHe flied to Flood. No nutJ, no hits, no errors, none Jen. Cardinali Sh1h 0 Brock grounded a single to left £ o r bis 13th blt in lhe Series, tying a record set by Bobby Richardson of the N e w York Yankees .la llJSO. Brock was out stealing after taking .a big lead off first and breaking for 'Rcond when Lolich threw to c.tsh. Ca5h tossed to Slanley fOT" the putout. Javier lined to Stanley who made a one-hand catch. Flood beat out a single to deep short. Flood was picked off fil'!t and retired, Lalich to Cash to McAullffe to Lolich to Stanley. No ruru, two hits, no errors, none left. Tlgen Seventh 3 Stanley took a third strike. Shannon threw out Kallne. Cash singled to right on a three.two pJtch. Horton bounced ·a llngle Into left, Cash stepping at secood. 1'.'lood broke a few stepa in for Northrup's liner to center, then slipped as the ball sailed over his head to the wall. It went ror a triple, scoring Cash and Horton to give the Tigers a 2~ lead. Freehan lined a double to left center, scoring Northrup. Wert was walked intenlionally. Lolich was called out on strikes. Three runs, four hits, no errors, two !ell Canllnab s.. .. th • Ce~ struck out Northrup and Hor· ton got 1 their signals crossed on Shan. nan's blgb ny to left center and North- rup dropped the ball ror a two-base er· ror. McCarver flied to Kallne. Maris popped ·to Stanley. No runs, no hits, one error, one left. Ttgen Elptll 0 J.avler threw out McAuU!re. Muvill threw out &a:nley. Kallne llned to Ja. vier. No runs. no hlt.s, no errors, none left Can!ID11J Eigfltll t Gagliano batted for Muvill and was thrown out, Wert to cash. Gibson struck out. Brock waited oo four pitches. Jav· ier bunted but was thrown out by Wert. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left. Tigtn Nlnt.111 Scbolleld playing shortstop !or l h e Canlinals, batting eighth. Cash Wed to Maril. -singled to lefl Tracewsti ran !or Horton. North- rup slogled to centtt, Tracewatl going to third. Freehan pol>Piid to Cepeda In foul territory, Wert 11iigled to centor, Tr...,.. ski sccrin.< and N.ortbrup stopplna at aec- ond. Lolich popped '° Javier. One run, three bits, no errors, t w o lelL Mesa Balloonist .To See Olympics Hot 1lr baUoontsl Don Piccan! will drop In on the 1961 Olympic aa1llng reptt11 in Acapulco. PJctanf, a Newpx't Beach resident who builds hls balk>on.s in Costa M e s a, will arriYe le< tho Olympics en Saturday (li>oord a pllna), accompanied bJ 1111 wU1, Joanne. -aid he bao -penilll- alm to danala -lhe Acapa1co -in bopea ·f/£ aparttnc enthu.llaam among Olympics ol!lclab to ]iermlt hot air baJ. loon racing durlllc the 11'11 Olympics In Munich, <ltnnllU'. 'lbe aerlalllt, bolder ol • ......._ u-• Cllllloo-., recently WOil l_al_ Ullcalloo to producs the color!\11 cnll commm:Jall,y. ' -r.......ur -ao1 to all&bl """' thalr ftlllc1& 'lbe a1m or llie entorprbe, -Mid, II for vlaltors to Walch -l1IO African anlmall enjoylai a mode ~ llre and almuJated terrain th.at will be, u nearly aa possible, identical to thejr natucal ~bltat. . ... Game rangers armed with tranquilizer gwis will keep constant watch on the safari trails, Shuster said. 11ley will also be available to tQw dtJvers in difficulty from the area, he .added. . Shuster owns, iri addJUoa to the Florida animal part, preserves In-Johannesburg, South Alrloa -his home town -lhe N-aml la .,,,...ad, ..,,.. control& the ~ull· ol Bllh'I "LIOOI d Longleat" attrad.lpn. Admission charges have not yet been determined, shuoler said, but he bope1 to rtx prices_' on the IU. of Jees set at hil Florida park -$1.liO !or adlilli and 11.23 far children._ . A considerable acreage will be devoted to young vl.jltqn. Slluator said .. 11• p""8 to have a Pet Cwner where lllftlller Alrjc.. in!mall, ID10lli .them many whlCh can be haodlad w)UI completual .. . ty bi yOllnpter.s, wlll bl on .tew. , Honorary Okie . . Ex-publisher w Receive. Honor Jo'ormer Newport Beach newspaper publisher Ben Reddick, credited with cointng the nickname ""Okie" during the 0e"presslon, Friday wlll be named an "Honorary Okie" by Oklahoma Gov. Dewey Bartlett. Bartlett'• special emisaary, Mike McCarville, Is currenUy in Los Angeles trying to find Reddick and give him the: Honorary Okie certificate. "When Reddick coined the nickname, it waa in a very sympathetic news story and had none or the connotat.iona it later received," McCarville explained. "We don't know if ReddJck is sWl ajive or if he's still in California bul we: thought he'd get a bang out of an honor over teh name he coined," the governor's aide said. McCarville will find Reddick alive and active 11 publisher-editor of the Palo Robles News-Press. Reddick coined "Okie" while Creelan- cing a photo plcture page for the old Los Angeles Elaminer when he covered migrant camps during the depression years of the 1930s. He noticed that all of Bill Doomed the migrants' Jicense platu had "OK" on them -thus he devi.aed the nickname. Novelist John Steinbeck· la sa.ld to have later picked up the "Okie" tag in his book, "Grapes of Wrath." "I don't really know whether I came up with it first or Steinbeck dld,'' ReddJck told the DAILY PIL<Yr today. Then swip- ing a line Crom Mark Twain, Reddick ad· ded, "But you can tell Gov. Bartlett that the reports of my death -if any -are greatly e:s:aggerated." Reddick noted that at the transient camp neat Blythe in the 1930!, Oklahoma ~ot credit for many migrants who came from elsewhere. "They passed through Oklaham.a with illegally registered cars," Reddick recall- ed. "Oklahoma gave them a license plate, a transient certificate, tank of gas and a meal, then asked them to move on." Reddick doe1 have one real Oklahoma connecUon, His wire, porotby, is a native of Sapulpa, Okla. "Because of the Okie nickname, once in 1966 they almost made me an admiral in the Oklahoma navy," the publisher quip- ped. GOP Filibuster Threat Ruins Debate Chances WASHINGTON (UPI) -Repu!>llC81l filibuster threats forced the Senate.today to lay aside Jegi&ladon to permit television debates between the three ma- ,jar, ~deotial c~tes .. dQorning the bill iil ~ congresaionaJ adjournment rush. After a quorum Call that lasted one hour and 40 minutes, Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield announced the controversial House-passed bill would be laid aside to permit the Senate to debate a supplemental appropriations bill. The Door manager for the TV debate measure, Sen. John Pastore (~R.I.), virtually conceded there was no chance , ' Thief Cashes In, Steals Register Laurence Flores complained of a cash register theft Wednesday to Costa Mesa police. Someone stole the cash register. Flores said bis daughter was in charge of the ram.Uy dry cleanlilg store at 2117 Harbor Blvd., and had stepped to tho rear of the atore for about five minutes. She heard the ringing of the customer's bell, and when she went to the front discovered the cash register had been taken from the counter. 'I'otal Joss of machine and contents was placed at $701. rar passage before adjournment because of the &publican opposlilon. "They know they can stop it," the: Rhode I.slander told the Senate. "And they know 1·1m0w the~ can stop it." Mansfield said the measure was being put aside "indefinitely." The bill would have permitted. Richard M. Nixon, Hubert H. Humphrey and George C. Wallace to debate tbe issues on television without requlrltig equal lime for minor party candidates. The measure was the subject or a pro- longed House batUe this w e e k as RepubllCBU delaying tactics kept the chamber in se.sslon for 'n hours before admini!tratlon forces could pass the bill. Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen, who led the GOP fight against the bill, noted that Democrats had block· ed similar legislailon In 1964 to provide for debates betweea President Johnson and Republican Barry M. Goldwater. "U il was fish then, it ougbl to be fish now," he said. "ll it wu fowl then, it ought to be fowl now." Pastore said that so many Democrats were home campaigning ror re-election that it would be impossible to breat a Republican filibuster or succeed against dilatory tactics. "I realize that if we press lhiB," he said, "Republicans would have enough troops to stagger us to death by quorwn calls or they could talk lndefinJtely and compel us to go over unUI next week." jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "111n ......... __ _ lll1uctloa of I ropllca of an African village with pre:seotaUon of authenUe tribal rituals and danceo. Sbustor eitpecll to have more than $00 persons on his Orange CQunty l"')"OI! when the ~arl project Ii cOlllj)1eted. . . . Tonaue-ln-cheek p 1 a n n 1 n g c<lm· missioners, discussing the type ol oign that Shuster hopes to erect, indicated lhey already knew tbe wordiJlf ol one sign thal .,.., placed in the Florida park: "No Traspuslng. Private Property. Violators Will Be EATEN'' Irvine Company · '~sking Annex At Home Tract The Irvine Company wants to clole the gap between the 50<).bome Upper Harbor View Hills tract now being built and the rest of the city of Newport Beach. Jt asked the city today to annex 106 acres separating the new resldenUal development along Ford Road from "lower" Harbor View Hills. Both tracts lie east of MacArthur Boulevard. Irvine's land development vice presi· dent, Ray Watson , explained that the company believes "the enttre planned commwrlty" should be associatett with and serviced by the city. With the an- nexation, hundreds of addiUonal homes presumably would be bullt. Councilmen will be asked to adopt a resolution of intent to annex the area on Oct. 28. The COWlty's Local Agency Formation Commission will then be ask· ed to rule on the uninhabited annexation. Affinnatlve adlon is ezpected in boUt cases. Rites Saturday For Rev. Ikast Of Harbor Area Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday in Bell Broadway Chapel 'for ~be Rev. Jens P. Nielsen Ikast, active throughout bis llle in the Church of God and a long-Ume Harbor Area resident. The Rev. Mr. Ikast died at the age of 77 Tuesday at Hoag Memorial Hospital after a short illness. Born in D e n m a r k, in 1891, he em- igrated to the United Stat.es when he was 19 to join an uncle in Arlington, S.D. He was ordained as a minister of the Church of God (Anderson, Ind.),' and returned to Denmark in 1923 to serve as editor of the Gospel Trumpet unW the early 1940's. Returning to the U.S., the Rev. Mr. Ikast had congregaUons in Columbus, Neb., and Rapid City, S.D. He retired ln 1948. His wire, Cora, also an ordained minister in the Church of God, dJed seven yeal"fl, ago in Costa Mesa. He is survived by a son, Dr. David I. Nielsen of Newport Beach, a physician on the Hoag staff and president-elect of the Orange County ~1edica1 Association. Dr. Nielsen is a former mid-west chairman for the Youth Fellowship Movement of the Church of God in 19 states, and has Jong been active in Harbor Arta com· munity affairs. Other s u r v l v o rs include theree daughters, Joy Barnes, of Westminster ; Esther Fair of Wisconsin and Ruth Leedom of Costa Mesa, themselves ac· live in the Churcb of God; three brolbers, Carl Ikast o£ South Dakota, Marlinus Ikast and Niels Ikast, both of Denmark; 14 grandchildren and one great. grandchild. 5-inaf Clearance/ I 200/o TO 40°/o --LOOK FOi IED SALi TAGS - H.J.GAR~ij{ ~~~NflURE PROFESSIQIW. ......._ -= · • I'll. -2111 HAR~ ILVD. -.-COSTA I.IRA. C.O,LIF. ll«lltOa -~ '46-1211 • ~17' r • .! ' ' BY WILLIAM REED. ... d •••• In the Wind Law enforcement is a multi· faceted activity which somewhere along the line assumes that some of th& law breakers can be returned. to the community under strict supervision so they can demonstrate that the proverbial "new leaf' has been turned. "New leaf turnin~" sometimes is a long process and aiding in the process is a group of dedicated young men and women who believe that people have been in trouble are worth helping. . DAILY ,ILOT Shff 't1tM A group of these people wo~k. m Huntington Beach area supervuang youth who have for various reasons gone astray. There is a serious pr<>- blem in the city and many tempta· lions for youth, particularly in the narcotics area. Honorar11 Newsman * Helping those on probation to keep on the straight and narrow is a group of probati.on office~ led by .William Morton. These offic~rs want to establish a Io c a 1 office where they can meet their charges directly, often an~ on the scene of the daily temptations. As part of National Newspaper Week observance (Oct. 6-12), William Reed, Huntington Beach aty edilor for the DAILY PILOT, (!ell) p~esents plaque ~ Htmtington Beach Mayor J\]vin M. Coen. Plaque CJ.'tes mayor for his "demonstrated interest in a free press" and desig· nates him as ·~honorary newspaper man." There is no money from a governmental source for. ope~ng and maintaining an office nght now. Undaunted by Uiis handicap, the officers are out in the com- munity now looking for someone or Beach . Firemen to Visit a J?;roun to help. . City Schools in Program . An office is needed, preferably in the downtown area where the pro- blems must be faced. Money is needed for operation. including telephone and other utilities. The Probation Department provides the manpower. , * Right now the Exchange Club is involved in trying to drum up. a donated Oflice and some help wit~ financing the operation. Club presi- dent Bill Terzenbach has all the details and J know he would ap- preciate the inter~st . o~ anv other service club or 1ndiVlduals who mieht be interested. His telephone number is 962-~91. The club's crime o rev en t 1 on chairman is David Linder and his telephone is 546-9316. This is . a great opoortunitv for someone with an empty office or b u i I d i n g downtown to help in crime preven· tion. ..,.~ * Next April when Hunt~n~on Beach Union High School D1stnct trustees John Bentley, Ray Schmitt and Richard Wilson face re-elec· tion they likely will have to fight the battie of the naming of Edison High School again. Mrs. Nancy Tepper, who wanted the school named after the late Robert F. Kennedy, said Tu,esday night that trustees should not ig· nore her petition bearing the signatures of 1,800 backers of the Kennedy name. 'Because this board is an elected body you may ultimately regret it," she said. The comment drew strong applause from a la~ge crowd at Huntington Beach High School auditorium. Later a student leader, David Wilson of Huntington Beach High School.' told trustees that if the matter were not referred to a stu· dent election as trustees had pro- mised earlier, "We will work as much as we can for the defeat of those trustees who support this web of deceit." * Mounds of earth giving contour to sections of city parks in Hun· tington Beach have displeased some groups and i n d iv i d u al s almost since the first one was shown o'n paper by Park Architect Richard Bigler of Laguna Beach.1 Mrs.O'Leary's cow would hold her head high, if she knew what her foot stomping 96 years ago has wrought. This week, in commemoration of her Oct. 9, 1872, foot-flinging that reputedly sent a burning lantern into the hay resulting in the great Chicago fire, the Huntington Beach fire department is beginning a new fire prevention program. Called Public Education Information, the program is aimed at showing school children and merners or civic groups how · to prevent fires and to p r o t e c t themselves in case one starts. By the end ol the year, every filth Westminster To Dedicate New Center "Little Ben" at tbe south end of the Westminster Civic Center is set to chime greetings Sunday to the guest speaker at dedication ceremonies for the muJti· million dollar complex. Margaret Jonathan, a member o! the City Council o! Westminster, England, will speak at 2:30 p.m. Dedication ceremonies will be folklwed by tours of the buildings. · The public is invited. The site at Westminster Avenue and Beach Boulevard contains 20 acres with five acres utilized by the West Orange County Municipal Court. The City administration and com· munity services building faces Westmin- ster Avenue. City council chambers are located in the middle of the mall with the police building and clock tower at the south end. Miller Will Attend Parley in Detroit Huntington Beach City, Administrator Doyle Miller, who admitted Monday that he is not back to work fuJI time as yet following recovery from a heart attack, is beading for Detroit where he will at· tend a conference Oct. 21 through 26. Miller said that following the 54th An· nuaJ. Conference of the International City Administrators, he will take anolber week off. grade class in the city's 35 public, private and parochial schools will be visited by a fire department spokesman. The captains and chiefs, conducting the demonstrations on their own time, will distribute manuals on fire prevention and safety and show how fires actually start. "We've offered this service on demand before, whenever teachers have asked w to come and do it," explained Battalion Chier Doug Spickard. The Orange County Fire Prevention Of- ficers Association began o f f e r in g demonstrations for fifth graders In 1952 with officers from every ire departmeni in the county participating. A lack of manpower bas prevented Huntington Beach from joining the pro- gram on a full-scale basis until this year, Chief Spickard said. The depart- ment in the past 18 months has grown from 70 men to about 103. Hopefully, a fire official will make three &rips to each school, he conlJoued. Flfth grade teachers will be given booklets of. ferlng suggestions on teaching fire safety in the clasm>om. At the end of the year, the students will be given gold badges and a diploma showing they have had the instruction, the chief added. The fire department also will olfer similar fire prevention prgrams for women's groups, service clubs and civic organizations. To arrange a demonstra· tion, call the fire department. Openi.Ilgs Remain In Park Program Signups for five Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Department classes con- tinue to be taken at City Hall, 102D0 Slater Ave. Programs sWI open are: -Ladies .Silm and Trim, Monday and Wednesday, Los Amigos High School, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. -Tumbllng·Acrobatics, Monday and Wednesday, FVHS, 6 to 9 p.m. -Gymnastics, Tuesday, FVHS, &:30 to 9:30 p.m. -Tennis, Saturday, FVHS, 9 a.m. to noon: -Flag Football, Saturday, Fountain Valley Elementary School, 9 a.m. to noon. For details on the activities and their fees , contact the recreation office at 962- 2424, ext. 211. No.w the City Council is -begini- ning to wonder if the picturesque contour& are really needed. Monday the council called for consideration of hiring other park architects to design the local parks. Ocean View. Must Process The pri>blem came up when a park-starved Huntington Beach was able to afford development of five parks three years ago. One of 41 Transfer Applications ,the parks. Murdy Park on ~den J4ore .. then·41 students have requested West Street, fl or th of Warner · ·tnuisfers into or otit ·or the Ocean View Avenue featured prominent ipiounda of ' earth which prevent -&-..hoot; Di.strict tJlia )!ear, which meant lootball and baSeball games except . ~ of paJ>Ul!'or~ that had to be 1n the designated area at the eait reviewed ,by the district trustees Monday. end of the facility. Supt. <llarence L. Hall, after trustees Objections began to come to the bad aJ>lrOved· the requests of these councihpen pointing out that at a ltudents either to ·at~ other district time · when the various Little , ac:bool.s or to come to Ocet\n View 9Choo11 • Lea~es and football teams needed from other areu, suggeated that trustees playmg areas, the city was ou~t not to ave to bother w1tb IUc;h developing parks in such a manner detail as to e1clude the t e a m s from He proposed a "intenHstrict attendance using the perks. policy", which In effect would give the Councilmen agreed to hire Biglq superintendent the ,..pooslblllty of rvan-_ to develop working drawin~• for ti"I! transfers to &tudenta. the proposed LeBard Park ll1 the >.. >Pfll'OVed oo fiht rtadiog-1 final southeast section of the city, but bearlog. wUJ. be held pct. 21--<ludent.I asked that the Recreation and from other districta can attend Ocean Parks Department consider askin,g vteW 9Chools u they: for presOJ1tatlons from other part --Gtt approval Ill the local school F"" •rchltecta for any projects lri the dpal. future. -The parent er &1W'IWl I.I employed • • and needs to provlele adequate schooling in the Ocean View idistrlct. -Have educational or behavioral pro- blems that can best be resolved by a change to another IChoo1 system. -Rave moved into the boundalrea of another school district but they are within the last grade level of the achool which they attend . -Have moved during a school year in- to another llChool district. Interdistrict attendance permits are to be Issued for only year only. Renewal of permil• will be denied U the student doel not maintain saUs{actory ocbolanhlp, citizenship and attend.a.net recordl or false Information is given u a basis for securing the permit Dr· Hall added that 0 all ocean View Olstrict re&idents will be given first coo- aideraUon Jn classroom uaage" when other dlslrlct student.I req110lt trinlfen to Ocean View c1...,..,... ~· Thursday, Octe>Mr 10, 1968 DAILY Pilaf # Fountain 1' CJlley Projeet Air 'Education Taking Off Air-age education, a program under development In Fountain Valley the past year and a half, is tlll its way to Cessna Aircraft and then to some 60 educaton across the United States. Fountain Valley pioneered the study to bring Jets -or information about them -to children whose education was almdy speeding lurth<r ~d of what thelr parentl had known. Fountain Valley and two school districts ln Seminole, Okla., and W1chlta, Kan., were selected by Ces.!na to develop the ''air.age education program." Tested at Nieblaa and Harper Schools, the program Involved use. of models, the acUng out ct airport situations in class end vlaill to the °™'" County "1rport. a..u!ta of the lk>ontb 1tu<ly •.- by c.sma Aircraft, American - end the Bovell Corp. have - -forwarded to the airtraft c:ompulea. The fhlaU:ed program, wftb ...,._ reyisioD.! from the educalon: who _. tD look it over, will be used In all !'oUa&aln Valley sclloolf ne.xt ye8:f. TODAY AT BUFFUMS' ... FOUR GREAT FURS AT ONE LOW PRICE lkwport Cooter 333.00 Jlow's lite time to seJOOt !fle ooat DI your dreams at BulfU!lis'! Meie are br af 1 ihe'ni.ost wan.led furs.of the ne~ fall :iaason .•• , each 0ne an exc;eptiOlllll Yaille. A, Nafu al mmk cape or stole 111 shades from pale ch1mpa11e m darks. All wilb double r collars. B. Black dye 'broadtail procassed lamb iMllNe-foorths Sl!ollw eoat. c. Natura l mink ·u, belted splifhoatlll 32".str,oller loo~ D .. Natural grey Pers~· an lambjackets.wtth eerulean·mink eolfa Ask· about Buff urns' pl with 36 months to pay,.when·Y<llf come ill ID saeOI' Ms. Fur ~Ion; ,,. '''""'" '"'""~'·"--...... u u fl Fashioo lslM!I • 6+1·2200 a ) • • , " ' a cssccsaes •• •• ... . = 4 • = • = + = • • • • = = • • • + • ···====· Thund'1, Ot-10, l'M Tho town of Ondarra, Spain, Is looking for a street sweeper. An ad In today's edition of the official pro- vincial newspaper says applicants must be decently Chrlst!in and politically above reproach. 'In ad- dition, tliey must take dictation in a 15-minute test. read from a modern book and solve two arithmetic pnr blems In 30 minutes. Finally, they must give a demonstration before a lury of town officials of their street sweeping ability. The job pays $144 a year. • ·-1 Muriel llumphrev c:•• took on Jane Mus· Ii kie and Lodu BW Johnson m a bowl- ing matc1' on the White H&we lanes. •'Oh, • ta !I up there,• Mrs. Hum- phrey taUi as Mr ball edged toward the guttu. As she made a ttrike ahe aaid, "That was on accident." Remark- ed Mrs. Mu.1 kit when she bowled two ball$ and stiU 1w.d °"" pin left standing, "That'1 the story of my lif e." The .!Core after four frames: HumphreJI, 50, Muskie, 44, and Ladu Bird, 36. • The town council of Goroka In New Guinea announced a ban on betel nut chewing bemuse of tile risk of cancer of the mouth. The ban, which threalelll to create a major disturbance among natives fond of betel nuta, prolllbit. native~ from selling or chewing -1 null in the town area and merchantl from selling the nut. Natives may still chew betel nuta In their homes. • Thc-Gcor~-l'<au Offic<rJ Association comfMftdtd Ma11or Richard J. Daletl and Chicago police for tllt llXIU theu hcndltd dem.onatnrtor1 during the Dtmo- cratic Conwntion. A r11ol.i:«ma read m part: ·nv t111ocfatkm hereb11 ooe1 on record a.i com- mending the Chicago police for . . . preventing vfcioul rioters and demOnstrators from achiev- ing their destructive purpo1u • ., The reaoluti01t commended Daler for "unflinching support of-&M I' Chicago police force and for hil . actiO?JS in preventing injury and death to the man11 promtnmt I out-of·state offidall Gttrndiftll the convention." • Volunteer fireman W 1111 • m Germann was Johnny..on·thHpot while on a door-to-door fund drive for Fire Prevention Week. Mn. Charl•1 Newman gave him '5 for the Old Bridge Fire Co, then 1he smelled smoke ln her kitchen and discovered the cabinets were on fire. Germano grabbed a pot off lhe stove, filled it with water and doused the cablnell. Troops Ring Palace Thieu Says Coup Reports SAIGON (1JPI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu. spoking from a palace ring- ed wllll troops and armored can, tald hia nation ln a television speech lut night that romon of an attempted coup agmt the Saigon government were completely untrye. SOuth Vietnamese troope were ln the third day of a coup alert which placed an- tiaircraft gunners atop the Presidential Palace and jeeploads of· troops u well u armored can around the building. Adding to a growing air of mystery were reports a coup had actually bee:n at- tempted and a four.-bour blackout on outgoing Saigon communicaUons before and during Thleu't broadcast. The ~om· munications began working again sbOrtly Bombers .Hit · Enemy Camps Near Saigon SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Alr Force BS: bombers blasted enemy base camps threatening Saigon with heavy raids Wed· nesday and today boosting to more than 700 the number of missions flown in the past four months in defense of the capital. The B52 campaign to blunt an enemy attack on Saigon has become one of the biggest and costliest of the war - perhaps costing $250 million since June L The eight-jet Stratofortresses have dropped more than 125,000 tons of ex· plostVes 1n 705 miulons against bw camps, infiltration corridors and other targets in the ouUying provinces of Saigon. Each misllon averages about six bombers e&ch carrying so toM of bombs at an average cost of $2,000 a ton. The closest raids to Saigon were 24 to 31 mllea northwest of the capital. Other strikes were west and northwest of Lal Kbe, the headquarters of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division. They were 44 miles north.northwest of Saigon. But U.S. IOUrCel said there were no Indications that any of the three enemy diviJlons -: lbe 9th, 7111 and 5tb -baJed north and norlhweel of Saigon were moving on lbe capllll, Untrue alltr Thieu llniab'1 hi> lpeedL - "I wbh to ~clear that Ibero bu been no arrest of Narine olfl~, no ar- rest of generals, apd that tbere are M generals who will ~ forced to retire and that Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky did not do this or that," Thieu said in h1I broadcast. The rumors sweeping Saigon for two days said Marine ~ficera loyal to Ky had been arrested and that cliBsident B\ld. dhisb might be !z?volved in a plot to restore to power Gen. Duong Van "Big" Minh who retumed recenUy to Saigon from exile abroad. Ky and Thieu carried out a power struggle for months but Thieu triumphed and ·has control over the army and police. Some Marine unita were thought to · favor Ky, especially Lt. Gen. Nguyeq ltbang, lbe Mlrille commander. n- were rumora Kba1J1 might nave to retire.• f'Vlce President Ky was ln the Central Higblandl yesterday and be Is back in Sa;gon today," u said. AllhoUgh Tbi<11 dismlBsed the coup reporU, it Wlf obvious something unusual was gOlii( n. . South · · troops manned two antiaircraft g: u n r on the roof of t h e palace and the buUdlng itself was guard· ed by jeeploadl of police and armored cars. U.S. War Deaths , In Vietnam Drop SAIGON (AP) -U.S. combat deaths in the Vietnam war dropped last week to their Joweat total since the week of Aug. 17 while those of South Vietnamese forces went up, weekly reports showed today. It wu the 11th. conaecuUve week that deaths among eov~ent forces have exceeded those of American military persoMeL ; t The U.S. Command saJd 190 Americans were killed in action lut Wffk and 1,32.fl were wounded compared with 247 killed and l,77t wounded a week earlier. The toll raised to 28,MB the number of Americans tilled in action in Vietnam &Ince Jan. 1, lMl and the number of wounded in that period to 179,561. Another 1,214 are lilted at missing, cap- tured or Interned. SilJeria Sente.nce Due . . For Russ Protestets? -' MOSCOW lUPIJ-'l'he prosecution to. Clay uked prison sentencea for two ol five Ru.utans who protested th e invuloa of Czecbollov-and banishment to 10me remote area such as Siberia fOT tbe otllor threo. Tho Soviela tried ta keep the trW ln- lide the courtroom today but It lpllled outalde onto the street where debates flared between Communist party workers and aupporten of the defendants. The proaecutor asked a sentence or five yean lnterpal elile for Dr. Pavel Llt.- vinov, 21, leader of the group which stag~ ed the aborUvt proten in Red Square Aug. 25, informed $0W'ctl said. Mrl. Larissa Oanltl, wUe of Imprisoned writer Yuli Danlel, lhould be banished for four yeara--and literary criUc J<onatanUn Babltsky, 32, to three years exile, the prooecutor said. He called for prison 1entenct1J for the other two who bid bad , previous con- vldlODI. -For Vadlm Delone, 21, who had a one-year !UBptnded aentence for diaturb- lnl the peace, two yean plus Ille wuerv- ecf ODI )'ear. term..,. -Fat jobless 1 ab ore r Vladimir Drtmlluga, 27, previously convicted of blackmarket currency dealings, three yem lmprlsonm4"L .. , NATO AIDE HELD FOR ESPIONAGE BRUSSELS (UPI) A high Turkish official in the North Atl anUc Treaty Organization (NATO) haJ been arrested "for a serious breach of security," a NATO spokesman announced today. NA TO did not name the official, but NATO sources 1aJd ht is a Turkish of- ficial in NATO's international secretariat in Bruasell. The sources said he wu caught photographing documents con- cerning NATO fon:e strencth in his office on Sept. 1J with the intent of passing them to Soviet qenta. Hail Pelts New Orie.ans Rain Extends From Great Lakes to Gulf of· Mexico ... • ... l ! .... II\. .... 10:5? 1.m. .... "";-t j :H '""· .... t:2• p.m. Utt'•· .... ..... •. ""' Ott. I• .act. 11 Oct. • Ho.. • V.S. Sum,..,..· Cool •Ir l•nnlnt M5tweiN out -"" Plll!\I lClltter-.cl r1ln f""41 tl'll u.,.. Gre1t Like• '"'°" to Ille Gii" ._ '"'-11ko tad1Y. ~fl • -tlMlll 1 ~ lndlet -"'119 per'l'el d .outheni Ttic .. dUrl149 the nlthl. All Ind! f/I IT\Ol'W clov ... POrtl-ol Mkf\lg.,. I t Ille "'°'""""' erMI d 'lie nllll'I bllt. A tfl'll!I but ln1-'111Uf1111nl.,,.,. IWIPt Htw °"'""" Wld~y nl.iit, P11nM -'"" wlltl N J and ~Ufttllnl Nn d ftie City Int. Wl'll• -·· In ldelltlon to ~ ltor'tft.t.IUld .,_.. t1t1u""" s.ooo t.~ _,.. knocllllil wt untll ~ Mtly """""''* ... ~ Maillel"•lt n l"" •ltO wet .,...... c..t. 11 1trttttM1 d ftle l'~HI$ H°""""9tt, Litt!! 111owtn sorlnl<lecl soulflem ll=loro .... .. I l'emperatures ·--Atllflf1 .. ktf'Sfltllll •llmtl'Ct -..... ""'"' Cll'ltlMttl c....i1M ...,_ ... _ ........ .. -.... Wd ·-H-H..iul9 H_.., k1na1: CJty L11 v ... 1 L•-Ml1l!'ll MllWenlkN Ml""".l'olll """ OrlMlll _y ... 0.kM/W ........ ~:..:: ........ Pltbbtl,. Por1111M1· •...id ctw "" •ruff .... .. _ SI. Louft S.111111 Silt \Allt' C1" Sin cu ... Sin Fr...c:r-,_ ....,n ...... -~.~ w-d " .. .. " .. " " " .. " " .. .... .. .. .11 71 Sf ·" " .. s .. » .. .. ,,. • • n n 1.n " .. " " ts ,, .01' 12 " ·" .... " .. " .. " -.. " " .. 17 ,, .... ,. " " .. " .. .. " ... " .. .. ., ... .. " . " .... " .. .. ..,, .11 " " .... " .. " .. ,. . " '1 II ~ : A • fl Firemen Ail Wet / Ul'I T .... . -' Tbese San Francisco firemen, so accuSll!imed to ·do-struck a !!re hydrant et_ Ocean and Cayuga •t?MU ing the soaking, l!nd their job Isn't always so hot Wednesday. One passenger al the car was reported _ as they get drenched In tcylnlf to move e car_;_tha_t __ ln_J:_ured.c..:..::_· ---~------------ Doctors Ready Tiny Sextuplet ' . For New Surgery BIRMINGHAM. England (VPI) - Doctors today worked to build up the .kength of tiny Lynne Thorns, one of fiye surviving sextuplets who must face a se- cond major operation soon. Lynne, only two pounds, 11J: ouncts when born and 18 inches Jor(g, was operated on Tuesday night to remove an intestinal blockage. The operation was so delicate and Lyn- ne 10 small the surgeon, Dr. Keith Roberts, had tc use instruments normally used. for eye surgery. J ·Lynne's condition early todlcy' still was c~using "considerable concern:," Roberts said. "One Is always hopeful J:>ut I would not llkt to put it any higber1~ Ulat,'' he aald. "Yet 1 have never c~ to be surprised it what the hwilan frame can Btand." . i l An amin~acid (protein) ~IuUon was added to Lynne's intraveu~ teedµig to boost her ,post-operative ienergj intake and td build ·her strength lof the second majqr :operation which wlll 1 also be ab- dominal. . . Use your H&F optional account also BankAmericard or M11ter Charge: Police Arrest 50 Students -- In 'Pittsburgh School Riots By United Presa InternotloZlll Police arre~ted more thiln 50 high school students near a Pi~burgh high school today. One school in New York -and two in Philadelphia were ciosed, and Chicago officials reopened a high schopl closed Wednesday after fitel and fights broke out. The Pittsburgh arrests came at the north side Allegheny High School across the street from a police station and near the Oliver High School. The Oliver school .bu had racW trouble for a year, and last Thursday a series of brawla oceun-ed in and near the school. Tension and in· cidents between black and white 11tudents spread to ot.her Pittsburgh school.I, particularly in the last tbret days. Platoons of Police in ·~anelt .teams" swept" the streets, giving students one - only one -warning to go to school or go home. ThOS;e ignoring the warntng wete arrested. Many were girls. In New York, the board of education avoided a third teachers' strike by cl06· ing Junior High School 271 in.the Ocean Hill-Brownsville District in\Brooklyn. The . enrollment la mostly Negro and Putrto Rican. The action followed a day of trouble Wednesday in which police u 1 e d nightsticks when ZOO angry · resldenta tried to push by baJTicades. At leut · three persona were clubbed down and · seven persons were arrested. Wilson, Smith In Tough Talks GffiRALTAR (UPI) -Premier Ian · ·smlth ·of Rhodesia and Prime Minister Harold Wilson of Britain talked for 3¥.1 hours today on ways of ending the three-- ·year-old apllt between the two countries. The talks were tough and neither side gave ground . ' A British spokesman said Smith and WilSOn met for 15 minutes aboard the ROYal Navy assault ship Fearless moored in Gibraltar Harbor and that they were joined for the rest of the talk.a by their 1 negOtletlhg. teams. ' Harris ·& Frank SI~ 1!J'56 112TH ANNIVERSARY ... _ MEN'S CLOTHING THOUSANDS OF NEW FALL SUITS A great selection to choose from! Classic, Fo rw ard Fashion , Natur!lll Should•r and Shlped Models. Even • number of our popu· lar TWO PANT SUITS in All Wool Worsted1 are incl uded! REG. $J JO FALL 2-TROUSER SUITS This special 9roup includes the bu siness man's fa vorite, high feshion Wool-a nd-S ilk Shark .. 1kin1 as well as 2-Pant Ve1ted Natural Shoul .. ~•r models. • ... $91 & $100 REG. $55 to 59.95 .MEN'S SPORT COATS Annlvernry Priced Selection includes High Fashion and Natur&I' Shoulder models. Tweeds, Sh•tlands, ft•rring .. bo n•s, Pla ids and Checks! REG. 16.95 to 18.95 MEN'S FALL SlACKS Sav• handsomely •n this special grouit of fine quality Slacks -assorted pattarns1 colors! '46 SPECIAL FEATURE VALUE Hti. $JS naMANINf.PRISS AU.WEATHH C01'TS $28 KORATRON® PERMANENT PRESS COATS of Dacro11 and Cotton Poplin with Zip.out fila lin•r for extra warmth. DON'T MISS THE EXCITING SAVINGS IN OUR MEN'S FURNISHINGS, SPORTSWEAR, S H 0 E OEPTS. ANO IN OUR WOMEN'S SHOP ,. Ilarris & E'rank COSTli MISA South Co11t '11u O;IHI I 0 •·M··· , .•• ,M • .._ --1uiII" l'1'U Sh•ppint C•nf1r Opt11 I 0 •.lfi .. f p.1111. Mon. thr. Fri. • ' SANTA ANA Hon1r rt•1• C.nt.r Op•11 10 •.111,.f p.M. M.11, iflN Fri. HUNTlfl•TON llACH H•nH11rt•" C.tttw O,•n 10 ··""·-· ·-Men. thri M. . \,. .. -----------------=="""""=~===~=-=~~===~-......... J ' me .,, ce th• qu an ' Ne H' by la! for Pu (P. die un Jo na be pr• ' sel by 25. H' Ni: we gh • pe; un WI Fl dis un Th jF Hu AF ME Jo I un sai CI• ph th• the of sai I fol SOI TE pn HL OV• wa HL nu bo na till VO tio 7~ Pr in th• ag ta dit WI Hl Tt WI 13. die lir. O\'. nc CE tll 01 "' I. .. tll I ' t I l t I I· [ • • ... 1 .......,., Octobel" 10, 1961 Depen!b Wlao T•lin It ' • Polls Sh()w· Con;flieting Evidenqe • Ill President ·Rac e· ;. 1'mn Win s.,.lcel As Ille PresldenUal eledlo111 move 'cloaer. the pc>Il taken are busier than ever. Four ft-- cent polJJ seem to substantiate the old aaying : .. Alt the right question and you get the right &n.$Wtr." One poll published by the New Yort Times showed Hubert Humphrey as favored by a "narrow plurality" of labor unlooist!. The l<lephone poll conducted for the Times last mooth by Public Opini"' SUrveys Inc. (POSI) of Prfncofuo, N.J ., ln- dicated't41t a near..inajority of unionists dlsappl'Jve President Johnfon.'1 band.Ung of fbe VJet· nam war, while 65 percent believe racial integration ls proceeding too rapidly. Of the 409 especia l ly. selected unionists questioned by POSI between Sept. 20 and 25, 34 percent favored Humphrey to 32 percent for Nixon. Another 25 percent were for George C. Walla ce, giving Humphrey's opponents a combined majority or 57 percent. Nine percent were undecided. WORKERS-LEADERS CON· FLICT The poll indicated some disparity b e t w e e n the unionists and their leaders. The ei:ecutive board ol the UL-CIO has endorsed Humphrey for president, and AFL-CIO President George Meany is a strong supporter of Johnson's Vietnam policies. Fifty-three percent of the unionist!! questioned in the poll said they knew of the AFL- CIO endorsement of Hum- phrey. Twenty percent said they almost always followed . the political recommendation of their union, and 22 percent said they almost never did. Four percent said they follow the union's lead "only sometimes." TELEVISION DIFFERENCE Another poll of residential prospects indicated t h a t Humphrey has taken a lead over Nixon among voters who watched or read a b o u t Humphrey's television state- ment that be would consider a bombing halt over North Viet- nam. Sindlinger.and Co. reported tha~ ql .UQL .:.,Oi;lc~1>4 of voting Agl'fu43 stales it ques- tioned by telephone last week, 703 knew of the V i c e President's ad.dress last week in which' he promised to stop the bombing If North Vietnam agreed "by word or deed" lo take a like action. Arnone the 703, the poll in- dicated ~ percent now "most wanted to see" Democrat Humphrey, elected President. The pOll said 29.9 percent wanted Republican Nixon, and 13.7 favored third party can· didate George Wallace. Sind· linger said 12 percent had no opinion and 7.3 percent wanted oone of the three candidates. But Nixon still led Hum- phrey and Wallace among the 1,101 persons who did not watch Humphrey's televlslon statement. Among those, Nix- on was favored by 37.1 per- cent, followed by 26.1 for Humphrey, 19.4 percent for Wallace, 7.2 percent with no opinion and 8.2 percent want- ing none of the three can- didates. HUMPHREY GAIN The poll showed a 1.5 per- cent gain for Humphrey from the previous week's poll Nix- on dropped fractionally by .% percent and Wallace gained 1.4 percent. On the aide of big bu.slness, and a UPI survey indicated that Nls.:on baa caPtured a lfl'S BE FRIENDLY If you haYf new nelghbon er know cf anyone tnovlni to cur area. please tell us 10 that we may extend a trtentlly welcome and help them to become acquainted in their new IUITOWldklp. Huntington Be1ch Visitor 536-9626 Cost1 · Me11 Visitor 642-6014 So. Co1st Visitor 494-0579 Harbor Visitor -675-3432 SHARP If y•u',. • •h•rp tr•d•r, ••• 'h• DAILY PILOT'S f1ma111 Dlme·A-Llnt c.l1nlfl1d ••• S1turd1y1. M1\:1 1 b1tt1r d11I , •• wh1th•r you'r• buying of .. 111n1. 1ubslfn\ial bloc d b 11 amoor al>oot ••. ,a!. .1119. OJ-camp.afgn. He 1 said In Erie., lhe following margins: fottlgn policy. Olhen were vuy well upeet Nlloo. busibeu 111 p port trom eeutives aho"ed thfiY upected Pa., Monday that '"we have The Vietnam War -N~oo undecided. The In-house docu,ment df.s. Hllmphrey-in tbe past sit a Hwnphrey-Nl..um rac;e aod bad serious flnancla1 trouNe.a" 53, Humphrey a; City rtotl -Despite po 11 lndicationa, counts as m.1.sleadlnl the na-montha~ , -both men 'fel"e ,Plderred and had t.o borrow luncC,for 57tolS; organlz.edcrlme ~60 DemocraUcpoJlticalpro-tlonal public opinion polls ~Men)btn of_ 1~, busineJS about even)Jr,' . . v•'. bis teleVisC(t half~ 1apeech to 2; Foreign Policy -53 tb 9; fessl.ooals have adytsed Vkt which Indicate I N I X OD «>Uncll wbp .responded to•,tlle Of the es· ...\i.cu memherl .oo Vietnam ·on a televlllon' revitalizing Ille cltle1 -<5 to President Humphrey that ho landJlldo In the making. poll overwhelmingly favored who.responded fi> J. UPI qu,.. network. 17; ending inilatlon-IO ~ 2. sWl hu a chance of swinging Tho document reports that beblnd" In ..... llallo and re,loos -ilOlablY tho -'.• and West. But U cJa1ml Ibo ;-::, polls give a dlator1od ~ •• because the ntent to ·which Humphrey will loae ceitaln states will have no effect on the electoral vote. the RepUbllcan presldenllal Uo~~:on 111d they 111111 Tho UPI poll lhowed lbat Thlrd-aparty c a n d Id a t e the presidential election In the the national polls, by averag. nominee, and only one said he pref'trted pf\nl)', but 61 '1law and order" and vio1ence George c. Wallace got ,two four weeks of campaigning re-J.na: out 18Dlpling of aenUment, believed Humphrey w~ win alJI :by ' · Nhoo. in the dUes were dominant votes u having the best IOlu-maining. sbow Humphrey behind in an the Nov. 5 election. One WU-• · • Jssues among the business es.-tions for curbing crlme, but. be A document prepared by the entire region and fall to take The eouncll. includes :00 of Ha.mp b ~~I 1pparently ecutlves in choosing their WIS not preferred by anyone Democratic National Qlm-into lccount wide swlnp from the nation!s I e a d 1 n g in-~¥]" kllll of 11.rpport' 1n the presidential preferences. (or Pr e 1 1 d e n t . 0 n e mittee findJ the presidential state to state. For example: a candidate ,J. can lole 1 state by a wlde . • margin and win anothtt Ital< narrowly with the electoral el-· .. ~. fect the same.. But to average out the votes could mistakenly give both states to one can didal<. dustrialists, bankers ani;t com-bui1ne:u comrminltf. qi.ay help On the leading campaign businessman saJd he could. oot race much closer t b a n The De m o·c r a t l c pro- pany encuti•es and meets u plaJn his dlfllcuJty issues, NIJ:on was l'q'll'ded u choose between Humphrey generally believed. It. con-fesslonala acknowledge that twiC< a year with bi&!> pen> In r~ money l!nanoe 1111 ollerlnl the best IOluUom by and Nllon on Vietnam or dud., that Humphrey could Humphrey la "qufl< fa r ment officials on policy mat---'-"--'"'-\,-------=-------..:...----------------'-..:...----'--'---...:...------------ ters. When .lhe councU ·last met in May, before the · na- tional pollUcJl conventions, an Informal 1&1npllng ol·opinfon AREA CODE DIAL . DIRECT 1rs1w1cE AS FAST And you save mo ney when you call station. to-'station ... on out. of. state calls, even more after 7:00 PM or, anytime duiirig the weekend. .,@ Pacific Telap bme 2666 HAllOl ILVD. -. 546·7080 COSTA MEsA WHllAYS tte9 SA'l'.'lllDAY 9 le 5130 SllllY 10 to S.00 ~~"'111ii1· • a11ne· a :a . I ICASDlll' -.t ~~!j~~ Sh1pord li\:1 ct1t1r1 of ;; d11r1bl1 pl11tic with 1t1rn t nd plt tt. Fino for n1w •r rDCDv•tff fur11it11rt . of 4 2•' SPONGE MOP . ! Unlo11. yau got • Ftiry SOclmath1r t1 do tti1 floor, th1 job f1U1 on yau. Uthhtn th1 lo1cf 1 littlo by tr11ting yo11,.11f fo 111odtrn 1tyl1 1pong1 ro9c SPONGE MOP REFIU 49c: PORCILAIN ' llGHT RECEPTACLE Flh 11.4" or 4" box, porcoloin p111l c,tllng r1c1pt1clo h11 conv1nl onc1 outlet in bt10 with 1horl ch1in ind cord. lmporltd from lrtaHyn. 59c ' . P .... lc El-..lcal T'apli I 1/1 '' :r .12'/2 ' RAM··2 WAY SANDIR 17.88 START THE ARK 9Cup Automatic Percolator t cu'· ,orca/otw fl'IDkff d1/lcio111 cofft1 In no time ot oil out0fl'l1tlc1lty. Shut. off wh tn L,.w1d tl10 woy ya11 lilt It •nd •t1y1 werm ..... '\ 1H city without ,.,.r.lng, 411 Deluxe Pullman witli ~ FAUCn l 11ulif11l 16 Inch profinbhtd pullmon with l clr•wtrs, c:h1ico tf ritlif or lift htnd. Compltfl witli unibol oncl d1IJ11 f1uc1t. Deluxe Harcraft Faucet Thi1 d1cor1tor 1tyl1d luxury f111c1t by Horcrtft will flt 1t1nd1rcf 4" · oponint ond will m1lt1 tht wholt btthroo'" com• •liYe. !How n1u11tu•.) A winntr wlth pop-up. 11 11 AUTO 'DRIP PAN K11p1 tho t•r•t •· floor 11r drivtwoy clttll whtn ftr\:int •• th1 cor, truck, bo1t, wh1t...,1r, {loak1 liltt 1 cooltlo 1httl I• .., •• 1 211 CREIPY CREIPER ...... "·· "'• • •k•hob••r , .. th• i1ony c;.,. ... G11n1, iiut it rttllr grtDT•• for 1ncl1 rite cor worlt, .S1¥e1 tht lteck ••cf cloth•k 369 • (I Smell . Rain) 10 n. LENGTH RAIN GUmR • 2·•p1td blt nd1r wlll,., clltp1, Ll1nd•, cr11111lw, ml•••· 9rlnd1 •n4 llq11lflo1 I• 11concf" (Souncf1 ¥1do.i. Q yolf """ • 11 .. n .. 11 Cor11,lotw with Wt• 1t1ckM reef,. bo1k. Chotco.· .rr.,~~~~on1I 01nbo1M14 or formtd p1 n1l1 in 11nkr blut encl 1r11n mid. A• 111y to c•r• for 11 t lt11 but • lot dlo1pw •ncl Nftr. 2' x 4' 2· x ,. 2.29 3.89 ... uld Master Ballc0ck . Thl1 b • t•ctd •no to •t••. noiM and wot1r 1011 , ptrtl'fblintly. Adju1t1blt .. ' 11Tt weftr end •hut off qulc:\:t r. Eo•ily ln1t1iltcf, 111 11 or 11 Inch lt"t th1. . 3'' Sentinel 24 Hour Automatic U1ht Control Mttlc (yo "M"' corill111 S.11th1ol Chi•r41N• 1ut.m1tlc1lly tv1111 htltt. 111 •t tiu1k. •ff •t oil•-· Htlpt ,rtv•nt lt•irtlor'" y111oll11l,m, ••cW.,.t.. U11 et M•, ·~ •fflc1, foctory, 111pMtt yo• 111M 24 M1t ,,.t.cffoA, w~ .............. 3u·"'- .... .; '· ..... ... ·' ,· • .. .. . ·. •' .. ·:' ... • .. -. .. - .. • . ,··-. . -· •.. .. . ··-- ·-•• ) I .I -~-----___ ,_ -' .. -...... -...... -··-. -·----. --.-~:=-~~~-~----.... -..---... f Do\11.Y PILOT Fear Boosting Gun Sales QUEENIE By Phll lnterlancli Johnson OKs Sale I Panel Told: 'Americans Arming • in Cities, Countryside' Of Jets to Israel . . w . .,sm1:mTON (UPO - Preddent J o b n a o n • a com- mlslloo "' violence, In the first such data ever auembl- ed. has traced a d1st.lnct cor- re!aUoll between rising t.enslon and fear In the country and lkyrockellng gun Biles. It b.u foilnd that for the first &Ile months ol thla year alooe, manufacturm prodU<ed tnOM: than ~ bullets for every man, 'l!O!Jllin and cblJd In the United States. Figures obtained primarily from c u-n manufacturers themselves support w h a t Internal R e v e n u e Com- miuioner Sheldon C o· b e n testified Wednesday: Tb a~ Americans art arming "In the clUea a:nd In the countryside." RepusentaUvea of two ma-. lot flrtarms firms -Rem· ngton Amil Co., Inc. of Brldeeport, Conn. and Colt Industries, Inc. of Hartford - asked that they be allowed to tesUly In cloaed oessloo today. Tht1r teatlmony will complete a two.day session on firearms by the Conunisalon on the Causes and ·Prevention of V1oleiM:e. The commlsaion bearings colnclded With a drive toward final congressional approval of a compromise bill to outlaw most interstate sales of rifles, abotjuns and ammunition - a followup to a slmllar Umlta· U<Ol oo ban<lglUll alrtady wrl~ ten into law thll year. The Senate approved the long"llln measure by voice vote Monday, aDd the House wu expected to follow llllt quickly. Figures compiled by the commission on violence show- ed that for the Hnt ail months of tb1s year, 1.1 million bandguoa were produced or hnported, 50 pereent more than the total production of 1967 -which in tum wu 33 percent above the 1966 total. Lloyd Cutler, executive director of the rommission, said the total! which tbe. rom- S.oowts A~ando~ing - Dubcek Ouster Plan LONDON (UPI) -The Knmllnhasabandooeclplans to presstlre for the ouster of Alezander D u b c e k and hU cloee associates from the Czechoslovak leadershlp, high .Communist diploma.st Nld to- day. . lmtead the Rnu!ans hope to 'Kremlin Satisfied' PRAGUE (AP) -csecho- slonb w~ told by Prague ndio today there is evidence lbat the Soviet Uni<Jn II 1aU. tied with Prague's latest com· mltments providing for a =.!~ck to orthodal c:om- "'lliere -II In evldonoe -a toolng down in -nportl on Czecboslovakla ••• AC· g!Wllve, polemic artlclel have praetlcally ceased," added the -.st from Prague fad. 1011 ~ correspondenl secure their a i m s In Ct.echoelovak:ia by extending their stay In the country and gradually tightening their grip on the nation's key in- stitutions. · Thl.a emerged clearly today in talk! with the Communist diplomat!, well quaUfied to reflect Soviet policy. Kremlin leadership h a 1 resigned It.ell tO accepting Dubcek and dealln1 with him, in the face of the nailoo'1 determined support for the Commw:Ust · party fir 1 t aecretaey and bll aides. But. there is not much love loet between the Soviet leaden and the Dubcek regime. MosCow, clearly r e m a i n 1 susplcloul ol It and Its abillty to carry out Rualaa demand!:. But the diplomata made lt c 1 ear Moscow insists that the8e demands, deacribed II "nonnallzatiort," mw1t be met by Prague ud that Russia will not let go of Czechoslovakia, at any prict;. Vietnam GI Mails Drugs FT. DIX, N.J. (UPI) -A 20-year-old soldier recently returned from Vietnam was held by military author!Ue1 ro. day on charges that he ar. ranged for a buddy in Vietnam to mail c:ekages of marijuana to him • • State police, federal customs agents and post office authorities arrtsted Spec. ( Robert Boggi Wednesday In h1s home in nearby Blackwood. EASY FRONT LOADING "BIG FAMILY" CAPACITY with I THORO.WASH·"' • IE UCLUlllEIDflfOOD WAllEllS- POSU lllds old f111i-hind """'snd """''' • POlb AIM m POWll TOWll 1"1n up to pmide the most tllorouth Wishing fronl 1U aides! . • AUTOttUn: DOUCEMT D&SPOSD: ldds delertent to tbe wash cyell 1t wctfy the rirht lime for 1P11"klin1 clean dishes Ind sllvtmre. • llllllCHAtmAIL£ flOMIPAlln.1 lei'°" custDa:iize yoor dislnnsh• to bltrld with yoir litdlen deco1 •1t FACTORY AUTHORIZED INSTAllATIOW PlAW 111..r.u •"Y old 1.1nden:ounttt ctllllw•IMr ,...,Int mllllmum lllmlnllont of 34V.~ 111-", 2f' wlcle, •lllf U" ..... I"« -IDw IN"k t of °""' t2J.DO. Prlu d099 Mt lr'ldude -calltnel "10Cltflc.Bllonl, m., or rttnOclellnll. Ellltthw ll'llllf-IJI .... m111I mttt IDul code ....iull"f.,_b. TV and APPLIANCE CENTER .Harbor Center 2300 Hcnar llYd. • Costa Mesa • i ..... 540-7131 mission lllb u 11estlmated production and ~" may be regarded u aalea n,ur ... He pointed out the fairly s1eady increase in a a 1 e a through the years from 1151 unw a sharp bike in 1987 - the summer when racial tensions flared hl:gheat. l"We are drawing an in- •ference, of course," Cutler told UPI. "But, it la partly the 1eneral tension and fear in the country in fancied self-defense that aceounUI for the sharp in- crease. '"No one has ever had this kind of solid data before /' he --· ·Peru Seizes ,, Major u.s ,; Oil Field ' • 1LIMA, Peru (AP) -PerJli'I revolutlonary government toOk O\ler a $200-million Amerl. owned oil field comph:x W~ nesday in a move that eolild delay recognlilon of the n e'w regime by the United Staiu and other Lailn Am.ericin IP.Vernments. J The acilon agalmt Interna· tional Petroleum Corp., ad>- sldlary of Standard Oil 1>f New Jersey, also could aldw loreign Investment wblch Pe. ru need!. President Juan Velasco Ai. varado announced the setmre by the armed forces of t tie oountry'a major petrollllm. domplex in a apeech broad· 4ut to the nation abcrtly lft.. llOOll. ....... "The revotunon Ls on the march,'' said Velasco, a geh- llral In the coup that o v er • threw and exiled Preslclmt 'ernando Belaunde Terry Jut 1'1.ursday. He was cheered by veral hundred military ofti· rs crowded into the ball· oom of the presidentlal pal· ce. . . . . . WAS1llNGTON (AP) President Jolwo1r hu given the g..atiead !or oegottaUooa on we ol !lo Jr! Phantom jet- n1hten 19 II r a e I to help rebuild her d-force. Jolutaon ~ Wed· nesday he II asking Secretary ol State Dean Ruak to start , the negQUaUona In ·Una with a '.'ieMe of. COrigrtu" appeal · added to Us 11:97 blllloo foreign aid authorlzaUoo. 1be announcement w a s groetod With delight In Tel 1AvtY. "It wW help olfaet to a cer- tain eztent the arms Im- balance In the Middle East, .. aid a soarce close to tbe Llraell gove?nment, '!and may help deter aggression." Congres! asked Johnson to Mayor Stokes Shuffles * * * Jet Sales Anger Cairo Police, Replaces Chief CAIRO (AP) -Anger and dlamay were expressed here CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) - Mayor Carl B. Stokes, troobl· ed by racial unrest I n Cleveland, announced Wedne,... day a '17 mllllon program to improve .law enforcement. The Negro m.9.yor also relieved Police Chief Michael J. Blackwell, 88, and gave the $22,~a-year post to Deputy Inspector Patrick L. Gerlty, 49. Blackwell, who wu ap- pointed police chief when Stokes took offtce l a st November I turned down an or- fer to become a consultant to the.police department lllld said he would rather go back to being .. lnapector. modem command. center to today •t the U. S. deciaion to start negotiallom on the sale conrdlnata pollce rapooae to ol supersonic jet fighter· crime calla. bombers to Israel. He said be would fUDJ detail Arab League diplomata des· the program later but the im· crlbed the American move as . nqranUy unfair. Egyptians mediate aim wu to correct contend Israel wbtch f 11 e s the "internal breakdown of some' u.s .. m'ade Skyhlwk pollct morale and diJclpline." fighter-bombers, already b a s Relations between members superlpr air strength. ol th 2 il Egyptian officials were not e ,20()..~an po ee depart~ Immediately available f o r ment and City Hall ' became comment, but one source was strained alter the July 23 quoted as aaylng that !'mi· sniper ~de!1t when 1 0 derit Johnson "appean to be persona, including three •hl:te deliberately pushing us into policemen, were killed after a the embrace of the Russians group of black nationalists to whom we must look fo; opened fire on police. help." Stokel withdrew white police Though Johnson's directive negoUate Bile or ouperaontc plaDel to provide Israel 0 wllh an adequate deterrent ron:e capa~le of preventing futuro Arab aggression." " The "sense of Cong:re~" re- quest saJd Israel needs planes to o·f f a e t 1'aopblf&lcated weapons received by t.be Arab states and to replace lo4ses suffered by Israel in the 1967 conflict." Israel .smashed A r a b enemies' air power during the ail-day war in Jun~ 1967 but the Soviet Union has re!ltled the air forces of lt.a Arab allies alnce then with m o d e r n planes. Republican presidential can· didato Ricbard M. N-bas Bild planes obould be oold to . Israel ff she needs them for "valid self -defense." Demo- crat Hubert H. Humphrey bas said such a sale ls justified in the absence of a Middle East peace setUement. '!110 public·- to'lltft 1111 CEMTl!NMIAL CAlll'flN A dramatic exhibit ahOwlng 100 yeers ol achlevtmenta: by The University ol Callfef'l\te Plus 1ec'tures and fllm9 Admlaslon Free ioamtoa pm Sundays 1 o am to 5 pm 1 Stokes told a news con- ference be would a!k City Council for funds to overhaul the police communlcaUona system and to establlah a and National Guardmten from to the State Department Wed: the GlenvWe area the night nesday did not specify the after' the shootings. Black type of plane, the assumption Oct. 10 toll. Or•n9• County rommunity leaders and Negro here wu that the deal would A9r.Jcultur• •nd Community lldg. policemen patrolled t b e involve 50_ Ff Phantoms for streets.. which Israel had applied. WE Will , BE HAPPY TO HElP YOU PLAN A .. -BUUTIFUL -·. SPECIAL I GIANT KING ALFRED 6 9 c DAFFODIL BULBS d1 Reg. 91c Doi. • T 1· 1" u 1ps " ...... .,........ ·- • Freesias ............ 79' •••· • Anemones .......... 1 n .... "lout........ .. • • Ranunculus 98c ,. 1 ':... LJSSEN Strawberries ur'"' SMAU •AIDIM HODUCI ANO MANY MORE WINTER RYE SEED I "011 llOW fl •11l1y • <omfl1t.ly ftt•n wlll· t•r 1w11. It 1t1h 10 littl• -lt'1 ••. •••Y to '•· w.·11 1how you htw. • 1.,98 ,.. "lk HOUDAY llllEEll PU SEED AllllUAl RYEGWS PA~ '" +k prod'" t~ 1 ... 1ranl+'t'd lo work ,,,, C.tl•I01'1oil l.iwri~ Philodendron A n•~'"°~~ tr•pl· ~ c1I 1ettlf11. L•rg• huh l••v•• up to J" In l•1111fli. S11it•bl• fo, tilll or 1h1d• . L1r9e I Gil. Sb• R09. 1.6098¢ HIWHT ILOOMING JASMINE F111t•tH• nltlftti111• fr•9;•11c• Pl111t 111 th• 111_, ,..ln4. .... 98¢ .... SUN AZALEAS Wond1rf11l ·l•nchc•p• 1hrub. Pl111t In 11111 or 1h•ie. Hu1ufred1 of pl•nh to ALI. 1 •AL. SIDS •••. 1.4t HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M., SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THROUGH SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13 • 2641 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA ·CALL 546-5525 II • -·----- 'Misled'. People .Win ,19 Lo.Se I • Unruh Hits Hard . · ·'•Drug Sellers Get Revenge'· A·t LBJ Policies . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jwt hours .ofter couno '• ty sheriff'.• narcotics a~ents cracked a drug rin'/ they found 'lllemaelves victims of a robbery by their -~ an misled th Intended. targets. : LOS ANGELF-S (AP) - Democratic Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh picked a ail- lege audience today for a stro~g a ck on President Jo charging be has . '.'co sistently and cate•-" Y • A two-month Investigation ended Wednesday American people about lhe afternoon In Hollywood With the arrest of 10 Houy·· .. pro~ of the wa.r,11 in Vlei. wood. area residents and the co-g.ftl~..ation ot 3,400~" nam. tablets of the. hallucinatory drug !:,SD wort& $17,000, · On the lbJrd d~ of a agents said. . statewide tour on behalf ot ·Later, two' undercover agents acting as pl"Olpec--. Democratic Asse!Dl>ly Cail-live ·n8rcoiics buyers were held up by tile drug . didates, the speaker said "no sellers who made off with the acenta' $$,000 and one " government can survl,. Ult II o! their pistols, deputlea laid. built on a pyramid of -------9"---·-------• falsehoods and deception." Ria remarkl were prepared for a rally at U:>s Angelea State College, sponsored by the Associate Students and the. Young Democrats. Thia was one of the colleges that pro\•liled the workers for the presidential campaign! cif Sen. Eugene McCarthy and the late Sen. Robert F. Ken- nedy -and U n r uh clearly wants the young people to re- main in the ~mocratic cor.. ner. Priest Charity Leader AeclJsed of ~iving High: . LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A Cathoilc priest who OPtt&led an orphanage but lived as a layman in swanky Palm Springs baa been accus<d In federal court of nol reporting income of lhnost $120,000 over a three year period. · Heart of Mary, an order .crea~ by the San Diego Roman Catholic DJocese. His aim, aides said, was to ainvince Californians that the Democratic party 1n their state doeSh't support all of the policies of the national Democratic party. In 1963 the San Die10 dloce,. ~c.iulred 122 acru of land at Beaumoot. to expand the orphanage. Famed City Chief to Quit In that way, they said, he hopes to help Democratic AMembly candidates win in a~ state where Vice President 'nl.e U.S. attorney's office filed a criminal infonnltion against the Rev. Robert Nlkllborc, 37, head of Boys Town of the Desert at Ban- ning. In August, 19!i7, Nikllborc announced the state of con- atruction of a new $4 million facility on the Beaumont pro- BEYERL Y HILLS (UPI) -Hubert H. Humphrey, the Pollet Chief Clinton Ander-D em o c r at i c presidential son, whose quarter century in nominee, is trailing in recen,t.. the post was marked by sev-public opinion polls. eral world-famous cases, The Assembly is now 42-38 will retire Dec. 1. Democratic, and if the GOP Anderson, 64, figured 'prom-wins control, Unruh would be inenUy in such cases as the overthrown as speaker.. killings of Beiljamin "Bugsy" In his speech Unruh said: Siegel and Johnny Stompana-"More than aigning _pieces of to, who was romantically in-legislation, more than a~ Volved with Lana Turner. pointment of individuals to Anderson once said most of high governmental position, his headaches stemmed from more than anything else -the the movie stars and other eel-greatest responslblllty of a ebrities who live in his city. president is to keep falth with Underlining the point w e r e the people." three recent kidnapings ---------- Frank Sinatra Jr., Kenneth Young and Stanley Stalford Jr. -in wllich each victim's ransom amounted to a quar- ter-million dollars. Kid1 Like to 'A1k Andy' U.S. Atty. Mall Byrne said that In Palm Springs Nlkilborc occupied a $f5,000 home and was known to his neighbors as "Robert Drtw Rand." Byrne said that people who lived near "Bob Rand's" home were unaware of hia dual iden- tity as a priest. They had the idea he was president of an electronics company. Filing of charges against Nlkliborc followed a lenfthy investigation by the U.S. Internal Revtnue Service. Nikllborc hu been preisdent of B o y s Town of the Desert since 1961, a spokesman at the orphanage said Wednesday. It is an orphanage for youths up to 17. It is con- ducted by the Brothers of Charity of the Immaculate perty. . - 300 Teachers Go on Strike OCTOBER HARDWARE . BUYS BY POPULAR DEMAND WE REPEAT :J.eiilivaf Black & Decker CRACK-PROOF TRASH CANS 14' DRILL 32 Gaf. Guaranteed 7 Years '$ 99 .... W.Hrlp U!ldl•. ~ Md1tt1ci.. 11111111' llllM tllll klol I :i:.-.=.-1819 .... $5.99 ,,,,. Great for bathrooms! It's. washable /an~~t· $ELMOHlllV6 N.ASTIC It's easy to create a beauti• ful, practloal bitr.room with washable, wonderful "CON· TACT." JUlt pH] off back• Ing and emoolh onl This durable 1plash'-abll vtnyl waterproofs 1urfaces. Sea au the new patterns for ltlll more Id•!~· '18" ...... Water Heaters REPUBLIC "GEMINI'' 30 GAL. $44.11 40 GA:L. $49.11 50 GAL $64.11 · IJ.100 . IS' DDUILE·m•m SMRUI I HmlE Tll•ER ... , ...................... . ... ,. tlOltttll ~!!.,,. -dl• : =·~-==:·L:. 23 11 ---U.171 I IJ.llO iteJAU.PUIM i VACUUll CWll£1 ·-29" GARBAGE DISPOSALS IN..s!~K~TOR :~llB:::~i.'~.~., .......... $3195 . ''TITAN" :IO GAL. $64.11 '40 GAL 71.11 MODll. ... 17, s549s ..... ,,,,, 1111 ••• PllClwAi:rE'KiNC. · 5.!::~;~~ ........... S3195 • '· 5°'wJi.'.~~ ........... S4195 INSTALLATlON AVAILABLE - I Th'ursday, October 10, 1968 DAILY PILOT ·?; Sus ... .t Finge~s Pal in 3 ·S.layings NOW!- Mercury S1Yln11 now offers home lnipn1Ytm111t lt1n1 up to $5,000 1nd.el1ht y11n ·1t low rtt11 and 1m1ll monthly PIY· . ments. Inquire 1t Mercury SIYlnp Md Loan Anoclttlon. Bueno Pork Office: -· 827·2320 • Huntington B~ch Office: • · 540-4050 • Funds e1m IRtemt from date of rectlpt. Funds received by the tenth of the month earn interestfrom the first. lnttrtst compounded dally- bonua accounts av1ll1bt1, MERCURY SAVINGS and loln~UM WIM Offln1 1114 Knott Ave,. liMM Park On Knott. MW Lincoln lqltlll 0t11 .. 7112. Edlnrir Ave,. H11ntln1to• le1cla Acrou hom Tito B!Oldni Slloppl111 Ctntor . MEN' FULL-WEiGHT DACRON4:.WQRSJ.ED YEAR . . OOND SUIT Robert Hali low'Jjl'ic-.r~.~ g favotite y0u Clll wear~il·\· around the calendar, In pei!ect ·;:. ~ored of a rlch·loo~full·'IN!ght Di<iUi 'po!yes1'Jraiid wool wonted. pickofoutslandingnewFAU '' and colors In mm.fil)lng two liild tliree .liut1tolti'rio' deb' • Sbes for !egulan, shootr, longs.! OPEN 8B . SUNDAY . . 11 -hl'S · · • .. • . • • MESA,· 1601 NEWPORT BLVD. AT i1'6tlt:, GARDEN GROYE-12372 GARDEN GR'OVE ILVD: . ' l l I • ' f .~An. Y I'll.OT • What. ·10 Wear To.day ' -Pistol Found at]ackson Home with other Jactson-era relics. MR.MUM ·Nation's Schools Ponder Clot1ies Codes ' NEW YORK (AP) -The a.no.Ital ttacu between school ofUclall and students over classroom ature rq:ed acl"OSll thc~tand today, spiced by gllmjJoes of stocking tops, pan- tie!! end eve.n navell. must be tucked inside shirts. Obters said go ahead wear 'em any old way. girl sits you should not see the ~iiiieJ,;.~==:~::;::~--;;;::::;:::;;;;::;;::::::==1· tops ot her stockings." hUNISKlRT mGH NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A filnUock pistol bas been found behind an atUc cornice in the HennJtage, President l\.ndrew Jact,son's mansion near here, by a workman repairing the roof. Tho lull-lloct piltol « burl maple with engraving in brus and silver may ll.ave belonged to Jackson said J a m e a E. Arnold. necuUve directQr of the'Ladles Hermitage ~a­ tion. He said it would be displayed at the Hermitage An area gun expert, rttlred Col. Daniel F. C. Reeve!, board member of the National Rifle Assoc.lation, identified the weapon u a· "rare Ken- tucky category, f Ii n t Io ck pistol-pocket type, circa 1~12." Eacll 0( the embatUed sides, a ,pot aurvey disclosed, had won some, lost some, and the ultimate ootcome mlgbt lalrly be detcrlbod u moot. There :wu bot and generally umuolved controversy over a number t1 burning questions : At what point do a girl's rulottts beeome so brief that they are, so to speak, more like aa.nKU]ottes? Is a T -1hirt underwear or outerwear? - Where ii the torrid zone on ' miniskirts? Culottes, a sort of split skirt, were taboo last year in Chicago's Morgan Park High School. This term they are permissible if they ext.end to within two inches of the knee. _~.,Hollywood, Calil., High, wtOOeJ must be full enough to loot lite unsplit sldrla, and three inches up is the limiL On T-shirts, U.. olllclal rule at Mandan, N.D., Higk School is: "They're underweer and not proper school apparel." But at Radford High School, nt.ar Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, T- shirt.s receive the stamp of a~ proYal as long' as they do not bear words or pictures. A preUy glrl·ln facllic Hlgb School; San Bernardino, Calif., admitlecl her minisklrt was five inches up lhe thigh, of- ficlally an Inch too high, but told an interviewer : "Jf 1 pull the dress down and hold in my stomach it's only four inches above the knee." Tho PboenU, Ariz., High School l)'stem ran into Nehru jacket trouble and had to put its foot down.' Ezplained Miclt Henog, the system's community relations direcctor: ''The girls were wearing them with nothing but panties on underneath, which turned everybody on. "Tbe boys came to school with short Nehru Jackets, no " 35 Minutes from Orange County Airport Should a girl wear a Nehru jackcl With n o t b i n g un- derneath but panties? MALE SIDEBURNS Officially fixed miniskirt lengths range from two inches above the knee in Jef£erson Parish, La., to four inches in Glendale, Calif. But there are other l~ specific views. undershirts and open at the -----1-----------------midriff, allowing their navels What Is a resonable length for ma.1e sideburns? School jJrlnclpals rrom coast to coast wtre bugged by love beads, and rode off in several direcUons. Some insisted that the wearing of love beads by males.-would not do . Others held thal Joye beads. if worn, The Westport, Coon., school board ru1ed simply U!.at skirts must cover the girls' "un- dergarments and t b e i r torsos." Principal J . H. Boucne or Booker T. Washington High in New Orleans said: "When a to show." Some rulings on sideburns- Glendale, Calif.: No lower than the tip of the ear. Hollywood, Calif.: Must end at midear. Pasadena, Calif.: Down to the bottom ol the ear. 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Features: advanced solld-stete sound system (no tubes, no heat, no trouble) • 30-Watts undistorted music power• two High-Efficiency 12• Bass Woofers •two 1,000 cycle Exponsntlal Treble Homs • plus many mDfe extra-value.. f.nest performance featurel that you must see and hear to appreciate • Come in-select your Magnawx Stereo from today's largest VBTiety of authentic fine fumifure tty1es. beautiful Uni shes-even decorator colors I Portables from only $69.90 , Compact 1t1reo conaole-solid·s1ate phonoQraph model 3000 in Contemporary; also in Mtdlttrran•an. Colqnlal. French Pro· virlcl1I ayt•1-your choic1 I 20-Watts undlttorted music power, four speakm- giW ttuty amazing perform.nee. And, your recoritl ctn last 1 lifetime I Removable leg• makt it pMeCt on ah~ves. tables. etc. Stereo FM/AM lld'JO oPl;DMI on 1111 styles. Magnavox sofld·state portable stereo -b1ings you amazing performance; lasting reliability! Precision player with Diamond Stylus banish discernible re cOl'd end stylus wear-let rec ords last a lifetime I srim and trim Model 244-with swing.out or detach· able speakers and swing-down record ptayar -is one of matl'f exceplional Magnavox wlues in fine luggtge styling. K~RM RIMA MAGNAVOX ORAli6r CoutfJJ'J FRIST FAUORY DIRKT DEAlER • .., i , • COSTA MESA ,WESTMINSTER GARDEN GB.OVE The fac hair hassle bas come to s me sort of climax in Nash youths federal 'n' roll Love e, Tenn., Two challenging in the schoo l t to expel them for only long lock.! . They said they · hair in their are with· a rock verboten f boys in Glendale, may be m inside shirts in Oconomowoc, Wis. B u t in Waukesha, W l s. , Principal Charlea Horwitz of Central High looks at it this way: "U men can wear ribbons around their necks and call them ties, there's nothing wroog with beads." Ka.ilua High School i n Hawaii ruled that this year the kids must wear shoes. The students won a point, though: From now on muumuus are okay classroom garb for girls. Par nt Education Expert Gui ance Clinic Speaker A well own lecturer In the field of p ent education and family Uf , Mrs. Sylvia Liv· ingston en will be the er Oct. 14, when uidance Center of Orange its eighth annual diagnosis and treatment of emotionally disturbed children and adolescents. Further infonnatlon may be obtained by contacting Mrs. June Prichard, 646--5211. meeting · Newport Beach. Mrs. gen, who ~ cur-Day of Prayer renUy co uctJng an evening oedes on "Sex-<ducation' A Asked by Pope New Loo ' at GolQen West College courses in Im. VAT CAN CITY (AP) Angeles '""'e ~--·-ation 1 -.1.u ~IC.I The Vatican announced tO-Gap -What They Are p VI will k Saying," will speak to day Pope aul &$ an men or good will to join members f the center at 7:30 with Roman Catholics to 00- p.m. in Little Theater at 5'efVe a world day oC peace Corona d Mar High School. Fly to Palm Springs in a Powerful 20- Passenger Aero Commuter Turbo Jet At the fO?t of Mt. San Jacinto lies the recreational oasis-Palm Springs -.a wonder of attr.;ict1ons for the whole family. 1 The sparkling crystal waters of palm-lintel pools-over 320 hotels have at least one Twenty-one pu?lic and private golf courses a11d perrect year round golf weather. • Spectacular aena4,.tramway .UP Mt. San J.11cinto. Art galleries, health spas and fine restaurants. Fun and relaxation just minutes from you on Aero Commuter. Aer~ Commuter has more fl ights from more places to Palm Springs-convenient service fro~ L.A. lnternatiol'Jal, Orange County and Hollywood/Burbank AirporU, Service at Los Angeles Airport is located at Western Airlines Satellite, Gate S1A. Call your Travel Agent or Aero Commuter : LOS ANGELES •.• 1213) 636-2121 ORANGE COUNTY •.. (714) 827-7700 HOLLYWOOD/BURBANK ••• (213) 845·2651 II•• ·~ ~~~~~~:=:::::::;~·~··::::::=:,.-tt. - CATALINA 7\ vnn AIR LINES ..!:3,l!}.ct.A.J Includ in the program will 1)'t·~ be the second roch be the pr entaUon of awards, day or special prayers and election o We members and reflections promoted by the the nomln tiort and electton of ,.Jpo~ntlff!.~T~h:e~r:u-:ot~Wllli=~l:••:t!___:_:::========T=O=M:O:R::R:O:W::'S::S:E:R::V:IC~E;;:: .. :·~T~O~D~A~Y~/~~~ directors. The center is a Ja • psychlatri center . for the n. l. HEIM INGS A880ClATION AHllM MIN Orne(; 1•1 .Uneoln,,,.,,_ l'ft. ·Wl Bft!A 770 . .,. ....... JA 971 N llACH fR(E CO U4:1DIT P.ARKINQ AT AL l LOCATION$ 5. 0% 5. 53 Current ,nual r1t1 on S.WJr • KCOUntt. Ml nlmu 11000 plu1 tlOOO "llpltL Let us Iran '' your account, wt ha a 1tr detailt. History Making Sport Coat Event! Any$50 rt Coat Or Blazer ·For a llmltld Um• only! When you can buy a 50.00 fall sport coat at the start of the season for 37 .SO-that makes news! When your choice Is unlimited, not just restrict&d ta "llmlled groups"-that makes history. During this event ... ,, sa.oo aport cot I In 1tock 11°" at 37.SOl Every style, every fabric, every color. One button I Two button! Three button! Forward fashion and natural shoulc;ler models. WoolL Shetlands. Tweeds. 'stripes. Plaids. Checks. Even the popular solid color blazers art Included. Don't mias this great opportunlly to replenish your sport coat wardrobe. Make tracka to your nearest M&B today-and make a \itUa history, tool cri.r,. ftf ••• """ M&t U/CIYr ... t111M"'*'1c•r• .,-M111t.,. Clllr,. MULLEN [i] BWETT SOUTH COAST PµIA. 8rl1tel •t S111 Dl•t• '1-wy. • Open W11•11 lghtt 'tll t 1JO IP.OADWAl' ANAHEIM CENTEll:, E11cllcl 1t Cr11c111t 0,.11 W11lr11i9hh 'tlf t 1JO -2U6 H~RIOR BLV0.16855 WESTMINSTER Ave. 12116 So. BROOKHURST 546-1691 ~ 894-2350 5301-360 •--.r1---· ·"' ... I I -'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=>--~~~~~~~~~~~~~>--~~~~~~-l. ·-- / •• " " d ~ n • • l b b • 0 ,, j u I • I I Cri111e~s Different --- 'Emotional' More Feared Than' Activist' Tlilrsdly, Oct-I0, 1968 DAILY '8.0T f Laguna Man Aids Claremont • • Donald C. McKcnna, or Benson, who hu announced ,,...:-.-+-& uth-·~giJ•a, bu-beeo plans Jo r•tlrt.bee•UJe of W named chairman of a com· health. . ' CHICAGO. (UPI) -The average American ta more concerned about 11ac:tlvlst11 of emoltonal crlmll than •bout I ' W 0 fkrnanllQI• GJ'ganhed crime, a survey shows. I':""~ mittee to find a successor to Or. Btnson will 1tay,on as Claremont . Men's College· president for a UJ:ne until a :president Qeorge €. S, successor is round. The survey, releued Mon- day, waa cooducied by Social Re.search Inc. under com· mlssloo from the Federal Sign and Signal Corp., a maker of wlllllln& devices at B 1 u e Island, UL "Orianlzed. crime teeml 10 lmpeoonal and less threaten- ing that .. .,. people aay the)' wl1h more crime were organized ••• 1lnce pro- 1"'1onals do • --job and are not llkely to harm uninvolved cttlr.tns," t b e IUl'Ve1 said. 'lbe survey· aald 28 percent of the penons questtooed think crime II aa the iocreu1 In their communities. An equal -ber let! crime It CloWn, wlti!e 2t percent lhought lt was status quo. Tfrenty per· cent said they did not know. Conducted through tn-th .. home interviews, the survey found 44 percent of the lower class persorm 1 u r v eyed thought crime was up, while 2t per...i of the middle dw pel'SODI felt the same. Many of UlQllfl interviewed upreaaed faar of lislng crimO and violence across the nation. However. neighborhood crimes d.hl not "seem to be a major worry" among most persons ourveyed. 'lbe re.warcben: said 0 crlme la a catch all term that may be used to describe all kinds of law breaking, (as well as) fn. dulgent, suspicious actions, group and individual For Navy, Air Foree beba.~ora." • • The threat ol anarclly was a prominent concern to many of the persons questioned, tho survey said. The aurvey elao .....iec1 that few penoos actually are doing aoythlng to upgr~ the prolectloa of their bomes. SOcial elll8S posltlm llll!1ed In be a mojol" factor In each person's attittide t ow a rd crime. "Upper middle class -16 -to be ruaonable, and -crime with -~ent. Upper I owe r clus persona who were ques- tioned foe! moll afiected bf crime/' the aurvey said. ·~ ~ is emotional in tone," the survey aald; "even if they have not bad peisonal experience w 1.t h crime.•• • \ He's Recruiting 1,800 Girls , CHICAGO (AP) -Many a the best looting Rfrl thet com-have filled out the two-page man would envy J a m e 1 es aloag, and runnfni." appllcaUan, which as k s • McDonoqh. Some 800 girls ihowed up among other things, for three He bu been. assigned to Monday night for Interviews references, "preferably your recruit 1,lllO Rfrll, age 18 to 22, with the llCteO!l1ng committee putor, your llCbool officials or Pretty as Pietures These lively coeds from San Clemente Hid! School brldlten foot.ball gam'"' wi1ll their songs and routines. Shown are (left to right), Sandy Ziegler, 16, jr.; Jeanne MacAdam, 17, sr.; Christy Foster, 11, sr.j Linda Guert.ner, 16, sr.; and Peggy Anden;on, 16, Jr. Songleader Sue Fischer, 17, sr., is not in photo. Clearance' Salel MODEL HOME FURNITURE SaMWf ...i S•""1 Oet. 12 dd 1J .-... 10 a.nt. to I p.oo. LUSK HOMES MODEL AW -NOHL RANCH Rustic Gate W•y et ·l:lncoln Av•nu• ·in Or•nl}• Ntwport ,,Mway t• lal'tlag• 11¥11. or Lll'lcoln A.., Tvm...n ,,.. 0.11.-.,, within 10 rnUe ra~ Stops Tormenting Rectal Itch Exclu1i~e Formula Promptly Stopa Itching, Burning and Relieves Pain of Pi! .. In Moat Cues' Nil" York, N.Y. (Special): The eotic1 or stinsinr a1trinfe'l'l~ embarra11ing itch cau1ed by of any kind. I hemorrhoid a l! moat torturous. The secret f1 PrtPGTGtiota H~. But 1eienoe bu found a special There i1 no other HeJnorrhoid. formula with the ability, in · formula like it. Preparation H i moat casea-to promptly 1top alsolubricatea,aoothuirritate.d I th8 burning itch, reline pain tisauea end help• pll8't'ent ':tu.r- and actually 1brink hemor· ther infection. In oin~ W tlloid.a. And all :without Dar• auppoeitorJ" fonn. u blind data for Air Force in a ·norma117 mascullne employer." . cadell and Naval Academy ltronghold, the City Council Cblcqo, wblch will pay •• 1---------------------------------....:...---------- mkWdpmea at a d an c e chamben. Another seulon· '250,000 bill for transporting Saturda:J' an. the Navy.Air waa IClieduled I« Tuesday, and entertalnln( the satJon Forea football game In Soldler The gtrla came In all sbapea and atnnen, has told the girls rteld. and stzn, Aid Mrs. Jane they'll have to provide their But far McDonough. ctty Byrne, 8 committee member _own_r_id_es_ho_m_e_. ----I cormnluloner of streeb and well veraed in such matters.,1~---------1 unttatloa, tt'1 a big headache. She ia commissioner o f Ht wu given less than two welghtl and measures: FAVORITES weeb to t1gn ap the lasses. The committee expects M The Jut Ume eirls and trouble iJ1 easing the woman- academy men were matched power shortage and thinks it after the gune wu in 1965, may have flooded the market when 1,000 temate1 applied to with an SOS to 14 local col- N1tlon1I 11141 locol N•d~ 1hlp poll• prov• th• DAILT PILOT ••niff 1om1 of th• moat popul1r column• ind f•1hlr•• •v•il•bl• to •ny n•w•p•p•r lft th• Unff•4 St•tu. be data for 2,000 males, leges and universities. "But they bad a couple ·of About 500 coeds already•l'----'-------'1 monthl to work on it,"l;==================::.I Mcllonoucb oald Monday. The lucky 1,800 gtrb -who muat be high school graduate• -wlll be allocated to the men according to Ulta provided by the academies. a T~~~~~~.~~;~~~~ 617 Wost Homllto11, Co1to ..... . And, true to military form, they'll be matched with the men by the number. All .ltWllll flll'lllllC ,,. lnYllld " loin vs lit ""'' -lnlfUI 'IAllATH IYININli SERYICIS FRIDAY• 1=11 P.M. Rabbi Alexander Graubart "They're given the name of their date -he's in Squadron 10, No. 7," aald McDonough, who wa1 appointed date- recruiter by Mayor Richard J. Daley. _ •f Con1d1 will condu,t SPECIAL SUCCOT SERVICES ........,, Oct...., 11. 1:11 , ..... ..,.,..,., October 12, t :JD •·•· EnloV thil fh11 slnal"' ol t119 Temple Sh1ron <:ltOlr •nd tt. w1rm tellOWW!IP of our one. Sl'lllbet "But they tell me that only lasts for a while," be added. "Then the guya otart srabblng . R91btMi• fW M.,_ & R.iltltW sCllwl "'" until Tllffdl,, OdHtr 11 c.lh 646-SSSI « 141·1411 •---UDIU''------MEN'S--- KNIT. SUITS 18.95,.51.59 ~:'i:.: DRESSES I .. VII All St11on 7.59 .. 22.59 •: i:::: SPORTSWEAR Stpilrl,. Ir Coordh11tt1, llou1•1, Ptnf11 Shirh, Shortt, Sh•ll1, Sklrtt. 1.19 •• 4.59 .~::·,':°{;. .. SKIRTS & SWEATERS P111'1•111 N•m• PROM 10.59 •; . .,\,' SWEATERS P11lll'ltrt I C1rdl1t11t PROM3.59 ~: SLEEPWEAR 8._,..i'll., P1f•in••· 11'-Y Dtll1, Rtlio••· Du1,.r1 PROM 3.19 6.~t'.:o UNGBUE . lttlo Slnll•1, Pt11ff11o Sllp1 1 19 .... Ut PROM • te l.M Krill, Sperl, Dr111. MEN'S SHIRTS 2.59,.6.59 ·:·,•;:, 4 59 ...... • It.DO Or••• I F-r•• Cutting) SLACKS 5 59 23 ·59 .... 12.00 • 10 • to 40,00 SPORTCOATS & JACKm 18.59 ,.46.59 ~:'7o~00 Orlon C1rtigiln SWEATERS 11.59 "'?i.~ M1tchln9 Orlon SHIRTS Sp•ci1l S1mpl• SWEATERS a.oo .. 12.00 •: J:::: Fer Lldl11 Toti SEE WHAT. THE EARLYBIRD CAN BUY FOR LADIES Ste BOY'S Nyl• % 111,, SWIM Trvnb-lpert Shim ••• 1..:eu ..... s1tortt· MIN' • lwlm Sulh herb .,..,...r Umlllld Qutlltfll• Mi.ct Ti.-.Knlt lhlrt1 to Prior lllt .---IOY'S Doportmont GIRL'S Dopartment•---- ~".m.TS• ••IT mm 1.59 DRESSES • . . . . . . . . . . • • . from 5.59 """' .. • • • • .. • •• • • • • KNIT TOPS L PANTS f I 59 . N11>u10N ~ • • • • rom · • PANTS .. · · • • · " ·' •·• ·.. from S.59 S""' •TERS · from 3 19 SWEA Tl!lRS from 3 59 "~ · · • • · • · • • • • • · · T-SHIRTS & · ii&iEFS · '."."..... . 47c SLEEPWEAR ...• • · ..••. from 2.S9 SOX . . . . . . . . . . . • • • .. • • • . . . 3/74< PANTY HOSE .......... from 1.59 SWD1 TRUNKS ........... from 1.00 SKIRTS . • • . . . . • • • . • • . • • from 3.5' AJl1' ~ u ~ • 3321 E. Cst Hwy, Corona del Mar i"'•I lf~~ ~ .. 111 Av~:del.M.a~ San Clemente MASTD CHAIH • e IANKliMllli:AID e NAYIHOINE'S CllAllOI Get 80¢ off the re~lar party·size pri~c!, and get your· ball rolling in a big way. Just pour ov'«:r ice to discover a delicious adventure. Now-the giant ,48 oz. party size · only ., ·Manhattan • DalqWrl -I r.Whl•U>:.Sour • Marprita B ti euhletn ADVEN'rUROus · COCl{T,AILS In od~er Sit": Mll·Tti, ltack ku1sl1n, Gimlet, Stlnlff, Sl4t Ctr.i. Old FJl1hloned, VodU ~r. TequU1 Sour, i\Pt.k:et Seut; tl•I0-1 Gin Marllnl. Vodklil,.,1rtl11l1:£ll:11'1 D~ or ~l·to-~ ! •. • ' . ' . 1 " ' ' • i ' • c I I I ' • I ' • 1 • ' I ' " I ' •1 . ' ,, . I j • UCI Biologist Says • or-Th ..... e~Jf-Z ....... orld Famine Record , Meetings Divorces Fire Cal& ,..,_ s:• ,.m. w~,. TV 11,.. 1"" SI, Md.-., llOI. ! ~. G ... ,,. ...... lt::IO 11.m. Wtdntld1y, /Mlllul 11d. "" MMllKll'I arci. ... ..._. v ..... 7:11 p·"'· WfdrncNy, ,._, 11'D7t La1,1rel SI. S:OO p.m,, ~. 1TTJi lllllllllnl St. Mu"""'""' IMdl 12:1! 11.m. Wtdnftd..,, DW111 !Ire, )1• ftoblt!wovd D....._ 1:00 P.m .. Oii -II. '411 and W1lllllt .. -. •:12 p.m., frlllil trvck, UUI lu• ..... l:lt a,m. 'thundlY, •r•• flMt, ~ llaulW•t'll nat1ll ol Hol!Md C.11 ..... 12:11 ~"'· WtdnHdly, r-. 2'1t """" .. J:O 11.m., r1i.. Nrm, UM strW 11111 Newport IOlllrll•rf •:tD 11.m., hlN •ltrm. ... 1'11,..,5-w' .... A:'6 p.m., hlfe 1leftill. 11111 Sn.et •Ml """ ""' "-· --1:11 1.11L WIHIM&dllyi ....,Q can. 11111' J.....,... lloH Pilot Visitors Tai.H'I -mnducled MGndars arid ,,_,.. ,_. 1c1..i m-o1 mn. .,... lro'll Md ..... .. """"" °"\ -'-""'-ol ........... , -.... ... lntwwlfld Pl'OUPS IN' Ull IN, Dl.ldlrf ltlct1, ""'4ll:I, l!lrt. 271. DEATH NOTICES PAYNE Alvin D. ,.,.,,., 1'1~ Antlltlm. Coal• Maa. 51/rvlved by motllet", Mrs. Alie. M. P..,111. Servlet•, Satvrday, 2 PM, 1111 lroed'WllY 0..1111. lr1ltl'1'ftlftt, F1lrMven ~Ill P1rtt. Dl.-.etltd bT II.ii lrwdw1y Mort\11ry, 110 Bro.cl- .. ,, CC111l1 Ma.. MAC RAE Flori N-.-MedlN. 20271 SPrvet, $11~ ff Allll. Sllrvlwd b't' hulbend, Dfi¥kll dal/vlllff, Marv 81'f'(.o¥lti1 ,,.nc1u.11- dAt1. ll!:Hen Ind Sl1nlrf 8en:o<tlh. 111 ol Newport 8Hdl1 1fft>.mollltr, Mrt.. Mollie TrHdwl'I" Ind s~. Edw'ln Tl'Nllwlf, IClno-1. T-. lrllem«l1I ,.,,,left, SUnd1y, Oct. 12. P~lln Owrcti o1 '"-ccro--nt, Cml• lrMu. F1mlll' ~~ "- W\thlM to ....... rMl'TIOl'lll contrlbu- tklnl, PlelM contribute lo tlM ~­ Il l Fund Cll n. Presbvttrl1n ChurCll Cll n. CowNnl. HOSl'KE PIUI JI ..... Hmlkt, lll Cllllllll Dr., H-' 8ffdl. Dete Gf ,,..th, <kto- ber I. SU"'lwcl by Wiit , Mlrt111tl S. Hmlkt. Funet1I Mn'kll, Frld1y, 1 PM. 111rz c111pe1, 17~1 Sll•rlor, c- l• """'' Wiii\ ltw. Y. l. Htrtwld< ottldlllno. lnttmi-"1, Ptclllc Vllw Memor11I Ptrl\. Dir.Ci.cl by l1rtr M«- 1\11•'1" C01l1 MtN. BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona .del Mar OR S.MSO Costa Men Ml S.ZU4 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY llO Broadway, Coit. Me1a u um DILDAY BROTHERS Buntlnrton Valley Mortuary 17111 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beacb 84!-7771 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ceme&ery e Mortuary Chapel l50I Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, California 144-Z70I PEEK l'AMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 Bola Ave. Walmla-llS-mS SMl'l'B'S MORTUARY 117 -81. e-.i--u;..- WES'laD'll' KORTUAJIY ., B. 17111 81., c.a - M 1111 \ Already Here By THOMAS FORTIJNB Of ""' O.Uy ,..., , .... World famine is upon us ..,,., DOI lurking JO er IS yean la the fUlure, says UC lrvlne Orianlamlc Biol°" Chairman Grover Jltepbens. And be believes that har- vesting food from the sea ii DOI gol!>g lo bill 111 out """ ·or later. = spoke 'l\iesdly ... po tlon and food prochM> tloo to a eemiftlr ol sradulte bloiOt1Y.sludmb. 11We doo't haw Jarae nwn- bers " ~ lilerally bel-in& ..... f!q2I starvatloo, but in point ol fact we have flm- ioe right now," be said. ''People rarely Ille ol starv- ation. Tbey die ol measles, colds, dysentery," be uid. "They die because they .,. undemourished and lack re- serves to witmtand disease..• 'CRASH' AHEAD? UCl'1 Stephens mGB IN emLDREN billloo In 1!1115. Stephens said he cannot sub-Stephen> made th.,. other stanUate the extent ol tam-points: lne, all he can do is point out -Birth rat.es are dependent that in undeveloped countries on social norms and not avall- the mortality rate is highest ability of contracepUve de- for children and pregnant and vices. In India, where there !1ursing mot>ta:s, those most ; is no social security, elderly m need of noorishment. -people are dependent on their He said_ there are other male children so they make ways to starve to death })e... sure they have several in sides lack of calories. A per-cue one or more die. son can die frqm lack of -Man lw specialized In protein, iodine, ii'oo o< Vita-death control 'and DOI birth min A, be said. control. Sprq for mosquitoes He noted that goiter, caused and other rilaUvely cheap by lack ol Iodine, bits alm...i publlc health mea:.ures sine<! 10 percent « the world's pop-World War U have reduced ulaUon and that the major the .....W death nte world graino-wheal, rioe and com wide !nm !15 perlOlll per 1,000 -are delldent In .,...tlal lo elgbt or 10 perlOllS per protein. 1,000. He gave yet ~ meas--'lbe populaUon or undevel- ure of ':ht world s hungriness, oped countries which now remarking. on the smallness makes up two-thirds of the of people . m countries where world's population will make there is liml~ food SUPJ!lY-up three-fourths of the world's He gave ~futics sbowmg population in 1985. the correlation between stat· -None of the current devel- ure and available food cal· oped countries made the tran- ories per person. sltion to industrialism with "People ~eady are so b!18"" less than .a tripling of their gry for calones the~ are ~ng populaUon. "Tripling is exact- stunted in growth, be 'Said. ly what we can't stand," NOT ANSWER Stephens said. . _ Food from the sea doesn't He concluded on this pessl· appear to be the answer be mistlc note: said. Harvesting sea pl~ts ''I think we ~ going to would be extremely costly and have a cataclysmic crash in would require great advances population. It's typical at the in technology. end of sustained growth for He said present world P"P' all kinds ol systems. Whether ulatlon is 3.3 billion, and at it will be caused by ep1d~c, the current rate of reproduc-nuclear war or something tUJD it will be better than five else, I couldn't say." UCPs 'New Cinema' To Show 9 Art Films Nine underground art flhns from around the world will be shown at . UC Jrvine tonight, and again Friday, Saturday and Sunday nigbts. Kids to Join Fire Parade SANTA ANA -Up lo 5,000· children will participate in the fifth annual Fire Prevention Week parade sponsored by by the Santa Ana Fire Depart- ment Saturday. Children will enter w i t h decorated wagons, buggies, bikes, pets and themselves in fire prevention theme costum- es. The parade will start at IO a.m. at 8th Street and Broad- way, go south on Broadway to 4th street, west of 4th to Flower and north on Flower to the Santa Ana Bowl. Joining the fire depart- ment in sponsoring the event are the Junior Chamber of Commerce, Exchange C l u b, and Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. Award! will be presented at the bowl for best parade en- tries. DEATH NOTICES COOK ltldlll"ll w. Cooi';. 1442 Alv1r1M. H11nttngfoll Be1t11. S1tn1lcn PMldlno. Dlld1., ltll'lhert Hun!lnoton V1ller -N. !KAST J-P. lk1•I. AM n. S1>r¥1Ylcl by IOI!, Dr. D•Vkl I. HlelMn. HWlllOf'f • 8Mdl; ttlrH d1ue~ter1. J11r 811T•n.. We.tmln1~r1 E11hH F1lr, w11eon1!~1 •1'111 Jl.111!1 L-..i, Codi Mesi; lllrM broflllli,, C.M 1k11I. $ou!h Dlkol11 Martlnlls lk11t, Oentnlrl\; 11'111 Nilll lk1$1, o.<ll'Nrl\1 U ar11M1e11lldrtn1 11'111 -1rw11,.nddllld. Strwlcn.. 511\1,.. 6-y, 11 AM. 11911 8rot1dw1., c ........ wllf1 ltw. A.1¥111 Sl\lklefan •nd Jlw. Wllbuf Otftfall dflcl1!lne. F1m11., •-"""' ,,_ ....... in. to lnllkl "'"""'Ill CO'ltr'lbullonf ''",. contr!Mrte to 1111 OrlflH Cclunt"I' Httlrt AIM1tl1lklll. 11911 ........... Mortuary, 111 .,,..,,,,.,, C•l1 lrMu, Dlrectort.. ELDRED ll!'b liA. l!ld.-.1. 1lOI Hl\IM l'IK"t, l'f-.ort ktdl. Sw\11.... by llulblM, """"" C. I!..-.., M-.t aHdl1 -, ....,......,,, a. ENll'ld, Sin °'"°I ""'9ft1tr, Mrt. a.tty WlllM, "'-' hld\I "" llrolfllt'I, W. G. Mell'lt\ft, K-Clt\I, ,,._, 11'111 c.. 8. Me"""1't. Clllffllnllel alMI -1r1"*fllldr'lft. ~I ~ ,1161.,, I l'M. St. J•-t:1i.c.1 Olurdl. .... ,.,_ Jolln AthtfY Ol'flclat11111. lnlilomWnt, Kl-Clf'f, Mo. DI~ ll'J' 1111 •P'DMlnY NQ1r.110" 111 •!'Mdwl~. -- Admission to the "New Cin- ema" program, sponsored by the associated studenls, will cost $1 • A secood series of n i n e films will be shown next Thunday through Sunday, Oct. 17-20. The films, mostly shorts, are from the United States, Poland, France, England, It- aly, Japan and Canada. Included are films by "new wave" directors Polan.ski ("Rosemary's Baby" and "Re- pulsion"), Truffaunt ("Jules Et Jim" and "The Bride Wore Black") and Godard ("Les Car ab in i e rs" and "Breathless"). Two of the films are "The Running, Jumping and Stand- ing Still Film'' starring Peter Sellers, and "The Most," a documentary on a few days in the life of Playboy editor-pub- lisher Hugh Hefner. The films will be shown at 8 p.m. in Science Lecture Hall on the UCI campus. 2 Marines Face Suit SANTA ANA -Two Camp Pendleton Marines convicted in Superior Court of kidnaping and assaulting a San Diego woman near San Clemente have been sued bY. their victim for a total or· $18,000 in damages. Named as defendants in the civil action filed by Mrs. Marian Metzler are Marines Donald Kness, 25, and William L. Tadder, 19. Both men are serving one year each in Orange County JaJI. Charges of rape agalMt them were dlsmWed in court. The two Marines were ar- rested by San Clemente police last May 26. The vicUm nam- ed them as the two men who met her In a San Clemente bar and then drove her to an i90laled area north of the beach city. Mn. Metzler clabns that she Wfl! manhandled and beaten by both men and that each took turn! to pin her down while his companicm raped her. - LARGE GRADE AA c DOZEN ·PANCAKE SYRUP fill JOUI CAIT WITH SAVINGS AT lB.C. AUNT JEMIMA 24-oz. Bottle iLA~K· PEmR""". .. ·. -··---: 37c SOUTHllN CIOIS -Ne 1 c• 5~ 1 00 CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .................. -......... • SPllNGFIELD -46-n. c•• 5• 100 PINU.PPLE JUICE ...... _.......................... • HIJNZ -26-oa. bottf1 29c TOMATO CATSUP .... -.............................. .. coF~E"1~'.' :;~·. ~ ..... ·-·--· 3, ... 189 JACK l IUNSTALI -lOl c.. 5• 100 BEANS Cut or Fnllch ......... -................ ' NAllSCO -1°111. Jkt-. 43C. OREO COOKIES .............................. _ .. __ JOHNSON -7--. c• -UMON ... llG. 69' PLEDGE POLISH ·------.. ·-·--·-- JOHNSON -27oft. C91 79C KLEER FLOOR WAX · ........ -............... __ _ JOHNSON -46-. ce. 139 GLO COAT __ ................ -.. -..... _ ...... _ .... ~ AJAX 2 DE'IHGENT -locl. I Oc off .... GIANT 59c AJAX ALL l'llttt'. -loc. 20c off .... KING SIZE 69c AJAX CLIANUI -lod. Jc off _ GIANT ISc CARNATION CHUNK STYLE LIGHT TUNA 61f2.oz. con CINT• CUT 79c PORK CHOPS ................ _ 1b FRESH PORK ~H 89~ PORK CHOPS __ __ FAIMll STYLI 59c SPARERIBS ...... _.... ·-lb LIAN PORK STEAK POI.I( LOIN ROAST OSCAI MAYER ALL MU.T DELI MAN+IAnAN ALL IElf. 59~ 65~ MANHAnAN ALL MEAT BOLOGNA KNACKWURST WIENERS ¥<-lb. v ... l'ak 12-oz. Vac. Pall 12-oL l'kt. SHOULDER ROAST WHm ROSE s 9c 4 9c 3 9c POTATOES 10 :fG 39c FROZEN FOODS MEXICAN MORTON'S ENTREES 3-COURSE ROSARITA l11f °" Ch1111 Enchil1d11 ! 10 01.J Coc~t1U T1c11• 151/r 01.I DINNERS Chick111, lfff, Twrkty, S1li,. ll11ry St.•k. JONATHAN APPLES HOURSi TUES. thNqli FRI. 12 noon-9 p.111.; SAT. 10-6; SUN. 12·5 'CLOSED MONO.A YS Ii HOLIDAYS 3328 w. Bolsa SANTA ANA t ' ------.- ' , _, ' HD-NB-CM Thilldq, Octobo< 10, 1968 DAILY ,!LOT JJ ----------------~- Red · C~i;nese Military Now 'Wielding Immense Power By WILLIAM L. BYAN • been denounced by Red Gum! AP Sped.al Cot1erp11dtlt rallies u foes of Mao'• think· Official Pekinc accounts of ing. The.it appearance aa Red China'• 191h annlveraary Polllburo memben could point celebraUon this month bolster to a process of compromise lA an lmpre:ssion that t be the upper levels which could military ii ·wielding Immense permit Red China to ateblllao poliUcal power. TJie aame ap-herself after the vast ~ c o u n t a d a n g l e before tiOJl of the party and govem- Wutemets some tantalizing ment bureaUa'acles wrousbt clues to a variety of ChineM by the excesaes Of the c;ultura1 Nleh and Yeh ronklng u much cl Ill ortcinal eotl'll'· !Jttle can remain; 6.wever, membon Ill ao high a body, Apart h'Oln lhe conttnulng ol lhe party and -•t llOd wtlb a-proopect cl lhe del>uDciaUOOI ol Ibero In lhe strucillH u tt nilled 'belore culboral moluUoa almmerlni praa, Ihm baa bee n lllt. Much cl lhe bllrtaucrasy down, lhe "1 may bl open no evidence Ill Mao'• m.i<lr In lhe g...,..Uon, .'w h I ch fw I .......,a.a ol ioltlll. -.ni .. for monlha. l'r<lldent foqhl • foe . lhe colnmuniBt Thin haft -....,. !Ju ShaC><hi, whom lhe pro-re vol u t Ion , hlo been N<llltq, dellilto r...,.u <i Jll(anda calla ' ' C h I n a • 1 dettroyed. rWng Influence of lhe armed forces. This month, the army w11 alngled out for ex- travagan(praiie as "the pillar ol lhe dictetOrshlp of lhe pro- letariat under the direct com· !llllld o1 Vice Chalnnan !Jn Pilo .•• a great 1teel wan deltodJng lhe country •• , and defending the great pro- le!arian cultural revoluUon." Whalever hu teten piac<, It The ncfmo -nlfnc baa not lessened the bostllity · aitnabelnJIUllirBFlbltatt of lhe current Red Chinese . to what WU ~ II ... regime to the s o v le t CCrnmbnllt COMtllnl._ AD ltadenhlp. 'rhe tooe toward lhll -...... a.ma Moscow ii aa defiant and pro-watcherl -: --. vocaUve as ever. now 'II. ,._ out Ofl!_Jllc- ...,UnuJD, -· lhet lhl · Drusbchev," and biJ aUles There ,..llll to bl a 11nn cullurll nvolulloo had tumid appur to have b • e n lint between the r<rtoraUon of R<d Cblneae leaders have tun, wlll lhe ,....... -,.. predlciea lhal lhe cultural talnlnc OonunlOdll tra,,...., revolution would end by 1.,. beer a cloll ,_.blsac1 •a I -. u II II had llpal thoroughly deleated. order In Red ~ 'and lhe ---···-. That ,time ii cloae at hand. · mllllaey __,, - puzzles. revolution. . Among lhe puzz!ea: h the . Two military men In lbll "great proletarian cultural Politburo llstliig, are -tod revolution" be~ t.o fade with the nuclear weapoqs pro. away after two violent yeant _ gram. One it NJeb Junc-cben, Hu a proceu ol compromlae wbo had a marshal'• rant aet In among top leaders before lhe abolition ol all Dance Class On Tuesday whleh can bring political rants In 11165, and Yeh Chien-Wil er children .,. tli&l- ateblllty? What bas happened ylng, also a former manila! bl 1 -·•·-•·-·•·- and vice Chairman of the Na. e or a _-u ~ ~ to Red Cblna's nuclear ---"1 "-..... ~-.a. • .-.....a 11 tional Del··-Council. The P•=uY --weapons program after a ...-. M·""~-p-~ ul" to former •·· •·-,.. general a&WCI• -.i• m ,u-purpoee dazzlingly swlft pace up "'"" ~ --llllOI Do Dr ---mki-1967? charge of the nuclear ._.., ver ·• ... _ weannn• development · 1'\n'I. day even!np ti1. the Newport Chinese press articles make r--.--Beach Par~ '"---•-and gram. The iltler i. -·•dent .., .,.~ lt clear. that an elite -·p of ... ""' u~ .. .--~.--... ~--of lhe MWtery Science ~~~ -.--•Q•• 13 members is ruling the na-C1Ulel I I ... _. ..... . lion's 700 million. It is equally Academy. ~ or agtl ..... ..,... l t IS wW be beld 7 to I p.m. clear that the military, under Something which o o • d Teens and adultl wW. meet Defense Minlster Un Piao, s u s p 1 c i o us I y lib a , Mao Tse-tung's heir apparent, catastrophic test.failure at the l:~S to t :JJ p.m. occupies a dominant role in end of last year aeema to have ReptraUon may be eo». governlng the country. At the interrupted th9 nuclear pro--pleted at the clau acUvtt,:. same Ume, people are popping gram. There bu been only TaUgbt on an lntroductorJ up In fairly high places wbo mild boasting ,bout nuclear level, Iha clua ii cleflped If might not be expected to be weapons from ClllMM·leaders ~ develop p6ilt,· srace, Coonllna- lh In rocont monlhl. Bui wllh Uoo and pbyalcal atem1na. ere. •-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I Accounts of the celebraUon11 departed from recent custom by announcing Ute presence of "the poUUcal bureau of the Central Committee," and making It clear that this body ls separate from and greaUy subordinate to the ruling ellte, );me of whose members are included. in the Politburo listing. Before 1966, the Polit· buro was the all·powerfull governing ·body of the Com· murrlst party and the nation. At least s.lx of the 10 listed as members of the Politburo had at one time or another Polls No Worry To Truman I N D E PENDENCE, Mo. (UPI) -Harry S. Truman did mt believe tbe polll when he WU 1n the thick of prealdeDUaJ pollUcldng two decades ago and be does not believe them now. 1'l'he formtr President, DOW In biJ em yur, II watching the current elecUon campalgn with avid liitu'est, a trlend aiid rr.quenl <ioondent uld to day. 0 He'1 ~eeplng hla views on the outcome to bimaelf, at lei.st u far u I'm concerned, but everybody knows what be thlnka ·or polls," the frieod uld. . In wioomg te 1941 election, Truman demollsbld the credlbWty of poll-taken who predicted Thomu I!:. Dew.y In a landslide victory. "He didn't believe the Polls In 1141 and you can say fer lllM! he desn't put any stock Ip them'' now that they tab Richard NlJ:on u the favorite over Hubert Humphrey, said lhe friend. Truman accepted honorary chairmanship of a Humpbrey- for-Prestdent CommJttee im- mediately aft e r President Johnson announced he would not be a candldate for re-elec- tion. Before th a t an- nouncement, Truman h a d predicted Johnson would win the nomlnation and re-election hands down. The former chief ei:ecutlve, whose activities have been restricted in recent years, rarely makes public statemenls and has taken no part ln the campaign except to receive party leaders, in- cluding Huµiphrey, at ~ home and to appear briefly with them on the front porch. Truman it in good health for a man his age, and from Ume to time when weather ii pleasant goes for a walk aloDS the familiar streets of IndependenCe. 2 on Coast Get Honors ~ I' \I I; I ~ c) II ~ YOUl LOCAL H!IA!lqUAlftU ' . fora RCA Month! RCA • • . Presents the Ultlm1tt in HOME ENTERTAINMENT COLOR TV, STeREO PHONOGRAPH, FM-AM, FM STERfO RADIO ••• 111 ll•••tlf.I D..W. tt;I• w1l1111tl TV li11 ••'•"'•tl• f1..- T1111r111 21,00 Vilt N-Vitt• C111r ch11l1. Tw1 , 12" 1.-•I cl11 .. c1111 •P••k•f1 pltH f•wr J l/:i" fw11t•" for 111quldt• •••"' wh•th•r fOI' 'f'{, r•1H1 1r ,.corcl1. F••flior Actl•n l•11• Arlft •II procltl .. •irtom•tic ch•nt•r •Hu,.1 1•"9 Ufo f•r y1ur ro11N1. lite:lud11 1t1r11 h11tfphe110 J1clr A Input, 1ut,11t t•1t• roeerclor J•elr, I t1rrnl111l1 fir 111hr111I 1po1k1r1. THE ERICKSON Model JIL.818 23" diag. 295 sq. in. picture $895 " EASY TERlr.tS WHERI SIRYJCI IS OUl SPICIALITYI TAKE THE GUESSWORK OUT OF COLOR TUNING! 'AUTOMATIC FINE TUNINO(AFTl wr. 'J'll/rt ~ NI Cdor TV, thn's llt to k 1 ....... ""'-""' r .... IN! locb ,, s529 ... plctm ..... Md -JICA ........ "" bri&Mtt hitpill_. thb )'Ill'. Yoa pt ~ mcn-frTllll RCA Vitor. IJBIBID Oii DA VIS-BROWN • • • for expert, factory authorized SERVICE! e I lell• D~ ·s.rm. TtKbl e 11 hll ti• fMt«Y ~ s.r.tc. T"11•l$1-.I e A .... "'""""1 .t ,_,..,., ,_..1 1 COLOR TV -ITIRIO -RADIOS - RICORD PLAYIRS -TAPI RICORDl•I - TUNIRS -AMPLIPllR• In Our 22nd Year! StttlootlMH-Arto .. 411 E •. 17th St. •• Costa Mesa SALB: 646--1'14 -SllVIClt Ma.1417 Dolly. f·f: Sot. '"' ' •• I -z ' •• . . , '. . ' ' , ' T -, -·/ . . , ,, ~.\· !•" ·";: ·.':' :ii· .... , c=i· .. ,i:, ./.; "'' •• ~· ·~ . ., • ;r-• .. .~ • • •• •.' .,. 1:.' .... /' . ... • .. • ~ •• ~ :.-. ... •• ,-<•' . .;. ~ 't· •·I -·' :, ·~~, .. "' •. .. ·1~·-· -~· .I t'. BUFFUMS'~OWN /CREST BLAZER ' • SAVE 15~oo • ""'n.• lllfllH111111c Hit II""' ~11• • .TllIN a111,,.,,, 49.99 • ""' ll.• ... ,. "''"" Ctlt 111 llYJ I I I ' ••••• I • I ••• I I I ••• 54.99 , I ~ ' Try our areal blazers. You'll ·like Ille patch pockets, the center vent. The attenUon to detail. Y0t1'll appreciate the hopsack-textured blend of wool and Dacton • poly.Ster. It k9'1s itswpe. Of cause, Ille savin& is lmpoitant, too. And, you ta1 match youi tilmr wi~ oUJ 2·p!y warp all woo! pant by Haggar. Belt loop mode! in 'P/, bllt~ ~. lrown, olive, blue. Reg. 20.00 ••••• lUI. Sl111e for lien. I .. u mS' ,llewport Gtfller _ tl FA11i111 l~land • 644-2200 e lb!., lbars., Fri.10:00 ~It 9:30 Ohr~ lQ:JXI 1111:11 ' ' ' . ' ~ I -·----------------~~------------------~- ~ DAILY PILOT --...-.-r • -Th , -10, 1968 Archeology Meet Topic A lecAn series OD.. 1'The Wonderful World d Blbllcel Aroheology" will be beld at the home o! Mr . and Mn. Norman Bing, 2015 Se-11 Drive, Corona del Mar. The ..ne., presented by USC and tile Trojon l<lague of Orangll County, will meet six Tuesday evenings froro 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. begim!ng Tuesday. . 1n.....-will be Dr. Geral~ Larue, r e c e n t l y n!tumed from a sununer expedition to the Holy Land. Fee for the six lectures is $2S per person or $45 per couple. Telephone 746-2641 to enroll. t DIAL1, DIRECT ITS TWICE AS FAST( And you save mon~ when you call station. to-station ... on out. of. state calls, even more after 7:00 PM or anytime during the weekend._. Pacific T 1l1phon1 • Kids Li~• to 'Ask Andy' , LAY AWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ' e Use our convenient lay~ewoy plan e Just 20')', down holds any combination of toys totaling I 0.00 or more until Dec. 2+ MA ITEL'S BABY SECRET DOLL WHISPERS YOU A MESSAGE 8.99 orig. 13.99 Save 5.00 on this cufe \ittl th1ng that tells her secret. Just pun the secret cliatty ring and watch her lips move oS' she whispers her ·1 I phrases. 18" of bouncy_ 0boby dressed happily in red f1onnel pj's with her name on the collar. il"oys. 28 MICKEY MOUSE TALKS AND RIDES WITH YOU 2.99 reg. 5.99 Attach the Midey Mouse head to any trike or bike and listen to him folk. "Lot's take e ride" is just one and there ere many more phrases he saY.s· Batter.Y.. op.erated. IDEAL'S FURY RACERIFIC SET ... FOR HOURS OF FUN 4.99 reg. 6.99 All the excitement of o big roce is iampac;,,d into this high speed layout. It's the route you toke that makes o winner. Includes I sports car l track and accessories. I ---ll __ __ ANAHEIM NEWPORT 444 N. EUCLID e 535-1121 47 FASHION ISLAND e 644-1212 Mon. thru Set. Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m. to 9:l0 p.m. 10 a.m. to 9;30 p.rn. Stt. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. I ) I ---'""• --••a-.. • > MATTEL'S TALKING SNIFFY MINT SKUNK 8.99 orig. 14.99. Save '6.00 on the sweefesf smelKng ·1 +" skunk in town. Just a hint of mint to let you know how fr iendly he is ... and he ta lks too! Sey. ·10 differer.I phrases. Plush J>laymete has bushr tail. HUNTINGTON BEACH 1111 EDINGER AVE. e 192-lll 1 Mon. thru Sit • 10 e.m. to 9:)0 p.m. ' ---~-------- Brilliant Concert Forecaalln& a .........tu! 10uon are members· of Onnge Oounly Phil- harmonic Society who wUl open their 15th concert IOriel Satilrday, Ott. 26, in .UC! Campus Hall · Playing the first program will he.Ille Los AngolOI PhllhtrmOllic•Or- chestra with Zubin Mehta, music direct.ol", oonducl!ng. 'the orchestra will play fi'e more concerts during tbe S:~11:m, one ol which again will be conducted by Mehta ond ptaylnc the other prograir. will be the Pitt.burgh Sympbooy with WUllam Slelnberg, oonducttng. starting promptly at 8:30 p.m. ·!M all conceria will tills yoor), th< first program includ .. the Ruy Blu Overture bf Mendelssobn, sYmpl>ony -~o. 39, Mozart and Symphony No. 5, Beethoven. ' No one will be seated durini ~ fli'st number, annoUnced TorrencP Dodda, society president, llld Mn. Jameo P. Judln, ticket cbairmm remind' ooncert-goen that seata will only be held unW 8:25 p.m. Series tickets, at $21, a<e oo sale at the society office, 201 W. OoaEt ighway, Newport Be..:b, 92680, pbine 646-8411. Single tickets, if avail. c'>le are $4 and student ticteta, ,l,75. Mehta ta one of today's young conductors w!\o bas Ille magic eni- -ution of a neer-hypnotic pel90llllity, plus musicianship !hit lift bis per- ' )rmances 1floive the acquisition of musical knowled.R:e and professional akill. · Although he is only 32, the Bombay bom conduct« enters his seventh ~ason as music director of the Los Angelea Philharmonic Orcbestra. Within I >ss than a decade Of finishing his oonsecvatory training, Mehta has pisbed ·o far toward the top of his profession the Philadelphia's OrIIWldy can oay, "In spite of his youth, he has very much amved. I consider him the finest cf the young conductors." · Mehta, fresh from summer successes in LondM, Vienna, Budapest, · !ilan and Granada, conducted the Israel .Pbflharmonh: · Orchestra both in . · ~thlehem a12d Vienna. Following the ._en a reception will take place in the home of .Jr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. Hooored gueSts. Will he Mehta and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ll~hll Mehta; Concert Master David Frisina and Mrs. Frisina, and ftrst chair mu· sicians in the orchesti'a. Also · honored will be Jaye Rubanoff, manager; Doyle Phillips, assistant manager, and Joseph .Fishman, perso!11lel mamger of the orchestra. Society members attending include dirednn, advisory board, di· rectors of the societv's women·s committees and chairmen of the women's committees. • · , . ' S.eason Forecast SUCCESS IS CRYSTAi. CLEAR -It really takes no cry;tal ball to predict the succ~ss of the 15th concert season of the Orange COunty Philharmonic Society, fur the engagements of orchestra, oonductors and soloists are impr~ive. As Mrs. Leon Lyon · gazes int.o the future, it is revealed that Zubin Melita will conduct tm. Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra during the opening program Oct. 26 in UCI Campus Hall. ··· Phil1,armonic Perfo·rms Twi ee .:for Students .; Lecturer Offers· Sneak Preview : Students from 13 areas in Orange Coun- ty plus 20 private and parochial achoolJ will be treated to a free concert Satui· day, Oct. 19, In UCI Campus Hall. Opening.the Free Youth Coocerl Sems v for 1968-69, Orarige County Philharmonic Society will 1ponsor identical programs at 10 ·a.m.. and at 11 a.m. Because of the ent;busiasUc support. of patronesses of the I. Magnln Fashion Show (which is gilten to raise funds to un- derwrite the free concerti), patronesses will be special guests at t h e performances. In the past 10 years, more than 110,000 children have attended the 1ree concem. Playing the 40-mlnute ~~ will be the Loa Angeles Phillwmoruc Ofchestra, conducted by Dr. Howard Hanson, and in- cluded works are Ravel's Mother Goose Suite, excerpts from works by Mozart, Schubert, De Falla and the slow move- ment from Dr. Hanson's Symphony No. I. Dr. Hanson is the former dean of the conservatory of Floe Arts at the College of the Pacific. Upon his return from Rome u a fellow of the American academy, he ·wu app:ilnt.ed director of the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, N.Y., bu served u cbairman of the com- mhslon oo curricula of the Nati.,W AssoclaUon of Schools of Music and in other aimllar capacities. Previewers ot Orange County Philharmonic Soc.. iety's first concert will be transported from the ieaim of the concert hall to the back lot of MGM's moVie studio by lecturer Harold Gelman. Gelman, MGM's music supervisor, pianist an~ Jlusic commentator will inaugurate the preview series at 10 :30 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 16, in the Balboa >lay Club. .Jncluded in his p'rogram will be a review of the forthcoming concert to be played by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and conducted by Zubin M<llta Saturday, Oct. 26, in UC! Campus Hall. The audience will have a special treat in store, too, for they will sneaki>review Gelman's score for MGM's soon-to-be-released "Ice Start:i.on Zebra" and "Shoes of. the Fisherman." The program also will touch on other interesting aspects of classical and symphontc mu.sic used in mdt:ion pictures. Gelman received his early academic and music educalion in Portland, Ore. Following graduation· !tom the Universi:ty of Michigan he was awarded a fellow .. ship at Juilliard Graduate School of Music in New York City where be studied with Alexander Siloti, famed pupu of Liszt and teacher of RaChmanlnoff. A native ol Wahoo, Neb., Dr. Hanson has been conuniJsJoned to write worU by the Booton Sympmey Orchestra and the Columbja Broadcasting System and has compoaed for orchestra, chorus and HAVE TICKETS, WILL TRAVE L -UC! Campus Hall is the d .. tination of this foursome Saturday, O<:t. 19, when they join students from Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, O>sta Mesa, Fountain Valley, Westminster and HunUngton Beach for tM> free youth concert.. Special guests will be patronesses of the I. Magnin Fashion Show. Anxiously awaiting the performance are (left to right) Mrs. James B.'Keyes, Dana Newquist Patrice Young and Mrs. Clinton Eastman. Mrs. Keyes' and Mrs. Eastman are chairmen of the next fashion show . Heading the preview committee is Mrl!. J. Dooa14 Ferguson, and serving with be? are the Mmes. Muryl Hallman , ro-chairma.Q; Edward Schumacher, speaker chairman; Kenneth Smith, tickets; E. Morgan Quinn, printed programs; Herman Johnson, hostesses; Ray- mond Dosta, advisor, and Loren Heather, publicity. The second preview will be the "red letter" trip to the Music Center Dec. 3 for Zubin Mehta's rehearsal. Further information is available· bf callihg the society ofllce at MU411. , operL $64,000 Question Can Be Answ ered Simp ly-No, Th:an:ks DEAR ANN LANDERS: I -II years old, .tn my leCODd year at col- lege, and I &m ibe ·only virgin in OW' crowd. I date a lot. but never lfflD to get asked out more than three or four times by the 1ame felmw. I usually get 'Ibe Bia Question on tbe lbird or fourUa Ciate. When I say "0011 they dcn.'t oall me any more. NOw I've met · a py who lntrliuet mt. Be ii the oalY fellow r,. ever dated -I -.Id lll:e In marey, We've gone out toa:et!w *"1r times ml be blln't ated me to (0 to bed yet but I have a bunch the quflltlon will oome ~ toOO. Do you believe tbat if he does ask me, ~e lJ not the hero I've been waiting (orT Should I say "yea" and tr&ke a chance that he won't ANN LANDERS 5l ~me! Should I say "no" and hope DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am ill, • .. he will 'J'Nl)eOt me? ...... , A WHITE so~ore.tn rmldwes~n urdversil: FLOWER IN Wl!lTE PLAINS . and <'DDtldettd good-looking and DEAR. FLOWER: Wllea a feDow ·ea&onablf bright by my peera. f've alb 'Dte • Blc Que1tlo1 tt doen't Oeen dating since I wu 1~ and, •eettlll'llJ men be lt att tbe hero -vithout boasting, I cian truthfully aay yoe ltave beea waJtin' for. Even I've bl\d m«e Utan my Share of male hereea uk. If tbe girl ti.J'S "ye11" • t:entlon. < • bowt1'er, lie niay wcll ~~c.lde 1hi I~ ' All throUgb high iehOOl l maintained no( die heroine KE ha1 te"ln w1Utng :r.> ~ and top morel star.dardJ. for. Read dte next tett•:."' . .,... .... '"1111 bas .. lithout being a Touch·me·not and an tmportant me11afe fur 1oui wearlnf my purity like a medal l con· --------· veyed the message tbat I WM oot available aa an outlet for m'a!e sexual aggresl!iOO.\. A few fellows Jet me know they were not interested in future dates unless I gave some tangible evidence that "I cared." (Tran.slated ln plain F)Dg!isb this me.ans "U yotJ aon't put out I am not spending any mor.e, i:nqne1 on you.") Ounfng the aummer, J met my Ideal. We dated ieveral times and I found 1ny1elf pyirig "No " to othf.ra In thfi ttope he would call. I loved being wttb. lim. On Au Jt. 2 he was leaving.tor hif' 1 vacation. We OOth ttaled to part and sat m die park for two hours aa·yt.ng good nigtit. For some my.ttrloua rN>C)G all my willpow&r and !food in, tenttons va'r\isbed and l gave in. I told myself "Thi! la }Ove. Why should I deny him a true expression of my feel- lnga ?"' He sent a few postcard! along the wray but did not telephone me as J had hoped he would. lJ8'9t nl.ght he return- ed -a ch~ed man. He tbok me to aupper and informed me that it would, probably be our last date. Tbeie were hi& word&?"'YoU are not tte girl I had hoped :you were. Our talt night together was a nightmare. Yod made me ashamed ol myself. I could never mary you after that. I would always wonder If there had been other1. TbJ..s has been the greatest claappointment of my U!e." So there'& m1 story. Ann. I am tryin& to keep my chin.up but ii.isn't I t • easy. I tell myaelf .no deed - woold treat a girt this way, but doe~ down J .know it .,... nt.f decialcD, not bis -end all the ratlooalizati"'! in th• world doesn't make it richt. T -YESTERDAY'S FOOL • • • ~-. . I . . Drinking may be 11in" to tbt Jddl you rUn -_:_ but it ur{ pat -"out" ~ keepi. You can cool It _. sttty -1&?. jiead ·~..a Yoa~ For Teenagero Onlf:" 5end 1111-la coin aod a lol:igi sf)f4ddi • • S. •lam!>ed envelopo wltb JOlll' i....- Ann Landers will be llad to llolp ,.. with your problerna. Send -"' ..... In cant of the DAILY PILCll', - Ef a oelf--4; ........... velope. • ~ ... .. _ .. ,.. ... ' • ·--.. ~ .. Santa's Helpers Start Deoorating Early '1be Dover Sbo<eo home ot Mro . Glen Stillwell will be transformed IDlo a Obrtatmas wonderland by tile women of Plymouth Congregatiooal Churell wbo are spoMOl1!lg a Pre-Ohrtl!mal Boutique Tea from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 19. Members have been bUJily creatlng decorattona and gift and gourmet items ,. which will be displllyed and 90ld that day, according to Mrs. David Good, ways and meant chairman. Orders for Mure dellvertes also will be taken. Ar· ranging interesti.ng wares are (left to right) tile Mm..,. George Weedon, 1'1!ter Smart and Wl!Ham Roller. ··y~ Olde Town and Gown ' Fair Lures · Ye Olde Englllb Fair will be attracting vtaiton between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Saturday~ Ocl Busy Year Beginning 12. Spoosored by SL Edward's Episcopal ~ Cbur(:b, Westmlnsl<r, prilceeda from the fair will benefit Westminster Unified Church Child Day Care C.Ol<r. UC! Town and Gown and Its sectiOlll are beginning a busy yur. The .Ont membership meetiog of the entire group will bear Dr. Daniel G. Aldrlcb Jr. Monday, OcL 14 at Th'"' will ' be gAmea fdr ---------childml, bOoths sclliitg baked goods, sewing, crafts and white elephants and a snack bar offering food itemJ. Serving u cl>ainnsn "of the fair is Mrs. Johr. Ambrose. Gathering Scheduled The meeting of C o a s t Women's Club will convene at ti a.m. n e :1 t TUesday with Mrs. William Halliday, pttSi· dent, conducting the businw. The luncheon meeting will take place in Mesa Verde Country Club. Program speaker will be J. R. M e t c a I f , merchandise manager for Sears. . 1be club was organited to raise money for scholarships and blind children. Mero- The Tee Tattler : • benhip is open W women over • 11 yea.rs or age. Further ln- fonnaUon may be obtained by " e:allin& the president at MS. lil5. :. Groups Unite In Thrih Sale El Camino Real Woman's Club will take part in the 15th annual thrift sale which will be set in the Dana Point C.Om- munity Clubhouse from t a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow and Satur- d.>y. other organizations sponsor· lng the event art the Dana Point Art Guild and the Dana Point Civic Aaoclatioa.. Those who wish W make donations for the venture may obtain pick up service by call- ing Mn. Honn! Borla, 496- 9138. TOPS Mermaids lnformlUon recardlng membenhJp in TOPS Merging Mermaids may be received by telepboolng Mn. John Kotlofl at SIH:l13. Meetinp W.e place at 7 p.m. every 'Ibur&- day ln Woodland School, Caota - Organization Forming New OC Chapter An organii.ation designed W assist women continuing their education after a lapse of several years is forming in Orange County . The Association f o r Women's Active Return tto Education -A'1ARE -is meeting for its first Scholarship Coffee on Ocl 15, at 11 ia.m. in Orange Coast College's ho m e economics building. Mrs. Marie Howe1 , a1S10Ciate dean of students, will address m e m b e r a, students and guests on cam- pus opportunities for women. AWARE has presented more than 40 scholarships in Southern California and wiU offer another to a deserving student at OCC. t:.em to Sew , , • , the ~ ... ~ t' I > :;· ''PIOFISSIONAL" way :At laatll n. &henn te ... ,.. te .... Ilk• •fl expert. ,,. qukk, 4!lllY WQS ol JlttJng, tallortna:. and finishing. Ill tht lfCl't'tf of good dr@Mlnaldq. • • • ._, ,. \; Small ..._ tndfvlduaJ lmtruction&. . . ...... ...,, ., _. su•el"f c• ...... nll """''11 -"°fefflen•f School .I Sewln.91 N•wport Beech 10 a..m. ln Mesa Commona oo the Irvine campus. Tbt chancellor will speak on the role of the university in contemporary society during a perlod of uncertainty, fear, dissent and violence. A special welcome will be extended W women new to the Orange County area, new women faculty membenl and new staff members or their wives. This meeting is design-. ed to attract new members, W ·enroll all who wish W be in the activities offered by th e special Interest 8fOUPf; Mn. Ralph W. Gerard, co-Chairman or the music tnterest group, will be introducing the guest speaker. The following day at 10 a.m. in the home of Mrs. William H. Laing in Corona de! M>r, members of the mu.sJc interest group will gather. Caned Concert Cues, the group will host Dr. William C. Holmes who will present their first program of the aeaaon. Dr. Holmes, a mlWc scholar a n d impresario of e a r I y opera. will tali: about his research and the producUoo " the baroque opera "Orontea" which he conducted at Cornell University in May and about which he has written ei· tenalvely. The professor spent aeven years at Cornell where he led lhe Glee Club and wu direc- tor of graduate studies in music, before joining the UCI staff this fall u usoclate ~ fessor of mu.lie. He received hiJ doc!orate ln musicology from Columbia University. Earlier he was asaoclated with the P a r i o 1 i Intemallonal School in Rome. Concert Cues meets in member home. on the third Tuesdays of October, November, January, Marcb am April at 10 a.m. for a social half hour follOwed by a meeUng and program. The pwpooe " Town and Gown ts to pmnote .... derstandlng between the ...,. munlty and the untvenlty and to provide opportunity for the pursuit of ahared cultural, educational and IOCial in- terests. Applicants may join and remain member»t-large or they may afflliate with any of the interest groups thus sharing their enthusium for art, boob, music, crafts, sports and other interests. ~ In addiUoa. to personal goals, Town and C.... con- tributes W the fulfillment of university goals in such ac- tivttiea aa the Art Fair wbJch raises money for a r t acholarah1ps for UCI art ma- jors. The fair wlll take place Nov. 14, in the Newport Beach home of. Mrs. Robert Malinoff, chairman " the arl group. Items sold at the fair are made by me~berl In worbhops bein& conducted •t this time. SUtcbery worksbopa are tat· Ing place in the homes of the Mmes. Ste .. arl Carpenter, Frank Fkrentino and Douglu Fletcher; pap!« mache wort ts being clooe ln the homes " the Mmes. F.dward Stelnhlus, Aubrey Horn and Lewis GllJel. te, while collage and wall pla· que1 are being made tn the homes " Mn. GWette and Mr1. Mallnoff. Further information on the fair may be obtalned by call- ing !he fair chairman, Mn. GUlette at 411-1242. Mesa League La Leche League metla the second Tuud.ay at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. H. W. Moore, 5'5-4J51, will answer que1tton1 regardlnc Io c at ton and membership. .. .,,..., /?_ .. ;.,~.rlflDRAPERY .,,..., (_,,lJt(,. IJLj !;. LE AN E ~ S a.,.,_. Water D•m• .. e PLAMI PROOFING EXCLUSIYI wUAU.NRID DIAPHT CLEANIN6 ~' I . &a Drapery CINnlftl. P..r.ct ..... ,...r... ., the !t• ., y.vr tlra,.y* ., 111% ,.. ~KllMftt If ......... e Ne WllW ....... • Ne Shrl11""'9i1 • ""'9ct lw• HllM e W1twlt111ta.....e • Perfect ..... , .... , .. e Ptefatelc:..el IMtal...._ OUlt IXCLUllVI llltYICI DRAPERY e --•--i -CLEAN~E~R~S~-·-~~~~'::: ... :...._~':k,_!"'""""~:_, • ,,.. LeMt ca...,. ' ;_; Off .., ..... & ""' 20% -· 540-1366 642-0270 t 702 NEWPORT lll:YD., COSTA MESA Horoscope • Virgo: A void Excess Speed ,_IOAY OCTOIER II llJ IYDNBY OMA1Ul ''111a .......... <Olltrols "" -,. . .Alhloc ,allDtl ... w.,.•• T -(¥ardl ll·Ap<il lt): <>r-. -· ..,,..,. with -reluc:- _ "'_ dwlft. Som• m1t•od1 an outm-. JI"'!"' tbll -&Dll welcoine tbe DIW. You m•1 hive to -·~-nlaUYM, . TAUllUI (April 1()-Moy :111)1 llDplloe buylnl could ~ put dell& lo budlel. Rec1U 'ill 10 bendle balic deW!o. vi41'nce., Your great Illy naolutior\I mafjt eonctrn.Uii TtM bl& ttUncs will take care can be a eenae or humor. money maUers. Get wbt't of themselves. Much of im-Cement family relaUons. yOu . need. Draw . l J n .• portance occurs behind th.fl Key ls greater harmony at betwe:ea deefre *ad e:s:· acene1. A~nt 1teady paoe. bom·e. trevagance. You get ":"llllilg LEO (July 'U.Aug. 22): IF TODAY IS YOUR for,not.blDg. Be re~tic .. · Suggestion trquf fr i,e.n d BIRTHDAY you ere in· GEMINI ()iJay 21·June coWd le~ to ulUmate profit. tultive, artisUe -you have ?II): You~ ac~oa Jn <f•• Be perceptive. lf'anafytlcal, completed • jlroiecl \\itlch which bad-been dormant. 'Be you find enswen. Accent on could brln& greater recogn.i· ver1Jt,ile;·d i1pla;y adap-hope1,full~·of. finan· ti.on. Now get ready for t&blllty. Some at home ap. clal .needs. Qlange apt .to new tasks W)\ich bring con- Pl• ugumentative. This is prove beneficial tact With.e.xciting: persons. but lempO!'ary. Don't be VIRGO (Au~. :z:h5ept. 22): G'E N 'E·R AL TEN· upeet by _. who 1s im· Avoid excen epeed. Check DENCIES: :r r 1 c t lo n in· patleGt. dlrt;!diona.. Specl.al uslgn-dicated betweea persons, CANCER (June 21.JuJy meot can be SU(!etnfuny O'<*P' which were allies. 22): yqu may be drawn in completed. But be aware of ~':' .... ~~*'::.,.~k.~o!:',,!: two direct1onl at once. Key credits, debits. Seek greater 1 =:_ .. 1::'t11:11i ":"r.dM:' c5 AAUW Hosts bannony Witb fa mt iy ~~"'s!:''it:.~ ~tsc:.,ifr!l"sl:. members, work associates. ...:.'::"".:..c-"-v" .... =""::-Y:."c.:MM::."::.-__ _ LIBRA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 22): Indivtdual who bad b e e n 11oqcommtttal makes kDqwn ,bi.a views. This can work out fn your favot. But see situa· tion in realistic light U you deinond faets, you get lh<m. No wl>hful.-Wg. Former Mayor • ~ tnat wlD ba lo llClro for --.. cl lb• Jf-rt Cotta N• lnnc:b " !he "-lean -'-1atlm of Un1""""1 WClllOD at !heir llUlmeetln(. Mn. W1IUam Stafford Glbba, Ul!&lanl irol-and .....ior at ~ State Collep at Loq Beach and former mayor cl Seal lltlch, wf1I be tbe-apeater. Irvlne Caul Country Club wlD ba !he aettb!c nell Satur- day at noon. Mn. Glbbl .,....mly ts completlnc her dOctorate at the Untvenlty " Sou-.. California. 8be wu awarded the Ut!e, Outstanding C1t11en " !he Or-Caul ln lllM and two yelrl qG WU ~ tbe Dllllnl1iitbed Alumnee award by North Part Collqe, Chleago. The HunUnaton Belch resi. dent and motber of four chUd.rtn 11 • member ot the AAUW, Leagne cl Women Voters, and terVea on the -" Ibo Oranp Counly Mental HtaJth Auociatlon, County TUben:uloala -la- tlm and !he Part. and PROGRAMMED Mro. W. S. Gibbs B.ecreatlcn ~t of cheon and pl'Nn'am may be Hwrtlnaton Beach. ' made with "M:";;. R ob e rt .11uerv.-for the lun-Warner, m..1004. Beta ~a Phi Clubs Plan Varied Activities , Bela SigrN Phi chapten have a variety of actlvtUes scheduled for October. of Mt. and ;Mn. RWrd Somer, Gafden Grove. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Obtain hint f rom LIBRA messaige. Get cor- rect view of f.inanclal si'W.a· tion. PrOm.is~ are tint, but insist on resulta. One who advises you on investing may not be oompletdy in· lonned. . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Reslil\s come through unorthodox metbodt. Means those you depended upog In past may not live up to potential. But tbosi·wbo C(lme forth with unusual procechaes anl. your ·cause. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan. 19) 1 Sbive for greater eelf'ftllance. Jn so doing you actually will attract those in a position to help fuJftll goals. Means positive ac· tion, attitude ls winning ticket today. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): Tendency today is to want too much. too soon. Pull in tbe reins. Be sensible enough to listen to valid suggestions. There are changes, but it i5 not necessary to ru!h them. Take your time. PISCES ((Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Steer Clearo! disputes. You could become involved with one inclined toward What's Doing MARY DAY, 442-4321 PERFORMER Glyde Zulch Artists Perform At Meet A joint concert wilt be presented for members or the Upper Bay Associates of Orange County Philharmonic Society Monday, Oct. 14. Clyde Zulch, pianist and painter, and Miss Judith B I a n d, violoncellist an d sculptor will present the pro- gram at 10:30 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Robert Crawford of Newport Beach. The program will be in- troduced by Mrs. Robert s. Pike Jr. Luncheon host.e!lle!I will be Mrs. John F. Dean, Mrs. Daniel Gilcrest, Mrs. Robert Hetzel and Mrs. John Zaremba. When members of Xi Eta Pi ch1pter met in the Garden Grove home of Mn. Jack Murray lut Jtllhl, Mn. Mike Glardlnl reveafed plana for a 10Cil1 tatln1 place Saturday, Oct. 12. Working on the combined social and fund·raising event are Mn. Peter Nyhuis, social chairman, and Mra. John Cop- pin, ways and m e a n 1 chairman. .. _______ .., GREY'S ART GALLERY Mra:. Giardini, s o c i a t chalrm.an, also was elected as Valentine prlnceas. Guests wert Mn. L ea Stoman " Westminster and Mn. Ann Glaus of Garden Grove. Mn. William Chamberlin presented a ~ sram ,.. the s...e of Hearing. Mu UpaUon chapter memben art thinking Hap- p!MU h -Petluck Dinner as ·111ey mab plans for a dime+ dip whldi w!U take place Saturday, Oct. 11, ln the home Th•,.'• no fabric Ilk• ,.r••Y for ea1y cor•, comfy-wear. look1 great, too. Find yours at Hatf-SII• Shop. from Sl.5.00 - Members and their husbands will enjoy cocktails prior to the 8 p.m. poUuck. Mn. Jerry Cohn will host TODA'f' l411nllllfttll Hllll O•l'ftll C_. - Location It av11 .. 111e b'I" ailll1111 Mrt. WUll.m G1ll9v1n, "2""'13', I 11.m. the meeting of Mu Upsilon • Custom Fr•me1 chapter at 8 p.m. Monday, •. m. 1111104'1" e Art Le,soris U.S. A1r l'eru Mil--., l"ltlll 1t - l·hdt ~Irk mobile Htlt., ?.1"11 Ana •• Oct [• CN tt MMll...i ... .,_ -CO!"-411!1 • ~. M•r 'l"oo.ith Centw, f:JO •.rn. A review of bylaws will be ,_, .. 11 v.,..., Hut• .. "'"'"" Call '45· 1480 TO~S Clllll -RKl'"Hflon Ctflfw, HU!>- given by Mrs. Richard Somer, ''':!:"...!~~~~ 'L~~ cin _no 657 W. lttta St., CM parliamentarian, and Mrs. w. a • .,..,.., •. , 11a1bM • .-.. lO~:JO daily Richard Qioper will present ·-~o~"~M~•~•~w~..,~~-~·~-~~-=-=-::::!~lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli!I Self Um ~!, Garden Clrcwe. I 11.m. program on -es ate. Mrs. Cooper. named Valentine girl of the year at the last meeting, will represent the chapter at the West Grove Council Ball. --- SJZIS 12~·26~ 11. 20 fijht brilliant dlaMOOtk outline 14KsaldpencHnt' fll.15 Twenty fiey diamonds add splendor lo 14K gold pend.an!. $ZU ~~~'sHALF-SIZE SHOP 1105 N...,... 11..i., c .. 1a ;._. II "'Ya w.o..,. "' ............. COHVINIENT TBM.\ I .., ""'"" f :30 .. 5:30 fn,lay .. 9:00 Am 214 0. I Ml .......... . NEWPORT CENTER 17 Nshion l1l•nci Op•n Mon. I: Fri. f :lO SANTA ANA IOl W•st 4th Str••t Open Mon •• Thur.-Fri. 9:30 -· \ -· -....---....... -'7,..------·-.,...~---~---....,.~~-----.... --------------.... -,.....--~~---.. ' P·arent-teacher A Vote for Snoopy Snoopy for President? It's time at Harper SChool to join the..PTA and at the same time vote for your favorite candidate from the comic strip 0 Peanuts." Danny Rufer gives bis ballot to Mrs. John Gillan, membership cbaiPtnan. The drive will continue through Oct. 21. Singing for Their Supper? Singing for their supper? Not really, but Becky €rocker and Julie Gillespie (le~t to right) are singing praises fo r the second annual chicken dinner sponsored by Crest View PFO. Tuesday, Oct. 15, dinner will be served from 5:30 .to 8 p.m. in the cafeteria. Ti-ckets are $1 -for adults and 50 cents for cbildren. Diners will be entertained by the Newport Harbor Area chapter of the Society for the P re- servation of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America. Kids Like to 'Ask Andy' Boos PTA Mn. AllrM-11 Prelldent REPORTS: Using the Iheme for the year, Bulld\ni II Our Business, al-t blocks will. be used t.dndleate the progress of the PTA membenhip drive. Mrs. Dallas Stevens, membership chairman, announces cash prize> of $5 and '3 will be awarded to the classroom w i n n e r 1 • kindergarten through t h 1 r d grade a n d fourth through •i.th IP'ade, at the unit m<etlng Monday, Oct. 2t. Circle View PT A Mn. Holt JeueD Prelidenl COMING UP: Ba<:k-l<>school Night al 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 15, beginning with classroom visitation. Dr. C. · ~. Hall will speak on Future Plans for Ocean Vlew School District. Mothen ol first graders will host refresh- ments. .Cle99 PTA Mn. £, M. XDo% President COMING UP : Parade and carnival on Saturday, Oct. 26, will be dis<:ussed at board meeUng, Mo n d a y • Oct. 21, in the teachers' lounge. REPORTS: A limb will be ad- ded to the Clegg family tree, as each new parent beci>mes a member of PTA .•. Mrs. Peter Holden and her com· mittee honored teachers and s t a f f with a luncheon to start the new year ... Board served punch and cookies · for kindergarten children and parents prior to opening of school. . • Boy Scoot Troop 551 opened Back-to- school Night with a Dag· ceremony. Teachers were introduced and each outltned thelr individual methods of teaching and expectaUons and hopes of their students, as parents visited the classrooms. FV High PTA Mn. Wllllam Muon President COMING UP: Board meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 15. . .PTA will have a hot cirlnl: and donut booth al the Fountain Valley Hallo-ween Barbecue Celebration Saturday, Qct. 28. REPORTS: Membership drive will end tomorrow ••• Proof!: of ldenWication will be mailed home so that parents may place their orders ..• New teachers were in- troduced by Dr. P a u 1 Berger, principal, at unit meeting. Mrs. W i l 1 i am Brockman , program chairman, introduced the song leaders, yell leaders and band, under the direc· tion of James Doyle. Mem- bership approved the pro- gram, Talking It Over, and voted to suppClrt the Hun- tington Beach Union High School Dlstrict Bond Issue Tuesday, Nov. 5. Fulton PTO Mn. Gerald Rix President COMING UP: Bake Sale wlll be featured at Back-to- School Night, 'I'tlunday, Oct. 24. REPORTS : Richard Hanna, student go ve r nment coordinator, reports new stu- dent council officers are Mike Plerson, president; Sue Holato, vice . president; ' Units Ba .ck . , I Grounds for Fund-1aising Attracting members and frie!lds ol. McDowell PTO to Mlp raloe funds is Ille tasty fare bE!ng pnipar- ed by Mn. Ray Hart and her committee who will serve dinner from 5:30 to 8 p.m. tomorrow, fDr a dime-a-dip. MWlic' otudents, under the ~ lion of Don SalltM>r, will enteitain. ~~~~~~~~- Cindy Hoiato, secretary, and Angelic Gift Debra Roberts, treasurer ..• food COU(lOllS and trading stamps are needed for ad- ditional coffee makers for the school, reparls Mrs. Art Brown, ways and means chairman. Harbour View PTO Mn. Wendell Schabert President COMING UP : Conferences for parents and teachers will take place Wednesday, Nov. 13. That evening at 7:30 p.m., unit meeting will feature Don Bowlus, pro- fessor of education a t UCLA, who will speak on the Lost Treasure of Fatherhood. REPORTS: Norm Worthy, director of Huntington Beach Recreation and Parks Department and G i en n Block, assistant district ex- ~ve of the Orange Area qiuncli of Boy Scouts, spoke on library and park bonds and scouting to the PTO board. Merine Higli PTA Mn. Geor1e Waltert President COMING UP: Back·to-school " l'\i>, 'D Night at 7:30 p.m. Monday, · 1'"'IUll. Q .. efl Oct. H. Short business . meeting will p r e c e d e clauroom vWtaUon. • • Membersblp drive will end tomorrow. H ofter o om reaching the highest percen- tage will receive top prize. Next three hlehest will receive special recognition, reports Mrs. W i 11 i a m W 11 liam.son, membership chalnnan. REPORTS: PTA theme for the year ·1s LIJten to Youth ••• Members have assisted school in new student registration, f i r s t day registration and w i t b physical examiiiaUons. Niebles PTO Mn. Richard Wllbtbn President COMING UP: Back-to-school Night at 7:30 tonight will begin with outdoor spotlight flag-raising ceremony by Cadet Scouts. PTO board and teachers will be in· troduced. Classroom viaita· tion at I p.m. Cadet Scout Embroider thb enchanting sampler now, then flll in vital data when baby arrives. Let trus happy angel watch over baby always -frame panel for nursery. Simple stttchery in bright colors. Pat- tern 7167 : transfer 1Zx16 m... FIFTY CENTS (coins) for , each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Allee Brooks The DAI·. LY PILOT N~ecralt Dept., Box 105, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Address, Zip, Pattern Number. . NEW 1969 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG-''best faslllons!'' "Most new designs to knit, crochet, sew, weave, embroi- der!" say editors. Three free patterns inside. 50 cent:!. Book of II Jiffy Rugs - complete paterns -inexpen- sive, eaay to make. 50 cents. Old Customs Hard to Stop iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii By MARIS ROSS LONDON (UPI) -Tip· ping is often a source of em- barrassment to givers and humiliating to receivers._ But efforts to abandon the practice in Britain haVi! pro- ved that old custo,ms die hard. The habit started cen- turies ago when servants at coaching inns relied on tip6 for their living. Restaurant and llotel staff, porters, taxi driver1, hairdressers and various others 8tilJ expect tips today. The alternative is to pay bigber wagila or add a· fixed servi~,.charge to the check but ·eveb 'Rbere the charge is added, customers tend to Jive a tip as well. A British shipping / line found this in trying to aban- don tipping on its cruise &hipl this year. So it is giv- ing up the experiment and eo!ni back to Uppln£. "We tried to end what we felt was a possib1e em- barrassment to s om e passengers,'' said a s pokes ma n. "As oo alternative, we added a cer· lain p ercen ta ge to passenger fares but the system did not seem to work. Passengers gave tips at1yway." The spokesman fou nd tt difficult to say wllettier peo· p1e were more embarrassed at tbe idea of omitting tins than of giving t.hem. Few w~men would dare to leave a hai.rdressJng salon wilhout tip pin g although David Ad'mason, president ol the N•tio111aJ Hairdressers' Federatlon in Brlta1.n, bas attacked tbe custom. "How much longer are we going to tolerate a form or patron)lge, almost ot almJ- giving, whidl dates back to the middle aeea?" WE HAYE STOCK FROM BACH TO ROCK , IDENTIF¥ THIS TU.NE ,+. lit 20 pttle"I .. CGttt ,tly liMflfy thit +.nt WfM fl fit m.r,htndhe. e IAND • DRUMS e GUITARS e LESSONS e OR.GANS e ,IANOS e ltlCOR.DS e RENTALS e ltE,AIRS e ,SHEET e MUSIC e ltADIOS 6% FIMANCIMG AYAIWl.f .. DowNTowN Costa Mesa HARBOR AT NEWPORT 646-0271 Do-•· San Clemente 3 DOORS SOUTH OF DELMAR 492·4642 'I SCHOOi. INSTRUMENT RENTALS eNow e Pint Qvallty e l111t ly Menth e All RM'lt AppllN to Pwchalal A PIW UllD MARTINI AND OlllON GUITAal . IAYI 150" a U•· 4 NEW DIM AMPLHRS 25°/o OFF ·LIST ,RICI t -()$ ~v ptl.Of JI - • 1n Swing Baio Sale, wider t11o cn-r '"1ll•g• View i;T ._, lion ol Mn. 0-Ma.JD. ' ,Y " will be featured. + , Mn. ~~· .. (femure PTO J .~MING UP: Open -at Mn. Lowell Brlllk 7:!0 p.m. -y1 Ocl. lJ. Pr..tdettt · Teacben will bo • tidiJ>duced e<lMING UP: Back,to-ecbool , by €. L. Beaa!ey, pilnclpal. Night at 7:!0 tonJa!it in the PTA will op<iaaor a Bab mu 1t1pu•rpo1 e room. Sale ..... E~. Joins Jntroductloo ol teachers and PTA Is -Of mem- pr .... taUon· ol the bu<fget beralilp dl1ve wblcb ends for tbe corning 'year. Plans l!'rldi,y, Oct: 11. l'rllel will and objec!Nu for tbe yeor be awaided clulrooms bav- 'lllll be disc:uaecI durln& Ing JarlfOll . -o I classroom vi 1 l·t at i on • parents, join. Mrs. Wllllam Refre s bm·••hwillbe ,DotyandMn.M.~ oerv,ecI. • ' .an.cbalrmen ol tbe drive. • • • • . . . THE MOSTWANIED WIDE·LEG SLACKS at an ~ievably lo?IJ '/1f'ilxl only - ~ I 99 . --°" .. ~NDAY ==::i ,11 to s ' COSTA MESA, 1601 llewport BIYd. 1116111 GARDIN GROVl-12372 GARDEN GROVE ILVO.:' • • ·----__...... ,.-.. • --=-~~~= .. -.----·-.--. ;_~ .. ~_:;_::::;:::-;.~. .............. 9¥ ........... .-.-..-.. _, . ' DAILY PILOT Coas,t .. Singer 'Ba~k D.0111e~ for Opera' Slooe • ).hen she has 1;;q leading rotes in "The Ocscrt So"n4'' and "RudigQre" f!>r the now-d~lUOct1 Orange !:ounty Llght opera Com p'a n y, "Hansel and Gretel'' with t.be Guild ~ of 1"" A\igel ... "The BarbU of Seville1' with the Redlands Bowl, 'plus many otbera. She also bas been • sololsl wltbDr. Richard Lert'a Pasadena Symphony on three Occasions. .Oratorio singing, a field into which she first delved as a teen-age solo!$ at the Balboa Island Community M.etbndiJI Church, remains 4." important part of Mn. Cariaga's pro- fes,,ional llfe. Lut yur sht reeeivcd wide accla1m for bet appe:aranCes at the carmeI Baeh Festival wben she performed u oratorio oololst In 1eyeral d~, f_erent programs. T h e s e pralses followed htr roles ln Handel's "Saul,'' "Messi.ah,'' and "Jephtha/' for t b e Pasadena Symphony. She alse bas.played Azucena ln "D Trovatore,'• Czipra io "The Gypoy B"°n" and La Ciecai in "La GiOCQndil, '' for wpjcb sh<!, ~vtd th• Euterpe Opera'• outstanding performer award for 1967-68. Mrs. car111a 'llli ...... uy with the ~'8U1o Symphony, the Queen Elb:abeth 'lbeater lit Vancouvtr ucj the Hollywcod Bowl Sympllony, and bu been beard as a ton- ltmporary llinpr at the Oji! FesUval. 11\e sJ.nser m~ fomer concert pianist Daniel cartaga ln 1MJ, He 11 now music critic ror the Long B,eac~ Independent PreM-TeltCf'IJJ'h Together, the Carl•1a1 «iu~ed rt dUea with ~ . ,,,.. Norman Luboll Choir In 1118.l, ho u 11113laol cond~ian­ lst and •he as alto oolofit. Mrs. CUiqi u lb e daughter of Mn: Marvellee 0. )(oody, ~ (epresenta1lv• of Equity Securltlea Corporation Aod a rulderlt of Coit& Mesa. From !Ml! to J961 Mrs. Moody lived In Corona del Mar. 1be inUU•IO(MnQ wi 11 return to ber home county Fri., and Saturday nights to , perform the. role of .tbt med- dling, splnstetjsh Marcellina in ~ Ml!llR opera. RETURNS HOME M•rv•llH C•rl•t•' Mancini-.. .. . Subs at' Benefit 11enry Mancini, the roclplent 'of 17 Grammy awards: and Ihm Academy awardl, ·h8.f volunteered to iwbstitu.te for Paul Wettoo and his orchestra at two Jonathan Wmteu-Ancty Wlllilll11 benefij concerti to h< held · at the Anallelm , Convention Cent.er .OcL 18, 1 Wllllam Gardner. producer of the two concerts,·anoounced that· Weston was 1forced to cancel his ·appearance because of illness and pending surgery. .... .... ' ~ • . y egas in Paris? That's Liz' Game Computer Uncovers Talent The eencerta, at 7 and 10,u Pl~IVISl-ON' lli.111! BY D£ LUI£ p.m., will be sponsored by Ar-1~~~~~~~~~~ By BOB moMAs · marks the return to Jilming by _ PARIS (AP) -Wb,y would steveq& after a . four-year •an Ame.ric8n .film com~y I8pse:. His last picture was ~·COIJle to Paris to mab a :moy1e -• Las Vegas. "The Greaiest Story Ever : ·~o please tbe lady," u-Told." , . plains famed director George "Once before I laid off for Stevens. four years," be commented, When the lady in question is "and when J came back, I Eliiabetb Taylor, ynu can found that I did my best work. understand why m Century-So maybe it's not such a bad F~ is 'anxious to please her. idea after a11." Besides paying a million He was speaking of hi."I dollara for her ~. the' service during World War II. company sem Stevens, ~ when be made films for the du<7" .Fred kobbnar and Army, including documen· vanous f«bnlclans to film taries of concentration camps. "The Only Game in Town" at Stevens1lad special memories the Boulope studios here. of the Boulogne studio. French technlclans have LIBERATED STUDIO Jazz Fete Slated .for UC . Irvine By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD '(UPI) - Now tbere'a I guy Ullnl p computer ·t9 diacover ehoW · business star1. · He ls Bert Richman , a personal manage wbo grew disench8.nted with Hollywood and turned to the cbmp.iter dodge. Then , perhaps because he is a college graduate, Richman put two and two together. He ,decided lo return to ,pel'JKmJl maoaging using ~ computer to discover new talent. ·· - So be sent out somewhere betweM 500 and 5,000 ques- tionnaire.s. to 1uccessful en- tertai,netl r-actora, ·lingers, Qa~s a!)d comedians. If the ereeted • r<pl'OClu<llan of • l.as Vegu motel on a movie stage. In tbe background is an amazlngly :tCCW"•te miniature of tbe V~ Stnp, with casino signs gUtltrlng In neon. Shelley Manne Md his Men 5,obo figure is right he muilt team up with a group nf also have sent them to obOe Orange C~st Jazz stars players in Schenectady. I Saturday night for a ~nefit mean, there just aren't 5,000 "We liberated it," he recall· concert at UC Irvine's earn: · stars around. ed. •'When we arrived here, pus Hall. Anyhow, he rented a com- the Germans were loading The 8 p.m. event is bei ng 40-puter and fed its memory equipment into trucks and sponsored by the Orange bank with aJI the qualities that trying to get away with it." County Partners for Progress ·go into making a star. Tbe withdrawal of Sinatra and the Associated Students at Some of the categories are·a from "The OnJy Game in UCT. little far out :\ · Town" prevented a con-.JQining Manne on the staod Rictunan incltided · abuse row, Inc., the nation's leading the computer and wafts for a at lhil time. Instead he ls organization working wit b score. u the hopeful lall8 into choosing h t a opportunities mort; than 200 American In· the range from 0-10, ~ is star cartfully. dian tribes. Proceeds from the material based QD ~ .cale of One thing tor sure, com-concerts will go to a new~ 100. puW or .no c 0 mp u t er, establis~ national American So far Richman hat pro-Richman is not about to fold, Indlah Scholarship Fund, foun- d ed ·•··• ~ tial t mutilate or splndle Steve ded by Winters. uc a <Kl-16'e l""en s ar -Also·starriDg in tbe concerts who rated 80 on the scale Arlen. which b cl-to period l;:=========.I ·will he Bplfy Ste. Marie and -.,.-the Cowsills. Tickets are on Was . tbe potential star a -sale at all mutual ticket agen-beauWul blonde? A high-wire . walker? A bronc rider'! Or ctes. ~~ec:1d;boe player from ~ . llF=========; No. Rlchman's first prospect -r...., BALBOA ls Steve Arlen, a lumbering sw.., ~·ltler 67J-404I Welshman who sings for a liv- ing. Moreover Richman first "GUESS Wt10'S 1::; caught his act in a Beirut, COMING TO DIN.MER" "' I . a.HIM Lebanon, night club. P1111 111• ,.,..,... "Steve is one<>£ the most ei:-lllft La11C...., clUng artists rve ever seen," ''THE SWIMMER" said Riehm~ "But I wasn'tl'=;:::;::;::;::;::;::;::;=:=:=:11 counting on· the computert;: alone. He'• more than a good risk, but a l)ersonaJ ~ger must apply his own experience and coosider the variablei." Richman said he is against booking his boy .irito Lu Vegas NATIONAt. GENElt.tJ.. CORPORATION THE LUXURIOUS NEW '?/,tctcd A1tc'JtJ I •(• • \'I I I"• I~ tJTll olll•1 +l:)llh~Pl~f>'\-,jJ'/'1<1 Kd>lmar uplalned th e essential' reuon for filming here: "Elizabeth bu the pecullarlty of not wanting to leave her husband. And since he Is malllng a film ('The Staircase') la Paris, she w1Dts to be here. SO we shoot in frontation that Hollywood had will be Lido Isle's Jack saturation., anxiety, s£agnant been anticipating with relish. Marshall, the Harbor Area's trend, bias factor; enthusiasm, Sinatra is known to some of Mark Davidson Trio, Jack career concentration a TI. d s." 01"' .. ,,..,.. 11 •r1tt.i • J.M,n11 his fellow workers as "one-Sheldon and the Senior SoulS. creative Concett among bther·11 ·--------- take Charlie," being notorious-Tickets range from $2.50 to human quilks. . Of)en Tod1y 6:45 Fiii~.s!!!· ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Ma1' DIJtlCTOlt-Mll(l lftCHOlt. JOSEPH E. LEVINE ... ....., • MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE·TUFIMAN -• Paris." • ,,_v - • AVOIDING TAXES A lurtller nuon may h< to avoid American ta ;z: es • Kohlmar oatd the maller never came uP. Miu Taylor will join the company for three weeks of fllm1ng in the real Laa Vegas, but that may not affect her tu status. To add to MISI Taylor's pleasure, Foz: has decorated her studio dressing room at a reported cost of $30,000. The same was done to please ·her costar, Frank Sinatra. But when Miss Taylor's recent operation dellyed the start of the film, Sinatra bowcd out. His replacement: W a r r e n Beatty. "The Only Game in Town" • Jy impatient with repeating $S for adults, $2 for college Now when a hopeful talent his dialogue. Stevens .is among students and $1 .50 for hlgh 11hows up, Richman has the i~ the most meticulous of direct-school students. They will be dividual · fill out a que's- ora and has been known to available at the door and the tionnaire Which ls then puncb- order 30 or more takes of the UCI student st~re. ed onto a card. He slips it into same scene. 1;======'==;:;============= '41 didn't expect any pro. blems with Frank," said Stevens. "He is aware of his resPonsibilities and w a s prepared to do thret, lour or five takes or whatever was necessary. But listen -I'm not fond of a lot of takes myself." Tbe direct.or expre~sed disappointment at Sinatra's withdrawal, but was delighted that Beatty chose "The Only Game in Town" for his first film since "Bonnie a n d Clyde."' "Sup1rbly 1ct1d ind dir1ct•d." l . l•1ch P.T. ""-"" "THE HOMECOMING" Th11~9f tVa S.IHkoy -l :JO P.M. lnfatMGtto"•R..-naft••• -'4"'1 J6J Third fiqp TltHtre, 1127 NH'-" llvd .. C•.t• M-Dtllthltul C~lldrett's Tl'llllr• -"H-~1 UICI c;r1l•l" • ~'t'.i.. It 1:00 Ind 2:11111.m." ~ SPl_Cl~L Kll~Dll MATINll SATURDAY I: SUNDAY ONLY 12:JD •114 2:JO , .•• ALL SEATS 50c Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 49 R@sort 1o regularly 1 Kind of bird 30 Family naml Ii Vesstl prefix 10 Statuary: 5Z Vo fd's Abbr. partner 14 Flf!,'tty 53 Sargasso, 15 Trwbadout's fOf one love son1 54 Alrplane 1& Cuousar 11ember 17 RetJ,ltst to 57 Make ready be l)l'Hent fM action 19 Dip kl a 59 Certain 11.,,ild 111191zines 20 Sacked &l Supttim· 21 Coarse posed durabtt M Expung@ fabric 67 P.1. -tree 23 Gru.t llllCIU!Tts 68 Marked with 25 Dtinli:-different 26 Office of colors Strateglc 70 Uttered Services: In words Abbr. 71 Boy's 11a111t 27 Follo'll" a 72 --nous: curvin; Confident• COUrs! l1lly 29 Certain water 73 North11t11i>ff'· cu rrents l1nd r!Ytt 31 Margin 74 Number 33 Can. provh,e;t: 75 Ha.s ~n Abbr. OfHn1on 34 Ancie11t portlcos 36 Finlsh td, in England AO Best 42 Non-flowi ng substance 44 Show dJs pltlSUl'f 45 Loaf on the job : 2 words 41 Asian country ' .. j • DOWN l llllaltt mournfu l outcry 2 ·-·Dom ini J Separating, in a way 4 Group regarded as supttior 5 Rends anew Vtsterd1y's Puzzle Solvtd: ' . .. 10/10/68 6 lte111 of 37 Dance sttp sports 38 Rive r of equipment England 7 H1ving )9 Great df,-agrttiblt 81rrier S111efl Island 8 In the 41 Purpose l11111tdlate 43 Trick nelghbomood 46 S. African 9 One who dl1lect treats hides 48 So-called 10 -··biscuit :Sl Cowardly 11 Nova Scotia :S4 Automatic commun iW de vice 12 Girl's name 55 .···-Coast 13 Cert1in 56 Ptrform,d children first steos 18 Acknowledges :SS U.S. winter 22 A.c~lsltlon resort 24 Specter 60 Jel 27 Copied 62 Assum!!!" 28 ExKute character again 63 River to th e 30 Soaclous Adriatic li~in9 roon1 !iS Call 32 Plan in 66 Gt~lc detail resistance 35 Sweet coalltion 1111terl1I t.9 -··du DJ1ble · Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE·IN SHOW STARTS AT 6'45 P.M. THE GRADUATE PLUS 21111 FlATUll-Peter S.11..-s "THI PARTY" LAST C.OMPLITI SHOW STARTS AT 1:41 P.M. • I • PIA DleillMAlllC ''El vtRA MADIGAN" C.AIOL WHITI ,, "POOR COW" M111k ltr Do11•t•" loth F11tur11 In C11lor I, They held the fate of the world in their llalids-1nd dropped It! I SWY PE1R tlllJR. IAWMI • m1J l ·PEPPR' -- AIM Pl•¥t1tt- lo4 SMlpt • LM h111lct "NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY" THE&RADUATE .l.N".wte EM9ASSY fUi COl.OR ·---·-... - f'111 P1t1r S1ll1n l" "THE PARTY" JAMES GARNER DEBBIE REYNOLDS MAURICE RONET • • ALSO DIAN MARTIN JOEY llSHOP ,, "TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER " In. Sltaw St9rtt 6141 Co11tl1111•n S.!Klay Ire• 2 ,.111. And Thlt Grut FoatvN ' i..,_. ___ el'llin liiiiiiii~iii~.~.-i r.n1icliiu11as" .r.= .... INw ,._.. 7 p.lft., C...t. s.t. a fiH. hM. J p.111o- '· &INDYDMNIS· K1!1R DUl1J!\ ANNE HE\WOOO -~ ~....,...w., ............ r..-i,1111.. "' HILARIOUS CO·FIATUll >0-~ .·.~ . " . ' . .~ ......... ~--.,. ' , M&I ....... , ... .... .......,.,. ,_ S42~7P COMEDY e ACTION ·JI.lilt Al'lllr•ws "THOltOUGHLT MOOlltN MILL/I" E1vl• Pro51eV "SPllDWAY .. ALL COLOR SHO COSTA MESA PAULO ·-........ 54S.lll3 I RECOMMENOEO FOR ADULT1 ) David NIYtl'I • Pfobcl'e~ Ktrr "Pnlde"ce •"4 the Piii" W•llfr M~t!tlllu e Anne J1ck11011 "THE SECRET LIFE OF A1'I AMERICAN WlFI!" ALL COLOR SHOW 011.vllA e ACTION: ~I~ Conn.,..,. e 8'11!ell• 81rc!ot "SMlka" Bur! Lll'ICISi.I' •itte SWllllllM, .. ALL COLOI: SHOW -::---......... 9' .... · M7·l5t1 lll!COMMl!No•D ~Oii AOIJLn "A11pls Ire• Hall" 1111111-rl Wilker . .,,,, ....... A.LL COLOR SHOW .... _,., ............ 962·2411 CMIHy • 'nlrlh • MtlN &lmm'l'O•wlsJr. PtlwLIWford '"s.tt • ..,,.,.. Clift! E11f'lltoo!lcl "H•llf '1111 Hl9h" ALL COLOll .... _ .. ,, • ..,,,,.,.. . --.... -lffM 6l1AT•W•IK Oudl~ Hoff!M~A-&lllt;f'Olt "TM."" ...... .. Aristocrat of SPANISH FOOD Delectable Steaks & Lobster Lunch-Dl-r Opon 10 a.m, I p.m.. Two Locations 19922 2130 W1tf N1wport Co1d Hwy. 1t P11i11d•1 N1wport 811th Mi11·fr'4i1 C11if. Duo at , Pl1na l1r P•n~ho Lopt1 545.5579 Dua •t Pi1no l1r R1i1rv1tion1 LI 1-1177 M.0. .o J.DMIS, CO$T ... IUS,t,, IMOIC .!-UollO'I: M......OO..-...·OOll-"°"!JIOf __ _ 10th SUPER WEEK ACADEMY AWARD WINNER IUT INftCTCM1-•1 MCttOLt JOS.EP,t:t.E. LEV.l~E -I MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMAN - THE GRADUATE AN AVCO DW.$3¥ fllltl ca.OR ··-ce·--- 2nd Top-Comody Exclusive ArH Run BRIGITTE BARDOI SEAN CONNERY "SHALAKO" TECHNICOLOR@ ALSO : Srephe11 loyd Ho11ar llRlnrin 2nd Top Action Hit IURTWiwtll l!l ·m ..,. lwPllUll1EIS" ,._ -llllm PW!!lll 2nd TOP WEEK .i .. .,.., Cl..i'.*"' ... "'""" ...... "" JAMES DEBBIE GARNER REYNOLDS MAURICE RONET -s Also Hold O.or I •• " ,, •• • I I ' , -. ~ ----.... -· --· -....... ~ -· ...... ------...-~~--------~--...... -~----~-----~ , ocn.d10 ... • i>i ... -Ill (tllJ ~"'"'· ' • ff.ti., 1:1 "'" ...... .., ·-- -Ill (10) Sfive'tt\M.lltttrt.IMlltMI_ ...... Glori• Lori111. tlMI ~ ....,_ 0 THE IJ ·O'CLOCK MOVIE * "FIY1 Finpr ·~I•" ROSALIND RUSSEW l:"Ct "'.!:;'. ~:>---·-111(9111 - ly G• ~DI• . ' .. JUDGI PAIKU ~-------··-··-'----:0-------....,cmm=-lllll!!!l~iiiiiij _______ ly 'Htnld ... Don ,,., 0 9 [J) ·-.... .., (C) .(60) Jaek Lorf." 1t1rrin1 U stM Mc· Gatrftt, held " HtWIM't "tbtt po· lice unit, ~nv~ .. t• tht W..01111 10:• or 1 milhon11r1 • llf!n. $111 Mlneo • 1'T H E CAT" auests as Btlbby Gtorae, 1 rock D . . . tN COLOR •_nd. roll Mier who d.cillts his * st1rrln1 ROBERT LOGGIA 11n1m1 earw ftMdt ·• pllbllcllJ boost IO Ill tlots t phoaJ Md111, 1t1111t with two fritllds. 1fn'lll't Ml a UL Cit IQ (30) PllS IHlfl hi is tht IDfl If t Mii· • 11111t: ....... ttilllMI lb1I" lionai~., · thl)' !llcldl _to 1111f flt ~ 'U. -Mar..nt Mtstro· "pme" for "''· tMt. plrtltlt ._, Sltft11lt Stn· "~~ ':' ~--" = :~ CC> (30) .. Jeftns. hrfrllt ....-I ltMI ti lilW ·--.... -. ·-. prdlM. HtNll leltl4 ...... • H• ..... n.l a.,ett: fC) (30) ~· """· io,,, -· • -(C) (10) • "' 1111 .... -{C) 130! ·-.. '"""' ..,,. liMI 1iio ....... ....... " Jridtlkl Nlt4I tfttn II llltnMkldtot of wtrlt ~ •111111 "' ............ (IO) -... llM lo ftllow illt ·-(C).<JO) .... , Wot MOON MUWNS TUMILEWEEDS leCOftd lffl .. ,,, ri-. tM , .. ,. it lllllW re.-tea (90) ·-!Cl ..... -{C)(IO) ... -...,,,.-::::-..,....,....----~ Ullllll(j)-ICI ~ -.... ·-14 l'M l«JMESICK, llOl'-:!::'t' ,. .,. :-:· ,-: 11,.!:_ ..,... , -Lio" 'sMAmR, THIS DESERT BIT AIN'T - ' -. "'' •41 ,,_ ~ -l'UlllOJTUNl\IJS? FER Mf •.• l'D GIVE . ~·.n:•:; '!,:!~,,r"~ -_,. 'ta! LOOK ... NYTlUN'JUSTlOHEAR -• ---•900"' ,_ -IC> BLUEi ... LEAF DROP OR THE .,.-.,,~-1.:---I" CRYOFALOONA.Q,l.TIN' • rlat ......... ,..,..,... • • .,_._. I 'KE ""lOGO "*-"'"""'"'""" •> ,.._,,, ""°'' "" ......,,.A.,, •""' -'"'-. "'"-SURAN&AGAIH- • -1111 1001 1!11111100"" - -IC> aam•saM tit fC> (IO) .... ...._. <~ '39 ilf"wildii" • 119 ~" .. _:Jt• CelMr, L..,. lfol111. -. ""' .. --. ., ................... ~-·--...... {*tllt) ,._ ___ .... _... -...... .. II.. '-9 ... letnl a. IMtt:t • WIY M H ._. ftf M" .... 11:11 ......... "'· SURFING IS WHERE ONE GLIPES N::Pa.sTHE SURFN:EOF A LAKE IN ONB CANOE! I • - Iv Ferd Johnsen ·t1y To111 K. lyan • m-""" !Cl ltol 1"'•-.,.. -...,.. MUn '"ND J•-I Al Smltli GI '"" -IOI! => ·01-h ... °'""'· ,_ ,...,,,,,...,=,,,,",.,,........,· ,,.'"""=...,..,.,..,.., ~.,,.-----.,...,,.,,.,,..,.,.,,,.,,,.,..,,,,,.,,. ,.--.-....--Y....., __ __, !.;~,==-~~",: • .''; l::""-"'\J:,•·.,,"'::: ~~=-\o·~ ~~~l:e, ~~=' ME? ~':: .. ':':":'.,.. ~ ,:: .=: '°"""'"· ME WA& ALL "TWn: MAS. MY 6ECURITYI DO YOU HAVE SOME· "" cltf• "''" tor --a •••••iii - -1 HAD) &IJTZKRITG! I CAN'T LIVE 11!1N6 OF JOE'611l11T •-• -•-!Cl Wl'TMOUT MIMI 1 COULD HAVE A6 A DAmME MOVID • • .,. • .,.,_ -l•rohfJl l:JO D "fl••••1•r" (...., 'II -'1' Pui:a ,_.., .... ,.._ Clltlon Wtb', MM t'nllll:IL 4:11. fCt "'lllf ._. ....... ( ... ,,., .... _ (wMI.., 'ID- llR)' ....... ., ......... (_.,, __ _ __, ... 'ti IS. Qllllla. M-.. .,.., _ ..... _ ... ---·--.. 1 L Comp!Me Prlnffllt Service Top ~ -Fast . Service 2211 Wfltlf lo-tml. ME¥ENTO? • ..SS PIA.CH . I ,, ., ... DA!l.Y PILOT IZ . - VARIETY -Roger Miller, above; tnlik'eii a !l)lest ~p~e on the "Dean Martin Sliow," IOnigh~ in Color at 10 on Cbannel 4. other gue.\t& on the oneo hour.program iliclude Vincent Eawards1 Phil Hams, Gloria Loring and Stanley Myron Handelm!lll. ' . ~ION VIEWS Doris Day, 'Julie' Score By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Initial television rat- ings by both the national and tile 31).market surveys claitn. that NBC-TV's touted "Julia" s!'lles and CBS- . TV's Doris Day &hows are off to fast freshman start.. Bolb new entriea flnish!d in the top 10 programs Of the recently-issued national rankings. alon~ with the aemi·new "Mayberry R.F.0.," CBS-TVs off-sl!oot of the Andy Griffith show. · Since 11Julia," which stars Negro actress Diahann Caroll, began a week before Mi.Ss D~y, it can clabn a slight edge in consistency at this, early ,..date. The ·rating covered onJ.y Miss Daf's premiere. IN THE NATIONAL ratings, Miss Day's series came in sixth, while "Julia" finished loth. Curious· ly, though, a perusal of. all the various early rat· U;iga_ -those emphasizing New York or 'the 30 key marlJets or the national statistics -iridicates th.at "Julia" seems to have a m'ore firm basis of all~ around viewing participation. 11 Julia/'. for instance, has consistently come in wltli"impressive statistics in all survey taken, where- as Miss Day -as an example -bas not been doing particularly well in New York. Although she did show up strongly in the 30-market survey, the na· tl.onal ratings prov.e again that Miss Day's basic ap- pe91 ls in the grassroots. Miss Carroll's ~how, on the other hand, was considered pretty sure fire stuff in urban areas be- cause of the Negro-white relationships. But its ap- parent all·around reception -in outlying areas as well -. has surprised some. ONLY TWO OTHER new series finished In the top 20 -shows of the first national survey of new program competition. They .are CBS-TV's "The Good Guysi:_' a slapstick outing with Bob Denver and Herb 1!>delman, and "The Ghost and Mrs. MU!r," .an NBC·TV offering with Hope Lange and Edward Mulhal'O. For those who claim s~tuation comedies were on their way to extinction, it should be no!¢ that all Ave Of the hew series that placed in the top 1Jl are situati$ comedies. The other·new shows finisbing in the top .40 - which LI more or less video's elite· circle -were "Here Come th~ Brides," an NBC-TV westem acl· venture--cQmedy; "'Ibe Mod Squad," an ABC.TV youth-oriented police series; ''Land of the Giants,•• a acience:flction pr.ogram, also on ABC-TV; "Th.e Outsider,". an NBC-TV private eye epic; and 'iLan~ cer," a CBS.TV western. "Lancer'' did ~er in the national ratings than in those focusing on city mar· kets. THE FRISHMAN series moot definitely in trouble are NBC-TV's 11The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," a c'1!ldren's outing that placed 86th among 89 rated shows; ABCJrV's Don Rickles program which came in 83rd; and NBC-TV's Phyllis Diller COIX)edy hour, which ranked 72nd. "T1te Ugliest Girl in' Town'' and "'l'hat's Life," both on ABC-TV, didn't fare well nationally either; but 0 That's Life,'' a weekly musical, indicates more pull in the cities. Over at NBC-TV, meanwirlle, the much-touted 11The Name of the Game'' thus far· is below ratings expectations, getting squeezed. by N1'C.TV's 1'Gom .. er Pyle" and Friday night movies. Dennis the Menace . • . h , '-.}\'1 . --------------'-----------·--·--~ -----·--- ---. -·--·--·-··----------"--..:.._"'-'_!~..;;._..;;!:.....:...~-'-...0..:.C'.:.C:.....'.-"--~------··-· .. - • l I I ! I " I l · I . I f . .... .... ,,. ..... "' -.. .. " • .. • ~II'" . . /; _,. .. , JI DAILY "I.OT o~ey s Werth Equality of Sexes. In Jobs i n Dangeri . I By SYLVIA PORl'i:B Tllo prlnclple GI equalll;t between the ,.. .. ID ea>ploJ- menL, wrllten inLo tlUI' lan la the blll<lric CM! R!pla Act GI 11164 and -GI Ille ~ achievements of women ln 1be u.s., 11 in er•ve d.lnc«'· It will be oerblsly und- ennloed, In foci, tt a - IDgb' l!lnocuoul, appar<Olly dull rider attached to lbe 0 Cbriatmu Tree" tu: bl.D la not ellmlnaled before 11 bemnts law. TBl8 RIDER woold J"O- for an ei:etpption \IDdtr' 11Ue VU GI the ,Clvil RIPla Act In order to permit different com. pul!ory and optioaal ttlite- ment ages for men and women 10let1 en the bub of aei:. At. an illustration, the rider would alloW a corporation to creatt or to continue a relirement plan under which all employes would retire at age 65 but with women permitted o't com.pell~· to retire at age a . Umler today's guidelines tt Tille VII, this retiremen plan's distinctive "conditions" would be a violation of sex equality. Simple and dull enough ••• and the .......,. has been bailed as favoring women and favored b y women. But actually, this one amendment would :strlie at the heart of equality between the seua in employlbenl Whether the condition or employment is starting pay or retirement age, what we have been batwng for ill equality tn the cood.ltioO; and any backing away from this must be recognized as retreat and defeaL -Im-. • ,.. ml&llt -1111 Bqital ~ mm&OpportaaltJ~ mild' wttldt tdm.hk'M 1\o • tie vn. '11111 m>C lmlsla lhllt it<Ollld,bfnplalloo,- ._,....,.., iD uiltias ntft. -plam " ~ Ute , riclD GI -aurlJtf ~nella on Dri4g Sag ··-... aad lbll .. ltgillation b: we• 1 KY. Omepln...,q ool 1obliyhic fer tbe amenrtrim are tbe Amotic¥ Molon' new modilled Javelin currently is Oii llMo dr11g racing Qrcuil. Painted in ·MIC's colors of red, white.·and blue.the Javelin is now oo display at Holfday Rambler in Costa 'Mesa and will mce this weekenil at Orange County Raceway. leodloc ....... ~ cqanfsa.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- -tioaa, rull!ol !nm -and P'O(essbiaJ w.o me a ' 1 clubs to _.i ....,.... ~~ trs ~"sleeper,• this amendment bas g<n«ated groat emotioo in lnformed circles. Hett'a a rundown: a a1m , Pension p1an1 with lifferen.t retirement ages fer men and women are com- monplace. Rebatlah More than 15 per, "°' or a11 "'tlmnent and pension plans do not have 1ex: differentials. Only 5 percent differentiate on the basil of sex, with the plans ·of_ the Bell Telephone compantes affedin( the most employs. Qalm, OUr Social Security System has different retire- ment ages fer men and women. Rebullal' It does nol. The normal retirement age under SoclaI Security is 65 for both· men and women. In 1958, tbe act was amended to permit women to retire at age 62 with reduced benefits. In \961, the act was amended again to permit men also to reUre at age 62 wiUt reduced benefits. TV fi'rom Out.er Space UP'I T1l19h0" There is no sex differential Despite cramped quarters of Apollo capsule, Wews from outer space will be in retirement ages for men televised back to earth when craft with three astronauts aboard is launched :1 ;:e~~ emJ:-es ~~: Friday. RCA's Dick Dtmphy aims Uie camera that will enable all three net· Retirement System. works to receive and transmit the space pictures. Camera was developed to perform functions identical to those of cameras that are 30 times as heavy and Claim: The amendment ~ times as large. refers only to optional retire---------------------------------ment. Antis ub Aircraf t Has Business I n Brie f DALLAS (UPI) -Empiro Life Insurance Co. of America says its NaUonal Investors Lile Insurance Co. subsidiary at Lincoln, Neb., will absorb Lincoln Llfe and Casualty Co., also owoed by Empire Life, and F.ducators Security Insurance Co. of Nebruka. The combined compani.• will tiave $250 million ln insurance in force. BOSTON (UPI) Consolidated Production Corp. has bought Ward M. Edinger, lac., of Oklahoma City, a petroleum engineer}Jlg con- sulting firm, for s,t9s shares of common stock. NEW YORK ·(UPI) Melville Shoe Corp. h &:_ s agreed tentatively to buy Fol· wood Casuals, a 16-store chain of women's specialty sportswear shops in Pennsylvania and tlie Midwest. TORONTO ( U P I ) International Utilities, Inc., has increased to 58.S percent its interest in Divcon, Inc., of Houston , an oceanographic and underseas services firm. International had a "l:l percent interest in Divcon. FARMINGTON, Mich (UPI) -Futwmill, Inc., said it will be purchased by Teledyne, Jnc., of Hawthorne, Calif., for about $5.17 million in stock. " . ...... : ....... ···- M.•'lce• M.onef, Too Firm Helps Fill • Man's .Basic Needs NEW YORK (AP) - A U.S. compaoy wttb lhe doubl- nlld 1i111 GI making profila aOd Mlplng Ille ..._ic lll1d aocW . prosr1ss of Wl- defdeveloped C0tU1fries bu been operating 21 :xe~n but few AmerlcanS imO•N1bqut Jt. ,,,. firm Is' Intetnatlonal Basic ~ Corp., a parl o1 !lie Rocuten.r ~· · It WU founded in Brazil and Venezuela th 1M7 by NellOo A. Rockefeller, now gov~ of· New York, and bil ilr<>Ulers. It now opera!es .W subsidiaries and l!mtates in 33 coonlries. Rockefeller's interest i n Sou\h Aniertea •temmed lrom a visit in 1937 to the Venezuela oil propertiel of. C r e o I e Petroleum Corp., of which he waa a director. It wu h<lghtened by his World War II work u U.S. coordinator of commercial and cultural· rela- tions between the' American republics. 'BASIC NEEDS' IBEC's first undertakings in Venezuela were a farming company, a fisblng company, a food wholesaling company and a milk company. '11len and now, IBEC ex- ecutives say, the purpose was: "To do a worldwide, pro- flbble busineis in fields im- portant to ecooomic develop- ment and concerned with basic human needs." IBEC's start wasn't without it.! troubles. , American ex- ecutives ran into rtsistance to change in the ways of doing business and political and monetary in!tability1 Some of its ventures were ill-conceived for certain areas and failed to show profit. They have been liquidated. Operations have been refin- ed into five groups : Food Operates 5 2 supermarket.! in S o u t h America, raises hybird seed com, catches and cans tuna, proce.smi and distributes milk and other food products. Poultry -Supplies breeding stock to chicken farmers in 23 countries.' Puerto Rico. Prolraml ... under way In Mezico, Peru, tJoe Virgili Wanda and the Unlf<d States. IHMD:lal•-Manufactures: a wide range of lnelal products in Ille United States and overleas. l'la-1al .. me.. and ... vesf:mellt -Mana1e. mutual funds ID six coontrles, plus w or 14 "id e Insurance brokerage operations a n d varied lnvestmentl. REVENUiS IBF.c's revenues h a v e groWn from f12,.85 million in 1951tq$213.29millionin19117. Group contributions t o 1revenue in 1967 were: food, $106.• mlllioo; poultry, 137 million : housing, $11.4 million : industrial, $50.8 million, and .finaocLal, fl.7 million. Profits· in 1967 totaled $936.547. In the flrst six months of 1981 they rose to $1.814,000. In an examination of 1BEC's history and operations, the Journal of World Business, published by lhe Columbia University Graduate School of Business, says: "Overall, IBEC hu souglll to persuade business com- munltle! around the world of the ~ of a concept of long-nm profit muimizaUon within a socially responsive framework. . . ' •1t seems clear that the op- portunlties today are manifold for private capital to lake on the challenges of economic and sotjaJ. gro,wlh in the developing couptries, and to be able to do this profitably." HOUSES IBEC's president, Rodman Rockefeller -son of the governor -says the cor· poration plans to extend its operations oo a geographical scale with Pfrllcualr interest in Soolheast Asia. IBEC'a newest undertaking is building houses under a mutual-help program f o r Choctaw, Cherokee and Creek Indians in Oklahoma. The Rockefellers are ma- jority stockholders in IBEC but there are about 1,000 other LINED UP behind the amendment have been the Bell Telephone companies i n particular, leadin·g employers of women in leseer paid jobs. M. Michigan Representative Martha W. Griffiths puU It in a masterly ana1ysis of the rider, the Bell Telephone com- panies "fear that the ellmina- tioo of aex differentia!J in retirement age may result in earlier retirement for men, or longer 1erv1ce and increased credits for women, a n d thereby increase the com- panies' costs." Lined up against the amend- Rebuual: 1be amendment would permit the sex dif- ferential in either optional or compulsory retirement. It is entirely possible that it would pave the way for forced earlier retirement of women under existing pens.Jon plans. It certainly would make lt easier for employers to deny promotions to qualified women on the ground that they nll.ght be retiring at an earlier age or exert pressure on women to retire earlier so they could be replace with younger, less ex- pensive workers. Buffums' Acquired By Gimbel i~ew Weapon: Computer BURBANK (UPI) -The Navy's newest antisubmarine aircraft looks the same as its predecessors on the outside but carries a computer which ushers in a new era in sub- marine warfare techniques. would be a grave mistake in- deed for us to underestimate the rapidly growing Soviet submarine challenge at sea,'" be said. Houainr -Has constructed about 13,000 one-family, low- and medium-cost houses in shareholders. Futurmill makes metalwork----------------------ing machl.Des and carbide cut- UC B Earnings Increase 19% United California Bank's third quarter earnings moved up sharply to reach a new high of $6,914,389, a 19 percent in- crease over the $5,792,710 recorded during the same period in 1967, Frank L. King, board chairman, announced. Per share: earnings for the third quarter of 1968 were $1.15 compared with 96 cents for the same quarter of 1967, a gain Cf 20 percent But· all the'se are details ; important, but still details which pale ,against the fact that this amendment would represent a retreat from the equality for which we have fought so long, so bard. No matter bow well in- tentioned the amendment's backers may be, this fact alone demands that the rider be wiped out of the bill how thriltY are you when you borrow money Southern California Thrift & Loan specializes in personal , business and Trust Deed loans .•• Stop in today and see how we can solve your imme. dlate money problems from depend. able funds available right now. The Thrifty way can sova you money. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT & LOAN 110 c..t W St.. Cost• Mew .•••. 641-5045 "" Wlllflk't IM!., lOIAnrtte• ••. 653-8220 • . \. • 'Gimbel Brothers. Inc. and Buffwns' are to combine, the companies aMounced. The atreement, approved at meetings Monday, is on the basis of 0.65 shares of Gimbel's comrilon stock for each share of Buffums' com- mon stock (equal to one share of Gimbel's common stock for each 1.538 shares of Buffurns' common). Gimbel's common s t o c k closed on the New York Stock Exchange on Monday at UV. per share. The e.i:change will involve about 505,000 additional shares of Gimbel's common assuming the conversion of Buffums' outstanding convertible deben- tures. The proposal will be submitted to the stockholders of Bufum.s' at an early meeting. Vale G. Young, President or Buff urns', will continue as chief e:a:ecutive officer of Buf· fums' which will be a subsidiary of Gimbel Brothers, Inc., which now operates four autonomous Gimbel divisions in New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Milwaukee. and Saks Fifth Avenue. PENETRATION Nttrly "'''T"'• rtt4f tht DAILY ,tlOT, homtfown l'l•- p1p1r fir th1 Ftbulo111 Ort "fl Coast. • The prototype model of the YP3C_ "Orion" was unveiled Tuesday by Lockheed Aircraft Co. which will deilver 100 of the $4 million planes to the Navy starting early next year. A data processing system is the major element which distinguishes the new aircraft fram the older, four-turboprop P3B which it resembles. Inside the Orion are more than 300 pieces of equipment, 200 of which were not incorporated in the older models. Use of the computer, developed by the Univac Division of Sperry Rand, will enable the 10-man crew more effectively to detect, locate, classify and attack enemy submarines, the Navy said . Vice Adm. Turner F . Caldwell, director of the Navy's antisubmarine warfare programs, warned at the unveiling of the threat of Soviet Union aeapower. ''The Soviet submarine force is lbe primary offensive arm of the Soviet Navy and is a weapons system that can seriously challenge the primary ol the U.S. Navy," Caldwell wci '"The Soviets have a curreni inventory of about 3iO sub- marines, approximately 50 of tbem are nuclear powered. It I See by Today 's Want Ads: • Ha.ve trailer wW travel - Ownen settled alter using ooJ.>t 5 times! • Wouk!n't men! a q out m a. day tin thllT GI~ him a. large redwood houR -..... "'"" •Bad<to--··· BQys' :and You.thi' doth- tng a.t a. very Ow price. • <Van) Gogh vt 'urn ! Live in M art plier)' -trade )'!:Mr car far tt-beauti- lut~ olt ...,.,,_. . e R.AIO didn't~ lh1s bug .• But )'Ol.I ct.n -for 9lle by owner. ' • N"~ a lot cA 9\onla;e C*Ce1 Uere'1 • prage for 1"811 jn 0::111tii MesA. The prototype is the result qf a research and development program begun in 1960. The plane is expected to be an operational mainstay for the Navy for the next decade. S&L Bares Nine-month Results LOS ANGELES -Net earn- ting tools and has annual .sales of $6 million. CIDCAGO IUPI) -Gull and Western IndustrJes, Inc., has agreed to buy T h o roughbred Enterprises Inc., for an undisclosed amount of stock . Thoroughbred operates the Arlington Park racetrack, Arl- ington, Ill ., and Washington Park Track at Homewood, Ill., and 1,000 acres of choice real estate adjoining the t w o tracks. Cross Lauded For JA Work ings of Huntington Savings SANTA ANA -For his and Loan Association for the w or k i n he I p 1 n g Orange County "companies," nine months ended Sept. 30 Charles Cross has b e e n were equal to 52 cents per presented a special award by share compared with an ad-the Southern California Area justed 49 cents jn the cor-of Junior Achievement. responding period of 1967, The .award was given to Robert L. Lynch, president, Cross at a meeting of the announced today. Orange County Chapter of the Huntington Savings vi a s National AssociaUon of Ac- (ormerly a 99.8 percent owned countants. He is director of---------------------subsidiary of First Financial special activities for this Corp. or the West. Last month group. the holding aimpany divested Cross developed a rating itself of Huntington Savings by system for e v a 1 u at in g a tax free spinoff to the of JA pant shareholders of First Finan-treasurers com es cial on a share-for-share basis. ::f' :a bee~ •1;~Y c!!:. Per share earnings figures for s.idered for adopUon J a 1967 were adjusted to reflect Sou.them California. the 868,070 Huntington shares ----------now. outstanding. Huntington'• earnings, after provision for federal income ta:res and b e f or e ap- propriations to genera I reserves, totaled '451,296 cotn• pared wllh $4211,098 in lhe first nlne months last year. Nel W11inp for the third quarter ended Sept. 30 were $183,606, equal to 21 cents per share, compared with $222,110 or 25 centa per share recorded in the limllar 1967 period. Hunttnatoo Sa'1ng1 Ii""" operating Income for tbe rlflt nine months tlilil y e a r amounted to $S,817,7'1t against $5,678,880 ln the like year ago period. Operating expenses totaled $5,244 ,780 against $S,160,782 last year. Savings accounts at Hunt- inglOll Savings and Loan .. or Sept. 30, stood •l $IOl,U4,2!1, up from $101~,111 a Ye31' earlier. Loans ReceJvable for the ame interval Increased from ft,190,208 to $102,263,180. St.ockhoklen equity w a s $10,688,188 ·or $12.34 per share against $10,127,005 or $11.69 per share a year earlier • ·Vice P ruWettt EugMe D. Bishop of livine bas been elected a vice president o( United Cali!ontla Bani<. He is manager of the bank's Orange County Airport office. ' . State Economy Rises A gain in September SAN FRANCISCO ~ Catlfomla'a ~omic activity advanced again In September, wllh total •pending ruching $911.03 blllloo, ac:cordlng to figurq just released by the Bank of Ca1lfomia. The stat.e's economy which ha1 bad Its ups and dOWDJ lllnce the fint of the year finished the end of Ille third quarter with a 3.34. percent lid- varp over January of this year. The bank'• economic lerles, aeaSODalJy adjusted It an an- nual' rate. meuura penonat. government IDd b u 1 i n e s 1 IJ"'ndin& for find IDve!lm<DI ~ Ca1llornla. Wap and oalary co... peru1UOO totaled $$3.37 billion in Stptember, boosting peraonal Income to fll.Sl blUlon, a pin ol 1.15 percent in the moolh and U percent In a year. P<nna1 tu ... Avlnp and consumer lnt.erm. payments subtracted $18.33 bilHon rtam ptt10n8.1 income, I ea v I n g $51.50 b1llicn for per90nal spondlng. or this total, retail trade, rising 5.6 percent ln the year, accounted for $36.27 billion, and personal services, hous- ing, transportation and recrea- tion coils totaled $32.23 bllllon. B ....... apendlng for fixed ln-t advanced 1.15 per· cent In September ot llUI bllllon, IO -moro than a year ago. Purchases of durable equip- ment, totaling 18.94 billion, ... ceeded the August llgun by 1.5 pettenl Private Construction, at $8.21 billion, wu up 37 percent In a !S<nonlh period. or lhl1 Iota!, $3.5' billion Wll resldenUal and lbowtid a 5.fi percent in- creue over August, while noo- realdenUal, at !UI billion, clec1ined 5.l percent in the same period. GovenJmem Spending, IC- counting ll>r Olle<juarter GI total spending in I.he state, acf.. vanced to $24.37 billion in September. Compensation of empJoyes, at $12.91 bllllon. was over ha.If or this total . Public constnicUon inched . up only slightly in the month to $2.81 billion, but showed a 2.6 percent increase ln a lZ- au .J ' 1 I! " a v " c: u (I M •• .. .~ I Q Ir ti p ir e jJi 1 ·----~---.... ----....... --.. ------~ --........... -~------~---------------~--,-.,.---;;-----·--......---~--~.,. Alt 1,000. of Us Had a: BUS·y D~y Today . . We creawd and delivered a:rwtlier tres1i editlon of Tlie DA'ILY PILOT,· . ~ . . ~ . ... , TEAMWORK produces uCh day's 111 .. ew DAILY PILOT. Often special· ists like Tbomu Fortune (left), whose beat is education, work with a staff photographer like Patrick O'Donnell to get the story both in wordl and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pietUre! last year to illustrate the varied atory of Orange €oast life. Nobody tnows bow many local atcrte1 we wrote. Not even us. ' CREATIVITY helps advertisers tell their storles and sell their goods in the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. Gordon Crawford (left) of the display advertising department watch~ staff artist Les McCray put final touches on an ad which will be ready to appear in the newspaper only hours after the artwork is .finished and approved by the advertiser, a local ietail merchant. . . QUICK llANDlrplace lines of type, ads and cuts.(the metal plates ·uaeo1 lo reproduce pictures) into page fonm as the--day'a product begins "tO take ahape. Compositor Arden Malsbury ill onJy one of a platoon. of printers who .. build" the news pages under preaure of deadlines, work· ing against the clock to bring ·naders Uie latest available information in each edition during the day. . . . DELIVERY of the -la a speed ewnl, too. <Jonveycr belU carry the pa.._PerS through the mailroom when they are automatically tied in "iundles of ""SO and toued to waiting drculatim district managers (like Blaine ltobertl, -hen, right) who lpeed them 'Via a 40-veblclt Oeet to carriers for delivery. Mailroom f<reman ~ge Arau& Odl) and bis crew can move 20,000 newspapen an hour. VOLUME la the word at the Copy llesl:~DAJLY.i>lto'r Qipx ~ CbW Norman Andenon (right) aided l>l' Tom Titus (bacqround) lpd ·- copyreadera -every day alfts, chJ!cks and edits more wjre repcrts from worldwide nen·servicea than the ,average weetty news mapslo'I p liJht.fl ..... Editcn IC8n. ~ telephotos to willpaper a living room evfr1 U boon. Speed, born · of Oi]ierienc., <ilelps them keep it Ill ~ too. , THE WORDS are ready. Marjorle Jackson feecla them tnio a $25,000 computer, a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which UJeS a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characten: at the rate of 1,000 a second and punches a new tape which will t.ctivate Mother machine for automatically setting type at high speed. The machines can aet type at the rate of 6,000 lines per hour. - MAClJllNJ!ll hasten the processi!s ol preparing plates for printing the pages of the newspaper. Here, Charles Haubrick (foreground) and F..d- ward Quinn operat.e a casting machine which molds curved. plates to fit onto hflh speed presses. The DAlL Y, PILOT keeps in stock more than 40 tou of type pietal which is used, melted down and used again in the continuOUll job of printing 100,000 words a day. MODERN equipment help! the accoonUll8 depllrtment keep up -the '1today" pace at the DAILY PILOI'. Even u ,tlle day'1 ~per Is being sped to Ill readers, Bonnie Chauvin begins feeding llgurea into a -qooic bookkeeping macbine Iha! helps keep tnck of blWnp fer .0. 8ncl subscriptions. The machine, forerunner of a br ... of computers '800ft to be added, bandies 5,IXIO accounta a month. r· BAPIJ}, cocnmunicltioo is part of the workaday world of "Ad-visor" Jan. · Rowan. and the battery of other girls in the classified adv~ depart· meot who handle 1,000 transactions a week to publish 5,000 ads -worm •• help ~ bµy, aell, rent or lease ••• even find lost dop. The DAILY P.ILOT bu 1!!0 telephooe Jine!, many of them plugged mto lbla ~t whoe Dime-a-Une ads have become an lnstltutia:n. . PleruB.ICS, too; gtt 'the benefit of' skilled, efficitmt handling by master craftlmen who re-pootocraph "them ind then: transfer the images to a ltnlitized metal platel which are used to reproduce the photos u: read· •• will see them in the newspaper. Here, Chuck Ryan takes a realJy c1oae loot at a negative which will· be used to etch the image oa the metal plate. . . . 1'1NJSHED PRODUCf gets quic~ <can ·I>)< Wayn,.'JluBOhe, prmroom · foreman, while his giant pr~ continue to roar turiiing a ribbon of newsprint paper into newspapers. The DAILY PILOT keeps 4,000 toM cf new19Prfut on hand at all times, uses up in one y~ the equivalent of a ainJ:le roll of paper one page wide and 110,000 miles long. Presses print, fold, cut and count newspapers in1 oqe ..Qperation. ALM-OIR bOlore the Ink la dry, the product of our busy, day la toaed deftJy on your lawn or porch by ooe Of our 700 newspaperboys who are 1-lonl Una in the chain of people It tu., to brlnl Y9U todiy'1 news 11111 f-today in the DAILY P!LQT. And u our young Independent mcdwrtl, Uh John Melton here, make their deliveries, we're gearing ·up for·.-bul)' day -all l,GOO ·ol us. J The ·6Now~ Newspaper for A.II .The Co.1l1111unities -·--. Of The Growing Orange .Coast . . . 1 ., ---. -~-....-.~ ------~-.-:-_.....__ ___ _ ··-- .. . .I I j ,I ' . ' I ' I I I • .. H DAIL V PILOT Th.....,, °""°" 10, 1968 • • -;·Sati.sfactioQ, Gu0rrant~.ed or YQur Money Back! 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Y" lnspect Master Cylinder >'Bonded Linings lnslalled on 4 Wheels >'Rebuild All Wheel Cylinde.n >'Arc Grind Brake Shoe• >'Resurface All 4 Brake Drum• Y" Inspect Brake Hoses >'Inspect and Adjust Parking Brak., >' lnopect Gr•••• Seab >'Bleed All Line• and Add Fluid >'Repack Front Wheel Bearings ""Road Toot for Brake Reliability >' Free Ad,io•lment for Life of Lininp I All 4 Wheels Only AJI Ameri-. Cim •nd Y•lbw.Je• NO MONEY DOWN en Se1" E.ay P•yfttfltt Pf• •Chrysler pro<lucts having 6 wheel cylia. dcrs and can with disc brakes sliltitlr higher. ADJ -oddirional -ond w... . anilele " S-low, low priftl ----~ DAILY PILOT 21, Russian·s Spill America~n ~ ood • Ill 5-3 ·WiA1 BJ GLENN wmTll Of 1119 Dair Pllll ..... MEXICO CITY -'Eut-WOll rtlaU- lc"I'< a ~OWld lum for the wcno Wtdneld(y eveninl when Ruul1111 oplJI. ed .Amlrku blocc! In the waten of the Unlvenlty of Mexico nr1mm!ni pool. Yanbe water Polo pl-Stan Colo took 'what ht calfed a deliberate elbow .....,, the face from hLI Soviet ....,. terparl' lo Ille fourth quilter Ind' had lo Leave the pool'covered with blood. lie ftllered I cut Wldet Ille lefl eyt 11111 I bioo«r -11111 lo add fnault lo t... jurJ, ollldal Goo<p Gcllri.n ol Holland 111eued the U.S.A. wllb a penalty, &1vtnc the Sovletl the cllod!loc loal In a W vie> tory. I 1lMn GelnWn, wbo ,_iedlJ -Jl1lld> -.. laalde the Iron eurlaln, . took a lut.<lllcll loal away from the -la the lncndlblj< officiated debaclt. . United st.let Coach Art Lamber\ llW . the blooc!y lbow u tbe •park hLI wUll ---' . "I hate lo ... blood in, u; pool But that ml&bt bave bee.a just what wu need· ed la pl, our lddl !ftld. Wt'lt In the ...,. ~with lhele l\!YI all the way. "I a:uaran* )'OU tbet tbe adremlln nmoDB will be, JIUll1Jlilll'a Utile luttr the!IUI tlni6 we~ Ruula," .be told tbe"DAI· LY PILOT, It's 1967 Series All Over Again ST. LOUIS (AP) -Mickey Lollch and Bob Gibson went into their seventh game World Serles dat.e today wltb a bit of. ap- prehenlion. But neither WU backlog off from the confrontaUon. Gibson, ace of tbe Sl Louis pitching Ila.ff. waa to work the deciding game with three daya of rest instead of hia customary four between starts, while Detroit's Lolich was coming back with only two days off -one less than he ii Wied -to. The Card 1 were 17-10 favorites this mornlng. Both were going for their third Series victory and were less than dellgbted to be working with abort rest. 'Ibe Series closely resembles lut year's match between. SL Louis and Boston. Boston WU down J-1 and came ba<:k lo win tbe next two pmea, oo4' lo loae the flnale to Gibaon.. DITitOIT IA) IT. LOUii UO .. , .. "" .. , .. .,. McAullft., 2b s11n1w. u K•ll,,., rf Cu~, lb -" 0V141r, 11 Nortf'lnlll, d Fr..,.,.n, c Wert, lb MCL1ln. I" 22•••rodr." ... ,. S211FIQod,d -4001 -4Jl•Mwl1.rf •120 42Jtc.,..oa.111 ••2• J22t~rvw,c •110 tllOSh...,_,lb Alli S 1 2 4 J•vlff', 2b 4 I 1 1 •••l~xvlll,11 •o l 1 I I W•lhbo.orn, • I t •ottJ1tler,p 00 Wlllll, p 0 t Hu!lhea. ' O t ltldr.l'lfl, • 1 • C•rltm, p I t Tol•n, I'll I o Gr11!glll', p t t Edwllnll, pl! 1 I , Nehoft,. p O I Tohlla Joi IJ 12 11 Tohill lS 1 Dl'lrolt .. .. . ••••.. .. . OZ 10 010 llCO -ll Sf. Loul1 .. • .. .. .. .. . m I llDt 001 -I II!: -find:, SltnltY. DP -SI. LOI/It l. Dt- tri11t I LOe -o.tf'olt J. St. Louil 7. ,. -Hoarton. Hit __: HorthruP, K1llM. S -McUlfl. 1•H1t•1t1aso Mc:l.1ln (Wan) t ' 1 1 t 1 Wullburn tLottl 2 A J J J J Jaalff 011111 WlHl5 VJ14•Jt HU9het 1/J 2 0 t a I C.,.,ton J J 1 1 t I Gr1._ 201111 Hiii-I I t t t I Ga.,...• Briefs U.S. Hurdler Injures Leg MEXICO CITY -Boyd GIU!ns, loo. meter hutdler from Bellevue, Wash., turned up today with a pulled hamstring muscle ln his lelt thigh that may knock him out of the Olympic Games. ......... Woald JOU. btlleve a U.S. 1..,...metu relay team "ltbout world record ltolder Tommie Smitll7 , As11.Jtant coacll Stu Wright, In clsar&e ol the lot, ZOI, ftll, bJgh bu.rdlel and relays, e:rpl.alned tbe 1traoce aliaatlon, "tbe four men "e have on the team all earned tbelr potltlons. Tommie did.a'l" So, the team In order, will be Vinet Mattbe"'• Roa Freeman, I.any James and Ltf: EvlDI. ... ... ... "Ridiculom" wu the emphatic reply by Hilmer Lodge, chairman of the U.S. Olympic Committee, to rumors that American black athletes are n o t fraternizing with blacks of Africa at the Olympic Village. "I can't understand how those stories can get started," Lodge said. "As a mat- ter of fact, the exact opposite is the truth." "Anytime you break a roUune ••• do aometbing out of , the ordinary, or 10methlng you're not Ultd to, ft. wW af· feet you. somewhat," Wd Glbsm, "ho beat the 1lgera Jn the fourth 1ame "Jtb just three dayt of rest, "I couldni judge off that 1ame what dWerence the abort rest bl.ct. 1be weather wu IO bid. With condlUons like that, you can't compare a pme with any other one.'' Gibson WU eomplalnloa afle hLI ,._ cond game victory. that the pain in his right elbow "never stops." But Wfld. nesday be said the arm felt OK. Sunday's' fourth game wu played 1n a steady rain: Lollch, wbo W<m tbe lleCOl1d and lllth games, said be WU IUlpriaed lo be work· log ogain. "l figured the fifth game WU lt," be aid an.r the TllUI had tied 1he Serles with a. l!-1 romp beblod Denny McLain Wedoeoday. "I'll be able lo 10 out !hero and throw," LoUcb continued, ''but I won't be as strong u with three da)'I of rest. lt depends on what kind of game it 11." Johnny Sain, pitching coach of tbe Tigers, said be upecled Lollch lo hurl a ltrong game despite the abort rest. "He's done It before," said Sain. "I'm not worried a bout it." Sain recalled the 1941 season when he combined with Warren Spahn to pitch the Bostoo Braves to the National League pemwll "l pitched nine comP1ete games In one 29-day stretch that season," he aaid. "l went five inninp on the last day of the season just for the work. Then I beat Bob Feller 1-G in the opening game of the Serles with two days rut, came back with two days rut and lost the fourth game 2-1. And I wu ready to pitch the seventh with two days rut." Olympie Posh-in MEXICO CITY -Mexicans and Americans exchanged aboves after the former tried to in vote ceJllOl'abip oo photographers trying to tate photos or a leaky roof at the Olympic Village J>resl c e n t e r Wedneaday evening when a heavy rain gushed through two placei in · tbe roof. The scuffle lasted only a few seconds but super«nSltive Mex· leans raced around in froot of cameramen holding their hands up In front of tbe lens and trying. lo prevent them from record.Ing the tctne oo film. Water doused two banks of llghts, cauaed television sets to be moved out, typewriters were saturated and carpeting .... soaked. All Ughtl wen~ out briefly while ~kmen scurried about getting bucketl and barrels Jn place to . catch the water. For Total Olympians Orange Coast Area Tops 39 Countries MEDCO CITY -Would you believe that the Orqe Coast area ha1 more Olympians than Syrla, Paraguay, Lux- emburg, Haiti, Uganda, Afg:haniatan. or Bolivia? However incttdlble It may 1etm, that bit of lleUstlc came lo light when tbe Mexlcan Olympic Committee rt:vealed the aile of each Olympic delegaUon sent bete by tbe Ill parttclpaUng nationl. In fact, not only does the talent-rich Coast area outdo the countries men- Uoned, it bu a larger contingent here in Mezico City than 39 International delega· tions. That certa.lnJy aupporll our belief that comparing by alze, there II no region In the world to match the Orange Cout's total of 11 Olympic athletes and one coach. Here's a breakdown of the countries unable to match the nUty dozen with the aiJ.e of their delegaUOlll in parentheslJ: Fiji (2), Halli (I), Br!tlah Honduru (7), Iceland (I), Kuwait (2), Virgin Island• (I), Lu:a:embourg (7), Llecht..lltln (2), Madagucar (I), Mall (!), Malta (I), Monaco (4), Niger (2), San Marino {4), Sierra Leone (3), Singapore (4). Alao : Surinam (I), Uganda (11), Zam- bia (7), Antlllea (I), Qiad (5), Gabon (I), Honduru (10), Guyana (10), Paraguay (I), Syria (4), Tanzania t, Togo (I), WHITE WASH . tlllllllllllll.I -.a111M WM•T• Afghanistan (I), Dutch AnWlea (7), Bermuda (I), Cameroon (7), Bolivia (4), Ceylon Cl), Tunlala (7), AJi1tn (5), Congo (I), Bruzavllle (11). Lema to .Be Honored One further It.at -the Uulted States bu the biggell group (421), outdoing our Soviet bretbru by 20. • 'The night of Tuesday, Oct. ZZ, will be a very rpecl.al evening for fana of the late Tony Lema, known a s "Ownpagne Tony" until he and hll wile perished. in an Ohio plane crash two years ago. Al a prelude to the $120,000 Haig N• tlonal Open at Mesa Verde that week, the club'• banquet room wm be offlclllly ded!Cllted u the Tony Lema Ownpagne Room. Muttr of Ctn!lllonitl wlll be U.S. Open champion Lee Trevino, once a friend of Lema'a. An even cloeer friend WU Bob Hoollm, dlreclor of public relatlolll at c.ata Meaa Cowitry Club. '!be Idea for the namfnc of Mesa Verde's banquet room wu hi.I four ,..,.,_ He ..-Lema o( the Idea in April ol 11165 and Lema ttplled: "Your Qwn. -rOqrn la. p..i Idea. ""'-TOQJ WU born at Mtsa Verde." 11 waa 111 Meaa v.,,. la ua that Lema -hit lint PGA Ulla, tbe Oranp Cowit7 Open championship. lmmedlatelJ upon winning, he ordered champqne lot Iba pna llld .. ~ 1'n7'" • became put of 1oll'1 vernacular. -met Lema In the Marine Corpo. liolklne WU clllcharged In 1tM and "ent &o W<rk at Meta Verde u a public rtlatlolll -· HOHOlllD AT HAICJ Tony LAnMi Olpplc! Briefs A _,.. clalmlol lutde - -... lateraadoul O!Jmplc co... mlltee'• nu.t to eoaUae ..... tile G.-. dttplte r!ollq -tbe dty, waa dedded 11y a 1111g1e -mtq tut week'• •l:Dlt:flt8C!7 meet11i1. u·CMt ii t:nte, Mab elme ........ a Air el -el a. rreatetl ..,.., ol laee ... -........ -.. ... ,......,,. ".:"~~ the Ob'mplc ~k ~ paddJen aquubed a car whi!o backlq up GO a lroeway oil ram after IUlol a """'I tum GO tbe way lo the Ol7IDPlc Vlllqe. ----.. -111 oi,.. ... Vllop ..... net ... nil type Jlllftl·--...... -ir,. _. f11 •·a 1111 el leWerlco 1MJ an ,.-,-. ......... lly- -Taylor WU U Olympic -la tbe Berllo Gama, ~ lhlnl la the -lmdla with an ILi ~' Thll ICUubetb TayJor wu a Caftldl•n parlonniM Ill the .. Olympic dallic 11111 all'lloolt1 la .. ""' --tbe -ie- 0.W-. Mako Qty la -ot ala'! --111,.., ...... OIJ>aplc riap, ---toMi.i.ttlle.,. _.,..,,.....-.,. . . . Only ono pl came flOm Ille pool -Tiie U.S. la in Iba ...,. bracket with and that wu J>lcked up by Gary ltua:la, Hungary, West G er m a n y , Wel~r1 In the third quarter. He got , A-Illa Spaln,,CUba and Brull a htallhy wlJt 11\>m mate John Parter, ' who tcreened oft a Russfa defender. i The Y anU wm aquare off against So, coacbet Mont. Nltdow1~ '(l{&m. . ·Brull QO Mooday lhea come back two Unlloo &acb) ·and Lamberl, will lfjld day• taler lo' duel ~. America bu thelr U.Opo ·lntp Olym~tc;, Gamu action alrtady vanquished the Brazilians, 13-1. next week with a 5+! hcwtl Iii pie-. in Uie 'coJl\bat with Russla--i that's 01Ymplc acUon. just about what It was, combat -the So- Yet they aW1 fee. they have a chance viets pulled 1 n to a 3-1 lead alter three for a medal -if 'they can get a 50-50 quarters. break from Uwi referee.a. Gturben't wblatJ.e wu tbe Ruaslam:' oruY WtlPon, but II WU all lhq nwi.ct Tht U.S. fought Ila way lo evtn tcrma with lour mtouta Id! In llM prne ai WcJUenberr coonected, thtll Ga r J Sheerer hit Ille equallur. But Geur!aen WU lo have the laat """' and bla two peoalty ainrdJ lo tho Soviets, plus the nullified American JO!lli did In lhe U.S.A. ' Lambert is a.wous17 JooidnI 1orwuc1 lo Ille Oct. 11 t<inalcll with Ibo Sovlof Union. Zsivotsky Inspires Burke ~oomey Relaxes Workouts Wants Best Performance For Bendlin MEXICO CITY -Deciilhlon champion Bill Toomey of Laguna Beach la goln1 through on1y mild wortouts for the Otym.. pie Games compeUtlao wbidl beg1ns next week. Toomey, cut down by lnjurlea throughout hit sparkling <areer, puts It slmply: "I'd rather lose a fe" "orkouts than injure myself t1r leave my best performance on the practice ·field. "I'm not golna: to pUt the pressure on my sell the way the Germans are doing." He was referring in particular to th1 cue of world record-holder Curt' Bendl· in of West Germany. Bendlin 1a now recovei:tng from a hamstring muscle injury suffered in practlce earlier this week. Toomey, four-time United states cham· pion and co-favorite for the Olympic gold medal, has been drllllng with· fellow decathlon performer RJck Sloan. 1be lat· ~r Us a former Anabelm High and Fullerton JC wbil wbo now attends UCLA. Toomey also has been taking a few hard runs wllh Ron Whitney, 400 meter hurdle aimpeUtor. But mostly he's stress. ing technique workoull for the lG-event program. The Laguna Beach ace bu been deliberately avoiding fraternization with ~ foreign counterparts, saying he pref ere to stay away from them unW the Garnes competition. He says be IJ 'ln much bett.r pbyJ!cal cond!Uon than be was a month ago at South Lake Tahoe when be came w:lthin 97 polola of !l'ing Bendllo's· global mark Of 8,319. "I have to be," he points out. "I have been traveling a lot before the U.S. team trlals at Tahoe and really wasn't in top shape," he says. "That'• "hy I ran !!)Ch a slow (4:47.2) 1,500 meten." If be had run 4:31.7 in that Tahoe l,!IOO, he'd have equaled Bendlin't record. "If cl:rcwnstances were aimllar now I think I'm in good enougb condition to run a 4:30," he revuled.. Football Odds SAVING HIS BEST Bill Toomey NOT WORRIED Ed Burke FuJlerton Tabbed by 6 Fullerton Junior College ls a slx·polnt favorite over Orange Coast Saturday night in the DAIL'! !"lLOT's weekend football odds. On the prep front, Westminster 11 a 10- polnt choice over HunUngton Beach and Brundage Challenged MEXICO CITY -Avery Brundoge, Ille ll·year-old pnsldent of the Internat10nat Olympic Commitlff, WU challenged directly by France's Conte Jean Beau- mont, In the IOC electioo this morning. Madame Monique Berlloux, tho presa relatlonl oWcer for We IOC, announced Beaumont'• challenge to Brundage at a prea confmnca WedJlo!day nllht. Brunda1e ,bas ~!«I ll)O IOC lloct 1152 "'Ith an trofl hahd, and··moet oblervert believe that the 70--member IOC Congreu wOl re-elect him. yel aplo. They Weta the oo4' two nom1-for Ille poll. •. Beaumoot lhlnb \hal I wu ,_ry lo malr• -ehang!I In the 11>-ternatlooal Olympic mo•emeot. Marina ls a 16-polnt underdog to Anahclm . The odd11 -a consensus of the Pnnr's sports 11taff predlcUons -are working on a .736 clip. Last week's results : 11 right, four wrong. For the season : 39 right, 14 wrong. Thill week's odds: Friday Estancia ~ over Rancho Mesa 4 over Garden Grove Westml.nst.er · 10 over Hµntington Newport 10 over.Valley Foothill 7 over Mission V1'Jo La(Wll.,S over Villa Part Anaheim 18 over Marina El Modena 13 over San Clemente Ml SAC 6 over Golden West .. · 8a&urd11 Fountain Valley 8 over Bolaa Corona del Mar I over Santiago Wilaon 6 o~er Mater De1 Fullerton 8 over OCC Saddlebact 1 over Napa Penn State 2 over UCLA USC It over Slanlord 8und17 Ball\I 5 over Packer• BOLT TQ PUY IN HAIG TOURNEY ' Muell~ bu·1-roinl on lo Mer:lco City, and tt llill is a matt.r of op1n1oo -Br1mdale wlD beat olf TommJ Bolt, one of the -bllshed -·1 challtnp ..a 1te1 In oUloe. ytterao. Jl"'I on the l'()A -· bu It WU dilcloaod a lolal o( 5t o( tbe 8' -n hLI hat lolo the rlJll lot the Haig IOC memben are :'"..oudli>I tho cumnt NaUonal Open -Ill M-V--, ' Comlry Clob October II.fl, Count De Beaumont allo will be a -llolt Joinl lllllJ ~. Al Gelberpr, cUdale for two dtber oftlcel to be '+'Oted Lee Trmno, Mike Sooobat, DIYti upon TllundlJ · , Stockloo Bob RolburJ, J17 lltbtrt, Tom- lie la .. the 'cO.t..t with -others • rrtl J~; Clllrley SUlord and -100 lot lht llnt vbprelfdeol'• poet belnl othen. • . -bJ Armand aMaard o( ,,,_, -ticket -lot the -• Beawnoat Is 11111 llitliil with Ill< other end Sa~. l'rlcfd·lll flO ml '1$,.the c:andldatea for llOl!lioatloo lo nplaco dueala .on avallable ot CQ' eounty 1<1U board membV Dr, Glorila da Sialul of eouno. lta!J, wborelirea. Hungarian In Impressive Warmup Show MEXICO CITY -Many alhlelea are psychologically destroyed. when they note an outstanding performance by a rival compeUtor. Such ls not the cue of Ed Burke, however. The Olympic hammer thrower from Orange Coast College sat in the hot Mes.- lean sun and watched Gyula Zs.ivotaty o( Hungary whip the !~pound ball and cbalo out of sight on neary every throw durin& practice at the Olympic Village. The Hungarian world record-holder bounced several.tosses out to the far edgt of the practice throwing area, then came through with one mighty effort whlcb hit a green Ught standard on the left side m the field. It figured to be somewhere In tht 'neighborhood of 240 teet ... maybe eveb beyond his li!ted. world record of 241-11. . Burke was seated on a chair behind tht throwing cages, taking in the eye-po'lplnt &eSS.ion by hia HlUlgarian counterpart. But he Wdn't find the imposing show dismaying. "Actually it inspires me, .. Burke told the DAILY PILOT. ' "Gyula and I have the same tedmiquea IO if be can get around that fast, so can L "I've seen all the great world h.muner throwers perform and I'm Impressed by them," IO' says the handsome Orange Coast College history teacbe,r. ·~But lteir perfo~c;es 'also moUvat.e me. An~ I seem to. be at' my beat when the, COmpeUUon is thh toughest. I thlnt J can do as well u any of tbem.. ... 'Then Bufke came back .for a bit Ga classy throwing later in the d8y. . His efforts were hlgh and far, somewhere in the neighborhood of 235 feet. His American record ls ~11. Burke 'f!IS especiall)o plea!ed with the showing because he said he was feel.int: tired and lisUess and really wasn't throw· tng hard. Therefore the excellent.distance was due to near-perfect technique and that is th~ name of the game in this event. He also got a look at Russia's Romuald Kllm, the defending Olympic champion. B_ut the Soviet whiz wasn't on his game. hitting the cage on a number of throWI and not getting u good a dtatance u Burke. Uwe Beyer of West Germany; who defeated. Burke in a late September meet In Arlzona,.was also having throwing pro- blelllJ, battering the cage with regularity. Burke may not be the gold medal favorite but be certainly 11 a popular choice with the multitude of big and litUe autograph iteek.ers who roam the area. He also gets, and fulfills, requests to be photographed for the youngsters. And happy parents get a bonus when ht holds tllelr kida on his lap. Burke says thI.s Olympic VDlage ii cozier than the ooe be lived In at Tokyo Jn.1964, citing Ille compactn.., of Ille liv· log and workout area for the warmer • mospllere. He also uya the food II !or the birds- too bland. "The meat II reOny tough. n would tate a nine tettlnl on your aclo )uitable ruor lo cut It," Burke opined. Professor Burke brought one aecret weapon ~ Mexico • ., • ·a boUlfl of add to roogb.up aiick lllrlaptl ot Iba tbrowlol ring. "I <ap~ ille a chance on lllpplng witll 400 . m1illoll peopla Wll<blol O I televtalori, "· be eoocluded. 2 Olyqilc .Ga'1.11 I I I I I I I l· II bAILY PllOT . -Jenkins '· ... 'Marina Fears ,,Aecl81 . Game ·-' !, Of Anaheiin For the Jut lwo aeuooa, Anaheim Hlgb's talented football teams have come lnlo their Marina ,.,... llllod .. top. beavj favoritea. 1o' llM, tbe Coloolata, glll(>inl, llttug- gled lo a IHI wi1L Lui year, Mama barely mJased agalo, t-7. Now 11'1 llM and VDdng -.II Jim • COon hopes bla troopo ... -back from Jut week's IUbpar effort agalnat · N.;,.pjn lo llnally 1rlm Aaabelm Frldly -nlgbt II W--lllli> Scbool. Marloa falled lo lmpma anyone ID Its 11·1 loll lo the SaDon Jut weetead. ' "We bad our poorest effort of the aeason In that game, n Coon 18)'1. "We just weren't mentally readJ to play. If,.. bad be&teo sav .... testeod o1 losing T-t I thlDt Ille momentum mlibt 1,·, have cerledover to the Newport.game." ' . COon llyl lhlnp ... picking up .. wortoubl thlJ week. uTbe tlda: are a llttle more aar-tve In pradfce thll -aod tltey'n pUlng excited about plaJlnc ADabelm ,. The Marloa -.11 II concerned about Anaheim'• deadly pualng .... J>Olll - ~ quarterback George Fruer and recelven: Dan Slmpaoo aod Bob Clayton. "Our deep pus clelendera ue J.ll aod aix feet," says Cocxl. ''Tbooe guya are M and H . If II bolb '.down lo jumplog m•tcbes for puaea ~ we're tn trouble." • Of tbe previoul hro --... tbe " ' two &mael Leagui acbooll, C o o n , . descrlbet last year's f.7 defeat u a · _ clutch Marina ellorL .-"Anaheim gained 1 lot ol yanll but we were lougb wbeo we bad lo be. Tbe ~ before (14-ll) we maintained bal! coblrot aod pre-..oled them from ptUng away 1 from UL" Ttlundlf, OctDbtr 10, 1968 Could Play for Any ·CoUege Now ·, l 'd D· . ~ B E -,-a e -.r--1rate~ .---· -e-st -· · ~ver~ • F f • ' • ·• • • ' l ' • '"' Merloe Jurdat cane,. le LtBl!d w!D --lwo -.,., J<oklnl qull'Wback, for O<:C, but be'• moel 81odkan. ' ~ -lalorlllr -tbe · .vallW>lo II clelenaive. llallback. And J-n..,.. 1o pi., a u, n1a lloild -* ilttliC '*It -poattioo Oran'go CoUt lw turned out ooe other for the Plru le 11111 bis Soulb Coul (deltallve ->. lo dea1 the l!*id1 :!,, ':":1't: ~ ~"!/ Cca&ienco pme. Lui yeor, Fuiler1oa ~a Bawb Ille GUllldt oo lllt.•esi: side. 1 b t NJ'L, but Tucm"~ then'• no bunled Or-Coul with llx toudldowo · FrOm bis Invert pooiuoo, J-II •AY ol _.,,Ibo! t..._ -en ""1lt ·lo a •T. vlcltty. rapoollbla for ~ ~ u wen u . "Spllkr didn't play .vecy much fer us Tbe Pirate oecoodary ol Jenkins, Elhan movJnc llP lo tbe )It» ol IOrilDmqt. lo : dllrlng bb Drat year aod lben wu jllil_ an Ollvtr ~ ~ aod Ralpb Go<lf\'oY atop the_..... pwod-~ quartubact for us ID bis secOnd will...; lacOcl with tbe dllfJcult job ol cut--"Jenkins ll10v81 •UP' uieedln3IY W.ll aeuon. • · 11111 off Fullerfoo'• _.,,passing attack and hill with authority," Tucker said. Defensive ballback II probably the Saturday JliCbL . • Jenklnl a!Utude at.a 111ates him an banlul position lo play ID football aod u Jenkins, u be bu been all .won, will -player lo WCl'k with although '!Ucter uys: "A lineman mates a be tbe blc maa for tbe Pirates oo .....-bla .._ pvea the Pirate mlatakt aod II <osta you five yaNs, A ,de:fel'lle. • coacbel «ht chDll:. defensive back makes a mistake and it "Jenkins ls a coech's dream," Tucker In pracUce this weet, Jenkins bu had cost.a you ab: po1nta and everyone ia. the said. """'' got· Iii ol the physical and trouble lllling one mn above bis bruised atadlwn caq aee IV' mental equipment, fine leadership ability shoulder. "I tokl him not to hit during our Jenkins b'un'& cosr the Pirates six aod tove. lo blL.Tbe ool)< thlDg you could drilll," Aid uslatant coacb Dale polnta-be actuaD1 gave them Bix points polsibly uk for la more opeed." Wonacott, "but you turn your back and by recovering a blockeoj punt la the end Jenkins bu been timed in 10.5 for the there be ii stic.ting people." 1 one for a touchdown -: and be ~·t 'too, buf what be 1a<kl tn raw speed, be '!Ucter ..id Jenkins could flay tny figure lo change that pallern . S.tunlay makes up In qidct-lo OCC'1 M,10 llUDlber ol poalllom, Io c ud I ii I Dlgbl. . . Friday fiouelal . MoatsAi1™Huntington At Westminster Backs Now llml Huntlnglal Beach lllli> School'• football team bu lhown mryooe bow lo put tbe clamps '"'Santa AD1'1 llaac CUrlil, It will attempt lo do the A1De thlng on Westmlni¥t'a fleet of nlfl becka Friday niabt II the Oilers' field. "We look Ille -play aw11 from Curtll," Oller colCh Ken Moatl .. .,.. '.'We made blm run Inside with the ball aod our line cmlalned him prell)' well." CUrlil gained ooi, 40 Janis In 1' car- ries but Slota Ana .un wm. 1il-,, on a long-bomb play late tn Ille game. "Our pl thll week II lo conlain the football for the entire pme against Westmlmter. I'm afraid of Westminster's ball control. We've got to keep them from ge!Uog the football aod keeping It for IS or 20 plays." Moatl ii concerned over Lien backs Charley Buctland, Roa~. George Bera aod Miko Haynes. "'Ib1t'1 the belt tet of bacb we've aeeo tn quite a period ol llme. Very rare- ly will you aee a boy aa big as Sbepberd With h1I inoves. •• What'• wora for the Oilers, Moats says the Lions don't make many mlalakea. "Westmlnater II big and -.,, Ind they execute wen. 'J'bey've got a lot of llrenglh In tbe line." . Tbe Ollen will be • llWe gimpy It linebacker Friday Digl>I. "Both of our Ilnebactm, Paul Moro and Ron Db:oo, have ltlff necka. lt'1 a small wonder -I thlnt they were in on aboul evecy play qllnst Santo ADI." SUU, Ille Olien will be ready, Moets 11ys. . SA Valley Could Extend Tar Grids to Final Gun Sante ADI Valley II Ille lone roadblock coalrvnling Newport Harbor lllP'• •~ tempt lo pool Its flneol early aeu... ......i In II yean Frldly DillS II Sante ADI Sladlum. And judging lmn laat weekend'• rewltl, the game won't be decided unW tbe final IUD mates II offldal. Valley -..cl Weatorn, l'J-21. The Faleonl staged ID loc:redlble rally, ...... Jnc three times In the Jut fiVI mtnum. Tbe Clpper WU I 95-yard toucbdowD run by Tom Marlin with ll second!J lefl lo lbe 1ame. •"Iblt wu the tbot in the arm we need- ed," 11ys Valley Olllcb Bflly Milli. Before the Western win, the Falcons had been beateo by Long Beach Poly, 33- 0, and Escondtdo, lf.13. "We needed that vtCtory real. bad. We've been mating steady progress with our Inexperienced penonnel." Milli ta In bis Drat year al Valley, l!av- hlg coached for the put 11tven years at CoUeyvUle Junior College In Kansu.. Defense Line Still Worries CdM Coach litre's the understatement of the week : "I guesa our offense has finally found Itself." The speaker ls Dave Holland, com- menting on bis' Corma del Mar lllgh foot- ball team's 56-0 win over Pacifica last weekend. The next assignment tor the re- juvenatad Sea Kings II Santiago High of Garden Grove, winners al one and losers of two this year. "I really can't figure Santiago," Holland says. "They beat La Mirada (lM), who I don't know much about, and they lost to Nell (4HI) and Neff bu a pretty good learn." In spite of the fact that Corona del Mar11 defense blanked Pacifica, Holland iJ concerned with his defeme. "U we · don't straighten up our defensive line we'll be In trouble against Santiago. Pacifica was running right through our tackles but we managed to atop them when they got cloae to the goal line." The quarterback situation is a different matter. Dave Terry tossed a school record five touchdown passes and ran SO yards for a TD that was called back. "Dave has been starting all along for us but last week be really put it all together." Doug Young caught two of Terry's TD passes. Holland says Santiago halfback Jose Fernandez "is as good a back as you'll aee in the county." He adds: "And their quarterback, Roger Takahashi, is a preUy good run· ner, too." • • p -·-T" ... ---.... ·~ .... --~-:- DAil Y l'llDT PhOla by Rldl1rd K""~r DEFENDER DELUXE -Orange Coast College defensive halfback Bill Jenkins, who coach Dick Tucker calls "the best player I've had at OCC," will play a key role for'the Pirates Saturday night against undefeated F\lllerton Junior College in LeBard staduim. Back to Drawing Board For Barons' Defense B.v ROGER CARLSON Of "" Diiiy Plltl Stiff Defense is the key word around the Fountain Valley High School campus as the Barons ready themselves for their non-league battle with Bolsa Gran<le Fri· day night at thi!: Garden Grove school. It was the defense that broke down in the Barons' attempt at victory number two Jail week again.st La Quinta. Despite equaling its highest ever,output offensively, the Fountain Valley crew lost. 32·l6. "Our defense simply broke down last week. A lousy job of tackling, but you have to give La Quinta's (Ken) Ep- pelheimer credit. .he's a real good back," commented Pickford. Eppelheimer (a fullback) ripped the Barons' defense for 202 yards in 23 car· ries. ' Wounded Eagles Back, Estancia Eyes Rane~ Milts ~ tbe Newport game la a dif- ficult ualgnment for bis team. · "Newport la a real ftne team," he says. "I saw them beat Marina and Wade Watts' kids look well-coached, scrappy and quick. They're not as big as some twna I've aeen but they 1et the job done. They'll be a tough -1.'' Martin, the lllO-pounder whose Jong nm nipped Western, wW be a marked man Coach Lauds Defense Despite .103 Points Bolsa Grande, htwever, is another matter. This time it's the quarterback the Barons must contain to notch a vie· lory. Rick Daley is the gridder in point for Bolsa Grande, and Pickford noted that his defense would have t.o contain the Matador field general on his rushing and passing-if the Barons are to be success· ful. .. Bolsa was blanked by Costa Mesa, 2;!µ), Jast week, as the Mustangs put a fierce rush OD Daley . At the rrwnent., r.standa ID&h School'• football team II riding Iqb with two straight coovlaclng vldoriea uncle< Its belt and .. Injury.me aquod ialacl. '-~ The Eagles have been witboul the '' IOrvlces of three key play<n for the moat ' . of the Drat three ween of the .. cam- ..-~ palgn. 1~ , But they are back oow. Roa Brant • (1115) returns lo tbe atutlng lineup II left 1· gua"1 Ind wlogbeck Bob Conmke aod ' gum! Mike Willy are fit aod rudy lo go. ~ Cornutt WU oat becauae of abouJder' ~ . surgery. Willy WU sidelined with ID ap- pendicltia operation and Brint wu out with • bum knee. Tbe Eaglel have been working bani : this week on their offem:Ive bkding after being portially stymied "1 Ganlen G<ove'a clelenaive -11111- ' Coach John Lowry e>pecta tbe same • type ol def-lmn bis --Randlo Alamlloa, llld lw voiced CODCenl • ·that bla line will be lb!< lo handle tbe v. -'-"We bllx:ted weD enough (ll1yalcally • but we milled too many ud&mnenta.': ' lamented tbe Eagles' boa. .. OI -Alamllnl, Lowry uld li WU hard lo leD Whal 11'1 capable ol. on llnt dcnm aeveral llmea ID Ille 154 i... to Loara Jaat week. Eatancla'a big IUD offensively lw been junior Dave Jobnaon. Johnlort lead& the Orange Coast area lo rushing llata after three pmes with 367 yardl on 71 carries, but WU btld lo 15 yanll In IO trlpa Wt week in the ll-4 decialoo over Garden Grovt. In the backfield, quarterback Paul Joyce, considered tbe beat pauer oo the Eagles' squad, takes over starting duties for tbe flnl tlma. Friday night. "Tom came out late for football and wasn't eligible to play unW just recently," Milla aays. "U. Hroke a baod aod didn' ploy ot all last year u a junior. lt'1 a .abame ht hun't played more becauae be'• really a dandy." Milli' quarleri>ack, PhD Blind, 11 a junior who lw Improved by 911 percent since aprlnc ball, -his coach 1ay1. The only starting seniors art fullback Frll'lk Kelly, left end Carl Fie.Ids, center Mike Wm! aod ript eod Keith Keckler. Argos Next· Opponent For Mustangs Friday F« some time now Nd! Peet ol Colt& Mesa IDgh School bu been <Ullldmd the eternal optlmlat In the l'lllkl ol Orange Cout area coaches. Now, however, It'• diffk:uJt to pt Peek lo talk about bla squad'• cbancel ol vic- tory. put In Ille blalory ol the -· Meaa hll been proparlng for tbe Ganlen Grove teat with empbasls on pus clef-. Peek ~ be upocta lbe oppoallloo lo throw c1o1t 1o eo per<a11 ot tbe Ume. You tikt Napa Junior College football coach John Langenbach at his word when ht says Ilia team has "a pretty good defense." Then you see where hlll outfit has lost by ICOl"es of 17·7, 52-41 and 3f.-O and you scratch your skull in wonderment. "All those points have been scored on our offense," he explalm. "We've bad it all -dropped punts, dropped k:Jckoffl, fumbles, interceptions. .. Saddlebact rues north Saturday morn· Ing lo play Napa that night. Langenbacb 11y1 he's burling fer .,. perlence. "We have '8 players 9l' our roster and leVeD of. them are sophomores," he says. "Our quarterback (Jed Cooper) was a RCOnd stringer tn blgb llCbool but he's improving with every game." He says his best 'football player is safe~ Mike Wolfvam. Be was a atarter oo Ca1's lmbman team last year. j..angenbacb bu lo b..Ue for lootball talent. N Ip& Hlgb ta the one and only hllb achool In the college's diJlrlct. The largest ol tbe hall dozen acboo1s in the llBTOWlding free territory bu 250 students. Langenbach had scouts at Saddleback's 26-7.S win over Barstow la.~t weekeod. "Saddleback looks like a well-coached outfit," be says. "The people I had there tell me the Sa.ddlebaclt kids are tough and well-drill- ed for such a young club. We'll have our hands full, I know." FountainValley goes into the game relatively injury free with only Duane Dilfie out of the normal starting lineup because of I.he flu . Roger Jackson, a guard and mJddle linebacker, is out with a knee injury su&- tained against La Quinta and Bill Braack continues to nurse a badly sprained ankle suffered in the first week of the season. 4th Straight Toughie For Tested · Monarchs Coach Bob Woods or Mater Dei High School is not one to be dismayed over the fact hi.a club has been beaten three con- secutive times at the outset of the '68 campaign. 11le Monarchs have lost to three op- ponents -all ranked the top six in the ClF, and more of the same is sun to come. "In the long run it Nods to help us," commented Woods in reference to the top notch opposition the 1'1onarchs have been running into. Long Beach Wilson Is next In line for Mater Del and the Bruins hold the cur· rent fifth spot in the weekly rankings. "We should have won a couple of those games ... or at least made it a great deal closer,"-said Woods. lie pointed ool llml tbe Vaq1 med I balkloolrol '1llllllnl ellorl In their wlo •over La Habra, but were aeeo throwing It all aleml from the -game of tbe IWOll wbeo Peek Ind bis Costa MOii lridden ... .,.--they woold pt<Vail """' Newport Harm. Newport More Overtime for Kuhn or the third loss, a 19-7 verdict to tbird- ranked Lakewood, Woods noted bis club outplayed the Lancers for the last thret periods. Coach John Ford ol Lakewood agreed with Woods' observations. No injuries were incurred in lasi week's game and end Don HeUon returrul to the starting lineup after sitting out the Lakewood game with a bum knee. . : OCC RANKED 11TH ' IN JC GRID POLL - J ' Despite Ila SM win -Rio Hondo 1u1 -· Orange Ooaat tumbled from olnlh lo 11th ID tbe JC Grid Wlre'1 weekly .. ' -1 football nllnp. • OOC'1 Saturdl7 nlchl lot at LeBml Bladlum, l'lllJeftoo, ta raobcl No. 2. ~ laola Ana ll ltated Ulh aod San Dleao .~ -Ila SM win""" Golden Wtll lo .... ..... ot !Ith. • S41U ll•oa, .-11n1 lul ..... II -third and El camtno II finL - woo, I«! . ~ Ma& travels lo Ganim Groore Friday nlabt to battle the Argonauts in Ml final ........, belll'I lrrint League i..uwu.. open --. Ped 11-Ille ""'°' a blc balldup, point!. out tbe Ganlea am. ..Wt !oat by onl7 .... point .. Iara and ,.,., W<n loolnc lo Eatwl1 by u. And, be'1 rlgbL 'Ille .V..,. hava loal lo -..... -. Loanl (IJ.11) Ill -lllltlf In Ibo AAA ntfnp. Cella ............. ltlrt.ld UM: -ollooapod--wlthwlDI -Onnp and Bola-· Tbe l\fuatanD racked up » polnta In ----------_..,Bolla, for the-hi&bell- • • 1-8-11 HIP Scllool.Ulalllf runs · Ila lullblic:lt • -a -and thla •uon bam"t been any~ . .:.J -· 1111 -ooocb Hal AklDI' football squad ... u without Ila number ... -· .. Atlnl -bll _., ballback, Jim Kulm, ID tbe roll ff lroo-man. . It turned oat .. ...0, Klllm Ill -lo carry tbe ball I lot a(ala, -with tho ' """" ol IUllbect llzfao Ba(leJ. Without lllt lojund llal!IJ, the - ran up a llM -arilnii lft"lfomt1 -Ill ll«lma and hid a A-Jani -S-lmn 811 .. - to 11th "'*' ---ol a -11J'. Wllh Bqley beck Ind Wlezbowlll and Kubo hollthy, VIiia Park abould blve a tough time slopping tbe Arllatl. Delpit. tbe M tie with Tuatlo, Villa Park's Sparlanl do 1IOI carry the cr<den- lla1s IO stay with Laguna. "We uw thirn In tbe1r He with TUstln and ..... lin......CS, but Tuatln Only tbreW two or ·three tlmts," commented -"Wo plln lo pus a '""" .deal mora than that agalnot Villa Patt. We'll bave lo II WI are lo keep thtll" def- -." added Aklnl. Villa Port ~ med a u,i dll-with the ava llnebe<l:en playing It tlChl aod atunUn& --form- • Ing a fonnldable nt...mao line against the OPpc!OltlOD. The Artlsta and Spartans will mh: It up at a at M1asiou Viejo Hlgh School because tbe El Modena District Stadium was once qaln declared unfit because ol lighting problems. AtlDa lw been ruonlng bla ~ In, practice through passing drills lloog with mort wort oo tbe punt aod ~ctofl ttlurn game. Kulm, wbo broke lhnt lackles en rwte to an 17-yard touchdown nm on a punt mum qlloat Brea, ts perlicularly dangenius aod Atlnl Is aiming lo in- """' tbe pressure on the opposing punltt. • Practice on the Mater Del campus bat been encouraging to Woods with the of· fense beginning to find the right com· binatlon to make \he Monarchs a more of a threat to score. The Monarchs' to date have been led by Tom Gehrb aod Tony Gardea In the rushing dep&rWent. Gehrls hat a 4.5 average per carry wUh ~118 yards while G&rdea bas nm 108 ya.rds in 17 tries for a 8.J average. Mark Oum. the Monarchs' fastest back, hold.I a 3,4 average oo 28 carrlea. Maltt Del had been aver~ !O yards per game In pasalng unW bdng shut down by Lakewood wtth 1 1t yard perionnanoe. . . -------··· --·· ---------~---4----~-~.__ • • ·-...... ------·--._. -...---· -~ ........ -------......... --....... --~-.... -· --t""'. ¥¥¥ 4 ¥I I I 4 • • . ... W W O +-• o ¥ F ¥ • • MUSCLE CITY - A newcomer to Zuver's Gym wouldn't know where j;o start. The ladlity has weights running from 25 pounds up to 1,000 The tree 9tmnp in the foreground contains resin. The gym's front door weighs 4,000 pounds. Indian's QB Key Don't Laugh, But USC Worried About Stan£ ord Don't get hysterical when you read this but the USC coaching sWf is genuinely worried about Stanford Saturday. The Trojans will be lopsided favorites to be sure but the coaches have a deathly fear of the young Stanford quarterback, Jim Plunkett. Reputedly, the sophomore can throw a football farther than any man alive -BO yards. For a first hand appraisal of Plunkett, we called Dick Coury, the former Mater EARL USTKEY Del High coach who now instructs USC's pass secondary. "We feel that Plunkett Is as good a passer as any quarterback we've faced in the last several years, and that includes Gary Beban, Terry Hanratty and Bob Griese," Coury says. Plunkett, a 200-pounder from Sanjose, red shl~ last year after playing on the 166 Stanford freshman team. Stanford's football press book says <>f Plunkett: "A young sophomore who is big, both in strength and potential, Plunkett is expected to bec<>me one of Stanford's all Ume great quarterbacks." With Plunkett calling the shots, Stan- ford finds itself unbeaten after three games - a peculiar state of affairs in Palo Alto. Plunkett debuted with a 68-20 smasher over San Jose and followed it up with 28-12 and 24-13 jobs on Oregon and tilt? Air Force. The taJent doesn't end with PJunketl "This is the best Stanford team In years," Coury says. "Our secoodary Is going to have to have a r~r-sharp day to stay ahead." * * * WESTMINSTER DEPI'. -Th e unrestrained cheering by Westminster High students last Friday w ~ e n Anaheim's Kevin Keders was hurt was &1 disgraceful elhibiUon . Up to that point -midway throoidt the last quarter -It was a thoroughly en- joyable and memorable contest but that episode reeked. * * * NEWPORT DEPI'.-Break up the Tm! Newport Harbor HJgh has beOn U at thl.o stage "-the season only three times in 11 years. Tbe.1949 Tars under A1 Irwin were a.t, losing only.JH'UllertOD, 4.!-'27, ln the 1eason '• last game. Under Wayne 'Huahes In 19IMI and 'II Newport stMted each time with U marn but loot lhe. fourth game. Coach Wade WaUI' awrent outfit lbould make it U with a win over Santi Ana Valley Frtd•Y and rnll!ht go Ill !Ml " the following weekend with Western. After that, though, it's Santa Ana. * * * HAIG DEPT. -The bargain day ticket sale for the Haig National Open at Mesa Verde Country Club October 21-27 ends Saturday. A $10 <>r' $15 season ticket -obtainable at any C<>unty golf course -admits ooe to all sessions of the $120,000 tourney and the $15 ducat" is also good for clubhouse and special parking privileges. General admission tickets will be on saJe daily during the tournament but with a season ticket purchase a fan can save as much as $13. Tourney officials are still hopeful Arnold Palmer will be in the starting field . If he ~. the Haig will have every major pro except J a c k Nicklaus, who will be in Australia. * * * O.J . DEPI'. -Three National Football League teams remain fu the race for O., J . Simpson. Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Atlanta are all o-4. Pre football's worst team gets first pick of the collegians at season's end. Denver and Miami of the AFL won over the past weekend, advancing to 1.J records. *I* * MOVIE DEPI'. -The DAILY PDm sports staff attended the Hollywood premiere of "The Paper Lion" last week. The film depicts the hilarious struggles of writer Ge<>rge Plimpton when he tried out as a quarterback for the Detroit Lions. If you know anything at all about foot- ball, it's a must. Tritons Hope To End Skid All's quiet on the San Clemente football front. The Tritons, sUil reeling after three straight lOS9e!1, are preparing for their fom'th (and secood Crestview League) game With El Modena with quiet determination. Coach Tom·Ead.3 of San Clemente said his deferufe let him down in the Tritons' 14-7 defeat at the bands of Mission Viejo. .. We could have beat.en them (Mission Viejo) if our defense had payed as well M they did against Palm Springs," com- mented Eads. Aa for El Modena, the Triton coach ex~ pressed coocern with the vangua,rcis' aiZI and uperience. Otief El Modena threats a r e quarterl>Jck Chris Nelsoa and fullback , Randy BIIler. Jesse Hernandez (155) has taken over the slartinJ< right end poslUq11 tor san Clemente alter being named player cl. the game last week by his coach. Steve Divell (165) was nominated for the right llJArd position. . Mission Viejo came out of the SU Clemente ~ 1rith DO tnjarlca. - ---------_a....__. - OFFICIAl. GREETER -Rev, 'Bob Zuver· shows off his new greeter. Muscte IllBgazines arotmd the world are conduelling contests to name the fiberglass greeter ro the Costa Mesa gym. Zuver is building an W' eightlifting • in OAJLY f'ILOT I ' DAILY f'ILOT ...... IW P•·O'~ eight-foot fiberglass man who will be painted in gold and will also serve as a greeter. Light Atmosphere Zuver's Gym--Zaniest of Th:em . All By EARL GUSTKEY Of 1IM Dmll'f' PIMt ll•ff The sport of weighUlfUng has come a long way since guys were hoisting barbells in dingy garages and the basements of YMCAs. Now it's the age of carpeted, air con- ditioned salons where customers feel short-dtanged if there isn't a whirlpool bath on the premises. Then you inspect Zuver's Gym at 443 Hamilton St. in Costa Mesa and you don't kn<>w where to c•tegorize the place. Here are it's vita1 staUsUcs: • The front door weighs 4,000 pounds. • A waterfall cascades Over the front of the building. e The official greeter ts a g i a n t fiberglaSs· gorilla. e It~s the world's largest weight-WUng gym. The catalyst behind this zany establish· ment is the Rev. Bob Zuver, an iil- terdenominational minister who also claims to be the father of the w<>rld's strongest boy. "We call Rickey 'The Rhino ' around here," he says. "I'm sure he's the strongest l2-year-0ld boy in the world-he can lift 370 pounds." Of bis arsenal of barbells, Zuver claims: "We b ave m<>re weigbUifting ~ulpment here than any gym In the world. We've got more weights than any five west C<>ast gyms and we're just starting. ·"I'm going to add on another wing to the building (100 feet long) pretty soOn.'1 The front door is beyond belief. "It weighs an even two tons," Zuver says. "ll's covered with rock and you can push it open with one finger. Everything here is big. Heck, the front wall weighs 65 tons." Zuver says he has "Abo u t· 5,000 members, most <>f them women. "The men lift here Mondays, Wed· l • • • • • CAH HE DO IT? -BOlfZuver Jr., wh ... dad owns Zuyer"s Gym" In' Cllsta 'Mesa, wrestles with gym's J:*-pouncl weight. Wb"' die weil!Jt11 lifted oft th• floor, lights fla sh \ind bella ring. Zuver claims to have more weight equlpn)cnt than any other gym In the world. • -• • ___ 1...... __ nesdays and Fridays and the women have the gym Tuesdays and Tbursdaya. My wife, Jean, works with the women." The weighWfUng equipnient ls a sight: not soon to be forgotten. Th,ere's a l,~pound lift, a 500-poundtr and several unique weight racb. When a big weight is lifted, beDs flash and beJ1I ring. The monthly dues are $5. "If you can't afford it, it's free," ZUVer adds. It all started •ntne years ago when the Zuver's lived across the street. "I had two tool boxes and we put together some weights," Zuver recalls. "We were lifting in the gar.age, bad S<>me friends over and pretty soon it •ot <>ut of hand. We suddenly found ~vea: with 100 people showing up in the even. ings." Zuver ls thoroughly devoted to the values of weighillfting. He la In .close con- tact with Orange County juvenile officers whD send youngsters who appear beaded for trouble to Zuver. ."We've helped a lot of young boyl here," he explains. "A boy will rome here and start lifting and .putting tnuscles <>n ti.Is body ,and finds he's no longer inter¢ed in d9pe." Rejuvenated Diablos Eye 2nd Straight Winning a varsity football game around the MJSS<ln Viejo campus was e<msldered Mission Impossible for some time' wlille the Dlablos were absorbing 15 con- secutive defeats on the gridiron. But times have changed --at least temporarily. - Coach Ray Dodge's troops are .freshcoff their 14-7 upset win <>Ver San Clemente in Crestview ~gue action Jut week and they'll try and make it two in a row' Fri~ day night at Tustin High Scllool agalmt Foothill Game time is at ,a.. . !" The Diablos, -however, are, in a little deeper this Ume with Foothill, and will tie uqderdogs as they try for ·a school l'JllC!)fd second atraigh\ viclo'l'. , , • , FoOthlll bases most of its offense on tbe rushing department and Dodge and ' hll aides are well awan! of It. · .. we•Ve got to stop their P.JWer up tM middle," said Dodge. : The Knights roared through, Otanp last week with 300 Yards gBined on ll!e ground and' ~ 'M4s!ion Viejo mentor feeu the . Foothill club will tey . and duplicate its game plan with his team. Not much is being said alioul the 5an Clemente victory from ~ ~5hlng ~epartment, apparenUy in' a mo.ve to get the Dlllblo play~r• out of the clouds after record.in& \heir fir1t win In two yea.rt. ~ Those counted <>n mOBlly in the upt Misslon Viejo delenalv• 't'llll tq do the job against Foothlll!1 runnen .are Mart Doane (155), Don Wilson (ISO) ind, Tom Berce (155). 1 ' ~ Mission Viejo'• defenae hu lmpnmd each week after ellowing t1111·y~ In Ila first test of the ....... The defense gave UJ1. 234 yard.I In the IU defeat Ill Valley'~ and u.n held San Clemente Ill • mere HI )'U'dl . 1'8t week. . • , Offensively, Rlck Boehrnet and R1cbm Oiavea wW carry the 1"<d 1... tho Diabloa. Boehmer ,has ruthod flJf U'I ,_ In 17 trips and Cbavea two yards -of tllcl 'Wilb 1l$ OD 3i carrlet. ' • ff DAILY PILOT I -.-10,1961 Start Your Engines -----. • . - by Deke Houlgate .. _ .... Ila~. bat Bobby -lalOclooe ·--··--"' -llllllanl PwlOO lreld lll:o a ·-an. P-11 on1J .......... -la .... ft'ASCAll -'• ..-. with two --_... ... 11111--~ ... SUodaJ and lld:liitli-Od. 17. 'l1lo .,._. 11111 cm !'em.. . .U _, fu at LM~ 11 Uie ~ papn wlll lllJ,.., "ll'1 lo bl ............. -.... -· . I 11 Imc _,<&!di -. be '11111-.,_ I a pd bat l!bt --wlll haw • .,..t._,.,-. the hnl mu, 1111 ...., U ,_ la lad 1bt llASCAll Gnnd N• la that.....-. ml 1111 prlll unilop ... '10l,'NT. lie -·1a..m. ' Oo Uie _. b111d; ..i.lldciry Doqo -1mc II Mr. ~1·2MJ1 whole mcido la 1'yau hate to ftlllh to 'Wbi:" Re bu '*"" --and J41.m 1n pr111 -· m1 tt 11u """' ...,. _that .... aot him lbll far. Outllde .... Deep Sooth , lbll -i.w. !tr ....... cltMnc ~ bu llr(ely -unnoticed, ml K mlPt ha .. 111.,..i lncognlto If K badn, been kr ID lllcldenl 1t -· lld., In September. Bel<n Uie raee Tlucl' mecbanle, lla?T)' ff3de. watd>ed wbllO -·· car wu llllpected and certllled Jeg11. 'lben i. coo-tjoued watcblog u the -cmr .........i welgbta fnlm the car. llJde tuc:tod the lnkrmaUoo away unUI lalo In the t5(kn)le nee, when be made a dramatic protest. 'l1ilil WU the altuatkm, U r.lalod by Tuac: "Cir! Yarborough was leading, I WU aecond, Richan! (Petty) 'tl\lnl and David fourth when the yellow Ila( came out and we 111 went Into the pits. "We were all Ryin1 to be ftnt oat, ud I left too BOOB. My Pl cap wm't all the wry en, ud I wu 1plllfng pa eut Utt back. ne green f1q came on rtpt awa1, bat I wu blact-Daged back to the pftl to pat the cap on rlghl I Iott a whole lap." Th new Hneap was YarboroaP, Punon and &uc, u PeU, wu removed from contention by a Ion, pit ....,. '"l'htft I wu, trytn.1 to get by David, lllm f'llll!lbl' wtdl a B .. t car and me beblDd. IW:n," lu.c A.Id, "and that made my mecbaa.lc mad. So tbat'1 when be protetted Peanon, dllrinl tlte n~." Y&rtllnaifl, tile leader, blew a tire, and hue paaed Peanon lo win lie race. n.e post.nee ftl,W., of Punon'1 MC<IDd-plaee . ear dJltaalllled ~ lad llllowed IAlc to pick ., 51 polnll la tbe daamploulllp race. Peano11 aho paid a $50I fine, but evea u Iuae taket a pbD01opble view of tile predicament of hll friendly rival. "Hect," be A.id. 1"Ibtre'1 no cbeaten, only fUY1 who pt catJSbl" l&aac thought U was even funny that the aune thing almM happened to him the next race. "When we weighed In tbe Charger at Martlnaville, V1., 1be nut week, they found m IS pounds ll&hl to llart the ,...,., Somebody bad lorpt to put welgllt back In lfter !akin( "'°' out for 10rDe re...." · Tulc bu been around IOlllOlblng llte U yOlrl ts racJDi, bat this ii his first full aeuon on the NASCAR Grand National drcult and the first time he bu had anything c1-to 1 flClory ride. Even though II be doean, win the point dwe, there'll prol> ably be a 'O Charger 500 for him to drive come Daytona time nert February. It sure is nice to be where lauc ii oaw, lookin' up that tree and Uckln' bi1 cbop1. • Oetopu of Rlll!f"B Not long ago Mickey Tbompecm wu a newspaper presmian wflo ...... luMy aquan -hit Oil ht& -to mp printer'• lnk out of his crewcut. Hil eo-worken dJdn't tab blm 8MioullJ unW he went to Bonneville and drove a car 40S miles an.hour. Mickey has run the gamut in motor sport. He tried sporta car racing. He was the owner of the tragic car that Dave MacDonald rode to h1s death at Indlanapolil and the comic Indy car that bad fOur-wheel steering and other oeat things that never leellled to work right. He dJd well promoting drag racin& for awhlle. He bu buDt 1 successfuJ speed accessory manufacturing bullneu that bu made h~ M/T mark the standard of the Industry. Prep Stars of Week JORN CARROLL Fountain Valley . JESSE HERNANDEZ Su a.me.ta AJamito.$. Restilts· .nlfT UC&. • ,... I ,,_. .... 11 ..... .,... ............. C#. "1fM •1• I • -·- l•CONO llACL -,..,._ I ....- ..._ ci.lmll'&. ,_ ei. car. Ol'I °"* llMrl'tl) ......... .... Ktwllt ,.,0 (Me~) ... .... Jetf•rt ("°911'1 ..... ... ,...._,. ,,,._ ...... ll1n -~•llM'll "*""-INd .,_,., llfY Gffttr, 0.11 MY. tl'V'M ..... ~"'Miu,,,_...,. GM. lali~l'N .... ,......., DAR.Y DOUILll-Wl,_'11 ....... lie • ..c.r1 o. "'*-,. ... tna.a TIUllO UCL. • .,.,._ J ,_. .... &uPlllOrMitA ...... ....,_ .... Tnie On l"ly llfrllllilmll ltM t.• ... f'w99 Gr1bbW (""-) tM ..... S19 G,..ndilddy (Ml._.) Mt T'b-11 ..... ,.. Abo ll•-S.-ltrlowt, ...... O\le, llwr ••r TOA'I, Clndn """' ....... A LM, Air St,_, fl ..... OllirY. kn~llty o.Ml9rt, M1111tta """ ScOClfw .,,...,., '"""' OM, ·l"OUllTN UCL -.,.r11, I._ ..... C111ml,., """"' .,. 5-SleelrY lhlttt) 1M UI UI Helct~U ........ I a.•UI D'Arcy l<rf , • ..,.., 1.JI ~M.,,. Allo 11:111-Clraicwao•M, Jtll 0 Jet, 1t11nnlnt OW. ,.. '-lar, ~ PHMft, l.Ydty a.rt·,_ Scntdltd lltMY Deft. AltMltk. Pll'TN ltAC•. -,.,.._ I ,_,. old• .. \IP In 0...... A itfVa. ""'"'9 Slfl!O. Tiptop DecX (Kanil) a• 1Ut 1 .. P•lt? BIU. hit 11"-J .... t• .._,., Bab (Snclttl) a.• T.,__11 J/11. Abo lt1-.llllllllta Quid!. ....... It• 114, l•r Oedtw Gt. l"tnnY Oii,_, ~ Diii T1l'M, ·---· Cl .... ...,. .. r. knlldled-Mr. 111'1' ...... 11141 o.ct. Tl'\ldllln Gil, Jl:ldlt.... lt1YHn. ·LOs Alamitos· -~ . .Entries ,,, "' '" ,,, "' "' '" ,,, ,,. ,,, ,,, "' "' ,111 "' "' "' '" "' IM .. "' n• 111 ••NT• llACa...:al .,....._ ' ,_, UI ....... i. Ill 0tW. M. ,,... ,_ UJ -. m "' ,,, 111 JtmfM ltu Ill U.lr) Or. Mank Ill 1 ..... 1 •• ..... CM C""""1 ~ C1!dlef {C "1'11111) • o ... ,... °'"* (J 0-1 Dellble' It-CIC Mell.,,.,...) "'"'"'' °""' fJ W•l'Mnl DlcUn °"" IJ llldlll'°*I Tap Elltr!INS ID Mon111 ,_ ,.,,._ 1>9. It Colllftll ........... .,,. ,,,... (J Wli-1 ~· ... ,,, "' ,,, ,,, "' ,,, •INTN llAC........, -*-• ,_, .... •nd w. Ali--. ""'--· r111 a.rh Cl ColAM) 111 11.. OletM ·-' (0 Mwrtll 11! 111 11--.. ~ Ult ltflb) 114 114 ~ Oue TlrM f lt Adllr1 TIA 111 ~ ....,... CJ WlllMrl) 111 111 ·-Mlc0¥ (J Brook111WJ '17 111 JllM!y MK hr Ill ,...,.,.., 117 "' ,,. ,,, ... ,,, Family Affair 111 'lbe Wber4Dd«111 ODID.4 ,,. P1"1'M ~ .,.nlla. I .,.., .._ Cillmkitl, l"vrw -.. Cl.llmlta --""'" Ntwrct out IM er-llYI 1D 114 tmation ot H&ary Smrart. .., llld ot!A>er, aod Piil! Smart, faller ..t crew, won gold medals In tile Star clu! of the Yaddng cun· )7<tition in the 1948 O~c o.n ... Ionic ~ (It I.Mir) lit llXTN IU.CI. '50 ,..,._ ! .,.., ....._ M19111111 1: .... ID M«rltl 1tt A!k1w111>1;11, Pu,,. l2000. Cllu Oii.i Bab 2 CW Jtn11111) 122 lteMl'1 A111_, [Adlilr} t.• '·'° I.Gt TrvclUI ROH tH P• .. I 11f ' M1rll"9 IMl'tlnf ISl1"J U.• '·"'J-....CC::...C.:'-".--'-'--------------Tlny Ti'!\11'\defblrd (WlllOll) 4.H Tl-11 2/10 . . Alie R1rt-aonl011r Med...... ltlPlll MIN, OllrlllllSI 81r, 111Hn-, Go ,._.._ Go, Al1mlh11 K1y, ,,,.,,.., "''· lcnldled-c.dui lt.tal, Dllr l•be ~. Throttle 8Mk. CM,... l"w· ._ llYDITH ltACI. «Ill y1rda. J .,.., oldl I. UP In Gnidt M. Plul. ""'"' -NowN!i. (P111tl Ml "11 f5mlfll) Tiie Cholrt llAOr'M•I Tlm-20 l/10, 7.• J.OI S.20 11.~ 7.60 ... A19o 1t1rt-l.1 1tW'1 llodc.11, Giid l1d, Pro\IOQllVI, hflty l1r, Lft'I ., S.m. . No aer1!dlfl. l lGKTN ltACI!. JJI .,.!'di.. J .,.., eldl • 11P In Gndl AAA Mlnua. ,,,,,_ -l!tt.bt 11.,•o Hcibler011 (tc.nllJ Dnlil Jin. fStnvlll ,_,. J.4.11 , ... , .. , ..... .. ••• AIM ll1n--LllMlllllS It._, llln"1 llflle. Im. J-Gh1, Diet Nolp, W•r Gii•~~. M9rti; II Now, Ht,,. A .. ... ICl'ltd'lft. •IMTM ltACI. a "..... I ,,_,. ..... & "" lfl Gm. A MlNlt. ...,,. ..... Oo W1tdl fltnltll) ,."1tw'1 Im ... CAMlr1 eu.t~(-~l TlrJ&.-21. ...... 11111-C•ldi DMtl, fl"*' ,_,. save*2~8 · RW !IPPIN' Wll~KEY ~ IN}'20AUDN! He era.shed once during a w1ter tpeed record attempt and wu told be would never walk again. At night he had aome frlenda spirit hlm out of a hospital and drtve him home, where he recovered without benefit of medical 1Cience. •••••••••••••••••••••·~~~~~~~~~~~ Jn a movie, "Viva Las Vegas," he ltole IOIDe of the wildest 0. lthod1, SHYW ••r l.N,,Mlll T,..., """ 5-r R9"1~ l.""9 lttoj A,.,_, knktlld -Mkk'I --.. v...-. ...... ·""' o.11\, lk. """" "'· stunt driving scenes ever filmed. I forget the story, but nobody could forget Mickey's driving. In short, Mickey Thompson bi the octopua of •uto nclng. He moves In all dtrecUons. The direction he goes best in, however, is ,one straight line across the aalt of BonnevtDe. This Is to report that Mickey Thompson 11 10In1 back to cap- ture that elusive record, the I.sR, for all vehicles known to man exceot tbe ones propelled by jet or rocket thrult.. ne camnt l·mOe and 1-tilomder reeordl an ••er ttl m.p ... , •Melt meu1 Mickey wfD haft lo lop 'IS. Rb ta..,et lpetd It UCI. A bot rod aftclanadt who ha1 aeen the ear aay1 It 11 a master wort. The car fl 11 feet ~011g, St lncbe1 wide and welP. •bout i.tot lb. (•ery UPI compared lo the recont-faoldtnJ "Goldenrod" Of Bob and Blll,Sammen). USAC record certlifer Joe Petralf 1ap It II aboat u llfp u hll b.lp pocket. MJcley'1 lliJlnaJ •m.p.11.. BonnevWe ear wu pewtretl b foar Pontiac engines, and tlte Sam.men llrothert aled f•·· Qmlen. .,,,_ ,_,..,. can ctold 10 flll -sl, bat Ille· were 10 HaT)' they Ud ae acttleraUea. Y • bd te n:art tltem I ·Collndo and ltop diem la NmldL 1be new car wtD. have only two m cu. Jn. Ford.I, the rear oi 'supetthargod. 111 lpeed depends on lilblneal, tmlque IUJpemlc Ind oteerlng design Ind Chrysler Toniuefillo lrlnamlsslon to pr< vid6 the kind of quick accelenUon Ideal for Bonneville runs. 'lbe smart guys are betting that Mickey wW get the officla 1 record that hu so long eluded him thb: time for wre. He'll have the ult from Oct. 14 to 20 to try. Cross Country Results ...... C-111111 Mtl' ltclJ. hdfta (U) 11) McT-rt 11"1 lt:.W 12) n.rr. -(P) 1t:U IJJ Ml*a (CCMl 1t:'1 (41 lltY IOIMJ ll:tl UI Mfllart IOMll 11:• Cll It-IC~) U:tt ,,, lnlllli CPI UiM 11) A'*" ICdMI 11:14 It) .... ,_, le.Ml 11:1• 011 Mlktal le.Ml 11:11 flll ~ (I"), .,.,. ,,., 11rtl (lt) .._.. (1"1 Ile• (11) ..,...... l"J U :tt (UI D•i-... (•) ll:a ,_ c.-..... 11'1). hdlke (10 0-. T• .......... 1. , ....... ti:• ....... ·---... Mir 011, hclKm 1111 ~ °"" T• l"lllW. 1. Cl'"IMtl 11:)1 ·-...... Clt).MllriM 1•• {II 81dr Pllrclt 011 lt:SI 111 1>9• Jlffl 00 lt!f1 (ii o.tt. ....., '"' ntt1 141 o......,,_ IMI 11111 IQ C.V .. IM/ 11111 !ti .._ ......., oo 11111 n H1tt11n IMI t1:11 111 W•lclll*. tMI l h • lfl "--lMI 11:9 (If) J-. ,.,... fil 1!11t C11) ~ .._, CNJ lllB fl!) .,....,_ &Ml 11:• Im JI# ....... 1•1 UJtl 1141 i:c..... (Ml "'g Rustlers Win Polo Event Behind .... -tac " -Xrllu, KN s...._ Ind Roa Coot. Golden 'lie11 too~ Ont placl la the IOllMeam Southern C&lllomla lnvlta- Uoul -polo loon>e1 _, and, """-'' at GllC. 1be RUltlen woo t h r e t llrllChl ,., tbtlr - tounwnmt cbam(llonlblp " the ....,. by downfnl Rio &aodo'• Roldnmnen, 7-4, In the lealllrt duh Wodnesd~. • Lions Lose on Error Westminster's water polo fldals discover the emir. team wu eraSed Wednesday Slnce rules state the offlclal afternoon not by opponent score can only be registered 1n the home scorebook, the Llonl Huntington Beach, but by the were strapped by • technic&ll- pen c i I , as the Lion ty. Newport beat S.A. Valley, scorekeepter failed to record a 11-2. pair of Westminster gow, IDd j------·--- Instead of • 6-5 Swlset League .triumph the Red·and·Whlte. fell M to a blunt graphit.e :>01nt I TWo goals by Lion Jim Iaselton w e re lnadvertenUy iverlooll:ed in the b o m e COftboot, and not unW Oller oacb J ob n Greenfield h•d · o ngratulated Westmin8ter lentor Walter Otto did the of· ...... W•fmll'ilhr 1 l t ,._. l+unllnliOfl •MCll , 1 , ....... W•lmlMtw: Kin 0...... 1. ltlft IC11IMll l. CJ'lf'L• Dllrt 2. Hllntl119*': ltl'Cll Nonil l, Jin'I ,,,..,. L Det1lolff 1. ...... i. AlllMlm I t 1 ~T MlrlM 1 t 1 1-f Mlrl!IOI: ~llllMY IL U..wt !, 1t1n1r 1. 1wu.1. ... , .. ,.,_. r • 1 l-4 ~""!' .:...-:: ~·r ..l W.. ..... tw .,, ......... nwnlltct"°" a.oi t • 1 1-1 W=t.8""'1 s.ttw l. Otl..lalt 11 ~: Kii& I, LlllM 1. ... -...... . . . ...... t 4 IM •Mlr1M1 ~ l. ""n I. Mln1ft'len '""' 1. l'•lww*rvl • __ ... ... -•• 1 ...... , Mw1Ml Kira I. i FOOTBALLS '°' WAIND SIZI._ .... -·-·--····-6A5 6.95 .. 13.95 4.95 .. 12.95 4.95 .. 17.95 7.95"' 19.95 9.95 "' I 0.95 ll4iULATION sm BASKmALLS YOWYBALLS Soccer Balls LIATHIR • Soccer Balls ....... ,.._ I S9UAU BALLS MIN'S Tennis Shorts nNNIS Wlllto • heoy SHIRTS' 3.25 4.95 .. 13.95 4.50 5.00 llNNIS SOX llNNIS RACKm llNNIS SWEATERS LADllS' nNNIS DRESSES 95c· I .25· I .50 4.95 "' 39.95 9.95 .. 15.95 9.00 "' 14.95 IOYS TENNIS SHORTS Ir SHIRTS =GM 4.00,. 15.0G Op•n 9 a.-. lo 6 ;.-. , CONYUSI BASKmALL SHOES lock or Wlil'9 • , • HI or Low ------ 1 ~ -----. 8.45 Convene Tennis Shoes MIN'S 7.75 LADIES' 7.25 !ACK PURCllL TENNIS SHOES CROSS COUNTRY SHOES WUSntN4i SHOES SOCCD SHOES ltYMNASTIC SHOES SWIM FtNS 8.95 5.95 .. 17.95 6.95. 11.95 8.95. 11.95 3.951o 6~95 SKATE a6ARDS FRISBEES IACK l'ACKS Sll&l'ING BAGS GYM SHORTS Reversible T·Shlrts SWEAT suns HANDIALL GLOVES Ir BALLS RALEIGH BIKES Pam -nres --r.t.es-ltepaln .• -.. ... '" ., -.. ..... ... • "" • • "' ... ... ' ' °" ' '"' .... Wo "' ·~ ... •• ... ... .. '"' "' • • • • ' • • • ' ' • • ' • • ' ' • • • • • • I ' • ' ' ' Oo ' "' ' °' • ,. •• "" ,, ... '" "" " '" '" "" "' '" •• •• ~ "' " -' I , ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' "' ,. .. ...,,, •• .,. "' .. '" .. .. .. .. I " I "' .. "' I .. " .. ,. ~ •• .. ... ... '" "' w K • .. ., .. .. .. .. " ... .. ~ m .. w " •• '" " .. .. I ·~ .. .. .. I .. •• LEGAL !IOTICS LEGAL NO'l'ICB LEGAL NO'l1CE LEGAL NMICE " " " -" .. ., ' ., ., I . , .. --- .. ---~-·-------.. --...--.. .-. .. DAILY PltOT U On Diablos · Pepplng up Uie songs this year for tile Mission Viejo l!lgb Scbool Diabloa will be (from left top) Wendy Rasmussen, Sue Rowell, Diane Gover ("bottom),. Connie Radler ad Sandee Reece (top rlgllt). Pepperdine College ~ill Move to Malibu Area LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Pepperdine College will build a new campus on a 138-acre site in Malibu which will emphasize liberal arts sub- jects when It opens in 1971. The Adamson Compani~. owner of Rancho Malibu, an- nounced Monday it b a d donated lhe land located west of Malibu Canyon Road and north of Pacific C o a s t Highway. Merrit H. Adamson told a news conference the family gave the land to Pepperdine because "we like the old Pep- perdine philosophy and their Instructor Promoted Mrs. Elizabet:h M. Truax, of Newport Beach, has been promoted from instructor to assistant professor in tile English department a t C:lapman College in Orange. Sbe completed re· quirements this sununer for the PhD degree at USC, writing her dissertation on "Preview of the Vanishing Hero: A study ot. the Protagonists of the Jaco- bean Tragical Drama." LEGAL NOTICE Ll!lGU. NOTICE •. coocept of conservatism.·~ Pepperdlne's exisUng 3So acre campus in Los AngeJel will speclallte in the future on training students to teach· and to manage businesses in urban areas. Some 750 students are a· pected to attend the Malibu. campus during its first year, wilh 2,500 students projedld for 1985. Punt, Pass Kick Slated Eighteen trophies will be awaTdOO at the eighth an- nual Punt, Pass aad Kick competition to be held Oct. 12 at Cost.a Mesa City Park. Boys age 8 through 13 years m1ay regiater for the. events throogh Oct. 11 at Theodore R-• Ford, 2(fO Harb<r Blvd., Costa Mes!a; Costa M e s a Recree.tion Department, 88 F&ir ll<.; Newport Beach Park, Beach and R ecre a ti on Heed· q•arten, 1714 W. il<lllJoa Blvd.; and at the Harbor Area Boys' Clullo, 2131 Tustin Ave., Cosba Mesa and 594 Center, Costa Mesa. Entrants must be ac- companied by a pwent or guardian . Spo...rlng Ford dealer Theodore Robine will alMll'd the trophies at 1be com· petition. Guide at College Everette Abrams, soo of Mr. and Mrs. Norman J. Iverson, 365 Victoria, Costa Mesa, will be one of the guides showing parents and guest! new residence halls at Caillorn.ia B a p ti s t College, Riverside, •t dedicatiol1 ceremonies Oct. 19 and 20. · JitOTICll TO c••orrou tv,.••io• couaT o,. TH• STAT• O' CALll"OllO.t. ,OI TN• COUlfTV 0' otUN9e ... ....,,. fll OOflOTH't MUltWA. -· -----~ • .. ~ ----·-··---------~·--~----r.1 ,_.,, -10.1968 Everyone Hu ' You C.n Set It, Somethin~ That s-.. a.. w.n11-'J'BB 81GGBS'J' 81/WGUl MAJIKB'J'P£llCli Ol'i l'~B OJUN611 C9,ui'-P80/WB DllUfa' 8U-M7• --Ami , Trad1•-~­ W'llh • Went Ad • 11S l'Olt SALi HOUSES FOil SALE HOUSES, FOR SALi 'HOUSES FOil SALi ~~~~~~1~ooo~~Gonw~~·~1;;;;;;J1~ooo~J HouSES l'Olt IALS , HOUSIS lro1t 5,\LI. ' HOUSIS FOil SALi' HOUSES FOil ,SALi RENTALS 1705 H.,.... Pumbhecl 1-==--......;..-0.-1 L•guno lloadt 2705 1000 C..t• /Mae llOI Lido 1110 1351 L1•un1 lleoch ~1;o;~..;;;"'----~:.;.. • e IY-OWNll e CHOICE 90' LOT Broadmoor Harbor View BUILDERS CLOSE OUT Lrl • BR, Fam.,... Dec ldt s Bd ' bo w12 o:,,i. °""' . 1.a4Juna Niguel ' BR ' BA " -""""· lohn macnab """ crp<o. ·a... to IChla .. h.!a..;.,, -· e1c· , , • Bdnn ,_., • land· Bea•l """· --.. Exocutlvo4 a.droom ONLY9 NEW KOMES .AVAILAILI . · +men. 22'.""'-540$3 BBQ.G"'"t-P> ocaped blt·W.c-tonew vtow.!2131- Trf•l.eVel Model RANCHO LA CUESTA, In HuuUngton Beacb, bu IAYflONT HOME EA81'. SIDE; • Br. "' pk, teotlll. St/St, l»,000 North Am.ncan . RDcl!weD k~IHAL~ lmp,..J .. -MotchM the best values In a new home In lhe entlre areL PfN'EC'n<IN PER.'lCN111· iiu oo. ao dowo VA. R-2 R., c. GRE!>I, -Pllttt Priced !root p;,a;o to HoUMI UnlumlsltM Add l & 2 story;$& 4 ,bdTnJa, 2 baths, quallty coll!lru.,. ED .1mmoo11ate 111y ,_t lot. -341& Via Udo m.om 131,000. lmprolll.. ,.. tlon including all kitchen bu!lt-IDJ, ·fireplace, fully • Spot!,., --Wtll BAYFllONI' HOME Phil lzt-General 3000 2500 W~t • C-. del Mar carpeted, shake roof, concrete driveway, lar&e 4 BR,• botho ...... $llll,500 Mota Doi M<or ll05 com• '"' i,iord, $106,000 llllle Lagoon Villa 4 BR. 2 BA. -..-, By eppolntmont only loll. Walking dlstance to Public Beach. • Call !or _. .. ..,.._ JUST LISTED W•IWer Realty 3 sa., 2 both., 1am11y rm, ""'""" New ham• In 'l'Urft• Imagine 3300 tqUll'e ._,. (Located at Hamilton & Buchard) pa CMh to pt,860 exiltlrle 6~ blt·tri kitchen. wet bar, prlv/ Rock, closest to UCI: Swim- $2S OSO to $21700 1714) 642-1235 GI loon at &%. $2(11/mo. • . boadt. Guud """""· 2 ming, I"'""· otc. 12'1$ mo Yon Hemen Dec--.d Ylllo FHA'. VA. Coriv~tlon•I ai Dov• OrJ,., &ilta 101 ;.,.. .n. , BR 1i; i.. -~untlntfOll INch 1400 poo1a. • . • 00 ...... 6'1>-21<3 Dave Gcaabll, Rhf. 644-0020 C.ll Hf-29it IBJUJ --10 & 1 ~ Rollt;y Co. Bldg. In fam rm, epW-dbl Dr1m1tlcolly Sltuetod All tltJJ tor colY $C5,IXMI $1251 NEWER 2 BR., t.nc.d $17,500 YA NO DOWN Lara:e corner Joc:atlOn on R-2 k1t.. 1.. moe 1 BR. beamed ceUtng home. I d e a 1 for )'OlJlli: oouple getting started. P-.vmeots iJ:5 I DlOll.th ln- cludet. everything. c.all now to .... Newport et Victoria M6-1111 SIHPlflG BEAUTY Just ..n.ted thla aleeper is waiting to be "Rff. cued from ita deep, clul· tered ~. Needs a ''KNIGHT'' in thtnirla: deaJl.up clod\tos I yau'D have a cuUe in. no time, 4 BR A: family room or 5 BR.s, R·2 mnina: w:tth room to build additional unit. C&n be prchued NO DOWN VA or lcrw down FHA. Full price S2'l,~. pa.yment approximatei)t SlSl per mo P.I. /fia,., COATS 3600 SNview ~ wAtl...cE Corona dol Mor REAL TORS $69,500 546-4141- 1.,..,...,...;;;;;,;,!!!0me!!!!;,,o,!'m ... !l!0111t!ll!~!!! ~ pr, bit·'"'· ....,_, Han! to p&euer u 00 t1tb BOND Realty yard. J'amlly • pet OJ<. -(OflDOMllllUM ~ "I mako ....,_ tnda • cltlmtlnr 3 BR bome Is '" 32325 So. Cout ywy., Brokor - SECLUDED °"'"" view Home w11h l<OO tt. ol """"" ll'l. faahionable Cameo Shorel wide tetruio entry into llPllcbl• 1Mnc room J Bedrooms 2% baths private p;;l and patio Owner has moved out oi town wanta octioa now ! s.., 4539 Tremont Lane fl9,000 call Jim Cobb eve1. 873-1861 HAft•Olll P•• y ll8r C• Bob Olim RH!tor """"80 yoo. vaiu. b wrlttat all ,,,. So. 1-= ia 5 BJ( 3 ba., >«...,.. UvmGATrrsar:EAPESI': •• · · G.1..-3 B~-2 BATHS er 1t'1 tace, brliht cbeerfW. 499-7l38 «l!J.340.l Manyextru.Available • ~ In '11111 Gara-Thia ""'"""1y .,,..ted i..., -· 4 -~ old ....,., SEE us roR NOW• Family 0.1<. 53MCl80 Only pJ,150. t:JC(4'1)«1'1., ..,-·--. J .. -.. ' LAGUNA NIGUEL RESALES Bkr d.imll room, 2 bl.tbs a: dou· wey drive • trs all benl ftt.tl.ris a lu.tl tropical Pl'-root. aervlce porch, bb:tc · · ==--=~~-~-1 blf! pnge L·ar1e ilftD Bncb.Poci..Teant..l.otlcl din aunwnded by ll)eclal wall,cupets/drapeg,sprink. n66; 3 BR. 2 bl:-. w/w, *ftll. at bot dool' • Adults fUll, and ttn:_~ pat» ~e newly ler, landscaptng, Temu FHA L1gun1 Be1ch Income dr'&ps wired m CllJldnri, aob'· Low pe,ymeat. include in this low ~ painted., w I ca:pt'g, or VA no down payment. 6 unit apt bldg., PRIME LO-pets O.K. 534-QB) Bia. 1n1urance pH1inz Span t h dear, ldtdl. bltns, Wallt to OATIONl~~.totownl ';';: •• * .... *. 129,150 oil-. lttclu<iq-o.c.c. "'8clt. $6000 ANNUAL IN-Coste Miio 3100 CORONA DB: MAR OPEN HOUSE DAILY 1 • $ Dandb ~ -<X>ME. PRICE 141,960. The xi WGONIA ~n (open net1) 54&8lOJ best income buy in town. l BR Houle In Q:IQrt, ~ I N~ 91ore1 Newport 8eKh l200 ~ AVAIL. gar, $120 mo, :Z mo rent. I: NllllCV Cheshire llNI Edit. •• """ Everything-MISSION REALTY ::;'"" c~ ~~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~R H E 'rythl -~ l:'w.'-· "YFAR ~" lly.. a.de Bly Hom. GI Ve fttl BEAUT 3 bdr, 2 bl., trpk. Place. 64&-S'B; k;Jat.lt'• best Two bed-HURTING . Knott;ypinewoodtntmrw/ ~~!>&:=~~«IT.~~ Fam-rm/ldtch, front patio. 2 BR., a:ar., patio; carp. __ ,. In eacll 'Wdt --t· 0wnft" bu boulbt aDOdwt hl&h beamed ~ 3 BR, ~" <gl• ..... uu.-Bluebird Cyn above Oriole. [)rps. stove, r~. Ttopic&l ,....,..._ ---home and must aell 1belr l tie.th. Wntbr nn + h.tge ....-.~ New ~ off Ownr .sac! $29,500 • .fM.'1'870 setting. FOi' adulta. 1 Bl.II:. ed by kMlly patio • lbade trllllf!S. nWi Q'Pt at rtntal ii constanUy m· demand. Let added. 1ocome o4 • Bet i*Y'" menta. A FINE VAWE FOR ONLY $39,950. beaut. _. BR. 3 BL bomt; a game fOCfb oft J.6di ft poo1,' ·ramp. This hardwood &or shops. J150 Mo. 544-:4780 aep, tarn. If util. rm. en W/W C1'?(a. all bkina.·$40,500 SOL VlSTA hN an added Dana Point 1730 2 BR house, a:ara&"e, private onzy a few of the fee.hrff. rm5 Tustin Ave. tamib' room, ~. fenced yard. Sill month. Profess. 1nd.9cpd. w/eomp. Fl.-.t Time Offered :1i:_':,' tt'a newlJ pairlt· 2:!t 2 ~ ~ ol~~ 546-5630 548-15.U llldnlder aystem. New paint ~ -Uke new IP&doul R~ ( Hod-RNlty State Parle N-port BHch 3200 lnside It QUt Carpa., drapea ,. BR, f b&, dln/nn, fam. ' •--496-~ •" and many decarabr Hema, nn., unu.W elm w/wet bar 847-2525 BEAUTIFUL VIEW Rustie Beauty! Thia loYely fOpen Ewnlngs) 3 bdrm home is loaded with I=::=::==:::::=::=::=::==:; I ~ panelling, and is J<icated oo 11 a corner lot ooly one block to the beach. Large fireplac· es 1n both the l!vbig room and the Wnl.Y room, built· in kitchen and like new C'Ol'l- dltkln iruide and out. Don't let t:hi& one alip by. ...... ""'111 ""'""" bonto 3 >'pico, Ir•""°'· 162,500. ' CAN YOU SALUTE? RENTALS Channel, Udo t.lo & °"'"" alu Talk to about ~ HouMI. Furnl1htcl , v t. us u. WALKE8 Realt.y , 'reter&n1 do not know 3 BR, atitf, drps, elec/lriteh. ...... .., Appl. OeL1ncy Reil Eatate 2828 E. Co&st Hwy, CdM ""'11'1\I Walk to Harbor Hi We're excttal over thls lave- ly 4 BR & family room heme near Wesfclut ~ PU.: Cente!". 2" be.tbs, all electric b.Iilt • in kitchen, di.shw'bher, over 2Cm sq tt, newlrf painted JnteriQI', 2 patios, huge maateF BR with Grecian be.th, lush w/w car- pets & drapes. $37 ,500. - EZ terms. Sparkling 1nr your ~ In trade. 33311 Via Lido 6'J'5.5200 they ve qualified to use Rent1l1 to Share 2005 llJ'I. Kinas Rd. 642.s:nl B • ht Dorado DeVeJopment ~ l ea Badr: :e..y home ms thtir GI tllgibilii:y MORE I :.;;;;;;.:::..:::c.:::::;::;;....:::.::;1 "'=="======I ng 4 BEDROOMS Siem vw., prlcod to .en THAN ONCE.,, VA ,...,,.._ WORKING Wootan m\y •• ' .lrv"'l::.;no,;;,_ ____ 3_2.;;.31,1 Park-like aetting SUITOUIJdlne at $32 500. Call Paul Nordin O:inp:em extended ~Ira-Kl t ch en privlleaea avail-- adult occupl.ed home. 3 over-Eventnp Call 5*.m3 $24, 950 m.00 or 382-5'9! tor tb1 datea t« many v~erans able. Refermces. ca 11 VllLAGE n MW home, alzed bedrooms piua dinJnK I----------~---Unbel!e.vable _ MtM Verde polntment to see ap-• You are probably sWl ell· be~o~ ll A.M. Tues., Wed I fam-rm, dinnn, crpts & nn and spacious llvlni'm:i. fl f bedrooma .. 2 baths rte-lffl(e. We can help! Oill Vil· Friday, After 7·P.M, Thura dr,ia. $320 zno. 646--1147, 3 Private beachel. Owners pa~ed and carpeted Price 3 BR. Condominium; The la.re Real Estate 9624tn & Sat. • , all day Sunday & 548-7400 eves will carry Trust Deed f aluhed _ $24 seci • Bluffs. Near CdM HJ acbool. Monday. 548-9737 ~· -· c ' rn•g """'i:G-16ll•xt2417d1ys. BACHELOR'S HAVEN •pr,nen s "' "' SPRING WATERFRONT 3 bdnn # l~te 1 BR elocttic H••. ng A Roomm•" ~..,...·.100,,;_,., .. • Cast !1£'1' f ' ;.~ • Pri potlo. fl<,400. ,.._ H I . I • 6l ' Looking for a Roommate? • REALTY Balboa Covet. $60,l'.m. Would t·in&, mrpeted, covered let ua auist YoU E11t Bluff 3242 PRNATE home, 3 Br. crpt. drps, frp, ""'"' ,..,., gud. w .. pd. $2115. 644-2052 -Coron• dol Mor 3250 BEACH HOUSE g 2414 Vista Del Oro •• "anytffM"' prefer acreaa1 In trade. paijo, & walk to the beach! Roo~~~te RefeNnce '!-Col!;.:.., ~j~~,':'cit.T_ui (o. S N~~achBuy 2629 Harbor BlYd., c.M. = &l'M; 3 BR. 2 ~:: = . Newport B~:~ic;h, 875-22ll --··----r-. ..... ..u:. ~Home 1n F.astbluff View Lot Bathl; condo., next to pool. 847-8586 Eva 842:4738 WANTED 27-32 yeu old 1003 Baker, C.M. M6-5+IO -;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;::;;;;~ beautifUll:y llCJl)Ointed ~ ol MeA Verde'• most By owner, $41,$0. 644-()655 · bachelor to shan! very large Bllbol Is. Duplex I z::=::=:::::;~::=::=::=~ I iiii outstanding view Iota over-DLX. Part Udo ccmdo. Pool, . 3 bdnn ocean front apt. m 3 BR. 2 .,.,,, ""' Unit 1 I• CUSTOM DUPW ......., Model. F-.d looltln& M"' V-Coutllr> lpl.; -chand•""r: 2 LISTINGS NEEDED Balboa P""'. Ovid. furn. On the beech at Big O::im1&. Fantastic view, lge. llvinr rm.; 1 BR. & m., blma, avail. now! 6'1S6«iO eves. block 1D Village, only S yrs INYEJJORS .~· ~ O•b, lakeo, .......,,,. l BR. $21,500 RI" .,._.,. 3 4 • 5 Ba. prico $llS mo. 6?>-4498 old. Fine Rental record. -..gv ...,...... -~ IJ"'Hnll. About 158' of front. • • any -MAN ed 3 BR, 2 ti.. tar&e lot. leue ~.ooo·. t--· BIG EASI'SIDE c-ta M.,. Large l BR untta with pri. 3 BR, 2% ba, d eclldtcben are on the falnvay S25 000 ciaah to loan buyers wlJtb:I&: ~.~ roommate w.nt to $285 mo. G. E. Robertaon, ""' ,..,.... ...., vate pe.Uol, near sbopplna'. din1ng nn plua tam room • ' Newport Heights 1210 WE GUARANTEE SALES ..... .., Ige. Meredith Gardena Rl.tr. 675-2440 Commerclal acre with 4 old· IJve In one &: rent the other. Added attractkm: ~fn $46·5110 IF ~ MEETS home, oomp. fum. Rent $150 Bl CLIF P~~T9s1Ro1ltor ~..,"';,:;~ ~6 = ~""FHA ''""'· Mklntl ca.,P~.~~if"% IOkntfGT.i'Eirv Cliff Drive Boi:::s~~~~~ :~:.i..:;~~M.;,.,, 1i =: ~""';...!: mt E. Coast Hwy., Ol.'d poesibie. Ha~ YoUI' income !~~~~~~=~~11-~==-;,~at~lla:::·;CM.;.1 lest luy In Helghttl 847-8531 ' Eves. 9M-U73 3 bdrm Mch apt can l==~~=====-1 l!!!!!!!!!!!'!!cn!!!'!!!1!!""""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t I :.~.bolkllng. Full price J; WEEK.ENDER 3~. ~ ~~=: Owner Transfer.-.cl I =673-""5========= I Huntington Beech 3400 Investors • B/B or BACHELOR -bit-Itta, •boon• tor dis-M..t "" ..,.. 3 BR, ..,..,.. Coot• Mooe 2100 3 811. new ~. -· Speculaton beautifully decorated w11h Unctive IJYlni. $38,!M. :.i d1nJn& z:m· ~ • -fl35 in.e, small lncd yd. * 642-1771 Anytime* OCEANFRONT "'"° ""' TV 1nc1 1n I'""· GtWiam Realty ,:"Y:. ... '!'..•.;•<""" 3 BR. 2 Ba, built-Ina,""" & 17656 Van Bumi M>-7823 Prime c.2 dlod ..... Car Jot. n.., .... ' -~ -· ....... Otlldn!t ok. $185. -··· Wl'l'H 2 BEDR<X>M home. FIXER-UPPER ac... Neu N.B. ""' O!c. ""°"' Poul Jon" RHlty 541>-n<G . Loguna Beech 3705 BUY Low TODAY Sz ooo T M7-12i6 E"ves. ss.mt 2 BR. · ~ -~ 1--=--------1 ld"1 COO. M"' locatlo~ 143 Broadway 645.0181 I' Ba __ ...,_ OIOor M ' . orma *PLEASANT 01!! Ha 3 cpta, -~. o,>I, Y~~. MONAROI BAY A R'EA Room !or additional....,,. Evanlngs 642-8453 3 bodn>om home ........ CAYWOOD REALTY 8' 2 .. + 2,,. Oc "'tv $1000 DOWN •"'· a .... '"""'· Ut!ll"" LOVELY OCEAN VIEW 3 lion. ATI'RACl'lVE F1N-I"'!'!!!!!!!!~!'!'!!!!~-SELL HJOHrn. TOMORROW cat10l'I near Newport pl.er. 63IJ& W. Oout Hwy. ~e Apt m 500 ~-·9u lm.maculate new _ __... paid. $195. 548-S7SO dt 5. d • Room N.B. 541-1.Bl • ...,, · ..-.o-1U1 • ........ Y"',., BR A en, J BA, cpbl, Drpl, ANCING. French Provincial Thia 3 BR .. _ room born• !or -'"""' ""'" .. E -'"'"· nice '"""""-· No~rt Beach 2200 b;>I, pool. $300 mo. ""° OPEN rnoM l ·S In -M ... Vonle will I~ """" ""' build -xcltlng 2' Story N-rt Shorts 1220 new point In • ool. A ""'" -., avoll. 2 BR. 2 bL $250 mo. appreciate in value. Ira ::· ~ ~~ tri-Ivan Wella' model h 0 m e -H· 3 BR. 2~ ba, ipl., htd. pool; adultll 496-00 betw 1o.5 pm 25~r:.o~~~ ~). ~ ~= &wi~ba=-2 ·1. temw $17500 to with view. 2 . ttory livhW SOUTH OF HlWAY AFFDAL REAL TY dbl. pr.; condo., fam. area. FOR leeae; channinr 2 Br. ' ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 Neo.vport Beach. A ooique ftreplace1, Quiet cul-de-sac IW .,)'OOI' & ·-~-L ~ ~ :•· famth rm, .. Unuaual 3 BR, 2 t.&h bomt 8740 Warner 842-44<ii 8TI-88ll days; 646-700'2 or untum home. Ocean view. home 00 a uruQue street·to-street. Buy lo9.r at $29,500 & .WUtill · ,200 wi 1:1% $31,f!OO Needs little HEIP. lllnems forces us: to 211: 43-t-39M Eves. Land!tcpd, fenced yr d . street k>t '15Xl25 with view. lO% down. Hlty, Inc. fiMnclna: avallab!e.. flxi:Q' ·• make~ sell our lovely 3 Br. Deen 2 BR. 2 Ba, Pool., beach Fireplace, carpets. drapes. Private cul-de-sac. Loaded Xl25 W Balboe. Blvd NB Roy J. Ward Co. M&-1550 0 C t p · Home. Qopta, dri"a· $24 000 Leue. Adults <ml.y. 144 &y. 2 car p.r. Avail bnmed. 4lecl- $23,500 with shuttered windows in· 673-3663 Ev ft. 673:8oa6 Santa An1 H•l1ht1 ~~':' ~= Pac1tlc Sanda: Tr a' ct : side V'illage. NB. 213/7Z2-4.109 $225 mo. 900 Hillcrest Dr. doors, Iara:e bedrooms, tam-ftrtPlace, dining nn, elec/ ' 53&-8489 Lac. Bch. ,.94--6697 ilyroom_,tngooto•trtum bit.Ina, "Pl mtrance!or Bt;y Lge Famlly H-· BY OWNER.""""'' 5li% Coron• dol Mer 2250 VU1a pgd:ftc in tbaw tmdcl & enormous bade yard. Per-PaceHtter-Pool 9"'P Of destred.). "'''"' loan. No ~. on kweb' 3 Duplext1 Unfum. 3975 cmditloll. Sl61 per mooth feet heme for a discrimina.t-I Zl"'3::=Bak::=="'=· =c.=";;·::==-=:=1 I Real lha.tp C<ultry °"' FORTIN co. WaJ.k:: to Ocean, walk to Ch& Br-1!( ba.. Fam rm, ft1itc, 3 BR nr. Albertam'1 Mkt. I --'-'--"'----'---1 mven all with a SIA.?0 loan ing tamU,y. Pricl."d right at Ser1etw1th thepopularlva:e 8«2..scmEYea. 548--0.190 houae, with 2 Pooll;· T4!ruW eltc bltna., «>mer lot. $3,IXX) Frpl., carp. & drapes. $200 2 BDRM Dupl•x-Bltna thll.t may be lWUfDeCI. Ten-master bedroom wltti Ro-Courts, anl1 child.nn1 Pl&y-down. $24,!m 847·2U3 Afo. to Jun 15th; a.van. now. Firple. O'ptl. and Drpa. nil and swimfning u.sc. ~U.,500ReeJ F.stale M6-4414 2 BR HOME man tub. BeauUfully decor-Costa Men 1100 a:romd. 5 BR, 3 ba, $39,500. DOUBLE alze Jot. 3 BR, l ~ ==='Ca::=ll;213:=' ,;795-;::-;;= Enclosed Gar. $135. Adult., Large green area for the -;;;---:;===-==~ Wood Doors, patio, double ated. wooden sun • ·deck, Call 548-1290 b,a Lo dwn nIA. Princlplet "no pell. Prime Oolta Meu =· toan!j:.: ...,, bike 3 STORY • VIEW ....... Rlght In town. -"""" "''-Double Your Income 3 BR. Iii bo. All., ... , Ct"ph, ont;y. !536-~l Lido 111• 2351 loc. 968-ltl!l Nealied oo tree lined ~eet. iIS,850 epuiding belted & fllh!!rtd , --Xlnt oood. 2 blb to Westminster 1612 A'ITRACTIVE Furn home Ri:NTALS Colesworlhy & Co. 3 Bedroom• amt b ... RUM-DUPLEX pool. °'""' "'°"""' "'t oi ,.,, oddlnr un11a.,' "-dJI bdt. By """"'· 6U-3363 • -"'"" ,.,,. •bort t .... ""'· i --A""p_t .. _Fu_m_1shod ___ 1 PUS room 00 puk-like 2 BR e&ch aide, hardwood area & anxioua. $42.950 built on this choice Cotta $21 950 INCLUDES Might COlll.lder Mo IM o G I 4000 642-7777 ground& with view or bay -floors, double garage, ._._,I ~ S45·5Uo' Me1a lot l)1u fl0Jc300, bu Hirbw Hl9hl1nd1 1235 the ,Air Conditioner lease. Li&> Realty ti73-8830 enere Redecorated -$38,500 5"""' "ring" F.ast:side location. $25,000 fnearcil«nltheltrt) plency ol remaJn1rw: bWJiS. ATI'Dm:OO" Brand new wall/wall, oew Huntington Beich -2400 College Students ••• with terms. llffi~ REALTY able apace, and ia clolie to FIXER • UPPERS! paint lna:kle & out a: an Attentlonl 1904 Harbor Blvd,, C.M. Open Eve1. Ocean fronl Home • MO • SPRING Well1.McC1rdle, Rltrs, 1500 ltHaltler,CM. ma.In business tectton.. Harbm' Hl&hlands NB exl!ting FHA loan you CM :z BR. duplex: new furn.; Studlo Apt. Ooee to Bee.ch, • ...u . REALTY 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Will Trade -uktng $!7,.500 t Bdrnu, J Bak $1000 get for • low down. The n111.; patio. $150 Mo. Ooae bandy to UCI or Saddleb&ck. 5 Bedrms. 4 Baths. Den. 2 F'ittplaces. 46x32 hee.ted, rutered p:nl. 14xl8 P!.aynn. with soda fountain and wet with view. 2 · story living Sep. laundry room. Written up Jn Arc-hitectur~ Digest. Must see to appreciate. Price $165,000. or submU trade. 27'l2 S tr an d; Man- hattan Beach, by appt. (213) 545-6100 Ot' 376-0501 ~· "anutime" 548-7'729 Evts. 1W4--0684 Giant Sized Famlly Rm. BURR WHITE, Re1ltor down. SS.CW under mar'ket. owner wll1 even help you to beach. 213: m&-9880 Owner 642-0255 Cll' Don V. 11 $22,500 2501 Newport Blvd., N.8. Rou;h, but a BARGAIN for make the down PQmmt. No Franklin 673-2222 2629 11""" Bl"'1., C.M. W1a Sell FHA y,.. """''..,..,,,II 'ti!""" 675-4630 .. "' 67$.49111 ""t1tbt """'"' 64>-7898 qu"'1!ylng. P!.ACI!: -....... w-•·11~75~: ~FURN=~.-. -dlx.~-,~BR-., aee 111 Extends the entire OWNER TRANSFER.Rm _ a. k a. Rex. L. Hodges R .. lty they &l9 1ootina: -DAILY trpJ.; PrtT. fenced )d, e LAND and COMMERCIAL FUNDS avaUable, Cootact Mr. Rokos. Pmslble S650 dmtn payment b.zys thia 3 bedroom le din- in g room. Bride fireplace. Kitchen with buUt-lns. Town· house with pool., etc., etc. - length of the home. Rieb SACRl F ICING thelrrl ;;.;;.';;:::':::::-;;;:;7.1:2.;40:1:,,,,=':='84=l=·"="==:::~~PILOl'===cl=1=111fled~=l=6'2~-5'7&~;'..:~P<~ti<>~· ;;• -~~-~~,;:Bkr~:: panelled walla, entldng ti.rt-btautilul 4 BR horn i ,I By owner $32,500 0. I 2000Ge I 2000 General 2000 place. Larp bedroom. 2 ~ n.ylon carpetlnJ, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, blt·tn kitdl,l.;;.;;.";;';;.r;;•;.... ___ .:::.::;.;:::;:"°;;o;.":::...---...::.::.:::....~:;::::_::: ___ _;::;::;1 MARINW Savings & Loan $16,750. 646-71 71 baths. Homemaker'• pride aparkllna built-in kitchen I llvrm ftl.tn-nn 2 trpbi' built·in. Jdtchen. ~ doon fa m 11 y room , I a r 1 e brdwd ftnJ Ip ieneec1 yard' 546-2313 leod to lowly""'· .... ,,., llndscopod "". lhuf. "'"""" ;.....,. .... ' TARBELL 2$5 Harbor fieboard &: hNvy ahake 646-mJ «' 5'7-9531 ext ~r roof. N.ne )'OIJl" term&, • c--.~!'1'~~ Swpohltc•i~~me ~~-1~,~~1':~ Corene dei Mar 12$0 East Costa U---, j~~64i!'2i!'..Ci!'OOO~iiiiiii 1 -~• "~ u• ~ horn • 3 50. 2 .. _.... lqien eve1) Hert~ Real e. ..... ...uaa. New. Eatate umuuallY •ell bW!t ' ""1· HARBOR YIE 1y 1"tod at "'·""· ~:;;;,-...,...---,.....,,.-.1 * Channel Rfff room bomt. JSial kidney W 3 Bedrm -Formal Din· p I Ba R OWNER moving, ID\llt •ll 4 THE i'JE A L ESTATE R S ....... pool· filt....S • """' Con tempo""' -· .... , to Ing Rm -$23,500 e e nen Hy. BR. ' BA oil .... blt-W, Condominium heated. Alley entrance to move lnto. TVr.> king size NO DOWN G.I. 161C5 w~cuu Dr. 6i2-53XI formal din rm , lllD1 rm, EXCELLENT BUYI db~ a:araee A boat •toraa"e BR, 2 i., drt!ssiog nn. Decorator's dttrun -tasteful crptd, &-ped, Good neilbbcJr.. Top Floor ars Covered patio. $38,900 -Try 10% down·. wallpaper aC'Cf!rlt.s. Loads or Mtst Verde _ 4 Bedrm hood, cloee tD 9Chooil I Spectacular Vlew ""·""" CORBIN-MARTIN c1 .... ""'"'· 1""'ely kltch-$24 950J "-"" ...... """""'"'OCEAN A BAY, 2 Bdmu ' HUIT)' on this one. REAL TORS ~. built • ina, dlahwuher, Hard to find ~t this low Pl'ke buy! $31.500. 5'6-2588 batha:, with ~. ~. JEAN SMITH, 3036 E. Co11t Hwy, CdM IA<1" "" ,,...i. E>«ellmt ;n • .,..Up loca-2 IMMAC -Lib n"' 3 BR, 2 ltot condltbt. 675-1662 A ·Ii area. 540-l720 bath&. FamUy room All ~ In beautltul Mmticello A11t l::lr: REALTOR nyt""' TARBELL 2955 Harbor bU!t-ln kltcltet. rorc.d ""· """"°.,. Fatrm• Rd. Lob Chet S1ll1buty """"" $19,500 BALIOA ISLAND Cari>otinr-llridt potfo. 109' of .._ WW All !Ura or 673-6900 5 B cir PLUS • -.. v .. __ down -owmr ~ finance unf\rn. ._, "~ A no -· Duplex 541>1720 . ANXIOUS - GIJESl'llOUSE, POOL. Eut-• 3 BR..,,.., r.n. ....... Btst bzy 00"" bland.,...,. TARBELL 2955 Harbor E-SIDC s Br. home by Bolboo Ponl....,le !300 lldo CM, 2 _,, 4 bato., • Cpb/d.,.., """""" yd. boy, 2 BR In '""'t + 1 BR DAYIDSO owner, J'Mtl 4o mt, nu """""" dt:ilntl...,. ram-• ~ ........ """"'frltr· ""-A..-w,cm N •....i... &,.. •""" '""" O'ttr tot. Just a Come On •• ... _.· scscm • Rl"· 1142-mo Eves • .....,,., u ,,_ ~•r ....,,. ·~~ ~ •. "[ ___ v· 1...:,.,· •-1ltor • "ENNEDY RI ... 646-!lm """' -.,._ ...... lnllde out ..... ~ ~ ~ -Wa'D .., moot -ju'1 ---,.. *LACHENMYER "",.. l<dt tt-. -· Rl>mcnl Al• Cllll -1o s.i ,.. ., -., 1tt1a -_..,,. Low DoWll Pmt. ....., i..t wi.t *' ,... ... LOOK -"'"""""' ""'"" BUlLDERS Ooee out. Lut TR.Y OFFER. PfCt for SU1t:it! 4 Br: t BL $21,CIOO Norti1 Once J'OU .. tt ·lm* ou.t! j Newpart hlcuicl ol JI. S -l li bell>. 3 BR Beodt -nt. Bly !Utr. :mo -511, OI CJi. Ml VA, ntA. 8roltor BR, ' botl\o, ~ - 2Bedn>ootDoll11ottao, Ideal :" -llllt Vall<J Spoctou.lftLl'f!nr rm, llro-------.,,., Jal> $44(!1). lor ~ 227.500. c:i, C.M. Mv IHle oi> ~~ "R!. :'~ C PANO!WiOC ll01 YleW at EA!TSlDZ • lllr. 2 a.. 1"' IURll WHIT!, 1t11ltor Solue •Sim pl< Setombled Word Pim!< for • C7tU<kle •r~~""'I:..""'-"'. :: ,,-, .... -~ .......... -... low to fonn four alfl'IPfe word&, ILECKAC IS AS l ll I _11rr_ IF I IN GIE r I' I Sign dlaplaytd In Tuoc .... L. ::::'.-=~·==-=·=~:! touranh '"If the "9ok fl too , ~a-IO tough for you, get "'1f, Thi• IL; E WV ET I '' no ploco for __;_,, .. : I' I r I 0 ~t'.: te ... do~ ~ • • • -• 'IOU~ from•• NG. j b.low. 8 t\fil1~0 l1 r r I' I' I' I'. I' r I !~1 I I I I I I I I I ·-.... ,,. ...... ....._._ ll~O-;,'!!!!Wllll!amsoo,.:iiii~Rl;!t;. : clfott~, ~&IUI~~DI~!!~== 100 E. Balbo& m!i I B·~-""' 111uf'1. I BR I both, wet .,od yrd. O,.C,, *iio, o,>tc. 'lQl ,,_. 111..d., N.8, E¥a m.1581 .. u-bot" s im. ,_ -. 122JOO w1t1t 109' ....... 67M6IO _, 67S.5122 SCRA. M LETS • CJIAl!G.f; m ORloll! $-0411 By ........ -114(1 ~J .... ~Vt""~.!Jll~tr::,:. Nf,lllS~~-'"'""'""'"""""' .... ~~~~~-~~A~N'.!SWE~~R:..!!IN~C:=!LA~S~S:!!IA~C:~A~TI~O~N!.._!1~8,0~0~ ) •, -----.-_c__:.. __________ _;_ ___ .::.._"'--------------------. ---·-·· ·-=' --ft = = -ft ---ft ---= = • •• ' ' ( i • •, • ' ' : ( • J ( ( i ' 2 I t • ' • J f ' I . I i . ' W ...... ~ ............................ A~•-= .. •--P•••=<---------~-~-~·-~·...,-~---.-.. _~_ ... L&O&LOWL&iltw_m_~_ ......... m ................ WESO ......... &.&OLOEOEOO~-~-~·~·~·~ .. ~-~-..-~ •• ~ ..... -~--·---~ ----... .._., ... ---......--.. ---· -· .. . - . -c· , • ..,Tli\ndlJ;,;.=~f.,'~ Oc14ber~F,;10;;,, ;;1968:;;.,"'°';---.,....,=-~00Al.,LY;;;i"l.a1' S/1 1ENTALS RENTALS ll!NTALS 1ENTALS llEAL ESTATI Rl!AL ISTATI ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRftmy '.Aph. Furnlohtd Aph. U~ Aph.. Unfurn........ Aph.. Unfum!--'Geno=.:.:':.:.'I'----_:0..::::'°:.':~•:;.1·-----l-'':::nd:::...:N.:.:O:;T:.:.IC::E::S;_ __ ..;•:::nd::;...;H.;.0;;.T;.;.IC;;.t;;,;5;_ __ 1 Babyolltl"I '550 Gonaral 4000 Coatio -5100 C:..ta -5100 Santo Ana 5620 In-Property 6000 Acrc1110 6100 Announcernonta 6410 llnnouo\comenta 6410 -r·· RENT '· 3 Rooma Fumltul"I :·· $25 Month }tu. OPTION TO BUY No dep)llt o.a.c. .-H.F.R.C. ~· Furniture Rent•I• '1.T W. 19th, C.M. s.is..3481 568 w. Locln. Anhm. 174-21KX) •-11 PUNT SEEDS FOR FUTURE COATS a. W AILA CE wan ta to com· mend all of you 4-B Club memben, leaden a. J>lrtllla on your f111e work in agry:unure & home economics. ~y ~ hi .. conilnued au~...,! . . COATS & WlllACE REALTORS JCiiJt,,,,,.. . 1491 . IAKill STREET 'flll!ll6!f 546-4141 COSTA MISA, CALIF. -------------- Babyolttl,,., lronlne. Scwfna. ms Elden Aw; CM Brick, Ma-ry, otc. 65'0 BRICK, Oancret.. ~ custom Cabtnetl. small Jobs OK ""9 Ett 9S2.at45 Busfn"' Service Servket "Yet" ~ Buslne99 men -do )'OU need .omeone to do )'Ol,ll' ~ Bookeepln&:f a SeeietaaieJ Substitute! D1al 114: IG'DU or 847-0028. "TI!f' ii our middle nmne. 24 Hour MrV. JOO Setvices Ottered 6590 NOW'S THE . TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD No Matter What It Is YOU ctAN SELL :IT WITH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD For Fm Service I &pert Assistance DIAL 64~5678 DIRECT JUST SAY CHARGE IT! • I ' ' ' ' ----..-.. -----~ - • WITH I I Don't iust SIT there! Grall hold of the llG action today! Dial Direct: 642-5678 Just say: ''CHARGE IT!'' lltortli Coanty, l40~1ZZO, ton free) > • • ' • .. -..... c • IT'S EASY TO PINCH 1.1--NNIES-EVEN DOLLARS PENNY PINC HER WANT ADS NEW-LOW~RATE · 3 LINES l TIMES 52.00 IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! P:umttvre Office Fufnffure Offl .. lqulpmont Store Equipment C1fe, Rnteur1nt llor Equipment Household Goods Appll••- Antlquu Sowlnt MochlMI Mvslal lnstrumenta IOOO Pl.,,.. a Orgono 1010 belle 8011 Tel1vl1lon 8012 HI-Pl a·-8014 IOU Tope It.-.,. 1020 C.morn a lqulpmont ::\>: = .. "'= 1120 llneculon.5- 1125 Ml-11·- e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e 0 NO ITEM OVEll $50 0 NO COMMlllCIAL PlllMI 0 0 NO COPY CHANGES 0 NO AllllEVIATIONI 0 11M noo l20ll n10 l220 -MOO 000 '"° NOD Let PILOT PENNY PINCHER Want Ads Work for YOU! \ • I • .... -..... -,- • -~, ; •' ~ .. . ' ··. •". I . ' . •'. " ' " ··'. ·"····: " " ' •' '· ·' .. -"~ ;_::: . : .'. ·"· .. ·". -: .. · _.,.. ... .~ .. '- _ .. ;'; . ' . ., '.;. .•.·< ... ' -;; " ' -• • .. c. hn hn yr °' " & co In "' $31 .i. "" "" "' T: p: 00 " B IL " T, "' B N .. .. "' In fr " F• w ., w . " .:· . . ' .;:;:c~ ' ·. -.· ;, .. ':.: •' ' ' . ' . ·.' ' .; .. . ' ' ' " " .. ,. .. . ·-;: '1 :-.,. . ' " ... ' .. · .. , : ·-~ . ,, ' , .. •" :. ~ _. . ' "' ... " ~ .. ' ' '.'>. ·.;, ' • ' ' • " • ' . ' • • • ' • • ' • • • • . . . !!l s -G M p ' c I .l • ' ' ' ' ( I . ------------·------~-------·-------·----------~ - -~--~---~------- r--:.-:--~-----~--..-.~------:0--------.......-.._.... ·--·· ---' -------.... * * * * rnn'-. Wlla.Nya Wlftlt Whaddye Gett SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NA TUltAL BORN SWAl'l'EltS lpoclal Rm 111--Slllllft-Sllucb llULP -AO MUn !_t+CL..UOI ,,....... .. ..,.. . ........ ,_.,.., """' ""' ..... ~YOUll ,._. _,, • ..._ ,._. ._ ......... .....olHINO 1'0tl U.Lll -f~AOU QMLYI 1 l'HOllE 642-567, Ta Pia~ Your 'Trider'• ParadlH Ad .. Colonllol 2 Br. 2 Ila. }'Jew .... In So Lquna. ... , ..,.,. bm. w/2 tryiica. AW'OJI 1 yr old: Want am inc. vnita. Own·Brkr. Aft 5 pm ~1990 2 BR. 2 ba hmhlt; $3000.~ Ir: $87 mo., or $tlOO ctn. Inc. costs $1Cfi mo. Poue1. today ln Hunt. Bch., FOR house or 1 646-3389 • $38,SKI eqwey 1n lovely Ir- vine Terrace home. Want small Comm'l; Residential [ncome, Or' aibmll Cbtsbir9 Real Estate. 615-2503 TRADE '58 OIEV 1iS TON PICXUP truck, V«f ad cood, FOR SHARP 'S8 OLDS 98 rr ? M22 SUu, HuoL Sch. Apt E. '31-4987 HA VE Dl!JI home w/mey extru 1n a.ta Me.. WilL TAKE Vacant land, TD'1, boat, cv, Bldg. &l2-5liJS Builder bu 3 Bdrm., 2 bath NF1N borne, abo U tmlt -L ,._ 1cr locol ~lander-? • ~16'1'5 • 25 Good qmllt)> oil paint- -.,...,.... """"· all tra.med, up to 24 x 48 tn We. Approx. $500 wlue. For car, or ? 644-Drl Will trade BIG BEAR lot br • door wagon ~ to '67. WW pay ar takie the differ- ~-51).2319 . * * -.-~lM DAll.YPILOT n SliRVlCI DlllCTOlt'f Joas I EMPLO'fMEN.! JOBS I EMPLC!YMENT .IOIS 1 IMPLOYMENl JOIS I IMl'LOYMINl MllatANDBI l'Olt MtKQtANDIS• ,OR l'aporhon1tne Help Wanted. Mon 7200 Hole Wanted. -7200 Holp Waai.I Help Wani.I $ALI AND ~DI. SALi AND nADI Palntlne 6'50 w-7400 w-7400 Pvmttvr. -Vmflvl'9 eooo DllE3SIW<lNG • ai.... tlona by expert ~It•••· ..,_..., I J. W. Robinson's APl'LY PnlSONNEL i<><M<nttuul'rl F°"'lon l1l1nd Newport- .. '""" -1\WIY ..,....,.. DISHWASHER Full time Evllllng ~hlft Ai>olY In -9·5 p.m • . Rfll8BC L .Uf ISi E. Cout Hlghw1y Newport Beach ' · OPBllllG IMMB>IAlRY For Cooks with Hotel.Club •ap. Coll Chef O.e1r Zink COWNS RADIO CO. . 19700 J-ltold Newport IMch All--OD merit with DD Wt.I to- ward Jtatoe, O:*lr; Creed or Sex. * W ,O,ITRESS * E~rltnc.d OVER 21 NIGirr smrr • APl'LY 'LYING BUTLER - . SEC:RETAlY !'lone Apply In -.. ' UNION IANK Matn at L&Vea, Orurip. Receptionist "" ,..... ...... booulf -Open--P'tferred but -ntet6-Ill')'. oaen pmn..a work, pleudt t11Tiron- -~---ellb.Apply IUFFUMS Fashloti Island . N"""°"' IHch Eoc:HW Officer S.Vlnp A Loon expodo enc. neoeaaiy, Prtttr tome sales e9CnlW ex»C. • I • I · · New Sliowt-S1111pl• ' , , Wiil s.11 Any Pl-lndMdutlly a• c.in.ec1 arm dlu11, 11 matc:hln1 ~ with belatltlll fabrics; ~ pc lieugon illft oak &... lllf 1et '!'Ith black or avocado, framed cblln &: vinyl CUJblona; S pc bedroom 1et, tklr Mr & Mrl ,~r with 11 framed mirror, 2 lg · C11mmo(le1 a! matching beadbo~ ONLY $429.95 ' . ($HS YalH) ". .. TIRMS •low• 12 Wiik No c;wn-VM our 1tort charge plan Approved Furnitur.e !No 'ancy 'ront-BUT Qvollty Vil-1.;,ldo) 2159 Horloor Blvd• Costa:·-541"6o Open 9-9 Dolly-Sllnday 11..S 12 Y .. n llil'M loatlon -lllM OWMl'I '-~~) ' • 3e DAILY ,.Lor '""""'''" -10, 1961 .Mlil&ANDISI FOii ME ltCHANDISI POI MiRCHANDISI l'Olt SALi AND TRADa SALi AND TIIADI <O.LI ANO TltADI MEltCHAHDISE FOii MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE SALp AND TRADE TRANSPORTATI ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOllTATION TRANSPOllTATION Ml..-ll•-NGOMhcell•n-NOO Boot. & Yochll 9000 Molori:yc... '300 lmf'°'!od Auto. 9600 lmportod Aut°' 9600 20' GULm'!IEAM. J/O. U6T SUZUKI 11-100. µo 'cx:. .DATSUN TOYOTA • RJ:YNOWS -Doperor Deop V. UJ HP M ............ ~Xhl~t ~-~~od.~S,IOO~~ml.:__:11:95:i· ==::=::::===;::1--------I Old World =··m.t.."' c'!":'i $50,000 Special ~"::"~ w/trlr. ~=~ .. IS63 '69 '!"'69llEW 169 '69 '91 8ll1 MAXEY . Mediterranean ':"': Wlwfl ....... * .AUCTION * _s.~111>oo_11 _ __,_t0_10 !<50. ean ~ 'to::~~N !TfOI YIC)!TIAJ Spanllh Furniture 5'WI• '62 ISLANDER lM No. 83, Auto s.tvice 50 000 ml 11111' "" •• ,•o:·,•.·.· •• ~·rllololfl ... ,_....._ & Fri.a-. McGlaa1on M,arln t 1 , " , Jtacelvod uncell•Hon of $22,000.00 PR.VMS, paid llllt. HI! 196. m--1 .-1 11ber1 la" w / &oldoc & Pam 9400 ' 11111 Boedt llYd. Sp111llh ond Medltorranun Furniture ~i;,.~~.::"~-October 10 & 11, 7:30 PM ~ 1rlm. Spruce O!TENHAUSER .,._ $116.16 DOWD HunHntton 8oach . .. -"' ,_ --I =======:I -...,.., 1 • 19 • •tendb>r dual qwod nm ....uoid Ph. M7-8555 .. 1 ... ..., .. .,._ H ... a-o. M...J-• I ~ From l1nkruplcf .. , Moffl Hornet, R--italon1 rl"'1&. Mam, l\'MY, Jib all .._, n-·• -·~ ~ -·-$5316 I n · ~ ......... Pl .. ......... •130 """"· ···-....... _ .... -:::.:.:-~··. =-~;:,.. ~ . for 36 mo. J "'· Norlh • '"' .. c. ... 1tem1 as followa: GorgeOUJ 8 ft. =tom quilled •--• 1 Spanish & Contemporary -many Bedroom 1.,. ..u. K:,,.,:O: 10ifp .,. --.,~ • ._, --... H~. •• '"" ..... · sofa with aepante loose pillow1 wilh beavy oak aeta, Dining room sets, obina cabineta, bu!· hoard Winch" '""""' quedl Carbo, ...,., ...,., · ~-d-r and m1ttbing chair, 3 matdlin• oak Foll S1 l......Spoclel1 feta, commodes, holl consoles, divan. .& love-, __ .:. .. N, ~..:---• ....i. • C«v.ite i>" ....,, OAC + TIX • Lie. uu.u ~., • W need Jor Q:datm.u ~ l"U ... ' """"'ue -..en-'l" wide, with..,_, .... rt.ms 4 Barwidc Hll)'dal Imports 11UUMPH occasional tables, (2) &8" tall dtQOl'ator lamps, e i:n * u Ham· seats in Spanish & Contemporary. Rockers, inp. We preeerven, new --..y 998 So Coast H .l..11 hanging cbaln swag lamps in wrought Iron, an ~PR 40 Uke ..., chest. of drawers, hanging lights, lamps, col-heed, oiove, lull '°"•"· etc. _.... ""°"· 1 pr. """'"" •"'-sm ~ · '58 TR 3. _, ..., • """· 8-piece king aize master bedroom suite tn pecan $2250 Hammood M-l.00 A. fee tables, TV's. pictures, dinette sets in Span-Beautiful condition) $4,495. SIA" llUda mounted Oil 15" NI.I rood but need• work. Panelled Mediterranean ... n:.te with top quality ,. .. e· """" ............. er-% ish, chrome & maple, office deslu, veeuum S15-3744 att 6 PM wkd)>s. all Onvette rlnlt, 2 -15" riml • . S200. 499-2849 or $1239 _, . -~ -··· u ..,. wlmdo. • ,.. ...,, " beauty """' • JAGUAR 15 Yr. warranw. king site mattresa & box springs. ....... .. ,,, u'.--~. 6 ....... cleaners, mattresses, vlbra ng lounge chairs, ... ~-,, .. ~ -~ .. _ refri h dry .,, CALKINS .. ,... ... .... ~ 5 fM. S36-7802 VOLKSWAGEN Spenish decor dining set, etc. old. 11'95, u...i Hammooci bar stools, genttors, stoves, was ers, • ...... ---· '""·" Spinet IQ;(), u...i Grood.. erg & MUCH MORE! DA~~ed~. i::i::sElt Trel11r, Trevel 9425 ~~; .. ~~";..~1--N-IC_E_S_T_C_A_R_S __ I MUST SACllFICI $698 00 ,_.SAVE! .......,. -INSPECTION EVERYDAY Call' OUld! Av.ry '51 BUPDY 36 • a 2 ""' Cb>ome !'ltt ,..,.~ <tc. IN ORANGE COUNT¥ FOI ONLY .. -...... --h Inell Id "11 ~~.Friday .... •• WINDY'S AUCTION S42'Vla0pono,N.B. ll'Oll. '"" ..... :. Xlnt S36-00ll '66VW.Awlld.,...,...IOld Any PIHe Can 611 Pure ased V ua Y &mQay 12 to 4.30 , 673-6752 * *"39lS Eves. tbruout Owner ~7695 '60 Jaguar 3.8 bu;:! Want tometbing dlffer. Terms Ava ilable -Newcomers to Callfoml1 HAMMOND · , SNIPE flberglast, built ,by 1966 ~A-BOUT tr&Uer 48,169 actual JJtil8"-mt? Fqebell this special Cro111! Approved lmmodlehlly In CORONA DEL MAR 2075Y, NEW PORT BL VO. Loltland, sail• by N-wlll> tent cobana. !400. 11000. 613-5M2 IH95 285' E, c-t Hwy m8930 Bebind Tony's Bldg. Mat'ls <r!r, ""'er· au In xtnt """ ~ w~~ • MERCEDES BENZ ELMORE COSTA MESA 646-86116 .. tion. S.t-Uled, BEST • ~-.~ " Hey Look U. Overl OFf'ER! Gordon .Mon'OW, TRAvn. 'l'RAD..ER MOTORS We have the laJtett telection OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 days 540-9870, eves. ~1761 CAU.. after 5 PM, 642-2989 TOYOTA A t Harbor Blv d. HD of new and ueo! planoo at * DEMO SALE * FIREBALL is. u...i 5 time• Pb. 894.J33I 1E'11-lttlre "" tow est prices in Oran.. 22 11 8600 Rhod" 19 .... ll?OO Xnlt """· • 15300 s.,,,,h s1,• .. w-r • •• County. Come in and ICC tor T•pe Record•rt I 0 Misc• aneous 1r O'Day •... $1350 • 962.401! * J ycursell. Mariner, new .... 13100 '61 VW Sunrnof, RAH. reblt. 1844 N-tt Blvd. Costa Mna (only FranclUJed •..i" "'" SONY 230 Tape ""'"'" 68 souo •tat• "ereo """ Demo .... l2550 Trucka • 9500 ...... nu braJ<.,, """"' """ ....... r _. r h Pi &. 0 w/2 Lancer speakers; Hke so~. Diamond styhui, 4 Fun Zone Boat Co. Balboa tlreL Gd cond.. $fiiO ot 'best ._., 91tk 't1 t -W ....... , .... "II I •mK•h•I ,.•"°'c .~9lart1 new. Still on g\lanmtee; vat speed. $79. $2 weekly. Free l ~=-=-~~=""'-==-,67 Datsun PU • otter. 499--2.849 or 968-1239 o er amp..,,.I at $.100, wm sell for $200. home trial 642-1403 NEW Schock Sabots. Re1. I~~~~~ Storv &. Cla rk $4'15 ~ to S410 "......... with camn.r '61 VW. Reblt eng. Syn trans. ; ' ·548-4000 After 2:30 PM UPHOI.Sl'ER.ING -..-m.so. 2 ' ' . ""'uuo.:11. 4 ~. dlr, -.. ~ ~:. ID .... '66 MER.CEDE) Benz. 23!lSL Needs body .. ~ •• id-' "• 20 COAST Music pc. (~-· ~~:_-) !,~'· 29 LaFayette ~ •-• -· ~ ~· = '" Houn hold Goods 1020 Sewlng __ Me_ch_l_naa_·_8_1_ .._.."Y"_ ....... ...,...... u• .... ~ He-ve! Beaut oltve green ~· v.itlte wfblack in-dune buggy com. Make o,t. Sporting Goods 8500 Free aet, del. pickup, 2:15 J -....,--==-=~-=-paint. Camper, &'llld, whitt. terlOI', .. ~.;.. 5 new tires fer. 962-3983 ORIENTAL RUGS 1967 SINGER compt 1839 Newport Blvd. Moo,HB''Bemy"~. *STAR 24'' beautiful I""'~~· Private Party. a.)15( w/walnut catimet. Divorce 64LQ271 SPAULOING Exec ~· MO G ll cmdition, trailer. i,cllJO ~t cc.nUtion tbru-Out. '6.5 ~ES 2'm SE MUST VW~"'~e immac . actionforcedsacriflce! v-Walker Cup wds: bag • VIN , must ae (1) 528-2530 ....,... CUh dela er will take greea. uv, new w/w, '7~ ... '7--........... cart. Excel eond. $145 everyttnng Fumltutt odda older car in trade. WW fine, Conv. Red w/white top. low mi $1495. 536-1075 (6-7 Gtr•9• Si lo 1022 !.':!..":,"'.;.,rt;,.;.;.,";;::; Clean Out Sale II I 8:£-7117 . .. enda. 96; West 1ith St. ~Ai,,,,~~. ':"'"" priv • .,.,,,.. Alter 12, 491-9773 ""'' """'· >l,000 ml $5800. !'Ml . GARAGE SALE Mm.I, O¥ercuta without at· . ·-SURFBOARD>: Russell 9'6" ~eo.ta-.....,Mc-"-'..,·,--....,--, ACrifice! ~ ...... , or~ 675-l63Ei, 6"15--l63S ·66 VW, SUn root. new wbite Letvitw state! Everythlna: tadunentt. Auume $4.11 St~ Grand, Artist MOd-used 1 • tima oo>;y. $15. Large, brand new redwood I==========-DCX>GE PIOCUP 1 9 6 8 , wails, Rallio, 2 Speak~. Goes! ~. 2 sets mo or $39.8'1 CUh. C&1 et; Wurlitzer Bab)' Grand 67S--2'1J), dor house. ~ x 36 x 36. Power Crultart 9020 Model 100 Custoot, ltM tha.n MG Beautiful inside ls out. bunks, l mahogany, other 5:1)...6616 $595; Steinway Protessl.Coal SQJBA gear· Complete Bet. $25. * 644-0DG 5,IXX> mi'L VS, auto., a 1 r, $1450. 847-6703 metal. double bed with 1967 SINGER -WHe iooe Model $695; Tiny Si-drlet pl-tJ'!; Diven ~ ind wet CHANCE of a Wetime! Own radio. Mr. Ware. 646-74.JS MG • VW BUS 8 pus, '66. EX- apring mattress, living home to mother. Will sen ano $345; Gulbransen Spin· Nit. ~675-5307 Misc. Wantecf 1610 a twin deisel, » O>ris •67 FORD pickup w/S' bed. CEPn.. CARE! Xtraa. roomandkitchentableand for bal. $39.82 or assume et$395;TbomasQrran$1$. HEAD Stand. Ski.a. cable • WANTED • Craft, rood condition. V-8 autorn, chrome whl!. S1l.,,Servlce,P1rts Sl795. c.au 96S-42C6 chairs, antique dressers, o~ $5.22 mo. Zig-zag, button nie.e and many more at •• , SacriHce $8,500. 0 w n er Xln 1962 vw Good nd •-·• ol but xlnt gu etove &. electric bol--. No .......... needed. ur~nn•s • ., ~·~• ~'DIO binding, 2m cm. $50 ~ 54&-2588 t o:md. $1995 673-4813 Complete new MG inventory · CO • aaw,. • ta.bl .... "'"' ........., •f.IUlool-' ~""'' .,~u aft 6. See the new Austin America fer. Call aft 5 pm. · refrigeratnr. Coffee e, Wal . cabinet $5. um Newport. C.M., 642-&184 l550 Furnltu're-Ap•pllancH 30' DR.AKE Cab.In Cruiser. 646-9565 tamps, .living room throw w/maclUne. Guarantee OK. Open Sunday afternoonJ Binoculars, Scopes Color TVs-Pianos F1ytrc Bridge, electronic 1965 FORD % TIPU. Here Nqw! rugs, kitchen utensils. 804 C.all 523-0'17'5 ............. 61 RMn llQtomatic, good rubber '61 Camper. New en&"·, Treru E. Balboa ·mvd., Apt. 3, 2 WURLITZER TELESCOPE! ETC. !~·. ~ ~ ttt best $7!JO. 673-WlO & brakeL $9». Real OH.D <loon """' "' Main St. ln FREE TO YOU PLAYER PIANO s~ Dilcov .. er. Ilk• ,,..., c .. ~ In 112 Hour 1964-30' OWENS "·oo"'""'CHEV="""P~/Uc:--w-c/.,._,.--. '" .... ,..,-=-'7".'-=--,,-1 Balbaa, 2nd flocr. Alter 6 Completely Autcmatic 541.4531 Twin 220 Qi...v e ....... "·..r--VS auto. Pa, tac air, new '65 VW clean, W'hl.te walll, P.M., weekd.8.)'a, all d a Y PLA__. ........... 6 weeks old. Solid State Action -· J • ..,. ....,. .. "" ti Xlnt ---" ..,,,, ......,. R&H. Private --$1150. week-ends. Motber Q:d:.e,-poo :lather $1195 H 54(>.9935 .i.r ua.. ........ Miscell1naou1 1600 w A N T E D bridge, xlnt cond. 130 hn res. "'" ..... ~~ ...-" and whl ""'----"-T •fts? total fll,900 &f6.2318 61 CHEVROLET heavy duty 3100 W. Coast wy. '-"~°'=~=~~-·I Fri .. Sat., SUn. 10-4 small also. BlacK te. rn:o:-lVW!I • emu: Christmas GI % ton. Exceptionally clean. Newport Beach MY LOSS YOUR GAIN GE upright deep tr@eze $lKI. Love chlldren. ~2336 3.128 Gould Music Company For those frlerm and rela-WE need quality (no Junk Speed-Ski Boats 9030 Must sen. 546-C618 642-Mlli 54G-lT64 '68 VW auto. $1950. Smith Corona port LincolD Way, north ot :1>45 N. Main, S.A. 547.()681 tivesaoha.rdtopleueTRY TVple~>_.:~tureappllan' ~ AuthorhedMGDealer e 64&--2591 e zypewrtter $15. Custon Din Paularlno. 10110 OUR 58th YEAR a gift from .., .,,c.o.,.,..., ~ ... 1967 CHRYS. giass8~= J•ps 9510 52 MG TD. Gd eng, body NICEST CARS ;: ~m.,tabt~w'!:::: ~ANJC' -.. =-~~~ J" Lay Away TREASURES OF tool&TOPl<CASHottlce equjp~e11t ~:d."~1:n.outs, access. less '62 INTER'NATIONAL Scout needs work. $300 &17-9969 IN ORANGE COUNTY . ~ ......... .._...... I BABA IN 30 Minute1 ... __ half . att 6. '68 VW Sport Station Wqon Upright Spinet snano+ with ' wood sba:vlnp. Good YOUR CHRISTMAS PIANO AL 531·1212 * 89J.a)55 .,,...., new boat price Four wheel drive -travel Squa.reback &pQ%1ding tdQ.> tom clothes 7 -9, 10 • 12, $2 mulch 833-6332 between I & OR ORGAN NOW ~ .Y._\~.Oportolnd. ~!:~:-* WANTED * Sl,150. Area 213: 4~3033 top, new tires $995 cash will blue with ~---black to $10. Other Misc. 5 or~ after 5 10/31 While choice is eJCl:t'llent ........,, ..-3 """".........," 1900 lT CHRI accept trade 642--0297 PORSCHE ·--~ household items. 548-li!Cr7, CUTE littl ....._. ___ ......... , __ ... WALLIOfS MUSIC Cl'IY u am-5:30 pm Clt»ed Mon. Good Used & Antique .tum. -S CRAFT . interior. Save a groUp. cl as;:, Genoa N e w p 0 r t 4 e iuu c.o .. ~. ...uv1 8 eru~ C.M 1 ,...,..,_. .... ..,..,..,.,I mway Used Fumlture, 7401 Cavalier, fllboard, 3 2 7 money on this ODe. S:low- R"" C.M wollint< ""' od home. 720 -• --~ • ,. SWIMMING POOL w.mn1ns1.,, _.,,..,. ~=,,-..., .. trlr, tJ.SOO Cempors 9520 PORSCHE 911S room"""'"""" •w•era. ' Victoria St., Apt. D-1, C.M. 540-21(1) .,.,_ 10 GARAGE Sa!e: 19031 548-1023 10110 SEEBURS Stereo'• New! 18 Ft Pool, Filter, SUrfaee e 893-3683 e -4 to choose from $2345 Mathew Or HB. (off 511 -Guth Or Skimmer, MainteJWIOI Kit. mGllC)'I' PRICES FOR * 17' GLASTRON, 90 h.p. $0095. * 100 miles ELMORE ""'hard • Guflddl ""°" ' MO. Old b 1 •• • Spaniel .. -....... -FREE G ..... -• QUALITY a.oTHES • Evlnrude-v • ..,. "-big ' & M Mo~oas beds, 2couchee, ftrpolisher, pup. Would like pod home. pm~ at Sim. Used $149,18 213: 437-8101 (ll-5) whl trlr loaded! 546-6488 I' MOTORS tbl dbbN A Mix" items. Loves Odldrt!n .. outdoor Orpns starting $3$. 00 96::n78 dog ~ 548-7423 10/10 Electric Orga n Assoc. SECARD P L 8700 Marine Equip. 9035 Garderi Grove Blvd. at Beach TOYOTA • 16, SKIBOAT. Come &: 333 E. 17th, Costa Mesa 323 S. Main, Orm&• Mlchlnery, e tc. (1) 89.Ufi61 or 534-2284 Ph. 894-lm D~ nn ot se!ir.~~ =" take it away! Call 646-403.1 532-llm FORKLIFI' 3(0) lb C1ark S~~y ~ ~:I~ 1965 Pone he SC Coupti ts.m Beach Bl Yd., Watmnstr nwble cottee tablil, TY' 6'l5-4917 """/10 Hammond SplD l BIG BOY Ber-'8-Que, llke Runs good! $IBl marine rquipment new & AM/FM radio, exoellent thru-1;:s t VW Bus _!l~uxe,Phorplit record playtr. Misc bric-.w e organ new w/oven &: 7 apita. 2% ~2691 * Eves 897-2433 used. 30f 28th .st. NB, out! a • new ~"· ne Inc, anti-·-21822 Kiowa 6 Foot Sot.a w/perculllion, reverb &: S .. _ t 675--0131 $3695 524-6131 alter 6 & Wkenda: .. -repeat. Se.ve $225. hp Brigp &. tra•wu mo or. PETS a nd LIVESTOCK 1n. H.B. 9ElW1l9 56&4<11 2% hp Brtggs A Stratton '6& _ 9.8 HP Mercury Tong BAYSIDE MOTORS '67 VW. Xlnt tn>d. DINE'ITE •!'l.. surfboard. Jne fer-the taldne! Used iplnet piano, $395. lawn edger. 2'" reel t Y Pe Pett, General 8800 Shaft. with Power prop. llX> W, <bast Hlgbway ll,CXXI mi $1001. co«ee tble. WCl'derful selec-tom ~-~ ~· lawn Jno\1fel" w Irr a•• SCRAM LETS Xlnt cond. $200. 3203 w. Newport Bee.tit* 646-5005 Bob Wabon. 646--0'lO!. tion baby's children• HOUSE pets! Nd loTing Santa Ana catcher. Electrlc hedge Balboa, N.B. PORSCHE '61 Super 901967 VW, perfect condition ~. books etc, Fr1 It home tor 1 apl. fem. &: 2 1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' trimmer w/100 ft d. cord. • 1968 vw camper, tully equi~ Convt. Reblt q. Top-1 yr Orig. private owner Phone Sat ZZ1' Ba.nflo:> St, alt. male cab. Also kitten.a. IQRGAN Kimball Player, 546-36M. ANSWERS Boat Slip Mooring 9036 peel liJt up top, almol!lt new. old. Nu tonneau .. Xlnt cooc1.1,",,'-;·;;;1921=..,...--..,-..--~ N~ Beach 5G-Dl2 or ~7006 10112 Walnut Like new, erg. price Put ycu"se.lt ln ~ Pllflce ..,........ • "E">•cr<:" Sli sm miles. $m). Prl. parity $2200. '64 VW Sedan-mint condition, BARGAINS Gakft! Boys', T Ii: 8 mo. old catl need $2795. Will sacrifice! Harl>or mvd D-I Theatre rv.n. ~.:.: Boat p, ~1212 * 962-2811 * RH, about n<Yili, original Youths', wash petlts, leTia, homes due to pre a en t 847-7064 3700 McFadden, S.A. ~: = ~;;r-:,a~ 1!,~~~ 40 ft. 1965 FORD % T p U '66 PORSCHE 9ll. Darlc owner. 962-98$. shirbl, sweaters. 50e Up. ~r '• illnel~/~ • MINIPIANO Console, SW·AP MEET Sign di.splayed :In Texaa Automatic !iiift. Great for ~ue. NewA G~d:ears ~ VW, good rondltion. ~M.6at. &m. 34.l E. l&th, l'Mthelutof1belltterot7. =-ofEliz.~en ~~· EveeySat.&:S\m. ::si:;~If~ :1'ou~ Aircraft 9100 =~~.r~r. $3,,:.'~ uy at 64i.~~1:w~;~ FRENCH Prov. china Black It curly. Need a 540-1962 531.-12'12 aft 7 Th'·'-pla 4-..nrr>Av PARDO~ MUST&aerlfice 'S9 ·Porsche, 1968 VW Squa reback cabinet w/drawen; stand. rome. Mother is Oa.cbshund Wur!i'--......_ _ _... ,..._,,,,., 16 "" 00 ce , .... "~· MOONEY SALES REP. Dun1 Buggl" 9525 xlnt cond, financing avaiL * 646-4846 * Roy al typ<writor; •• • • Pond!" 548-fo828 10113 ~· ~· -··-KNITTED FABRICS ·LINGS. FLIGHT TRAINING 496-3'1'5 aftor 6 ;:;, ,...,..,,;..c..::;;c_c __ I _,....~·,.,·,,."""=2562-=--=,,. AUSTRALIAN Shepherd Ir: $200 or make otter DOG Problem& C01Tected. Orange County Airport DUNE Buggy, custom, ooe 1967 PORSCHE 912 l3CXXI 65 VW Bug. By owner. c AM p ER stove ns. Spe.niel mixed. g mo. old 546-47'19 or 646.-7585 Barldna:. retuslrijc to come, 5-iS-2666 or 546-1610 of a kind, mbject af 2 ' ' 54()..$52 « 675--0045 aft -4 Generator $25. El~ pinball loves children a: cats. M 0 VIN G, must aell! .,FOR SALE fence jumping, c h as in g. magazine feature articles; miles. Oean, lQts of extras.l==========I machine $15. Mlac. 683 645-0077 10/ll. Wurtfu:er studio wlbench. Remnants, samples &. Mill Pvt. trainer, Jd:in, 49'2-1491 Mobile Homes 9200 street legal; a.II .extras. Call 546-'1563 1 Imported Autos 9600 Senate, CM Sat Xlnt cond. ;I.75. 543-3206 end• Sat. Only I Lm. to 2 Must see to appreciate! FREE kittens, cute&: cuddly HAMMOND n.-..... Model p.m. 9'l9 Baktt, C.Osta Mesa. Ca ts 8820 19% x 45 ft . Double Wide Fiberglass bodf, all leather TOYOTA ~~~.E bow~· ba[u:ed: ~~ old It ""8{;,rii J...l33 Spinet Llk"e""~ew! $875 $lOO Roadliner set Up in adult inter., <."fU1)ets. 642-6 9 741-------- ding dress & mac. 847-0023 "="==-.,-,.,_-.-=,.,. Private party. n4: 842-1333 Bulldin g to be Moved BLUEPOINT Slamjse .,,;, park. Ready to mow in. Eves. NICEST CARS REFRIGERATOR & other FREE ki~ena to H "~e. Conn Organ. X n lt cond. ,.. ___ , ot Ward & C&lle Ma· papers. $50. Male -yr old. Indudes refrigerated air 1963 VW Oiassis, reblt trans. IN ORANGE COUNTY 2316 De-aware, un ..... ..,.on ......,.,.., Clamp pedij!ree. 642-3460 con dltioning, dishwasher w/2 15" wide Tetta tires. ,66 TOYOTA SPORT SEDAN ml11e. items, Sat 9-5 Sun 1-6. Beach. 10/10 $4$. * 496-3767. dero, Fountain Valley. nt: landscaplna:, carport, patio $550, 6734813 aft 6. Automatic trans., 90 h.p., 30 5161 S:issoo Dr., HB 18 LOVll.Y cats & kittens Ba.by Gl'Md Piano MS-50'Jl 213: 663-U24 Dogs 1825 awnings , •kirting. new miles per gallon. Room for 8100 need special homes. Adu I ta Perfect condition SIGN -fluoreschlt 3Xl.2', carpet, lined drapes. Serial lmpo'1ecl Autos 9600 Appll'encff POODLE ,,.,.,....i_ 1 .. _., N o ~• -·" pr1 '~ the entire tam.Uy~ .. pow<r or older ~. 540-6183 $80) * 64&1389 plus 3X6' reader panel, Cast .,..I'.,,...., .... " • o. "7""V<.w. r wi ce _.,.,.,. 1-'" JMllST·~--..U-. -...... --.-'1-ove before 4 10110 iron double sink. New G.E. standard, $25 to good Call Dual Wide Sales ol e Spot Cub far Imports and economy. This is the comb. 2 rdrl.geraton 14 cu 2 • WORKING Kenmore Radio 8200 sllp in range. Red--.E Rental& hemes. 1 Must • e 12. .... ~· Cl1apman Mobile Inc • We pay more tor fUlY import winner evt'f')'one'• talking ft. each. Vented space Wa.sben 606 Kings PL N.B. 7167 Harbor Blvd, CM. mediate y! l73ll nuu.-=n 531-85n. reg:ardleu ot year, make about. heater. GE w a• bin 1 646-6031 10(10 GOLF 10 tran,,lstor radios. DOUBLE box llPt'lng & mat· Lane, H.B. or condition. Try us bef<re machine 642.-8119 MonJER rabbit 10 4-H Oub $19.95 value for $12.95. Just tress nearly new $25. Cat GERMAN Sbe?terd. 6 wits MOTOR HOMES 9215 you sell. E L M 0 RE e VACUUMS e or FFA Otil members only. a few left! 646-1763 stove good cood. $50. '56 for Mlle or trade. AKC. MOIORS, 15300 Beach mvd. SlO up Repairl .l parts 673-ll33 Balboa Island 10/10 -Chevy parts. 601 Gary Pl.. Ownplonship stock Phme WestmiMter. 894-3.122. MOTORS ~bl,, Cout Vacu~ VERY alfectiooat• 4 mo old Te levlslon 1205 N.B. 54&-5147 892-5696 ALPINE TOYOTA 333 E. 17th, C.M., 642-1560 male wltt ha1r terrier . '61 FRTGIDAm.E Imperial. MALE ~NLESIAT URE Ph. 894-3320 REFlUG 12 ru. tt: Clipper-646-2169 aft 5 10/10 RENT Fro 1 t -f r e e refrl,gerator 12 ~ old 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnst:r tone 2 dr llf!lf-defn>Sting, CUDDLY Kittena kJok1na: tor or Buy freezer $150. Mediterranean 545-68£0 1~~ ~Pi~: 1969 new ruo. &M-2861 homes. 67 3-1071 « New Color TY hanging lamp, cost $150, sell TOYOTA ~ -10112 for $50 642-nS BEAGLE pUp, male, 10 wks. $1295. 12 CU ft L•onud 0·~ $9 PER MO Shot., AKC, clwnplon lln• KOSTA KUSTOM KARS refrlaerator ~\lent con-BLACK male, 3 mos. old • MOVING To H a w a i I t ?<: .:•o ~.,.,., 1980 .Harbor Blvd., C.M. S d D I Tod I dlHon Sl5. ~ Fumish\ngs of 4 room borne ..,,.,. .....,....,_.. ff in r YI ay . Spaniel and ! FrH to good RENTAL CAN APPLY TO incl clothlni" &: Ml• c , DOBERMAN pupp~a. 8 wits. AnHq-lllO "°"''· 5'9-06l9 lOl10 ORD~:~ONE Oct.""' Noon., 6 p.m. TOI AKC. <lwno"'1 •toe k. AUSTIN HEALEY ti"'• L•...:1 FREE Kltten1 to a 1ood N TV Marlgold, CdM Shots. 54()..3076 Wli UU 1.Q •·me -~-•wporter '62 AUSTIN ~·. now AMDUCAN primitives: bey, 1"' • °".........,,..,, KING-Size bed, oak Med1tt. •TOY POODLE PUPS AKC '"'"""""" ( pO aell A: trade. The Dow.... 10-12 Westinghouse Hdqtn. CM. .... ...... ard ~ p -• ma\o g wits. ~ ,..... 1275-S eng. ffi&'hest ofter M RTS ., 548 8511 ·-. comp. 11~; ·~· ' ... ~ t ...... MUI! • .u """" TOYOTA.VOLVO Oett. .$Ql 31st St., Newport FREE IPet cages. Fri. • Sat. .. white, rare KhanJ.eh poodle, Call 646-3523 Betim. 675-2491 &: &J.n. 1204 Pee.an Ave, {Old 9 AM to 9 PM 1 Dayai male, 2 yrs, $100; 548-2931 Ml I Blk 9275 ~1~; _o.,y 673-7761; O'fli!' 1966 Hart:or, C.M. 646-9303 VIS'r stock Amer A Eur H.B.) 10112 HOUSE tull of tumlturt for Hor111 1130 n .. TOYOTA •-• .-. L LONG h·"'-__.. __ ,_ ...., RENT TV $1 0 ,..,. VALMC6.D..E folding '58 AUSTIN Healey. Ex· .-. • art Y ..... o:o..1 '1HL'4" ..,tty No Depogit • F'r'ee delivery aale, abo huge garqe u.le. taddl "" cellent condition. $800. Moqut. ~ 2 • 21 P'Y & white, you n g • Option to buy m 9uo Evtr)'thlnc from wltl to CUSTOM western e. minibike. Lie. for street. N~ Blvd., CH. ~ 10110 · C.B.. unttt-~ Best otter. Call ft!Ul'tlme Take tt anywhere! Call !.'VD 673-106'9 HEADQUARTERS *CASH TOR .ANTIQUD * 1WO Sm.an Be&cle pups. SEARS 23" Ctm.o!e 'N, $TS KIRBY vacuum clH.ner &: 83'1'·9&82 eves. 548-62«) ELMORE ...... entire llbop9., 548--4448. n5 Thu r In , = ~cta:....;;;reo ~· attachments, Balance $55-12 l RANSPORTATION Mo I GLAS ~ etc. S0.7Sll CM. 10110 .. .,.,_ or $7 86 per mo Credit -torcyc " 9300 15300 Beada Blvd Wstmnstr t======::::::::;:, :ICQWE ,,_ ...,.,, ""°" RCA TV 23" Tolb<. Goodpto. DeoL ~'1289 • Boots & Yachts 9000 HONDA '6'1 S-90, 1600 ml. ·:.: J:i ~~ ...... ~ Phone~ hwi'!·MMhlMI 1.12' •btime. . QI.II aft.er 5 • ture. $4.1. ~'7216 POOL TABLES, TfMls '!'bis, HAVE f\ln wlth a cb.aracter w/tcrambler aoces. Xlnt Submit ~Ql.0311 eve. '66 TOYOTA US1 llfGDl ._ ,,1_., ·~'15 10112 Poktt Tbis, E ir etc I• f n i bol.t BAHAMA MAJIMA, cond. $300. W-E889 Station wqon, tta blue ext., ...-. -,_ i---crib • mattr.,., "'° HI.fl & St 1210 Equ!p. •< .U.OOunt prtce,. World le'"""' :a, O>mler '6'i BSA Lltl'>llllat< 65 0 · PATSUN with matdolna blue lnl Muot $1395 ELMORE 1969 DATSUN THE WORLD'S IEST $2000 CARI DATSUN/2 All new for l••fl D•hun/J Door. Gr11t tide, llen1Uin9 96 HP perforrnene1 i nd 11 le11t 25 "'·P·I· ec:onorny. Flilly lnd1pend1nt teer •111· p~n1lon, front di1c br••••, w1ndow1-up fr11h 1ir 1y1• tern, do•1n1 of no-colt e•· tr11 1dd up; Oihun/2 Door . • • T~e Wo,ld'1 11.t $2000 Cid NOW! Wa •r• THE Oeel•r for tha World'• Most Adv1ncad 4 Wh••I Oriv• DATSUN PATROL WIU PI0,1 IT TODAT Inc b'i:iN i'ISJo). TOcldt.o. =: ~ Blnltwn-ereo Call Wallace. 5.l&-0311 ACE power. Rum tint, Matchlils Buco helmets. 11 1ee to appreciate! s Sdp., -----• 1'llU STERm • 1969 Unlvenal • GOOD Ut$ED CARPEi'-""""""" work&, ....U..t °""'"" -$8!0. -,67 DATSUN ,./OD, dlr, ,..,, ...., ..... 11 •------..i 1'o l •a, tt ltn 4 '-e• 1 , 'IARGEruM>er tree· JO.I dW; llOUd •late 1 conaol.e model. ING. SAORIFICE 15c PER omition thtOqholJt. Smoke '67 TRIUMPH ~le. Lo Statkin wqon. 4 IPd. dlr dow. $85 Cub dtls, take old.-GEORGE .,.,_"I --..,. !141-Ml llll!2 IJKE NEW. 9a1...., 183.00 YARD! 611-USJ otadl" pehn .... Ind..... mlleege. Mils! ..UI All<.,. exoellmt condition. WW " ''" Pymnu 139.00 "'°· ZIMMERMAN J'uD )ldcl. $lT.IT • _.. • ORANG& kibbJ ldttfona or •mall pymnts. CttdJt NF.Mt new. OoQc:b $50 Mq be aee1 •t kr'k*tre'I K'1P 673--0193 me, tte $125 cub dtllvtn 49M773 ·Gt 5.f6.0634 SUO mo. Call .S2.\4S S6omt 10/11 ~ ~!:.c, .., iat.tw' ~ J15 ~e =~:'") •1517 • Honda 250 .. Scr•mb1e r ~ tab ~ trade. 81.ISJEST ~ In t>ClfT 1UST .... _... J"ftEE PU Palfn lrtt:I. You ap '°>" JOG no kmcW need. · l9' <JmJS atAFT l*1N'd $250 * * * 5'l6-3fM Make paymsita Of $39.88. --. 'I1w DAILY Pn.OT lltloc • -,_ -dlt< Ac bouL -I0/11 ..0 """' ""' _,. with DIAlo-MMm. °""""' motor. Cood condlitc... First It y"" M In our dullllobt C' 11 after U. '9U773. a, ... .,. ..-. s.w ........... """ .... i'Rii . ,. .... ·-...... a-.. -.,,.. --... -sit -and $1000 -· 2912 w Caul --will be -... -· --.. .-. ..... ..,,, (JrrdOed Ml. . tcMCM • I 10111 todqt .. to ..... rlbct lfw7 .. Mn&r"• olftc.f; N.O. .. DW M).STI Dial &Gall far R.ISULTS DOWl!I. \ • • ___ . ___ .... ---..----------~-~---~------~--~-----~~~~-~~ .... -. ---·-----~~---.. .......... .-........_. ___ ~~---. DATlUN SALU AN D lllYICI PHONI 140-6411 2141 H.._ l rN.. .....M_ ' -' • • .. . • • .,. t~' .... ,, ' ' ' l l I 1 I ·-!" ' ·-:~ :· • i.; • • ' ·-. . ! 1 :~ i ... . • '.'\! .. ~ ~. " ' -... ·:. : ... • c ., .. • .. . . ,, .. .... ., ... ... ,. .. .. . . . ... . • .. . . '=· .. I:.• ;; :~ ... ": ::· ·' .I :! :; .. ;·, ·) :. .. "' ·~ " " •• ., ., ., " " " .. .. .. .. " ., " .. " '• .. '• '• .. '• '• .. '• '• " .. ,• ··: " .. " :: ., .. •• .. :; :1 ' ;: •! ! " • l '.i " ~ i, ; • TRAN~PORTATION TRANSPORTATION • • ! Imported Aut.. 9600 Usod Can . J :;;;:;.:.;..=..o.;.;.;..;;...._ 9900 Ufocl Cus 9900 Used Carw VOLVO IUICK CHEVROLET -DODGE -1--------:,1---------1968 '63 BIJIO< La s.bn. Air NICEST CARS '<2 DOOOE Dut 440. Good '• MUSTANG vg. J.uto !~ VOLVO' cmd. Power •tterln1, IN ORANGE COUNTY mech C'Ond. Good"'ttres, nu tn.nl. 1"i,OOO mt. Prlv. ~- ---- :·-brake1. Reblt f:D&, $850 'Sl aa:v. IMPALA. SUPER p11nt. $Ill)_ Wknd/e•e. Copper color. Hi-II ~ .,....., •• ,...,. .. u .. 1'.ll'Vf cub. 673-4815 SPT.,. SllYft' metlLWc bl.ue,_673-"'5=="=·=====1 Blaupunkt AM-FK. aarp~ t ru-.tt.M ......_........~ 'G3 BUICK Wildcat Coovert. with cootruthW: tQteriar,1"' Ex.cdlent Coadltion! .$1,495. 1 l Full ,...., ....-""'" Looded with ..-.. Aboo-FALCON 615-nH a111"" -an $ lmia woric. MUlll: .elll! AM,...f« baldy Immaculate. -&o;,~-==~~~~ ~ . ~· 6'13-m93 -, UOOS '~!_.ALOONGood J\ltun.. ~ 1i8 MUS'TANG. 13,000 mlles. I ' IMPORTS ELMORE ~ .. ..... -::,, ...,ii~, 8'1-UTI :·. TOYOTA-VOLYO __ c_A_D_t_u_•_c__ .....,,. ... MUSTANG V-8, '89 cu In: ~ 1996 Harbor, c.M. 64!)..9303 NICEST CARS TQ~ 1154 FALCON, 2 dr. • eyt Power •tr'r. Air cond. . T ·VOLVO, a:ood engine, IN ORANGE COUNTY m1,11t telt immediately, P'i•· 13,000 mt . .$ZIG. 347-lm I <-...d. ··---'· 4'100 Ph. &!K-3320 pty, 6t6-868l • ~ J-... W\,11,..,,, ~ • '65 CADll:LlAC Cpe!. DeViUe. 15300 J\Mdl Blvd W1tmn1trl='°'===--,,,,-=;:-:. :-< 64SM<i Poleyellowwlthliackleatbo " 'tl6 FU'l'URA STA WAG 6 OLDSMOBILE : e; P 1800 S, xlnt cond. Low et interior Air cood and all CHEVY Statiaa W-con. 1963 cyl, auto tranl, RIH, very 1-------- ;--·ml Air, OD, th + stereo. GM ~. ol ~.Trull' ~ewa cyl. A~ &Oandld dean. $13$. f94..6140 og OLDS ·_,~ ~-~l1~ lll f"IM:ll OA'l ....... .be. tiful tomobll ,.,._ a.nur. aeon uo;iur MR, aJr, &Wt ....--Vh" 11e • .,..._. . .......-~ a au au e. .., tailpte carpeted. Power FORD 116).<319 : Antlquft, Classics 961 S ! 1!-o. J,929HUDOCIN,exce ll e n l :'. med>enical and running : · •· cond. Extra pe.rta:. Belt of· fer. Clll .tter 4 PM ~4-2888 to match this anywhere at steering • ndio • one owner -1---~ 01.DS. { tr. Radio. ... -veey gwd cond. Wblte wan 4 SPEED pb. 1135-R""'l Good ELMORE .:--::. ,;,~:'1.ct SPECIALISTS -·· Call 6™001 MOTORS llr, IW1 ""''new ""' A HIGH ~ERFORMANCE ''8 OUl6 98 4 Dr.-J.Jr,cood,. TOYOTA pa1nc A-1 cone!. Oda .... .,. CUSTOM CARS ~f""""°X:.;,:"'· Pb. -11<16. 54>-"88 LARGEST SELECTlON IN Autos Wanted 15300 Beach mvd., Wstmnstt '56 mEVY Wqron, 2 ck, ORANGE COUNTY i..;...-------l --Ov,,.-.,""ll>:;-__ -::,,0:1968'='-ltlck. Now polnt • tmerior, Selected Alda 9700 PLYMOUTH WE PAY , . . Preriously owned ater!q, 4' mlD)' utr;a. $3'1'5. l956 PLYMOlml Sta. Wp . CASH * Cadillacs * 548-40CIJ • "" Center "'nck. New ~tecy, &ood All colors; mod~, ft1ll '62 QIEVY Bel Air, 6 C)'I. 4 Ulm Harbor Blvd. S!T-t646 tire&. $1'15. 675-5160 :~ pwr, air ccil)dltioain&. ~ steering, R/H. ~ '67 FORD WAGON, Squltt 1--======== . ·: · r.r ...< can A -Just Save up to $15001 · ""'"""· xlnt cond. 22,000 PONTIAC '.:·· call ua tor tree utimate. ALLEN '63 CHEV f 01, sedan, V-8, or1g m1. under ~ 1------, --- GROTH (HEYROlfT Ol-obile-Cadilla< "powe. •toe-o '1 g l n al $2900. 962-8311 NICEST CARS · ll50 So .. O>a.st Hiway owner. Reu! 642-tBU '6.'t FORD Fairlee 4 Dr. IN ORANGE COUNTY ; •. Ask tor Sa.lea Manapr Laguna Beach 494-l!M • '58 IMPALA Xlnt cood New brakes auto trans '86 PONTIAC GTO Hardtop ; ·" 18211 Beach m., '67 ELDORADO tbruout, air cond. Secrlftce! radl.o, aaklng, $450. 494-Cru, Cpe. Silver areeu with black ' • .J Hun~~eacb Pul'f: white landau toP. 548-8339 '64 FORD F~lane, 4 *· llndau top. 4 °" the Aocr. --=:::---;; '-'----French Dare red bottom. Has • '55 CHEV 283 4 speed. Wg. All power • xlnt con-Immaculai. -.nd lhJwtoom :. .. Will Buy ... _... ...... AM-FM/ Good """'' """ -· 1175. dltlon, '""" 545-1675 ,..,.._ :.". . dlr/sfeno, alr, full pwr. $285 Call 8.17-5500 FORD 1966 FAIRLANE CUit. $l295 '.~...: Y01D' Volkswacen or Ponc:be' cash deb!: or :-vm take ~Ider '62 STA·WGN, ~-Air, tact. sOO 4 dr sed. Fact air, R&H. • & pay top dollars. Paid (or trade. Will finance pnvate air, auto, Rf,H, asking $850 aean. $1S60. 615-4899. ELMORE :·,_., or not. Call Ralpb party, alter 11, 494-9773 or or posstbl.c trade. 540-4614 .... _ MOTORS o:Ac ,..,,,A 'li6 FORD Ranu""'ro, ·30,0CQ ''' 673-D YD ~~. --mllet. Red w/ blk int. TOYOTA ·'"I-~==-,,==,--'68 CADIU.AC Ope De Ville CHRYSLER Xlnt! Owner, reas! 894-2616 Pb. fl9.4.3320 IMPORTS WANTrn Ex~tive car, loaded, im-·--,64 FORD Galaxy 500 2 Dr. 15D) Beach Blvd .• Wstmnstr . •: Orange Counties mac. Pri pty. B d. & in . '68 NEWPORT HT, Pl. XlDt cond.; auto. trans. 4 SPEED ~ TOP S BUYER 642-7346 R/H. A1r cond. Red w/bl.k Good tires. U!XIO. 646-4339 ' BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '65 COUPE De Ville. Block, ·'··' top. 6,000 ml. War--'="==""="==== SPECIALISTS 1 -18881 Beach Blvd. ... .. ..,. - ; •·: H. Beach. Ph. 847-85.55 full power. Nu tire1. Xlnt ranty. $3595. 673-1746 LA SALLE HIGH PERFORMANCE • CADILLAC ~~late ""'~ Sacrlll"'! COMET CUSTOM CARS l_ ~ PRIVATE n•"TV '40 LA. SALLE aq>e w/ '54 LARGEST SELEX:I'ION' IN -· c-vu" '64 CDUPF. De Ville. XlDt CadUla ~-dk : ~ _ WANTS LO MD...F.AGE 1968. '62 CX>MET Sport Coupe Xlnt c C1J5....,, grem. ORANGE COUNT'l :·~·-* 64.Ul64l * eond. Full leather. All ex-cond. New &es &: batteQ>. XJnt cond, runs very wen. Selected Auto tras! Prl prty. Call 541--4574 Priced right. 833--0138. Must sell from eatatl!, $475 : : ~ WANTED: Small, : ~c transportation car, : .. $100. 642-7241 good """" days of 645-2663 eves. or best oiler. 494-8185 Center -- CA MARO CONTINE!!!°AL . MERCURY ROY CARVER ' 9900 --------1 ·oo caIT. 2 door by Owner! 1-------- Usod Carw NICEST CARS • --·~·e, lull -... '67 MERCURY °'-· Full PONTIAC CAR? IN ORANGE COUNTY ':J: c. [;.ft.er, ~~. p)Wer. Yellow w/ bl~ in~ • ; __ NEED A '67 Camaro -SUnburst gold easy. At $3500.!! 644-1456 terior. Xlnt cond. 18,tKXl ml. -~Bl., Colla MMI ; CAN'T BE FINAN CED'f with contrasting Nack inier· 642-7423 eves. ~9661 ~L ,Kl 6-4444 ' ';-' eBanlaupt'!' ·~t VB · ed1 01 .it kir. Automatic trans., • CORYAIR 0ranp eountTa am.tft "·'' .... Cr tt • VO!'C ........ -· -with . MUSTANG Deal" ....... -........... : . -..' e MWtary e New In Area! · :., Make Payday Payments extras. Polittvely beeutifUL '65 CORSA. 140 hp, 4 1pd. Bm-."1-;;.-· -=-.,,--,.-,,,-,--1 McCARTHY MOTORS °"" blk. mt """ l """ Xlnt NICEST CARS '67 Pontiac Sprint ,... 10> So. MaJ.Q A Edin&:er ELM$11950RE ~:'Lo mUeaJ.e. ~ IN ORANGE COUNTY LOADEl>! Like new thnl-out. l2 blocks N. of Seus) '62 <DNVT. Ow:rhld trans. '97 Mu&tang Sport Olllvertl-Thia car bu bad LOVJNG Santa ftna Pb 542-3507 RfE Very good cood. $485. ble, ~ ~ blue CARE. $150 Ct.Sh dels, dlr WE MOTORS * 96Z4018 * with mow white top, 6 cyl. or f1M older trade. Take PAY CASH TOYOTA automatic, loeded with ex· Jaw payments. After U, FOR Ph. .....,,., CORVETTE ""'· P"'ect lo• the pl ""'1'13 o• """"34 Transportation Cara .LS:m Bea.ch mw .. Wstmnstr --------~bound. Only We Carry Our Own Contract! 'ST CORVErl'E wf '61 32'1 $1895 . • 5th AMivonary """""' CHEVROLET eng. Leoo thon 2,000 ml on ELMORE '40 P'ONTIAC, Collector'• Item! 57 ,(OJ orW mi. Xlnt l'Di· cond, i owner. Bnt ot- ;: :;.: The Q:mm...Ut;y! --GB.·~·~• radiator, . . '.'.·_., Newporter Motors NICEST CARS , · """°'· &... ,... • ,.,; · MOTOftS ler, --" IN ORANGE COUNTY -""-F!"C"'I to ,en . TOYOTA RAMBLER -. , 2036 Harbor Blvd. , II ick Sacriflce! $700. Cell before 4 _:: 548-5294 548-851.1 62 <bevrolet too. p _up, l:lm:t~66-.z338; aft 6 pm Ph. ~ loog bed Fleet Side, lime ,m.bzu or 646-9295 15.lJQ Beach Blvd., Wstmnatr '80 RAMBLER PS A: PB, '63 COMET Custom dlx, dlr, green and positively a.a sharp 'S1 ~-CORVETT E 283 .67 MUSTANG; sbarp, fully new ipaint. $350. 847-2657 fact air cond. Xlnt cond as can be -make a beauU· automatic; '525· Oean. 3223 equip., fact. warranty, lJke i .::•an=alt~"=''=pm."===-~w' thruout. S&5 Cash dell, take ful camper. ;._,_ ...... """ CM 545-0017 new! 673-4349 EYl!!L' SOCK IT 10 'EM! ,.·. pymnl& $33.86 mo. 494-9173 Only $1045 ~~~~~~·· ~-~-==::::=ll":C="""=====~==-=====:::::I BUICK ELMORE DODGE Sport Cara 9610Sport Cars 9610 .·.~· 1957 Buidl: Roadmuter Xlnt : -cond. One owner. Asking : . •r $..\%. 546-6m aft ~ MCYI'ORS '68' Dodge Charger TOYOTA Immac, dtr, v~. automatic, Ph. 894-3.DI radio &. be9.ter, loelled! Ex· ism Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr cellent condition. French ORANGE COUNTY CENTER FOR : .• BUJCX 'ffi Skylark. Fact air, :-J power steerg, Xlnt cond. • $13X). Pri ply. MZ-3148 '64 CHEV Impala 4 Dr. pearl gray, blade l&ndau ' - Hard~. Xnlt condition, Jo leather top. $285 Calh deb, SPO mileage, factory air. Radio. make payments. 494-9773 or 67 BUl(]( RIVIERA $1350. 675-4529. 545-0&M All tbt Extra.a: $3400. 548-4825 '66 IMPALA Conv, power '64 D<X>GE Of.rt GT, 4 spd '----------S/B, air conditing. Excel VPr-273, bucket seats, $825. : . ' . : ;: QIARGE your want ad t'IOW. cond. $1895. 673-350'l or best offer. 548-8215 :-.. I ~"'=======-:..======~~====== 1 :..... %00 1mport9CI Autos 9600 Imported Autos :j 1;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ :~ :~ ... :~ [i ,.; -1968 AUSTIN AMERICA- IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON HUGE INVENTORY of • MGB GT Cpe • AH Sprite MGB Rdstr • MG Midgets • NEWPORT IMPORTS LTD. 1100 Vf. CQAST HWY. NEWPORT ' BEACH 642-9405 =-......... 540-1764 • '66 SUNBEAM TIGER. Orange with a black hardtop. Perfect running and a car you would love' to own. '1999 Book of $2600 Now Only ' '64 TR 4 HARDTOP. A car with a beau- tiful price. Book of $1690. '1299 • Now Only '66 TR 4A. Red rNdster; one of our bet~ ..,. Triumphs of 11 to chooH '"""' lloolt of $2145. '1999 Now Only '66 SPITFIRE. You wlll bo GREIN with anvy ownlnt thl1 one. '1399 Only ' '63 KARMANN GHIA. Metallic blue paint l!f'lth tokf pin atrlplftl, Interior deluxe. Saa thl• -nowt '1299 , Only , '64 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE. lilrgondy hd with black Interior. Ilka S 1199 •new. Only '66 TRIUMPH SPITFlllE. Beautiful 0... ante 'Fire color with black s 1399 • Interior. , Only '67 DATSUN ROADSTER. llack with rod '"'*"°"' ene owner,.._ m11..,., hanl- lop .... ..,.. Only '1999 '63 -'65 and 2 '66 COllVETIES c:.-...................... .. ............... ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA • '" __ .... __ 11)00 ••• ell thcl. ff4-JJ22 " 'l"I 11'1 .,. Tl••ld<r. °'"""' 10, 19611 . Brand New 1969 Valiant 'fUIAtlttttff ' $~114 ii. •1111 . ' Ate>. • '67 CHRYSLER TOWN &: COUNTltY STATioN WAGON ' VI, •Ufom1tic, r•di1, h••t•r, pow•r 1t•1 rh\g, pow., br••••, f•ctory •Ir coriditl11Jng, Elicollori c .. 41- tion. low mil1•g1 . (XSP271 ), s3495 Excellent S•lection of late Model Stetlon Wegons •.• Most Mak.es and Models Available '65 RAMBLER 110. VI, eut11111tl c, r1dio, h11f· or, po]'W•t 1t11ring, power br1•11, pow•r window1. IN&S- 4111 $1295 '63 CHRYSLE~ '66 FORD f •irlent 100 w11011o Vt, 1ufo. m1tlc, r1dl1, h11t.r, olr coridl· tloril~, IRYS491 1 $1795 '65 DODGE ' JOO Co11¥1rtlbl1. VI, 1ufoM1flc, Coron•t 100. A11t1m11tlc, Ndlo, rtd!o, h11t1r, ,_,, 1 ... rln9 I )t11ter, pow., 1t11rl11f, 1lr cori• l.r•k•1, •Ir e•llditionh1g, IOKN. llltl ... 1119. IPAJ l161 1721 • $995 '67 VALIANT •edl1 end h11t•r. Fvlly fectory •ci•lppN. ITMCOIJI $1595 $169$' '65 DODGE 'ol1r1: Autcim1tlc, r1411, h11+. 1r, p1w1r 1t11rin9, vl!'yl r1off elr c0fldlff911lflt. C •TTI '61 $1695 'ti4 CHRYSLER ' JOO. 'A.iitorn1tlc, r1,4t., M1kf, ,..,, d1wln1o 1ir 1.Mltlonl1•, IPUX27t,I $149'5 . I '65. FORD LTD 2 400!'• A11t0fll1tlc, r1t:ll1, h11l- 1r, power window•, 1t.1rlnt1 br••••· •ir comlitforil119, Llrid1• top. IPIJOJ.4 1 $1595 '64 PONTIAC St1rchl1f. VI, ••to-He, nille, ai.1t1r, pow1r 1k9'lri9, foctory 1lr •. 1 °'."'."''·· lwctt•I l $1295 All JN'lc .. plu1 ,,·. ond Ileen ••. Pil'l111 9ood 11~!111 10 P·"'" S11nd1.Y.' O ctobor I J.1 All p•ymont1 .,.. b11od o• l/J tlow11 wi th 16 '"'"th' fl111ricln9 •nd in~lv~.• t1., llc11"111 11t4 lnto,.tt. • • I I ---·-,,,..-- "' " t ••• READ All ABOUT IT I ' . •• l• Salute to Our 709 .. Nation.! Nenpopoltloy Dl7 next Sa~ bao . ..., lit ""'" to bonor lbe ~I bUJlnessmen, a mil· llllD ct ll>ml, ln '1116 UJlltecl Statu and Canada. ,,,. DAILY PILOT ba1 70t .flt th ... Independent .-llllldwib brlhgt;Ji the world to the doonleps Cit a;ooo Onnce e...• homu .very weekday, earning '1Jf,OO(), and In the pl!>Ceos gelltlng practice! trlllnlnC In l!!e .. fulid1menta1 oystem ot American free enter-~ lllCI tnillvfduel inlllative. :, Wo Jai11 their CUIUJnml In 1elu1lnc these fin• '°""' mm. ,' 'Yo.liticill Eyes on C.Ounty Final voter Ie&Utral!on !!gureo f1lr the November G-.1 El6Ctloil now dtiar!y establlm that two lnlerut-1111 tNmjla are lit wqrt In our own region. Flrot, °=e County became the 1ecoad largut la 1116 'lltate oveftll numben ot reg!Jtered voters. 01ir ~ euaed San Dleco .Counly to ce1n that honor. nae~: orange County, ill0,880 voten; San Dleco ND,wu. •1....... Skmdly, the Ori!\ft County flcureo lndtcated .lbat .,.. Gil tile <>ranee ·Oout, nrllleted wten are today '"" iwn lrmly enlnnchecf In the ~llcan m• ~~ Beach cl~y Is the mcNt GOP d\y on our ~ wfth 11,585 registered Republicans to only 5,855 ~. j more than 3 to 1 111lijorlty for the Grand Old J!iitt. 1n Laguna Beach, the GOP rimelns' aolidly In cfulrge, 5,690 to 2,819 for the Democrats. Costa Meoa . ~, ~cty Republican with 18,BIO voten to the ~ 12,oee. lla'tbe lteakdown by cltleo._tbe figures show an In-~ change In Huntington .oeoch, wbti"e Democrat. h&vo drilpped ft-om • prevloua majority ot about 2,000 'ioten to a poeltlon aome 2,500 iby ot majority. 'lbe Oll1y Ora!\fe Cout city ltlll with a iqajorlty of. Is . President Too · Powerful? ,.,,. .dice et .trealdent." Woodrow M.' Nlxoo, the Republican nominee lor W ,1 lil o n. -' Aid.· ••ttqutra the ~ President Jn lJ80 and again thll year, on stllutlo!D 411. an athloie, Ula pou....; of o Sept. II, 1118. Nbon llld In a noUonwldt macbel, lbO endtirance !I ID eerly Qui>. radio broedcalll that "the day1 <I a tlall." , · puilve Prealdeoey belq lo 0 limpler 'l'lll l'n4idenl <I ,Ibo Uoltad.l!lalu la ujMoC:tod • lo· -wlldom,. co¢<r, pall." He. added' "'!be om President =-~· ind-per!lapl -·Iii> · mUll take an ac:Uvtsl mw <I his office. · 411 _-. -.. w........., He .m1111 artlculala the· oatlon'1 valuos, -·--tlll''illtJ p,.,jdoat lo clelloelllpllanclmonhallllwlll." -,ll04 ill " _,.__ Ills • MC;tf!llli bt'fl .. Mind tbe ACHYD't PRlllDl'.N'l'I art hlJbly Pr'dM1•·d ...... r 7 I esteemed by hilbr1w wbl rW ddif ..... -In -cl -el· 1o1f ,_ ............... -., ... *·cm . fed! ..... 'lbt h PIMMenta 1emn.111 ti:z=.,t1111-..-1-)a,leevhleit o•llL.1eftd .. put" -Ll•eola, Ml -Ilic .lilllol," J-~ Wullinglna, II'. D. -..it, WU-. Jef. --madt lull .... of the _. . ..-_1o them.. Uncolo. -· estab~ in latltol7 DOW power--Ole .. President'• 0 war poftr" -whktl hll succe-. hive Uled In U-'1 oaUooal ~I'!--alwoys create reseulmenl In C<lalnu Ind amOD& t.be public, even when they are ~. Al a rault, ae,tlvlat Prelldenll ... ofteo IUC<ltded "' paalve Praldenll. Lincoln, for ...,.pie, WU IUCOtedtd by Grant; Wiilon by Bar· dinl: Truman by Eile.00..... TO, MAJll& Aft&lC'ftON <I the J>rilldlDc1 ·u die .;,..tw11y It allonll tor !»:-.<I ·-· Today0 the Prllidl!lt Is tho moll powerful man In . THE JOHNSON PRl!:ilmENc:Y bu lho1world. '!be llWI wbo occupleo the ol-produced • limllar reactfan. lUdwd ftct enttaJnflotnCt: not only c:n the fate Rovere write• (New Yorker, Sept. a , <I lill 1Wf .,,,...,, but l1lo on lllllt <I 1111) tbat Sen Eugene J. McCarthy "won ~ ~ the world. lrlelids and influenced people by llvinl • Fow colidlditoi ior '1'risldent, bo.iever .. the. lmpreal.., lllat 'lllo Wlilta House haft mtlled-prlor to elect!on hot!' they would be • quieter place ll he 1ot the lntendtd· if lialt tbe. 'JIOftfl 'of the ottlce. next leue. He even .went u far u to IUI· ooe actplloo 11u John F. Kennedy, wllo plll lillll he mlPt sublet It and make bis In a J.....,.,. 11111 1J1ffCb doc~ lllllt home -·" tho odl.l'ftolilenl ,''must be prepu<d to II 'bu beOD ~ from time to -die 1111 NDat poirm <I bis olllce -thne lllllt tho hunlens Ind powen .i the alt that .. specllled and , oome lllllt are Praldeney be reiluced by adoptinl ..,,. not." ~ .. • , IOJ't ol parllanient.ary pernment 1n A slmlllr spoecill wu made by !llcbard which the Preldent would act u Prime ! Mlniltet. SUCb a change WU recom- .-:...-, •• Geotye --, Dqr Qeor1e: . I flt~'. wrltlOo you three Jetlers an4 -wtih' Udi one I enclooed o lt&ii;P, lar' your reply. Now' can't renstmber either U you replied, or whit m1 priWim II. ·Do you lalow wbll my ~ "' A. W. Dolt.A. w~ 111. )'ou .,... IWnpL Dear.Oeord;. Do you think tt•s unhellllly lo wut ai gtrdle? ' ' ' ·, , · , MAY I>w ai.y , ' . ' ' I bi~ no ldeo. If you lnalat .., oenbnaI ~ Ul:I thot, honftr1 htatth wun't a fad« In 1111 laeliloo. n wh the I'll'• In the loclier.~.-. '"''lh'iic <W '"'!' ,...,._ 1o O-CO ....... Utile,.. ... --· r11nC lid ult K 1<r 11kot ponlc.) Dllf<!-P· All 11!1 ""1 fllon4 .,.., ..... lo .... -......... dnock.11 _..*'r ,..,. I -pt111m lo ............... _., ~ *-7: . n&llT Cll I , 'a. ...... bllll tblt ..ioljl lo.-.... ,_... __ ,. __ ,,Ibo_ ~--....--and ~ ":-....: 1!" ,::i Jr': ... -. .. ' MIJlll _.., to c.ar.. I --~;;"~tTio: I'll )Iii ·-") ' mended u early u 1914 by Henry C. Loe-In a book calted Tile Abo!ltlon " the Pruldeoey. Lockwood malntalned tbat there wu no e:ff~ve check on prtlld~nUal power, for '"I?be senUrnent DI hero wcnhlp, which to a treat edent pn:valll amonc the ~-'people, will mlorte him." However, "Witb the deltrucUon of !nlldeoUal and the ulobllalunent " repruentaUve coo.greaaional aovermnent we could, wllll lmpuntty, place any 111111 ti the held " the -·· Branch. were be QeVeJ' 10 bad, amblUoul and in- effldent, far 1t would then be known that at any moment be could .be nlltved from the CU'U of ttate ... IT 8-" BEEN SUGGESTED Ibo lllllt u many u ll Vice Preaiduta be elected wllll the Pmldenl. Some " lhl Vlco Pmldenll would IUperviae lndlvlduel departmeots; u Cabinet 11erelar111 do today; othen would -the Pmldlfll In polley l«mullllon. 'llio ot>JedlYO would bl to ...U.v. the President <I trtvtll matters ond enable him lo de..W bll fllll attentloo lo Important dlclll<nl. ~la lo relilnn the Pnoldenq ilaYI DOI fared will lo tbo pul, --" --Tllo ..,q .. -<banlo lllat .... -IP' proved liDce War\! llor n lo the - --lo the ~ wbldl · :i~-1o111oi-~- Eliari11 .. tllO -In -" a. ... clllad .Brlcl:lr -lo nVilo ad c1art(r the tl'eolJ -"""' """'"' II _. bJ !ear <I Ujlltad Natl<ns .,. cnwhnw!t an American dGlntlek llW u lly -lo -the~·· ,. ..... -. Jl'atu. ·'1 -ellolta -~ -..... llRl>able -''"" lbat, for .... ~-. tloo .,q -... ..-.. -wtD 'bo -__ .,Ibo_" illl Glllco -· ~·" ....... , Domocntlc voten11·Wertm1mter with ll,881 """"""4 with 9,077 voten for the GOP • One 1ni-tJnc lidelllht ot Ille telly U.. tn the P1nt made by the two new poU,UW parties mo!d!\f their ap-~anca In tbla the 1968 preslcfenllal conteot. CollHrY• live Orange County otte<ed 7,059 memb<n ot GeotP Wallace's American Independent Party, wb...., tile llbenli Peace and FreOdom Party manaaed ti> 1et only a 1mell foothold of 1,097 ~ed voten. Come November 8, however, pollUcel oboemri wlD ....., the real polUlceJ, cllmole of Oran&• Coun\y I• from the Nll<>n-Humphroy vote (which all q:ree ti>ould ,, bo hMvUy Nil<on} than kom the Cranaton·Ratferty oui.- ccme and'from the ihowini mode by Georp Wellaco. An'! way you :new I~ Orange County Is 10Inc to be blc. polil!ca! news In Colllonila and 1Cr001 the mitlon. ~n of Near Disaster '!be d""1uctton by fire tut weekend ol 180 acres o! walerabed in Ali4o CanYon neer Laguna Nlcuel homes -occurring ironically oo the eve ot Fire Pr&- •-Week -demoortrated two leasom. The first II that Dlvisioo of For~ crews In Orange Oounly have beccme e:rpetl In mi>vlng eftec· tlvely to control and utingulsb brush fires threatening the life and p,_rty ot canyon dwdlen. Tbe second lesson ls that the art of eliminating or (really reducing the risk ot brush fires ls 1WI a prim!· five one. After each minor blaze iJ squashed there ii a collective sigh ot relief. After each major dlsuter- sucb as last year's hM>o-dutroylng Cowan Heights ftre -there is an outcry tor the deveiopment of 1ub. sUulllve measures to ellmlnate the fire peril ot canyon li~OmaPI Fire P""'ention Week la an aUJpldoU. occasion ·to begin ulr:tng serl01Uly how this hazard can be tamed. •• ·,.· ... • , f;r. \!. .. !~; :! . ·~' . . '· ·-:" . . ' -..:. ... •• .. ·.' ---------------------""•' Dear Gloomy Gus: Say, I just saw the movie "Dr. StJngelove" on television the ether ni1ht. Now shouldn't General Le- May demand equal Ume? -L. V. G. ~arriage Taboos Need Revisions To the Editor' ~y IWTll llrll" again (DAILY !!ILOr, Ocl. IJ~lllll. -at the and.en! 'order or to-qalnat ar1111lsed mor- rlafo and --' coonselJni. Why ls 'It that we have no uniform counes In thele moet euenUll subjoc:ll! Then should bt •' compulaorJ' courae Jn every hlib IChool oo "Husbandry ond WHS'J" u well u one on how to brtna up ihildra Tbese ~ two ol tbe mOlt important jobs a young man and woman have to lace, and yet then 11 no real help from tcbool. Posalb~ lt II ~IUIO (I) Jll"llU differ u to what COlmHlln( ii pr-and (2) DNch (lj tho advice would undermine Iba porenll method I« """1ni with their ahlldn!ol Let'.• uswne that there ii a areat deal Ii Information that la ladual, lllllt these ....... -vttan, ....,Ual "" the wettan <I the -aenerauoa, Ind take the pl11111e. BJ!:RNAHD BARTON ltlore .., Cleover To the Edlto" When tax supported unlverllUes be&ln 1eeting out tbe Ekirldae Cleavers of this world u "lecturen", the tupayer lbould better begin uklq oome perUnent que1- Uona. ' First. what kind <I admlnlltroton do we have who would. permJt the h1rinl of an individual whoa only quallflcaUons appear to be a Iona: crlmlnal recard and • vocabulery of four letter wonill Slcondllo on any crlterla UIOd In 'lele<Uon other tbao 111111Uaolllllnl Followlnl lbe Cleover act wtD be tough, llut I-fully Upecl the scbooll lo come up wllll oomo nil wlMen ualni Ulla ...,. pattern " ooledivtly. Far uamplt, they mlll>t •Ian a few bntMw:llel to lecture. on "mental reLlrda- dcln" Of elite Mafia memben to cover •1a:tmJnal behtvkr". A prostitute lhwld bt able to handle "blc1h control" very n1.,q. Lit'• just 1iope tb11 doOsn't 11•• the "HmJnlttraton'' an, new ldeu. M. L. SORBER .lofltm """' -... ...leomf. Nonnaflr wril«rl 11lould ..,..,.. U..lr ... _, 11< 100 toOnll or 1<11. TM tiQ/11 to ~ llttm to fl• rptJC• or cUminatc Ubtl Cl f'trcrved. AU let. "'1 tt\Vll l!l<ludo 11gtt411lro O!ld ...a. Ing oddr111, hi ......, tDill be tolll> llcl4 .. ,,qou1. . Quotes Higla Court Faces New Attack ··:' '•' 'Peacenic' Stays Hit ... WASHINGTON -Al the U.S. SUl>reme Court reconvenes, It bi confronted with a oew congressional challenge Involving a caustic demand for a major procedural reform. Under tralo fire ii the pracUce whereby litigants can shop amona: the nlne justices f o r a stay en a ruling or order by another eovemment agency. Chief JusUce Earl Warren ii on em- phatic notice that unleu the tribunal i-labs .... to cmll tbll pow«, ltcltlatloa lo l'!<Clbl1 lmpole correct!ve .......... wlD .•• ...., pmaed In eooar ... ~taU" II'. Edwin! H~ !). La., cbajrnwi <I two House Armed Servtcea subc:ommltuu In charge of Na· Uonal Guard and reaerv• affairs aod the draft oeryed thlf ~'! oe11 ~~ In I sttrnly outapoUa. Jrlttlr. tDCn'I bare- tnuctled W ...... WU promi'*"d by the 1 er I e-1 of ltlyl granted by JusUce Wlllllm. 0 . Douglu deiaJinc the sblp- ment of reservllll lo Vietnam. DOUGLAS 18.TllB only Supreme Courl member to approve IUCb sla)'L In eech -he did lhla -they bod been denied by Chief JUll!ce Warren and Justlces Blaok, Brem11n, Harlan Ind Whlte. Do11g111' ltaya are clearcut caw of personal bias determlnlng his ICtlon. The 70-year~. four-times-married mllltanUy Ubenl jurist bQ ioq made oo bones of his ltrenUOUI oppoaltlon to the Vietnam war. He bu repeatedly at-- tempted to maneuver &he court into paas- lna on the legality <I the conf1lct. Lui May be wu sharply 1\apped down "1 bb coUeacues in a 7 to 1 decision upbolding a lower court conviction of a draft cant l:iumer. Dnuglu wrote a bitter dimnt, and ever""""' bu 1-1.lrylng to qaln bring Q1t laue before the tribunll. Repre.entatlve Hebert, 1n bis letter to Warren, 1eathingly c bar act e.r i 1 e d ' stays u "arbltrary and !ll -acUcm which caonot 11111 i!icl l b e alrelldy linili1iiil lmqo =r the U.S. sutftme r.ourt." C8IEr JUmCB Warren b a I tent a carefully noncommittal reply ·lo Hebert Warren'• reply II wllolly unaitfslactory lo Ho!>ert on the ground It dellberately sldeltept Iba c:ru:i ·(lj the problem. IN Bii. LEITER to Chief Justice Wll'- ren, Hebert flatly charges Douglas with !sluing one lllaf In a highly trregulM manner. 'I1t4i cue involved a company of Cleveland, Oblo, reservists who had been rebuffed by a federal district and appeall Retarded Child Drama Mixes Humor, Pat1ws 87 NORMAN NIXON, M.D. "Joe Eu", Jast .eason'r smuh bit on Broadway, dt!ala with a young couple;• conlllcta over the1r devotion for and care of their 11)-yur-old daughter, a spastic, severely retarded c::hlld. Tbe parents nicknamed her "Joe E1g," an Engllshman'1 aliu when he: finds hlm!elf wllll nothing to do. Joe ii helpless; her only speech Is whimper. SU!>jecl to sporadic fits, abe ls on-itage 1n a· wheel chair during moot <I tho ploy, quite unaw~ of the 1allows humor wtikh her parents use with abandon to reljett tbe -ond tenslono of their daily lives. Wheo .. A Doy In tho Doalll '1 Joe Eli" {abtnvl1ted to "Joe Ea" In New Y«k) wu premlered in London'• West ead, cr!Ucs delcrll;\od lbll -.mJc: n1n • ''tender," "desperately twm.y,fi-abd "brlWanl" MOil New Yort crlUcs ~ It "the belt play ol the te;ason ... 0De iaJd ''Joe Eu'' had more real mirth~ 801 other comedy co Broadway. · .. IT SEl!M8 INCONGRU~ tbol o spuUc child ond her parenll lrustralfng marrlap wouJd be tbe ralton d1ttrt1 for an enllrtalnlns comedy. Tho pi.7 cv- talnly Is hwnoraul. Bui more lmpor1an~ author P<ter Nicholl, lather <I tour clll~ oae a lle'fere "apatlc," bu dealt ln!alllleotl1 11111 fnnkl7 .wltll .. amblvaleiit feallnp ""1 ~ pro.. blems which poreols <I I mtalallJ retarded chDd must face. Tiit audlooce la wllll the porelllJ all the ...,, lo111hln( Ind cryirc too u -they- the Impact <I Joe on them and tbelr mar- riage, partlollarly wbell they act Clll the.Ir early uperleoca wltll dacton ml dero ln>m whom Ibey aouPI help 1D11 rausuranco. Aa Br! (Joe'• lather) mlmlco tho doo- ton and the mlnlater who trJo4, lo holp them, ho la tailing Iba ud llor1 " """ thejo leamecl about Joe'1 c...iltloo aed beclftlt reconciled lo It. Bit tbo 1'111 within the plot are luhlos atlrto ot-llo!r l, • 1ns1nce.. ond Inept their phyalcl11n, ciervman and friends were in their Milo atfeml!ll to help. ALTHOUGH SllEIU lharOI b er hwblpa11 J.\ah~ "aupenoom.," she conl!des to the audl<nce ' "! jolo In -jOku lo p!eue him. ll 11 htlpo him live with her, t CO'I IOI the harm, CID JOU? Ht bun't 11111 faith lht'a ever aotn, to ,improle, wtlerea9 r havB, YoU 1M. I'm alw"71 oo ~ lo!kout for 101111 siln. • 1lio pla)"tirlillt deplcta the lrqlc ~ Cl( 11cl1Qine In •lllch Iba !other la un.•ble to carry Go. In an ulde to, the al.to dlence belcn.the llnoJ ~. Brl ..,., "Our marrlqe l!\lgl>t ~ve worked 11 "'11 u -It Joe hadD t hoppened. I WU too )'OUl'll for It." Adually a mam- mo'I boy -. 'bo willowed In .lllll·pl- ty u ho Ufbl.lioartedl1 revealed his joalouoy ..... tW oUenlka bis WU. lhowm ed ca loa. tbelr plon\l Ind peta. TQDAT, A am.D lll:I Jflt 111Ua1iJ 11 plocod .... ~ -Uel llltlnl lq belGn .. Is Ii. "" Shella, with her over""wamc .,. ..a -. would not -Ibis. Hor .....,... lectiCll of J8' • ~ W*f ol U• pllllng ,.,ut. lift -lbne aed .... ,, !er her hulbaod • delprnlo!IJ - her Ion and "'-'-Had .... ---. Oil ............. .... likely Slloila sWl -· --did ber Ion .. , .... ,,...,. the olhlrl lo ...... op with Jr.willqdtto 1'lolberlnc. WOll--aeda~& clooblodly wtD -the· .. -....... ";)04 Ea" -iftd lo Landoo and llew Ycn·whiii this tlillplJ mninl pla1 -lo Lao Anpllw-- • .•· court In their eUort lo dodge actlv1t- servlce. They encountered similar d~ when they 10ugbt stays from Warren and JUBlJce Hugo Black. ·, But despite these rejections, ~ prompUy granted a stay when theJ 'ap- pealed to him. •"The somewhat biurre clrcumltul!el llmTOUndlng the Wulng " this ~ order," Hebert wrote Warren, "In ''m1 riew, clearly Indicate that J'404 Douglas WU either unn\lndful· of tbejm. pllcalioo ol.bla actJona. or wone, cl.-i. disreprd thtm entirely ••. Tbe mu.._ of tbll stay order and the a- puhUclty given It bu bad a d~ e11ec1 on no1 on1y the numy --·a dedicated and ioJll r9d'Vllll wllo are serving tl!elr _.,. .. -•• 11111 has oubjected the entire reserve_ lo ridicule ond emblrraument by i... lerenllally ~uestloolng the very - Of ltl being. I , • Hebert als9 reveales(. that a weet after llouglu Issued lbll curious lllaf, neither Heherl, the Justlce Department nor 1111 general counsel of the Army hid ... able to obtain 1 certl.fied copy of tt. •· .• S EN A T 0 R EUGENE McC,U\THY, Wllllccessful "peacenik" candkt•le lOC' Presldeol, II apparently Ondlng It borlli( to return to the humdrum wort:: OJ leglalatlng. Althoulh the Senate has been In lllllooi a month since the turbulent DemocratlC convention In Chicago. the MlnnelotaJt bu IO far been recorded on only 1J!t i.n call votes. '!be lotesl wu on Im~ cloture to bruk the lillbuJler aplnlt !Iii Fortu appointment lo ~ J~ McCarthy voted for cloture. But wblle noUceably absent from 'tlMI Senate -.. bu been hi• ~ lhrou,ilOut lbll aeuloo -Mc:Canid-Jo findlnr plenty ·of time for vacaUonlnl'W ..~,.. ... " !'8-"•z..... •"• • While bll colleagueo resumed \¥! RJ\atorlal work ,followlnc the nauan.1 coovenUono, McCarthy Dew to ;...fl!! French RJ.Viera for aeveral weQ9 ,.cif resting 1nd vacaUonlng u Ille au} mllllooalre Investment banker. Wbeii' flnall1 dl4 return to W ashlngton, d I llllned, mted Ind urdonlc.Uy the Mlnnuotan loot DO Ume In h!Wof'"" 9)C{a1 dm.Jt. .~.~~: Promlnellt imong the put!" """' tended WU poe by Coonleas Nlc:o!'i(lll Rochefort for Gloria Vanderbilt ~~ -Iba muciHnarrled belreu Who::!lif gone In lot art ond Is having -~ hlbltlon of be r palntlnp In the c~ Mn. Cooper WU a llroof McC= porter In the DemocraUc scramble Ind stqed a f\md-raiJfhg - l<r him In blr New Yen-. ," · , "Wt beUova In Senator~ much," 11Y1 Mn: Gloria V ' Cooper IOUllully. ..:~. • . . ...... .. :·' • •• ---·----------