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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-10-23 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• ---. eace rea • • . ' Anahei111 Coun~il 1Plays,. St. Patri~k~ • Drives Ont Snakes . ' -. .. . . . DAILY PILOT WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER. 23, 1968 VOL, '1. NO. US. 6 Sl!CTIOHS, M P.&Gl!S Politi~al Bombshell City -p)lice watch as demofisQ'~ march in front of Coral Gables, Fla .. Country Club pl"IJ(t8ting v~r ,,;..,, party Vice Presidential candidate Curlis J,..el\fay. AI1aheim Council Give s Snakes Walking Papers Old Patrick may becomt Ute patron -oust every snake in the cily. saint of Anaheim, following action by the 0 n l y member to vote against t h e Ci ty Council Tu~ay night to drive measure, Councilman Jack Dutton, based snakes and, maybe1.a famil,y of. snake-bla decision on a visit to the Burch home, loven as well, out ~;town. ~ be found the 1nakes well caged The Cil1 Councl,t Voled 4·\D.1~ • > .ijl ~ from escape, variimb allow!JMi die 1dlla ~ · 'no Burches maintain Iha! the non· family, of %107 JUdflll'¥ II '"9Awr poilonoUI le'l'ftllJI would aod cOuld harm boa eoostrlcton aod 1 r<>bull. to.loo! no cmt. plui lht fact lhal lhty have been python in their 1arage. ' --~ _ ~ .\o iood educational advantage in They have the ~ ~ moving,. \liaits to Anaheim classrooms. Nol contenl Wllll. drttlng • ..,,., the ' Basilfg their objectioo on lht fact that minla!UL'e ¢'•~ Ille ""'""° .i.o pe_oplt jua don"I like snake1; bowever. voled to adopl 111 ..,.,....., Wblc:ll woold lht couoC11 majorily ordered lhtm ...,. · ' within 30 days. Coast Kayaker In Semi-finals Freudian psychologisls mlgbl have some hltemU111 ebnjecture eboul '¥'" derlying eausu Ol tht cooncll'1 assump. lian lhal . ....-,-flndl "0.p.I ~It I repulsJve. ' '1.i. ~ :~~~ :,.. ...t.t. ' An American Flag tacked down as a tablecloth and topped with a serene iJn. age of the Asian god Buddha was con- fiscated early today at a Costa Mesa apartment shared by two girls and three men. The banner -which had ashes of some sort scattered over it -was glven to the Costa Mesa JXJlice investigaUoni bureau to determine whether a complaint "Would be sought. Defiling the American Flag IB: a viola- tion of the 1tfililary and Veterans Code aild Harbor Area judges have been hand- ing down some stiff sentences upon several recent convictions. Officer Dave Dye was sent to the 24.00 block of Santa Ana Avenue shorUy .after midnight in responSe to a disturbance report and contacted a 24-year-Old man. He said the man apologized for noise he had apparently caused while routinely setting out his trash cans for morning pickup. Dye said he was invited inside the com- munal apartment to see for hhfu;eli that there was no disturbance going.on and it "WU then that be spotted the Oq. 11>e patrolman said the individual with whom be spoke denied knowledge of the apparent Military and Veterans Code violation. Two girls 19·a00 21 and two other men, 18 and 19, live in the apartment and 11hart the rent equally, the eldest boimeholder told Olllcer Dye. Mail Vietna1n Packages Soon Orange· Countians who plaJI to send Chrlstmu presents to servkemen ln Vietnam should mall packages before Nov. 9, U.S. POil Office ofiicials' re.mind- ed patrooa today. The parcelt will be stored in Oakland then loaded on the USS "Santa Claus Special" which sets sail in mid-November foc 0. Nang, Qui Nhoo, Cam Rahn Bay and Saigon, Vietnam. Post OUk:e and military officia!J say the early mailing date will usure pre- hollday delivery of the g.ifll:. Packages abould be m1rked "Santa <llaua Special'" j\111 below the llampo. ranspl~ni 63 MEXICO CITY -John Glair of Newj>ort Buch qualified for Thursday's .emi·final1 in men's jl;aya.k al.ogles by plactna thlrd In hla re~e or aecond chance beat thla morning. Down lhn>ugll lht!.ag<1 -llnce Adam 3/ld Eve -anakeJ have been held lo low SYDNEY (UPI) -Allllralll'I fl1t regard, however, eveft tb the eutmlt car· heart. transplant operation bu been IUO- Tuesd1y, GlaJr finished last In hls heat ~ of I.he orpic Games con;ipcUtion. • toon strip B.C., in which one serves 11 cesafully ""1.ed out, a ,tRJUe& 1utiM everyone'I scapegoat. from St:: Vlnctnt'I Hoip\tai ia1d earl,1 Jn Lbe Fifth Century, St. Patrick Is Thursday. It was the 63rd kno'tm heart (See SNAKES, Pa1e Z) ~ lransplanL ., rou. ers 'Mesa Poli~e Grab ~meri~a:D Flag' • Used as Table~loth I :I * * ·'* ':ti * . -: .... , ,'fi;; * ... :ti , . ..,. t .. ' JI,., .:--1:1, ... f~ .::rJ. -~t;':": .r.r · r -~; '..J-. or-w--... ~.. -.. .... Carididates EXChange 'Fast, Loose' Charge·s Fl'tlm Wire Services . In a fast-winding up pre.sidenlial elec- tion campai&n that ia fast picking up steam bodl candidates were playing "fast and loose" with charges. Campaigning, W Texas, Vice President Hubert H•!..":'.'.phtey a cc u a e d his Republican opponent Richard Nixon of playing "fast and loose" with the nation 'in his choice ol a running male, among other things. Nixon, jet...toppinj; through crucial Michigan, tumtd the • aame phrase, saying Humphrey brings 1'the faset.st tongue and futest switch of poe!Uon ever seen in American politics." He cited what ·tie calleCI Hurriphrey .. lhifty position on ,Vietham and for · ~St"reet public com· ments on the Paril peace talks. Humphrey made his accu.saUon In a speech wl!,lle campaigning r~ votes at the historic Alamo, Teus' most sacred 'shrine. The vie~ president's noontime audience was composed largely of Mexkan- Americans, who in turn make up a significant, and perhaps crucial portico of the Texas electorate. Harriman Tells Harwi Humphrey, hailed by Texas t>enocrats as a "miracle worker'~ for . bringing together ,their .warring .Jeaders, ,Will find hJs healing skills in demand apin today when ~e gets to Callf~a. , . . 'Time for You to Act' Not oply are California's DefuocraUc ICaders caught in inteii»i.I party.disputes. but a sizeable nwnber of rank and file mem~rs were1,won to the• peace stands of . Sen. Eugene · J. McCartbf and are following him 1n withholding support for any presidential candidate at the ~ PARIS (UPI) -U.S. and North Y°i~t­ namese negoUators failed once mot! to- day to achieve a breakthrough on delicate steps that cou1d lead to a U.S. bombing halt and full-fledged peace negotiations. "ll h lime for you to act," U.S'. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman told North Vietnamese delegate Xuan Thuy. "The choice ill youn." But despite report& by high diplomaUc sourres Hanoi wa11 ready to talk and despite a general feeling <lf optimi!m in world capitals including Washington no progrus was reported. The only known agreenKn\ was \o meet again ne%t Wednesday. Haniman ~ one point said lhe two aides wquld meet <&gain 'Iburaday in an unprecedented extra !elSion, but changed hl1 statement later to next Wednesday. ThJs immediately prompted a d d e d 1peculaUon that Hamman and Thuy were boldlng eecret meetings, but William J. Jorden, chief U.S. spokesman, said the Harriman statement was a "alip of the tongue" and no other than the regular Wedneaday meetings w e r e foreseen . The North Vietnamese delegation •pol<0'11\an. Nguyen Thanh La, sidesttl>' · ped quest!°"' u lo wJ1etber oecret meet!ng3 had been held or were planned. . The ldjoumment unUl next Wedoelday apparently .meana anotheor week'a' delay in Hanoi"• re!>b'. lo Wuhlnllon peace el• Iona. . . ~1~ .... l(Olllbkl ~fflft--llod.­ yet received Ult ollleill North Vletna!!I governmenl rucUon to Pi r e 1 l d • rr t Jol1Nm'1 peact olftMIV8 and thal be ·reply c:oukt.como .Thund11. II had been uP,lded today ...i 'l\'l!lhlllalon was liopelu~ of 1rmoonelni I bombing hill duri11 lhe day. Hl&h dlplornollc IOUt<CI In London uld the Soviet Union had intervened to '!transmit the U.S. propo6als to Hanoi and that the North Vietnamese government "means business." Another sign or developments in the search for peace came from Saigon (See TALKS, Pqe Z) Pair Rob Coast Jewelry Store Of $5,000 Ge1llS A neat young couple with stars in their e y e 1 and talk d.. wedding plans ai>- parenUy left a Laguna Beach jewelry store with $5,000 worth of diamonds in their pockels. Detective Ales Jirnenei u.ld lltVert loose diamonds and two diamond riop were stolen from· Hayes Jewelers, 246 Forn t Ave. The gems and their velvet dlaplay ca.'ll were tuched from a counter dilpla,y cue llhorll,Y before ~ Mond11 lfternooo, Jtmenez &aid .an attractive 'blonde and a neatly drused )'OUnl'man nked to 1ee •Ibo wt6tllik alontl . ...i apent.about ball .,, """' wllh> lllore owoer, Tllomu G. ment. , The result has been a sputtering cam- paign on Hump!lrey's behaU lhat finds him trailing bll Republican rivsl. Richaril M. Nll<on, In lht polls in lhtlr contest for California's 40 electoral votel. With only lwo weeks left in the cam- paign. Humphrey aaid it was time to ast Lbe central question : "Who can the American people trust to IS.. POUTICS, Pip Z) Orange Weather Get ready to ~ your w a 1 through more fog 'n\uraday, un- less you llve rar ln1m:l, in which case you'll be moppl'ng your brow in 91-degree heat It'll be up to 72 hereabout.. . I NSIDE '.l'ODAY The world ii to0tching the U.S. cZ,ctions. Stomt °" WI and olhn "'f'<tll of Ameriant poUnea moy b• /01<ftd .,, ·PoQu 7, ll and 16. lfoyu. -h ;;''"'"' " ~ ...... ,. . thl'"lttil*f one-a(a-t rm ,-. ---........ -~·- IClaulflM II... :'W: --. ad NtUrDld them' to tbt d1sp\Q c • r d '<-ta .a beMatJi tbe oountlt. At cine poklt, Mid s::.-!: =-= ~ lllt ollktr\, Ibo-·· ullad obOlll Mlilnci .• ,., --• r-r -..ti.... ~ ·-~ ..... ..... """ arid u 111&:Jt1 'tunild awl)' (or • -........ :-;;,.,...,...... an ..,_ -thecard.d.._.wen~Uy =-:... »: ~ .: -· ttudy the window 1itll01ay. •Mscd~ • • ......, ti ~ ~ palr llntmid P the YOWi man :.::-' · ~ = :::: l: .i\' 1R0BBEllY, P11e I) , .. .. • f • r-2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 BJ 2 a 2 2 2 2 21 a --- 2 OAllV PILOT w""''"'· 0c.-23, 1960 •I Runtingtpn Lead:s Coast P .. opula ti9n Bo.om ! II)' llANDI MAJOR ot .... °""" ...... '""' Qlmi<rly copies ol the Orange County Pr<gress Report, submitted lo the llOl~i GI suponiloR Tutlda1 -. a total populaUon of t,330,1111 penolll, with IDln- tingtoo Beach growing the futest. The beach city led 24 Incorporated areas of the county in growth wlth 10,049 "'" new people according to llgurtl releued ~· y the COUD\J'. Plannlni De-L .= Anabelm fellowed wlth 1.,112 new l ~~pollo Team ~' W el.comed l!~ ~ ~ J~I ,.- "-Back to Cape ,.., n •· .. r~· CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Bubo '.*r~bt.Jng wlth thanks for the team that "':Jaunched them into orbit 12 days ago, the thrff beamln1 Apollo 7 utrooautt ..:nturned to Cape Kennedy l04ay to begla t:d"nUvin1 for e:rpertl their marathon gpace "'~oumey. "Ur. ''"I'be beet part or COW'H ls to eome ·"~home," l&ld smnin, Apollo i commtnder ·'"'t.Walel.r'M. Schlrr1 Jr. "We were here for ~a ·number oi months but we left rather · · suddenly," he told MIO members of the ,_, launch team which ,retted them at the "J!!_\airport .. iii _A lari;ie red, White and blue sign was ·lo _unrolled sayin,11: "Welcome Back." '.b · Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and m .dvillan Walter Cunningham. the other ,..membero of the Apollo 7 cnw, Aid .they were overwhelmed by the welcome. ~ CUM1n.dwn aaJd 11Wally'1 b e t n !lrio~tbroueh um • number of timfl," • · 'NOT OLD RAT' ;:;·. 11But l\'1 not old hilt to DoM and I," he ~ ,,,.aa1c1. "I don't know what I expected.when . t ·Ianded here but I certainJy "un't n:· ..i Jiocllng lhl• and all I can aay II think you a.,..Jor..the warm welcome." {a .. A rOw of Rlrls, restrained by ropes and lz•µcurlty,.police. invited the astronauta to .T(i;eome over and see them. "~·. ·rw1 don't.have enotJ&b. cour11e/' quip- . ped Schlrra. i:!' The utronaull wm wearing their btue _,,night 111111 and looted reeled. Thera .,..,. ..-:.no vlllblo ligJll of the -... clllplay<d ,,.jJy Ibo crew TUllda)' alt<r they were ., ~en aboard Ibo carrier Eau. . ci • 'Ihe return to c..,. Kennedr Jra• delayed whm1 the plane carrying Schlrra developed a leak In lls hydraulic l)'llem n and wa1 forced to tetiJrn to the Essex. "Sorry about that, sir," a ~.hip's officer ~,.told Schirra as the astronaut switched to another plane. . - ''Thal11 an right," aald the man who Tuesday finished flying 41Ai million miles in space. "I've got to get my fliJht time 6lil -~ow." -I A -.d plane, cinyln( 3chirt1'1 fellow Apollo 1 crewmel'I -Air Foree ~aj. Donn JI'. EIHle and clvllian Walter -"=.'.Cunningham -circled overhead so that •:"the arrival of the three at the Cape would ~~'.Coincide. ; TEAM OF DOCTORS ~ • The two twin-engine planes landed at 3:55 a.m. PST after a 2 hour and 15 , ~-mintm flldlt from their prime recovery .. ~·-shh>. the Essex. With them was a team of medical doc· ~~tors, headed by Dr. William Carpentier, •;.the reeovery team'• chief ph)'lician. It wu the firlt Ume the astronaull had ··. tet foot on land 1ince they blasted off Oct. 11 from a Saturn lB launCh pad 4,._,.bol.lt three miles away from the Cape -Kennedy alritrip. j ..._ Abolit SOO represenlaUves or the c 1overnment-lndustry team involved in the ~ launch of APollo 7 were on hand to greet the utronauts. The space heroes were of. ficlaUy welcomed· by Dr. Kurt H. Debua, ) dJrector ot NASA'a Kennedy Space I Center,,and by Maj. Gen. David M. '! Jonet, commander of the Air Force ·' Ea.r.m Te!! llan1e. ~ The Apollo 7 crew planned to stay at 1 Cape KerinedY unUJ Friday nliht oe i SatutdllY far a Jong sertu of debrlellng1 j with medical and technical erperta:. The meet.ln.p wlll conUnue at HOUlton's Man- : ned Spacecraft Ccnld' Sunday and tut : unUJ Ncrv. 1. • l • l ' i : ~ I I DAILY P!LOT N_,........ . Ctlt•.,.... N•............. yt.11111 .... ll . w......... .... ..... ,.., u..-- OW:AMG! C011Sl l'UILllMINO COMP'AM't ., .. ,,. H. Wee4 ,,.....,,... ......... , .... Je~li •• c.,1.., Ylq P'rnloRlll ....i ~,,. ""ntttr Thtt11•1 Ktt'llll ·-Th-·• A. Mtrpli!~• ~ ..... ,,.. ltllter ,,,1 Hitt•" MWfl\tlM ··--'9111 MIM1 )JI '#HI .. , """ IM-" ..... I nil WU~ .. :-...,...,.,.. L..,.. .... 1m ~ ~ lttdl: • 111'1 '"'"' • • nsldentl. During the quarter ended July 1, COW> ty populaUon Increased by u percen~ or 1,172 pentOQI per month, Wbicb breakJ down lo • arrivall dilly. Oru.ge County will account for one fourth ot the enUre populaUon growth of the southern half of California thil year, county officials said. Tbl quirterty nport, wblch cOltl ft per copy and II In IJ'<!•I d<mand In the county bualneu community II based on a ..--. . ~ coet1' avorage oot to ft.JO per ~1 or '51.IOO for the lata\ count. , 'lbe cluzen tall1 In lluntlnPll ~ach , '" .. tabbed Gii ;Jufj 1 at 101,oa ansll cent tncreaae over last year. La P ha<! fl\e high!el per<enlage fqllowed by Fountain Valley. '!'Ill Inland qty, with a IU percent IJ>o .,_ !'!· population, -from 1,0U poriau In July, 1111'1' lo an llllmll<d 7,0lO tbll year. Fountain Valley, wtlch 1alned t,W ·-fllldenJa ID'1hl: pa1 meam there .,. about :11,000 mon ~ per<eot gmrtlinte. women than men In the counly. lo the nport J>Ol>llallon and ' The median, age for meo Is ZU year~ lhe II srowlh..tliz -1111..-1114..for W111J11:11.,JIJ'---dUes Ir. Accor41ng to1be ftpori, th"° flSUJ'es, ~ta M-72,981, U pe«<nt. are allgbUy lower than the naUonal -N~ Beach, 43,tU, 7.4 percenl. average of 51 percent of the population -~ Bach, H,253, U percent. belril female. Median age for the United -SeJl Beacb, 11,4171 5 ~... .. · States for women ia Z9 yean cofllW'ed to . Sllfl!Uy more ibaa . IO -I GI Ibo men at 21<6. counl;jf'lldentaanllimale-wjtlta-'9 ' Couoty-wlde, mOll q1 gJOUPI showed percei$ nllle, lbe nport obow1. Tbll lncmaes. The mOll aliJ>lllcant decnase ' WU reflacted hi lha number of dllJdren under five years ol a,ge. According to the report, lhll ace grt11p --from -I.I.' paroanl II( O>t populaUon In the !teO ......, to ani1 lf-l percent of the populaUob recorded la tits year's report. 1 More than 180 people wire hlred fto mu• the latest COl1l1ll report. piannlDg officer• nld Iha county bad to be dlvidld Into four dlJlricta to flgun lhl poJ>Ulll!!m beca"" ol the magnltade II the ll'owtp. u.s. Kills 225 In ~Four Attacks --. .. -.. SAIGON (UPI) -U. S. planes and The batWng near the Special Forcu UP'I Ttl.,...hl Marine artlllecy caught four groups of camp, wb1ch 81000 North VletDamue · Ommn• .. ..W. ID~ -~and oolillm lalJad to tab In a 11,dajr siege ldllll! • al ._ 111.J·-1lf -11ruer. ·lhll month, appmntl7 )oded a Ibo& -' IJM*t ..._ •ot • ,,.. two-w11k lWI In major ll'OODd ICllocl In ·roiortH-•lc:An ~tfll. South Villllam. f ''Ibo " llV11fl Vlilname'(t and Some illplo111aUc observers hid cited · a . ~ ~"'"'~-~~ ,._ the lWI d pf1:1 of paUern sumundlng ' r .... al 1rtai 'r'""lbi"=· American efforts to gol.HIBOl lo ..... to , llflalll-~ urllar In .. mllillllljl dH1<alall lhl wu. tlil·-wlllllloalJ' a !l'f'' by North Vli*r•••llJi ... -~.~ croui> o! about"ll11 North Vietnamr,te .,ldien waa spotted near An Hoa and f7 of them were reported killed u nf&bt fell. Marine ground troopa puah· ed lnto the area but reported no contact u darkneu fell. The Marines earlier reported killing 178 1n the area below and lnland from Oa Nang. It wu the largest operation since a lull aetUed over the battlefields two weeks ago. However, the air war against North Vietnam continued despite peace rumo111 flooding t h e world, a n d tn 8a11on a greucte blut outalde the central market in the heart of Saigon killed a teen-age boy and wounded 18 other persons ln an apparent terrorilt act. ·From Pqe l POLITICS ••• lead thia country for the next four years ?" He said Nixon had made two deci&ions Jn the campaign "which 1peak dlrtctJ¥ to this crucial issue of trust." TH&RE'S NOTHING LIK& A RAZOR AFTER 11 DAYS IN <>,RBIT Cl .. nshaven A1trorwiut1 khlrra, Cunnlngh1m, &lnl1 (from• left) The blalt occurred a mile from the pre1ldenUal palace when U. s. Ambassador EllJworth Bunker' and South Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu met for nwJy three houri -their se. cond meeting ln two days and their alstb in a week. "First, he decided who should be h1a vl ce presidential running mate -the man who would be a heartbeat from the pre1ldency tteeU In th.II nuclear a1e," Humphrey 1ald, "And Mr. Nixon cboee Spiro T. Agnew -a ao-ea11ed urbln U· pert who says, 'when you have seen one 1lum, .you have 1een them all,' a man who say1 he cannot wait to try out bis new.found expirience tn foreign polley. "I think my Repilbllcan oppo11e11t played fast and loooe with the security o! this n1Uon," Humphrey aa1d. •Femmes!' Flops Beauties Fail to Boost Show lly ALBERT W. BATES , ot, "" O.\b' 'II:" ll•ff "Femmes de Parls," bllled as an original, not a transplant from Las Vegas or Frqce, opened to a;Jfar aeUout or,n· lnl ntgtit audience al M<lodyland Theater Tuesday evening. Despite a display of bare-bmated pulchritude, with headdresses and other accootrements to outdo the late Flo Ziegfeld, the show is an overall dud. Oh, it has Jts moments, but not in any "femme" fa1hion. SpeclficaUy, It has Francis Brunn, who fully Uves up to his billing as the world'1 ·areatest juagler, Aficionados of old time vaudeville will t.ero in on this sure-handed, sure-footed young man as the real star of the stww. RUJty Warren, the flat-chested queen of blue material, is top billed. She 1erved u a kind of counterpoint to the ripe-bosomed ahow girla who 1lorlfy the mammary gland. But Rutty puts into words all the coarsely aeiy thoughts produced by aome of the atnitUng. No doubt many of Miu Warren 's devot1e1 of her "Songs Jor Sinner•" and lhetnben. of her "Knockers Up Club" were in the opening Dlght audience and hanging on her every word. But there were also a great many others who walk· ed out on her perform1nce, not out of prudishness but from sheer boredom. Sexiness bordering on the barnyard, with a heavy concentration on udder and rump size, leaves real humor outalde the farm fence. Elsa and Waldo, co mic cutups and ec- centric dancers from Spanish music hall1, started off so totally corny and elemenlaJ that it wa.s a serious question how they could have made it as far aa • county seat amateur 1how, But they got going finally, and showed 10JI1e real finease in the later 1ta1e1 ol their Ume on stage. Closest to a real pro In the performance is well-proportioned, reasonably Jooci singer in the French traclitlon, Maria Marlene. She claims she relilt.s recordina: and TV oHers becauae she likes live audiences. The openina: nl&ht audience at Melodyland appeared to like her, too. She has a commanding way about her. Nola Hoffman and Fred Mann pul on a pedestrian performance as a d a g i o dancers, laler return fully clothed in another number, Possibly the major disappointment of tblJ show Is Jacques J our d an, a handsome French singer who contents himself mainly with a weak imitation of Maurice Chevalier. Jourdan is very French, and hit 1upport from the nude and semi-nude lovelies it considerable, but he doesn't capture the Chevalier m•- Kic by the distance from Parit to Mar· sell Jes. It seems reaaonable to conclude that producers Sammy Lewis and Danny Dare are straining hard for sure-fire box office with thla inferior production. It 11 far below the standard they set in the early period of M e I o d y 1 a n d , representing welcome professional theater in Orana:e County. Certainly 1t is not worth the price boost to $6.&0 for 1 1eat nonnally priced al $5. Tbl!I one 1.s an unabashed appeal to worshippers of the mammary iland. \VhJch isn't to II)' that_ the production Is In any sen11e obscene. On the contrary, it has Its moments of great physical beau· ty I including tasteful presentation or I.he remlnine fbrtn and my1tique. The trouble 11, ft just doun't come off U a fully Atllfylng and balanced show. Maybe the P.uerto Rteans, who have bought ll for a lull )'Or'a!ler It eod1 four week1 at lttelodyland,.,will Jove it. . Mesa Teacher, 2 .0thers Arrested in ·Drug Raids Three persons including an assistant teacher at a COita Mesa private school were arrested on 1usplclon of U&Ort?d narcoUca vtolaUons early today ln separate raids, St.ate narcotics agenU, the Orange County Sherllf'a narcolle1 dllall and Colta Mw detective• cooparat.ed in the arttll&, coallllCIUng a llllall· lmOWlt of LSD end ma'rl.juana. Lan'y D. Dean, 21, and Beverly Creech, ,II, both of Sl4 Monte VIit.i Avt,, were booked on suspicion of tale of dan;uou dni.p i pouer1lon of danceroua drui:a for ale; ult ot marijuana, and paueaion of marijuana Jor Alt. 8bamln L. tounr, 11. II Ut Ramona Plact, WU arntlld ani1 Cll IUIPklon II Ille of mari)Uana. - Sbop,.berOC<UplUMUID-1 lnllnlc:tor al 1111 MCll-School, wi1Jch m-•mtlhed of Individual a~ llr!llm ealhae than cl.......,, '"""""· All threa llJlpecla wera bool<ld al COlti MMI Cit)' Jail and then tranderred to OrJ11g• CUnty Jail, -1111 .... oriclnated wlth a st1t1 lnv~tigallon . It wa1 not Immediately disclosed how much contrabimd wu seized at the apartment lhlr'td by Dean and the Cretth woman, but invesUa:ators said it WU D0t Vtrf m\ICh. Fr-Page J TALKS ... where U.S. Ambuudor EI l 1 worth Bllnl<et m<I today with President N111Yen Van ?111tu fe< 1111 aecond Um1 In two daya and 1111 alstb llml -tut Wedneaday. n ""' boll .. ld Bunnr wu f1lUng In ?111111 oo 1111 pea.-ctewlopmenta ancl on U.S. lffcrll lo ltl 1111 Satcon .....,..1111 to 1111 Paris CCIII""""' table with 1111 Hanoi rtpiwlall,. and envoya Iron> 1111 National Uberalloo Front (NFL), 1111 poUUcal brlllCh of lha Viet eon1. From Page J SNAKES ••• reported to ha ve driven all makel and toad.s out of Ireland. Anaheim, originally founded as a German colony, may not exactly be a Garden of Eden and it isn't u old as the Emerald I1le, but boa, oh boa, is it tradi- tionalist. From Page J ROBBERY .•. discussed diamonds with Haye.s. They left the store' at. a leisurely pace pausing to study the widow display. AJked about the eJl)erilH of the pair. Jimenez said, "They were either pros or they bad a lot Of au ts." Beach Woman's Oailn Rejected Orange County 11upervilora Tue1day re- jected a '25,000 claim by a HunUngton Beach woman who alleget1 t h a t negligence by Orange County Medical Center phy1iclan1 hu caused her "great pain and IUf!ering." Mr1. Sl11rley Perrin, 10411 Cinco de Mayo, atates in her action that ahe was operated upon Jut April 8. Suturing of the W'OUnlf WU canied 0 U t lnlatlafact· or!Jy, 1he to the point a 11wlre1 in· lerted in the fleah later protruded" from her body. The county, both pby1lcl1n1 and the me- dical facility are named u detendantJ. As usual there wu no statement on the mettfna: but there wu IPeC'UlaUon about the poulbJUty that North Vietnam may have aJreed to American propotall for a bombing hall and lull peace tata. Divorcee Loses $20,000 Theft Suit in Court A ~7-year-old car leaalng agent has been found innocent of charges thst he stole $20,000 from a Newport Beach divorcee. Superior Court a1de1 aald today John Bate1 Greg, who had been charged with grand theft lut AugUJt, wu freed foUow· ing a trial in Santa Ana. The verdict wu attributed largely to the te1timony of the alle&ed victim, court sources 1aid. 1bt 42-year-ord woman'• teaUmony varied considerably from th1t given 1t pre-trial hearlngs, It wa1 reported. . Gregg auertedly had once promised to marry the woman, a d1Vorcee, but In· stead, re-married a former wUe. The grand theft complaint wa1 then flied by the Newport woman, accordina to the dlltrtct attorney'• office. Barnard in Hospital CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI) - Pioneer heart transplant 1ur1'°°' Chrllo tlan Barnard WU admitted to Groote Schuur lloepltal today for lieatmenl ,o! an undllcloltd ailment. Humphrey then chided Nuon for bll ,._ cond dec!Jlon: "He decided to uy nothing elle for the rest of the campaign." NiJon flew to S11lnaw from Toledo, Ohio, where he 1pent the nJght He was greeted at bll first 1top, an airport rally, by aeveral thousand perlOnl and mtt by Gov. George Romney and other Mlchl&an Republican olllclala. In 1tatement1 laaued at Sqinaw, Nb:on added lo bll overo)I cr!Uclnn o! the Johnson admlnlltrallc!1' 1'1COrd on. Vlet- "nuh ·will> bow personal Jabs al Hum· phrey for •ltJI l'llJJOllllbUllJ ancj IJ>o volvement In the Johnlcm admlniatz''Uon war record. "To th.11 dismal admln11traUon record my opponent brlna:1 th e fute1t tongue and the futest awltch of poalUon ever aeen fn American poUUca," Nixon 1ald. "Mr. Humphrey hu lbown a con- alltuUonal Inability to treat the Vlolnam war and the peace negotl1tlons dllcree~r. (or) f 0 r that matter, un- deratanc11ngly, ever 1lnce he started cam- palll!1lnl. "l lh!Dk the Amerlcan people wtD queo. tlon the peace-keeJ>lnc capabWUa ol a candidate who from week to wee.t abows on every luue he would rather n1tch than flpt -rather IPlod then .. ,., rather talk than m1ncf hi• tonp on aens!Uvt Jntem1Uonal matter.," Nb:on a1ld. "When a man 11 on all 1ldea of the luue, be createa a grtat rilk of miscalculation m 1111 part of our od· venary," Nlxon Aid. With 1 boomtni, ener1eUc aty11 of at- tack which hu marked Nllon actlvtUes the cloeer he approachu llection day be told the Saglaaw audience, lheltired from a chilly wlnd In u alrplana baqar, that ha wu confldenl or vlclort, boil In· tended &o "takt no,chancu" and would hit at Humphrey with increasing vigor. FROM CllLIFORNlll llRTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMP>'>RllBLE BEllUTY. • coNCO~DI t llD • • -- 1121 NiWl'OlT AVL. COSTA MESA n :r-ho Tit• s.... i....11 ... • ltii~\l 1 "' ,' I ' • • 1 • -- I I • VOi Qt PrOl of ~ J>Opl ting- Tt areE new by ' Al resi D ty p 6,17 do• 0 R s J1 T firs nig~ Sch ath '[ sta ite1 me [ Cat dis. uru prt .(In; i sai bll CO! by I ari de th• stc • ta! us w, nii st: th Ix VC Ix C( in OJ fi· .. C< " " b' 0 o· d k y I t t I r t r \ f ( f ' ' Bomele'Wll EDITION ' Dally Paper VOL lif, NO. 255, 6 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1968 TEN CENTS Beach Growing Fastest County_ Report Shows 10,049 New Residents By SANDI ft.1AJOR Of 11M 0.llY P'llfl Sllff Quarterly copies of the Orange County Progress Report, submitted to the Board of Supervisors Tuesday shows . a total population of t,330,7.0l persons, with Hun- linglon Beach growing the f~stest. The beach city led 24 incorporated areas of the county in growth wilh 10,04\f new people according to figures released by the county Planning ~partm'ent. Anaheim followed with 7,732 new residents. During the quarter ended July I, c<1un- ty population increased by S.9 percent, or 6,172 persons ~r mon~. which breaks down tO 202 arrivals daily. Orange County will account for one Ribal Wins Skirmish With Board Trustee Joseph Ribal won one of his first skirmishes in many weeks :rues~ay flight when Huntington Beach Uruo~ High School trustees pondered lhe question of athletic stadiums and who pays for ~m. ·0r. Ribal has wanted to discuss stadiums, but had t>E:en unable to get the item listed on the agenda for the trustee meetings. Despite a lengthy discussion on who can bring items to the trustees for discussion ' trustees eventually voted unanimo~ly to ask the administration to prepare a report on athletic stadiums and financing of them. District Superintendent Max Forney said he has to follow policy too and thal b1I view of the ~licy indicated that he co'uJtl place matlers on the age\tda only by direction of a majority of the bo~- Board President John Bentley sai~ the argument rewlted f r o. m. nnsun· derstanding and voted for brmging befo~ the trustees the matter of athletic stadiums. Trustee Ray Schmitt, who seem~ lo take over the bitter attacks on Dr. Ribal usually made by Trustee 1'1atthew \Veyuker, who was almost s~lent 'J'.Uesday night, voted against discussion o( stadiums. . ''About all you are doing is conf~s!ng the issue on the bonds (the $12 million bond issue for building on which the voters are to decide Nov. 5). ''I do hope the people pass these bonds" Dr Ribal said. "But I think we could 'enhance our position in public by indicating that athletic stadiums are low on the priority list." To a comment that stadiums are Hnanced through the 5-cent civic center or recreation tax, Dr. Ribal said that "we could use that money for something else too like ·cultural programs or opening U1e sc~l library programs to the public. "We coold do a lot of things besides building these Roman coliseums.'' Schmitt. who changed his vote to allow 1he discussion. denounced Dr. Ribal as an opponent of athletics and said that "you don't go to football games: you don't know how much the public likes them; you don't know anything." School Trustees Oppose Prop. 9 Opposition to the Watson Amendment, Proposition 9 on the Nov. S general e_lec- tion ballot, was e>.-pressed Tuesday mght by trustees of Huntington Beach Union High School District. . Unanimous approval was g1vim to a resolution which stated that "passage of this ill<0nceived measure would create a real danger of serious inequities and Y:ould plunge local school districts inlo financial chaos. "Enactment o( lhis amendment (would) mislead the public into believing thci'e will be a tax decrease when In fad a massive tu shUt requir!ng signifiCIJlt state tax increases would result. "Local districts would be forced to lean aln1ost entirely on the st.ate legJslature t.o dole out operating fundl to Ult various 5Chool d.l;sttk:U· ., Mail Vietnam Packages Soon Oranie Coundtn1 who plan to send Christmas pre!lelltl to servicemen in Vietnam should mail packages before Nov. t, U.S. P Office offJclals ~mind· od patron> today. The parcels will be stored In Oakland then loaded on the USS "Santa Claus Special" which sets Mil in mid-November for Oa Nang, Qui Nhon, Cam R&hn Bay and Sa.igon, Vietnam. ' ' fourth or the entire population grov.'th of the southern half or Calilornia this year, county officials said. The quarterly report. which costs $1 per copy and is in great demand in the county business community is based on a regular census. Census costs average out to $1 .10 per household, or $52,800 for the latest count. The citizen tally in Hunlington Beach was tabbed on July 1at101,082 an 11 per- cent increase over last year. La Palma had the high.set percentage growth, followed by Fountain Valley. The inland city, with a 39.9 percent in- crease in population, grew from 5,02.5 persons in July, 1967 to an estimated 7,030 this year. Fountain Valley, which School Proble1n gained 5,466 new residenta In the past year had a 26.3 percent growth rate. According to the report population and the percentage of growth for coastal cities is: -Costa Mesa, 72,988, 3.3 percent. -Newport Beach, 43,163, 7.4 percent. -Laguna Beach, 14,253, 9.4 percent. -Seal Beach, 21,417, 5 percent. SlighUy more than SO percent of tha county residents are f~le with about 49 percent male, the rePkf. shows. This means there are about 23,000 more women than men in the county. The median age for men is 24.S years, and for women, 2fi.4. According to the report, these figures, are slightly lower than the national County Office Rules on Bids . The Orange County Counsel's Office has ruled that the governing board of a school district can legally approve a list of bids on school items without seeing the bids. A majority of the board can also decide if it wishes, to prevent one or more board members from seeing the bid prices, in the opinion of the county counsel's office. "It's true," said county legal aide John Anderson when asked by Huntington Beach High School District Trustee Joseph Ribal about the legality of such actions.- The deputy county counsel told high school Lru&tees.,Tuesday night there is no requirement for trusteM to see a list of items to be purchased even when they are approving Individual bids, as long as the bids exist at the time of the decision. "A contract 1would ~ created if the trustees approve the bids and lt would still exist if the majority took the action over the objection of a board member who wanted to examine the prices first,'' said Anderson. Dr. Ribal appealed to the county counsel after he was unable to get the board to hold up a call for bids on some athletic equipment several weeks ago. His request for an opinion drew a sharp lelter of criticism from fellow trustee Matthew Weyuker. Dr. Ribal said he believed lhal the board should not be allowed by law to ap- prove bids without seeing them so long as any of the trustees wanted to see the bids. He said Tuesday he would take the matter to the slate Legislature in the hope that corrective legislation could be drafted. "The public should have a right to see what their money is being spent on," he said. '"I might want to make some substitu· tions on 'the bid list like elimination of a $10,000 weight Jirl:ing MaChliie \n favor of $50 worth of heavy rocks." His defense ot his pos1Uon obviously lr· ritated trustee Ray Schmitt who at one point asked Ribal, ••are you going to get off your soapbox pretty soon so we can hear this man (the county counsel)?" Ribal pointed to a board policy which states that "the board shall not attempt lo decide upon any question. before ex· amining and evaluating any information any person requests the board to con· sider." "It seems to me that even a board member should be considered a person,., he pleaded. "Not you," retorted Schmitt quietly. Anderson said he did not think the stated board poUcy would arfect the rul· ing of the county counsel's office. Orange County Officials Dismiss Beach TrashPlea With the crisp e-0mmcnt, "We've heard this argument before," Orange County supervisors Tuesday swifUy dismissed the pleas of five Huntington Beach property owrlers for access to a county trash transfer station in the beach city area. Kenneth Boyce, who told supervisors he represented himself, William Strand, Howard Beaty, J .D. Kraemer and Paul Newman, argued that access to the coun- ty station would save many homeowners In the area a 40-mile drive to county dumping sites. "Some of our trash consists of animal matter that cannot be put out for collec- tion by the Rainbow Disposal Co." be said. "If we were -eUowcd to use the county station it would save us a long drive whi ch we have to make at least once a week." Commenting that "I have to make the same drive myself,"' Supervisor C. M. Fealherly told Boyce that "such an authoriz.ation would be quite impossible. ''Our county stations are much too busy for us lo add to their load by allow- ing homeowners to take in waste of this description," Featberly said . "As you say , you pay tu.es for this service but there's only so much we can do and we certainly couldn't go along wltb the arrangement you suggest." average of 51 percent of the populatlon being female. Median age for the United States for women ls 29 years compared to men at 26.6. ·~ County-wide, most age groups showed int'reases. The most significant decrease was reflected in the number of children under five year:; of age. According to the report, this age group decreased from 13.4 percent or the population in the 1960 census to only 10.2 percent of the population recorded iD this year's report. More than 180 people were hired to make the latest census report. Planning officers said the county had to be divided into four districts to figure the population because of. the magnitude of lhe JfOwlh. Jury-Weighs Conspiracy Case Verdict A jury of nine women and three men retired at 9:25 a.m. today to decide the fate of pretty Jeanne Covell, co-owner of a Huntington Bt!ach ten night spot. The 26-year-old blonde defendant is charged with conspiracy with intent to libel and slander a Huntington Beach police officer and attempting to obstruct justice. Both charges are felonies. Jurors went into seclusion after less than two days of testimony, concluded Tuesday with final arguments by the defense and prosecution. Defense attorney Henry Cleary con- tended Mrs. Covell could not have fabricated the slander because she had no way of knowln& the oUicezo. was in a situation to f'iiake ·a threatening phone call unobserved. Officer Jim Mahan, twice-named Hun- tington .Beach Policeman of the Year, was home with the flu at the time alleged threats were made against Mrs. Covell and her husband, Gilbert. Mrs. Covell was arrested July 19 at the Syndicate 3000, a fonner auto agency at Ocean Avenue and Third Street, site of frequent narcotics arrests. Deputy District Attorney Cosmo Slivolella argued before Judge Karl L. Davis in Superior Court Department 12 t.har the jury should weigh the Covells' in· terest in the case. He reminded jurors that Syndicate 3000 caters to juveniles, especially those of the long-haired pseudo hippie set. Arrests of young people on curfew violations and drug abuse were frequent outside the club, located in the city's Haight·Ashbury -like downtown area. · Slivolella pointed out that it would be Jncreasingly difficult to attract juveniles of that nature to an area subject to hea· vy police patrol. Woman, 72, Dies; Autopsy Ordered A coroner's autopsy has been scheduled today to detennine the cause or death for llulda Adell Jones, 72, 1012 Olive St., Huntington Beach, who collapsed Tues- day night on a Newport Beach street. Coroner's deputies said the elderly woman was dead on arrival at Hoag l\1emorial Hospital at 10:05 p.m. They said Mrs. Jones and a companion were returning home lrom a dinner when Mrs. Jones suddenly collapsed after first com- plaining of stomach cramps a n d dizziness. Police said the woman lay oo the sidewalk at 800 W. Coast Highway when their units arrived at 9:30 p.m. She was taken by ambulance ~Hoag. Shoreline Control Sought County Studies Plan to Buy Private Beaclies By TOM BARLEY Of ,.,. Dell' P'llM Sltff Orange County S'Jpervlsor1 today are lludylna a 14-page planning department recommend1Llon that urges the county to acquire all remaining non--publlc beach areas fnim Seal Beach lo San Clemente. Labeled lhe M.-Plan of Shoreline Development, P~nina Director Forest Dickuon'• .,,.1ym. also advocates the acquisition ol upland, CJVmliibt call)plng ar~ within ..!tew .Pi.~BD...And the Teiil'6ill{f oT """"11ctillJ a r t 111 c I a I ptnlnsulu to help meet a mountlng de- ~ for bt1ch frontage. No immediate action will be taken by lhe board on Olcka80n'1 long li!l ol 1horeline proposals. Ordering distribution of the Drochures to rederal, state and city agencies, 11.1ptrvbon: noted that "it will take some considerable time" to uamJne the plan- ning proposala. Formal pr-laUon ol the Diclwo~ plan would be needed before. any Im· plementaUon could be o r d e r e d , supcrvlton 11id. In any event, It w11 Mtod the br,.d Dickason proposail do not specify where the v~ funds needed for a£!LulslU.Q!J.~deyelOJ>111ent would be Ob1ilned. Dickason hinuelr isn 't ctrtain. But he advocates the appointment of an ''lnterdlactpllnary group of nceanographtrs, blolORtsts, enginetts, conS<:rvaUonista, planners, c I t I z e fl representatives, h y d r o I o g i s l 1 and educators lo research •nd plan for coulal projecta and overall aborellne developme"\." Tbil C r o u p, Dlckuon .. Id, llliould "parjloularly ostablilb pr I or It I e 1. methodl ol ftmdlnl, and detennlnatloo ol whlch projecta need lntenslvt study." DlcltalOD warm that d r a m 1 t I c tr1nsformaUon Of 1Korellne terrain now in t>tlvolc.haods-hustlntatu.llultllllL or lhe 42. 7 mHe coutll.ne i1 10 owned - can bt expected. · He also warna that lht chlnges Ulat can be expected will "dteply altect the open spice and sea vistu tltat now ui$t, !Ste DEACH£81 P.lte Z) DAIL'f P'li.DT P""!" 'r 1.M ,...,_ 'THIS IS A DRILL, THIS IS. A QRlll' Bomb 'Shatter1' Post Office, But Not Firemen -~ Y.: •. , J 'i.:" ~r....:.t\•/;\ ,.. ... TrQi·n .ing Huntington Post Office 'Blasted' . . By JAMES ft.fcNABB, Jr •. 01 fflt o.ur P'I~ 'sttlf A simulated· bomb explosion at the Huntington Beach Post Office Wednesday "shattered'' the parcel post rooin, four postal employes but not the city fire department. Sirens blaring, red lights cuttil'!g through the morning fi>g two engine and truck companies plus a rescue squad rumbled to the "bombed" Warner Avenue hullding shortly after 9 a.~. for the realistic 30-mlnute training exercise. Carefully bloodied employes lhra!hlng for help were carried on strttche~ to summoned •ambulances; then rushed lo Huntington Jntercommunity HOlpltal for emergency treatment. Then the 13 firemen complement ex- pertly extlngui!ilred the blares set by the bomb while pblice kept the curious under e-0nlrol and out from under foot. The surprise realism was to test the readlness under stress of the firemen, said Battalion Chief Jim Gerspacb who commanded the operation. "Our crews knew there was to ~ a training exercise but they dldn1t know what or how It was going lo be," he aa. ded. •·we found a few weak spots . .in our o~tions but over all it was pretty g ." ' jured" postal clerk Beverly Orr said she and her fellow victims ''..moaned .and groaned" amoog the scattered mail and overturned furniture of the parcel pOsL area. . . · .,,It really was fun and tpe boys did. a gi-eat job in rescuing us;" she said, "W we tried to he plenty laud." ' • · Asked how the crewS Cauld ~.J,e:t~ prepared, Gerspac~ ~d'tJ>W CQ!llll;ilax• . used more stretchers and a ~"119e to improve communicat..P;»w:. EV~g else was fine. ' • • ,, . OV Schools Ask· Talks·' . ' On Issues With Harb-our. Trustees of Huntington Beach's Ocean View School District have called for a joint meeting with city ofticiats to air problems they say they are having with the Huntington Harbour Corpo(ation. Speclllcally,sald 1<hoj>I trustees, lh".J' are uneasy about future developments tn the pluah marina area on lhe ·northwest 1ide of the city. "We have 1 acbool site there ind Ute value ol. the lite for achoo1 purposes may diminish U updated p1ana for the area are not fully known lo WI," said Trustee Leooanl Shano. · Shane, a reaide.nt of,, the marina. are&, said he fetls the acboo1 board has re-mained lllltnt 1ona eooup. "It's Ume we toot our troubles with lht lluntingt.on Harbour COrporaUon out or e1ecutJve session," he sald. "We don't want any development company to &bartdlan&e our kkla." Police Arrest ~Ian On 'Bomb ·Charges LONG BEACH (UPI) -110Y Emory Hatg,ves, 281, wu ai:rested late Tuesday bY 110V9.t..........-i1111.Afjomb~-lhe Long Beoch olfice ol tli<Tefi-wfn& studaiw for • Domoeratlc Soclety. ~ expl08lon evi.Y Tuesday •• ~ S1JS olllce ~..i ·two 4oors oil their tinces. '1'wo f>l!J'I004 In -tbe tJuildui& 1t Iii< time clcaped Injury. · • • · ' The 1ebool district. already ii lnvol..., In a Jaws,ult .~ain;st . the lluntington · Hnrbot.Q" Cotp0ralion qvu the qua.Uty,of' fill dirt a( Harbour View School, one ·d two elemenfary schoql S:nes in the area. Or11119• ' Wect~ Gel ready to grope your w a y throu&h inore fog Thursday, .un· less yw liYe far inla.Jid, ln which case yOu'll be mopping your brow lo 91-dcgree heat. It'll he up to 72 hereabouts. INSIDE . l'ODAl' Th< -Id ii "'°tclllog th< U.S. •i<ctio111. Slorit• on lilli end o)h<r olpfctt of Am•rl!on politi<I• ""'11 bt found on Poo<i 7, lJ and 18. . ..... -=" .,_ . ,.... .Ir .. -· __ .. .... _ -....... ---........ • ' .. " . • ' ' l .. ' . . a Breakthrough on Viet Peace Rumor. Falters PAllll (UPI) -U.I. ud !IGrlll VIII- ..,..,. noaoU&ton lalltd once """" to-day to acb!eve a brtattbrough OP delicate otepo thal COOld lead to a U.S. bombing ball and IUU·Oedged peace nogotlaUoDI. "It I.I time for )'OU to act," U.S. Ambu&ador W. Avertll Harriman told North Vietnamese delegate Xuan Thuy. "The chotce is yours." •' Bui despite l'EJlC)rtl by high dlplomaUc • ll1Jl'Cel HaDOri WU rt.ad)' to talk and Apollo Team Welcomed Back to Cape ., ... • CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Bui> tiling with thanks for the team that launched them into orbit 12 days ago, the tl1tte beaming Apollo 1 a.trooaula ' .. , • returned to Cape Kemedy today to begin ~. reliving ror experts their marathon space \;,journey. ;,~. "The best part, of course, 11 to come ·~11ome," llld smiling Apollo 7 commander "n'wa1etr M. Schlrra Jr. "We were here for a number of months but we left rather suddenly," he told 500 members of the "'-.lam>eh team which greeted them at the " airport. ,_ -A large red, white and blue sign was ~ unrolled aaying "Welcome Back." "'" Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and " civjllan Waller Cunnlngham, lhe other members of lhe Apollo 7 crew, aald they •">-rwere overwhelmed by the welcome. :-... ' Cunningham nld "Wally's been ·~•-through this a number of Umes." ,., .. •NOT OLD RA?t ;: -"But lt'a not old hat to Donn and I," he eald. "I don't know what I upecte:! when • ., I landed here but l ,µrtainly wasn't ex- >U f)ed.ing tb1a and all I can say 111 thank you 1,.·for the warm welcome." 1Jf< A row of gtrta, rutralned by ropea and i· .. ucurfty police, Invited the utronauts to •1.icome over and 1ee them. "We don't have enough courage," quip- :~::fed Schirr~. . -/ ·, 'Ibe utroftautl were wearing their blue ,;-•fllgbt lllltl and looked rested. There were ; , :no visible oJina ol lhe lhaldn.,. dlaplayed ~. by the crew Tueaday after they were rk taken 1board the carrier Esser. 111.e return to Cape Kennedy was • delayed when the plane carrying Schlrra • developed a leak In its hydraulic system and was forced to return to the Essex. ;i\ "Sorry about that, 1ir," a chip's officer ,. told Scltlrra as the astronaut swltcned lo .r• another plane. "That's all right." said the n1an who Tuesday finished Oying 41ii: million miles " lllln ._ "I've 1ot to 1et my flight tUne ..... somehow." A second plane, carrying 3chirra's . feUow Apollo 7 crewmen -Air Force : Maj. Donn F. Ellele and civilian Walter ~' CUnnlngham -circled overhead so that , the arrival of the three at the Cape would <,, =~F DOCl'ORS The two twin-engine planea landed at 8:55 a.m. PST after a 2 hour and 15 minute Olght from their prime recovery ship, the Essex. Valley Tl'ustees Against Prop. 9 Fountain Valley IChool truateu are on ~ record today ln unanimous opposiUon to t the controvenial Watson Amendment, >,• PropoaiUon 9 on the Nov. 5 state ballot. From where they alt, said school ~ tru5teea, they see the initiative measure, aimed at property tax reform, as m1ss.ing the mark by a long shot. rt "would seriously threaten the ability of the public schools to function by drastically cutting property tax revenues wiThout providing alternative sources of financing," said school trustet11 in a formal resolution proclaiming their op- ~ position to the ineasure. • • • • • • • • l r • • t ~ DAILY PILOI •effrt N. Wt•I '""i..' ... ,l/tllltlM!f' ..1,,1r; •· C11rlty Ykt l"flt..,,I 1"41 0-tl .......,..," Tlri1"'11 K11•il Edi"" Tlri1111•1 A. ~u.,..a.1~• ~111•1~. ldll•• Alli••' w. ••t•• war. .... ~ •• , A-l•te H!ltltir..io.. ltod'r f:Ollw City foflllr th9'1 ..... 1Hdiotftte JOt ltlrl 5fft•t M1lll~1 Mir•nt r.o. I t• 1•0, •tl41 --.._., et.di: mt w.1 h"91 tMwlrf -"°''' ,,..1 Jll ....... , ... 9' ......,,.. ltlCll: = .... , "'t'tllllt • • : • . • • • • • ' t. • i I ' ~ • pneral fetllnt ol ~ Ja war'li ........ •••!ol!H" W ....... 'no JX"P• -nparlad. no ..., ....,,. ... -•• to-.... -w-oy. Harriman 1t one point lltlld the two sides would meet again Thursday Jn an unprecedented extra ~Ion, but ch1n1ed hi& lllalemenl later to DUI Wedneaday. 1ll..11 lmmedlately prompted 11. d d e d speculaUon thal Harriman and Thuy lloildln&i • -Unp. but apponnllr -anolhtr -· doll7 1J. ,...., Gill! U.I. ...... ,.... In Huo1l1 reply to Wuhlnaton P,.Oe ef· -~ -·-··"llllp !aria. .......... tllio Ibo ,...._ .._.., ,.....,,. ,._. f ._ _ 11,w11 possible Ille delegaUon had not ~ yet received the official North Vletnam ·-· . Tbe. North Vietnamese .delegaqott govertl.ll)tl11 reaction to P r e, 1 I d t n t . l(>Oketman, Nguyen Thanh La, skleltep-Johnson'• , ~ offensive and that he ped queallonl u to . wb<lher oecrel reply could co= Thuraday, II had been meetln.g1 bad been held or were planned. expected today and Wasbinit<>n was The BJljoununenl unUl nal Wedn.,.Jay IJ!>peful, ol announcing a bombinJ ball THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A RAZOR AFTER II DAYS IN ORBIT Clean Shaven Astron1uts Schlrra, Cunningham, Eisel• (from left) Campaign Picks Up Steam Major Candidates 'Fast., Loose' With Charges From Wirt Services In a fast·winding up presidential elec- tion campaign that is fast picking up steam boLh candidates were playing "fast and loo&e" with charges. Campaigning in Texas, Vice President Hubert Humphrey a c c u s e d his Republican opponent Richard Nixon of playing "fa11t and loose" wtth the nation in his choice of a running mate, among other things. . Nixon, jet-atoplllnl through crucial Michigan, turned" th-e aame phrase, saying Humphrey brings "lhe faseUit tongue and fastest 11wltch of position ever seen in American polltica." He cited what he called Humphrey's shifty posiUon on Vietnam and for indiscreet public com- ments on lhe Paris .peace talks. Humphrey made his accusation in a speech while campaigning for votes at the historic Alamo, Tei.as' most sacred wm.. The vict prtsident1s noontime audience wu compl)9ed largely of Mexican· Americana, who in tum mike up a 11ignificant, lnd perhaps crucial portion of the Teii:as electorate. Humphrey, hailed by Texas Democrats 1s a 0 miracle worker" for bringing together their warring leaders, will fJnd his healing skllla in demand again today when he gets to California. Not only are California's Democratic leader11 caught in internal party disputes, but a slzeable nwnber of rank and file member~ were won to the peace stands of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy and are followlng him in withholding support for any presidential candidate at lhe mo- ment, The result has been a spuUering canl· palgn on Humphrey's heh.all that find s him trailing his Republican rival, Richard M. Nixon, In the poll11 in their contest for California's 40 electoral votes. With only two week• left In the cam· palgn, Humphrey 11ald It wu time to ask the ctntral question : "Who can the American people trust to lead this country for the next four years?" He said NiJ:on had made two decisions in the campaign "which spea k directly to this crucial Issue of trust." "First, he decided who should be hi s vice presidential running mate -the man who wouJd be a heartbeat from the presidency itself In thls nuclear age," Hwnphrey said,-''And Mr. Nixon chose Spiro T. Agnew -a .so-called urban ex· pert who says, 'when you have seen one slum, you have setn them all,' a man who says he cannot wait to try out his new·found experience in foreign policy. "I think my Republican opponent played fast and loose with the security of this naUon," Humphrey said . Humphrey then chided Nixon for his se· cond dee.ls.ion : "He decided to say nothing else for th e rest of the campaign." Nixon flew to Saginaw from Toledo. Ohio, where he spent Ole night. He was greeted at his first stop, an airport rally, by several thousand persons and met by Gov. George Romney and other Michigan Republican officials. In statements issued at Saginaw, Nixon added to his overall criUcism of the Johnson administration record on Viet- nam with new personal jabs at Hum- phrey for his responsibility and in- volvement in the John.son adminlstraUon war record. "To this dismal administration record my opponent brings t h e fastest tongue and the fastest switch of position ever seen in American politics," Ni.Jon said. "Mr. Humphrey has shown a con· stituUonal inability to treat the Vietnam war and the peace negotiations discreetly, (or) for that matter, un· · derstandingly, ever since he started cam· paigning . "I think the American people will quu. Uon the peace-keeping capabiliUes of a candidate who from week to week shows on every is.sue he would rather switch than fight -rather spend then save, rather talk than mind his tongue on sensitive internaUonal matters," Nllon said. ''When a man Is on all sides of the issue, he creates a great risk of miscalculation on the part of our ad· versary," Nixon said. dllrinf Iha d11. Hlgb dlplomallc tourct1 In London ,.Id the Soviet Un&on had intervened to transmit the U.S. proposals to Hanoi and that the North Vietnamese government . . "means business." Another sign of developmto\I in the r;earcb for peace ca.roe fnm! Saigon where U.S. Ambassadot Ell 1 w or l h. Bunker met today with President Nguyen * *' '* Van Tbleu· le< Ibo ~ llnit In 111!1 days and tile sixth Um• 111nce !alt Wednesday. It was believed ,Bunk• wu fllllng 1n 1 Thieu on the peace developments and on U.S. efforts to gel the Saigon gavernment · to the Paris cool~ &Able with the B.anol represenlaUVes and eDvoya from the National Llbuatlon Front (NFL), the P,91tll<al branc~ of lbe Vlei Cong. . * * * U.S. Kills 225 In Four SAIGOM (UPI) -U. S. planes and Marine artillery caught four groups of Communist soldiers in th&open today and killed 22.5 of them in a ieries of ~lkes that were continuing tonight. Spokesmen reported no American casualUes, The weJJ.anned North •Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were spotted late Tues- day ~by U. S. Marine reconnaissance patrols in several areu oeu the Thuong Due Special Forres camp. whlch earlier in the month withstood a &.lege by North Vietnamese regulars. The latest group of about 170 North Vietnamese soldiers was spotted near An Hoa and 47 of them were reported killed as night fell. Marine ground troops push· ed into the area but reported no contact as darkness fell. The Marines earlier reported killing 178 in the area below and inland from Da Nang. ll was the largest opefation since a lull settled over the battlefields two weeks ago. However, the air war against North Vietnam continued despite peace rumors flooding t h e world, a n d in Saigon a grenade blast outside the central market in the heart of Saigori ~llled a tee,n·age boy and wounded 18 other persona in an apparent terrorist act. The blast occurred a mile from the presidential palace where U. S. Ambassador Ellsworth ·Bunker and South Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu met for nearly three hours -their se· cond meeting in two days and their slxtb in a week. A3 usual there was no statement on the meeting but there was speculation about the possibility that North Vietnam may have agreed to American proposals for a bombing halt and full peace talks. The batUing near the Special Forces Beach Woman's Claim Rejected Orange County supervisors Tuesday re- jected a $25,000 claim by a Huntington Beach woman who allege11 th 1 t negligence by Orange County Medical Center phyalclans bas caused her "great pain and suffering." Mrs. Shirley Perrin, l!Ml2 Cinco de Mayo. states in her action that she was operated upon la.st April 6. Suturing of the wound was carried out unsatLsfact· orlly, she 11ald, to the point that "wirt.! in· serted in the flesh later protruded" from her body. The county, both physicians and the me- dical facility are named as defendants. Cha1nher Endorses VaUey Parks Bond Proposition P, the S2 million Fountain Valley parks bond, has won the unanimous endorsement of the city's Chamber of Commerce. The board of directors called for voter approval of the bond which would prov1de for the development of a complete neighborhood parks sys~m. Attacks camp, which 8,000 North Vietnamese soldiers failed to take in a ls.day 11iege earlier this month. apparently eDded a two-week lull in major ground 1cU011. lo South Vietnam. l From P"f1e J BEACHES .... perhaps, nol fully appreciated unlll Jo91." He prt.Hcta the conversion of "now open sani:ly beaches, salt water marches, bluffs and upland rolling bills ••• to bJgh density townhouses, hotels, convention centers, tourist commercial develop- ments and resort complexes." Spurring any acquisition deciaion, the planning directors 11ald, should z.e the fac- tor that the California Department of Parks and RecreaUon predJcts a 121.S percent increase in demand for llhorellne areas by 1980. And Dickason reminds supervisors th.It In 1941 the 24.5 miles of county beaches than available could have been pun:hued for less than $8 million. Planners are not prepared to estimate the Cost of the land to be acquired. It wa1 pointed out however that· Laguna Beach is prepared to pay under current negotla- Uons $1.3 rnllllon for lesa than one fifth of a mile of oceanfront. Further key recommendations 1n the Dickason report include: -Accelerate city, county and private sector action to carry through the role of. local agencies in the state's acerllc highway program along the coast. -Study feaslblll\y of protecUve zoo1n1 along the coast, particularly with regard to scenic value, architectural and 1 l 1 n 5tandanls. -Design system of hlklna; tralb along the coast to tie in with the "coast to crest" hiking trail system. -Acquire . areas for vista points, and says.ide rests for drivers and hikers. -Construct system of recreation aJps. -Construct multi·level par t4 n I facilities at Intersections of major highways with lhe PacUlc C o a 1 t Highway. -Put into service 1 system of ahuttlt buses between mulWevel pa r k I n I faclliUes and beaches. County Ignores Huntington Plea A plea by the City of Huntington Beach for county coope.raUon in the crh.Uon of an Airport Land Use Commtsa!On ln the beach city area drew a perfunctory ''receive and file" responn Tuesday from county aupervisors. Pwed by lhe Huntington Beacb city council lut. Oct. 7, the reJOlution offered to the board suggested formaUon ol the airport group wouJd fill the need for "a forum" on airport plans in the area. Increased air traffic and Ill possible penetration to the Huntingt.on Beldt area was another factor which made establlah- ment of a commission desirable, supervisors WU9 told. FROM CALIFORNIA ART ISANS, ENGAGEMENT RING$, OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY. OAl\.Y ,l\.OT lttft ...... Claow Call at Bo91 Cl"b Hanllnllt.on Beach Boy1 Club Director Pat Downey and HoUy Sue Calkin, "Mm .11oy1 aub," combine taltbllA to r11li cell for Sunday bol1>acue at club 319 Yorktown Ave. Reedy to eat a.re (from Jell) .rotm Brand, Ricky Beeudry, Brian McGuire. l. , -·--· ·-·---- CONCORDE' 1150 -- J. C. J.Jum,,,,.ie6 'Jeweler • U2l NEWPORT AVE.. COSJA MESA 22 v •• ,. 1. Th• s.,,_. locetl ... ' . SEVILLE 1171 -· - • • VOi - ~ ol St popul llngl< Th• areat ne'" byui An Tl ·SI r. "' "' l L LI youl to b w tali> dlac com JlOOI M -aem dirt ... UIUI non Par tioo poll !hot ( c Bio rec "'' are 1 De· Die ace "' !ea Per ma N the ah< c ti> '"I ""' Gin ., • pla pie '"' .... llOI flir dbl I ·• ' ' Bea~h j Yoar B••M'•wn •• ' ' voe. &!', NO. 255, 7 SECTIONS, 76 PAGES County's By SANDI MAJOll Of .. Dtlllr "'"' staff Quamrly copies ol the Orange County Progr.,. Report, submitted to the Boold ol Superv!Jors Tuesday lhowa a total populaUon of 1,330,701 persons, with Hun- tington Beach growing the fast.est. The beach city led 24 Incorporated areas of the county in growth with 10,049 new people according to figures, released by the county Plunlng Department. Anaheim followed with 7.732 new residents. During the quarter ended July I, coun- ty populatloo lncruaed by 5.t percent, or 6,172 perlCllS per month, which breaks down to zo2 arrivala daily. Orange County will account for one fourth of the enUre pcpulation growth of the southern half of California this year, coonty officials said. The quarterly report, which costs $1 per copy and is in great demand in the county bu.sineM community is based on a DAIL V P'ILOT l leff ,.._.. Tlaurston Student• Go to Sea ·students from Laguna's Thurston Intermediate School leave New- port Harllor Im: half-day cruise aboard cwn!y'• marine science labora1my. Duling reci!!it voyage, 711 atudents used fl5;ooo·wol'!h of equipme!lt 911 federally.funded boat !or •mplipf of education in oceanography. Laguna Minority Groups . . . •· . . Invited m UCI Semmars Lagune ·Beach minority groups lnclu& youth; senior citizens, homosexuals, ghet-- to blacks, surfers and artists. While attempUng to bring represen- tatives of such groups together for frank dl.Jcussion, the UCl uten&ion 11ervice of community seminars does not superim- poee any goals. Mrs. Lucille Kuehn, p r o gr a m coOrdinatet for the UCI community .eminan, spoke to Laguna chamber directors Tuesday about the program. "It is an effort to facilitate com- munication between group11 that don't non:pally talk to each other," she said. Participants invited reflect a cro.ss-sec- tion of the community, bus~ schools, police, church, liberal thought, moderate thought and cooservaUve thoogbL The· most recent seminan: get un- der way n e 1 t week with an all-d a y session, followed by slz evening meetings and a weekend gathering of all Southern California participants at Santa Barbara. The program started as a pilot project at UCLA. Funded by a $250,000 Ford Foundation grant, UCI receives $18,136 as its share. Commenting on misconceptions about · lJCI, Mrs. Kuehn said she would like tG conduct a tour of the school for persons interested in seeing the diversity of persuasions among both students and faculty. She spoke or the quie.1 ones that don't make headlines and told the chamber board, "a group of us that are moderate feel we should be more articulate." County. Studies Proposal To . Buy Private Beaches By TOM BARLEY or t11t rMinr ,n.1 staff Orange County supervbors today art studying a 64-paae planning department recommendation that urges the county to acquire all remaining non-public beach areas from Seal Beach to San Clemente. Labeled the Master Plan of Shorellnf. Development, Pllinntng Director Forest Dickason's anal)'lil allo advocates the acquisition of upland, overnight camping areas wil.hln vlcw of lbe ocean and the feasibility or coostructlni • r ll fl c 11 I peninsulas to help meet a mocmdq de- msnd for beach frootaJe. No immediate action will be taken by the board on I>lcblon'• Jooa !ill ol thorelln< proposala. Ordering dlstrlbu11oo ol the bcodwnt1 tD federal, state and city agencies, rupervl10n1 noted that "Jt will take some ec:miderable Ume" to esamine the plau- "1ni proposall. : Formal pmentatJon J'! the DlckalOn plan woold be needed befcn ll1Y lm- etementlUoa could be 0 r d e r II! d • ~pervl.lon l&ld. Jn any event, It was -Iha broad Dlckaloo proposa1I do 8<Jt speclly where the •ul funclJ needed !(Jr acqullltloe alld denlopinent would bo -· -' Dlckuon hlmatll lsn't certain. :Qut be advocates the appointment of an ''interdisciplinary group of oceanographers, biologists, engineers, conservation1sls, planners, c l t I t e n representaUves, h yd r o I o g i s t 1 and educators to research and plan for coastal projects and overall shoreline development." nu. g r o u p, Dickason said, should '"Pllrtlcular1y establish p r i or i t I e a , methods ol funding, and determination ol which project.s need intensive study." Olckuon warm that d r a m 1 t I c tremfonnatlon of shoreline terrain now in private bands -he estimates that hatt of the C. 7 mile coastllne Is ao owned - can be expected. U. aiao warn.. that the changes that can be expected will "deeply aUect the open space and tea vilt.al that now exiat, perhaps, DOI fully appreciated until IOI!." Be predktl the converaion of "now open sandy beaches, salt miter marches, bluff• and uplaoj! rolling hills ••• to hlah denolt7 loWnhomti, hotels, con..,ntlon centers, tourist commttclal develop- mllltl and raort compleu.a .. " Spurring "'1 acqulsltloo decl.U>c, tho planning dirtcton ukt, lbouM t.e tht fac- tor that the C.lilc>ml<I Department ol CSee BEACBF.8, P1ce I) EDITION Dally Paper . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA: • WEDNESDA y; O'CTOBEI{ 21, T961 TEN CENTS Booms to 1,330,701 regular census. Census costs average out to $1 .10 ptr household, or $52,800 tor the lat.eat counl The cllhen tally in Hunlinglon Beach was tabbed on JuJy 1at101,082 an 11 per- cent Increase over last year. La Palma bad the highset percentage growth. followed by Fountain Valley. The inland clty, with a 39.9 percent Jn.. crease in populaUon, grew from 5,025 persons in July, 1967 to an estimated 7,000 this year. Fountain Valley, whlcb galned 1,461 Dew residents tn the put year had a :zt.S percent growth rate. According to the .._. population and ~ perctntage ol growth f o r coastal ciliea b: -Costa M ... , 72,983, I.I percent, -Newport Beach, 43,1&3, 7.4 percent. -Laguna Beach, 14,253, 9.4 'percent. -Seal Beach, 21,417, 5 percent. Slightly more than 50 percent of the county residents are female with about 49 percelll male, Ille report lhows. Tb!J means there are atiout 23,000 ·more women than men 1n tbe COW1ty. • 1be median age fer men ii 2t.5 years. and for women, 26.t. According to the repori, th.,. !lgura, are sllghUy lower &ban the naU~ average cif 51 percent of the p:>p11lation being lemaJe. Median age for the United States for women ls 29 years compared to men at 28.6. Counly·wlde, most age groups lhowed increa.sea. The moot lignlllcant decrwe waa rellected in the D1llllbOr ol cblldrm UDder five year• of age. AttOrdlng to the reporl, this IP -decru.ted lrom IS. 4 pm:e1I Of tho populatjon In the lietl census to ooly 10.2 percent of U.e populatJon'~ in this year's report. Mo<e than !Ill people weft bind to make the latest census repqrt. Plannln& officers said the coupty had ~ be divided Into lour dlatrlcta to llgure the populatloa because of the magnibwit of the arowtb. Lagunans to Welcome Olympic Champ Toomey U.S. Kills 225 Reds In Trap SAIGON (UPI) -U. S. planes and Marine artillery caught four groups of Communist soldiers in the open today and killed 225 or: them in a series of strikes that were continuing tonlgbl Spokesmen reported no American casualties. The well""1Ded Nolllr v~ese 111\d Viet Cong troops were spotted late Tum. day by" U. S. Marine reconnaiJsance patroll Jn several areas near the Thuonc Due Speclll Forces camp wblch earlih In the month withstood a aie1e by North Vietnamese regulars. The latest group of about 170 North Vietnamese soldiers was spotted near An Hoa and 47 of them were reported killed as night fell. Marine ground troops pu11h· ed into the area but reported oo contact as darkness fell. The Marines earlier reported killing 171 in the area below and inland from Da ,Nang. VINCENT CARROLL NIGHT SCHEDULED In appreciation of his 33 years volunteer service to the school, Laguna Beach High School has declared the varsity home football game Nov. 1 "Dr. Vincent Carroll Night." Since 1935 Dr. Carroll has betn team physician , attending both home and away games taking care of game Injuries. During haHUme of the 8 p.m. game, a special presentation from the school will be given to Dr. Carroll. Wedding Deist? Couple Steal $5,000 in Diamonds A neat young couple with stars in their e y e s and talk of wedding plarui ap- parenUy left a Laguna Beach jewelry store with $5,000 worth of diamonds in their pockets. Detective Alex Jimenez said seven loose diamoods and two diamond rings were stolen from Hayes Jewelers, 246 Forest Ave. The gems and their velvet display card were filched from a counter di'splay case shortly before closing Monday aftei'boon. Jimenez said an attractive blonde and a nel,Uy Qressed y.oung ~an as~l?d to see the wedding aton., and spent about ball an hour with store owner, Thomu G. Hayes. He showed the stones one at a t i m e and returned them to the dlaplar c a r d beneath the counter. Al one point, said the officer, the pair asked about 11ettings and as Hayes turned away for a aettlng the card and diamonds were apparenUy study the window dls:play. '11le pair lingered as the young man discussed diam,onds with Hayes. They left the store at a leisurely pace pausing to study the widow display. Asked .about the expertlJe of the pair, Jimenez 1aid, "They were either 1ros or 'Ibey had a Joi ii! W." · · Playhouse May JJrighten S~enery at New Location Motorists winding their way along Laguna Canyon Road may soon be treated to a humorous blaze of scenery on the Laguna-Moulton Playhouse site near the Festival of Arts grounds. Geoffrey Riker, liaison between the Laguna Community Players board and builders of the plahyouse said area car· toonists are being asked to decorate a 4 to 6-foot fence to be built a~ the front of the building area. "Maybe we'll b~ve an auctiGn of !ence- paintings when the construction is com- pleted," Riker suggested. While the building is rilling according tG schedule, with about 11 percent of con- struction now completed, efforts are being made by players' president, George Gade to raise more money. Additional funds are needed to put back deletions that were made to bring constructiGn CO!t.I down to the amount of cash By Phil lnterlandl available. Jim Steans, project manager for the players, said work.on the 350-seat theater is proceeding on schedule and it 11hould be substantially completed by the con- tractor'• target date, March 29. Azar Construcilon Co. or Long Beach ill the contractor for the $400,000 Pereira designed building. Traf fie Victim Arthur Vaughn Funeral Held Funeral services were held today for Arthur L. Vaughan, 48, whOBe'body was found beneath the wrecksge of his auto Sunday ln a ravine between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. He had been missing 11ince Oct. 2. Coroner's deputies estimated that the Laguna Beach resident died about 3 a.m. Oct. 2 from cheat injuries suftered in the accident The car was spotted Sunday by two young boys rldJng their bicycles near the Crystal Cove arae. Vaughan's body waa later found by police • Services will be held at Pacific View Chapel with the Rev. Ray C. G<ry ol- ficlaUng. lntennent will follow at Pacllic Veiw Memorial Park. Vaughan is survived by his wife Betty or the lunlly home, 3053 N..wl Road; two daqhlers, Judy ol the home and . Mrs. Jean Ptder1e11 of. Simi Vallq; father, William V1ugban, Maasaclluletts: mother, Mn. I1abe1Ja Steevts, Lons Beach; brother, WUUam Robert. La Mir1d1; lilter, Mr& Barbara Bf"OWt4 1.oo1 Beach. Trio From Coast Named Directors Mervolous Vltw They Hove, wl.i. I CO<lld Soy Tho Somo About Th•I• Vltwpolnl-r · . I Decathlon Star Due 'Own' Day When Olympics decathlon champion Bill Toomey retwm to his Laguna Beach home, he'll have a whole town to contend with. Plan!! are· being hatched for a ''Bm Toomey Day" in mid-November with nags, banners, speeches, a banquet, gifts and the key to the city be be Ip ed publicize internationally. l'<ojJJ:am Chairman Larry Taylor Aid today, :'"nib ls one ol the pmideit daya rm1 In the history ol Laguna Beach. ThrotJgb the outatanding efforts ol Bill Toomey, our city hat been the subject of. great and glorious noUces throughout the world. We wish to say tha'nk you to greatest an. around· athlete in the world." Toomey ls expected to return nut week to the home of hla parents, Mr. and Mr1. Cornelius R. Toomey, 496 Panorama Drive. Plan• for the celebration will be finalized then with the 29-year-old teacher. Taylor 11aid that Toomey was to have become a Laguna Beach teacher in 195& but became Ill during athletic ~ petition in Germany and could not return in time. · · "Anyone interested in making thl!: tht gr eatest or days Is invited to com- municate his ideas a,nd contributions to me through the Chamber office," aa1d Taylor. GI Widows School Benefits Expanded WASlllNGTON (UPI) -EducatiO!lll benefits for Gls or their widows will be broadened under a new law signed ~ day by President Johnson. The bill expands .the length of educat4 ional assistance to attend college or training schools to one and a half times the length of service by a veteran, up to a maxhnum of 36 months. Orange Weedier Get ready to lrORe your w a y through mart foe 'Mlursday, un- lps you live far inland, in wbicb case you'll be mopping your brow in 91..iegr .. beat. ll'll be up 10 n hereabouts. INSIDE l'ODAI' Th< -Id II 1110tch17111 the U.S. tJt"ctioM. Stoma °" UU, and oth1r a.9f)fcU,o/ Am.trlcon politic1 ma~ bt found cm Poge1 1, l1 ad JO. • .,.. " ....... u-. C.llfltf'lli. It § " (llHll... ..... DU Clltolt't ·a ,... -=;::.,. : I ar-.. # ~ 9 .... : ·==.:="· .. : T • ~-•-..,.1~,~- 11111-.... ~· • ,... Ci'* tf\'. ,........._' I ---. ........ . AM.....,. 1)0 .......... e --M ...... .. Z OAILV PILOT • • . RAlll!S OIJECTIONS Dlotrlct AHomey Hicks udge,-A 'T~y' Each Other ·Sumner, Hickl Trade Barbs at Panel Disciwion , . , I • 8r -U """1NI Ii 1 lllllt NIM Mlit, •y.., ... , pt llClllJ. . the eoun1r7. ~ make Jiii don I -., • - -""' ~ ..... el .. lnlot.ldeQco.'• Tlao lllltd member of the panel, 00: declaion." ' ' .TudlM -but -rlJ>I for dtltrtcl , l.ttorDeyJ. auaested tbe judge. Judi; ea• Tbe coonty. 1 ~et law enforcement of; Police Science Instructor Tom Adams, Another student W:ed, "What kind of ~ ....... a are clilldtlb countered 1be Deer a&l.d police find troublesome jUdgea gld Je1al obUsaUON prevent police from eonstructtve crltlci!m wou.kl N•!"r'1 ~atorney ' attitude that they have no i'dea what ls publicly &n!Werlng charges of police Beach police, for Jnatince, accept111 • 'lbe good-naw°red barbs were traded by happentnb 1n a secret interrogation room. brutality. Adama •Uia:eated the student contact Sl.IJltrlor Court Juvenile Judge Bruce "1l\11 atltude is childish -there ii no "Officers can't go back and say, 'Look, NewPort'• community rellUons oUlctr Sumner and Orange County District At-other word I could UH," he said. "In no £"d"'e,' f,n~w0 'a~dper. •~w' r0a~·ldTVbe), thldlvuls IJ m~g (John Richard) aad lit -down and talk Jt tomey C«ll Hieb during a . panel case does the judge kno'f (irSt hand wh•t ill.I ~· .. ...,.. 5 ,., over. diJcuaalon on "Law and Order" Tuesday happened . He hu lo rely on wJtnwes at infOl'lnlt.loo only available to the court at 1•ne bostlltty of the kids to police at Oraon:~ College. the acene." the proper Ume. We can't Jive out side &Qaret me," Hicks 1ald. "It ts just u in- 1'Polll tndlcate that many people feel Judge Sumner sald, "We have certain sometimts, so we bave to stand on our excuaable for a cltlUn not to be polite to the courts are responaible for the rules we set up in the Bill of Rights. integrity." · a pollcunad as it ls for a policeman not breakdown ln law and order,'' the jurist There iJ a rule aga.lnst sell incrimination. Adams, formerly community relations to be courteous. They're not going to Nld. "In aimo.t lftr)"C:ue it lr the pro-Go ahead and agitate to gd rid of the Bill officer for Santa Ana police, was liked relate to each other." slcutor who mov• to dllmlN, but It 11 d. Rlghta, but beat in mind our society ii by a student U a civilian review board All panel1!ts qreed &he poliilcally UM: Juda• wh::I am blamed for releulng 1eWna: more coruplex. 11liJ ii ,no longer wouldn't be more effective than a police popular pbrue 0 iaw and order" ii an ln- crimlnall." . . the old fronfler," be aald, not speaking PR man? o:ad expreuion that can mean whatever .. It la odd be "ould eet thlt 1m-directly to Hlcks but to the audience. "Yoo are equaUne New Jersey wilh one wants it to mean. It 111 alotaneerin.c preeilon," answered Hieb. "It ii our The panel dilcuuion was ooe of a Coeta Meaa.," Adlml aald. "Eacb of the and not a aolution to the crime problem, leellnl therl II llW111 oome 1111 up there wtes pu1ented monthly by the c<>Uege 40,000 Jndlvidu.11 police ogencl" acrou they 1ald. VIEW ~ROM THI llNCH Judge Sumner Candidates Play 'Fast ~d Loose~ Flag_ ~Tabled~ • Banner Used as Cl,oth Seized r An American F1q tacked down u a tablecloth and topped with a aerene lm· age of the Mlan god Buddha wu coo-. flacated early today at a Coe:ta Meu. apartment lharld by two sfrll and thne men. , The banner -wbJch bad uhea of IOIJl• sort acattered over it -wu Jlven to the eo.ta Men pollce lnveltlgation bureau to determJ.ne whether a com.plaint "ould be midnight Jn !'elpoDIO to I dlllurblnct report and contacted 1 H-y'8Mld -. He aald the man apologised !flt noioe ho bad 1pwenlly collied wblle' routlnl1y ,.t11ng oUI bis truh cam for m....inc pickup. Dye aaJd be WU Invited lmlde the COlll- mUjll! a~t to .,. 10< hlmlelf thal there wu no disturbance 1oin1 on and it WU theo that be lpoltod the llq. P'rtm Wirt Ser¥1ce1 In a fut..w1nding up prtsldentlal eltc· Uon campal.p. th.al la: fut picking up steam both candidates were playing "fa.st and loose" with charges. Campaigning in Texas, Vice President Hubert Humphrey a c c u 1 e d bis Republican opponent Richard Nixon or playing "fast and loose" with the nation in his choice of a running mate, among other things. _ , Nixon, jet-stopping through crucla1 · _Michigan, turne'd the same phrue, saying Humphrey brings "the fasetst tongue and fastest 1witch of position ever seen in American politics." He cited what he called HUmphrey's ablfty position on Vietnam and for indiscreet public com· ments on the Parts peace talks. Humphrey made h.IJ accuaation in a 1peech while campaigning for votes at tbe hiltoric Alamo, Texaa' most sacred -· 1be vice presJdent's noontime audience . WU com-1 largely of Mui<:an- Creative Drama Workshop Slate~ For Laguna Kids A crt1Uve drama workshop for children ages I to 12: wlll be given at the Laguna PlayOO... beginning Oct. 28. • ., Leonora Portney wW dlrect the , -workshop. She hu been involved in children's th e a t er including tha Pasadena Museum of Art Jun 1 or .. Workshop, American National Theater and 'Ibe Academy Children's Theater, • • Actlng techniques will be taught by use , of games, e1erdsel and improvisations • .m movement., dlalo1Ue and self-produced oowid. • There will be two sessions per week. ~·"The clilldre.n q:eJ I to I will meet from 4 :• p.m. to 5:30 m Mondays. Children 9 to 11 :: will meet Saturday mom.lngs from 10 to :·. noon. .: Regiltrailon will be al the first ~ meeting. TUIUon will be t10 per month. • •• ' ~: Barnard in Hospital ~! Pi~~ ~:k~:an~:~~~P~fuis- :· tlan Barnard was admltted to Groote : Schuur Hospital todlQ' for trtatment of ~ an undisclosed ailment. . ·. •. ' I ' • DAllV PIIOT ottAHOl C°"9T l"\llLllHIH!a COM,Nl't' ••Mrf N. W•.4 '"''*"'"~ J•ck •• c.r1., Vkil '""' ......... OIMt'al "'"""" Tlit••• KH•d .... Tlt•••• A. M1r1111lil11• ~.,.. r:•lfw l lch•rl '· N•ll '•wl Nl1••11 L-a.tCfl Mwrt'°'°" Cl,., •fllW Dlr9C19t ........... Of .. 211 ,., ... A,.,., M1Tlh11 A4 .. r••n ,.0. h• '''• ''''2 --c.• ... I Df WHt .... llrtlt .....,,., -..ct!! ttll "'"' ........... ..... Hwllll• ... llMdli .. llPI ..... -c'4\_ .. OAA.V ""°'• ..... ...., II ........ "* tlo.P'im. " ............... w"""' -................. -u.-IMMfl,. ......, ..... c.... ~ ..... ... --. .......... v...., ................ . --i '" ---........ ,,,,~ .......... Jl'U.._ ..... ......_......,~ ... ....... .,.c:.. ..... :.'•!···= =-~= c b -l!"t~.=.'::t ..;;..=·-. ..:. ..... .. ............ _.. ~ .. ._. .... ;:;............,,.-...;;;;;;. ... ...;:: :L..::·:::·::.~~~ ... :::.::=~~..J • Amerlcam, wbo in tum rnak• up a . olgnlllcant, and perhaJll cruclll porUoo of the Texas electorate. Humpb;iey, hailed by Texas Democrat! as a "miracle worker" for bringing together lbelr warring leaders, will find his beallng akilla In d"'IJ!ld again loday when be geta to callfornla. Not only are California's DemocraUc leaden caught in internal party d.isputu, but a sizeable number of-rank and file memben were won to the peace standl of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy and are following him in withholding support for any preaidenilal candidate at tht mo- ment. The result ha! been a sputtering cam- paign on Humphrey's behalf that finds him trailing hla Republlcan rival, Richard M. Nlz:oo, 1n the polla In their cont.eat for Califomla'1 to electoral volts. Wlth only two weeks left In the cam· paign, Humphrey n..id It was Ume to ask the ce.ntral question : "Who can the American people trust to lead this country for the nut four )'WI?" He 1ald Nlz:on had made two declslons Jn tbe campaign "which speak direcUy to this crucial issue of trust." "First, be dedded who 1hould be his vice presldenUal running mate -the man who would be a heartbeat from the prUldency Itself in this nuclear age," Humphrey said, "And Mr. NI.Ion chose Spiro T. Agnew -a so-called urban e:1- pert who 11y1, 'when you have seen one slum, you have seen them all,' a man who says he cannot wait to try out his new.found experience in foreign policy. Youths Slate Street Dance With City Council b{eulngs, the Laguna Youth Councll wlll bold a street dance on Forest Avenue Saturday. Behreen I p.m. and mldnlghl, leen.o will dance to two bands while "belng free in the cool evening air," according to President Rob Krorunan. Admission ls 75 cents. Earlier ~s have resulted in com- plaints of. too much noise. Tbe Youth Council apparently solved this problem with an end-of-summer dance, when the bands were aimed seaward. Noise Oowed out ever the ocean, resulting in a com~ plaint-free street dance, according to City Councilmen. Fram Page I BEACHES ... Parb lhd Recre1Uon prtdjcll a 122.S percent increase in demand for shoreline areas by 1980. And Dickason reminds supervisors that In 1941 the 14.6 miles of county beaches than avallabJe could have been purchased for less than $8 ml!Uon. PJannera are not prepared to estimate the cost of the land to be acquired. It waa pointed out however that Laguna Buch ia prepared to pay under CUJTent neaoua- Uons $1 .3 mllllon for leu than one fifth of a mile of octlnfront. Further key recommendations ln the Dickason report include: -Acctlerate city, county and private Rdor action to ctrry through the role of local agenclea ln the state'a acenJc blghway program along the coast. -Study feasibility of protect.Ive IOfllng alon, the coaal, particularly with regard lo :scenic value, architectural and • I a: n atandlrdl. -Design ryatem of hiking trllb along the coast to tJe in "lth the "coast to crest" hiklnc trail syltem. -Acquire areas for vista J)Olntl and aaysjde rtltl for driven and blken. --Oonatroct l)'1tlm ol recreaU... algns. --Oinatruct multl-leYel p a r k>t • I factUUu at lnterllCtlonl of. major hl&h••YI with the Pacific Co I I l m,h ... y. -M lntO KrVlce a iysl,m of abufUe bulel: between mulWevel park 1 DI f..WU..lllllbeacbea. DAllT 'ILOT lttff l'1wt9 Dana Harbor Anchorage •· Luxury yacht riding at andlor in Dana Harbor provides sharp con- trast In old foundations of what was envisioned in late 1920'1 a• plush, clllflride resort hotel. Development of new harbor has come about 4-0 years too late for original planners of hotel, whooe dreams crumbled with 1929 economic cr<U5h. Bach Program to Launch 9th Chamber Music Year The ninth season of the Laguna Beach Chamber MlWc Society will open Nov. 3 with an aU-Bacb program by tbe Con· centus Muslcus of Vienna. The 12 members of the unique ensemble perfonn music from the renaissance to the baroque. All are leading chair players with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra which opened the Orange County Philharmonic season Jut year. Formed In 1952 by Nlkolaua Hamon· court, the Concentus Muslcus uses orl1lnal manuscript sources, performance techniques and instruments. lury llalian instrument and an English baroque organ from 1870. Seven of the group's recordings have received intemailonal awards. For their perfonna~ at the Laguna Beach High School auditorium, the group wlll play Bach's C Major and B Minor Orchestral Suites (one and two), the Brandenburg Concerto No. 4, and the E Major VloUn Concerto. D. H. Colin Sllm, chairman of the UCI music department, will conduct a concert preview ln the auditorium at 7:30 p.m. The perfonnance will follow at 8 p.m. soughl . · Dellllng the Amerlcon Flog la a vloJa.. tlon of the Milltary and Veterana Code and Harbor Area judae1 have been hand· ing down some attll sentences upon several recent convlctlom. Officer Dave Dye wu Hilt to the MOO block ol Santa Ana A venue abortly after The pajrolman aald the lndlvlau.I w!t!i whom be ap0te denied tnowledr• al Iba .apparent MUltaly 11111 Vetarana Code vlolattOD. Two glrll 19 and 1111111 two other men. II 11111 19, live In the 1pa?lmeol ll>d lhare the rent equally, the eldest bouleholder told Officer Dye. Mesa Teacher, 2 Others Arrested in Drug Raids Tbrte perlONI lncludlng an llliatant teacher at a Colla Mesa private achool were arrested on 1UJplclon of uaorted narcotics vlolaUoos early toda1 ln separate raids. State narcoUca agents, the Orange County Sheriff's narcoilcs detail and Cocta Mesa detecUves cooperated In the arreat.s, confiscatlnc a mWl amount of LSD and marijuana. Larry D. Dean, 21, and Beverly Creech, 21, bOth of 314 Monte VL!ta Ave., were booked on suaplclon of sale of dangerous drugs; possession of dangerous drugs for aale; sale of marijuana, and possession of marijuana for sale. Sharron L. Yowig, 19, of 341 Ramona Laguna Chamber Urging Yes on IA The Laguna Beach Chamber of Com4 merce Board of Directors Tuesday turn- ed thumbl down on the Watson amend- ment, Prop. 9, and urged instead a Yes vote for proposlUon lA. The Chamber boan:I was unanimous in adopUon of a resolution recommending a no vote on the WailOn scheme and a yes vote on the legislature's tax relief alternaUve. The committee drafting the nsolullon supported the principle of lowering real property taxes. However, It found the Watson amendment JIJ.advlsed Jn that It offered no alternaUve f u n d -r a 1 s I n g methods and could create problems outweighing benefits. Place, wu arrested only en 1U1plclon ot 1ale of marijuana. ,. ' She gave her occupaUon u an uslstant Instructor at the Monteuori School, which !tresses a method of lndlvldual at4 tention ratper than classroom grouping. All three suspect! were booked at Cotta Mesa City Jail and then transferred to Orange CUnly Jail, since the case originated with a state invutlgaUcn. It was not immediately diaclOJed how much contraband was sel.z.ed at the apartment shared by Dean and the Creech woman, but lovestlaatora said it was not very much. Yule Lighting Surprises Due William McCready Jr., undaunted by lethargic response of businesses to h I 1 holiday lighting program, ii about to unleash h1a secret "eapoo oa Laguna Beach merchants. McCready, chamber chainnan rl. the Christmas DecoraUon Committee, 11ve no sta.Ustics on the guided mlsslle that will hit business establishment! but dld disclose Tuesday that "Iha ii an at4 tract.Ive young girl." McCready told fellow board member! he sent out 385 letten: to "get every businessman to light up h11 premlJet: for the Festival of Ughts." He is even of. ferlng ts.root light strings to bualneueit for $3 each. Only fl have anJWered., Aid McCrady. Now he's pulling out all the rtop1. Some of the Instrument! are copies or reconstructions that date from the 16th and 17th centuries. The collection in- cludes baroque violins and winds, baro. que and renaissance recorders , a harpsichord copied from a late 17th cen- I FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY. Newport Youth Injured in Crash A Newport Beach y~th suf!ered minor Injury Tuesday night when the vehicle in which he wu a passenger struck another car 1n Laguna Beach. Police said Stephen Let Mack, 18 of 161 4Znd St. wu to see his own physician. He .was riding with Lloyd D. Wittmer, 18 of San Diego. The car, northbound on South Coast Highway,. struck the rear of a car driven by WarTeo E. Howland, 70 of 311 Ktnp Road, NewpQrt BeaQfi. Howland had •top- ped for another caf that turned in front of him. Laguna Councilmen To Talk to Owners Logwio Beocll Couocllmln Roy Holm Ind City Plaoner Al Autry will speak to membert "' the Atth Beach lielghll AMocllllon ol Property Owners' at the first g<notal mtttlng ol the fill seuon. 'lbe mtttlng II to be held IL 7' 30 p.m. Thursdly at the City Council chamben. It will lnclude committee reports and ..., buslneu ol neighborhood concern. I. CONCORDE $110 I -- Jill HIWl'OlT AVE., COSTA MESA: 11 J..,. •• n.. s..... Loc:..+iM SEVILLE $171 COMTIHIJfTAl - -- I ' • 1 • ' i . • . ' I ' J • . I I • J l . I : I •• 'I " :c • c r ' ' . '. ... UPI T.....,_t One Point of View City police watch a.s demonstrators march in front of Coral Gables, Fla., Country Club protesting visit or third party Vice PresidenUal candidate Curtis LeMay. Anaheim Council Gives , • . ./ Talks Again Hit Snag Over Bombs PARIS (UPI) -U.S. and NOr1h Vl.i. namese negotiatora failed once more • da,y to acbleve a breakthrough on dellcat• steps that COl!ld lead lo a U.S. bombing halt and full-Oedged peace negoUailom. "lt la time for you to act," U.S. 'Ambassador W. Avecell Harriman told North Vietnamese delegate Xuan '!boy, ••The choice ii yours." Bui despite reporta by high dlplomaUc llOUl'tes Hanoi was ready to talk and despite a general feeling ol. optimism In world capitals including Washington oo progress waa reported. The onJy known agreement wls to meet again next WedneadaJ" Harriman at one point said the two aides would meet again Thursday In an unprecedented extra session, but changed his statement later lo next Wedneaday. This immediateJy prompted a d de d speculation that Harriman and 'Thuy were holding secret meetings, but William J. Jorden, chief U.S. spokesman, sald the Harriman statement was a "slip of the tongue" and no other than the regular Wednesday meetinga w er • foreseen. The North Vietnamese delegation spokesman, Nguyen Thanh La, sidestep- ped questions as to whether secret meetings had been held Ol' were planned. The adjournment until next Wedne!day apparently means another week'• delay in Hanoi's reply to Washington peace ef. forts. It was possible the delegation had not yet received the official North Vietnam government reaction to P r e s i d e n t Johnson's peaL"e offensive and that he reply could come Thursday. It had been expected today and Washington Was hopeful of announcing a bombing halt during the day. High diplomatic sources in London said the Soviet Union had intervened to transmit the U.S. proposals to Hanoi and that the North Vietnameae government "means business." • . . .. ~-·· ... __ , ....... U'IT ......... THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A RAZOR AFTER 11 DAYS IN ORBIT Clean Shaven Astronauts Schlr ra, Cunningham, Eisele (from left) Spacemen Arrive at Cape Trio 'Bubbling' With Thanks for Launch Team CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Bub- bling with thanks for the team that launched them into orbit 12 days ago, the . three beaming Apollo 7 . astronauts returned to Cape Kennedy today to begin reliving for aperts their maraUion space journey. "Th,e best part, of course, 1! to come home," said smiling Apollo 7 commander Waletr M. Schirra Jr. "We were here for a number of months but we left rather suddenly," he told 500 members of the launch team which greeted them at the airport. and was forced to return to the Essex. "Sorry about that, sir," a !'.hip's officer told Scbirra as the astronaut switcned to another plane. "That's all right," said the man wbo Tuesday finished flying 41,i million miles in space. "I've got to get my flight time in somehow." A second plane, carrying 3chirra's fellow Apollo 7 crewmen -Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and civilian Walter Cunningham -circled overhead so that the arrival o( the three at the Cape would coincide. TEAM OF DOCl'ORS Jt was the first time the astronauts bad set foot on land aince they blasted off Oct. 11 from a Saturn 18 launch pad about three miles away from the Cape Kennedy airstrip. About 500 representatives of the government-Industry team involved in the launch 'of Apollo 7 were on hand to greet the astronauts. The space heroes were of. Ucially welcomed by Dr. Kurt H. Debus, director of NASA's Kennedy Spaee Center, and by Maj. Gen. David M.. Jones. commander o( the Air Force Eastern Test Range. Snakes Walking Papers County Airport Theft Losses Set at $47,000 -A large red, white and blue sign was UMOlled saying "Welcome Back." The two twln~gine planes landed at 8:55 a:m. PST after a 2 hour and 15 minute flight from their prime recovery ship, the Essex. The Apollo 7 crew planned to stay at Cape Kennedy until Friday night or Saturday for a long series of debriefings with medical and technical experts. The meetings·will continue at Houston's M'an- ned Spacecraft Center Sunday and last until Nov. 1. Old Patrick may become the patron saint of Anaheim, following action by the City Council Tuesday night to drive snakes and maybe a family of snake- •· lovers as well, out of town . The City Council voted 4 to l againm. a variance allowing the William Burch · Mail Vietnam Packages Soon Orange Countians who plan to send Christmas presents to servicemen in Vietnam should mail packages before Nov. 9, U.S. Post Office officials remind- ed patrons today. The parcels will be stored in Oakland then loaded on the USS "Santa Claus Special" which set:!l sail in mid-November for Da Nang, Qui Nhon, Cam Rahn Bay and Saigon, Vietnam. China Claims U.S. Ship, Plane Intruded TOKYO (AP) -Communist China asserled today a U.S. warship and a military plane intruded into Chinese ter- ritory off south China Tuesday "in grave military provocations.·• Peking radio said a spo)les.man or the Foreign Ministry was authorized to issue Red China's "464th s e r i o u s warning" against the alleged intrusions. family, of .2107 Juditll Lane, to keep four boa constrictors and a robust, 10-foot python in their garage. They have the alternative of moving. No{ content with driving away the miniature menagerie, the council also voted to adopt an ordinance which would oust every snake in the city. 0 n l y member to vote against t h e measure, Councilman Jack Dutton, based his decision on a visit to the Burch home. where he found the snakes well caged and protected from escape. The Burches maintain that the non· poisonous serpents would and could harm no one, plus the fact that they have been used to good educational advantage in visits to Anaheim classrooms. Basin.8 their objection on the fact that people just don't like snakes, however, the cowicil majOClty ordered them gone within 30 days. Freudian psychologists might have some interesting conjecture about un- derlying causes of the council's assump- tion that everyone fin<h r e pt i 1 e s repulsive. Down through the ages -since Adam and Eve -snakes have been held in low regard, however, even to the current car· tooo st.rip B.C., in which one serves as everyone's scapegoat. In the Fifth Century, St. Patrick i3 reported to have driven all snakes and toads out of Ireland. Anaheim, originally founded as a German colony, may not exactly be a Garden of Eden and it isn't as old as the Emerald Isle, but boa, oh boa, is it tradi· tionalist. Value of stolen goods taken from Or- ange County Airport bas skyrocketed to $47 ,000 during the first eight month.a o[ this year, compared to only '21000 last year. The increase is caused parUy by ex- pand~ airport operation!" -three nt!:w. airlines and nearly twice as many pas- sengers. Part of it, too, is that the le' curlty force has not expanded. Airport commissioners were told by Director Robert Bresnahan Tuesday night that his nine-man security force ia proving the old saw "you can't be everywhere at the same time." The airport operations report he sub- mitted to the commissioners compar- ing the first eight months of this year with 1967 showed a multiplication of ac- tivity at the field in the 12 months with no addition of men to the leCW'ily force in three ye'ars. Bresnahan reminded commissioners that his request for three additional guards was "shot .dovqi at budget time" by county supervisors. . Commission Chairman DeM1s Carp- enter, scanning the figures, sald "I think you better open that door again" and a.sked supervisors to approve four to six men in order to provide "mini- mum coverage" at the field . According to the report, the number of passengers to the .airport tenninal has risen from 218,389 to 483,2112 in 12 months. The number of airlines flying from the field went from two to five, and the number of flying clubs using airport facilltie! is up froJR nve to 15. Bresnahan valued the aircraft and equipment under security watch at the field at h .87 million, or about $1 million per man. 'Femmes'·Barely Makes It Nude Cuti.es Fail to Lift Melodyland Offering By ALBERT W. BATES Of ""' Dlltr Pllff Sltff "Femmes de Paris," billed as an original, not a transplant from i,. Vegas or France, opened to a near sellout open- ing night audience at Melodyland Theater Tuesday evening. Despite a display ol bare-breasted pulchritude, with headdresses and other accoutrements to outdo the late Flo Ziegfeld, the show is an overall dud. Oh, it has Its moo\eDls, but not in any ; "femme" fashion. Specifically, it has FranCis Brunn, 1'bo ftJily live11 up to his : billing as tbe wor:ld 11 grutest juggler. • Aficionados of old time vaudeville wiU ' zero in on this sw-e-handed, wre-foated young man as the real star of the show. Rusty Warren, the llal-<bested queen ol. • blue material, is lop billed. She l&Ved as : a kind ot counterpoint to the ripe-bolmned • show &irla who glorify the mallllN!ry ' gland. Bui RualJ p!is lnlo words all tbe "°'""ly ~ lh<Jugbll produced by ..... : of the ltnrWng. • No doubt many ol. MW Warren'• devotee. <I her "Son.gs for Slnnerl" and members ol her "Knocken Up Club'' were In the opeolng night audiOllee and I hanging ,on her every word. But there were also a great many others wbo walk- ed out on her performance, not out of prudishness but from sheer boredom. Sexibe$8 bordering on lhe barnyard, with a heav)' concentration on udder and rump size, leaves real humor out.side the f4fTD fence. ~ and Waklo, comic cutups and ee. ceritriC dancers from Splnisb mw:ic halla, started off so lolally corny and elemental that it wu a serioos question bow they eould have made it as f.ar as a county ... 1 amateur show. But they got going flrially , and showed some rel.I tll\d!le in the later stages of their time on stage. Closest to a real pro in the p e r form an c e ii well-proportioned, reasooably good linger in Ille French tradition, Maria Marlene. She claima she reslsll recording and TV olfen becauae &he Ui:es Uve audiences. Tbe oPtnine night audlenoe al Melodyland appeared lo like her, too. She bu a command.ln.g way abouther. -Nola Hollman and Fred llano pit on a pedeatrlan performance u a d a g I o dancen, later return ftilly dotbed la another number. Pooaibly lbe major dliappolntmenl cl / this show is Jacques Jourdan, a handsome French singer who contents himsell mainly with a weak imitation of Maurice Chevalier. Jourdan is very French, and hls support from the nude and semi-nude loVelles is considerable, but he doesn't capture the Chevalier ma- . glc by the distance from Paril lo Mor- sel Res. It seems reasonable to conclude that producers Sammy Lewis and Danny Dare are llralning hard for sure-fire bos Dffice ~Ith this inferior production. It ia far below. Ille -aid they set In the early period of M 1 I o d y 1 a n d , representing welcome proff.Slional theater in Orange Coonty. Certainly tt ii not worth Ille price booot lo 16.50 !or a aeal normally priced at $5. 'I'1lil one ii n unabashed appeal to wonbippen ol the mammary aland. Which Ian'! lo AY that Ille produi:ilon la In any ...,. -· Oo Ille cootrary, tt bu lta moments of p-eat physical beau.. ly, Including tutelul prtleDlalloo ol. the femlnine_Joan. and...mylllque. The trouble II, It jull doesn1 come ol.! u a fully utJslylnjJ and balanced 1how. Moybo Ille Puerto Rlcanl, who have bought It !or a full yeor alter tt ...it IOU< weeu at Meloclyland, wtll lovt 11. Air Force Maj. Donn F .. Eisele and civilian Walter Cunningham, the other members of the Apollo 7 crew, said they were overwhelmed by the welcome. Cunningham said "Wally's been through this a number of times." 'NOT OLD HAT' I· "But it's n~ld hat to Donn and J " he f. ' ' said. "I don't w what I expected when I landed here but I certainly wasn't ex- pecting this and all J can say is thank you for the warm welcome." A row of girls, restrained by ropes and security police, invited the astronauta to come over and see them. "We don't have enough courage," quip- ped Schirra. The astronauts were wearing their blue flight sltita and looked rested. There were no visible sJgns of the shakiness displayed by the crew Tuesday after they were taken aboard the Carrier Essex. . The return to Cape Kennedy was ttelayed when the plane carrying Schirra developed a leak in its hydraulic system With them was a team or medical doc- tors, headed by Dr. William Carpentier, the recovery team's chiel physician. Hay Hauler Rams · Bridge Support; Driver Iilll~d A Norwalk hay hauJer died Tuesday shorUy before noon when his tractor . trailer smashed into a bridge support on Santa Ana Freeway. , Dead on arrival at Beach Community HO!pltal was Kenneth E. Carpenter, 49, of 12012 Alondra Blvd., Norw.alk. California Highway Patrol investigators said the driver was north bound on the Santa Ana Freeway at the Riverside Freeway access when he tried to enter the middle lane, failed and then swerved back into the outside lane. He apparenUy lost control of the v~­ cle and it crashed into the Orangethorpe Ave. overpass support, the CHP said. Carpernter was employed by the Lucefne Hay Company. Ren ate r Mortuary in Buena Park la handling funeral arrangements. Election Day 1968 .i.. NOVEMBER FIFTH Both Great 'Flag Days' UNITED STATES FLAG St1+. ~•9 lncludodl \ 139s Fly a new flag, save money lllld help 1i>e llOyo' Club of The !Lubor Area-all at the same time. Order tJtis de!W<e flag kit now and get a miniature state flag as a bonus. Home delivery jn Costa Mesa and Newport Bea<h; kits will be mailed· to other Orange County addresses. Order Now ·-----------• o... ......... ... I lkn' Cl\111 ol fht K9fbctr Al'M) I C.n+rel l rench U1>9tr ley lr11teh I ."4 Oll'IMf Sfrwl 1111 n.tln ..._ I =~~Cllllf. ., .... ~~I I "·· .. ""' ........ ,1., lritt •• u.,, ,,, kit. I • ••• • ......... ... I r City "• •• I m,,,, ... h , ----~ c:Ndll .. fllOlll'I' .....--............ Cllla f/6 • r Hll'W Ara) ----------· I I • • RepubUCIJI W. Crolg llcldlo, I== of. the 1tate Auembly'1 Proceclure Committee, !J holding hearlnp on the ot. chemlall~y .mlceo, de-Mooday 10 the effects of Cl and Wftl ed momerr FY· Asked •wbiat he ·woold have • U be was a d<Jnonstralx>r, he : "I'd oure have dropped my Jt • • • .., ; Tlllr lot><lu lau ' 1'G1f Rlemf>lc II ~boil bu11nu ""I ill foci IM ii I. "Pmthowe Pet." She's 20 ..:~ar ·old Vivienne N e v e • foho'• visiting New fork taith o fel,. Joto "pet" on bt· hat f of "Pcnt- hoV.fe,,,, Enalmtd'1 ~adnig men's mag: azmt. She ·wai pho- tographed ;,. . the . outfit on a vilit to tM WaU Street fi; ll4tldal dlltrlct. • Actress Loretta Young and her estranged husband, produce r Thomas H. A. L.wis, will divide more than $1 million in assets. They agreed to the cotl\Pn>mise setUement in Los Angeles Monday, apparently ending a 11).>'(m court fight involving the J.C.P. Co11>., which produced 103 films fur "The Loretta Young Show'' oo. teJevi- .si.on. Lewis and Miss Young1 mar- ried in 1940, have lived apart ap- proximately 12 years. • A businessmen 1n Macon, Ga., Data Found In Sirhan HomeOK'd LOS ANGl!:Ll!:S (AP) -Deleme el• Iorio to llUP~ inalertal ....... In lbe llome of Sllhan Blahara Sirhan failed Tuesday. But -E.. PUIOlll, ottorney for lbe man oc:cused of aJoylng Sen. ~ F. Ktrmody, told ......,.. o!terwordl that "aomeUme1 when a judge rul11 ogalnll 7pu II cu be ney be1p1u1." He aalil "Our 1Uenlloa might -be dlrec:led lo I more carefUI IWCh ond ltu<ty wby thele thlnp """' aald ond done." lddJnc lblt lbe --Md otlier JQaleriall found In Sirhan'• room 11may indicate aqmething" about the Sf ,..,. ... d Jordanlaa In psycb!atrlltl. Superior Court Jud go Herbert V. Walker aald be "'5 not ruling oo lbe ld- mllslb!llty of the" evid .... , but only oo whether it abould be aup ......... He 1ald police bad ,.reuonable authority" to enter the.home without a tearcb warrant becaWJt. one ol Slrban'• btothen 11vt. lim comenl · _ , Amozii! llem.s llObed -ond marbd !«' Identification. Tuelday -were notebookl that Included, aocordlng to Mayor Sam 'Xorty's couuoent shortly. after the u1uminar.on, "a direct reference to the n...,.1ty to uWslnale Sen. Kennedy before June 5, 1968." Cb re f Deputy Dist. Atty. Lynn D. Compton; who also he'ld a news con- ference after the bearing, aaid he and co. ~ would uae whatever dooimeilti ieheif at the Sirhan home --. . ' ... • . - Replies to Critics l Staff Pr{1sid~n.cy 'Nonsense' Ike . NEW YORK (AP) -Fonner Pr<olcknt Dwlgltt D. Eisenhower wrllel that ti la "nonsense" to believe thtit he' r•n. hll presidency largol1 through 1 t • f f doclaJOlll. Elsenbower, in an article In the November Readers DJgest e n t I t le d · "Some Thoughts on the Presidency," aal4: "Naturally, l con.suited' with my ' staff an d I valued their opinlOOs. B u t staff work doesn't mean that you take a vQte of your subordinates and then abide by the majority opinion. 'Ihis, ol course, ii nonsense ." The former chief executive worked on the article last summer at Walter Reed Army Meifica! Center j"'t before hll seventh heart attack. "It we did not tee eya to. eye -and these inata.ncea were rare -tt wu, of COW'te, my oplnJon that prevailed; thJJ ii the way It hu to be ... "Al a mWtary lead~," Else$otrer conUnued, be learned that his must be the ulUmate deciilon. "Many ttmea dur- !ng my two term 1,'' 'be said, 1'my decisions r'8 contr&ry to lbe majority oplnJon ot my advisors. u The fonher Pre!ident, who ls atll1 In Walter Reed, said lbe heavy burdena of the presidency can be eUed by good o:· eeulJ.ve organiiaUoo in the White House. He listed prime "'!uisllel cl tha presidency U charlcter t a b 111 t Y I tespolllibllity and eZJ>erience. But above all, he s a 1 d, every prealdent and "one profound duty to .the nation: to e:zeri moral leadership ... MOTHER TESTIFIES -Mrs. Mary Sirlum, mother of the accused assassin ol. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and another son, Adel Sirbicln, leev~ Loo Angeles Hall of Justice after testifying at h<>aring Tuesday. Eisenhower wrote that despite what some persons said, he kept a Ught rein on Secretary of State J<1hn Fost& Dulles' conduct of bb administrati01J's foreign policy. i Youth Beats Woman they decided are helpful and relevant. Atiked if a memo rela.Ung to the uaaainaUon f.ell Into that category, Com'pton replied: "That would be a algnlflc:,ant piece of evidence." Kennedy was shot fatally just after proclalmlng victory in Californa's June 4 Democratic presidential primary. Sirban'a brother, Adel, 211, coofirmed in Tuesday's bearing police testimony that he bad approved the search: "I said "Tbe perslstent statement that I turned sOmethlng to the effect, ''It's okay with fore.Igo policy over to DulJe!I! LB, to use a me." more civilized word than Jt deserves, in- t But a younger brother, Munir, 21, correct," be aid. · ' LOS ANGELES CAP)-A youth beat • detded two policemen's testimony that be Although depending greaUy on Dulles' young woman teacher in her empty also had approvel:t. He said police ques.-wisdom, Eisenhower added , "Foster classroom Tuesda~ and f1"!l wltb bU tioned him but that there was no coo-made no linportant move( ,.Ithout con-pbrse which contairied $5. · versation about searching the family suIUng the Presidenl I reviewed ln ad-An hour after the attack and robbery, house in suburban Pasadena. vance all his major pronouncements and aberlff's depuUes arrelted Elmore Scott .. And.}..1ary Sirhan, the mother, testified. apeecbes, and when be wu abroad be Mosley, 19, Loa Angeles, two blocb ··~is my house; I ani b'uying it" -and Wat constantly In touch by cable and from Washington Hlgb School Jn the Lln-\h~•=t~sbe:.::., too;.:::,~g=a~ve~n~o~pe"-'rm~i~$~io~n~to~en~ter~~tel-e~pbon~-e·~~~--~~~~~~~"°-'-Diltrid.~--,·~~~~~~~~~ Teacher, Steal, $5 ' Municipal Slowdown Worsens inNew York NEW YORK (AP) -A !eaoberl' strike kept the l.l·mlllion pup)] public school ~stem paralyzed, poUoe patrolmen con- tinued a wort alowdowli and firemen started their own slowdown today -but for moat ris1tDrs there wai llWe visible evlderice of New York 's iotebsifyl.Dg municipal labor 0'1&1i. R ·Tbe firem~ -carried out their threat to join tile police in relusJna .lo perfonn ~nesitenti.al d\rties, • beginning otuclally at 8:45 a.m. ~'Nothing ~ 1top the 1low down Ulla morning." a-union offialal laid. The 9QO schools m<>!l C?f thein Joc:;ked with only "custodians inside, are o[f the usual toufist paths, most police cars sUU " patrol U,.e 1treets and fire engines con- tinue to rispond to emergency calls with 1ire~ walling.' Perhaps a tourist visiting "Clty Hall might see pickets or glimpse ibe idl~ children playing in the par kB-but nowhere Wat lbere the obvious phyaical evidence ol crll1s IUCb as the '.masslve traffic tieupa In the t!IGa subway strike. Frank Parnell, told police Monday that someone bad Stolen a . bank hag containing $3,500 1rom his Se. nator Charged. home. About fuur hours later, fl!• . thief wa3 nabbed. ft Wjlt his dog, But the schoo.l controversy has brougbt subtler consequences such u the loss of momentum in studJes and charges and count.ercharges of riclam an<i anti· dro~ sa.1dthth• playful ~ ... ·~ In Mail Misuse . ragging e money bag wiw ttie · mont!y around Parnell's "bact yard, · • · · Oaims Vendetta A thief found hfmlelf the vic- tim of a tinseled world in Den.- Ver, Cqlo. Monda11 after M , stole a truck JoockrJ with tohat he thought waa tht fiM bour- bon adverti!erJ on tht tide. · Police later found in.tact the abandoned truck and tti corpo--· -au.es of di.spla11 bottles filled · with colored water . O:nd tea.: ' • WASllINGTl>N (AP) -A leader In the Senate fight" against President Johnson's Supreme Court nominations says Johnson . tiu liuDched a Vendetta agalnJt ·rum · because cl hll eUo<U In blocking Abe . Forla!:' nominatim to be. ch1ef jwtlce. .. When you stick your neck out and · bock the IJohnsoo adntinlltration, I guesa , yoo have to expect th.ii aort ot tJllng," sal~Sen. P. Gr1111n Tuesd11. '. &miti:J;m that are both Jnore:"'diftlcult to me.a.sure and leBI cerCai.n in tbtii' long !Orm eUecta. "-• ·As ·the strike by the 55,000.member United FederaUon of Teachen cost another day of classes ....... the .19th of SO In tQe fall term -the Board of Education 'Tn&de new moves aimed ;it ending the . walkout . The board armounced TUesday night it would seek an Injunction against the ad· ministrator Rhody McCoy , and governing board of the PredominantJy Negro and PUetto Rican Ocean Hill-Brownsville ex~ perlmental school di!bict in Brooklyn to prevent them from interfering with U\e ':, . . Roymond L""lfl•y, who wanted lo be a soldier so badly that he didn't mind •orving 28 daYJ in the guardhouse at Aldenhot, England far the Wvilege, is in trouble again. Ra·ymond turned· tiim.stU in when his brother, Vincent, went AWOL. He took Vincent's ~unish­ ment and then took Vincent s place in the ranks. All went well until Vincent turned up -but now Ray· mond has been oourtmartialed &:nd discharged fro liking lnl\Y 1"11 undta'r false pretenses. Griffin commented In a statement "1eased by bis clflce after the Post Of· flte Department ~c:cused the Michigan . Republican cl misusing free mall privileges in bis 11166 Senate campaign and said it wruld seek reimbursement of llOme as,ooo. Griffin, who wu on a midwestem speaking trip, called the po a t a I department's demand ••po Ii t I ca I harassment" motivated by the senalor's successful leaderahip of the fight to block Johnson's nomination of his old friend Fortas. reinstatement of 80 dlsputed white "~~h~~ same time tll• «ntral ooan1 . fir~st Class Freight uld Mayor John .V. Lin4saJ would tern-, · .. The o 7 'command module is given a thorough porarily close Junior High School 271 -. •I insp iob by NASA technicians in its hangar on one of Ocean Hill's eight schools -if the · .• ,' t board. ·• ~ USS Essex after its 11-day mission in Uf'I T...,,.. space. Balloons on top of Ute spacecraft were used to right it during the splashdown in the Atlantic Tuesday. union would call off its third strike.of the ~ ~ term. The union has charged that teachers were harassed at JRS 271. ' ... Union President Albert Shanker said he would present the board statement to the ' ,, Hints of Secret Letter "I've advised my relatives and my staff to double check their income tax returns and fasten their tut belts," Grif~ fin said. VFT delegate usembly at a meeting tC>-· J 1 day but declined to comment further. .'• Other UFI' officials said they doubted : T that t.be move would end the walkout. ! i I Mississippi .River Flooded Cushing I: c BOSTON (UPI) -CardinaJ Richard 'Cushing, a longtime friend of the Ken- , ·nedy family, hinted Tuesday tmdilclosed Topcoat Temperatures Chill International Falls, Minn. ' 0 d6lalls of Jacqueline Kennedy's decision to, marry Aristotle Onassis would atartJe 1 the World. • v.s. s-••rlJ bttwftcl llttll """ ,.. • .... '""" ,,_ ... DtlM!t91 .. ~ °"-llld.y, n.., mt • ,..,. MllM .,lonif • c:IMr, al .. IOllMl'llt Uy. The U.$. W'M!Mr •-11 1"""""9 "" flnt -"-.. "''-• .,._. l""I kw!\ CO.ff ...... . A dtlor ~ltillt ,,..., ... la. l!at fl ""9 lleflcln .... "'"PtAfuns .. ,,, todt., ~ .._ ..... .,.. • "' ,,. ~~----.......... """' .... ,.. ... ,._ ...... """'-'· ,,..._ ,...,.,,.. ,...... ~ J7 .. IP!tlml"-1 1'1111. MIM., lo " et Kl'!' w.tf fliliYll Air 111110f1 Ir! l"lor> ..... Thi "'""""' ..... "10tC'llf .. ~,.."" ... "' ........... .. IOI Jn "" Slufll .... .,. ..... "*"""' ~ --" "" u-0,.1 ~ .._ clol* ,,.. litllt All! K,_ h 0rwt L .... Al Midi-. Wltw tfrlt Mll1I• ... Incl It. Cl'tlht f'Mn. rwolltll IJr hM...., nlra, ~ tlCllfCftlll ft cr.t MIN' ................. Tempercture• Jn an emotional speech to the Carit.as i (charity) Guild, Boston's Roman Catholic •archbishop d e n I e d that the marriage ·-·-Atltntt .......... ··-... ...... .. _ """~" CllWl1111f -... _ ..... '"' ...... ·-...... -· ._ ... IC.I~• CIJ'I' ... -. ··-Ml-I Mii"""*" -· --.. " .. v .. ... _ -,_ Rdb'll f'flllldt!Pllll -·---. ........ ... lien••·-...... ..,,_ lllt ..... Or ... _ ........... ... .. ,... ...... ........ ,_,,,, -- Mltll ~ f'f'M. H G " " " .. " .. .. " " .. .. " Q M " " .... " " " a " .. " .. " .. " -.. " a " q M . " . .. u " .. .. " -1' A .. .. " .. .... " .. " .. " " • lmade Mrs . Onassis a "public sinner" in ~ 11he eyes of the chW"ch. l He appealed to the world to show clwi- \ ty toward President John F. Kennedy's widow. ~ ·• Cushing said he had known for ~ths .Of that Mrs. Kennedy intended te ..marry Onassis. He said he counseled her>~ bm- .1 wedding plans and intimated that:he ~ ~ couraJed them, although he aald 'many ~ l.S!OClates of the tale president and hls .!: famUy had urged him to stop the wod- ding. I He uld Mrs. Kennedy wnt to hlm · ·" a«:retly, accompanlod ool1 by 1 Secnt Service mM, and talked wltb hlm fbr about two hours. ' 111 a .Oli .. ( had a letter from he< that wuuld he worth hundreds of thousands of dollars li I alk>wed any of the natiooal aecular magazines IQ pobllsh It ... " H• lllld. 041 burned the letttr. ff ••• .. " "My Ups 11:1 oetled. I ccnnot tdl onythlng about the prtv•le, Ytrf prtnte convtrsaUon l had wllh btr. " " .. . " a " . " " " .. ,, ... " .. .. . .... ... ... "I tum on the radio and aD I hellr are _..,,..,,..-I !>fr hea<tO!I, as It were, Crltlclslng he<, and they are so for from the truth that no one would bellev't me I! 1 ....... rut on lbe rodlo and m.olod whit I know." , Defends Jackie The idea that Mrs. Onassis would M:· pose herself to church discipline through her marriage arises from the fact that Onassil is divorced and thus not normally eligible for remarriage in Roman Catholic eyes. CUslilng saJd it ls "a lot or nonsense" to say that Mrs. Onassis ii a "public sfn. ne.r" or that she has been "ex· communicated." "Why can't she marry whomever she wants to marry and •by shou1d I be con- demned and why should she be con- demned?n be asked. '* * * * * * Vatican 'Can't Believe' Cardinal's Statement condemned Bild "~ s&oula She be cot> demned?" . "I don't understand this remark," nld one high 80Ul"ce. "Surtly the cardinal'• remark mUJt have been repotted in- COlTOC\ll'. But u he really did "111 this lben hll.11.alement ii ineuct, • "'ll>t lady ii In on ln;qule poslUon with the· churdl, ond the --tlln!y must hive .. viJierl·ber d this In bis talk with bier ... 'l1>t -"""' with CU!hlnt• otolemfnt that '¥rs. °""""' Is not ... eomrmmlcolod or• JRlblle mi-. LuE weet a VaUcan canon law npert ;,.u quolod u c:lllillg ·her 1 "pabUc p -· "bul --todoJ uld that'"" -""1y·a.!.'.jurWlcill!L" _.,.,!Ill:" __ .. "The. chutcb dooon't . ... the !<rm (Ub~C ~ •111 \nOfe, Uc<pl Iii Y"J "10 ........... he-"'. "Such• ....... _ ~-;J;i . ' ...... ..---0!~~1\ia 1 ... Ibo • , I ' . . . ;:_ _-----. - W tr t•Oct.•tHI II~ .... 17 Hanoween Horror Guild Gives You Creeps Hall'ow..., tllw8(Y3 c:<llljlll'M up ttloughlo of skeletons • , , w>tches ••• gticollo ••• roriB'as .•• eerie music. And a !riglltaing tour of this Hslloween terro" wili be emp1111sized during Coota Mesa Pundl m>d Judy Guild's annual open (haunted) house. The bowie hBs hem built oo tlJe Orange County Fei.rgroonds tllis year, am cloon 'Mil squeak opm between S.9 p.m. Friday, ~. 2', and 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Slalllnlay, Odt. 26. Tours will be repeated from S.7 p.m. Wedneoitay, Oct. 30, and from S-8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31. Id visitors arrive 1hey will be greeted by gorillils. Witches will be on band to guide -to the med scientist who will be performing an opemtlon, a neieton bride, mummie6, coffins and o'tlher typical momrters, a torture room end a jail. Mrs. Remcn Poitevin, ways ·and means chairman and Mrs. Jolin Wells, projec't chainnan are directing~ major fund-raising event which benefills Orange County Children'• Hospital 'l'iekets, at i50 eenls, may be purobased at ttie door m: from any guild member. SC Alums 'Scoring' For Party Color them eardinal and gold! The number one college football team 1n the naUon which wears these colors proudly will be the main topic of convenaUon when members and guest.! of Ille Newport Harbor Trojan Alumni CJub gather for a no-host cocktail party. This second annual gala, following last year'• suc- cessful format, will again take place in the Vista del Udo bundlng with Mr. and Mn. Ralph Butcher hosting. Nov. s Is the date to circle, and I p,m. will be the kick-off. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Ray Benson at 875- 4257 or Mn. Frank Andenon at 540-1106. Tickets, at $1 per person, will include IDl.Cb and a chance 1t a fabulous door prize. WEDDING NIGHTMARE -Tudd Gardner, 3 (!ell>) ~ RUsey . 'Thomas, 4,.nilg!JI: be forev<>r frlgiltened away from the.allar alttt previewing Ille ·bride's room in :Ille· MAW!led House wljjdi will be open for terror tlouro· next Fr!ilay and Saturoay and Oct. 30 and 31. '.lhi3 is just one ol many scary scenes wepamt for Halloween horror by the Punch and Judy Gllild. · Blind Chef Stirs Up Success By JUDY HURST Of tlHi DlltY Pia.I St11f Elem Zelayela has been blind for 34 years but oan ·see :--friendliness. Even with her handicap Ille is a happy person vlbo ---lift lntereR!ng lllougbts. ·-If happiness and wealth could be compared -then she is vezy. rich. · Mrs. ZOlayeta, dianning 8Z\d · pe1!1e, was tile speeialguest·at a recent luncheon oltlle <lo5ta Mesa Friendo ol the Library. Born 71 years ago in Mexieo Olfy, Elena has learned tn live 1llrough 8lmoai!' hlsurmow\liable per- sonal Jones. She is a naUonally known autllor, lec- turer, tead!er al Ille blind and ·cook ol MexiCIUl cui- sine.· Having :llown from Sen Francisco whero she is maldng her heme, the short grey-haired grand- molher can be saluted fur ber remarkable courage and her efferwocent perscnelity. Her loie ol cooking was her salvation. She learned to conquer her fears by helping at.hers. And she taught herself how tn live again by leaching others to "see." She is a product of what sbe "preaches" -tllat it lo b.uer to give than receive. Her philosophy is '\t's wonderful to be alive." Al'lhougli an American for many years, her par· enll were Spanisb and they lived in Mexico until the.revoluotions. She was H yeero·old wben·they ar· and no money. "What we had saved went tow9rd several unsuC.:essful eye operations.'' But· El.,. Jearned bow to "cooperate" wltli. tile lneviliable. ' . At.. this same time slie already. had a• bcolc In the offing and the restaurant business was locmiD( brighU ahead. ' · ' rived ln San Francisco. . "! was mill small when l learned that Ameri- cans liked to eat. rt w .. from my mother that I' learned to cook and it was from me that my paronts leam<!d lx"ape&k English.'' Looking back, she has managed several restau- rant.. and today is a consultant for a '2"" million ~11111urarrt in New York and Lawrey's Foods. "As· my latest endeavor (a res1aumnt in San Francisco) hlrned into a success, my two soos then dedded to join me as partners," she chuckled. 111 taught them welt, I guess. 0 I've never seen my yQUDgest because he was born the year I became blind. But I always told him he was handsome and now he believes it I remem- . · ber when my eldest was very yollng, he always ~ay sbe is the autllor ol'"Ellf!lB's SecreJ!s~ -Mexican Cooking, 11 "Elena's Favorite F'odd6· GiJl.. :!cinla Style" ancl"olb'P's· . ":riiese books•are bid ~ the tummy while·my 'LessOns ih !iilvillg' is !OOd·~ the 90ul. R'.wils'after;I tatigllt claS,.. for lile blhld 'in Mootana 1li8t 'l°"""'1s' began•to 'take shape." 1 Wbile"teachiilti·in Montana.she !\ulpris'ec1<a'1- ly reoideot who had been· an orphan and blind !\>I' 58 years. "He-wn so unhappy and s~· tl>ld•me he bad never'b!td a birthday perty. I happily~ him a large ch!>eolate'calle and arranged 58 on it. 'lbe. others told me·be cried for happi:Den ' The club also bu planned to take members to the Unlveral· ty of Southern Callfornla's homecom.lng ram~ OD Nov .•• via buses. Irvine Coast Coun- try Club will be the deparlure point at 9 a. m. Tickets for the USC.University of Calllornlo, Berkeley, game are avalllble at SS, and $2.60 for the bus r l d e. Robert Basmajian at 84&-0462 b taking reservations. FOOT.•• L ON A PLATIER TbJ · what will be ,, ed" hen would tell his friends that his mother wasn't blind, -- s " serv w mem-· ii was just that sile bad a problem seeing. Regarding· Mexican. cuisine, Elena nOted - UJere are riiany misconceptions. "It is not BlWBYI hot or spicy and heavy, unless you ehoo6e it to be. Mexican food is DOI only. tamales, fJacoo and ""'91· ades. I have learned what the typical American liltes to eat and what can be foond in supermar· keto. I include that in my -. and DOI the typically Mexican dishes wlileh Americans would not enjc) ." . · .~ hero end gueot. ot. ttie Newport HarWr Trojan Aiumni Club gather for a no-"When I became blind I eoold do ncthhrg about · · · · · ii!, bat ·I could do a greet deal about myself. You ho8t eoelEtail pal'ly Nov. 3, et 6 p.m. in Vis1a de! Lido bWding. Ray Semon, havo tn have the desire to h~ yourself or how can Officers leading the area · group are Benllxl, president; Basmajian1 vice president; Miu Judy Hunt, ...,.1ary; Con Schwelt:.er, trellutlr, and Wiley Johmon, a 1 am n t coordinator~ pt'leSident, find& 'tile pigskin "delectable" and showing surprise are (left: to R111>4>) Mr& ,i!Clll lkhw-and Mrs. Bensoo. others help you." Ten years after her blindness her hll!band died in an ecddent and slle was le!t with her young soos m Of Mµieo reflect. itS !Uory. And El$ is a refle<llioo ol honesty and om. · ceri.ty. ' With a Problem :Like This, No Solution Is Necessary DEAR ANN LANDERS: M')' problem fJI that my -undentanda me aad I bave a father who cares. Wt n .. In a .-but --home. My wardrobe II adequate aad I ba•• just about •ffrJl!Uc I need. Tbert· ANN LANDERS are nlltl and rogulatiolll ll'GUlld i-11r1...-. -.. Hiie yoon mm my and 11111 erpected to obey them. Tbert •wt e-. also are --~prMl•1& What more can I dof I told him I was nlng and saving mcmey for • reunion In writing to you and we are both awaiting Hawlil nut DIOl1UI wllell be sets hlll Relt your reply. -CLOTHESPIN NOSE and llehablllta~ leave. DEAi\ N081C: Yoa eu .. M Yesterday hlll mother told 1111 she aad -· H 700 wut lo, -,., 1111 her hUlband are pllMIJli "' llylq to .-..,e ,_bl-Ian--,.... II'. ., .. ywr_liuhnd. lllllPll ... wrllo'.p Ml,.,.... .... ut -1o ... .... for Tllllll OR JOOR DAYS._, fii.. pt, ... , ........ ud ltte "'9, ..... Ille ezperll eall It okk, llek, *k. All Hawaii to J0tn U.. I ntlr!j dlod. adaH • ku Ille_,. k,.,._ ._ !,don't wan1.iO make • ..Y family u.u. Unsure of yourself "' atmT Wblll'o of a (Oii .. _tq hie Wlp. rtnlJ b\f, butl've ~D dreunlq)\i&l!t .... cloy rilbt! Wbat'I wrong! Sllould 10l'I r M)' __ ,_..ml my lather . DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother dOun 1fl1nt;--Wliel do ~ aiw1111 told me, "You never ti!Ow a1Dlll wronf I pl ~· 'Illa I .. lllllll ,.u U.. wUlt hlm." How tlPI Ibo without a .......... He ...... -.miles blJi" ha.Ir btclL• 11water will make it fall oot.'' I have boupt him ~· dlH"l'enl ldndl of deodoronta bul he rie'"f bled. them.llenewr·br1Jllielhllteeti. · a lttal 411n(a.I for -.. -. . about 1ttfns Ll!JYd .dUrlnc R and R. We Shouldll't you! Send I«' Ana Llndt(I' ·~klUJ.---·. l>ava been 'IDll'l'ied Ill Jllll,llld hive boolilet"Dallngllooandlloft'tl,"-. Y..r llorliud _, "''""l1··!'1ot1p. 'heen'apartneoilybalfthellmt. qwltb,....reques1s:;cen111neo1n• IOmetbii>I aood I pt pnbld. -· I'm a lf.~'bQy .,! l lak YCRl- wlth a !l'oblun ·Ille Illa~ who llOldl a aolutlonT -JUST PLAIN HAPPY ' . DBAll l.P. S.,,,1 'l\ub t. Ille lla;y- ' I bavo told him a 'thousand tlmea I can't talerate bla carelesanea. He cets mad at me aad doesn' ape>k for !'Ito ·dayo. •Lui week I olept on the <OUCll ..... ..., I couldn' 11aDc1 to be·near hiJllo, ' lfelJ. .. cltll 1" 1n 111 JP ,;•.. Lloyd'• motbef. reldl' your column akln.ii ielf·~eliled, .. •w; l:u ' .--.. p1111. re11,i01111y. can , you 101 ~ io· . Ann Landm w111J>t,IJod1o..,,,.. keep hel alid her huob&ncM10me!'..:. t;o· with )'bar problmna. Send u.n low., €ITY PLEASE 1 em.of tbt D"1!-Y Pllm ..., .... a DICAll ANN LANDERS: M')' hlllband•ll ln·Vlelnam. Lloyd•llld I have beea plaD-DIWI NO GTY:.lll1MMI IQ fllw 1o , -. ttllQpOd ....io,a; ( ~ I -l< I • . • • ---------~--=----" J• DAILY PILOT • f .. ·Stanford, A~ums ·Board Bus for Game~ Party • ' . ·1 roian Guild Sails Nobleman Shares Bill VISITING Duchess of Bodford Franct, WU Ill enrd-wtn. niog film prodqcer wblft sh~ met the Duke durinC the course of a film-making U · signment. 'Ibey were married in 1960. • Boardlnc a rpecW bus to will !ravel to Ille UCLA game tho UCl.A.stanlord f~ via Ille B-Kalal lil Lal ·-Saflliday, Oct.. will ba ................ ~ .... II ......,. of Ille Oruee .,. pllUlllld berore IJld altlr Ccililty ~ ~. • t!lfitame. a-,. ....... lf,lftoPJll'I Jn a -ame raDy, allllllll\ llefdt, ~ ~ !11111 aod frlendl will -a •ll••· tllt bps will ..... lttlM t4ilJI lb; ',arty starting at 11 a.ftl, CoullrY ,Cllm ..-. ,11' llop. II In ti,. M19lc Room. After U.. Ibo 'Disneyland Hotel. -· tlio Stanford Juai!lr '!be special bus trip b one Gl Alumni will sponsor t!ialr Ille ~ CoulllJ alualli · nHt wl party for aD alun> groqp'a traditional event 1 , ni, Parents and frjendl of - trbkh also ·tneklidt :e ;nup: university in the Blltmon11 flight to the "big game' Renabsance and Rendelv..,. between S t a n for d and rooms. Calllomla and the~ Jlill -....,...--~~---- barbec:ue with Staah'rl Ki'd• hkt .. to coacbe.s at the FlyiD& B Rueb .. W in Black Star Canyon. \llber Orange <;oonty ~ljllllli ~ GLYCINE : Mofernity Events -' Chapman's Town and Gown was orgaajJed la:it year, Mem- bers serv, u advl4or1 _,pn_ cultural affairs, act ii halt. esses for special vifiton and provide counsel on c.ollege facilities. Tea and · Sympathy· Given :a1111ri·• ucl amat.ur -·--.......... .......... ,..... __ IJ"' .. '"* --aat ~ .... SUolll1 u ... Y•~""-"*" ... pw?tf'" ........... .. ~,..c...tc " B tel I -rw· .. ...,_. .. ,.. lfl *he I ti 2 • • .Ill. .. 2 iAy .... r rt , a ..... t•r ............. 'I 1111111-llldl' = ----·ii tr t' I • ••tm .... I ......... Tiie -lab pla<e Ille lourtll 'l"ondll!' Gl <ad> moolb at 2 p.m. under the d1reetlon of Mrs. Norman Benham and Mrs. Norman Borucki. "lh ..,. .. -'Ille .... gmm as lute1es!lng .. "°"'"' t11t.• .... lllD. • t ' .._ .... ....,_ .. i...e • ..,,.., • ,.,_....,.,..._ awzJ kZ a:A)lya.,. ... _...,,. .... ~. "JM •,, h• .... ""' 11.mi.._u Y mbjedl.•h •• ·n.....,. • ..ne ..... _ .. _ .. __ .. ---.. -.· ......... , ..... . -ft9' 414. s. ..... ... •tnt." 'Ille lilo> io a IPi*it description of childblrtb, so graphic that viewers are -.. ""'* -· 11..,. Im! :tqtJ€8iilfstJ. Newcomers lured To Daisy Factory , _ _.._ .. -·-••a ..... ar ••• ,.,, I to. dllllri, ... llill lb. tnt "°"'--... jlllfl(.d __ .. ____ ____ ...... ····-·-,,,..· .... _ .. StUJW_ ,,,.. .. _.,... _ --· -·-a•lt. -.•. a ............. the front door. "We uot them In tJi,.. "'"'"Uf wlml lo do Ille JeC'MICI they _.. t )t • ~ ... 'dllle---.--. S81 '111e tour takes guests past the ...,.... •WI® lo the -bita -...... rooms where vacant ones are closely inspected. Then on to the . Mbies, where tiny lUt aid blle wrapped bundlet are iaspected thnlu&h Ille " ... partilllo, .,,,.. ... lllCI abs and nervous smiles. ~~ -Soeltly . .. , •• , 11*"1 ....... W'vtm_t ... , ~ c.ter'• ~ \\UUdblc will be ..... ,.,.. ..... . _ .... _... .. ... riq J 11t~Wllt-.ac­ .......... , loll a."" ... Sita_, and • entrJ ftt .... eMr(ed. fliO ... will -fJun I .......... S.turdoy and 10 ..... to l P.Jll.. on SundO)'. Tropbieo and -· will be ~SW11117all. Ct1t n. specimenl will be posted in 14 .sections and con- tam.a will ... --by IM ........... 'Ille lilalliab Ila> will be included for the first time. Fuilher info-lloo may be H91.L Y INGllAM . received l:ly calUDr Donald Te M•rry Berg of Santa Ana. --------- "We don't aDow a tour of Dance Club the labor and deltwl'J ~ Costumes In Order November Nuptials In Offing During a small dinner party ·given by Mrs." lllrold Pickle of · !rvtna and Richard Ingram of Whittier, they anRounced the engagement of their dau1hter, H&lly Buth Ingram te Lemuel Alvin Fugitt III. Plans are being made for a Nov. 21-nuptial ceremony in the :Riverlide ll"ree Metbodilt Church. Mia lqram ii a 1raduat. of Colla M ... illih S<bool, a~ tended Alula Paclfic Colle1e and now ii a student at Rivenl.de University. MEET THE NEW GLYCIN! DAY & DATf Glycine is one of Switzerland'e greatwatehes. And rKtW, GlycM brings you the.Dfy &. Otte. heh U hours, th• day •nd date chang. automatically. Both are self-winding, water and shock proof. Gold-filled top, stainl111 back, autom1tlc Day & Date, 171.95. 01)" & Date with Vacuum movement. Stalnlass caae wjth 14 karat gold accents, 1121, Followlng tredilloD, ,Lido Ille Woman's Chit> aplri will ...... -membon and their lrmbads durinS a paJty llril yoar plan- aed few 7 p.m. ~. i>ct:zs, in lbe c1u1>- for obviOUJ re~.. HW 'The first, third and fifth Mrs. Benblm. "Everytbina, FridQa of taeb mo n t b muJI bo ln!pt >terili ...cl memhen Gl i..,. 'n Leother privacy must not be invaded." Sq~ DaQce Qub meeb at a 1!lal -Ille -· lht . Ille ___ .. ~--·--p.111. m ~o;o,;;r-....uOD ~·~, Her ftance, IOI\ of Mr. and Mn. Lemuel A. Pulltl Jr. of Riverside, ii a ll'ad.Ulte of Rublclou> Hl&h School and ll!udied at CaUlomla Slate Collqe at Loo .lnteles. Coolwnad memban of Xi r=======~ll Eta-1'1 i:haptM, lleta 111sma PENETRATION -· Tiie -·· will be ---illlo • pdYale night club -mod llllrtlng and a pe111 reeee.w. ·at tbeir lfuntinCtOll Beacb. Purtber in- labi• for a "Juol hr fuo" part "'""'"'"' may be elllaJoed by ... the door ;rize drawings. calling Mn. Jnan Dillon at "Wt try to pve awQ M -..is. much .. p>Uiblo," -Ibo------~--. chairman, whose list includes everytbinc from d i a p e r oervlce to baby p h 0 t ••• C<lml>lellll& Ibo eller1)00l1 b • lllm Cll babla and the ...., pndlcal "'bj<d of Mw In give an acUve inf.nt a ha.th. Phi, WeN praented • pro-N••riv ev•ry•11• ,..4, "• lf'll1\ bn An Experience when DAILY PILOT, h.11'1 ... Wfl ,._,_ tht lll'OUP met lit the Garden ,.,., f•r th1 f•lt11l1111 o, ... ,. Grovt -Gl Ill president, c .. ot. Mn, w1w,m ~· 18 Fuhion l1l1nd Newport. IHch -644-1380 OP'l!lll MCINftA'I' ANO P'ltlOAY l!VEtiilN& ~ "' -.. -wlD .,..,,_ lbe D81sy' Fadclry, party -· A -will""'~ ... dancinl and JialeD. Ins pleuure; -will be available saWO.td with the fnnnat of the teas. Bu.I tl>olo'o QQjy one tblng sbe would chan(O. •J} only ,,. could (OI more fatners to ~me ... " Mn. Jack MllJTa, praenlad the Pl'Oll'lllil and iipOC!ll IUOl!I includid "11. Ann Glaua Gl Ganlln Grove and Mn. ll"la ~ Gl Fountain Valley. for -wilting to --Ulll, and a -et table will be !Mm -an array of tanpliDC ......... clellbll-"we· never Jmow Mw many' 11;;;;;,;;,;;;;;,;~;,;;,;;,;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;,;~· ..... "*"to ....... the II tell," llid" .... Benbam. . Party cbahman II Mn. M. A. Rlclll_91 Jr., .... -br ... -· Donakl Jtl<llltJI, Jact Haml!tOll, Plill -· Hem..t Oelke and Richan! )!..U-. "Once wt bad U and anatber time. m1J' ts. Mo& wanen ...,.. In -llnal ... -. bat aD ... free In ..... bad: as often as they like." MrL Benham Is v • r 1 REG.. •1210 •16 tN'IOUS MAKE HIJ. Oil HAnll WOllL 'l>WEAIBIB, Sl(l'RU, W'IU~- 6kim~de11prisidLj lincd, na11col•- ·ma.•1r.:m'1S , seaRISWEJ\R_ • 9°9 SHOl ltlPAIR SPICIAU FRIDAY AND SATURDAY HALF SOLE SPECIALS Men's lf!ather Or' neoltte r"e g , 4, 00, O O 0 o 0 o I I I 3.27 Women's fle xible leather"' reg. 3 . !50 •••••••.•• 2.97 ' , SPICIALS ON WOMEN'S HHLS Sp..-yed, reg. 4, 75, 3.97 Covered heels, reg, 5, 75, 4 .97 Many styles, all popular heights; we mat.ch your shoes. Reptt·te shoes, slightly higher. Hanct:>ags re pal red-attach new ,. handlu, reg. 2.eo ... 1.97 also ava.l\abl•a locks, clup.m, other-repa\re, Shoe Repair. Robinson's. N~rt --------- O'Keefe & Me:tdtt. SCCUIL1PW.u..,~ ~ ......... 36" SCULPTURA GAS RANGE • New Super Wide 25 .. Giant C•1>11clty Master OYen • New Convenltlnce 0Dtnp•n1ment tor H•od1 Storap • New Remov•bl• Coktr Blt~td Gr•tes • Easy •Lfft.Off OWf'I Door ............. • Exclutl\le RtQ\OY••ntc6tln IUr JC 8urntf'S1 • New !•IY'Uft·lnd·Cleen CDHTop ' • M•1ne·Fl1me Bar·B·Que Broiler • Teflon Coated <>v.n l i,..rs • Teflon eo.ted Bullt·ln Griddk. • Tru·Vlw P•nontmic 8111ek Glnt Wfl'ldow ATTENTION HOMIMAKIU~ Pl•n to Att•nd Th• 17th Annul O:U.Ntif COAST COLLKI COOKING ·SCHOOL · St1rti,n9 Wedn•1cley, Octob•r loth .t l'h• MESA 11rf!ATkl-C.st1 M,,. • I ' 10 u ll il 11 " 21 I! • t } ) ' l ' 3 • • . ' • " ,, -- Wtdntsday, Octlbtr 23, 19611 DAILY PILOT p_ 'Petrified ·Forest' Rules HuntingiQJi : Awards Nig ,ht Film FesH'Val Opens • •n SF . I l.Uf l'llANCJICO jfJl'I) --i-la odvlllCO WU Prt4ty Kill llao(lor1 .. l!dwwd,G. ~-..-.,.gnor, who -lillt- 'Jllo ... Fruell!>o llleru· ~·•--illfol"Yellow RolliNo!ld,...,.~· JlollJI Jll<::!. ~ redlo .. orl!Hollywoodfilml · · "--' · _, .. 1a ... m_ fon. ·--• olio ~ la Ille Jato -· • Uonal Film Feitlv~ 1""}11"1 to tuy featuring tbt musk and Wllll1m Wyler are JCheduled A Samuef"Goldwyn Aw~­ lhow IOmelh1nl for everyone, antics of the Be.itlea. to dilCUSeS their worka after for the best film made Jli: tba opens Tbunday with a formal, . Whll~ Hollywood will be . ibowlpg ol aelectlons. . United states the prectdinl .W4Ci--<Ill! oold ooit -_.,.nled by <lllll' • 1n1 DI r 1 et u I-· ..... • -·-wlll be )l'estnted NO\', ........ ti llf Odly ll<>UYwood rnov!t, the Southem Callforilla ._, ol 1t1Jy, ailcl Miii s. '!lie•-Will be ae!eoted movie. . movie capltal domtnalal 1111 ·f.eu.rltill, ol 8-.. 1loo Will by tlio .-.. Hollywood.pro-"f~._, ·.,&M. ~ · eft.ernoon ' ' f 11 m m a t er be honored wl'tb retrospec· ducer and .a ttlectlon com· ROH 1.4MIJltT J,AAIES I. SMITH · Top P•rformers of Huntington Beach Season ~ •.Just for-Love' Ron Albertsen and Cl,,.. I Petrtfi,.t F.oreot" dpmtnated the awaida night proeram ol the Huntington' Beach PJ1yhoule wt weokend. A1llertsen was 114med best director ol the swon for his producljon ol the Robert Sherwooll drama, his second P>nsteutiv• directorlal honor, aqd Jlso qaptured an award for belt. seenic design for the ..... show. Roa Lambert, who played U., PO«rt< · drifter i n "Petrified ll'ortllt," received ~ actor accolldis foe his perf-. wllllo Jomes E. Smith. wheelchair b o u n d olfsU!le u well u on, took but .,pportlng actor honors, also fer "Petrified Forest." Named best acl.IJSs of the ~ WU Diddy Lammers, who alJo acted in a wb~. for her rOte Uthe c_rodtetf MQ:. Bramson in •:ttli!>I Musi Pall.'' PID)ela Brojrp WU Voted befit IUP- portiDJ . ~ f.,r hor in -'°" iJI .. .., "' .. ts Gld·" "Joy ~ Girl" alN nail· fld .doWq botb CJllUl(I •an:ls, w!tl! Deonil ""'1beJt Ind SbtrJoy Dvonl: _, the l.IWreli for theif HQ.Aller wtlP"!!"'ll' '!be "yboull'1 p11Sident's award, lo r OQUtanding con· ltibution to the HUlllioiWD Beach theater, went to Nancy Wells. A special community ~ 1111',fd WU ......... to llaridy Keene and bis crew for the children's production of "Sir Slob and the Princess,'' Thi ur•r• were prestN.ed Friday evepjltf'. at ~ h·11: pla~a annual Beauw. Art 8all in-the MeadoW1ark Co- untry Club. ftn · ,A.merfcu, -•·--tive aer1-." · ,'-dorl tiv11, u will GtrPllJI., ,actr-mW.et from the festlva1. -~ llll II ·~....-· .,. . . ~ other · new· 'features tO be: · ~ · ~ · 1 • • .. ""~ durio& tho 11 daYI ol H _ ,, -uwen !tie annu1J fe,tlval. • UIMI"""" , 11'4 ..,,Phom wlll· Ii< "'! ' , ' -· dtctCton ud "way .t d o;g-;-,~ llil>Jeets,. bol ihe' pro-· Fet-e, Nig~t Set 11. war . "'""' .. ,,,. ,,_,the uoua1 Wik , Dflliey cut1&1if NYivll f(J< 1111 · tfddlOo Ind U- " Gish's 1925 silent vehicle, "The Scarlet Letter," to Andy Presentation ol the Warb~l'• ''Lonaome Westminster C o na Ill UJl It Y e&w\eyl'' arwl J e a a.Luc Theater's second annual Ab-Godard's "Weekend." bey Awn wi!l liill!IJPI 111t All ~.Ill ·•eotl tn Mwoic group's ~ CfMhune Audltoi:ium. oa 1Noll> lfill Wj!l"e ball Sa~y Bipt at tM IOlcl a wtH" in. ad¥anee far theater building. Thursday ni,91t'• openins film, Past award wtnnen •nd l'Tbl &ersaDt/• at 1trIn11 founders ol. the tlltater IJ'OUP Madlmy Award wlnner Rad will p""°t the st.w.U,., for fild(or, which nine .ctQrs· aad ac· tresses and three directors are The openlnJ lligbt Crowd will nominated. inchlde acitara ltlilpr, Gane Also to bo ~-··'-' or• ,. Kelty (who wtll 1ct u muter ·~~·• ~ ol ..,...,.Ito) Ind John special awv to tboae wbo CalNvt(.es uo ~tr.-ea RI:· have -led tli• m<>SI to •QI! Waleli. Jllla U.yworth the ~t . J e a 'on at •nd Mai Zettl!'llnJ. .A. pelt· W .. lminster. thooter: WU 1ncliJded In Costumes are Ollltonll at the 1111 ~ IOIJ cwgo. 11 p.m. evM. Music will l)e AJao Mld out mau than 1 1JH N. w.Mr, ~. provided by Ray TMl\ko'.s -==----'..::;_..::. _________ __c::c.:.._;_ _ _;_-'-"--'---------- band. The theater· ii loeatell. 1t 65'9 Westminster Ave. near Golden West Street in the Wt!!lltllMter Center. 'Madwoman' Play Opens In Fullerton Tlio drlllta del'Orlmaol ol ~ Jlllllor eou ... wlQ fftltDI '""" Mo4WOQ!an ol Challlot" in lit: perfonnancea .. , POSITIVELY , NO ONE UNDE8 18 ADMITTED "· --' TO THESE THEATR~S DURING THE $ff OWING ~· OF THIS TORRID .SOCK-IT-TO-ME MOVJf ... ·~J . ' New Play Simple, Charming starting Thursday evening, in Ilia Ca!npo.t TboM<lr. ·~ Madwoman of Challlet" ii 1 Wnd ,oi poetic and comic fable eeriterine: on a, plot by a group of promoter1 Playboy m.agazine readers were stunned (and some were even embarrass.eel) by the October PlaybQy photQ-ipread that dared to show · lly JAC!t fiAVEll NEW YORK (UPIJ Simpllclty ond charm belt deiCt'it>e "Just for Love," an unusual intimate en· tertairunent that o p e n e d Thurlday nW>t~ It t h e Provincetown Theater i n Greeqwieh Villige. Tha ahow is e~~tly wt>Ai the title 11ys -jt deab In song llld dialogue with many upectl ot. the human oon- difion known u love u treated through the ages by many writers. lt ii UA> pre~ bpt elf!(!tive ht a friendly, warming way, and tt i> 4•1i(litfully llOrformed. Ttie show has pe.,, n..Uy ond knowioiJY pul lDfjttber by Jill Show.U and Helli}" Comar, man and wife, who aho are two of the foot playua. Hot the least of i~ virtue~ is that it is ju$t th~ right l~ngtll, not too long. The other members of U.. cut ar~ Jaoq~ Mayrp-1.1¥1 steve Perry, who tlo mOitt of the sin~. ll'-ld bo .add"ll thet it la • pJeuure •imPly lo look at ~ MM<o. 1!91Jntn~ well, a!l4 ~ do tl!etr. '9PP with a 1lmplicUy that e~y fits th< ellrane lnttJllacy ol · Crossword Pmzle AC10$S .44 Uok to .. 45 p,11 l Vusli11 47 And othlfs ·iud1• 51 lre•tfY 5 Kin~ tf· PJodUC.l l11111b1r Sl flssll• rtct l~ ,,,,. ol S? ~Ind of E fi1Mll f91ct lt 11t.H1ov• 56 Lar!•!J ~ Ud ~ r11 fo"I lS .... ••"111$ ll ~·vlnl • J li·Ul~li'~'· '!1"'1'" ....... ~1... "1r.:i-.. 1• •hm •l ,.,..u-1:11 Sibe1it ls 66 Fe111fnlne ' Veslefd1j'1 Puul1 Stl•ed: IW!ll ' 2tl Drtss n1.111e 1 21 lando .. ,. '' Sw1etsot ..... State rd' 41 t..tn in: Ont., •I C••'I•• aotlvity 2 wqric university '' ConstNot M Jol'n, . U lJo-'-' 1' S:!', '' oo•• 1• :s~.i~•· 4• :~~r·' S,. · tln!ldOll ' CllfltlOfll "1/1 l s. A•et. Z2 Shee11Mfft 4' 9't11.w.i.Ua 1"' ~.:t, !ihrub •tll'fltr precision tf $omt1ful 1 .... °" J-' C"'1ry's •• LlterJt~ nOfll ,.su .. , baclr. 11l1t1v1 '• 1\1•• )0 "'lYt fX.-2 •Dl'4J 2' ff)llt ti !Pl .... prisSIOft te J iake !" !f !1cle1Jutl~ oflbt ,4 Edge fl a MOlf. lnllen~tlon 28 J:=e;t~, » :e~~~:; Inti.Var. ~ C1rt11n •r• 111 )5 UpbraldH 1ndlc1lors pOetry · • ff• )7 p.,jeclina 5 H1vlng 21 Scottish •h<tuf'I 0,0,,55 mri1181 1c •usici1n. ~ Fish "htlllt. " f . " 1;,, •f l' 9'!l~•o: Abbr. 'Tl1111tabl1 1bode ~:"' ·1""• ) •• 'l.n ibbr~lltltNI )l,Kifld or J7 art• t b f 1n11l1u1 1rfftt~111M'1 41 Atllltttl' tr HI )I Entlftalr· -~, ~'°"' A(lbr, "' ::' .,,.,,,. 51 A(Ghlltcljlni •J-sd s• Ce~ l• Dentist's R ti' ••11 tr,, ~ncarn '' ••slllntl• '' rit••l'-1:..s ltl oifeawi )f P'i1p1r1 wlnt 62 Sttl•t I i•f"i~ ll Jtovp Hitilt_ frtr servlfll 4f Eich on'• • .. ~ ., t ' • ill. jil this entertainment, to tw. up iba. tM3pmPI city of Thi C&lftOrl ti.rulle ~ Paris to uP.W1fl ~e gil which dWDp -I !lon't ti.ave WI.JM! a ~~ l;leY~V!!S he has l;J)! word "slu:tches" because located under the cjty,streeta. (hJ wQfd 1s Mt ri&bt for much P.etfQl'lllances of the fall at what tbey,do. They an er· · plaf are scheduled for Thurs.-. / per~oed adQn:, and they in-day:. FriOiy, and Selurday te~t a wide varJety pf ev1flil!p, 9f,i .. u, 25, and 26, I rq,11terfal '1'1th fine versatility. and again cj'. Oct. 31 and Nov .. Am.ooa: the 11 songs that are 2. curtain t.UP•· ifl ·I. p.rq. •. with d•votaUed lolp tl)e di1lo1U1 ...,._ JUO for iduits •od ~ Ii~ :J\ICtt faQliiJv i1'tlM ' 'JS ~ti ~'!l jf.U(le~\i. I •• "f!ml• Uv• IWth Mo." • "Jenny ~lssed. Me," "Wh•i it Love!," "Man is Far Wontan Mfde" aQd "So We'll Go No ~ore A'i'OYin&." . /ilD« t!)O progr11111 qedill Michael Va1enU with •1orJ&inal score," there must bl a ooup1e of songs written espeejf.Uy for tllil ,i,ow, but they IN DOI tdentlfled. ,....,..,~,.,-.... .... .... , "THI PlttfUCllS" ····-........ I ........... "CIJCIC.iD av •IF•l .. lltA"'°" lnth Tuotday ............. llWISMltltf ... tllftMI! ' ' the a~ual, zingy, revealing torrid scenes of Barbira McNail' and Raymond St. Jacques from .this far.out -wln1in1 movlt. , . WIJen you see this croovy movie, you'll understand w~y co,,,munlty advertising standards prohibit publishing these. 11c;tual far.out "hai>l>enln1'' movie scenes -and, ot course, you will also unde~tand why theatres .•• POSITIVf;LY CANfiOT ADMIT ·ANYONE UNDER 18• - "UNI.DI ICCOM~ANIED IY A PAR~NT OR ADULT ..,,,IDIM" ' . ;. .., 'l18i IOJJlllS.llrHIJf GOr 'i • -. Mia${ .... mfj Mtl.'lllft'. 11J:=AHnMI O'aJNllffl , llolliJMM\ ... llr . ~: tWillllJli~1 /11-WtMl·,_.llhlll-INM ·~ .. l!llr!MIM·'A .... _IM'i!llmJlm -ct---~ -' ' COLOR •Y IA8TMAN , NOW SHOWING AT THESE. THEATRES : ' ' . SPECIAi. EVENING SHOWTIMFS AT 7.00 ANO 9.00AN O11 00 PM LA H~BIA DRIVE-IN T"EATRE IMPlll.\L HfGHWA,Y .ITWEllN t•ACH I. HAllllOll llLYM. e 171·1"2 .. ORANGE DRIVE-IN THEATRE SANTA' ANA ANO GAllOIN lllOYI PllllWAYI e 547-4011 'FOU~TAIN VALLEY DllVE-IN THEATH SAN DIEGO PllllWAY AT lllOOKHUllST SOUTH Ol'P-llAMI' e HO.Ull . . . . " ·-.. ., ' ' . . G"OVE .)VALK-IN THEATRE • "!"5r'llDE~ 01ov1 1tvo. • sa1.-• . HUNTINGT°" CINEMA WALK ~IN THU.TH 1•AtH .. Y~. AT .liL,llS, HUNTl,NOTON l~ACH e Ml'·-, ' • • ' ' WPT COAST WALK-IN THEATRE ... IN~. ~lit'IT.,'IANTA AHA e J43.Ul7 ('il01 °MATUU AUDllNCU i J ~ --· ~-; -----;:... ~ ~::.·;...:: -----~---------• \ • \ ' , • . -----~~~ ---~~~-~~-...:.... ________________________ _ I • .,.. *""' -..-.:-'!"-. • , ...... r -- -. DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Needed: Specific Rules SeadW!aek College t-aren't willing to part wllh 1helr <ode aovenilna: dress alld grooming at tho """ edlool. But lit. la&t ~ will ll&ten 1D student ad-W.. 'Ibis ....., Ille upshot ol a meollng lllS! week at which ol>out 45 students 1-od !or abollslunmt ol Ille dress Nies. Tuni.ng -· a ~-that tl1ey suspeod the code ldlJ tl1e Oct. 311 &tudeot body elections, the board· did -to review it with a student committee. Sludmts, with some logic on their side, asked the -to pill clown -.i>at it ljleant by "unlcernpt" as ap- plltcl to hair and beards. ~ Wm Is rather subjective. It would seem If truoleea feel that thoy need a dres-s code ti> run an ac- cepW;le -. ~ rules had be&t be specillc. It woold ,,. wen ti> look at other jwior college rules -dress and flOOl!llng since the matter had be- CClllO ~ Issue. Ai-.gb the whole lhlng i& somfJl!rlng of a tempest in a teapot, it ill a good Idea to get student government inwlved. Perlla\>S board and &tudent body can pull a lrappy comprorruse out ol the hat, as Saddleback sails Rfefy out ol !to !lrst pocket-size maelstrom. Running the Gamut Albletics, science or politics, you name ii and La- guna Beed! con apporently sllJJl>ly it. For imtance there's Bill '.l'OOmey, the 211-year-old lDcal boy who just brought home the bacon in Mexico City for his exd!lng Olympics vic<ory in the decath- lon. Then there's Mr. Early Lagunan who bas anthro- pologists exdted. The.y believe a skull dug up several A University Politicized ls Doomed What ls "a university"! More import.ant, what shou1d a university be? Morris B. Abram, recenUy inaururated a.s president of Brandeis University, grappled boldly with this queatlon in his ritual of aceeptaoce. It wu a probing, profound address, too occupied with aearch!ng to try for eloquence. Yet, the eloquence ol it lay in !Is dlrect honesty. 41Tbe university is truJy at the vortex of the crilil of our time tn the United States, in France, in Medco - everywhere .•.. " Thl8 was the beginning of his theme. He developed it carefully. "IT IS A COMPLIMENT to education that men in this time of trouble should crystallr.e their attention, anxieties, frustrations and even a n g er s on the unlven!ty. In eHecl, they are saying, fre- quenUy ln unacceptable ways: 'Our socie- ty is ln deep trouble. The unlven!ty has the capacity to redeem or reform society U the university bas the will and is itself reformed' ••• the critics are saying that the university js more important than Its supporters say it is •.•. " Before him was one ol the nation 's more learned and competent faculUes .•. also one of the more questioning. It may be assumed that all faculties, save for the hopelesoly obtuse, are cllsturbed and are themselves trying for answers. It ls inescapably true -faculties being human -that many have been deeply !tightened by the student rebellions and by the occasional violence, in which the leaderih.lp often is from off campus. ('!be harck:ore noruitudent forces, dedicated not to reform but to destruction, ARE !tightening.) Blfl' THE lNTELLIGENT f a c u I t y knows that many student objections are valid -especially as protests pe related to teaching. • Universities of great quality, have, of course, learneil scholars whose research ill ltsell instructive. They are there to teach -but to learn and to allow others to share In that learning. But, Abram said, speaking cl the search for truth, '"!be Innermost truths in some JOclal sclenct.S may be not only In texthoob but also in the laboratories of life •••• " "A university •.•. is not a church or a poUtlcal potty. It does not llseH vote. It Dear Gloomy Gus: How about a benefit performance. at the Playhouse for Mr. Smith? 1 suggest the comedy, "You Can't Take It With You." -..J.C. Tlllt fMtvrt Nflldt ,....... ¥NWt "" "_ .. rllY ,,... ., lt!t .-.ui.... kM ,..... Ml ""'' II •llllnr 8UJ. IHlllY rlltl, should be crammed with people who think, vote and partlcipate·in every level of life, including poliUca •.• I applaud those wbo feel a speclaJ obligation to speak out because they are learned and influential men. Nevertheless, th e university must not be dogmaUst. It must be a free and open place ...• it should provide the forum for Individual and group study and experience. . .The university must hold the soapbox steady for others to .-and on .•. to study, to declaim, and to preach whatever truth they see or feel •••• "Btrr, A UNIVERSITY politicized - radicalized or conservallzed -is a university doomed, u the lessons of German universities under the Nazis pro- ved .•• A dogmatic insUtuUon ls hos- pilable only to those who support its dogmas .••. " Abram noted that in some clrcles today it has become fashJonable to downgrade the tolerant principles of the liberal political creed. "I am willing," he said, "to examine and re-uamlne every substantive opinion including those to which I am most com- mltted. However, I am not prepared to reject the liberal methodology of fair play, civil liberty and due process as the only way tn which a clvlllzed society can pursue truth, prevent the encrustation o' error and insure the fulfillment of man': creative talents and Inclinations. THERE AM OTHER conclusions, boldly, calmly made: ''The right of students to protest seems to me to be a rlgbt and not privilege ••.• The right of students, faculty or anyone else to disrupt the leamlng process ls no rfJht at all .. .it is wrong." 1bere was a proper tribute to "this generaUon of youth." It ill a great one. lt is disturbed by a soclety In which reforms are necessary -socially and educaUonally. More than any other man ln education. it setJM to me, Abram art.lculated what a unlvertlty should be -and, also, deliMated Its failures in ttachlng and yet, ., firmly, dedared that lasting reform comu by due process. Armament Over Curing ""'Jllll II Lari., Killin& ls men Important than cu.ring, 1n the new fedttal budget ; for cut! in ICIMUflc and medical researdi have dlminlted public projects Jeeldng • = for cancer, while armament ap-Uons conUnue to e%))and. ••• ,'1111 -hm!esl tab in tho world .. -pl!ytlcaJ !eats ... h> ~ ~ bol llimply- cf die wlD: to nlunt lo•• ror hate, to lo- dado Ille oriilded, llld to .. y, ''J WU ~· ' ,. •• ,, •. '. · .. - . ' .•.• ,ij.~­ ! '•. r j~" ·."····~ .• ~ .... tl. 1, ''·.$ "' ...... ~ •· ,,_ ..... -:i "' \1·• ,._, • ••'I.• ' "' ' ,, ,I t .. __ , ........ ---"-· What Ls wrong with our democracy is u obvious as It 1.\ intractable: While ..,.,, American ii • cltlttn, ba"1ly anyone Is 1 "clUzen Ont." in the sense that ho places the bn>ldesl needs ol the l1ltJoa above his own; rather, each of ~ t<nds to equate wr own par1lll, pan>ehlal, clus, giogr•pblcal or ethnic In..,..... with "the (Ood cl the country ua whole." • • • No coune should be labeled ''CreaUve WrtUns." which 11 a fraudulent claim - for only the •• a-eatift ~ ol 1'rllinl (« U1)' oOitt •rt) can bi taulbt or loomed in uy dldtdlc ••Y· "ii.an l.~ In I.aguli1 Beach Is the tar!iest found "" ililf-·~.m. daung 1119l!'I existence here at least 17,000 years ago. · And more recently there'• tho announced intention ol Laguna Beadl housewife Marilla Jones 1D seek cle<> Uon as Vice President along with comedian Pat Paul- seo. Despite astrolotlcal assurances from her campaign m.,.aer, Mrs. Jon..' campalgn seems to be getting oft I<> a aoubtful start -only a few crank calls and no answer from ber comedian runlling mate. Mrs. Jon .. • droll candidacy is ·stirring -il some- What less than a total succe!!, But tllm, somethtnc Is alway. stirring in Laguna, Full-time Firemen? " lt looks as though the South Laguna Volunteer Fire Department, with 30 yean' service 1x> its credit, may have In bols!er it6 fire.figllling force with full-time paid proless!ooais. A new tax district has be<n'Jroposed to cover lhe area from lhe soUtb city limit. Laguna Beach In the Monareh Bay area. H activated, it would prol>9bly In- volve a tax levy of 24 or 25 cents per $100 assessed valuation in the area involved. '.!'he prol>l«n, according to Fire Chief Arthur L. Pollard, is the 5bortage of. men available to answer daytime .fire calls. The volunteers are busy making a living. And fires doo't respect business hours. The p1'0p06ed district that would pay !or four fire- men will come before the Local Agency Formation Commission Nov. 6. In the mean1ime, Cllief Pollard is looking for volunteer firemen in hopes it won't be necessary In actlVBte the proposed tu entity. l ~Teaehers, S~tists, Scholars D~inated by Rabble Rousers' Charges Aldrich Supports Rebellion To the Editor: Chancdlor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr;, on the front page of the DAILY PILOT of Oct. I-4, speaks of the CJeaver affair, and sup- ports, in fact, the faculty rebellion agaln.!t the university regents and against everything legal, moral, and right. It Is not strange that the breakdown in law and order in the land continues to spread with ever-inereaslng virulence where there is such a lack of concern for, and enforcement of, the well-established and reasonable rules and regulaUons governing students ln our colleges and universities on the part of the chancellors and othen in _,ailed po!itlons of authority and responsibility. TUITION FE~ in all our colleges and universities would assure enrollment of students with a desire and purpose to learn, and would help to weed out the troublemakers, slobs, riff raff, dissen- ters, and Incompetents, who are ln the schools for the purpose of making an issue of so-called peace, and freedom of speech: I.e., license to say anything. More would be weeded out for lack of in- telligence and/or ambition to succeed ln constructive pursuits, if they bad to perform satisfactorily in class. In tu supported, as well as in other colleges, there are almost a1ways some rules and regulations relating to behavior and performance, and thls must be so for ordered progress. IT IS PROPERLY within the province 1.nd the responsibility of the dlrect.oni and authorities of these institutions to in- terpret and enforce these rules and regulalions. The academic senate and student organizaUons may properly sub- mit and petition the authorities in charge to consider their views but they have no rights to coerce ~ demand any con- '!flssion other than a fair consideration or their requests and an announcement of ibe decisions made. If the regents of the university system are Incapable of hiring competent ex· eeutive and administrative heads of the various campuses, who have the guts and intelligence to properly run their respec- tive schools and to follow and enforce the rules and regulations, then It ls in- cumbent on the appointing authority to replace' the regents with men who will do their duty. THE WHOLE MESS ii slmply a matter of the failure of the so-called leadership group to carry out their responsibilities to th e students, taxpayen, and parents. It seems that the student body l!adershlp group today IJ, through the !allure cl the weak·kneed vaclllatlng and fuuy·minded faculty, ml1KUrecUng and exerting total control over the actions of the men who are beln1 paid by the taxpayer to ad- minister and direct our university and college systems of education. It Ls a sad Ume and turn in affairs ln our 1talt1 and nation when the teachers, icle.nUats and scholars ln our schools are belr!i dominated by the students and rab- ble rousen who are nothing but the agents of violence and destruction. It II time for the authorities to awaken to their reaponslbilitle.s and pro!irly pttfonn their duUcs ln our IOclety we Bw George ow George : Every day l read your column ud eiUoJ It becouse 1 think we all need a laq.b to offaet the "normal" DeWS. However, rm In an arp. merit with my wife -lbe says nobody but an imbeclle would read thooe columns you put in the paper doy after day. Wbat can I say Jo her! FAN Dear f'tn' t AJll her bow ahe - Ltttm lrwn rffdlnl '"' W.1COIM. Norm1!1Y wrtten Movld ~ tto.lr meu111• Ill :IOO w.ra Of' i.... TIM rltht i. eoncl.nu llttff'i to flt tHe. or ellmllllto llbtt b ,...rnd, All lethn Oii/St ln<:lv* 1'91M1ture ltnd m•ll"'9 lddm.t. wt Mmn wlU M wllhllellll on ""vet. are to avoid the impending decline and fall of American civilization and return to the barbarism. and ignorance of the Mid- dle Ages. RAYMOND L. BEACH fteaporuil>llltlf To the Editor: The Academic Senate of UCI rejected on Oct. 14 a resolution by .Pean Ralph Gerard which supported a c a d e m i c freedom only wherl It ls exercised with responsibility. Because it wu: interpreted as an act of censure ol. a fellow professor (Dr. Stepben Shapiro, who has inYited Eldridge Cleaver to lecture to his literature class), the ftSOluUon was defeated, precluding a reasonable solu· Uon to a tragically· dlvlllve problem. Cleaver's quallficaUons as a university lecturer may be quest.1o·nable to many within the Academic Senate, yet that body demand! the right to make Its own unfortunate choices. This indstence upon freedom from responsi.blllty In.stead of lreedom witll responslblUty draws us closer to a confrontation that will benefit neither the university nor ourselves as free men. PATffiCIA L. ANDREWS Dbpla11 of Garbage To the Editor: I recenUy attended the Eldridge Cleaver fiasco at UCI to see for myself what was occurring at our univeralUes. I was di!gusted with Cleaver, but even more so at the officials of the campus who allowed this display of garbage under the guise ol free opeech. I do lhlnk Ultse appearan~ have dont some good -those of us who are Paying for th& universities may now start working to oppose school bonds unW some common sense returns to some university heads. JERRY R. JOHNSON f'oolbh!M!Ss, Wate To the Editor: The "common man" strikes back. Pam Coker's lecture to the common people, !Mailbox, Oct. II) is supposedly in answer to my earlier letter ol the totb. It misses the enUre point of my letter so completely, however, that I wonder if writer Coker re.ads well. The Yitai mis!ed point Is that qullllecl speakers are available to lntelligenUy present just about any point of. view on any subject. Therefore, w~ pay out one cent to hear a foul-mouthed. convkted feJon utter o~Uest The hiring of Cleaver amounts to the same thing u pouring tu dollors dlrectl)' Into a aewer. Anyone who con- tends that the "common man" (Mr. Tax- payer) is not qualllled to and doe• not have the rl1ht to speak up fn opposiUon to this type of foollshnest and waste ts l.D- deed "uncommon" (fortunately) and also oompletdy out ol louch with rWtty. II. I. SORBER Supports ll.N. To the Editor' In your Malibu (Oct. 11) •ppeuod a leu.r lrom .. lr•te reade< proteatlng thal the ldl ol July did not reocl•• tha consJdentioo thal the upcoming United Notionl Do.Y, Oct. Z4, wUI ha•e. - One very Jarge aerospace company granted its employes a holiday on Oct. Zl and organlled a picnic for thetn. Tbe same Irate reader complai.Ds that they did nothing on the 4th of July and cannot understand why anyone would com· memorate an "ungodly alllance" such as the U.S.A. joining the U.N. I must take exception to the words • • u n g o d I y alltance", "get us out of the U.N." and "who needs the U.N.?" IN THE LAST YEAR the United Na· lions vaccinated 19 million children against tuberculosis, supported feeding program.1 ln 55 countries, developed literacy programs in 48 countries. "Who needs the U.N. T" Baby, we all do! On Oct. 21 the Bahal's of Huntington Beach planted a black pine tree at Golden West College. On Oct. 25, 8 p.m., at'""th~an College dining hall in Oran~:,.~~·a of Orange County, in cooperation with the United NaUons AssoclaUon, will sponsor a program In support of the United Nations. All are fn.. vited to quote a world famous teacher on the subject. 0 The eartb is one country and all mankind IN! its cltit.ens." DICK WYLEMSKI Post'• NetD Support perty tax revenues. If no such funds are found, property owners will have no reliei . Prop. IA fails to solve the problem and its piwage on Nov. 5 will only de- lay much needed "tax reform." Total reform or the tu and fiscal structure is the only solution. Five state tax reform commissions have failed to offer any workable alternative to -the fiscal and tax problems. Prop. 9 offers total ta1 reform over a five year period. This measure certainly merits the consideration of every Califor· lllin on Nov. 5. G.A. CARTER Five Questions To the Editor : Having read Mr. Durkee's defense or the puppet theater and his claim of parentage (?) together with the amuslOg declaration that Mr. Williamson "had nothing to do with the project until he was selected by the b o a r d of directors •. .''), there are several questions I 1 1 1 would like to ask : (1) What happened to the Gag Rule? (2) What is a Gazebo? (3) BOW DOF.S Mr. Durkee happen to know what I've a1ways wanted for the To the Editor:.. Festival when our not very compatible Nest time 10111eone points a righteous association has been limited to three fln&er at some alleged "well.heeled" years a n d I have wanted many things ri&ht·wing pressure group" I'd llke to di-(some of which have been realized) over net his attention to an obscure Item in a period of 18 years. this week'a Business News. (4) But what I would like to know most 'l1ie ooce-respected Saturday Evening 1s why the board of directors would O.K. Post bu been dropping an average of $9 a theater very close to the stage when mllllon per annum for the last seven they fought the locati on of the Playhouse years slnce becoming a mouthpiece for on the Burt property because of the noise the liberal left. Yet an outfit called that would accrue to the detriment of the Perfect Film Ii; Chemical Corp. b step-Pageant. Or do they intend that the pup. ping 1n and balling out Curtis Publishing pet theater be dark during the two hours io the tune of $15 million in fresh capital:_) of prime lime each night when it should be entertaining guests not attending the ·NOT ONLY JS Perfect F 11 Pageant? (whomever that might represent) pro~ (5) And lncldenWly, who were the pins up Curtis, but its spokesman, one other architects considered? Mllrtln S. A<kerman, grandly bouts !bat SatEvePOlt Co. will have the saatCh .. not only to upand but to ll<quire other publJJh!ng and communlcoUOM opera- doni." That the llb! value the Post highly as an ouUet for their philosophy Is plain. That they have the vast financial power to e1pand their stranglehold on the com- munJcaUom media is now even more ~ Yiou.s. WHAT '1RJ.GBT-WING'' ouWt could or would hive taken a $62 million bath without blinking, then toss Jn onother dozen megabucks without bttaJdng a awe•lt an to keep in operaUon a pro- paganda or1an which obviously Isn't making It on Its own mtritlf "Idealism" gets pretty expensive JOmelimes, doesn1t It! Oh, ye1. Just 00'1 your illds will JP'OW'Up with the "rlaht •Wtude," the Poot Co. will teep oo pubJlsJ>Jnl JllCll and Jill, teo. HARRY WEISBERG&R CLARENCE UPSON YOUNG Mr. Young rtft-rs to hi.1 attack 011 • and Stuart Durkee'• defe-iue of, the 230-stat thtattr proposed for the Fes· tiool of Art: ground.!. Both aYe former Festival directors. Young resigned la.st t1tar and Durkee did not seek rf'!· eltctfcm thU uear. -Editor Cr-Valley P•rkw1111 To the Edttor' Now that Crown Valley Parkway ;, b,eins used 11 a ihort-cut to the Freeway aitd 8addlel>oct J.C., maybe the name """'1d be cbanged to Crown Vall•y Deall>lrapl Ir a,J'Old ever needed widening, it's this .... llllS. ROBERT HUKEB ------------------------------~~ ................ ~-....... ~ ... --......... --.:.....---- I • For the Record JtJeetings SECARD'S AMF POOL TABLE BU MPH TABlE 1~~=~! SPECIAL PllCl-ic--. ...... c:.. .... ._,..,~ ... c... --- FREE AM h••fta"'- ~.00 VM .. - m s. MaM $2J918 --....... ...... l'hane 532-t992 St~ 0r""99 H rs: 11 :00 hi 6:3().....6 D1ys 1 WNk CIDHd Wodnesd1ys .. ,-_. .... - DAILY PILOT %9 Actress to Take LEGAL NOTI~ ....... ClltTU'IC.f.'f'I 0,. aUllNIU PICTITIOUI HM\I • Theo uncttnltMld *-csntr ,. !if '*"' Daughter's Role d.,ld11!9 I bl.tllllln If )M ,....., bllrv1'1L C0tl1 MtM. (...,,.... l#'l4lf' ..., flctl1low firm "*"" fll IA Y COSTUMI U,.HOl.ITlltV ..... lwit· Mkt llnn i. (.......,.. llf !hi fillJoowllll _.. _.,,..._lllfUll ... ~• NEW YORK (AP) ra~ I• .. folloM: • AUIMI , .... 1tll or.ftM ,..,.,.,.,,.. Crawford aaid 1be told them 1tn1-"""· Clllllot'ftia • ' OttH ~ .... t, ,,. adding: "but I'm afra.id they'll ITAT! 01" ~'r,!o~~ have to gl'f'e me scale. I'D pay O~N&~°':~. blfor• -· 1 Not..., my hairdresser with my l'ublle 111 •M fer .. rd Sf•t.. --"'f. ~'"° Manuel "'°'" tllOW!t fill mt to scale " · .,. ,.... --.mo.. Mm• •• IU~ ' to flle w11111n IMlrvrntl'rl lt1d ~ ..... ChrLstlna Crawford ls the Id 1o1 uKIMd "" -tOf<FICtAL &EAL) eldeat of Miss Crawford'' four JeMllfl I!'. D•'tl• adopted children. ~::Ci;~ ~llfoml• Ori"" Countr M., Comml11lon £......_ Jllf\t !1, 1970 Rank Of Maj. or """""' ...... ""'" ..,. '""' Octobsr t, 16. n JD. '"' ll'OWI LEGAL NOTICE ANAHEIM /DISNEYLAND HELIPORT NEWPORT BEACH HHIPORI 60 FLIGHTS PER DAY 15 Minutes One Way Time Ucltioo: J,.1 north of tht ·D0noyland Holtl and just wtst of Disneyland Park on Cerritos AvenuL "'°"" (714) 77Z.S3W 22 FLIGHTS PER DAY 20 Minutes One Way Time l«lli>o: North ol Coin HilhWIY on th• .. n ~d• of J1mboree Road 11 lht Htwporttr ~n. """"(714) 614·1717 aI•WAJS ....-·SINCE' J!M7 ; r ' . . 3Q DAILY PILOT ' Wednt"'1, -23, 1968 New Car Insurance Proposed· WAsmNG'l'O!I (UPI) -An Insurance a11oclatloa .. _11r,a 180 ~ tb1s week unveiled lft Iulo iJl. ......... plan deslaned lo llCl'Op ., .Iba "'who'• al laUlt" payment :.: ~concept. = -A<corilJng to Iba America :~ A....iaUoa (AIA), ~ ""'1deot v1cttml woold have ·; :Jhelr economic loua and -medical upen1e1 paid by tbelr own b\surance com- ;: pill)... 'l'he-o would be no ~; court lldgaUon or aettlement : : 'between oppos1Dg companifll. ·-Koon-.. the comp! ... personal protection automobile lmunnai plan, the pnllJOS&l would cost "up to 45 perren& lea than the cost of the pre.em system," uid -tloll pr<sldeot T. La,....... Jooes. Under the praeot liability Insurance l)'llem. for the most part, there must be a determlnaUon of who ts at fault before claims can be paid. 'Ibe MW plan would be com· pilaory · -that ls, a person would have to meet insurance coverage requirement.. t o operate a car. In return, there woold ba c:ompl& bnmunll7 from court suits, Jone! said, • Tbe proposed system would make no change in automobile collisloo, W. and t b e I t pollcles. ' Immedlate oppoaitioo came from other insurance COD> panles and groups not coo- llecled with the AlA. Tbe NaUonal AssoclaUon ti Independent lnsuren (NAU), wh1cb Sk)'I tt.s 480 member companJes write more than hall the private car Wurance in the nation, sald the no-fault 8Cheme would shilt to each motorist "lhe entire burden ol iMuring blm!elf agalna:t all his loase.s -both those caused by himself u well as those caus-- ed by other motorbts." State Farm Mutual el· pressed doubt Its 11 million policyholders would want "the cost ol. accident! shlfted from the reckless driver to his vlc- tilm." Alstate ln!uranct said the A1A proposal would mean "ir· responsible and re c kl es s drivers would be held finan.. cially blflfJleless." • REGIONAL COUNSEL R. Jam11 Shaffer R. Shaffer Over The -Counter NASD Ll1llnt1 for Tu11day, October 22, 1961 --.......... •llllAlllMll~ ~ IF-; ·~ "" t =~~~~;'!\ i~ ~.--~ llu, • A c. 1;. ~,./' ii :n ~ Nrt "Lt~,. fl! r 1m :if ,i:r.··: ,~r ~ I e ·ul.t~ ~:ft 1 ~~ n: ~~ lu , nc * ,_ 2ji1 lw. ,It ~n W ~ ~Jsr.iJIP.!~~-" Im : 'it~:'¥i "~ II" ll! ~ -111• .-:rnrn;. 111,. 2 , 2J io:oi.51 c4:o"' ·'° zJ~ 'II! :!"~· 'l.':s. ~ '~ • ~ Llfo 'M •'" iiff:'m."11 • • ;,: i°'·"·Jr· J~ rtl! ~ .. In ~t.t~. . ~ ~ ~ -r.,. corz .!O l6 :Ill\.\ • 1• ~-r:::i.~;;. ·:1 ·i.. , !!'J Fnf°'·z:-~· 11.~ lli! • " lhHN• c.Pfor" ,, \' 1 Hs 1Td ~. ~ jij 11 11fl r;:~rv J,,,~~ Croco iii ~ :~ ~~~.!~ >l4i ~ m hwn M1ii1111 Ht"'1"Mll 1 ~· U» WIWIU. Im Co 6 " 6 ~"fl DYNmlca 16 ~ JI"' EAST!.RN 8.fJ'llCS olM I CO a ro 81ri:en Tri! 2.1111 1111M fl ICM 8=..,s~n.:_sMKll g i=t 'f:: ~uf'M"l ~ f.;g !f'I' :r= ~ ~~ .. Wit Co 1.U Jttl?\6; lJ l2 Fl~~ ::: c,~ ~II ! = :r = air,,.. Mio J Fnontlln Nit Bk t.20 jlU f •• 1n0ul '"'° 21111 'I M"' tt.,...,,., Tnltf 2.H .,i;. tcfnl C1r~nc ~ tl'I Mllrll"' Gtler 4.CI 1~ I 121\lo ltdrol~• on> 1.m ~ 31\'i »Vi hN Bt of NA 35 IKlronlc ., 3''h3$\li 3N WESTERN llAN S VlfHI a, l"tl 7' ~ 2'~ Ari-hllll; I 2t :It 2tl'I 1rm..-8rolhenfi llV. U 13 B•nlt ol Amer!(I 1.20 15 llS'4i M\.11 !il M1rt CGl"ll 2•\lo 2:5\lo 2'l\.'I 81nll of C1I $F 1.IO 511 50V. ~ 51tn Sig (VIII •• SI SI Sol Bk o fT1*.y9 ol Ctl 41 .0 ~ 11 El1CU!lv1 (l!fll 19 'lO 19 i•V HJU1 NII Bk 14 I~ 1 , ---------------~~------Fletchl~ \_•Pllll Fund 1~ lo.Ii 1~ ..,r;,... ":Jley Bk 1w 111'1 1 I" f.JrPr'rocf~ Inc .«I :4 f11• i'j ~~t 8j: .IO ~ »• ,ll: FOii!" Sltr lfV' 6"' 16; Crod<tt.C II~-l.«11 .0111 "" It •• ,. .I. ,, .Jpeeuy the roadrunner says-try To Counsel .. . -.. ' :::-, ; : Printing While You Wait AT SPEEDY COPY CENTER 1886 HARBOR BLVD. 00 COPIES s39s Our Stock: White or Color Ordar Your FREE Drop By Today and P1non1I Desk Natt Pad • BROCHURES • LETIERHEADS • BUSINESS FORMS • BULLETINS •PROGRAMS • PRJCE LISTS SPEEDY COPY CENTER 1886 Harbor Blvd. Cost• Meso, Calif. 92627 • • Drop by and Pick Up Our Complete Price Lia! Gel $100 or more month after month alter month! lmqlno ••• H•vlni 1 ....,11r monthly che<k to look foiword tol lllny of those who hm 1 wondertul MONTHLY SECURITY ACCOUNT, .. ori1ln1lld ond lon1 lilied by Newport B•lbot s.wlnp ••• sllmd by imp~ openln1 1 dlvldmd..,rnin1 $1vlnp ....,nt Otlie~ hmsltd I lump sum. MAil Tlf( COUl'Oft rort B dix Co i.den Lind Co Ltd 9"" 10\.'Ji f1h -=1u1lllY 81nk .70 \1 I \I.I I en rp •1 Br..,lnt 11 11'1• 11 Flnt 81~1llon 1 l\.!i I 1 'lo rl RtMarch COfP 19 F. lfl'Ji First Secvrltv Cpl .50 34 34 t r.d111tr1n 1111: 3WJ \'t lWo Giat-ay Ntl Bk I 11 1 16\1.1 -Tfi •Vt pf.'° u" 5'4 1~ 1.._,;.1 e1nk 24 2111 14 , 1. H T9dl~ 9 N t Libert vNtt Bk .241 t '""' Mio RHunUngton Bef achhares1dent ~,=.'"V~m•;i-~~ ~ r ~~~~B~r'.sz 1!2~ ll:Z lr-' • James Sha fer s been MF Im~• Sf,leml Inc 3'21.'.I :M\'t ,, S.,; P,t N1t 1.211 $1\.lo $1\IJ s l'I • Mllllf'I Erogln Co 6'4 6~ 6V. So Cal I hi Nat 1.-ID .V. ~ named associate reg 1 0 n a) Hor.II• Motor Co 1°"' 15'/J U\.'I Sumll'Omo Bk C1I .IOI n "4 41\.'I If th Be d. Co HYlltr 1.&1 41 4 41 Si.I,....,. Ntf Bk , 1 14 "111'1 counse or e n 1J: rp. 1n1orm11k1 1ne .,. " "" union ~l'>Corp_ .«11 11o S1 5'1111 • nl.nllll Bk pf 4.IO 71 71 US NII Bk W ls 21\li ~ 2t\4 He will be responsible for /ii'-'" Groc1r1 .!ti 7Yi 114 ,.,., v111"' NI'! P~l .5111 ,..,.. ia 2'11'> • Air Fr.IOhl :M ,~ .... :M Willi Fargo 81rW: 1.40 51 ,... 57Mi all Jegal bUSllles& for the COr· lnNI EIK Pwr Co 2.U lM'I ,... 11\.'J ACF Wt1 SI ro:oS ,•m poration on the West Coast ~~,,.c:;ga,_.., J"" :JI,, ~Am rmt lu1/~"4ll •,'11~ l:f 311 hil ' tainin' (f" l(Ofl(Ofll 22\.'J 2J 221'11 Am MetJ Ent CV 6 11 160 W e nuun g o ices at L.A Al""''! ' 1 6\4 .o.rt1en-Mllyt11r " 'llllU n ~ the Electrodynamics Division ti~rv?."'J~ :tt I ?: =~0.:f/11~·~12,, 11 'PJ 131 Jn North Hollywood. L•YM .. aow Pmo Co A) 10 n"' 10 ~~ms cv, .. ,,. 1'~, i70 1.'111 LI Grin Coni 14 15 13 tv":t' cv 12 ~ 111 Shaffer ha! been active in ~:::.C-M0¥1ol1 11.. lf ~: f:l:n!n °r1111 cvre' 7S ,1n local affaira u past ..... si.dent Miu Par .:JO tv. ' 1 ontnil 0111 cv J\li " 166 63 •"' ......,, ""! sy1 u «1 11'11 ..a ar Wes! F -5\4 1' ll U of the Oceanview School Mcf"rh 1"1 co 11>11 l.aa 26'h m; 26V. FMC, • '~, _ """",'• 1 ls:J u9 D• • t. ___ .1 N1tl E,...ltonm"'I CP 211\'t 22\IJ 20'.':i ~nl\I •f CV 4 Ill 117 13:1 Jstrict IJIJartl of trustees a N1t1-I ~Ill CGl"ll 16 """ 16\4 Gib Fin Cel CV •Ill 1' 12! 111 lOS be ' ,__,, e11e CGl"ll t\li 9•.r. t Ptc Alrllnes 6* 12 -·~ ti "n mem r of the California Oct..,., um .«1 1211o nv. \?\lo Ptc OVtdr Ad -' 74 ~ School Boards Association the ~n~ ROI~~~~ ~YI ~ im ~:::.!.er 1~et t;Y~v.1'11 ,~ 1Al 1~ ~-·-·'aJ Ad · ~ Pie Adv «I -ID 41 «I llorlftlmarl t;Y S IO "" 105 100 £"1JIAII\ri VJSOry Conuruttee PK "" II corii 1:Rll 16\lo IW. Thrlttlm~cv '11 1~ HO 1="!1 for Orange Coast College, ~:ic!:~ ~·i; na i= ~ ~:x~e: Mfg #~"'¥111 1~ I~ ~ Judge Advocate for the Hunt-II:= ICG1"1150 l~ ~ 1fit ~:S1~~:gfi,3~ r 1' '' "'5 ' lngton Harbor Yacht Club and ~o.c:ier•lf Mia n 11 111'1 17 Wllhhker c~ •\lo.fl • 111 210 li:ot11rt1 COllMIT ll'ldut 19~ 201'1 MUTUAL FUNOS has taught government con-R099<J ero1 .lb. 21 21 26\fo Ctwindler Fund Int 13.U 1'-31 13.lt tr ~'•ndr 1 oo 26:\lo 21\fo 2h:\lo O'Neil Fund 22.PS 24.'1 . act courses for the Unlver-lhrcti a. o.,, 1 ..... 30 1"1olo 17'4 11 P1r1m01<nt Mut Fd 10.15 l,_,, 'i·" alty of California. K9ro-°bv~ila ri ~ .fi ~;~%i11 Mvt Fd 1i:~ 1f.~ ln:il Prl lo · · · ! 11111 Slrft'I 111 3' 5 S SAVINGS lo LOAH COMPANIES or JOllllng Bendix s ench~ P9elf c cOr11 1~11 161'11 Amer S&L Ullh .15 111':1 22"' 21 a er prac c aw in Santa 1,1, ~Jv '" J>A Mt ~:f. Allle..ce coni 10'4 1o>.r. 101'1 Sh ff ti ed I • e"" xolr 7\41 ..... 1:\lo Bllmonl $1.L .«II. 25V. 26"' m't Ana and was employed by the •JICifl" lnc1v:irt• 2523\.'liIYI fl ~q~1~ ttt L.B. ~ ~ fv. North American R 0ckwe 11 T1=m1'f""~ 10. tl\(o ~ n... F1%:'1Ll~~l~Lfi:'nh.I ·'° '~ 16\lo r~ Corporation ,_cont Gas p)119 T.ot :JO 20\lt 20 Flr51 Sur.Iv CDl'll 1 H\lo 12'.!o 111"1 • Tr•,.,.'""' inti 19 21 lt Fl"! WO'Sitrn Fin ...., SVo •lll Udlco C0<11 13 lJ\41 13'4 ""-thor11e Fin .10. 17" llYo 13 Uncle Jolln'1 Rnt1ur \llll~ 11'h Pacific S.w & Ln .3(1 ll'lt :n ~f!.'t UnlOI! Roell Mlltr • .0. n. 'JI. Rlve~ck Fin Corp 5"' 6 S'/I VWR Utcl CofJI .41 2:1W Tr1M Cotti I,... • S'A ''4 ~ VICCO lndul Co $lA S\fo Sit Vtcu Ory Co .SV. ,M 51'1 as;: if# MMif \/tr.dine lnc:lus Inc lt 20\.'I lt District Adds N B L. "'~ ~ ,.. • •• •• •• ew us mes ~~·:fndU: <R.v.) co ;:.; ,:,,. ~ W•I ~L Fin Corp m 31A 2Yo LOS ANGELES (\)Pl} -Wi'.ifcoc~~r11n) \, !r ~! The Southern California Rapid ~~b.1::::, nr" .se ~ r1U ~v. Mutual Transit District announced z.vr. Po' .75 t2 u t2 that 164 new feeder bus lines u ti UfNSURANCE ITOCKS ill eel t 'd Am Gen Ins .«I :NV. ~ 26\fo w conn COUD y rest ents ....._ G-11 l.IO pf DMo ft" lM with 19 miles of proposed i:; ~r Lff!'ir.!"j_o ?r" ?w.. ?2'\\ Funds rapid transit routes. ~"' N11 t,~ ~o r'.6o ~"' l&YI ~ Final routing u !Ubject to l=f-1 \':"'~ ·l"-1sv. 1~ 1s>.1\ ••••••••••••I consultation and review b ~if: in~~o J._ 30 " Od n · Nwt i1v-12:w. . . y ~Ill-We!~ t1i. .IO ~ 2111 W' NEW v0RI( fAP) Shldt 23'.7315:11 local commuruUes. More than .,Y•bbF 0"' ii j1 U,,. sr -T111 fol!ow1n11 <1uo-v'"~, t.51. 10.21 • "" ,. !1llon!, IUl>Piled bV Ir IY 9.)6 10.61 40 areas will be served by the ~i~"~~ pf«ll 7,3(,1,(,76.lWifm "'' Nan-1 Allocl-1nv Rnll 6.-46 7.06 29 express feederlines no~ >~ !!!..'*,"' ~'·3!. • 11 !! a1"' ~°"ters~ 1~~,1~~ :~, l'::U i::fi I ed -"lv .... 1,.,,. 111 a '" ,..m 20 ·~ 20 Ille Prlcn II which Ivy 2t «I 29 •o P ann • e~·• Glner•w • ,,. •"' •,~ ,•,~ ltlftt •ecur111n Jollnsln 2111 ~i12 ''""'" "HIW or . ~ .. w.ild h1~ be'n K~t111nt Fund!: + ~~cunctwrn~" 2 ~:Z W;t ~YI lbldtor bougtit 1r1 e1 71.2922.22 'I'' u-rt°'illll'! 1.!CI '3 a .a =l V111d1v: us f2 ilfi ff ft ••~Am Tli'11 Im. .20 20'1' 21 19\lo Adl1J.':'-ll~jg'j· ~! Kf t):i1k112 '" n•~lf All ""'° ~ If lll!ld .H 111 1(2 f 7t I S1 Fri In L fl ,.. 3111. 31\li 31 J Al'Tlfl" 1 "l\ 1: UI n tl'.U 2:1:56 l"uncl A I °' 1.• SIYo ~ Sl\11 Amcaa ' ~· ! 12 !! u ·~ r:= i~nts!.io :r 1 ~YI~ ~I 1f Pi 11.'.· J rk [lf lt~ IMer'COllf L~ 12 lJ Am lnY 10.&l 10.l 1(11lr.:i.; •. ~ f-'~ '$""°" Ptla car~.• G G:\lo 4'11oArnMut 11111:.uKnl Glhjrn'!" L oln Nil L It I.I 7W. 7414 15V. Arn NGw 1:11 4.16 n 1191 1:4' 1 :52 Lou 1le111 I. $1tlrn L fl »* 21'4 21 Pac I.ff t .6' ~ltd! 17.fi 19 . .cl A'(C::r G~h 11.)4 tr. Slk l1s 1:2 Grwth IJ.1111.33 Lii• fnv I.fl ~fU lrw 10.t2 1j.M i.-tlll StYt.• : Fd Inv 11.1& I .:Jl Ctn.Id ..0.:17 ..0. I Suh ihl A»<Kltld 1,11 1.0 Ctol1 U.4J 1l.4l meI'S e A~~ Houqh""': Mui 17.o+ 11.ot ...... ·-~ ... Q """ 't'"'·U Fvnd B 11.,.11.26 Fnd l 11 1s. • !led: t.03 t .11 111 Gth 1 . 1,. T R d Cio 7.to a.59 oll Tr 1 .Ult.11 0 escue ~~Id 1::n l~~ :::l:r. u ~:n l'loiv;!s!I< 1.11 IM ~Oofl 't" 11.0CI Bo.I Slk '·" 11.8' Mid.A Mvt .M 1.7' hton t.60 10..t!' ~ QI I .'3 ll.1J N 'Kin'? R-SI 16.311)~ Moeot¥'1 IS.tt ui!I:~ avy • ~ll,dk li:J:lf:is ~ 1s.rfii~ij .,.ftldltn lt.17 21.111 I-S.16 !·ij 19)t 1111: t .'2 10.5'1 lniur t.1'0 1 , ARB on• tJp[) C1plt Shr 1.95 t ,11 MIF Fd 22.'6?4.11 SANTA B IU\.n ( -Ce<>t Shr 13.1'114.M MIF G!fl j·\l "" thennlna Fvnds: w.rt OGlfl , a" A thr-man submersible used ~111n 1•.» 11.u Mvt Sh" . ·" ,.,..-om Stk 1.2! • .c.! Miii Tru1t !-fl ti for underwater research was .= ;:~lS~ NitAw't: 11t:f1 ·~ SDKlll l.04 ~-'2 N1t !1111 l.10 U.10 flown to Massachusetts Tues-cha1e Gr'llU~: 111.1 _, 1.P ,,,. Fuiw: 15.U 16.'9 N~I tt Ser: day to try to rescue a Navy· Fr0111 111.eo116.11 R.i1n 11.•111.1.1 SM>kt 1,.311'.IO ~on<I ,4t 7.0f ownedsubmeralblewhlchaank k•.1 1 "8321"61 lvld '·g '·i olonl1I. I Slit I. t. last week in the AUantic. l~,.:itv 1~:~ 1::!i~ ~ 1:: ,f: bo Grwlt! 1.!t 9. 12.1 ll. The deep ocean work at ~omSt 11d &..' '" N11 ~' 1.pJ 1. operated here by General f'.;'~V\.94d1tt:.111 N~ na 'f:~n:~ lnum 11.n l .n ~IW c..-!13.oo >4.SO Motors was flown east at the s~' l\:~l :~N:::t.:1d lt:fi2o1l{:~ cwlih'Al.B 1. -•.t 11. !1,ti request of the Woods Hole wt1t1 cw:i !· ... 2.21 \D-511. ompe\' I .ta 11.tl 'f,' 0. 10. Oceanographic Institute to ~: •: li:ti l~:'ff1 1«1 ..tms lJ.ii f7:fJ conduct a sea search for the oncord lt.n lt. 111 2111 7rn ons Inv 1•.!a U.I fl\ t.'4 o.:n Al vin, which unt 0ct. 1e 10-=~flY1lH 12:iJ ~~~ Y:H ~:H orp Ld 7.'4 lf.GI Pn111 16.11 lf.ll m.ilea: soulhea!\ of Nantucket~ ea111•.5t 11.14 !\grim lJ.tl lt! w LSI t.:IO,,,: s -• 1 SF Island in S,000 feet of water. ~ev"1~ ~-.nu:~ Pfftl1 st 1:t."1J'tl.1f Th~ crewmen aboard the ~ti·~. 1..:J 15'.t p\:':f,.., 11:~\~:L . Tll ln LM t.ff ~rim Tll:• ftil 2'.lt Alvln escaped with minor fn. ~s f::Z! r,~ P:,lu"' 1:,. 11:~ juries when lhe BUbmersible 8'ona.~1•d: ~, "" 1rtE04 llO'l lllR 1 .Sol 1).U In"" Fl.I : surfaced briefly after a cable u .Ol 15.l! oult u . j'-" lhY l,lf ··~ 1'9 1·· l.(S snapped on the suppoi-t craft ~111 lt:n ~.:~ ~ ::,, 1j:" nch Ebe .. , U.13 11.M ·-· 1.M ·n during Jau . Em~ Gr 15.Ul . \11111 1 .11J "91"QY 16.!D lf: RIP Ttd'I 1.4' • The Alvin discovered and "'"'r" 11.tt 1 ... ~!¥.£.!.. 1t .C111 OciullY 12.ll tl:Jl -.1ilt'Tr. F~ncll: reco•ered a U.S. H-bomb Ill~~ .. ·~ 1\:11!},~ ~·" ~J~li wn.ters off Spain in 1966. l:f.'fd l11:3111:1~ ~:;,.st ll: 1 :U The DOWB wh1'ch made ,·15 Frm 6MlJ 1 .u 1 . .c. ffi 01v 11.0 . r f'td Grtll 11,7t 11." £11Ulf 11.71 , J • • CllllUlE DmllS Oii THE MOfllllLT SEctJIJIT ACt:OUllT PIM first dive off Santa Barbara in Fkl C111 14.H 16.t6 .c 1nv ~· J l ch d pth [ 6 ~"" ~!: t~ i1:U H:Q ~,~ 1ll.1 :tf u y, can rea e. so _.-Fln1nci11 Procim'I: 1om6 1 ll'' feet. It operates w1tho~t Vlt'W· ='' t·~ t:/i: "t'm!si l . 1 n.6 Ing ports, relying entirely on :~th fo~ t:rl '"'"" ·~\. l '•·e electronJc deviees and optits. ~~ !nS"' 11 ,H12 .... '-"' s1 ft"~·!' I,.,_.. ..tltd II ,...._ ti S.. 1104 If .. Clllfl!W fi1111t111 c. ...-.,.... 1 ...... _, i.11 -111i... Mr '"°' "l" 1111 np1:1 .. ,.....;,. ............ • lllCHI .. wltWrn. lwttr ..ittimw.1 ,..,..., ...... -....... -t2: ,..,.,, ······•e•••••e••····················••e•••e • e • : IlOWPORT BHI.llOR saVIDG : • , ........ lft JtJf ,lollla t.01.N ASIOCIAT IOIOI a e -Wt .................. ~ IMIJ • "-ln-lllO • atM L COl•t Hwy., Cllftlft• 011 Mar, C.llromla tthS I ~ 671 ... 50 : : Wuru. ill kn• ef on. Hul'ICIM Miiiion Poll•l'll • e P;4~c:a.1Wtl•~ AGHll ll.OMl)UIST,,.,..ldtnt a . • • =·· .::-. ·--· ......... _______ .... ~~-~-------------------------. :::-• e .. ;_: ~ ACiCJftQI 8 : .. ---·-= ' e ;--STATE IP • .,_ .. ""'''· . .r-: -.., •If t -Ill-, ... """°'' M-5.1.--ION! ..... ll(lOI • •••••••e••eeeee••1•e•e••e••eee••••e••e••••••e•••e•••••••••••e•••e•aee••······· 1 F C111 11. ..,. !!i... 1.22 , i F Fd 1,.62 .,. Mlle t.#1 .'1 Fii Glh t.S& 10.• ~ 1.Jt Gamache New W~· .t~.lti ''·~ ~ '11:1 l~i Simon Inc. VP '~?:~;ti ~~,:ff~ lbt!T~ ,fa,ID -:1~:1 J01eph H. Gamache, 41, lw :::'.': ~·~" !'· =' !!'.. · !~ been elected a corporate vice ~~· 1 :lj1f: Me · t prt.lldent ot Norton stmon; ~ '.'1 ~ :t:~....l. 1 Int., Fullerton, It ........ _ .... d: ·~k -,• 1rn nounced today bJ the firm's ·= · :a-" · tu president, David J. Mahoney. = . ·r: 1 ~1 .n : Gamache, who forrntrly 1t'U Js 1'ld " 1 : .l: l:ra 1 .1• 1 cllief uecutJ\le of t be 11 c;f 1l l ~~....,, automated Buslneu System11~,.J ,; ,; • ~I tR 1l G1'1lUj> ol IJlon · Jnduatrles, '::!.''" l:l! I :r. .. '""·· wW be Ill tharp ol : .. ~ 11:11 I . ~.,, . and roreca.u 1n .. 1.in1 Norton :::ir1~ t!l (~ Simon I n c • sub.!ldlarles, \Z '~ i~ 1tJt Mahoney uld. \'::1"8"'"°"'1 Cutting Jobs Way To End Inflation? By JOHN CUNNIFF tensiom? NEW YORK (AP) -Is the Based on the present cMllan loss ol one or two million jobs labor force, which ii about an acteptable price to pay for 71.7 mllllon workers, ~s getting thi!I inflated economy in the unemployment ~te back in balance? would have these con. Some economists, most of sequences: them perhaps with a business At 4 percent, S , 14. I , -o 'O O bent, feel that a million jobs without job!, or an increase oe mJgbt indeed be the price for 341,000. At 5 percent, J,935,000. keeping inflation from ex· jobless, or well over a million ploding into a recession. more unemployed than ,i the There ls an unfortunate present time . relationship between jobs and A five percent rate ii a very, inflation. When unemployment rea1 possibility. In 1964, !of ex~ drops below 4 percent, in· ample, the rate for the entire f l a t I o n generally develops. year was 5.2 percent. And in Competition for help pushes November 1983, with the up wages. Marginal help economy booming, the rate pushes up costs. Soon prices reached 5.9 percent. rise also. U S.9 percent of the pr~j!nt The unemployment rate now work force was without j.,ps, ls well under 4 percent. At the total would be well oyer: about 3.6 percent It is, in fact, 4.6 mhlioo workers, or ~t one of t h e lowest 1n many 1.8 million more men and years. A nl d, coinciding with women oot of work than-at this, inflation is running at a present. rate of 4 or 5 percent a year. By any reckoning that's a Some businessmen, as in-mighty big price to pay for dlcated by statements made at anything. 'Ibe only thing that a meeting cf the Bu!iness could justify it is danger of an Council, feel the overheated even larger loss to the nation economy mwt be slowed by permitting inflatlon to run substantially, even U It means wild, probably provoking sucli the loss of hundreds of a reaction that recession thousands of jobs. would result. Meeting during the weekend Despite these potentiallJ: at Hot Springs, Va., these cor· grave consequenecs, the ques-- po ration head! wamed that tlon still perslsts as to whether. the economy must be restrain· the country can afford tc. ed for the next year or so. permit so many to be without The tax surcharge must be jobs. Welfare roles already, extended ; government spen-are a problem. They'd grow. ding must be cut, they said. even more. 'The result of BUCh a policy Racial tension mlght be Jn. would be to brake t h e flamed by layoffs. Although economy, to restrain growth to many Americam are unaware a degree that could be main-cf it, the Negro unemployment tained without inflation. A rate is double that for whttes. consequence of such a Many working Negroes have slowdown would be layoffs. ooly the lowest skills; their This places the Johnson ad-iflp on jobs is weak. They'd ministration and the Federal be among the first to go lo a Reserve, which give the cutback. orders to the ecooomy, in the About all that fllCll and midst of a whirlpool cf dilem-monetary managers can do ls mas. balance the evils, If economic pr u d e n c e The net result of the!e demands a slowdown, what agonizing judgments may be doe! morality dictate: And a compromi!e -an Increase polities? And who is to decide in unemployment but not to when the slowdown has gone the extent that lnflatlon is far enough, when sufficient eliminated; a reduction in 1n- job! have been lost? And is flation but not to the extent this the way to handle racial ilwt twa million job! are lost, Fed Urges Tougher Truth-in-lending Act "Youn for only $20 a month," coaxed the huck!terl. "Define your terms," sna~ ped the Federal Reserve Board. The Board proposed regula- tJom Tue3day neshlng out the new Truth-in-Lending A c t which takes effect next July 1. In writing the law, Congrus said COMUmers need more in- formaUon than they've been getting when they make time. payment purchaaes. Tbe prOJX!'ed rtgulaUoM would require the aeller to spell out lo the pun:buer all the Important details fl their transactJon -details often left lllllllpoken at preaenL For inlllnto, the advwt!Rr who aaya on the atr or Ill print hll product can ba bought lot ju!l I f.., dolian a month, """' bo pmnltted lo llop' at that ')nlnl. U ba qool<I a dolllrl-P"J'"month Ogu.., the rqulatlons will ll1lflt that be Ibo tell: -How m1n7 months. -11ow 1>11 1 down paym<nL -Whit the financ:e charge ll whlD expressed 11 an an- nual percentage nte. -What the merchandiJe woold cost If bought outrlg& for tht ltller'1 dl.scl08ure to payment&. -How much ll'f•1'( this cost will be with the addilion of the finance charge. Th e regulations literally oot1aw "fine print" wheTI it cornea to the euentialJ of finance charges. ::: Ten-point boldface t)'pe - larger and darker than mest newspaper type -Ls specilied forth a seller's disclosure to the buyer of the" rate of · lhe fin,.ance charaes, the amount of each payment, frequency cf pa)'Illenll and other credil detail& Even larger type -12 poillt, an In capitals -ill required for a notJce telling the cm- aumer that If h< ha• pledged htl home u collateral in cer- lllll tJpea ol Wlallment con. tradJ he m-.y change hiJ mind ond batk out without penalty at any time Ill tho tine daya followJnc the llp- Jnc. Cooarus lnsiJted on thll conrwner tlClpe hateb after Jearninc many bomeownen ln Wailhlnglon'a poorer se<ttona entered into h o m e lib- --cootracta pedd!Od by hlgh-J>Nl'UN ultam.n fell bthind on their payments and oo1J then .U-Ol'ed that under the documents they hid llgned they could lose thctr homes. l J \ . . . • • • • • • • • ,. -----~·----~-----~--------~ -------~ ---. ------"-~-~-~-... -~-~----..c.._, ... _ _. ........ ~ ........ ~·:..-------------------------------......... • ... ._ _____ ----- -• • • All 1,000 of U·s Had a Busy Day -Today ' ;-W e1 created and deliver~d -arwther fr esh edition of X~ DAILY PILOT ~. T&UIWORK produces e8ch day's all.new DAILY Pll.oT. Often special· bta like Thomas Fortune (left ), whose beat is educaUoo, work with a ltatt photographer like Patrick O'Donnell to get the story both in word!: and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pictures last year to illustrate the varied story of Orange Coast life. Nobody knows how many local stories we wrote. Not even us. CREATIVITY helps advertisers tell thcir stories and sell their goods in the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. Gordon Crawford (left) of the display advertising department watches 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 ad~ertiser, a local retail merchant. QUICK HANDS place lines of type, ads and cuts (the metal plates -used to reproduce pictures) into page forms as the day's product begins lo _ take tbape. Compositor Arden Malsbury is only one of a platoon of printers who "build" the news pages under pressure of deadlines, work· •. fng against the clock to bring readers the latest available lnfonnation ln each .edition d1Irlng the day. DWVEllY ol the newaper II a speeil even~ too. Conwyor "'111 carry the papen lhrough the mallroom where they are automaUcally Ued In bundl .. of IO ond i-1 to waiting circut.oUon di.!bict manaaen (Uh Blaine ..-U, lbown bm, rigbt) wbo speed them via a ~vOblcle 11eet to carrlln foe delivery. Mallroom foreman ~p Ar&uJ (left) II.rid hll crew can move 20,00J oewtpapers an hour. VOLUME iJ the word at the Copy Detlk. DAILY PILOT Copy Deak Qilef Norman Andel'90!1 (right) aided by Tom Titus (baokground) ond other copyreaders every day llfta, checks and edits more wire reports from worldwide news services than the average. weekly news magazine pub- lishes. Editors scan enough telephotos to wallpaper a living room every !4 hours. Speed, born of experience, helps them keep it all fresh, too. THE WORDS are ready. Marjorie Jackson feeds them into a '25,000 computer, a DAILY Pllm investment In speed and accuracy, which uaes a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters at the rate of 1,000 a second and punches a new tape which will tJ.ctivate another machine for automatically setting type at high speed. The maclrlne3 can set type at the rate of 6,000 lines per hour. MAClllNDI hasten Ule processes of preparing plates for printing tht pageli of the newspaper. Here, Cbarlea Haubrick (foreground) and Ed- ward Quinn operate a casting machine which molds curved plates to flt onto high speed presses. The DAU. Y PILOT keeps in stock more than 40 tons of type metal which Is used, melted down and used again In the cootinuou.s job of printing 100,000 word1 a day. MODERN equl~ment help1 the accounllnli department keep' up with tht 11today" pace at tile DAILY PILC11'. Even u tht d17'1 newspaper ii being sped to tts ... den, Bonnie Chauvin beCina !ledJiig ftgum (Dto a computroalc bookkoeplnf m.,iiJne that belpo keep track al bllllnp far ads and 1R1hscriptkllll. The machine. !orenmner al a brace of oomjJuten llOOD to be added, band1el 5,000 accountl a mooth. , ,, IW'm c:ommunlcaUon ii the name of the game. ~ Juanitaa and per crew of "ad-vllon" band.le 1,000 tranuctions a week by , resulting In publication of 5,000 classified ads -words which help buy, sell, rent or I ease ..• eYen find lost dOp. Many of the DAID PILOT'S 150 phone lines are plucnd In here, the •I-adYertlalng *- partment, home of "Want Adi" and Dtme-A·Unes. i:, .. ,. " PICl'URES, too, get the benefit of stilled, efficient bandliM by mastii craflamen who re-photograph them ond then tranafer thehruiges toli aensl.tized metal plates which are UB8d. to reproduce the pbotoe as rerQ. ers will see them In the newspaper. Here, Cl!.uc.k Ryan takes a rutlf close loot at a negative which wtll be used to etch the image on tlll metal plate. ?~ .. .. FINI8BED PRODUcr geil quick IC8D by Wayne lluBolle, 11'""'000! !e<eman, •hil• hl.s giant preae1 continue to roar turning a ribbon of newsprint paper into newepapen. The DAILY Pllhl' uaes f,000 tona of newsprint each year. That meana we print each year the equivalent of a single roll of piper one page wide and 110,000 mllea long. Pressea print, fold, cut lP!d count newspapers in one oper_auon. ALMOIT belcn .the lnl 11 drJ, the proiluct al our buoy dq 11 - dalUy an your lawn or poreb by -al our 'IQO ...._..,,, who an lniponanl -In the clialn al -'9 It IU• to brine JOU today's DeW1 llld --todly In the DAIL\' PILOT. And u our,_ llldepenilent merc11an11, UA Jahn Melklo here, make tMlr delmlrlal, ...... ~ up far .....,. buly day -all 1,llOO al om. . ' • :The •Now~ Newspaper for All The'. Co1t1111onities· ~f_:_The -Growing Or -ge Coa.st r ·-··· • • • \ • l . . . . . . . .. -·~' • '..f' ~ _. ·---~ ..!.. L4J._• ,. •• ·~-'-''"-'""""-'U> ... ...,. ....... ,... ......... ,,,. ............................ ...., ............. ________________________________ ;_ ______ ... . - .,. AT HU·GE I D~SCOUNTS s on PLYMOUTHS a CHRYSLERS -' 48 MONTHS BANK FINANCl.NG AVAILABLE ON ALL NEW CARS AT .THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF WESTMINSTER ON APPROVED BANK CREDIT '69. Valiont IMMEDIATE DELlV!RY =.. ~,'."::::';.:::·>:r:.::::: $1·97 7' ,,_~ .. ., blolh. lhoullW ,.,.,-., aetlllld d<llh. W.£.W. "1\onel. lMw mlla. OCTLlMI FACTORY LIST $24U $53 ... $53 llo. + TAX 6 LI~ ORDER YOURS TODAY f'vl"' fllcfwy _.!Pl'ld. Hfflt'I', 911d. :':..~.!':=· .. ~~~2577 · Hddtd dllh. W.t.W. cipflonal. .., FACTORY LIST $31ZJ $195 Do. $69:.".. +TAX 6 LI~ IMMIDIATI DILIVllY Our Discount Pr1~ :i-.:.:·f.;X..'.'~:::'~:·~~.:..":: $2 18 7. fnlnt1'Mt" Mii btth, IP!outdotr hlmeu. M4"i! dnh. W.S.W, OPllonl1. llL%1ttf1°'7• FACTORY LIST $2671 . $195 ... $55 .... +TAX•LIC.. .. ,'69· Fury IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Our Discount Price :~.~;..'.":'~~~.:...~"'" 22 7 7· fl'OnN'Mr Met btl". 1hoVl<ltr ,..t -, HdOH duf'I. W.l .W. DPtiGll91 l"l:IT.-.11 FACTORY LIST $2111 $195 ... $59 .... +TAX• l:IC. IMMEDIATE DELIVE RY! HUGE 1969 SELECTION EASY 1969 TERMS LOW-LOW 1969 PRICES ALL ~EW CAR PAYMENTS ARE BASED ON 41 MONTHS INCLUDING TAX It LICENSE It FINANCE CHARGES ON APPROVED COMMERCIAL BANK CREDIT ' . IUY MIT USED CAI WITH CONFIDENCl -7 DA y; TRIAt '63 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN J:acllo. hffltr, wtom1i1c; -•'-'I,_, (IOIC :ltJl $477 TOTAL s16 TOTAL s16 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L PTMT. PYMT. ILUI 1001 PllCI St61 '65 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 4 Dmr. 1t•dl4' w 11H1tr, MlfolNtk. 1u?T m1 $677 TOTAL s23 TOTAL s23 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLY. + T I L nMT. nMT. ILUI IOOI PllCI SIJtl '65 MUSTANG 07 COUPE llHl9 Ind l!Hllor. lw, No.. tF07U1"'371 $677 TOTAL s23 TOTAL s23 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. · + T I L nMT. PYM1', ILUI 1001 PllCI SI 341 '63 FORD GALAXIE 500 • I Dr, tt.T. ll•dla, llffttr, 1vtorn.tlc. ~eerlnt. 1HBM OSJl s477 · ;:::.L s16 :~:.. 516 ~~~~-. + TI L PYMT. nMT. ILUI IOOK PllCI $1121 '65 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Mr aiM., ~ ttwrlnt', br1kn. WlflOOWll, rHi.. h911er, 1\Plomillk. tPGE 1t1) $1 477 TOTAL s49 TOTAL s49 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLY. · · + T I L nMT. PTMT. '65 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR ltMlle, ....,.,, MlilllMtk.." Ser. Ho. 156ff59115* $877 ; TOTAL' s29 TOTAL s29 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T • L nMT. PTMT. ILUI 1001 "PllCI S1J61 '64 CATALINA .9 PASS. WAGON All" «nd .. -lfMrl ... I. braktl, M/h:lmltlc, rHJe, tie1ter. CSJM n 1) $1077 ~:.~~ 536 Ti:'~~~ S36 ~~~~~-+ T I L PYMT. PYMT. '65 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER Vt. All '9W'll' IOIUlpmm!, 11t CDftdltlon1nt. (PJI OH) $-1577-TOTAL s53 TOTAL s53 TOTAL . PllCI DOWN MTHLY. +TIL ' PYMT. nMT. ILUI 1001 PllCI SI 141 '67 CHEVROLET llHlo. l'IHtw, llllemlttc. -r tflltf'lnt, 1lr cani:llllanlnt. (TUK nu $1377 . TOTAL$46 TOTAL $46 TOTAL PllCI . DOWN MTHLT. +TIL PTMT. nMT, ILUI IOOl PllCI SJJJI '68 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill a Ooar """"°"· Vt. llMWN!k. _,. f!Mrlnt. rMla, llelt.r, •Ir .....ittlonlnL (YltC 750) $2677.TOTAL S9()TOTAL s90TOTAL , PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + TI L PYMT. PYMT, ILUI IOOl PllCI $1121 '66 MERCURY CAPRI J ~ H.T. '"-dol"Y Ill", """''"'"C· -s!M!"l119, rldla, hllllr', CWEU 71" $977 . TOTAL s33 TOTAL s33 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L PYMT. PYMT. ILUI 1091 PllCI. $2140 '64 COUNTRY Sfj)UIRE "-11..,.1n1, rMlo.. hHllor. •~le. !VWW02') $677 . TOTAL s23 TOTAL s23 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T I L PTMT. PYMT. ll.UI IOOl PllCI 51110 '65 DODGE DART llldll<, flMlw. •""""'lie. (Mitt 6SO) TOTAL s26 TOTAL s26 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L PYMT. PTMT. ILUI 1001 ftlCI SIJll '65 PLYMOUTH FURY WAGON ,.vry II. VI, IU!wftllle. -ltwrirtt. •Ir C'Oftllll1kll'llnt. lllUJ "Ill $1177. TOTAL s3· 9 TOTAL s39 TOTAL PllCI DOWN M'l'MLY. · +T&L nMT. PYMT. ILUI IOOK ftlCI Slftl '64 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR FullY MUloMd. CH\IW 401 $377 TOTAL s13 TOTAL s13 TOTAL PllCI 90WN MTHLT. + T & L PYMT. n11n'. ''67 ·CHEVROLET IMPALA .. COUPE Jt8d)e, he1ter, 1!11-fk. 1110Wtr ttfftlnt. (TGN-4111 $1'677·~.Tt.L s57:~~ s57:~~. . , , , + T • L plfMT. PTMT. ILUI 1001 PllCI $2461 -'65 OL-DSMOllLE-JmTAlt-88 $9n. TOTAL s33 TOTAL s33 TOTAL PAICI DOWN M'THLT. · J + T & L PYMT. PTMT. '64 BUICK SKYLARK 1 door lllrd!CIP. llld1o, hfft9r, bl,K:klt '"'-11'1111 lnlll'IY eni.r·tKTnl. {OTW.N $6n. TOTAL s23 TOTAL s23 TOTA• PAICI DOWN ' MTHLT. · : + T • L ~YMT. . nMT. '66 FORD 4 DOOR Vt. 1111om111c, ~r •!•Inv, r•dlo. Miter. (UDA.112) c:$7•.7•7•, ;~.~L s26 =~ s26 ~~~~. + T &: L Pf.Mf, PYMT. ILUI 1001 PllCI S1 Stl '66 OLDS STARFIRE ltldla, lllller, ..... IU!Wnelk. •Ir, _, windows, tllt ....,.(, PS, ,. .. (TGR 5'01 $18". TOTAL S63 TOTAL S63 TOTAL . PllCI DOWN . MTHLT. + T & L PTMT. . PYMT. ILUI IOOlt PllCI S2061 , . '63 PONTIAC BONNEVIU! ltldlo. lll1ter. 1urom.11c, -ttwrlno. !LEW170l fi4n TOTAL s16 TOTAL s16 TOTAL .,L. PllCI DOWN MTHLY. . J + T • L PYMT. PYMT. '66 PONTIAC FullY 9'1Ulpped. R1dla. llffltr. (SYC mn TOTAL s29 TOTAL s29 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L PYMT~ ' PYMT. ILUI 1001 PllCI SI 111 '64 DODGE 4 DOOR Lo.lae(I lncludlng 1utomt1k. tNGJ 'S.l TOTAL s13 TOTAL s13 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L PYMT. PTMT. '64 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4 Dool<. ltldlo. llfflw, f111om1t1c. (OLI( W l lt-671, . TOTAL s23 TOTAL s23 TOTAL .. i PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L PTMT. PYMT. '68 DODGE DART GT Dan'! Wiit on !hit -· (VS t '5'11 $18771 TOTAL S63 TOTAL S63 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L PYMT. PYMT. '64 OLDS F-85 HARDTOP 2 Door, ll1dlll, Mottr, ~lk. (HYS1t7) TOTAL s23 TOT~· s23 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. + T & L nMT. . PYMT. ' ---~------------~~-------~--------........... _________ .... ····· ..... I I • • u b I h " n c " [i , c F • • ii 0 1 0 • ' h • ( n • • ' s n • • '· ' ' f s s ' c ' ' i I . ---DAILY PILOT __ '.'Newport Harbor . . Year B0meto"1D ... voe. '6T, NO. 255, I SECTIONS, 80 PAGES \ \ f;?• • .. ARROWS INDICATE PROPOSED ONE-WAY STREET PATTERN One!'way Streets Eyed for CdM By JEROME F. COUlNS Of fllt MllY PU• Stiff AD butlhree of Corona del Mar's north- south streets between Fifth Avenue and the sea may soon be one-way. Newport Beach city official$ hope to bring about the ~ge before Memorial Day next year. They're admittedly .uneasy a b o u t hbmeowners' reacUon to the major rJVisfon of trafiic patterns. But they see tt: as the only accept-1>1e way lo unplug Corona del Man tightening residential traffic bottleneck. The alternative. according tD City Traf- fic Engineer Robert Jaffe, would be to * * * CdM Chanilier Views ~Mixed''\ t ~~.~~=:~ii~,:.= President John Semple ~~ described as "mixed" his organh:alion's 'reaction to a city proposal to one-way miby streets in the area. \ City Traffic.. Engineer RobArt Jaffe outlined the plan to the Chamhtr board Tuesday. \ Dee Cook, ex-councilman and cl\airman nf the chamber's legislaWve committee, was strongly o°pposed to the change. He said it isn't yet needed and would result in problems for many merchant-; because oC the difficulty their customers would have in getUng to the st.ores. Jaffe was asked to return to the Chamber board meeUng next month with more information on the subject. "We want to know how many additional parking spaces could be created, and,.. we'd like some statistics on the ac<::jdent rate, and what effect this might have on summer trade," said Semple. He pointed out that many streets south or the highway already are one.way dur· ing the summer months. The 14-member Chamber board look no action on a suggestion that it help the ci- ty set up public meetings on the plan. "We might go along with spomonhip of such meetings if thia thing progre~ further," said Semple. "l tbizik people should have an opportunity to have their say." He said director1 left Tuesday's meeting "with the idea that we would discuss it with people in the area to get their views on it.'" "We haven't reached any conclusions ourselves so far," be emph••iRd. "'More informaUon is needed." RAISES OllJECTIONS Dlttrict Attomty Hlckt I •• . . remove. parking from one side of every street. And be considers that totally unacceptable. "To lose that much parking," he says, "would be utterly disastrous for Corona del Mar. There is just no other place to store thousands of cars overnight." Jalfe bas embarked on a program or softening up Corona de! Mar residents and businessmen for the change. He spoke to Chamber oC Commerce leaders Tuesday. With chamber cooperation, public meetings on the proposal will be held before it is presented to the city council for implementation. Also, maps and 9.'ril- ten material on the plan will be sent to every Corona de! P.tar property owner. Jaffe empt\asiZe, tba1 no one-way signs dn go llp without councl1 ~val. "Wt recognize that a sweeping change ~~~ ~~" be ·..Y.. "The big problem would be one ol ~it : peo- ple ge.Whi used to it. Some will find they hive to drive a half-block or a block f~r in Qrder to get to their homes. Bat others will be getting home quicker." fbe proposal was originally recom· m~ by Wilbi.ir Smith Associates, cotJNiting eJ}gineers who developed a $30,000 trafrtc and Streets master plan for the 'Pty earlier Utls year. City councilmen already have Indicated theit informal support of the one-way recommendation. Under the plan, the streets would alternate north and suuth one.way. These would run north: Avocado. Begonia, Dahlia, Heliotrope, Jasmine, Marigold aod Orchid avenues. These would run south : Ac a cia, Carnation. Fernleaf. Trill, Larkspur, Narcissus and Hazel avenues. (Set STREETS, Paa:e %) Woman, 72, Dies; ·~:~~~a~lsy ?.:~~=-~ today to detennine the cause of death ror Hulda Adell Jones , 72, 1012 Olive St, Huntington Beach, who collapsed Tues- day night on a Newport &ach street. Coroner's deputies said the elderly woman was dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial .Hospital at 10:0.S p.m. They aaid Mn. J<11es and a companicm wete rtlurning liiime from a dinner when Mn. Jonea suddenly collapsed after first com- plaining of stomach cramp& a n d dizziness. • Police said the woman lay orr the sidewalk al 800 W. Coast Highway when their units arrived al 9:30 p.m. She was taken by ambuJance to Hoq. VIEW FROM Tl-ii! ll EN'CH Jud1• Sumner -EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCT08£R 23, '190 Dally Paper TEN ·CENTS Airport Expansion Asked Irvine May Block Pilots' Pitch for ·20() A'cres By SANDI MAJOR ot "" ~lb' Plltt Iliff A pilot spokesman Tuesdiy night declared that ooe way to keep air traffic flowing in Orange County unW the regional airport is a reality is to expand onto 200 acres: of Irvine Cotitpauy land nez\ lo otaoge Cowlly Airport. 1Tidelands Exchange Hopes Dim Prospoc\5 for negollation iJI a land trade between Orange Couoty and the lrvine Company seemed remote today when county supervisors took the coD- troversial issJe -scheduled for debate Oct. 29 -off ca1endar. The supervisors' only romment on the shelving of the bitterly attacked proposal was: "We're still talking with Irvine but it may be some time before a decision can be reached." Irvine spokesman William Aldrich had much the same response. "We're still negotiating," h_e said. "Beyond that, we have no comment." Mounting opposition spearheaded by county Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw, led last week to defennent of I.he long 1tan- ding propoial that the county transfer 450 acres to lbe Irvine Company in exchange ror 157 acr~ of Irvine owned-tidelands. Hinshaw last week blasted the proposal as a ,.legally improper action" by the board. Hiniba'!' warned ~pervjson that tbl!J should wait for a court niling on the co,.. stitutiooallity of a 1957 act which made the trade impoS!lblt. In any event, Hinshaw said, bia office could not accept such an exchange f or certain taxes on the property. Supervisors have defended the sug· gesled deal by pointing out that it would result in multi-million dollar development of Upper Newport Bay. Day of Mourning For Joseph Beek SW.ted in Newport Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall has proclaimed Thursday a day or official mourning in memory of Joseph A. Beek Sr. Mrs. Marshall ordered flags lowered to half stafr on all municipal buildings. Last rites for Mr. Beek, for £ive decades a prominent civic leader, will be held at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. Interment arrangements are being handled by Paciric View Memorial Park. Jn her proclamation of mourning, the mayor said : "We respectfully pay tribute to Mr. Beek as a man who held a unique place in the history of Newport Beach; as a leader in the early improvement of Newport Harbor: as a distinguished secretary to the California Senate; as a pioneer in the development of Balboa Island, Harbor Island and Beacon Bay; as an active trustee of the Newport Har)>or High School board from 1933 to 1!154; and as an ardent yachuanan who promoted yachting in Newport Harbor. "Commodore Joseph A. Beek will be especially missed ia Newport Beach, his hometown." If Irvine ls unwilling to lease the land, "condemn it and sell It later" suggested &:I Van Allen, president of lhe Orange County Pilots AssociaUon in his recom· mendaUou to county airport com· missioners. Earlier, commlssioners had tentatively approved expansjoo plans for the ex.Lsting airport. Van Allen rose before the meeting was adjourned ·and ·said be was "amazed" at the way the county "avoMls the ~y to the west knowing tht faciliUu we have here cannot be expanded to take care of the needs In the next live years." His first suggestion was the improb-• TO JOIN COMO -Corona del Mar High School's singing Young Americans (left to right) Pat Ba1ton, Mark Brewer and Judy Twlle- gar practice. selecti~D.f.h!\)' · • ~. l.'!l?i"g in t , Yieel<UQi;,gF!'. , Como television fpeClill..... ·'· · · •r ~~~~r · ' .- Trio of CdM Hig~ S~gers • ' . To Appear on Como Sl1ow Three 16-ycar-old Corona del ~1ar High School students have .sung their \\'ay onto a Perry Como television special and possibly a world tour. Pat Bolton, ·or Santa Ana Heights, and Judy Twilegar and Mark Brewer,' both of Costa Mesa. passed three difficult aud l· lions to become members or the ·voun'g Americans singing group. At each audi- tion they had to sing, 'dance and speak before a panel of judges. Three hundred tried out for the Young Americans and most or the 40 selected are junior college students. s·aid a p~ud Corona del Mar vocal music instructor, Don Haneke. The three students are members of thr. high school. Concert Choir and ·Madrigals. Miss Twllegar and four other Corona dcl Mar Hlgh students. Chris Baker, Pat Ha lligan, Henry Johnson and Bob Frizzelle. have been selected for the 100.. voice All Southern Callfomia. Vocal Association Honor Choir that will sing at the Los Angeles Music Center. Heart Transplant 63 SYDNEY (UPI) -Australia's first Aeart trar:"fllant operation has been suc· cessfully carried out, a bulletin \,ssued from St. Vincent's Hospl.tal said early Thursday. It was the 6.1rd known heart transplanl The three YOung Arilericans w'lll begin taping the Perry Como appearance in two weeks . This summer the singing group likely will tour Australia an:J maybe Japan. Cai· Rental Agent Found Innocent Of Tl1ef t GQarge A 47-year-old' car leasing agent has been found innocent of charges that he stole $20,000 from a Newport Beach. divorcee. Superior Court aides said today John Bates Gregg, who had been charged with grand theft last August, was freed follow· ing a trial in Santa Ana. The verdict was attributed largely to the testimony of the alleged victlm, coorl sources said. •The' 42-year-otd woman 's test.imony varied considerably from that given at pre-trial hearings, it was reported. Gregg a.ssertedly had once promised to marry the ~oman, a divor~. but in- stead, re-married a former wife. ~ grand theft complaint .,.-as then filed by the Newport woman, acctrding to the district attorney's olflce. · Judge, DA Trade Barbs ' I Law and Order Debated in OCC Panel Discussion By THOMAS FORTUNE •Of ... Otlb' Pll1I $1.n Judges ofttn bear bum raps for di.strict allorneyt, IU(llesled the jud(e. Judgn' attitudes are chlldllh, coontered the dlalrlei •iorney. The pod-natured barba wen \roded by Superior Court Juvenile Judge Bruce swnner anc1 Orana• County DI.rulct At- 1orney C.Cil Hi<ks during I panel dbcusslon on ut.aw aod Order" TUealay aL Orange Cout College. "Polls Indicate !ha\ many people feel the, c:oortt lie ....,.ns;ble lot lbe breakdown In i.w and ord•." the jw1s\ 11ald ... tn a!Moit ~ tt1t ihe pro- !leCUlor who moves to dilmlsa:. but It la the judge who gets blamed for releasing crlmlnala. .. • "It is odd ht ¥i'Ollld get that lm- preslion," answered Hlck.'I. "lt is oor feeling there ii always some guy up there tn 1 black robe aayfnl, •vou can't get that piece of junk Into evidence.' " The c;ounty'1 chief Jaw en!orcemect of. fiC<T said ponce find troublesome Judies' 1tutude that they have no Idea what la happenlnb in a secret interroption room.. "Thi< atltude i. cblldLsh -Ulm Ii no othtt word I could uae," he Aid. "In no .,..., .._ the lu<lie know nnt hand Whal happened. He has to rtly on-wltneuea It Lhe, tcene." . . ' . • Judp Sumner said, "We bavt certain rules we 11et up Jn Ole BW of Rlahll. There ft a rule agalnll !clf lncrimb\atfOI'. • Go ahclid and ql~1e· 1o get rfd allhe BBi •• of. Right.a, but bear In mind our society Is geUlng more: complex. This lr no longer lbe old fronUer,'' .he Aid, not •!><ailng ' ' dlrtclly lo Hlob but lo lbe audleoce. The peneJ diOC' ... lj>n WU 000, of a ~~ pmen\ed o"!""ibl7 by, the col.loge 9\.VU,y, • The lhlrd -ol tho pine1. <tt Pollet ~ IDa\nJc\or Tom .\4lml. 'said leJal obllJalloas preveol pollcifn>m l>UbJitl; anneklnJ char&" ol J>bllce brutality. · "OUlotn can'l 10Lbaq,,and.,_,, '.Ltlj:lk, pre11 (Mw1paper1, rldlO, TV), thlt Is our 'side,' .. he Aid. uwe ~d ti, dJvul.llng lnlotmoUoot bnl~ available lo \he court at the proper; Urn~. Wil:·c!.n'l Clvf! Our slde · ISOe ,ANIL, P111·i1 , ' able joint use or El Toro Marine corps Air Stalion. His alternative wu the. acqu:lsiUon ol the 200 acrea of wxleve1oped land"'oe.aJ' the airport The county should procure the land on a flve year lease, put ramps on it and an lSee AIRPORT, Page Z) U.S. Kills ~25 Reds In 4 Raids ' SAIGON (UPO -U. S. planes and Marine artillery caught four groups of Communist soldiers in the open today and killed 225 of them in a series of strikes that were continuing tonight. Spokesmen reported no American casualties. The well-armed North Vietnamese and Viet.~.~ were spotted late Tues- day by U. S. Marine reconnaissance patrols in several areas near the Thuong Due Special Forces camp which·earller in the month withstood a aiege by North Vietnamese reguJars. The la~~ of about 170 North Vietnamese soldiers was spotted near An Ho8. and 47 of them were reported killed as night fell . 1.farine ground troops pUJh.. ed into the area but reported no contact as darkness rel\. The Marines earlier reported killing 171 1n the· area below .. and ini?nd from Da ·Naag. ·- It was the largest operation since a lull aettled over the battlefields t\fo weeks aeo. However, the air war against NorOt Vletnam conUnued despite peace nimoh n0D91ng t h e world, • an d Jn Saigon a ·grenade blast outsJde the central market .Jrt the heart of Saigon killed a teen-age boy and wounded 18 other persons in an apparent terToris't act. The blast occurred a mile from the presidential pala~ where U. S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and South Vietnam Presic!ent Nguyen Van Thieu met for nearly three hours -thcir se.. cond meeting in two days and their sii:th Jn a week. As usual there was no statement on the meeting but there was speculation aboot lhe possibility that North Vietnam may have agr~ to American prop0o5als for a bombing halt and full peace talks. The battling near the Special Fotces camp, which 8,000 North Vletnamest soldiers failed to take in a 15-day siege earlier this month, apparently ended a t\vo-week lull in major ground actioit In South Vietnam. Some diplomatic observers had cited the lull as part or pattern surroondlng American eUorts to get flanoi to agree to mutually de.escalate the war. Coast Kayaker In Semi-finals hfEXICO CITY -Johu Glair of Newport Beach qualified for Thursday's ·semi-finals in inen's kayak singles by placing lhlrd In his repechage or second chance heat this morning. Tuesday, Glair finJshed last in his heat o( the Olympic Games competitioTL Orange Couc Weather Get ready to grope your w a y through more to4 , Tllursday. un- less you live far inland, In which case you'll be mopping your brow In 91-degree heat. It'll be up to 72 hereabouts. INSIDE TODAY TM world ts wtchfng ih1 U.S . 1Lectionl. Stom1 on thil ood olhcr e11pecb of Am<ri«m po!ilf<I mo~ b• 11J1hld .,. /'aan 7, ll and 16. • ----------~..--------111111!11------m!ml!!lel!ll .. -· J DAILY Pilaf Wed-, De-23, 1'1611 'Coullty's Population B,ooms t ' 0,701 r a , ly "" u lit E =--~·'· ' ............ doWn :m arrivals dally. 0!'11111• Counly will ICCOUJll .for oot rourt11 o1 the entire populetlon·growth or the IOUllllrD hall ol Calllornla thh yeu, CQIDly o!fla.11 aald. The quarlttiy r<port, which c:oW II per copy~ ii in ' great demand Jn the C<IWlll' bll&IJlw CODlllllllllly i.s baaed on I -' qui lo 11.10 .,.. 1111111111 .... 1. In~ 1111<. m 101.082 an II per. cent increase over last year. La Palma bad the ltlghset percentage growlh, follow-ed by Foonlaln Valley. ·-~! inland dty, with a 39.SI percent in· creme In populaUon. grew . from S,025 pcrsortJ in July, lts'l to an estimated 7,030 Ibis yeu. FoonlAln Valley, which Silver An.ch.Qr Winners . .. 4. '~¢autiful People' ... ,. By ~ YN Slll!:Rll'OOD ~ Of "" Dtlfr ...... ,,... ~, J'our .~ewport Beach r .e1.lden·'t1, ,. ~lbed u "beautl!ul, compwlonale ~ an<! -llllb · -It," lod,ay wttt ~ J)reSente<i with Sliver AnchOr iwan11 by ~. the Women's Dlvl1lon of the Newport ~· Harbor Chamber ol Commerce. ... Rec<iv!ng Ille• IWlrtls ii the Irvine ~ Co\lnlly C!Jib, JiJQCbe:on W!f< Mr1 • , WDdan Thomas, Fire ·Capt. Samuel E. . AnderB!Jli, 'Mrs. Ralph E. Wh!Uord and pollee O!flcUJoseph Harold Shellln. . :rile prmnlailons were made b,y Mayor · Iioree9 Marshall. ·· ·Women!& Divi&ion Prtlldeot Faye Edelblute 1ald o!'U.. quan.1 , "They have given of themselves ln vital Police Capture Suspect ' In Mesa Girl's Slaying By ARTHUR It VINSEL Of 1111 ~llr ,.llft Sltft ·~... A suspect in the ambush slaying of a •1, preUy Costa Mesa cocktail waitrw was arrested this morn1ng in Fullerton, less than 24 hours after detec:tlves predicted it would be a long, tough cue. ,:,.-Levester A.Co I e y Jr., 29, of 915 W. ;" Orangethorpe Ave., wu booked into •'1 i . Costa Mesa City Jail shortly after noon ... . ., .. , :';: Rising Harbor Tides Flood · , .. ,, '.;" Some Streets .. :; ~: Periodic high-tide conditions have again resulted in the flooding of some Portions of West Newport'• streets with brine from the lower channel. .. -. N.f.!amiliar yellow "flooded" s.isl!s ' iprouted''thi.s morning ll\ the Cily it'a 11 area becaU5e of the e.7 foot Ude at 10: 11 a.m. nu. nOQCUng occur• whenever the waler level In the channel get. ltlgher than the city street level, officials said. When the Ude rtcedes, the stonn drains :~ carry off the water. ::·,. The Department of Marine Safety said . the tidal peak for lhls month was reached ~':,-.today. For ne1t month, however, Udes of !'\ • seven feet or higher are predicted. :;:1 on 1uaplcion of murder charges. Little information about the suspect or hill lmpllcaUon in the predawn piJtol 1laytnc ol Mrs. Rose Marie Weidner, 24, ol. 740 W. 18th St., last nu1nday, was avlllable. Coley was picked up about 7 a.m. by Costa Mesa Detective Art Appleman and -District Attorney's Investigator F.ddie Banks, but IJUlOWlCement of the arrest came just before noon. Co!ta Meaa Detective Capt. Ed Glalgow -who predicted only Tueaday, the day the victim was buried in New York-that the case would be a long~ maybe unaolved me, made the an- nouncement. Mrs. Weidner wu ambushed between two carports al the Ac:apulco Apartment. at S a.m. Wt 1burllday and shot four times with a heavy caliber piatol.~ Officer Randy Nutt, patrolling nearby, heard her dying screams and the ratUe of shots, but couldn't find the scene of the violence in Ume to catch a susPecL Investigation since the savage killing has jumped quickly from Mrs. Weidner's estra~ed husbaDd and ayaramout with '~-ISl!el ')li'<ll l'f' po11slblel ac· quafnlafu's during the past year.· The general theory seemed lo be thal !he probably broke off a relaUOllllhip - or spurned one -which triggered a homiclda1 i m p u 1 s e in a man she at· tr acted. Richard Surface, 28, with whom she was living, and James Weidner, 23, of El Monte, were both quickly cleared as suspects in the slaying. .. Her distraught husband said he hadn't seen her for a year. Frorn Page 1 , .. Newport Youth ., AIRPORT ... .. • : • • ~ l • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ ; ~ ' • • • ' ( I • • • • ! ~ ~ ' ' l l I Injured in Crash A Newport Beach youth suffered minor Injury Tutaday ni«bt when the vehicle in wbicb he waa a passenger struck another car In Laguna Beach. Police said Stephen Lee Mack, 18 of 161 42nd St. was to see his own physician. He was riding with Lloyd D. Wittmer, 18 o( San Diego . The car, northbound on South Coast Highway, struck the rear of a car driven by Warren E. Howland, 70 of 311 Kings Road , Newport Beach. Howland had stop- ped for another car that turned in rront of him. DAl lY PllOI OltAHGa COAST PUaLISfflHG COM,.MIY ••lio•rt N. w,, .. Pfft!dlfll W l'i*I.,..., J•tk A. C11tl1y Vk;t l'rn ....... I IN GtM•tl MIN"f Tl11 ... 1• 1(11 .. ll .. ,,, Tli•r111a A. M111pkln1 MMlltlnt ldl'°' J•r•fl'I• F. C•lll•t P111I Niutn ~ klGI Ahtrtlll"t CllY 1.dtlW Dlrtei.r ---JJll w • .t ,,,..,.,. 1 •• 1 .... ,.. M1lll•t AiUt•ur r.o. 1 .. 1111, 91&&1 --c ... Mtee; 2» ...... ., '"'"' .. ._ .._,.: ttl ~I A-..._....._...,_: .. tit! I"-! -~ I ' ' access to erl.!ting runwayt, Van Allen said. The cost of the lease would be repaid by subleasing the land to alrUne com· panles and letting them build their own faciUUes on It, he added. The leasing would probably cost "less than the $200,000 planned for the automobile park· ing space," he went on. Dennis Carpenter, com mission chairman, granted there is "some poten- tial In what you say" but said he doubted seriously if the Irvine Company would be willing to accept that kind of ar. rangemeot. Van Allen's recommendation that the land be condemned for public use if a lease could not be worked out, brought only gasps lrom the commission at the thought of the is ~on that would p~ bably ""'~ Carpenter said he would persoruilly Ur qu1re about the lease possiblliUes. However, an Irvine Company spokesman said today that the land was "definitely not a\'aiiable". Bill Aldrich, Irvine Com pan y spokesman, said, "We have antiCipated this for some time. Our plans are In the process now of filing tract maps for the . development of th.is land." Meanwhile, commissioners will g& ahead with their orialnal e1pans.lon plaps. Part of the meuures inelude a f25,CKKt modification of the terminal to turn of· ficlals' offices into a second lobby Ind to move the of£1cials into a house trailer. This remodeling will be paid for · with $25.000 set aside in the budget Plans also call for incrta!lng the park· ing lot to hold 1,100 cars and addln.g a~ dltlonal parking around the field. The cost of this improvement woukl be Qll0,000, $60,000 of which is alSo bud(tt.ed. The ra;t will came rrom the We of 1.7 acru of land lo the hq:hwa,y department fur part ol the San Diego Fl"et!way. " R<luml from the parting !aclUty would pay for the Improvement within 30 yurs, Airport Director Robert Brunallan aalcl. Auto Show Scheduled SlslOtn Hubor Area car dealm w!D dlaplay ,_. than 70 ""' ·-.. the malla o! Fllhlon laland In Newport .Buch Tburaday, Friday and Saturdly. · MrVlces lowi<d building and ' oi.<talning · the kind of a community we "int to live ·in." , ' ' . City Clerk Laura LaglOI, w b o enumerated the accornpl~ts of each awardee, said Mrs. Thomas .. baa' opened . her heart and her bome--t.o tlgbtleu and retarded youngaters and rmade a home for many servicemen." Mrs. Thomas also' has helped wlth the United Fund !or 15 yean and bu aerved as a llailon between the Fund and the Girl Seoul" Sbe bu assisted In planning and accompllablng the merger of. the Seoul Councila. She has worked u a Sunday School mumc clirec\or, and with the parks department, the P o w e r Squadron and Pl'A groopo. Capt. Andenoo, o! the Newport Buch Fire Department, has been a Boy Scout counselor, Troop committeeman. Scout. muter and manages a UtUe League Baseball Team. Mra. Lagios also noted that he has worked with church groups and bas delivered clothes to the needy in Mexico. Mr8. Whitford has worked with the Marlners Glrl Sc?ut Troop u advisor and leader, Mrs. Lagfoa said. She ill active wlht the Pop Warner foot~ ball and is a team mother of the ~t.'t Division CorsaJres; She teaches canoeing and trains and instrucl!i adulta in Brownle leadership. Officer Hal Shelfin, juvenile in· vesUgator for the Newport Beach Police Department, officiates at football games, is active in Sea Ezplorerr ·Scout Troop and personally ogranizes and delivers Chrlsbnas baskets to tbe needy, Mrs. Lagios said. He is a speaker for Tri-Hi Youth group an d "delights the youngsters at local schools and Fairview Ho.spital with his antics as a clown," she added. From Ptlge l STREETS .. : Three st:eet.s that are signalized at the highway would continue as two-way ateriaJs. They are Marguerite, Goldenrod and Poppy avenues. "It's an obvious solution," says Coun· cilman Robert Shelton. "Between now and Memorial Day we should try to gain community support (or it." "It's worked oul well on Lido Isle and Balboa Island," says Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons. "With one·way streets we can keep the parking." AFFECTED AREA Shelton's and Parsoos' districts en· compas.. most of the affected areo.. Jaffe says intensified use of Corona del Mar's residential 8treets has led to 1 big incrtase in fender.bender accidents. "The streets," he explains, "simply aren't wide enough for tWo-way traffJc. Everybody in that area knows that. With the streets going one-way, there would be a smoother flow of traffic, a reducUon in accidents and it should be a lot safer for pedestrians to cross." Here's the way the Wilbur Smith report puts it: "Like the divided highway, one-way streets separate opposing traffic streams decreal!le congestion, reduce conflicts ai intersections, afford more opportunity for pusing, and provide more capacity where streets are narrow and there is a nero to retain curbside parking." It's a package that is too attractive to resist. Accordingly. as far as city authorities are concerned, ·it isn't a question of whether Corona:ife1 Mar"s streets shoUld be posted' <Or one-way use, it's a question of when . And City Engineer Jaffe agrees with Councilman Shelton that Memorial Day would be fine -"ii it's acceptable to the people." Frona Page J PANEL .•. somelimes, so we baYe to .stand on our integrity." Adacos, fonnerf,y commwliiy relation.'! olCicer for Santa Ana police, was asked by • student If a civlUan review board wooldn'l be mort effttUve than a police 'PR man? "'You are. equating New J'ertty with Costa Mesa," Adama said. "Each of the 40,000 individual police agel)Cies across the country should make its own d,ecis.ion." Another ltudenl med, "Wllal kind o! coostruCUve crlUclsm would Newport Beach polJct, for lmt.ance, 1cc:ept?'' Adams IUlluted the ttudent contact NeWporl'1 community rdallona olflC<r (Jolin Richan!) and Iii down and Wk ii over. "The boslllity o! the klda lo poUce ttare1 mt," Hick1 Aid. "It ii just aa ln- ucuublt Irr a dUeae not lo be')>Olile lo I polkoman u II II !or I poUceman not lo be courleouL The1're DOI aoinl lo relate to each otMr." • plMd f,1111 new retldenll In the pet year bid 1 26.3 percent growth rate. . Aceardlng lq the report populaUoo and lllt -~ .r g'l'wth Io r coulal clUes la! ' ' -Colta Mesa, 72,991, 3.S percenL -Newport Beach, 43,18S, 7.4: peroolt. -1...qUlll Beach, 14,!SS, 9.4 percent. -Seal Beach, 21,4:17, 5 percent. SllihU7 more than SO percent· of the county residentJ are fema1e wlth about 49 peroool male, the repor1 · sbow1. This •• means lhM JIN' •bout· 111,pilll !lllln' wu 'relhielldiJrlbe numi,.o of ltlldrtn women than ~iD the comaty. under fJvs~~ ol ase. The median for men ls 24.S ~ . Accordhtl ID 4h report, thlJ age group and ror wtoin 2u. -I dpea$0d fl'om 1u -or the According lo report. th,.. !lgurea, JIOPll!a.Uoi> In the 1960 «n1111 lo only 10.2 are 1llgbtly l'!"er than ·the , nflllooll' • ·......,~or Ille population recorded In this average ol 51 percent of the Po~ltlon year's repcjtt.• being female , ·MedWI age !oMhti United More· than · 180 people were hired lo ·States for womep is U years compared to m11ke the la1est cell!WI report. Planning men at 28.8. ·J · officera saJd the county had to be dlvkled County·WJde, rno&t age if'OUps showed Into foUr dl.slrlcts to figure the powJation increases. The -algnllicanl -· becapse ol the magnitude or the gi'Owth. USS ALAMO STEAMS TOWARD STATION OFF NEWPORT HARBOR FOR NAVY DAY Two Ships Will Welcome Visitors During Observeljc• This Weekend. Two Ships Visit Newport Beach For 'Navy Day' Two Navy sh i p s, the USS Alamo. L.S.D. a landing s!Up dock and USS Tolovana, an oiler, will be anchored outside the jetty at the Newport Harbor entrance Saturday and Swiday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. for the general public to boerd in celebralion or Navy Day, SC· cording to Walter Cruttenden Jr., presi· dent of the Orange County Council of the Navy League. "There wW be plenty of small craft to transport the public !rom the Balboa Pavilion to the ships during the two Other Navy League events arranged by the Orange County Council will be the an· nual dinner an'd dance, Oct. 25, at t h e Balboa Bay Club. Tickets are $15 per person, Cruttenden added. Carlos, Smith In Washington WASHING TON (UPI) -Two Negro athletes, banished from the Olympic Games in Mexico City after their "black power" demonstration last week, appear in Washington Thursday in what Stokely Carmichael says will be the start of a na· ti on wide speaking tour. Carmichael, head of the Black Panther Party based in Oakland, said Tommie Smith and John Carlos would appear at Howard University for the klckoU of their tour. County Studying Proposal To Buy Private Beaches By TOM BARLEY Of ~ Dally Pw.t ll•tf Orange County supervisor• .today are !!ltudylng a 64-page planning: department recommendaUon that urges the county to acqu.ire all remaining non-public beach lln!as from Seal Beach to San Clemente. Labeled lhe Master Plan or Shoreline. Development, Planning Director Forest Dickason's analysis also advocates the acquisition of upland, overnight camping areas within view of the ocean and the feasibility of constructing a r t i f I c I a I peninsulas to help meet a mounting de- mand for beach frontage . No Immediate action will be taken by the board on Dickason's long list of shoreline proposals. Ordering distribution of the brochures to federal, state and city agencies, supervisors noted that "it will take some considerable time" to examine the plari- nln.g proposals . Formal presentation of lhe Dickason plan would be needed before any im· plementaUon could be o r d e r e d , supervisors said. In any event, it \Vas noted lhe broad Dickason proposals do not specify where the vast funds needed for acquisition and de velopment would be obtained. Dickason himself isn't certain. But he advocates the appointment of an ''interdisciplinary group of oceanographers, b.iologists, engineers, conservationists, planners, citizen represeoLaUves, h y d r o I o g I s t s and educators to research and plan for coastal projects and overall shoreline development." This gr q.u p, Dickason said, ahould "particularly establish priorities, methods of funding, and detenninaUon of which projects need intensive study." Dickason warns that d r a ma t l c transforril.ation of shoreline terrain now in private hands -he estimates that half of the ~. 7 mile coastline la so owned - can be expected. He also warns that lhe changes that can be expected will "deeply affect the open space and sea vistas that now exist, perhaps, not fully appreciated until Jost." Dense Coast Fog Hits Second Day Dense night and morning fog rolled In and out of the Harbor Area the last twG days without causing any problems for either "water people" or land1ubbers. "They haven't been able to see to bwnp Into each other," a Harbor District of· ficial quipped . Landslde, Newport Beach police reported only four fender·bender type accidents over the last two days in the city. FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY. ' CONCORDE $1$0 -- JUI NEWPORT AVE., COSTA MESA 21 Yffn lri Tiie Same location SEVILLE $171 -· - _______ ....;;;.;;;;;..;;..;;: -------- -.;;;: .l'""> ...... ""'""_'°_ ........... .,_.""' __ .,, ... -~---~----~-~--~-----~--=-'"-------- • .. ' :· '• ' ' - 'Petrified Forest' Rules Huntington Awards Night RON LAMBERT DIDDY LAMMERS PAMELA BROWN J AMES E. SMITH Top P•rformers of Huntington Beac:fl Season '.Just for Love' Ron Albertsen and "The Petrified Forest" dominated the awards night program of the Huntington Beach Playhouse last weekend. ,; Albertsen was named best director or the season for his --- produclion of the Robert Sherwood drama, his second consecutive directorial honor, and also c•ptured an award for best scenic design for the same show. Ron Lambert, who played tht poetrlc drifter i n "Petrified Forest.'I received be!t actor accolades for hiii performance, while James E. Stnith, wheelchair b o u n d offstage as well as on, took best supporting actor honors, also for ''Petrified Forest." Named best actress of the iieason ~s Diddy Lammers, .who also acted in a wheelchair. for her role as the crochety Mrs. Bramson in "Night Must Fall." Pamela Brown was voted best sup- porting actress for her in genue role in "Boy Meets Girl." "Boy Meel.s Girl" also nail· ed down both cameo awards, with DeMls Lambert and Shirley Dvorak laking the laurels for their smaller assignments. '11le playhouse's president's award, f o r outstanding con· tribut.ion to the Huntington Beach theater, went to Nancy Wells. A special community service award was presented to Randy Keene and his crew for the children's production of "Sir Slob and the Princess." The awards were presented Friday evening at t h ~ playhouse's annual Beaux Art Ball in the Meadowlark Co- untry Club. Hallowee n F ete, Awa.rd Night Set 'Madwoman' Play Opens In Fullerton Tbe drama department of Fullerton Junior C<lllege will )lre~t "The Madwoman of Chaillot" in six performances New Play Simple, Ch~ming starting Thursday evening, in the Campus Theater. "The Madwoman of Chaillot" is a kind of poetic and comic fable centering on a plot by a group of promoters By JACK GAVER NEW YORK (UPI) Simplicity and charm best describe "Just for Love," an unusual intimate en· tertainment that o p e n e d Thursday night at the Provincetown Theater i n Greenwich Village. The show is e:11:actly whal . the title says -it deals in : song and dialogue With many aspects of the human con· dition known as Jove u treated through the ages by many writers. Tl is Un· pretentious but effectNe in a friendly, warming way, and it is delightfully performed. The show has been neally and knowingly put together by Jill Showell and Henry Comar, man and wife, who also are two of the four players. Not the least of its virtues is that it is just the ri,iht length, not too long. The other members of the cast are Jacqueline Mayro and St.eve Perry, who do most ol the singing. It should be added that it iii a pleasure simply to look at Miss Mayro. Both sing well. and they do their songs with a iiimplicity thst e1acUy fit.& the extreme intimacy of Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 44 look to be 45 Dull l lilust l11 47 And oth!fs . judge SO Brtwery 5 Kind of product lumber 51 Flsslle rock 10 Fonn of 52 Kind ot Etlzabeth forct 14 Re111ove 56 Lariats · I 1 Id 60 Plttfont 15 Make a•ends 61 Having• 'l1'·Btln1: Sp. '111 .. tt of /17 Elec Jon tight . .,,. personalities 64 Miss S:Onnntr 19 ffhert 65 Practtcal Slbtrla Is Mi Feminine 1Gt%l/68 20 Dress name 21 London, fl7 Swtttsop 12 Stile of 40 Lies 111'11': 0 ,8 Ch es activity 2 words nt., arg h " Ki•d •I university ''Construct 13 Jo n, -" In Elrt crlmintl 23 Capt of 18 Asia n 44 Brltf Nava DOWN kingdom cessations Scotia -~"oem1ktr'J 41 Cuts with u, Fetl re· 1 S. Amir. '' ~· morse for shrub mattrla l precision ?7 Sorrowful 2. -on J4 Canary's 49 Literary nom Person the back: rtlatlVe dt phrl'llt 2 ards 25 Fruit J2 Fl911tnt 30 Gave tx" • Z1 Ecclttlntlc of ttlt prtsslon to · S •ate 1"1 a•rmeDl i1111ln1Non 34 Edge ti 1 .aJd. lndenta.t on 1 ed Ing: var. 4 Certain 21 use of l)'ric '3 Genii nat )5 Upbraided' Indicators poetry gra1n 37 ProJtctlng 5 Having 29 Scottish mixture process rt1ythn1lc 11uslcian 54 Fish JI •• clist: fall 31 kind of · 55 Outsidt: ' Tl t bl abode C0111b. for• Ab r. mt•. t )2 Kind ar 57 Part af Jit Asian abb:t~iation anxiaus Ft1nchn11n'1 41 Athletes' 7 Per a I )3 Enttrt1lr· body 9roup : Abbr. 8 Once 111 n n1ent fon1 SI Archlttctur1I 42 Ustd 3' , ;~rt~ln )6 Dentist's pltr Down 1 fGloes conctrn Sit Btspangl1 43 F\tJdb t l O Otf at.tit )9 Prepart wh'll 6Z St1111t f ~~7~ 11 N ou~_mnd-ln..,'..-..-"'-.' rH-rvlng 63 Each ont o T 9 12 'I ·. . .... ; ... ... ,. ' ·--~-.... ----·- this entertainment. to tear up the beautiful city of The Comors handle t]le Paris to unearth the oil which dialogue -I don't have to use a prospector believes he has the word ''iiketches" because located under the city streets. the word is not right for much Performances of the fall ot what tbey do. They are ex-play are scheduled for Thurs- perienced actors, and they in· day, Friday, and Saturday terpret a wide variety of evenings, Oct. 24, 25, and 26, material with fine versatility. and again on Oct. 31 and Nov, Among the II songs that are 2. Curtain time Is 8 p.m. with dovetailed into the dialogue admission $1.50 for adults and scenes are such familiar items lliiii75iiiceiiiinlsiiiifoi•i•iluidienii~ii·i"ilii_"'i_/ as "C<lme Live iWth Me."' I "Jenny Kissed Me."' "What is Love?." "Man is For Woman Made" and "So We'll Go No More A·roving ." Sin~ the program credif.l!I Michael Valenti with "original score," there must be a couple of songs written especially fOr this show, but they are not Identified. ........ ~At"' ... t lent MDll'lll "THI PlODUClll" l'tltr ~ ..... "THI PAITY" -. _..,_ SJ1·1271 ll•h"'•• ••• """ """' .,......, ........ (:_.,, """ 0...11!• "A t.OnLT WAT TO Dir ~ "-In!. ""11,., f'lo lfr --"'WHAn IO IAD AIOVT PUUN• eooD"' COOt...O •Y •ll"t!IOlllUITJOM Ind, Tootday ...... ~--·· Cl\1a5SllOUll ~r MltltfASlfSTfS' , .... """'" ·~ I) . ' ' ........ -~ .. • DAILY PILOT z:J Film. Festival Opens in SE EUaabe.th Bergner, wbo ·'lt.ar- red ln several Hollywood t1lma In U.. late 19311s. A Samuel Goldwyn Awatd - fnr the best film made lo the Unlttd States tht p~ng Yt:•f'"-will be pr"'nted..Nov. 2. TM winner wUl be selected by the veteran Hollywoocfllro- ducer and a selection com· mittee from lhe festival. POSITIVELY NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED --. TO THESE THEATRES DURING THE SHOWING OF THIS TORRID SOCK-IT-TO-ME MOVIE- Playboy magazine readers were stunned (and some were even embar.rassed) by the October Playboy photo-spread that dared to show the actual, zingy, revealing torrid scenes of Barbara McNair and Raymond St. Jacques from this far-out swinging movie. When you see .this groovy movie, you'll understand why community advertising standards prohibit publishing these actual far-out "happening" movie scenes-and, of course, you will also understand why theatres ... POSITIVELY CANNOT ADMIT ANYONE UNDER 18• •UNLESS ACCOMPAN IED BY A PARENT OR ADULT tllJAlll)IAftl 1i RI 80JJl/IS,llrmK G()r DANA WOOER • MYDO ST. J,WJES • KPllN Md'AlllHY • '".:;: AR!HUR O'OONNf ll • • BARM lkNAIR •it • SllJ • Sa111,h; ~ans lll1i ·,... • htill ~an MD llilJlll!r• ·'AlillWIM"IJS.,fli 419 COLOll •Y •ASTMAN NOW SHOWING AT THESE THEATRES SPECIAL EVENING SHOWTIMES AT 7:00 AND 9:00 AN D 11 :00 PM ~A HABRA DRIVE-IN THEATRE IMPERIAL HIGHWAY BETWEEN BE ACH ·& HARBOR ILVDS. e .-,1.1U2 ORANGE DRIVE-IN THEATRE SANTA ANA AND GARDEN GROVE FREEWAYS e 547-6011 . . FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE-IN THEATRE SAN DIEGO FREIWAY AT IROOKH URST SOUTH OFF·RAMP e ff2·2411 GROVE WALK-IN THEATRE 96 11 GARDEN GROV I ILVD. e 537"'400 HUNTINGTON CINEMA WALK-IN THEATRE l lACH l LVD. AT ELL IS, 'HUN TI NGTON llACH • H7.ff01 WEST COAST WALK-IN THEATRE 30I N. MA IN ST., SANTA ANA • S43.U 17 '°~ MATUU AUDIENCES I -· -- - -. --· -. ·- • I .. ' -- ............ '...---. =·,~--. ----.......,..-,--~~~ ...... --~ ......... ""9!! ............................................. '""" .............. """ ........................... .. DAILY PD.OT EDrfORIAL P A GE Bridging the Age Gap l'eople who oan quote t!ie Democratic or 'Jlepub- lkan party line vert>&.tlm or attempt lo second-guess Ho Chi Minh'• men in Paris often don1 know what their own children think. Worse, Ibey rarely try lo learn. Even worse, they may rely on a vague, precon. celved notioo o! what the yoongste< shoold be thinking and doinf In rtla!iooshlp to his complex world -roll· gion lo se.t, drug. and the draft -Bild coocludt that the cb.lld eccepta it. There is no law against tile flat di<:ta1Xlrlal approach, but It can be a !onn of child no- gledt.. hnaities in terms of friction, alienation and a arUUng apart -lo CCl?le automatically. WWlout an unlikely shift to sudden mutual under- lt:and.ing on either side, the rift widens into what is commooly called the Generation Gap, a canyon of mis- understanding. We are left with adults on one side and tilOSe in the younger generation on the other. • E-acb simply accuses the other of being on the wrong side-and the gap gets broader. The llart>or Area Coordinating Council, comprised of members of many diverse area organizations, re- cently experimented with a concept called Hypocrisy Hangup, in which each side reaches over that gap. The aim i& contact between young people and adults, with a chance to talk out the points of conflict. Not everyone over 30 votes straight Republican and advocates hippie concentration camps, whi le not every- one Wlder 30 uses drugs and advocates revo1ution, the group learned. "We have hopes and idealistic viewpoint&, too," one of the older generation said during the exceedingly successful seminar session at the Hoag Memorial Hos- pital Coofe~ Center. "Dou: I &ay, but not as I d1>,'' a teen-ager tossed back into tile boiling pot o! hangups. hypocrisies and points of contentioo -to .;uustrate what he could see tt!rough bis pe.reints and his own Wlbringing. MBl'lf other valuable exchanges occurred during A University Politicized ls Doomed What is "a university"? More important, what should a university be'! Morris B. Abram, recently inaugurated as president of Brandei.s University. grappled boldly with this question in his ritual of acceptance. It was a probing, profound address, too occupied witb searching to try for eloquence. Yet. the eloquence ol it lay in its direct honesty. "The university is truly at the vortex of the crisis of our tirne ln the. United State;, in France., in Mexico - everywhere .... " Thi!; was the beginning of his theme. He t:leveloped it carefully. "IT 1S A COMPLIMENT to e.ducation that men in this time of trouble should crystaliie their attention, anxieties, frustrations and even a n g e r s on the university. In effect, they are saying, fre· quently in unacceptable ways : 'Our socie- ty is in deep trouble. The university has the capacity lo re.deem or reform society If the. university has the will and is itself reformed' .. , the critics are saying that lhe university is more important than iUI su9porters say it is .... " Before him was one or the nation's more learned and competent faculties ... also one of the more questioning. It may be assumed that all faculties. save for the hopelessly obtuse, are disturbed and are themselves trying for answers. It is inescapably true -faculties being human -that many have been deeply frightened by the student rebellions and by the occasional violence, in which the: leadership orten is from off campus. fThe hard-core nonstudent forces. dedicated not to reform but to destruclion, ARE frightening. l BUT THE INTELLIGENT f" cu 11 y knows that many student objections are valid -especially as protests are related to teaching. Universities of great quality, have, nf course. learned scholars whose research Is itself instructive. They are there to teach -but to learn and to allow others to share in thal learning. But, Abram said, speaking or the earch for truth: "The innermosl truthi;: •n some social sciences may be not only ri textbooks but 1lso in the laboratories life .... " .. A univenily .... is oot I church nr • politlcal party. Jt does not itself vole. ll Dear Gloomy Gus: Why does that local radio station give the temperature like this: "ln Newport, 75 degrees. In the beach citie.s. al Redondo. 72: at Santa Monica, 7f ••• "? Isn 't New- port a beach city too'! c. J. 'nils , .. ,.,.. rtlletn ,... .. ,.,. vr.., ,,., -Mrllr tlltt<o ti tlMI • ....,.,.,. SeMI .,_ "' ,...., tf OltMt, 9111, Dtltf ~lltf. should be crammed with peopl,e who think, vote and participate. in every level of life, including politics. . . I applaud tbote who feeJ a special obligation to speak out betause they arl! learned and influential men. Nevertheless. t he university must not be dogmatist. It must be a free and open place ..•. it should provide the forum for individual and group itudy and experience. . . The university must hold the soapbox steady for others to stand on. , .to study, lo declaim, and to preach whatever truth they see or feel. .•• "BUT, A UNIVERSITY politicized - radicalized or conservatized -is a university doomed, as the lessons or German universities under the Nazis pro- ved . , • A dogmatic institution is hos· pitable only to those who support its dogmas .... " Abram noted that in some circles today it has become fashionable to downgrade the tolerant principles of the liberal political creed. "I am willing,'' he said. "to examine and re-examine every substantive opinion including those to which I am most com- mitted. However, I am not prepared to reject the liberal methodology of fair play, civil liberty and due process as the only way in which a civilized society can pu rsue truth, prevent the encrustation of error and insure the fulfillment of man's ereative talents and inclinations. THERE ARE OTHER conclusions. boldly, calmly made: .. The right nf students to protest seems to me to be ;a · right and not privilege .... The right of students. faculty or anyone else to disrupt the learning process is no right at all. . .it is wrong.'' There was a proper tribut.e lo "this generation of youth ." It is a great one. It is disturbed by a society in which reforms au necessary -socially and educationally. More than any other man in ed·ucation. it seems lo me, Abram artkulated what a university should be--and, also. dehneated its failures in teaching and yet, 11.s firmly , declared that lasting reform come.s by due: process. Armament Over Curing noup&a at t.arct: l\Jlling is more imporlanl than curinit:. 111 lht new federal budget : for cuts 1n acientific and medical researeh hevt eliminated publk projt!Cts sttkin,11 a therapy for cancer, while armament a~ proprlaUons eonUnue lo expand. • • • Bodl poet.I and military leaders tend lo haw been boys who were sickly and ...xl>oNlomlnai..t m thdr childhood -llldiatinc that cmstitutional factors are: "'ef1aJnly u tmponani u environment.al ~ In ddm'nfnin& which way chl1drm na e-vea uoder mud! the ume in· _,_ • • • The lhret hardest t.uks In the world are ntllher phylietl ftats rKK' ln- ttll«:tul.I ac:hlevtmMts. but simply llct.8 it the lrlll: to return ln\"'t for lu.le. 1.0 in- clude the eacluded. and io uy, "1 wu __ .. -·-~ . Sydney · Harris What i~ wrong with our democracy Is llS obvious as ll 111 inlract11ble : While every American i1 a ciUzen. hardly anyone is 11 "ciUten Or:st:• In Uit. sense that he placu the broadest needs of the nit.Ion above hls own ~ rather, each or ua tends C.O equate our own partial, parochial, cl1u, geogr3phical or ethnic lnterem with "tht good of the country u a whole." • • • Nn COUrSf ~hould bl: labt'led "Cteativi Writing ." which Is 11 rraudulenl claim - for only lht 1H1'\,-ctettfve 11spect.s trf wriUng lOI' any Qthfr art) c&n bfJ taught or learned If! a.ny didactic ·~· the talk-in, but the moot significant probably came from a pretty girl who admitted she was skeptical at first. "We n~ one every week," she said. Always One of the Best The grand old man of Orange Coast College -who rode out crlse.s from the great literary: magazine "Ob- .scenity" flap to such real problerr€ as failed tax is· aues -will be honored ton3.ght by the district he served so well. Walter Longmoor Night is scheduled in the OCC Student Center, where colleagues, instructors and friends will gather for a light-hearted dinner and pro- gram honoring the retired trustee. Observers who followed the OCC district, a post· war baby itself, aimed at educating tilose born in the war years, saw Longmoor consistently act with calm savvy as problems came, were handled and then went. But then. you don't spend 20 years on a job without learning the ropes. The Corona de! Mar civic leader, honored in 1967 a!i Outstanding Citizen at OCC commencement exer- cises, was also a Newport Beach Planning Commission member for 14 years. He was chairman for 12 of those yeers. CoUeagues in the junior' college district, which has grown from 515 to more than 20.000 students of alJ ages and ambitions, knew Longmoor as truly interested in them, not just as a behind-the-scenes figure. The leisure ol retirement, especially since he is liquidating the historic cannery he founded in New- port Beach, will afford more time to keep up with OCC, particularly its baseball team, which he has followed for many years. Tonight at Walter Longmoor Night, they'll be remi- niscing about how Walt was aJways one o{ the best. N 'Teachers, Scientists, Scholars Dominated by Rabble Rousers' Charges Aldrich Supports Rebellion To the Editor : Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich .Ir .. nn 1.he front page of the DAILY PILOT of Oct. 1•. speaks of the Cleaver affair, and sup- por1', in fact , the faculty rebellion against the university regenL'I and against everything legal, moral , and right. II is not strange that the breakdown in law and order in the land continues to spread with ever.increasing virulence where there is such a lack of concern for, and enforcement of. the well-established and reasonable rules and regulations governing students in our colleges and universities on the part of the chancellors and others in so-called positions of authority and responsibility. TUITION FEES in aH our colleges and univers ities would assure enrollment nf stude nts with a desire and purpose lo learn, anrl would help to "'ecd out the lrnublemakers, slobs. riff raff. dissen· 1ers, and incompetents. who are in lhe schools for the purpose or making an issue or so-called peace. and freedom ot speech : i.e .. license to say anything. More would be weeded out for lack of in· telligence and/or ambition lo succeed in L'OllStructive pursuits. if they had to perform satisfactorily in class. In tax supported, as well as in other' colleges. there are almost always some rules and regulations relating to behavior and pcrforn1ance, and this must be so for ordered progress. IT IS PROPERLY wllhln the province and the responsibility of the directors and <1uthorities of these institutions to in· terpret and enforce these rules and regulations. 'I'he 111cademic senate and student organizations may properly sub- mit and petition the authorities in charge lo consider their views but they have no rights to coerce or demand any con· cession other than a fair consideration of 1heir requests and an announcement of the decisions made. If the regents of t~ university system are Incapable of hiring competent ex· ecutive and administrative heads of the various can1puses. who have the guts and intelligence to properly run their respec· ti\'e schools and to foJJow and enfor ce !he rules and regulations, then it is in· cumbenl on the appointing authority lo replace the regents with men who wtll do their duty. 1'HE WHOLE MESS is simply a matter of the failure of the so-called leadership group to carry out their responsibiHlies to t h e students, taxpayers. and parents. It seems that the student body leadership group today is, through the failurt of the "'eak·kneed vaci llating and fu uy-minded faculty, misdirecting and exerting total control over the actions of the men who are being paid by (he taxpayer to 11d· minister and direct our un1versil y 11nd college s,vsterr1s flf education. . It i$ a sad time and turn lo affalrs in nur stale and nalion when the teachers, 8Clentlsts 111nd schol111r!'i in our schools Are being dominated by the studtnl.!i and rl't; ble rou~rs who art nothing but lhl! Agtnt.! nf vlolen« 11nd dtstruclinn . It is time for the aulhorilies to awaken In lht'.\r mponsiblliHes and properly pcrrorm their duties in our society If we ~--B11 George Dear Geort1e : Every day 1 read your column and enjoy It because I thlnk we all need a laugh to offset the "normal " newa. However, I'm in an :.rgu- ment with my wife -she say1 nobody but an imbecile would read thOllf columns you put 1n the paper ~ay after day What can I say to hu? FAN Del!lr Fan , Allik her how she k'nnws. Ltl!v9 f"°"' re-n1 .,. -lal!M. NormallY wrllen1 >hcNld awwey their niHM1t Ill :JOB word• Df IHs. TM r;,111 lo condlftu ltlten. fO Ill ... ..:. or t l!fllln1hl Ube! Is ru.e,...,i. AU letlen m1111 lncludt 11!1n1tu,. •nd "111!Jnt tddnu, bVt ntrna wm bt wllhMld °" rt<iv.t, are to avoid lhe impending decline and fall of American civilization and relurn to the barbarism and ignorance of the Mid - dle Ages1 · RAYMOND L. BEACH Reapondblllty To the Editor : The Academic Senate o( UC I rejected on Oct. 14 a resolution by , Dean Ralph Gerard which supported a c a d e m i c freedom only when it is exercised wilh responsibility. Because it was interpreted as an act of censure of a fellow professor ~Or. Stephen Shapiro, who has invited Eldridge Cleaver to lecture to his literature class}, the reaolution wa.s defeated, precluding a reasonable: solu· lion to a tragically divisive problem. Cleaver's qualifications as a university lecturer may be questionable to many within the: Academic Senate, yet that body demands the right to make its own unfortunate choices. This insistence upon freedom from responsibility instead of freedom wl lh responsibility draws us closer to a confrontation that will benefit neither the university nor ourselves as free men. PATRICIA L. ANDREWS Display of GarlJG{le To the Editor: I recently attended the Eldridge Cleaver fiasco at UCI to see for myself what was occurring at our universities. I was disgusted with Cleaver, bul even more so at the officials of the campus whn allowed this display of garbage under the guise .of free speech. I do think these appearances have done some good -those of us who are paying for these unJverslUe! may now start working to oppose: school bonds until some common sense returns to some university heads. JERRY R. JOHNSON Foollahne••, Wa .. 1e To the EdilOr : The .. common man'' strikes back . Pam Coker's lecture to the common people, (M_ailbox . Oct. 16) is su pposedly in answer to my earlier letter of the loth. ll misses the enUre point of my letter sn <'Ompletely, however, that I wonder if writer Coker reads well. Thf' vital missed point ls that qualified i;:peakers 11re 3vailable lo Intelligently present just about any point of view nn 11ny subject. Therefore, why pay out o~ cent 10 hear 11 fool -nHmlhtd, convicted felon utter obscenities? The hiring of Cleaver amounts to ltlf: AAme thing as pouring lax dollars directly Into a 11e:wer. Anyone who con- tends that the "common man" (Mr. Tai· paycrl Is not qualified lo and does not have t.he right to speak up in opposition to lhi.'I type of foolishness and wa.'>le is in· deed "u.ncoll\mon" (fortunale1y ) and also oompletely out of touch •Ith rtality, M. L. SORBER One very large aerospace company granted its employes a holiday on Oct. 21 and organized a picnic for them. The same irate reader complains that they did nothing on the 4th of July and cannot understand why anyone would com- memorate an "ungodly alliance" such as the U.S.A. joining the U.N. I must take exception · to the words ' ' u n g o d I y alliance", "get us out of the U.N." and "who needs the U.N.?" IN THE LAS'I' YEAR the United Na· tions vaccinated 19 million children against tuberculosis. supported feeding programs in 55 countries, developed literacy programs in 48 countries. "Who needs the U.N. ?" Baby, we all do! On Oct. 21 the Bahai 's of Huntlngton Beach planted a black pine tree at Golden West College. On Oct. 25, 8 p.m., at the Chapman College dining hall in Orange the Bahai 's of Orange County, in cooperation with the United Nalionii Association, will sponsor a program in support ot the United Nations. All are in· vited to quote a world famous teacher on the subject, '''I'he earth is one country and all mankind are: its citizeru." DICK WYLEMSKI Post'• N...., Support To the Editor: .. Next lime son1eone points a righteous finger al some alleged "well-heeled" right-wi ng pressure group" I'd like to di· reel his attention l.o an obscure. item In this week 's Business News. The once-respected Saturday Evening Post has been dropping an average or $9 million per annum for the last seven years since betoming a mouthpiece for the liberal left. Yet an outfjt called Perfect Film & Chemical Corp. is step- ping in and bailing out Curtis Publishing to the tunt of $15 million in fresh capital. NOT ONLY IS Perfect F i I m (wbomever that might represent) prop- ping up Curtis, but its spokesman, nne Martin S. Ackerman. grandly boasts that SatEvePost Co. will have the scratch "not only to expand but t-0 acquire other publishing and communications opera· Uons." That the libs value the Post highly as an outlet for their philosophy is plain. l'hat they ha ve the vast fi nancial power t.o expand their stranglehold on the com· murtications media is now even more ob- vious. WHAT "RlGffT-WING" ouUit could or would have taken a $62 million bath without blinking, then toss in another dozen mepbucks without breaking a i;weat, 1111 to keep in operation a pM- paganda nrgan which obviously b!1n't making it on lll!I own merits? "ldeall~m" gel! pretty expensive sometimes, doesn't h! Oh. yes. Just ~·s your kid~ will grow up with the "right attitude," lhf: Po.I. Co. will keep on publishing Jack and Jill, too. HARRY WEISBERGER T ax R .,torttt To lhi! Editor : In your ~ltorial of Tuesday, Oct. 8, you called Prop. lA the best All!Wer to the "feut'' ot property tax ~ief pr'Q~ osal1 on the Nov. 5 ballot. Prop. IA Is Ml the answer to Ult prop- erty tn bur<l<n of the single family homeowner. Prop. 1A ii "tax ttlld." but limplf: 'l\ax rttie1~· u outlined by this measure falls to sol\o-e the. problem. It Supports V.N. "'P......,., the combln«I blopart!su ef. forts of Gov , Reagan and the twn houses To the Editor. of the. Legislature to forestall total t..u 1n )•our Mallbox !Ott. llll appeared a reform for lhe clti.ttM of California. 1,.u,.r frnm 11n lr11ttl re11der prote11til\g PROP IA providu property t.ax rtllot that the 4th or JuJy dld not r~eive the ,.,,1y H hmds are available to be rerundC!C:I COMideration th1t I.he upcomlni United to 1tati and city agencie1, and scllooli to Natktna Day, Ocl 14, will ha ve. • C'Ovtr monies loftt from dtcreaSl!d pro. ' L . . . . . perty lax revenues. lf no such funds are found, property owners will have no relief. Prop. IA fails to solve. the problem and its passage on Nov. 5 will only de- lay much needed "tax reform ." Total re.form or the tax and fisca1 structure is the only solution. Five state tax reform commissions have failed to offer any workable alternative to the fiscal and tax problems. Prop. 9 offers total tax reform over a five year period. This measure certainly merits the consideration of every Califor· nian on Nov. 5. G.A.CARTER Tear• In Ber E y e• To the Editor : I don't think you will print this. but 1 will say this: I am white, 38 years old and f was born in this country. I was proud of it.. In the past few days we have won gold medals and other awards of honor in Mexico. We need the prestige and pro- paganda in the eyes of the world. When two of our fine athletes fe1t like bowing their heads and raising their fists ba:ause the national anthem doesn't really include them -I got tears in my eyes and a terrible pain where 'our hearts are supposed lo be. I wa s ashamed to be a white American wit.h this guilt, M. RICHARDS f't111r ChoiceJ To the Editor : Soon all registered voters will have four choices they can make with regarrl to presidential candidates. They can vole for Richard Nixon. or Hube.rt Humphrey, or George Wallace, or they can refrain from voting. Many pseudo-political scientist~ will say that voting is a privilege and that all good citizens will vote for some one, when the real truth is that each ci!izen ha~ the right lo vote or the right tn refrain from voting. Then there i~ the fact that there is no le~al way lo force a citizen to vole or else. This is not !rut" in Russia or even Greece, which was the cradle of modem civilization. THOSE WHO WILL vote for Nixon nr Humphrey can look anyone in the evf! after the election and state that they e"x· erc.ised their right to vote. even thougb their man km. 'I'hose who will vote for Wallace will have a more difficult job or justifying their choice. Yet, there have been other minority parties that were so popular that the two major parties bad to accept some of their better ideas. Thus. those who will vote for Wallace may ob- tain change even though Wallace only ~ins a few Southern stales. Please note that the placing of Nixon·~ n.une first wall intentional. HARRY B. McDONALD, JR. --WWW- Wed n es d O)'. October 23, 1968 Th1 cdJtorial JJOQI Of the Dall~ Pilot lttb f.o inform cttd ttim- ulak reod<rs bv """"'"'9 u.u ..._,,, opmionJ and '°"" """14rv 00 topia of mtoren and aignlfiom«, bv !"'ovidlng • '°""" f&r U.1 1ipr<UUm of our rtaden' opinion.t, and by prumting tltt dtvtrst oif:W- J)Oint.s of tnformtd obstrvtrs • n114 spokesmen on topic1 of th1 dor. Robert N. Weed, Publi.her • ' d• II " 01 n• ... E C• • • la ag (i~ ·~ m• "' Cc de '° tic '" in1 ••• bl! ! te; •• na "I Co Co { I ( I b<> •le di\ ! Ba gr: Ing , the !Oil tes gi v "'' ( ma sle gr< the dis • • Costa Mesa Your Hometown vot 6f, NO. 255, 8 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23 , '1961 Dally Paper TEN CENTS Airport Expansion Onto· Irvine· Land .Urged By SANDI MAJOR Of Ille DI\,,. ,,... .,&ff A pilot spokesman Tuesda.t night declartd that one way to keep air traffie flowing In Orange County until the regiO{l81 airport ii a reality is to ezpand onto 200 acres of Irvine Company land next 'to Orange County Airport. lf l!"llne is unwilling to lease the land, "condemn it and sell it lat.er" suggested Ed Van Allen. president of the Orange Cou.n~y Pilot.a As.soc.lalion in hi& recom· mendation to county airport com· missioners. Earlier, commlsaloners ~d tentaUvely approved expamlon plans for the u..isUng airport.. Van Allen rose before the meellng was adjourned and said he was "amazed" at the way the county ••avoids the property to the west knowing the facilities we have here cannot be expanded to take care of the needs in the next rive yeaTS. '' His first suggestion was the improb- able joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. His alternative was the acquisition of the 200 acres of undeveloped land near the airport. The county should procure the land on a five year lease, put ramps on it and an acceu to e:listing runways, Van Allen said. The cost of the lease would be repaid by subleasing the land to airline com· panies and letting them build their own facilities on it, he added. The leasing would probably cost "less than the $200,000 plaMed for the automobile park· ing space," be went on. Dennis Ca~nter, commtsslon chajrman, granted there is "some poten- tial in what you say" but said he doubted seriously if the Irvine Company would be willing to accept that kind of ar- rangement. Van Allen's recommendation thst the land be condemned for public use i! a lease could, not be worked out. brought only gasps from the commission at the thought of the $5 millioo that would pro- bably cost. Carpenter said he would personally in- quirt about lhe lease pcmibillties. However, an Irvine C o m p a n y spokesman said today that the land was "definitely not available". Bill Aldrich, Irvine C o m p a n y spokesman, said, "We have anticipated this ror some time. Our plans are in the esa ur er us ect • Flag •Tahled9J Banner Used as Cloth Seized An American Flag tacked down as a tablecloth and topped with a serene im- age of the Asian god Buddha was con· fisca~ early today at a Cost.a Mesa apartrQent shared by .two girls and three men. Tbe blMer -which bad ashes of some sort scattered over it -was given to the Costa Mesa police investigation bureau to determine whether a complaint would be 11oughL Defiling the American Flag is a viola· tion of the Military and Veteram Code and Harbor Area judges have been hand· lng down some stiff sentences upon reveral recent convictions. Officer Dave Dye was sent to the 1400 block of Santa Ana Avenue sborUy after ' midnight In response to a disturbance report and contacted a 24-year-old man. He said the man apologized for noise he had apparently caused while routinely setting out his trash cans for morning pickup. Dye said he was Invited inside the com· munal apartment to see for himself that there was no disturbance going on and il was then that he spotted the flag. The palrolman said the individual wiLh whom be spoke denied knowledge of the apparent Military and Veterans Code violation. Two girl s 19 and 21 and two other men. 18 and 19, live in the. apartment and share the rent equally, the eldest householder told Officer Dye. Arrested in Drug .Raids Three persons including an assistant teacher at a Costa Mesa private school \rere arrested on suspicion of assorted narcotics violationa: early today in aeparate raids. State narcotics agents. the Oranie County Sheriff's narcotics detail and Costa liolesa detectives cooperated in UM! Car Rental Agent Found Innocent Of Theft Charge A 47-year-old car leasing agent has been found innocent of charges that he stole $20,000 !rom a Newport Beach divorcee. Superior CA>url aid.es said today John BatH Gregg, who had been charged with grand theft last August, waa freed follow· Ing a trial in Santa Ana. The verdict. wu attributed large:ly to the testimony of the alleged victim, court sources said. The 42-year~fd woman's testimony varied considerably lrom that gh·en at pre-trial hearings. it was reported. Gregg asserted.ly had once promised to marry the woman._ a divorcee, but in· stead, re-married a fonner wif~. The grand the!t complaint was then filed by the Newport woman. ICCOl'dlnc to the district attorney's office. RAISES OllJECTIONS District Attorn•y Hlclct •• arrests, confitcating a small amount of UD and marijuana. Larry D. Dean, 21, and Beverly Creech, 21, both of 314 Monte Vista Ave., were booked. on SUipicion of sale or dangerous drugs; possession of dangerous drugs for sale; sale of marijuana, and possession of marijuana for sale. Sharron L. Young, 19, of 341 Ramon;i Place, was arrested only on suspicion ol sale of marijuana. She gave her occupation as an assistant instructor at the Montessori School, which stresses a method or individual at· tent.ion rather than classroom grouping. All lhree suspects were booked at Costa ~fesa. City Jail and then transferred lo Orange Cunty Jail. since the case originated with a state investigation. It ""'85 not Immediately disclosed how much contraband was seized al the apartme"nt shared by Dean and the Creech woman. but investigators said it was not very much. Panty Raid Made On Mesa Washers Someone who may have a thing going about women's clothing stole $44 worth of imdergarmenUi being dried at a Costa Mesa apaM.ment building Tuesday, police said. Loot stolen from 3008 Royal Palm Drive also included a dental assistant's uniform, but the bulk of it was lingerie. One vict1m wu II and the other was 11, polico said. VIEW FROM THI &INCH Jud9e Sum-ner • U.S. Kills 225 Reds In Trap SAIGON {UPI) -U. S. planes and r.1arine artillery caught four groups of Communist soldiers in the open today and killed 225 of them in a series of strikes that were continuing tonight. Spokesmen reported no American casualties. The well-armed North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were spotted late Tues· day by U. S. Marine reconnaissance patrols in several areas near the Thuong Due Special Forces camp which earlier Jn the month witbst:ood ;. aie1e by North Vietnamese regulars. The latest group ·of about 170 North Vietnamese soldiers was spoUed near An lloa and 47 of them were reported killed as night fell. Marine ground troops· push~ ed into the area but reported no contact as darkness fell . The M3rines earlier reported killing 178 in the area below and inland from Da Nang. It was the largest operation sm a lull settled over the battlefields two weeks ago. However, the air war against North Vietnam continued despite peace rumors flooding t h e world , a n d in Saigon a grenade blast outside the cenlral market in the heart of Saigon killed a teen-age boy and wounded 18 other persorus in an apparent terrorist act. . The blast. occurred 1 mile from the presidential palace where U. S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and South Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu met for nearly three hours -their se- cond meeting in two days and their sixth in a week. As usual there was no statement on th1~ meeting but there was speculation about the possibility that North Vietnam may have agreed to American proposals for a bombing halt and full peace talks. I I. DAIL T l"ILOT 1"11919 lly Lw P'•1M SUSPECTED IN COSTA MESA AMBUSH SLAYING Levister· Coley Booked, Maintains Silence Judge, DA Trade Barbs Law and Order Debated in OCC Panel Discussion By mOMAS FORTUNE Of ftM O.ltJ Pile! 11111 Judges often bear bum raps for district attorneys, suggested the judge. Judg~· attitudes are childish, countered the district atomey. 1'be good-natured barbs were traded by Superior Court Juvenile Judge Bruce Sumner and Orange County District At- torney Cecil Hicks during a panel . dlscuMion on °Law and Order" Tuesday al Orange Coast College. • .. Polls jndicate Lhat many people feel the 'courtl are reaponsible for the breakdown In law and order." the juri!'!t aald ... In almost every case it is the ~ seeutor who moves to ·dbmlu, but It la the judge who 1eta blamed for releulng crlmlnela." "It is odd he would get that im- pression," answered ~licks. "It is our feeling there is aJways some guy up there in a black robe saying, 'You can't get that piece of junk into evidence.' " The county's chief law enforeement of- ficer said police find troublesome.judges' attitude that Oley have no idea' what Is happeninb in a secret inte rrogation room. "This atitude. Is childish -there is no other word I could use," be said . "In no case does the judge know firr;:t hand whal happened. He has lo rely on witnesses al ~he scene." Judge SU[Mer satd. "We have certain rules we set up Jn the Bill of Ri&ht.ii. There is a rule against sell incrimination. Go ahead and agitate to get rid of the BIU of Rights, but bear in mind our society is getting more complex. Th.is is no lon~er the old frontier," he said, not speaking direcUy to Hicks but to the audience. The panel discussion was one of a series presented monthly by the college facu1ty. The third member of the panel, OCC Police Science ·Instructor Tom Adams. said legal obligations prevent Police from publicly answering charges of police brut.alily. ''Officers can·t go back and say, 'Look, press (nc:"·spapers, radio, TV ), lhil is our · 1ide.' '' he said. "We would be divulging informaUon only available to the court at Uie proper lime. We can't give our side (lee PANEL. p .. , I) Christwas Classes Carded Coast Kayaker In Semi-finals Guess what~ Only 12 IDCfl"t days unUI Chrlstm~. "" Preparatiqns c1n begbl Ocl. 30 -Ille day before RllRowee.n -•hen the Costl Meu .Recrel!ltlon Dcpartmtnt be&in1 It.a 11il·wtU Chrilt!nu craft.I clua. '. The cour>e will be offered W<dne.days f1"m 7:30 j1.m. to 9:30 p.m. In the Com- munity Reaeation Center, at the Oranae County Falrgrounda. The lee la $7.51), Reglall'IUon la beinj; taken Mor>dly through 'rrld>11 11 tho COsll Meu Recre1Uoil OeJ)arlment. ' \ . MEXICO CITY -Jolin Glalr of Newpi)rt Beach qualified for TJrunday11 semi·llnlla In men'a klyak lill(llel by placing llllrd In hla ,.oechue or """"" ohanc• heal tliil q>orof.,. - · Til08day, Glalr llnilhed i..t i~ hla hclt. qi the Olympic Gamco campelfilon. process now of filing tract maps for the development of this land." Meanwhile, commissioners wU1 go ahead with their original upanslon plana. Part of the measures include a $25,00IJ modification of the terminal to turn of. ficials' offices into a second lobby and to move the officials into a house trailer. This remodeling will be paid for witb ~.ooo set a.side in the budget. Plans also call for increasing ttie par)... !See AIRPORT, Page i) e Hospital's Lead Brings. Man'sArrest B:v ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of !Jiii D•llr ,llft Stiff Meticulou.s checking of county hospitals for someone wound ed mysteriously last Thursday led to the arrest this morning o( a suspect In the ambu sh murder of a pretty Cost.a Mesa cocktail waitress. Levester A. Coley Jr., 29, maintaining silence and represented by a well-known criminal defense attorney, was booked in· to Costa Mesa City Jail shortly before noon . Manacled, his jaws grinding nervously. Coley stood flanked by investigators outside, his left arm in a sling and ~like scratches on bis left cheek. ''What's this IOI'?", he asked u he was brolight out by DelecUve Jim Strickland and District Attorney's investigator F.d· die Banks into the hot sunlight. "They want your picture," Strickland answered. GET GOOD ONE "Might as well get a good one," the SUJpect said in a monotone, squinting at the ground . Only hours after Mrs. Rose Ma rie Weidner, 24, who Uved at 740 W. 18th St., was buried by her family in New York Tuesday, Detective Arnold Appleman cracked the first big lead. Checking at Martin Luther Hospital In Anaheim, Detective Appleman learned that Coley had been treated for a gunshot wound in the left hand last Thuraday. Hospital aides reported the incident to Fullerton police as required by law, bu& investigators who talked to Coley ac· cepted bjs story of being shot ac· cidentally. TRAIL OF BLOOD A trail or blood splotches led away from the spot where ,,_1rs. \Veidner tell, mortally wounded, by four heavy caliber slugs as she walked to her unit at the Acapulco Apartments in the dark. The vJctlm -on the job only three weeks -had just arrived home from her job at the Orangeiair Restaurant at 1300 S. Harbor Blvd., in Fullerton. Coley lives at 915 W. Orangethorpe Ave., Fullerton, just around the corner and almost within sight of the restaurani. lounge. Police arrested him at his home today. Appleman and Banks advised Coley of his constitutional rights, at wh.ich time he said he would make no ilatement without contacting hli attorney. He then ca lled Matthew Kurillch Jr., who is well known (See MURDER, Page Z) Orange c ... , Weather Gel ready to grope your w a y through more fog Thursday, un- less you live far inland, in which case you'll be mopping your broW in 91-degree heat. It'll be up to 7l hereabouts. INSIDB l'ODA't' Th< IDOTld II tDatchhtQ th< U.S. elccUoni. Storle1 Oii> Uds and other a.gptctl a/ Americml paliticl may be Jound on Pooe1 7, 11 and 16. 1 • --~-....... ---------~~=""""'-.-..;;...._.. ____ ;,:;;.;.--.;~~;.:...:.;...:..;:.:...;_ __ ~~~------------ ~-...----- DAILV PILOT Wtdntsday, Dttobtt 23, 1%8 . ounty's 'Popul ,~~ion ., t&l(l!l ¥ .... Of ....... ,.,... .., Quarterly cop! .. ol lbe-0.llOI• COW>ly ~~ ~. submitted .lo the Board SUpervison Tuesday &hows a total laUoo of 1,3311,'ltll penons, with H111> n-lleach'IJ'OWlna: tbe lastest. beach ' city led SI Incorporated """ ol the county In growtlJ wilt! 10,049 ,,... people according to lliW'f' relea.ed ~1 the county P~ Depat'tm,.., ~ followed with 7,711 new • ~'Tl::~ oul lo 11.10 per MllMI~ ~ l11M1 D0181t. Tiie lb lbln lloub WAI tllJbld. gD J 1 lit 101~ It 1'01'- cent lncrease over last year. La P"lma had lhe higmet percentage growth, followed by Fountain Valley. The inland city, wiUi a 39.9 percent in- crease in population, grew from S,025 perlOm in July, art to an eaUmated 7,030 thLs year. Fountaln Valley, wblch ,. • f'rom Page 1 County Urged ·To Purchase. Beach Areas URDER SUSPECT HELD • • • M.,. detectlve capt. Ed row -who only Tueoday pr<dlcted a 10uiJ> lnvesUpUoo -said a c:om- t cbarJing Cotey with murder WW be i»sht in the next two days. ,rwearing an overnlgbt stubble of beard t the 5uit he had on Tuesday, Capt. gow said much evideDce compiled in cue before t.Ae lucky break will be back pending prosecution. ;11e refused to say if a weapon wu found at Coley'• apartment, adding that ttie exact caliber bullets which crashed into Mrs. Wetdner 's brain at 3 a.m. Thlll'lday wlU alao remain secret. "We've still got a hell of a lot of work to do on this case," he said v.·earily. Investigation during the past several days has probed into the background ol the petite victim, who left her husband, James, 29, of El Monte, one year ago. It was not determined whether Coley was at all acquainted with the victim due :~ing Harbor ~Tides Flood &me Streets > •·.Periodic high-tlde condltlom have again .resulted in the flooding of !otne portions ~ West Newport'• streets with brine 110m Ibo lower c:hanneL -~.The familiar yellow "flooded" aigns aprouted this morning 1n the City H a 11 ·area becauae ot the 8.7 foot tide at 10:12 l .m. '·This flooding occurs whenever !he ~ater level in Lhe channel gel3 higher than the city street level, o(ricials said. When the tide recedes, the l:itorm drains carry off the water. The Department flf Marine Safety said the t1da.I Pfak for this qiouth waa~tl! tofta'J.l!'M next montlil howeverj _l~:\r.f ~ seven feet or blgber are predicted. County Ignores Huntington Plea "Paased by the HunUngton Beach city cpuncil 1ast Oct. 7, the resolution offered j4t the board auggested formation of the airport group would fill the need for "a (prum" on airport plans in Lhe area. ~ Increased air traffic and its possible Renetration to the Huntington Beach area ~as another factor which mHde establish- ment of a conunlss.lon d ea i r a b I e, i!JpmJJors were told. : A plea by the City of Huntington· Beach for county cooperation in the creation of •n Airport Land Use Commission in the j:>each city area drew a perfunctory •'receive and file" response Tuesday trom county supervtJors. • • • • !~:D:: !;~~8~u:a~~. ~! lieart transplant operation hu been suc- bssfully carried out, a bulletin issued Jrom St. Vincent's Hospital Mid early '1Jursday. It wu the 63rd known heart jransplant. , • • • • • • • ' • • • • • DAllY PllOT OltAlltOI ((MIT PU•LlSHIN() C°""'AH'f ~•tMrt H. Wet-4 ..... lffrol .... P'utilltllft' J•dt •· C.Ney Vkl ,,,..Iden, .... Gmefll Mlrlltet Tlie,..11 K11•il Edl!Or lJtein11 A. M,,,~;"' Me"'"lnt Edllor Petl NIHt ft MwWtltlftt Olrtcl• ---JJO W•d l•t Strt•t M11lh1t Ao14,.,,, P.O.~" ll•O, tl62l --~ lttdl: !2'11 W'9t telMt leli!Wtrf Le.-ll.M(fl1 m ,..,.., ... _ ~ le«ll1 -.tlll 11'"M1 ' • ' to the proxUnltY of her plact of employ· ment and the apartment he shared with a buddy. R1ch8.rd ·surface, 2&, with whom Mrs. Weidner was living in Cost.a:" Mesa, was cleated as a suspect in the· brutal' mur· der. as wa1. her di1traught h~band who passed a Polygraph tesl and was elim-inated. . A narrow gap of timing prevented the possibility Df capturing a suspect a~ the • i;cene of the killing, as a patrolling po- liceman heard s.hob1 and screams, then tried to find the source. Theories so far have indicated Mrs. \Veidner may have struggled with the slayer or pGSslbly caused him to shoot himself dttring the wrestle with dealh. One slug pierced Mrs. Weidner's hand. Coley was wounded in the finger and, today, bore a partially healed scratch shapedi like a woman's fingernail. Much evidence is in the hands of the Orange County Sherilf'a crime lab, in· eluding the slug!, blood samples taken from the second trail of droplets leading away. ResJdents who heard a car speed away from tile scene within moments called poUce, who guided Officer Randy Nutt by radio to the bloody carport area. BURIED TIJESDA Y St.ruck twice in the head, once In the stomach and in the hand, Mrs. Weidner .. was dead on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital, not far from Lhe scene at East 18th Street and Wallace Avenue. · She was burled Tuesday at Lanca!ter N.Y., and Capt. Glasgow said leads we~ running out after the two men who had loved her were released as innocent. Capt. Glaaaow Mid he had dropped by ~tte detective bureau early Tuesday even. mg to catch up on some things left over from the around-the-clock murder in- vestigation laat weekend. Shortly after that, he said, Appleman telephoned from Martin Luther Ho.!lpltal with news of the break which led to scooping up Coley this morning. Announcement of !he arrest wag not made until shortly before noon, after Coley was inlUally booked by Fullerton police, who look his accidental ~hot w~ndd [.eoo_It ea,rlley l'l.\. Thl'foday. Ile. m •<t' C..<llli ~ ..,w•!llper 1lo s and law agency bulleUna told flf the hunt for someone posll.lbly wounded in the murder case, but apparenUy Fullerton detect.Ives never conaldered Coley. By TOM BARLEY Of the O•llr ,.lltt $11Jff Orange County supervisors today are Studying a 64-page planning department recommendation that urges the county to acquire all remaining non-public beach areas from Seal Beach to San Clemente. Labeled the Master Plan of Shoreline. Development, Planning Directer Forest Dlck3llon'1 analysis al.so advocates the acqui!ltion of upland, overnight camping areas within view of the ocean and the feasibillty Dl constructing a r t I f i c i a I peninsulas to help meet a mo11nting de- mand for beach frontage. No immediate action will be taken by the board on Dickason'• loog li.et of shoreline proPosals. Ordering diBtrlbutlon of the bl'ilChures to federal, state and city agencies, supervisors noted that "It will take some considerable time" to examine the plan. ning proposalJ. Fonnal presentation .of the Dickason plan would be needed before any im• plementaUon could be o r d e r e d , supervisor• 1aJd. In any event, lt was noted the broad Dickason proposall do not specify where the vast funds needed for acquisition and development would be obtained. Dickason himself lan't certain. But he advocates the appointment of an •1 tnterdlsc)pll n ary group of oceanographers, blologisUI, engineers, conservationists, planners, c I t I z e n representatives, h y d r o 1 o i 1 1 t s and educators to research and plan for coastal projeclll and overall shoreline development." This g r o u p, Dickason said, should "particularly establlah pr Io r it I es, methods of funding, and deternUnation of which projects need inten!IVe stndy." Dickason warns that d r a m a t i c transformaUon of shoreline terrain now in private hands -he estimates that hall of the C.7 mile coastline ls so owned' -ean be erpected. · · ·1 • 1 He .also warna that the changes that can be expected will "di!eply affect the open apace and tea vistas that now exist, perhap1, not fully appr<claltd unW IOI!." BIRTHDAY GIFT -Roy E. Christenson, president and chairman of the board o( Beverly Enterprises, owner-operator of new Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, presents share of firm'• !tock to first baby as business manager David lletb watches. Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Miller, obviously proud, called daughter Beverley-Lin, which pleased the company. $62 Questio11 Hospiwl Ho1iors Baby Beverley \\'hat to name the baby turned out to be th! $62 qutstlon for a young Com. Mesa couple. The daughter of ?.tr. and Mrs. Robert J., ~tUler Jr., J84 E. 21st St., an1ved Oct. II-Into s new world on Columbus Day- al first baby glrl born at brand-new Colta Mesa Memorial Hospital. l1nkDown to the Mlllera, the laclllty wt>kh e>pen<d Sept. I II owned and _.ltd by Bevuly Ent•rprlee1. 'Ibey Dlm<d the~ little girl ee.erley· l Lin. which l.m"t exactly the way the h01pltal firm speU. II, but 1Uli an auspicious omen In the eyes Df the ad- ministration. To celebrate the historic event, Bcvrrly Enterprllu waived all cooll and plded up the bill (or the litUe girl's dellvt:ry and mother-da""1ter hotpltaU..Uon. t\nd fot a real blrlhday present. UUle Bevt:rlt!y·Lln waa presented with one shire ot stock, worth $62, In Bevuly EnterprlS<S. -l Booms • ~ t,411 -...W..U In IM PN1 rur Ji1G a IU percent rrowth rate. o\jllOfflng to the nport pcpulaUco 11111 llll ptltenlaf• of growltl to r cOoaal cJUel 11, -Colla Meoa, 72,988, 3.3 pet<ellt. -N"'port Beach, <I.Ill, 7.4 percent. -Lquna Beach, tl,W, u pet<lllt. -Seal Beach, 21,417, 5 percent. SlighUy more than 50 percent of the county rtsldents are female wilh about 49 percent male, the report lhowa. 'Ibis • ...,,.i1r la llit.....,;, llMtn under !Ive ~ of age, , Ac<onf\111)0, the report, tbla age l?OUP decreased !!Om 13.4 pereent of the Accordinf, to the report, these fllw'el, population b\ the 1960 census lb only 10.1 a<e slight y lower ilia.. the aatl= ,,.,_., tti.popllaUca r-.led In lhla average of 51 percent <4, \he popu )'t!:ar'I report. ' • being female. Median t;e tor tM I! Mon-thlJI 1111 -le ,..,. hind to States for women b: 29 yean oompathl to maN ..the la teat ctnsua hport. Plannlng men at 2&.6. . • officrn aald the county bad to be dlnded County-wide, mall •" iJ'Ol>P6 tbowed Into tour di!lricta to figure the pcpulaUon """'-· The-moat 'af&lllllc&Jll ~ • beca,.. al the DllllJ!ltude al Ibo ,....ui. ' . Fate of Mesa Motel Project Still in Doubt Fate ot a pro,,-17-room inotor hotel 1n 'downtown Costa Mesa-where city oltlclals Hterally had their rOler· vations-is open to question today, after the City Council cancellld Monday • Investor Edker Pope, ot1 ms . Shell St.1 Corona del Mar, plaM to appeial for a new hearJnr on his f<llt«ary project at 141 E. 19th SI., In 'the Mesa 8llopplng Center lot. Principal ndchbor to lpelk •nlnal the oft-discussed motel project waS Mrs. H. J. ••Jimmy" Wood, of 212 Flower St., an outspoken foe of the anticipated traffic it will cause. ••1 object to ·Mr. pope•s 87-unlt •nUCG• -that's what 1 call it," she declared, cit· ing city studie:i: by chapter and verse in opposition. PLANNER'S WIFE She Is the wife of Planning Comma. sioner H.J. "Jimmy" Wood. TO JOIN COMO -Corona del Mar High School's singing Yoong Americans (left to right) Pat Bolton, Mark Brewer and Judy Twile- gar practice selection they will be taping in two weeks for Perry Como television special. Elmer Dudek, of 125 ·Flower St., who owns property at 191 Flower St., and 1866 Newport Blvd., Bided with Mrs. Wood Jn urging a vote agabut the motel. Studies show that If a clovtrleal Inter· change I! built at 19th Street and the Newport Freeway route down Newport Boulevard, most of the Mesa Center parking lot would.be gobbled up. Trio of CdM High Singers To Appear on Como Show Three 16-year-old Corona de! Mar High School students have sung thelr way onto a Perry Como television special and Possibly a world tour. Pat Bolton, of Santa Ana Heights, and Judy Twi\egar·and Mark Brewer, both of Co!ta Mesa, passed three dlfflCtJlt audl· lions to become members of the Young From Page 1 PANEL ... aomeUmes, &o we have to 1tand on · our integrity.'' Adams, formerly community relations officer for Santa Ana poUce, was asked by a student if a civilian review board wouldn't be more effective than a police PR man? "You are equaling New Jersey Y.'ilh Costa Mesa," Adams said. "Each o{ the 4-0,000 individual police agencies across the country should make its own decision." Anotl:ter 1tudent uked, "What kind of constructive criticism wauld Newport Beach police, for instance, accept?" Adams augge1ted the student contact Newport's community relations officer (John R!ch&rd) and alt down and tall: it over . "The· hoalillty of the kids to police scares me," Hick• saJd. "It is just as In· excusable far a citizen Ml to be polite to a policeman as it is for a policeman not to be courteous. They're not eoing '° relate to each other." Americans singing group. At each audi· lion they had to sing, dance and speak before a panel of judges. Three hundred tried out (or the Young Ainericans and most of the 40 selected are junior college students, said a proud Corona de! Mar vocal music inatructor, Don Haneke. The three students are members of the high school Concert Choir a n d Madri gals. Miss Twilegar and four other Corona deJ. Mar High studen ts, Chri.a Baker, Pat Halligan, Henry Johnson and Bob Frizzelle, have been selected for the 100- voice All Southern C&llfomla Vocal Association Honor Choir that will sing at the Lfls Angeles Music Centtr. The three Young Americans will begin taping the Perry Como appearanct! in two weeks. This sununer the singing group likely will tour Australia and maybe Japan. From Page 1 AIRPORT ... Ing lot to hold 1,100 cars and adding ad· dltional parking around the field. The cost of this Improvement would be $260,000, $60,000 o[ which is also budgeted. The rest will come from the sale of 8.7 acres of land to the highway department for part of the San Diego Freeway. Returns from the parking facility would pay for the improvement within 30 years, Airport Director Robert Bresnahan said. Shops, stores, and a theater tn the Ctn· ter already me much of the parking arta. "I think that pclnt u pretty wen liken on parking," Pope sal4, adding, ".lt'a not the best development, but It's the beat I can think of at that JocaUon.'1 BlJILD ON LAND Pope pointed out he ca n build on the land-whether In the form of the 87-unit motel-on the basis of a prior subcllvls- ion agreement and another project could be a "·or.c;c traffic problem. ~le said parki.nS( on the lot now Is at a 3 to 1 ratio, which is normal, addlniJ that occupancy would only be about 70 percent during most or the year. "I wouid love to see a motel In the dowtnown area," said City Councilman William L. SL Clair, noting he would still be concerned without ctrtain stipula- tions about parking. TUCKER FRIENDLY Councilman George A. Tucker atao seemed friendly to the project: offered by PDpe, owner or the Sea Lark Motet nearby, but suggested It be held for pos- sible revision. Pope hinted he'd rather have an Imme- diate declslon, so the vote was 3-0 against him, although a hearing with a tun coun- cil may again change the picture. During earlier hearings on the mator hoteJ. Dne city report claimed It would put a severe drain on water service in lhe area, creating a hazard in case of major fire. Mrs. Wood noted this, but St. C11lr reminded her that the charae of lnad· equate water was refuted u an error in the report. Auto Show Scheduled Sixteen Harbor Area car dealm wlll di!play more than 70 new auotmobilea on the mall& of Fuhion l11and in Nnoport Beach Thursday, Friday and Saturday. FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGl:MENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUJX, COHCORDI f!IO -- JIU NEWl'ORT AVE, COSTA MES/\ .ZJ ,Y..,. I• The s.,.. loc:.+lo" l llVILU 1171 ...... - I I I • .. ·-. .. • • 'Petrified Forest' Rules Hu -t:tingwn Awards Night RON LAMBERT DIDDY LAMMERS PAMELA BROWN Top P•rformers of Huntington Buch Se•son •Just for Lfwe' Roo Albertsen ar.d "The Pelrlfied Forest'' dominated the awards night program al the Huntlngton Beach Playhouse last weekend. Albertsen was named best director of the season for his L--._.-..;...i11o.;....., production of the Robert , Sherwood drama, his second consecutive ,directorial bonor , and also captured an award for best scenic design for the same, show. · Ron Lambert, who played the poetric drifter i n "Petrified Forest," received best actor aceola,des' for his performance, while James E. Smith, wheelchair b o u n d offstage as well as on, took best supporting actor honors, also for "Petrified Forest." Named but actress of the season "W&! Diddy Lammers, who also ~ctcd in a wheelchair, for her role as the crochety Mn. Bramson in "Night Must Fall." Pamela Brown wu voted best sup- porting actress for her in genue role in "Boy Meet! Girl." "Boy Meets Girl" also nail· ed down both cameo awarm, with Denni5 Lambert and Shirley Dvorak takln1 the laurels for their smaller assignment.I. The playhouse's president's award, f or outstanding con- tribution to the Huntington Beach theater, went to Nancy Wells. A special community service award was presented to Randy Keene and his crew for the children's production of "Sir Slob and the Princess." The awarW! were presented Friday evening at th e playhouse's aMual Beaux Art Ball in the Meadowlark Co- untry Club. Hallo wee n Fete , Award Night Set 'Madwoman' Play Opens In Fullerton 'The drama department of Fullerton Junior CoUe1& win present "The M'adwoman of Challlot" ln six perfonnances New Play Simple, Charming starting Thursday, evening, in the Campus Theater. _ "The Madwoman ol Chaillot" is a kind of poetic and comic fable centering on a plot by a group of promoters By JACK GAVER NEW YORK (UPI I Simplicity and charm best describe "Just for Love," an unusual Intimate en- tertairunent that o p e n e d Thursday night 1t t h e Provincetown Theater i n Greenwich Village. The show is exactly what the title says -il deals in song and dia1ogue wilh many aspects of the human coo-· dition known as love as treated through the ages by many writers. lt Is un- pretentious but effeetive in a friendly , warming way, and lt Is delightfully performed. The show has been neatly and knowingly put together by Jill Showell and Henry Comor, man and wife, ·who also are two of the four players. Not the least of its virtues Is that it is just the right length, not too long. The other members or the cast are Jacqueline Mayro and Sleve Perry, who do most ol the singing. It should be added thal it is a pleuure simply to look at Mias Mayro. Both ling well, and they do their IO!lgS with a simplicity that euctly fitl the extreme intimacy of Cros sword Puzzle ACROSS 44 Look to bt 45 Dull 1 liluslira 47 And ottiers Judgt 50 81twery 5 Kind of product 1umbtt 51 Fissile rock 10 Form or 52 Kind or Ell z1befl iorct t• Rt111ove 56 LarltlS alld 60 Pl1tfo111 15 ll&k:t uitcuts 61 Having .a 111 Btlnt: SCI· valei'ltt.o' 17 Eltctlon . · 1loht person1Utlrs 64 Miss Somm ll' 19 Where 65 Practlca1 Slbtrl1 ls 66 Ft111lnint 1Q.!Zl/6B 20 Ortss n11111 21 London, 117 Swttlsop 12 Stitt of 40 Lits 1o't'I: Ch activity 2 words Ont., &8 1rg1s h 44 Kl'd ol unl¥trslty •9 Construct 13 Jo "( t in E rt crl111ln11 23 Cape o 11 • slan 46 Brltf Nova DOWN " I I ll:lngdOlll cessait ons S<:ot • .... Sho t111ak1r's 48 Cuts with 2' Ftel re· 1 5. A111r. u. I I 111orst fot shnib •attrlal · prK s °" 27 Sorrowful 2. -on _ a4 C1n1iy's '' Llt1rary "Ofll Person th• baclt: tt1tt1¥t dt plu•~ 2 d 215 Fruit 52. l'ltmt nt 30 Gave tX• WOI 5 ..., Eccl1sl11Uc of•\tl t prtsslon to· S Malle an '' "' 1,_ 34 EdOI rl •.old-lndtntatlon 1at11ent , .. na ,.11 Ing: var. 4 Certain H 11stoflyflc 5lGtr11ln1ttd 35 U11br1ldrd lridlc1ton; 29 ;:~sh ~r,~l~rt 37 Projecting 5 Havlno. nluslclan 54 Fish proc1ss rhyth1111c 0 t ., 'I B.ctlst: 111\ 31 Kind of 55 u s1 t : Tl t bl 1.bodt C11111b. fol• Ab r. 6 •• • • 32 Kind of 57 Part al l• Asian abbrt¥iatlon anxious Frfl'lch111tn's 41 AthltlK' 1 Ptrlod I 33 Enlttlafr· body group: Abbr. I Once a;• n l!l•nl fa'* 51 Archlllctvtll .Z Ustd 3ft t Cert.!tln 3' Dtnllst'a ,1tr Down attfl concttn 59 IHPlntl• 43 Flexlblt furcts • •1 P•opar• *""' 112 Sts1111 llQaMll'ltom 10 Dtftatt ~ E h tf Joint. ·u Noun ntdlflf fe r serving 63 •c OM " ,. ' rT""1..-:rr,,.-,;. r,,.. this entertainment. to tear up the beautiful city of The Comor! handle the Paris to unearth the oil which dialogue -I don't have to use a prospect.or believes he has the word "sketches" because located under the city streets. the word Is not right for much Performances of the fall of what they do. They are ex-play ul-schedull?d for, Thurs-1 perienred actors, and they in· day, Friday, and Saturday • terpret a wide variety of even ings, Oct. 24, 25, and U , mat4!:rial with fine versatility. and agaln on Oct. 31 and Nov. Among the II songs that are 2. Curtain time is 8 p.m. with dovetailed into the dialogue admission $1.5() for adult! and scenes are such familiar items 1_~7!5!c<~nitsiiifoi•i•i1"ideinitsii.iillii·­as "Come Live iWth Me," "JeMy Kissed Me." "What is Love?," ''Man is For Woman Made" and "So We'll Go No More A-roving." Since the program credit! Michael Valenti with "original score," there must be a couple of songs written e11peclally for this show, but they are not identified. ... . Cen!Mr 11 lt'1 ... , SI...., PQftler, ~ Trle'I "•Ulll WHO'S COMIN6 TO DINNll" ""'::l·" ' 147.JHI "WILD IN THI ITllm" "MINI SKllT MOI" FOUNTAIN V,lltEY ..... .., .... ....._ -1411 ._ ............... oV•ll 1• OfH.Y """" li\df11f', ••W'ITWllll •. ,,__ .,, Ml ltOUIU, LIT HIM 901" ..... ,.,.,.. >·•· t :• .., 11:•.:: .... ~· ~~11 .·~ - ·-~--• •• 0 Q ·----coouo I Y ••FflllllU.TIOtl' End. Tuooday • l' .......... ,* . WedntScljj, Del.Ober 2.3, 1968 OAJL y PILOT Z3 - • ID SF ,,." . . ! ~· "0'• •''•'" -.. . .. . , POSITIVELY . NO ONE UNDER .18 .ADMITTED -- TO THESE THEATRES DURING THE SHOWING OF THIS TORRID SOCK·IT·TO·ME MOVIE- Pliyboy magazine readers were stunned (and some were even embarrassed) by the October Playboy photo-spread that dared to show the actual, zingy, revealing torrid scenes of Barbara M_cNair and ~aymond St. Jacques from this far-out swinging movie. When you see this groovy movie, you'll understand why community advertising standards prohibit publishing these actual far-out "happenin&" movie scenes -and, of course, you will also understand why theatres ••• POSITIVELY CANNOT ADMIT ANYONE UNDER 18• •UNt.ESS ACCOMPANIED BY A PARENT OR ADULT 9\MMltM* · .,, RI f/OJJllS,LFr• GfJr 1W1A mH · •D Sfi,IJJIES • lMN Mcl'.AJllHY • •.::AfflHOO~lllNNftt ·"'"".BARBARA r.w.JR .~ atM S11J • 5-llJ" an Miii ·,_.Iii lhbd" DP Mn '*lrll!Jlill•"A .. ll~IM"lrllllrtm -&--•• -0 COLOll 8Y •ASTMAll NOW SHO.WING AT THESE THEATRES SPECIAL EVENING SHOWTIMES AT 7:00 AND 9:00AN D11 :00 PM ' LA HABRA· DRIVE -IN THEATRE IMPIRIAL HIGHWAY ,BETWIEN BEACH I. HARBOR I LVDS. e 171·1162 ORANGE DRIVE-IN THEATRE SANT~ ANA AND GARDEN GROV E FREEWAYS e 547-6011 FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE-IN-THEATRE SAN DllGO PREEWAY AT BROOKHURST SOUTH OFF-RAMP e 962-2 .. 1 GROVE WALK-IN THEATRE , f 61 f ~ARDEN 'ca1tOVE ILVD. e SS7-UOO ... HUNT.IN8lOll 'CINEMA WALK-IN THEATRE . · l lACN ILVD. AT l t LIS, ~UN TINGTON 'l lACH e 147-ffol WEST COAST WALK-IN THEATRE ' IOI IJI, MAIN ST:, SANTA AHA e S43-U17 ; I ... .· '", , ... ... " ... ·~ • H • ·' ·-... . -, . ' .. .... - " .... -. ·• . ' . ... . .... " .... ·~. -.... ... ... .. : . .. .. .. .. ' •. ,, _, .. .. ,-. ., •' ... . .. . ' -.. , ... ·~ .; ., . ,.. ~ ,., .... . . '•· .. ~ .... '• . . \. .. ' .. ' .. .. ,_ .. . . . .. -,,~ "" " , ..... ' " ... •' H .... ... '•' ' . . . .. . ..... '., . ,. ... ' .... .. ~ ... ~ °k'''" • ........... --. .... . . ~ .... ,. .. .,. ............ ~t i• .. ...... ' ··-· -~ .. ~. ., .. . - • -· .. " -" I-. . .. • ..... _ • .. . . • . • ~.· .... ·-,,( ·-FO~ MATUH AUDIENCES I I • i ---·--. -. ---· ----·--· -··-- ·--- ........... ~ ..... -.. .. .~ .-·" ---'• -... ' .. ,. ' D .. D.Y PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE Bridg~ng the Age Gap People who can ~~ the Democratic or RepuJ>. Jican party line verbatim or attempt to second-guess ~o Chi Minh's men in Paris often don't know wbat their own children think . Worse, they rareJy try to learn. • Even ~orse, they may rely on a vague, p~ec~­ celved notit>n of whet the youngster should be thinking and doing in relationship to bis complex world -reli~ gion to sex, d.rugs and the draft -and conclude that the child accepts it. There is no law against the nat dictatorial approach, but it can be a form of child ne- glect:. Penalties in terms at friction, alienation and a drifting apart tend to come automatically. W1-thout an unlikely shift to sudden mutual under- standing on either side, the rift w,idens into what is commonly called the Generation Gap, a canyon of mi s- understanding. We are left with adults on one side and those in the younger generation on the other. E·ach simply accuses the other of being on the wrong side and the gap gets broader. The Harbor Area Coordinating Council, comprised of members of many diverse area organizations, re· cently experimented with a concePt called Hypocrisy Hangup, in which each side reaches over that gap. T.he aim is contact between young people and adults, with a chance to talk out the points of conflict. Not everyone over 30 votes straight Republican and advocates hippie concentration camps, while not every- one under 30 uses drugs and advocates revolution, the g~p~:sra.~·hopes and idealistic viewpoints, too,'' one of the older generation said during the exceedingly successful seminar session at the Hoag Memorial Hos- pital Conference Center. . "Do as I say, but not as I do,'' a teen-ager tossed back into the boiling pot of hangups, hypocrisies and points of contention -to illustl'ate what he couJd see through his parents and his 9wn unbringing. Many other valuable exchanges occurred during A University Politicized ls Doomed What is "a university"? More important, what should a :niversity be? Morris B. Abram. recently inaugurated as president of Brandeis University, grappled boldly with this quest.ion in his rltual of acceptance. It waa a probing, pr6found address, too occupied with M!:arching to try for eloquence. Yet, the eloquence of it lay in its direct honesty. "The university is truly at the vortex of the. crisis of our time. In the United Stites. in France, in Mexico - everywhere .... ·· This ~'as the. begiMing of hill theme.. He developed it carefully. "IT IS A COMPLIMENT to education that men in this time of trouble should crystalize their attention, anxieties, frustrations and even a n g e r s on the univ.ersity. In effect, they are saying. fre- quently in unacceptable ways : 'Our socie- ty is in deep trouble. The university has the capacity to redeem or reform society if the university has the will and is itself reformed' ... the critics are. saying that the university is more important than it~ 11~porters say it is .... '' ·Before him was one. of lhe nation":; more learned and competent facuJties ... also one of the more questioning. It may be assumed that all faculties. save for the hopelessly obtuse, are disturbed and are themselves trying for answers. It is inescapably true -faculties being human -that many have been deeply frightened by the student rebellions anU by the occasional violence. in which the leadersh.ip often is from off campus. (Th.f' hard-core nonstude.nt forces, dedicalefl not to reform but to destruction, ARt: frightening.) BUT THE INTELLIGENT fa c u I l ' knows that many student objectioru; are valid -especially as protests are related to teach.ing. Universities of great quality, have.. of coorse. learnea scholars whose research is it.self in11tructive. They are there to teach -but to learn and to allow others to share in tflat learning. But, Abram said, speaking of the 'SeirCCh for truth: ·•The innermost truths in some social sciences may be not only in textboob but also in the labora$ories of life .... " "A univenhy ..•. is not a church or a political party. It dDes not il.stlf vote. ll Dear Gloomy Gus: The ''hotrodders" on Gisler and Mesa Verde Drive usually turn out to be old Dad and often Mom-a clear case of too many cubes in the engine and • vacuum in the guidance control. -Diogenes '68 T~l1 *'"'"' retlttb '""""' ""-Jltl --fir ni... tf IM _,,,._.. S..M rtW NI .... ..._ .. cai.mr On. 0 .. IY ..,..,, should be crammed with people who think, vote and participate in every level f?f life, including politics. . [ applaud those who feel .t special obligation to speak out because they are learned and influentiaJ men. Nevertheless, t h e university must not be dogmatist. It mu st be a free and open place ... .it should provide the 'forum for individual and group study and experience, .The university must hold the soapbox steady for others to stand on ... to study, to declaim, and to preaeh whatever truth they see or fetL .•. "BUT, A UNIVERSITY -politicized - radicalized or conservatized -ii a university tloomed, as the lessons of German universitle.s under the Nazis pro- ved • . . A dogmatic institution is hos· pitable only to those who support it~ dogmas .... " Abram noted that in some circles toda~ it has become fashionable to downgradt' the tolerant principles of the libera political creed. "I am wUling," he said, "lo examin and re-examine every substantive opinion including th.ose. to which I am most com· milted. However, I am not prepared tn reject the liberal methodology of fai r play, civil liberty and due process as thr only way in which a civilized society can f)llrSue truth , prevent the encrustation 1• error and insure the fulfillment of man · 1·reative talents and inclinations. THERE ARE OTHER conclusion, 'Mlldly, calmly made! "The right t• students to protest seems to me lo be right and not privilege .... The right o students, faculty or anyone else to di srup the learning process is no right at all .• .11 1s wrong ... There was 1 proper lribute to "th1!> generation of youth." It is a great one. It is disturbed by 1 society in which relorms are necessary -socially am! educationally. More than any other man in edueation. it seems to me, Abram articulated wh a, a uni versity should ~ -and. also. delineated Its failures in teaching and yet, as firmly, declared that \asling reform comes by dut proctss. Armament Ove r l 'uring· Tlloa1llt1 11 Llr1e: Killing J& more imporUnt than curing. tn Ult new federal budget; for cuts in .cJenti1'1t: Md mtdicll rcteareh h.11v~ tllminated public: project$ teeking I therapy for cancer, while armament ap- proprialions amllnuo to upand. • • • • ' - What Ii; wrong with our democr1 cy is as obvious u It is inLractablc : While every American IS a ciUien, hardly anyoot Is 1 "citizen Cirst," in tht sense that he places the broa.dest needs of the natioo 1bove his own: rat.her, eaeh of w; tends to equate our own partial, parochial. class. geographical or ethnic iolerests with "tM good of the country u a whole." • • • No course should bf labeled "CrP.arrvr Writ.ing," which I$ 11 fraudulent thum - tor only I.ht: non-ctt1Uvt upecU of wrltlfl.R <or any other art) c&q\be tauaht ot lnmed In an)' didld.ic WIQ\ • the talk-ln. but the most significant probably c.ame from a pre.Uy girl who admitted she was skepticaJ at lint. "\Ve need one every week," she said. Always One of the Best The grand old man of Orange Coast College -who rode out crises from the great literary magaz.ine "ob- scenity" flap to such real problems as failed tax is· sues -will be honored tonight by the district he served so welL Walter Longmoor Night is scheduled in the OCC Student Center, where colleagues, instructors and friends will gather for a light-hearted dinner and pro- gram honoring the retired trustee. Observers who followed the OCC di strict, a post- war baby itself, aimed ait e4ucating those born in the war years, saw Longmoor consistently act with calm savvy a-s problems came, were handled and then wen t But then. you don't spend 20 years on a job without learning the ropes. The Corona del Mar civic leader, honored in 1967 as Outstanding Citizen at OCC commencement exer- cises. was also a Newport Beach Planning Commission member for 14 year!S. He was chairman for 12 of those year s. Colleagues in the junior college district, which has grown from 515 to more than 20,000 students of all ages and ambitions, knew Longmoor as truly interested in them, not just as a behind-the-scenes figure. The leisure of retirement, especially since he is liquidating the historic cannery he foundf4 in New- port Beach, will afford more time to keep up With OCC, particularly its baseball team, which he has followed for many years. Tonight at Walter Longmoor Night, they'll be remi· niscing about how Walt was always -one of the best . c 'Teachers, Scientists, Scholars Dominated by Rabble Rousers' Charges Aldrich Supports Rebellion To lh.e i':ditor : Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr .. on the front page of the DAILY PILOT of Oct. 14, speaks of the Cleaver affair, and sup- ports. in fact. the faculty , rebellion against the universtty regents and against everything legal, moral, and right. It is not strange th.at the breakdown in law and order in the land continues to spread with ever-increasing virulence where there is such a lack of concern for, and enforcement of, the well-established and reasonable ru les and regulations governi ng students in our coJleges and universities on the part of the chancellors and others in so-called positions of authority and responsibility . TUITION FEES in all our colleges and universities would assure enrollment nf students with a desire and purpose tn learn, and would help to weed out the trouble.makers. slobs. riff raff , dissen- ters, and incompetents, who are . in the schools for the purpose or making an issue of so-called peace, and freedom of speech : i.e., license to say anything. More would be weeded out for lack of in· telligence and/or ambition to succeed in constructive pursuits, i£ they had to perfonn satisfactorily in class. In tax supported, as well as in other colleges, there are almost always some rules and regulations relating to behavior 1nd performance, and thi~ must be so for rdered progress . IT IS PROPERLY within th.e province .nd the responsibil ity of the directors and .:iuthorities of these institutions to in~ terpret and enforce these· rules and regulations. The academic senate and student organizations may properly sub- 1uit and petition the authorities in charge In consider their views but. they have nn rights to coerce or demand any con· ~essio·n ot her than a fair consideration or heir requests and an announcement of he decisions made. 1 r the regents of the university syst.em •re in capable of hi.ring competent ex- ·cutlve. snd administrative heads of the · •arious campuses. who have the guts and intelligence to properly run their respec- tive sc hools and to follow and enforce the rules and regulations, then it is in· t umbent on the appointing authority to replace the regents with men who will do h.eir duty, THE WHOLE MESS ls simply a mailer of th.e failure of the so-ealled leadership group to carry out their responsibilities to the studenlS, taxpayers, and parenl.S. It seems that the student body leadership group today is, through tbe failure of the weak·kneed vacillating and fu zzy.minded faculty , misdirecting and exerting total control over the aclions of the men who are being paid by the taxpayer to ad· mini~\er and direct our oniver5ily anrl college systerns of education. It is a sad time and turn In alrair~ in our sune and nation when thr teachers. i;cientists and sch.ol11r11 in our ~hools arr heing dom inated by the students and ra h '1le rnuse rs who lire nnthing hut thr· ·1cnts of violence and cle.~truction. It i~ time for-the aull'IOrill~ to ~wAken 10 their responsibilities 11:1\d prnrerl 1 perform I.heir duties in our society If "''l! 811 GeOf'ge Dear George : Every day 1 read your column and enjoy it because I think we. all need a laugh to oUse:t the "normal" nows. However, I'm in an argu· mcnt wllh my wift -she says nobody but an imbe<:ilt would read those columnii yoo P\lt in the ~per ~ay 1:1fter day, What ~an I ~!tY to her1 Dear rant Ask btr bow ""' ""°""· VAN \ L1t1en '"'"' readers .,.. ..... 1com•. Morm•llY' wrlMl"I ll>oukt con....., rll1!r in11n q1 In XIO worl:li or '"9. T~ 11th! 111 cond9nH tell•ri 111 tit M>•ts or ellmln•te 11~1 1$ r1strvtd. AU lelleri ml.ISi lnclvd• 11tn1!v~ 111\d /Y\1111119 .odrnt. bu! n1rnes will b9 wlt~held on r~lltlt. are lo avoid the impending decline and fall of American civilization and return to the barbarism and ignorance of the Mid- dle Ages. l!f\.YMOND L. BEACH • RespmulbfHt11 To the. Editor: The Academic Senate of UCI rejected nn Oct J 4 a resolution by Dean Ralph Gerard which supported a c a d e m I c freedom onJy when it is exercised with. responsibility. Because Jt was interpreted as an act of censure of a fellow professor (Dr. Stephen Shapiro, who has invited Eldridge Cleaver to lecture to his literature class), the resolution was defeated, precluding a reasonable solu· tion to a tragically divisJve problem. Cleaver's qualifications as a university lecturer may be questionable .to many within the Academic Senate, yet that body demands the right to make Its own unfortunate ch.oices. This insistence upon freedom from responsibility instead of freedom with responsibility draws us closer to a confrontation that will benefit neither the university nor ourselves as free men. PATRICIA L. ANDREWS Dlspla11 of Garbage To the Editor : l recently attended the. Eldridge Cleaver fiasco at UCI to see for myself wh.at was occurring at our universities. I was disgusted with Cleaver. but even inore sn at the officials of the campus who allowed thi s display of garbage under the guise of free speech. I do think these appearances have done some good -those of us who are paying for these universities may now start working to oppose school bonds until some common sense returns to some university heads. JERRY R. JOHNSON l'oollshne11, Waate . o the Editor: The "common man" strikes back. Ptim Coker's lecture to the common µcoplt, (Mailbox, Oct lfi) is s\lpposedly in answer to my earlier letter or the 10th. h misses the enUre point of my letttr 110 completely. however, thJit I wonder if writer Coker reads well. Tht vital missed point is thal qua.lifted sp<'akers are. available to intelligently pre$ent just about any polnl of view on ll n,v subject. Therefore, why pay out one rent lo hear 1t foul·mouthed, Cflnvlcted felon utter obscenities ? The hiring or Clea ver amounts to the same thing as pouring tax dollars directly Into a sewer. Anyone who CQJl· tenda that the "common man" (Mr. Tax- payer) Is not qualified to and does not have the right to speak up in opposition to thia type ot fooUahntsa and was:te is In· deed "uncommon" (fortunately) and also completely out of touch with tt3tity. M. L. SORBER S11pport1 V.N. To Ule Editor · , tn your Ma\lbnx <OCL llU appeared " lctur from an Irate reader protesting that the 4th of July did not receive I.he cooslderation that the upcomtna United N1lloo! Doy, Oct. st. will have. One very large ae.rospact company granted its employes a holiday on Oct. 21 and organized a picnic for them. The same irate reader complains that they did nothing on the 4th of July and cannot understand why anyone would com- memorate an "ungodly allianei!" such as: the U.S.A. joining the U.N. I must take exception to the words · ' u n g o d I y alliance", "get us out of the U.N." and "who 'needs the U.N. ?" IN THE LAST VEAR the United Na- tions vaccinated 19 million children against tuberculosis, supported feeclirig programs in 55 countries, developed literacy programs ln f8 countriea. "Who needs th~ U.N. ?''Baby, we all do! On Oct 21 the Bahai's of Huntington Beach planted a black pine tree at \.olden West College. On Oct. 2..S, 8 p.m., at lhe Chapman College dining hall in Orange the Bahai 's of Orange County. in cooperation with the United Nations Association. will sponsor a program in support of the United Nations. All are in- vited to quote a world famous teacher on the subject, "The earth is one country and all mankind are its citizens." DICK WYLEMSKI Post's New Support To the Editor : . Next lime someone points a .righteous finger at some alleged "well-heeletl" right-wing pressure group" I'd like to di- rect his attention to an obscure item in this week's Business News. The once-respected Saturday Evening Post has been dropping an average of $9 million per annum for the last seven years since becoming a mouthpiece for the liberal left. Yet an outfit called Perfect Film & Chemical Corp. is step- ping In and bailing out Curtis Publishing to the tune of $15 million in fresh capital. NOT ONLY IS , Perfect F 11 m (whomever that might represent) prop- ping up Curtis, but its spokesman, one Martin S. Ackerman, grandly boasts that SatEvePost Co. will have the scratch "not only to expand but to acquire other publishing and rommunicatiom opera· tion.s." That the libs value the Post highly as: an outlet for their philosophy is plain. That they have the vast ~inancial power to expand lheir stranglehold on the com· munications media is now even more ob- vious. WHAT "RIGHT-WING'' ouUit could or would have taken a $62 million bath without blinking, then toss in another dozen megabucks without breaking a sweat. all to keep in operation • pm- paganda organ which obviously isn't making it on its own merits? "ldea.Usm" gelS pretty txpeMiva sometimes, doesn't It? Oh, yes. Ju.st so·s your kids will grow up with the "'right attitude." the Post Co. wiU keep on publishing Jack and Jill. too. KARRY WEISBERGER -Ta;ie Reform To the Editor: Tn yoor editorial of Tu...t11. Od. I, you called Prop, IA the beit IDIWtr to the "feast" of property tu relief prop- osals oa the Nov. 5 baUat. Prop. IA ts not the •Nftr to the prop- erty tax bunlen of lhe single lamlly boo'le<tWl)er. Prop. 1A ll "tai relief," but simple "Ln rtllet'' as outlined by this measure fiib to solvt the. problem. It repr~t.s the combined bi·partisan ef- roru ol Gfw. Re11an and the two houses or the Lqbl.aturt let forestall lot.ti tax refonn for lhe ciUien.1 <if Californt1. MtOR tA provldM property tax relief only If funds art avail1ble 10 be: ~funded fl\. lo aute aod city ~oles. •nd school! to ' ~\>er man.Jes bit from decreased pro- perty tax revenues. lf no such funds are found, property owners will have no relieL Prop. lA fails to solve the problem and its passage on Nov. 5 will only de- lay much needed ''tax reform." Total reform of the tax and fiscaJ structure is the only solution. Five state tax reform commissions have failed to offer any workable alternative· to the fiscal and tax problems. Prop. 9 offers total tax reform over a five year period. This measure certainly merits the consideration of t!Very Califor- nian on Nov. 5. G.A.CARTER Tears In Ber Eye• To !he Editor : I don 'l think you wiJI print tllis, but 1 will say this : I arn 1vhite, 38 years old and I was born in this country. I was proud of it. In th·e past fev.· days we have won gold medals arn;I other awards of honor in Mexico. We need the prestige and pro- paganda in the eyes of the world. When two of our fine athletes felt like bowing their heads and raising their fists because the national anthem doesn 't really include them -I got tears in my eyes and a terrible pain where our hearts are ~U!JFOEed to be. I v.•as ashanied to be a wh ite American with this gui!L M. RICHARDS Four Choice• To the Editor : Soon all registered voters will have four choices they t an make with regard to presidential candidates. They can vol~ for Richard Nixon, or Hubert Humphre.v, or George Wallace, or !hey can refrain from voting. Many pseudo-pol itic al scientist.s will say that voting is a privilege and that 811 good citizens will vote for some one, when the real truth is that each citizen has the right lo vole. or the right to refra.in from voting. Then the re is the fact that there is no legal wa y l.o force a citizen to vote or else. This is not true in Russ ia or even Greece, which was the cradle of modern civilization. THOSE WHO WILL vote for Ni xon or Humphrey can look anyone in the eye after the election and state that they ex· ercised their right to vote. even thoui,:h l~eir man lost. Those who will vote for Wallace will have a more diffiCult job of justifying their choice. Yet, there ha ve bttn other minority parties that were so popular that the two major parties had tn accept some or their better ideas. Thus, those who will vote. for Walla.ce may nb- t.ain change even though Walla~ only win~ a ~w Southem It.ates. ·Please note that the pla cing of Nlxnn'1 namt first was tnt.entlonat KARRY B. McDON ALD, JR. ---- We<l n esday, October 23, 1008 Tile -m• of th< Dollw Pilot •de.I to iAf&f"'m end •tim-tdak r<odm bv prtsmting thll ll<IOIJ'CPl"'I opflliom and com. ~mrv on toptcr of fn tere1t •nd lfgniflctJit«, bf prooidfftg • f°"'m for iht tJ:J)rU.tion of 'our rtadn-1' opinions. and by prl!stntiftQ' tilt dtverse vicw- poittU of informed observer& t.md ipokt1mn on toplct oj tlu dar, ~ Robert N. Weed, Publl.ll>or )• ' I • ' •. ' I BY :WILLIAM ,,._ REED. Reeds ••• r In the Wind You will have to chalk up one, for U!.e homeowners of Huntington Beach. Monday night the City Council refused to go along with a scheme of a condominimum de- veloper ro ignore those who had .spent so much m,oney to buy ;homes in his development. The developm·ent is the Villa Paci.fie condominiwn on Brook· burst street, one of the finer look· ing developments in Southern ... California. The present developer a.dmittedly has some problems ~ since he bought an existing deve- lopment from the original develop-- er, but along with the purchase • went an obligation to try to live up ~ ·to at least some of the promises of the first developer. Monday night the developer asked for What amounted to_a com- plete change in exteriors of the condominium, a move hotly op .. posed by a couple hundred of the condominium awners. * Their complaint was simply that they had been told the character of further development ·of the con· dominiwn wo~d be the same as they were purchasing. They and the councilmen agreed that . the de"." eloper should live up to this proJruse because a changing of standards could result in a les· sening of property values for all -. those who have already bought their homes. Councilmen insisted that the de-- v~lo~r would have to get the per· rruss1on from the homeowners as· sociation for any changes in de-- sign before the council would con- &ider approval of· the changes. * The principle of the problem was Uted by one of the home- owners who read from a sales brochure that a huge shopping center was under construction next r to the condominum. The brochure was produced more than two years ago and: work still has not begun on the shopping center. Mayor ,Al, Coen wryly ·Observed that .. wi recognize that developers need some latitude for selling." While all of the homeowners agree to that point, all agree too that lat· itude _ should not be taken for license. The home buyer has been fooled al.I too oftt.en with the beautiful brochure and glib promise. Lets call an end to that. Construction Okayed ' On Mesa View School Ocean View School District trustees have approved construction of the new Mesa View School to be located south of Slater Avenue between Edwards and Goldenwest streets. The elementary school's construction , ~ is estimated at $21 per square foot totaling $992,000 for the 47,41JO.squal'e'"foot: facility. . Toastmasters Elect WtdntSdQ, Oc.tobtf' ZJ, l9tli:S O"'LY 'PILOT f Jfloon Orbit Next? Apollo 7 Shot ·'Greatest Yet' By EDWARD K. DELONG SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPI) - Apollo 7'1 auccessful splashdown ended the most perfect manned space voyage in the nation's history, the head of the Apollo program believes. "The mission has been just a perfect mission," aald Lt Gen. Samuel Phllllpa. "I don't ttiint there ever bu been one that'• been u aucceuful." With 1ta IUCCeSI Apollo 1 apparenUy cleared virtuaUy every barrier to a round-the-moon flight by U.S. astronaut.I in December, a posslbillty Phillips refus- ed to speculate about. He did aay, however, a flrm dtcislon about this Oight ahould be made lhe tbJrd week ln Novem-w . , Smiling broadly, Phllllps aald the Apollo 1 succesa clearly advanced the na· Uon's chancts of landing men on the moon next year and bringing them back to earth. He said it firmly. Apollo -: once a problem chili! -ls now in hand, he said. As an example he mentioned the difference In the way Na· tional Aeronautics and gpace Administration (NASA) ofncials can talk with certainty about fljght schedules. OVER THE RUM!' "When WI! used to talk schedules a (.'()U.. pie of years ago , when we were strug .. Phllllpo 11ld, II detailed m1111* ti tllo reama of "sublurfact <11t&" ndloed llKtl from Apollo 7 to the ground. Another 111 the completion of aeveral testl on tM Apollo a spacuhlp and 111 Salunl • rocket. l l'!tlllipo said he "'!"cted Apollo Y 14 work well, but "wu prepared far I &Qi wort leas well." "Whertaa I expected 11 to l1y !Iii 11111 duration, wt were prepared to have ~ blema appear which would have cau.d us to rim a ~r mlulon," be told UPI ln an interview: "In my perspectJve, this mlakm llal demormrat.d the Apollo command ad service modules wlll wort Ute they ..,. designed to work and do the lhinp they were designed to do, and that the fUCbt crew can operate them and openite them like they were dtalgned to be Operated." 11le command and .ervtce modu ... were designed to carry men to .Mt around the moon and bring them back to earth. A separate craft, the Junar modu1e, yrhich has yet to fly with men. waa designed to transfer two men to the lunar surface and return them &o Mai mother ahip. I j MOON LANDING .., , Huntington Beach Toastmasters President Lew Stein (seated) and officers take the leadership rein~ of the speaking.men's club. Assisting tile new president are (from left) Educational Vic.e Presi· -dent Dave Kory, Adm.irllstrative Vice President Janhl lndrikis, Secretary Gerard Pryor, Sergeant. at.arms Cart Stevens and Treasurer Fred Pellic- · gling with trying to get everything over the hump, nobody paid much attenUon to us because we couldn't quite make our schedules," Phillips aald. "But we're making them now." Phillipe aald the first moon landlr scheduled to carry men .. hu 1 Httle bit of positive slack to meet the ICbedult al readinw: for filght" before the end al, next March. He said in Its checkout tat. at Cape Kennedy the moon lander .,. working exceedingly well." Philllpo said the ntght, whlch mof every goal set out for It orflnallY and several that were added after the mi.. aion got under way, waa the f1nt In hill nw;mory to meet more than 100 percent of itl objectives. ciotti. . Work Experie~ce Not New He said Apollo I , whatever type mission It attem~_.. will Oy in December If it goes around me moon the moct like: ly launch date is Dec. 21, when astronauts Frank Borman. James Lovell and William Anders would become the first men to ride a Saturn 5 moon rocket. Other po.ulblllties for Apollo a besides the week-long moonnlght Jnclude a mission in low earth orbit and one reaching out 4,000 miles Into apace Some of the thlnp that were added be said, were goals the space agency ~ not "bullish" enough to include In original plaMing bttause experience on put filghtl showed there were almost alwaJ8 aome planned tests that had to be m.p. ped. Beach District Now Big Enough for Project "Whether people believe it or n~t. It Is a ract that the decision (about Apollo 8) has not been made," Phillips said "We have things yet to examine before .,;e can make that declalon. We're 10Ing to have to wall outselvea unW we Can make it properly." By SANDI MAJOR Of Tll• 0.11, 1'1191 ll•tf Formal work expe.rience programs were organized for students in Hunt· ington Beach area high schools for the first time a year ago, but the idea is not a new one. Robert C. Martin, coordinator of the programs for the Huntington Beach Union High School District, points out that some Southern California schools have had programs whereby some form of part-ti.me employment for students has been arranged through Ifie achool. "Whittier has had something similar for 16 years,'' he said. But, the Huntington Beach district, which is just now building its fifth school, bas been too small for such a program before, he noted. "Huntington Beach has been a relative- ly small district in student population as well as in employment possibiliUes until the past two to four years." ·Two yean ago, district administrators began studying the possibilities of begin· Ding a part-time work program for its students. Mrs. Evelyn Lanne, counselor , at Huntington Beach High, was given a year's leave of absence to study employ- ment procedures in Orange County businesses and industries. Dr. Ethan Fullmer, now superintendent for business services toured other school districts in the state to see how they op er ate d work-while-going-to--schoot cl.SS... "It bad become evident that the <Je.. mand for 1tudent part-time employment on the part of local concerns was In· creasing," Martin e_xplained. "The demand was so great that some persons habitually employed . students without consulting the schools for recom- mendation.s," he added. "Many were . Editor's Note: Formal work exper· ience programs began Last 11ear for siuij,ents in the Huntington Beach Union H1gh School District. Thi.! is the second of three .stories dealing with ihe programs. d.issatis~i~ with student performance. These Cll'~lfl:stances reflected negatively on the d1str1ct schools ~ their cur- riculum." District trustees approved the program submitted by the administrators in the spring of 1967. The $12,500-a-year position of Coordinator of Work Experience Programs was established, and Martin was hired away from the Anaheim School District to fill it. The main purpose behind the program ls to expose students to a "wide variety of experts on the firing lint" and to "bridge the gap between f o r m a 1 classroom training and employment In the adult community," Martin esplained. With this in mind, the program ls divid· eel for now into two categories -General Work Experience and Exploratory Work ~rience. In both, students must be 16 Time Scheduling Meeting Tonight Nieblas School Principal Don Hendrie will speak at a parent • information meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Room 18 of the school, 9300 Gardenia Ave., Foun. lain Valley. Hendricks will discuss plans for a rtar· ranged weekly time schedule proposed to give teachers more time to coordinate lessons. Students would be dismissed at an earlier time one day a week. 'l'he lcheduling change haa been adopted at several other schools in the Fountai.11 Valley School DistrlcL CofC All.ks Due Carrier Dinner Direct.oTs of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce will dine aboard the aircraft carrier USS Kearsar11e on Nov. 13, Manager Dele Dunn said Ma& day. A Uibtt of 50 wiD · be allowed to bOanl the lhlp In Long Beach and directors wisbirig: to attend the dinner meeting lboukl contact the chamber office at -. f4Mll lmm'edialely. aecord1nJl to Dunn. mgers Set Golden West College muJlc teacher Warren Petttkin has 1nnounc«I the names of 14 students selected as M&· drlgal Singers for 196Mf. years of age and have written pennission fl"vm a parent to participate. . The school diatrict lines up employers, gives each student three referrals and asks Chat businessmen interviewing the students submit written comments on them. After employing the atudent.s, buslnessmen also are asked to provide a performance rating for each student. In General Work Experi"ence, students took jobs not nece.ssarily related to what they wanted to·do after graduation. Last year, most worked in food services and sa.lea, but many handled jobs aa mechanJca, bootkeepen,-CW1todlaiia, hospital kitchen aides and office clerks. The Exploratory Work Experience sec. tion was divided into elementary teaching and regular employment possibilities. Students enrolled in thi.! part of the pro- gram worked at jobs related to pro- fessions they hope to follow. · All !Jve elementary school district! in the hlgh school district agreed to use students as clas.v.oom aides for one regular period a day each semester. The students got no money but received classroom credit. In the Regular Exploratory Work Ex· perience program, students worked at sir: different occupations during th e semester, spending about 30 hours at each. Here also, students received credit but received no pay. One thing the declaton must wait on • "Here is a case,'' he aahl, "where we've been able to do not only the full u· tent of a very ambtUous piece of pro. gress, but to do even more because tt hu gone so well. What that does for UI 1a to advmet us even further • • . more 1111 than we had planned at the oubet." Huntington Beaehes~ ' . ' City Boa.sts Three Oceanfront A.tem Maybe the name for the City of Hunt.- tngton Beach should be Huntington Beacher. It hu not just one, but three oceanfront ·areas. Two are state parks and one Is the city beach, made up of municipal and private property. The five miles of state park -Hunt- ington State Beach Park located south of the city beach and Bolsa Chica State Beach to the north -are in operation dally from 10 a.m. to midnlghl T w o lifeguard& are on duty at all Umes, and during peak season&, a staff ol !iO com· mands the beachfront. The city beach, divided into two Ne- tiona by the Huntington Beach pier, maf:n. la1ns a stalf of 11 permanent Jllegumll for Ila stretch of 3.3 mites, some of which Ja owned by the auntlngton Beach Co. A full ~plement of 81 la on duty durfn& the summer. Picnicking is allowed on the beaches but fires are limited to fire rinp .,,.0: vtded on the beache1. Surf flshing is allowed anywhere on tba city 's beaches, but analers over 1e mut have licenaes. The city beach Ii clooed from m1dnl&hl to 5 a.m. YOUR COMMUNITY From its unique cover pl-iolo of tlie only orou nd.the·clock surfing spot in the world- Huntington Beach's night.lighted pier - right on through 40 pages of facts, figures, • phone numbers and photos, here is Your ~ Community ••• Huntington Beach and Fountoin Valley packaged and gift,wrappod in e publication you'll wont to keep handy, 'Gift-Wrapped' By The I DAILY PILOT I I-Clip ;; ,:; ;;;,, -;:, - -- - - - --I I Orongo c-• Dolly Pilot I JH'"" ...... I Hl••'"'let"'""•• ...... c.Rf. ''"' I I ~ ................... ., ... , ......... ., fOUI COMMUNtTT ......... II ......... I ..._ I I ........ -.. _ I I I Fiii 111 "l111k1 ~•l•w wltli y1111r ••• 1111111 •fl' 1llllllr.- • 9f" th1t if ,.,..fl ff wh1111 Y•ll w•llt c1'l" 1111JIH . I I I -I I ..... I I~.~ I New Service ClufJ Members al tbe. linging eosemb\e are Kayla Mullaly. Cbarlea GUbertooo, Jan Pearson, Joe Turpel, Bob Mcintyre, Don Shtelda, Jean Wall<6, Sllerry Llndl<y, Alice J•y, Sue Jones, Ntney Elson, Steve 0.ntld, !\Indy Smith and Tim Weidert. Performances are slated 7 p.m. Oct. rt 1t the First Cl!ri'tian Church, Weatmln- tter; Nov. 4 at the COmmunlty Met.be). dill Church. C.plllrano Beach; and 1t II 1.m. Nov. 7 In the Goldeo West Forum. all year long for reference. YOU con get ex: tra copies, too (25 cents over the i:ounter, I ~.!!t !!!'!' !Ir-I I __ ...,.._,..._..,_~ ... I I .._._ ••• , ....... I Rogert Knox (left), lint preoident ol. Westmin.<ter Kiwanis Club ...,. ce!Vet 121• traditional "bell" from (rig!A) District Lt. Gov. RC.is JohMOD. Wostmimlbr dub -et 110011 Tueodayo at the lfa'Penny lit f 35 c.ents by mail to anywhere In the Unite d Stoles), ------------ ' ' • • ' - -...,._--............. -..... -:: ."': .. ::-:::::::=:::::::::'.:'.::=:::=-==i:-~~:ll::'!!!'!!:'!~~!!l•••••••11•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••111!11111!!!!!1 WldntsdlJ, October ZS, 1961 I ieii-1..;. ..... DUtf' .... .., t )tepublican '~-Cr•ig Biddle, 1;::::' of the state A·sSe(Jlbly's ~ · ' al Procedure Committ~. · cb is holding heartngs on the of chemicel·spray devices, de- ed Monday to try the· effects of ce and was blinded momen· · y,. Asked what he would have e if he was a deqioristrator, he 'd: "I'd sure have dropped ·my .. • This loveL11 la.ss · y rutmble a. yboy bunny t in fact she is Penthouse P'et!' 's 20 · 11;ear • old t.Mnnt: Neves · o's :11isiting New rk with a /el· "pet" on be· ' Jialf of "Pent· Data Found ..... In Skhan ._,Home 0 1\.'d LOS ANGELES (AP) -Defense ef· forts to suppress ~material seii.ed in the ho.me of Sirhan .Bishara Sirhan failed ' 'l'uelday •. But RtWell E. Parsons, attorney for : th_e man aocwred of slaylng Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, told newsmen afterwards that "aometimes ·when· a judge rules against )ou it can be very helpful." 1ie said "OUr attention might now be directed to a more careful search and study why these--things were ·said and dooe, '' ~ding tbat the notebooks and other tnaterials found in Sirhan's room "may indicate something" about the 24 year-<1ld Jordanian to psychiatrists. Superior Court · Judge 'Herbert V. Walker said he wB.s not ruling on the ad· missibility of the evidence, but only on whether it should·be suppressed. He said • ·1>0liee bad "reasonable . authority" to · enter the home wjthout a &earch warrant . }tecause one of Sirban 's brothers gave him ·consent. Among items seized -and marked for identlficalion Tuesday -were notebooks . that included, accOrding to Mayor Sam . Yorty's· conunent shortly alter the assa.srunation, "a direct reference to the necessity to assassinate Sen. Kennedy before June 5, 1968." Chief Deputy Dist. Atty. Lynn D. Compton, who also held a news con· . ference after the bearing, said he and co- . pr~secut.ors would use w h a t e v e r documents seized a1 the Sirhan home they decided a re helpful and relevant. Asked if a memo relating to , the assassina,Uon fell into that category, Compton replied : "TJUl.t would be a significant.piece of evidence." Kennedy was shot fatally just after proclaiming vict.ory in Californa's June t Democratic presidential primary. Sirhan's brother, Adel, 29. confirmed in Tuesday 's hearing police testimony that be had approved the search: "l said hou$~," · Etiglaru!'s ~f71g .~eri~s maO. ~:..§~l was .PM­ tographed tn the out/ft cm a Wit to the Wall Street fi· '."' nancial district. ~;.~ Municipal Slowdown • Worsens ·in :New York Actress Lorette Young and her est.ranged husband, p r o d u c e r Thomas H. A. l.•wis, will divide more than $1 million in assets. NEW YORK (AP) -A.~ers•·strilre The 900 sChools most of them Jocked 'Uwy agreed to the compromise kept the 1.1-million pllpil. tiublic school with only ~todians i~side, 'ate off the seTilement in Los Angeles Monday• system paralyzed, pol toe ,patrohnen con· usual iOUrist paths, most police cars sti ll ap~rently ending a 10-year court tinued a work ' gJowdo.wn 'a:nd firemen fl · I · ~ J c sta.r>ed thett own 'Slowdo •""" b t patrol ~ 1&trf;ets and fire engines con· g mvo vmg 1.:ue · .. P. Corp_., wn """'ay ~ u which produced i03 film'~ fu.r "Tb'e , for· m()llf. visitors ther•·was little visible t.inu.e .to respond ~ emergency calls with " something to the effect, ''It's okay with " ·., . ~ ... '. me... •.. . . ,. . . B1,1t a· younger brother, Munir. 21, denied tWb policemeri•s" tistimony that he also had approvetl. He sa1d police ques- tioned him but that there was no con- v~rsation , abou1 searching lhe family house in Sl1burban Pasadena. , And Mary Sirhan, the mother. testified, "It is mY h_ouse ; I am buying it" -and that she, too, gave no pennission to enter • Re plip1 to ~ri~l~•. ~ 1' ": ... Sta;ff . Presidency 'Nonsense' Ike NEW YORK (AP) -Former Preald<nt Dwight D. Eisenhower writes that lt· ill "nonsense" to believe ,that ~ ran his presidency largely tbrougb 1 t •ff decisions. , Eisenhower, in an article In the November Readers Dlgeat en t 1 t I e d "Some Tbougbta on the· Presidency,'' ·said: ''Naturall7, I consulted wlth my stall an d I valued their opinions. Bu t staff work doesn't :mean that you take a vote of your subordinates and then abide b,Y the majority opinion. 1bls, of course~ JS nonsense." . The former chief e:recutlve worked on the article last summer atWalter Reed Army Medical Center ju.st before' his · seventh heart attack. Eisenhower wrote that despite what some persons said, he kept a tight rein-on Secretary of State Jolin Foster Dull68' conduct of his administratioo'.s foteign policy. "The persistent statement that I turned foreign policy pvei: to Du,Ues ta, to u.se a more civilized 'flimi than tt eteaeryes, in- correct," he said. Although depending greaUy on Dulles' wisdom, Eisenhower added. . "Foat.er made no important move wlthoUt con+ suiting t h e President. I reviewed in ad· vance all his major pronouncements and speeches, and when he was abroad be was constanUy in ' totich . bi cable Juid telephone. · "If we did not see eye to eye -and ~ instance3 were rare -il was, of course, my opinion that .prevailed; this ii the way it bas to be." "As a military leader," Eisenhower continued, he learned that hi!I must be the ultimate decision ... 'Many tJmes dur· ihg my two terms," he said, "my · decisions ran contrary to the majority opinion of my advisors." • The former President, who is silll in Walter }leed, said the heavy burdens of the presidency can be eased by good. ex· ecutive organization in the White House. He USted prime reqllisites of the _presidency as chai:acter, a b i I I t y • rl!sponsibWty and experience. But above ·all , he sat d, every president and "one profound duty to ·tbe nation : to e1ert . moral leadership." · Youth Beats Woman ~Teacher, Ste~ls $5 LOS ANGELES (AP)-A youth beat a yoWlg woman teacher in .her empty , cf~ssroom Tuesda;9 and fled with her purse which contained $5. An hour after the attack and robbery, sllerlff's deputies arrested Elmore Scott Mosley, 19, Los Angeles, two blocks from Washington High School in the Len- nox Dist.rict. Loretta Young ~SMn{~~ -oil t~tn.. · _ev~~i :,!~e'!' 11.Y«k,.,, intensUying sifelU!. wa"Ulng:. . , . sion. Lewis and Mis~ roon• mO. •. ,ilJ1.UDI<!....,:,..., 1'r IJI; ., . ~bps' d.'tookbt ~\lilting Ci~y Halt ·' 'ed . :•'-·.'... .. , :o• ··--.: The firemen cariie\t out their threat to ' · " ' ~~-· · l · n m 1940, have '!'I"" 'IJ!3rl 8l\" .. Join· 1he; police in ~lnli, ., perform ll)Jgh~ see i>~ts :or· "'""""'the, died prox1mate1y 12 years. nolleSiefltial dutjes, beginning officially .children playing io tlie Parks·but nawtiere e at .8:45 a:m.. "N~g can stop the slow :wu thete the ob'7ioUs •pbysicai ..evJdenCe A buSinessman in Macon Ga. down this morning/' a union official said. of wisis such as .. the massive traffic Frank Pa rnell, told poli.'9 .~o~d 'I . · · . ·-tieuPs in' the~ ~~Way,~e·-.t ,· . that someone bad Sl&»tn a. · I .... ~ JI t the school ,,.,...,. h mn ht bag containing $3,SIJI' .fi"l" ..... C!enato~, Ch •.] . u .. ..,,.,,,.••'\fP.l'·, ... ,,._.ug h Abo lo h -~ '.::J ao argeu .!~ a>pB"l\lenC~~;.~.~ of ome. ut UC Ou.rB. fJW . 1 , . '"' : .· llhOJhentu.rft .. jQ studie&4rlcJ~e,s. and !hie! was nabbed. rt ~s ¥ 's iloii.,), J · M . , •, , .. , Police. said the playful ct.liine vilS ·~ ll Mail • · · · ·· · '"°""terchj!fgt!s or ---'fii'l,l!anti· dragging the money bag With tl1e ISU8e 1 • ~tisni tha't are oouiiiare ~ll to money around Pamell's'baCk'(afd. : measure and less certain in .their long • · · · · · '. Claims Vendetta . rum •fled<. lllllEl!lllll!llllllmUlll:mi' •iilli. \ · As the ·strike by the 55l000-member W,\SH.ING'J'.ON (~}-A 1.eader in tlle 'United ·Federation of· Teachtrs' cost A thief found himself :thi tJic., tim of a tirueled world ·i1'. Den- ver, Colo. Monday after M stole a truck loaded wi'h what he thought was the Jirie bour· bon advertised on ;he side. Police later found inthct ' ·the abandoned truck and .it.I CafgO.. -cases of display' botttes fiU~ with colored watel' o,ut tefi. ' ' • ~ l0ft9~, ·Who wanted to tie a soldier so badly that he didn't, mind '!l'l'.Ving is dao's .il! Ille guardhouse at Aldershot, Engla!>d for. the pri~lege.. ~ !n. tJ:oub~ again. Raymond turned himseif J.n when his brother, Vi ncent, went AWOL He took Vincent's ~unisll· ment and then took Vincents pi.ace in the ranks. All went well until Vincent turned up -but now Ray .. mond h,as been cou:r.tmartialed and discharged for taking army pay un~r false pre tens.es. .. • .&!nate. figti,t· afflrist.'f"r~!Udent JohnsOn~s i JWOther d.ay of clasSes -. tbe 1.91.h.of 30 in 'SupremeCourt'-nommatioris'aays·Johnlon '. the 1fi.II terin-the Board Ot'.Education has. laun_ched a v~ndet~a against him · made new moves aimed at. enr1; .... the · becaase Of his ·efforts in blocking Abe ...... 16 f'ortas'· nonUna:Uon .to be chief justice.· : wlilkOut. · · . .,When You ~ck your 11eck· out .and The· board announced Tuesday ·night it ~ btJ<:k UJ!? •iqbnson administration, I guess . would seek an injunction .ag'ainsl ttie ad· 1' )'Ou' have \Cl U])fet this (Sort or thing/' roiriistrator Rhody McCoy. and governing · 861d£en: P:<lrlfflii Tuesday,. · !J9¥a · ;;r the predon\inantl,y Negro and .:Qriffii'I • .Commented • ht· ·a statement ·~··~an Ocean H!ll-Browtjgville eX· released by his office. ·after the. Post Qf-: pe?~ental school dlsb:IC~: hl Brq°>ldyn to fice Departmeat a~ the Michigl\n· prei.re'nt therri fro.in irlUµ'feripg, With the ~publjcan of · miSusing free maiJ. reinstatement 0£ 80 dispUted White privileges~ in his 19'6 Senate campaign teachers. a~ sai(J·i~ould ·~--tt:imbur~ment of At the same time .the central board' &91De $15, 1 , • said Mayor John V.. t.indsay· would tem- Grifiin, W 0' wu on a midwestern porarily clo1e Juil.iOr Wgh School 271 - speekin'g . b-ip, .called the p o s t a J. one. of .. ~-an JIU}!9' eig~t .schoots -if the department's demand ''po Ii tic.a 1 union would calf off its third strike of the. harassment" motivated by the senator's tenn. The' union has charged that successful leadership of the fight to block teachers were harassed at JHS 271. Johnson's nomination of his old friend Union President Albert Shtinker said he Fortas. would present the board statement to the • ~·r•ve advised' my relatives and_ 'my UFT delegate assembly at a meeting to--. staff to dooble check their income ta1 day but declined to comment further. returns and fasten their seat belts," Grif~ Other UFT officials s&id "they doUbted 1Ur Slid. · that the move would end the walkout Mississippi River Flooded 1.'opcdat T emperat u.res Chill In ternational Fal'ls, Mi nn . CaHfonda ~ t..t. wll~ tu•llNI "' toarv wnshl"'! l11tr fn Ille tk'f• b!ll'\k"'ftl ftle Soull>tm C1Hlon"I, coe,t '""" Sin 0 1"90 lo Santi S.IW•• m~r:ll ol tf\11 mon"<lnt. Tiit -mitt faroied d cau•• o! !two l a& A1111eltt lnte.,,.11-1 Almo•t lo• ft>f llKond s1r1191'11 del' c1vrl1111 ~~ e11r11> mon"<iM houn. TM~ WI• 1!11~ 1.tlft•l>I,. l~!~r In .,,. day ,.,., ,,,.. Air Poll"llon Cont1o.i OltMl:t ~ ~ate to t>tavv -In "'°' ~11<1. T_,.lllitPI GX1lll'Ued w1rm .,.,ltl! -.. c11 .. 1c c"'"" ~,.,,...,, • ""'" fl/ 17, .,.. -detree lri:nt Tut14tV. T'-low tonill)l ,~ll .111' /II· TM bMdl .,._, -~ ""°""' fol ht the "'°"'!,_, bi.II "'It Wll DUf'Mll IWll' i,., llll'\lf't1~ In fnt tl~f> -· T ... ttltilhJ -MM ti Wiii'> file Witt!" lenwatu'l II "'· Mountitb certflt'll.Otd -""'" _. morf• ,,_11119 I!!,.,.. lie•• 10 n. *""11 -.. 9ltMY wrrd Wl•m W!fll l!ltfls IR the tol ht I"' 11-f v1lltn ind !ft fhl tOI; 1111 tM lc>Wer ~·-Ti. U.S. W4JlllM' Blll"Hll •tit' iie rain 11 exJl'tdold lfl fh.t ,,... for" h ""' fl11e Hn wlll! ._...,"'"" ....... 1119 t lltllllJt t b<M! non'NI, '"'""''· ~aim Sttrlftn 1nd Cl .. Bend. Am., ......, ,,. ................. ' c ... , •• '°•!tf!I' low C-t Intl Nf'll' "'Of"" 1~9 loo <em•lnlr19 ll•rv lllroue~I l~• a~I'-LlllM w111C11 bec:ornlnf """'""" jw '"'"'°"" lltd11>, I lO 15 m.•A l'o-diYa ~1911, 10 to 71. Yntffa•n '-"'11,.. rt 11t1 f from 1 l!lol! of t7 10 a low d SI. '"I''"' ~ill.Ire ,,.,... wit 1' lo SI, T~ Wiier temJlfl"I~ -tt.• •'ffl. .. , """" Tlleldll' """' "" ,,.,.,.. s-111.... -·.a-wrv -red to tJ, t • • ._...,. ~ llltfl temN<"ll\lm Tlllldff WIOMllOAY eN ,.,,_.._,..,,,,_ todtl' for. 1.-c lew .,. ... ,, S:• •.m. •• Mfldtd J«lltlln! C.llfomll ICIC".lflOM 1-.d hl'I' , . Jl;U •.m. 4..1 l!ldlldld: L-18d! ...,, S.nl• • T"MUaSOl.T Monb '14411 911rtllo'll; f2·fi. Meuftf Pint loW ............. ,. 4:14 •.m.10 wrs-""""' ,..,,.... a.&c. IUllwa'*' fll'Jt,,.... ........ ~ .. -10:0 '""'· '" ftoQ, l'•lrn IPrfl'IM "'*' ~ S..-low .......... • .... l :Clll •.m. t .1 ~ IM p"" ,..,s, . LOI AHCft.ft AHO "1c1Nrr.t-H.rr ..,Ill,,_ TIMI...-., Wllfl ~ ~ Hrtv momtne ~ lot '*" ""' -'· ..... fllf'llll'rt • Miii ft .. -"· '-. •IMI 9:17 1.m. "" 1:n "·'"· .. ..... 11• •Al\. Stoll l llf •. ,. "m e, 1"1111 Litt G, Nl'I' 0Ct. -JI Nw. ' Nool. 11 Mw. 20 . V.S. 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Chlca90 Clnclfllllll Cllwl1nd """"' "" ""-Ot!roil For'! Wartt'I ·~~ Htl!'nl HOO'>Ol11l11 He<11!oi. ~lll61 (ll'Y l ei Yeti ' LM An,e!~ M!1ml Milw1vk" M!n-11 N.w Orlffl'll Nj# York o.111111<:1 °"""' PHO ll;llbl!!I l'tl!tMh'ldll1 ....... , . I'm.bum ""'""' lttold City ·---~ SI. ll!Ulll h Jlnt• "'" I.ti!• Cltv SP! o ... o S111 FrtncllCO &.11111 ........ ...... --T....,,,.11 Wtllll"'l(llll " " 6J "6 .OJ n ~ 61 ..., .1)4 '' 41 ,. " " " n ~ n " ~ -~ n M 92 ~ .01 " M " 51 M " ., n ~ ... " -" " .... n " .. u ,. . ., . ~ " 111 ill ·tl1 ,. 50 .02 " n ~ = " Q n a " .. ., ff n " n " M " M ~ ft .. " . ' ) ~C:lass Freight r . e 7i command module is given a thorough "by NASA technicians in its hangar on ·~USS Essex after· itS 11-day mission in space. Balloons on top of the spac~raft were used to right it duting Ille splashdown in the Atlantia Tuesday: Hints Of Secret Letter ushing , BOST N (U PI) -Cardinal Ri ch'ard ·~shin a longtime friend of the Ken- :tiecfy ily, hinted Tuesday undisc losed detilils-<Jr Jacqueline Kennedy's decision to martY Aristotle Onassis would startle the WCll'ld. \n p.ii emotional speech to the Caril.as (chari(y) Guild, Boston's Roman Catholic archbishop d e n i e d thal the marriage made Mrs. Onassis a "public sinner" in the eyes of the churc h. · ·He:a'ppealed to the world to s~.tj\Bri· ty to1fanl President John F. ~s "i.i..i: ;,· :, : .. Cushing said he had known tof nronths that· ~rs. Kennedy intended t.o . ,tp.rty Onassis.. He said he counseled her· oil. ber wedcilqg ·plans and intimated tb9t1JN ·ei1~ C®ragedtthem , although he sal~.-m~y assooiat.es of the late presid~ ~~: b}s famtty had urged him to stop the wed· ding. • ~ He said Mrs. Kennedy came tA -him secretly, accompanied only by .'a''Se:Cret Service lllan, and talked with ldm for about twci hours.. "l bad i J!~ta.r from her that "would be worth buddrd:l!i of thousands of.dollars if J allowect aUJl cf the national· secular magatin~ talpublish it •.• " He-Jaid, ''I burned Ill> ~· . . "My lips ¥-sealed. I cafuiot tell anything lbelit the private. vety •. private conversaUon t &ad with her. ~ · "I tum on the radio and all I hl:ar are people knocking her head off, ii k were. criticizing her, and they are so lit from the truth that no one woold believe me Jf I ever got oo the radio and revealed whit ) know." Defends Jackie . . ;"I . . • t ' ! ~ The idea, tba:t Mn: ·0nas.tts1 ~'. ~ /i,1-ay that Mrs. Onassis iB a 0 pubUc sfn. pose herself to churCb discipline through · ner" or tbat she bas been "e.1· her marriage arises from the fad that communicated.~' Onassis is divorced and thus not normally "Why .. can't she marry whomever she eligible for remarriage in Roman wants to marry and why should I be con- Catholic eyes. demned and why should she be eo& Cushing said it is "a lot of nonsense" to demned?" he asked. '* * * * * * V aiican 'Can't Believe' ' •• • ... ~-; J .... r." .• ~t.~ Catdi¥-~s Sta~-"11;~~~, ·,~ VA""r1x CITY (UPI) -l~~CJm, ol· . condemned and whY ahoult1 ,ilbe ,_,.._ . r-· 1iellef demned?" ..... ' , ficiats ~ wit!. dis · ~ to 1 CardlnailUcltard James Cushing'1r1tate-· ••t din't underlfand this reritaik,""11.id mentlhli\1be10rtDerJacquetine)Cinhedr one high source ... Surely ~l's could marry "whomever she wants .. " remark mUlt have been rep:)t\ed Ill"" "sgr .. ~austo Vallainc1 tht. offi<lal con<etly. But if he "'!!Q' did·!!)' ~s, '" '#' -UieiiDJi ... :..tement1 • •=, Ad..~ 1 ' Vatican spokesman, ~ the :iw:i .. .auu. .. ""(: Vatkan position that the former "The lady II In anl ~0J1'1!1Unn American first lady is in an 11rrtgular Witb 'tbe eburcb. and" the c:ardlftil ~r· poaJUOn" with lhe Roman ~thollc talnly must heve ad'*'I her or 11111' In Church betause ol. ber marriage lo the ' b1a talk with her." divorced Mtototle Onusls, and la bamd The .......,. a.,...i·'111th ~' !rom chw:ch _,,..,,..ta. . , tlttemenl thal Mra. Onwla 11 nol ·u· "I agree "'Ith the Cardlnal'a -r communicated or a public olmer • that only'Gcd kn°"' who)• a lhlner," he ' ' Last W..t a VaUcan....., law~ said. ·~'Blit.~ cqpttav-the.Jay ,... 9lloled u calllna bor a "publlc jln- 61 lhe ilicutt 1>1:--'n!:\IO!lf.!" . -•d." liilt one sourii1oi!iy said that WBI .Qther hi vati1!E1110W•·wore m<,ite · • ..iy a "~i!al• 11ta1etnea1, e.tpanslVe~-Che Boston card1Ut;1. ~ -''The ~ ~oetn'r-b~ ~ ~ i:emarla:J• .• in 1!<11ton ~'¥ public,liimtr MY DjO?e,.trcept ln-v<rr night -• ' hit ~al ~ flagrinl ..... ;· he !aid. ~'Sueh •'llllf'"' tlon, "VI y c:ail'I .. hwTy '*1)oni...,. doe• 00! ~ ~ for the she wanll to mBr!Y and why &bould I he drama of certain souls." ~ ( • . Arias Pulls •coup~ O~ood President Takes Over Embas4y· WASHINGTON (UPO - The dapper man with ult-and· pepper hair chuckled t o hlmlelf u a 'telegraph printer in the-i'>nalanlan Embuly here clatlerod off a warning. Tbe me11age 1 from Panama. aa1d that Aruulfo Ariu, oosted from the pa.. Um'• prelldtney leu thon two week& ago, wu heading for WaJblniton, and thal IUp- porlen ol the nillng Junta abould make a war of wcrds •iainll him. 'I'bil naturally wu quite amusing to tbe man who read it -this very Arnulfo Ariu, who bad quietly takon over the embassy just a few minutes before. The belated messap. WU Just one 1ogredient in the bizarr< -ol belly laughs and intrigue whipped up by the mercurial Arias TueJday after • 10.hour niibt flight from Panama that would have sent most men stumbling to a hotel rpom. Air Oash Over Suez Reported ' • The &'l·yeat-old Harvard-ol IUlpeJlded diplomatic reJa. trained pbyaiclan -"on the t,ion.s with Panama evtr sinct epur of the moment," be said the coop,'' one inter-American later -teb:ed his: oat.Ion's affairs specialist aald, .. so who cbahctry and •Pool "moit ol knows who bas the ri4Jil to be the d17 there with eeveral sitting where." 1Upporl<n.. One U. S. offlcl1l conlldecl' ~junta d 1p1 o m a ta oo-"We're chuckling up our cupied another building on the aleeves." embassy grounds and 1w.cJ But the takeover of .the UDelllly 1t the intruden. chancery, In the -Arlaa ipellt Tuelday nlgbl In sec:tloo ol W u b In 1 ton a botel IUlt.e but left aidel in overlooldng wooded R o'c t the rambling two-story e~ Creek Part, waa u n 11 t e buoy to thwart 1DJ attempll anything In this capital's by bis opponents to regain tt. memory, and clearly cook! be He pledpd to return, and to · offlclaJly embarrassing. conUnue CU>Sllltations ~ed At one point Tuesday, .Am- at preparing his case for ~ Guillermo Sevllla- preaontaflon to the Orgllliza. Sacua of Nicara.,.., dean of Uon of American St ates the Walhlngton di_plomaUc (OAS). eorps, went to the chancery He olao planned to study and coolemd with Ariu. fO( poalble United NaUcrns action. :.> minutes. He told newsrnen 11>ere was no immediate he did not ask Arias to leave, reaction from the Natioo.al but added : Guard officers now in control "But., of coorse, he may in Panama. leave. It ls possible. Anything American offlc1ala were bat -ls possible. My advice to you fled. "We have been in a It.ate ii to be paUent." W est Ge rman Hunted In Security Scare from l'OOm to room ln sealed Navy's Arnlieiter Dismi$sal Stands · SA!i" FRANCISCO (UPI) -Swolprl llld, "'lbe court Navy'i declaioll lo ........,. Lt. llnda no pnulne i.. ol • Cmclt. Marcu1 A. ~ ellller noncompliance ( b 1 from command ot bit veueI in naVal authorltlet) w Ith Vietnam waa allow~ to ltaM · pertinent regulations, or Tuelday b)' a federal jl.J:fle.. deprival of due procesa ol U.S. DlaL Judge Wllllam T. law." Sweigert di1m_l11ed In a 31-page opinlon, the Arnhelter'a cO'mplalnt agalnat judge sa1d, "The thorou1hness tbe N-w. SQ'ing hla removal and substantial fairness of the Se. :xlU ' t wl:!! an~ • · I n tern • 1 act.. inve,,tigation and review are ministrative ~tter." not on1y evident, but quite im- Arnheittr wu relieved of pressive." cocnnWxLoL.tbe.....-destr~Sweigert___rttused lo order Succ --Vance, MatCh SI, 1911, the Navy to . aga;n review --plaints of Jmgular . "'!bat this court find• to be BIRMING , ' .England pradlcu and allegedl'y Jm. -clearly within HI (UPI) _ properoperatiooa off Vietnam. jlOWtrs." TM ccrnmmde:r, now Gnt larger thon a ah<ri dl!IJI at.Treuul:e bland, died T\Jeod&f ·-the Navy, uklDi fO( a ·Overtime High --•y •'-·-ol l.JHcale court ol inquiry oo ~-··-tJie aw. ... sextuplets alivt.j The NaV}' Mid an "Informal, For Convention Mrs. Norman Thorn! made one-offlcet ihveatigation" after British medical history on her hla remoV'al con c I u de d CHICAGO (AP j -OVertime 30th birthday ~L :z when she Arnheittr Was ~·a poor leader, owed Chicago's police and unreall!ltic tnd insensitive to firemen for work during the gave birth by caesarean see-wha~ wu ll>inl on around Derbocratlc N a t Io n a I Con'.. Ion to four girls and two him." . · vention totalled $2,235,130, billa boys. AmJiejter appealed through submitted to the city copm· The Thorn5 a draftsmen and the Navy chain of command troller's office showed Tues-- his il h.d altoll 10 , unW ti1e Socretary of the day. w. e, w years Navy dented Na request for· a Police officera are due a for children. 'further lnqulry1ut November. total of $1,133,6.11 f<lr' their ex- One girl died within houn His atim'ney, Marvin Lewis, tra hours during the week and of birth. Eleven days later the then went to federal court -firemen will get $401,499. bo I .... I llo · and pledged to carry the ciise Members of the 11,lOO-man Wed~J. October 23, 1961 ~t~~· 0 Interest from the·lst of any montti on funds received.by the -10th. '@ Interest from diite of receipt after the · 10th. ' @) Interest .to date .of withdrawal on ~'.~ funds left 3 months or longer if acCCIJnt .., 1 r1mi!lins open until qua.rter'.s end. ~: 5% per annum'compcundod dailycumnt • ~ate on passbook savings. S 25.. ftLO per annum .. · · "7G minifnurn term occounta • "' . '', in multipltt of $1,0JO, WI{ ~c/d ~·· ji_ut call DI" cOlffe IM. MUTUAL; SAVINGS ANO L.O ,AN· ...... o.r ... TfO .. 2867 E1st ContHlchWIY •.C.lftl Del M1r, O.lff. ftft! TeJt,llOM 175-!IOIO _ _...,...... 311 f , COLOlllMIClll\IO. • ,,~WIEllA, CAllf. tllll TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - EiYJ>Uan and !Maeli plll!1eS cluhed today over Ismallia. a midway point on the Suez Canal, in the first such aerial action reported here 1tnce the Arab-Iaraeli war of June ft.ID, 111•1. BONN, Germany (AP) - Police were hunUng today a West Gennan Defense Ministry official S:' or t e d missing at the of a contalntrs." Y an WQI 0 wmg.an op-to the U.S. Suprmee Court if police force were placed on 1J. 'l·j·;••~tion~~to~r~~mcw~e~ln~tel~tinal~~~~~ry~.~~~~~~~hour~~lhifll~·~and~~fittmen~~~ba~c=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tbe report of Boehm'• obstruclioo. Lynne unc!erWent In dlmnbslni ArnheJ!tr'• ed up police Jn llUCh fundloos disappearance came only a two aimilar operailons. complaint TUesday, Judge as. traffic cmtroL 5 day after the di>clolUre by the Cairo Radio said two of a flight of four Israeli fighten were shot down and a third was hlt. adding: "After this successful dogfight, the Egyp- tian planes returned safely to their bases." T h e Israelb 'denied a n y losses. Air Foret ]eta took off and intercepted two E I y p t l a n MIGs near !Jmallia. .an Israeli army spokesman said, and the Egyptians then turned back. He did not aay whether fire was e:ichanged. but decided the Israeli jets n:turnecl to ~base undamaged. 'lbe air operation wu the firlit reported -1 ol 81\Y llind.. .. the -between EoPt and· Israeli«· cup~ Slnal .flnce the ·U. N. °"'"'~ I tJ~l,• "dOb&t!Jig· IM'Mlddl• Eat - blem In the 33nf aaembly session that opened Sept. ii. Rio P olice / Brace for New Riots RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - Police patroti braced for pos- sible new vlolenCe in Rio to- day as the result of clashes Tuesday in which a student was killed by a bullet In th e head and eight students a n d three policemen were injured. Hospital official!: denied a report of a second fatality. Doctors had told reporters Tuesday night that a 5-month- old baby died from the effecU of tear ga1 lobbed in a fight ouf.!ide a medical school. The dead student was Luis Paulo da CriJz Nunes, 21, shot when plainclothesmen .a n d about 500 students clashed at the Pedro Ernest Hoepi!al of the Guanabara State Univer- sity. 'Ille students, particlpaUng in a "day of protest," had moved into a street and block- ed traffic to empbulze de· mands f o r educational re- forms , demands that have be- come increasingly antigovem- ment in tone. Kids Like to Ask Andy aecw1ty ICll'e folio the deatha ol three IODlor officers and on Economics MJnlstry official. A police 1pokesman named the missing man u Gerhard Boehm, 61, senior clerk in the ministry's administrative and legal ll<!Ctlon. Boelim, aaj~ to be suffering io!!<'deJ'!'e,aJOll, left a suicide note lni •oUice Monday •w@lw:~ vafthhed. Police .aid · his ti"riefcase contalntng peraooal items was found under a Bonn railroad brldg< llhortl)' after bil dilap- pearance. A delenle 1P>kesman aaid Boehm. who was due far retirement. had >no access to aecret defeme pajien "apart from carey1nc doc um en t1 ' ' federal pro11cutor tn KarlJruhe that Rear Adm. Hermann Luedke, .new l y retired NATO officer found dead from a gunshot wound Oct I, may have worked for a foreign intelligence agency. Also announced Tuesday was the lllidde of an Econornl,,. MlnUtry official, Hana--Helnrich Schenk, 40. He was assistant in the foreign trade and development aid department. He h a n g e d himself in hla Cologne home. Informed soorces said Schenk suffered from depression. Depreuion WU abo given as the motive for the suicide Ocl I of Maj. Gen. Hont Wendland, deputy chief of the federal intelli1ence agency. •. Some think the best standard to five by is what "works." But what ···works" today often doesn't "work" tomorrow. Material standards are changeable and fallible. The only standard that doesn't change is the one that can make the most difference in your life. It is God 's spir~uol standard of excellence. In this free,public lecture, Norman B. Holmes, C.S.B., a member of The Christian Science Boarctof Lectureship, cites several specific examples of individuals who have found that adherence to God's standard as PTllS•nted by Jesus has vastly uplifted their lives, brought better employment, improved human relationships ond health ilself. Everyone is welcome. Ch~snan Science lecrure Dl<TI: TIMI: PU.Cl: Mond1y, Oefob•r 2t, I 96t loOO p.m. Etfeneil High School Auditorium ADDWS: 2323 N. Pl1c•nfi1 Av•un•, Cost1 M•s• $-ivM ly: Ff"'t Ch1rch Chrl1t, ScitRfhh, Ce1te Mei• . ' •1 !1N tf. """"'' A::ali!k: ~ .. J ,. ;. .• • . ' ' '" l ... . .. f Mll.YPIUll' -W.....,, -U, ltll • • j • • ! • • '°' •., • I --~ All Penney Stores Open Ev;ry . Night Mondcay· Through S~turclay ~ . . . . ., • ' . ' . i EMD-e>·F~.~P.:N'l'8•! , I AUNAYI FIABT. QUALITY • • 4.88 Tenlflc MVln91 en ' -en'• hanclba'11 newl . ..,..,.. ................ "' . ,,..,._,.. __ .. ,,... -2.88 C..tume jewelry at a r.lluleualy low price! .............. 11 fwMUdi, ""'"' -• C... ht ffrfy for .;c&.t ae'-tttn. 44c W.men'• blouses ancl apert t9p1 reclucecll ..... frNt ...w "11•· .,.,., • 1..-·tiu., ltndte4 11Hnfiti ... 1.99 6. '-, ' ' • • Sc!vel Wonlen'i- wenilnatel Nducecll •WW._,.pol..,..-!UI I , , •M'"Yhte .... )W·k:;ut..,. - . 3 •••. _' . Olrl'1 1pert feJll and w-Nllvcffl - •:W1rtM ........... .... • c... .. 1erw1 ............ . j ' ••• I Tremendout MVi gs on , assorted pl-:9ooclsl • S.W cutll ...,. 'Wt~~, low prlc'.al ~. "!_ v•riety •f f'll~ ~~ CGJ.nl 36cycl. 66cyc1. COSTA MESA (HARBOR .SHOPPING CENTER) HUNTINGTON BEACH (HUNTINGTON CENTER·) 1· . . -.. ·~- . .·. . I ·; ·~·;. ' • ~l .. .. I .i ";' . . ' . ! " " . SPECIAL · _; a·:·u .. ;:· y· .· .. , . " ' ' •. '. ' • • --..:....-------'.. . -.. .. , ... ~.. . ' ~ I I . I I I I I ... ... • · ,-. .. !" ":'-.:-: .... . ·fa'~ • r . .... · -. ~ ... :· .. aor•~ .--.nn ·tr.st~ . · . ~ ._, . 1 "" ... • 'f>· r '" .; easy c.qre ·1~ans · t • • • Stocltup now on ruoged polymer I cotton cativas jeans at our · IQw price. Westem styllne; Pn Prwte for -of care, with · -:-:. perillaneiit c.mer~cre!Ut' t'p !Mp llim neat all clay. luy lft • ecidi cola{: laden, braP and nlQize. Slies1 6-18 rtg., 6-161ff111. • NEWPORT BEACH !FASHION ISLAND) < ~l~~~~~~~"~~~~~-....,-·--~~~.--~~~~=-=.....,o~~l-•-•~~·----=~<·-----·~•><-*-'"~'~'~"+-•4~~~-·~·~-,--. ._.,..,~~-~~ .......... ~~~'.""""-:-:'~~'~""'l'l"I I • Wod.....i.,, Oc•-"· 1961 IUJLY ,ILOT '1 Losi th Els~laere to Nixon. Hutti NEYS GUARA!"UES:ntE PICTURE "TUBE FOR 3. YEARS ON Al!PENNCREST COLOR. tv•s ,....,. ~ .... Mrri!a on Oll'f P.-...,.,1 TV (iMlore ~"' .. partdile lV).,....t on,....,i. or oompotlll~ 11....., ~~ Clj>IWWW•IQ WitlW) 9ll_days_ of,.,.,.i-. We•replace your pi~ Mio ll dofctMnmliin 3 yea;. on color ond on bladt and white TV. We picMde nplacomont fa< 01ff pa•ta defective within 1 year. Labar is .. li'a afior 90 cloys. Contact ·-fa< avthoriied ....,;c. undtr tho 8-;<I'-. . . • HUNTINGTON BEACH 'H·u n·t;i -n11 ton C·e nt er) ; ·--· I f •• .. --.. . , Cast~. :vdt~s I or .. ... ... ' . ; . ,., ; '.' ·~· , / \ ' ,,. . . . . .. .. ~. i' ' . i " -~ . ' :J place you've _got. to ga to· see what's going on-your Ford Dealer! .. NEWP-O:R·T BEACH ) '. -. .; ' (F-ash+on Is I a n.d) -. : .. -. -,. •. • -. . . . . ·~ .,., ~ . ' \ l • . ' ' \ ' ' ' ' • • .I I I i J I I I --· . ' ..... ..... DAllY PILOT Given HOllONl'!I , Degrees Honorary d~ were conferred on Newport Beach residents Ira Frisbee (left), doctor of laws, and Dr. James Mercereau, doctor of. science, at re- cent Pomona College's Founders Day convocation. Frisbee, 1919 graduate, waa Pomona College audi· tor, UCLA professor, and president of Ira N. Fris- bee ·and Co. accoonting !inn before retiring. Dr. Men:ereau, 1953 grad~. t.. professor of physics In residence at UC Irvine and manager of eyro- genic Devi~ Department of lhe Ford Scientific Laboratory. AMA Pres·ident Says: Drastic Changes Due SAN FRANClllCO (AP) - No ieu an authority than Dr. Dwight Locke Wilbur, pru!- dmt ol the American Medi- cal Allociatlon, uya: t b e pndlce ol medicine will change drutlcally over the nert 10 to 15 years. be • pbylidan. lllJ father, Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, sec- retary of the lntmor under President Herbert Hoover, WU prostdent ol the AMA In 1113. BIJ brother Blake la a pbyslclan and ao are two of h1a three llOOI. Despite bla blgb olfice, Wil- -• ~ Since LBJ's Bo11abl1ag Curb .... North Vietnam Life Returns to Normal~ ' . WABlllNGTON (AP) -Life . Ward ol CllildiUono In the In North Vietnam hu picked North comes at the ume Ume up In the lllOlllb! olnce Preli-u ll10ther 'pleee of military dmt Jobnson curbed bombl111 Information wb!ch also could with men truckl and \rains or CCIUld not be related to the roll!ni, bridleo bolni repaired current feeling ol heightened and frightened cltlztns return-expectation that some tnak ing to the clUes. in the war is imminent But many hardshlps remain. TROOP PUU. BACK One of the most pressing ls the manpower shortage. This assessment of the cur~ reot situaUon in the Com· munilt North comes from a variety of lntellltence sources and wu not dlrectly related to 1peculaUon over H a n o i respoos< to the latest U.S. peace move1. Nor could any reading be obtained on just what effect current condiUoos in the Nortb m!ght have on the leaders in Hanoi who art trying to decide whether to meet U.S. COD· diUons kr halUng aD bomblnf of the N~ This is the infonnaUon that U.S. intelligence an a I y st s believe the equivalent of five North Vietnamese A r m y divisions have pulled out of the South -into neighboring Laos Ud _c.mt>odia or Into their own territory -alnc• Bep- tember. The prevalllng opinion ta that these dlvlslona have pull· ed back to roorpnlu, ...r11, resupPty Ud reinlom. But In- telligence sources conctde the movement may be connected with the current lltuaUon. Jobnaon cut back the U.S. a1r ettackl Marth Sl to an chUdrta who had bem taken area iD the panhandle above · to tbe countryside to escape the dtmllltafued zone where the air attac.U. "" beeo ..... -t manpower ollarlaC• wn!oo4 recon!lructlon work on Im-opoculaUon thal the ltu9 portant factUUes 111Cb .. regime may hive to cut <!owl;. bridges, power plants and key its drive qalnlt the Soudr factories. But damage ro-whether 'tt r •I c b • 1 ~ about to percent of the popula-D O U M E R B RI D G E Uon Uva. Plll!8IDENT'S OFFER The President has offered to halt the. bombing enUrely if the Communilta show mat- chlnk rtstralnt and start serious negotiations. At the· latest ·u.s.-North Vietnamese meeUna in Paris Wednesday U.S. AD:J.bauador Averell Har- riman , apoke of potenUal economic progress ooce the flllitll!I. atopo. nu reportedly is the aitua· tton In the bomb-free portion ol North Vietnam -inc1udtng Hanoi, her cspltal, a n d Halpboai, her major port: In the half year since the U.S. bombing curb many resl4enta. who had fled Hanoi have nNmed. They incl!Jde OPERATING mainl extenalve. dlplomatln •...-nt with the The Doumer Bridie, a ma· United state or not. JOI' artery out ol Hanoi to the RATIONING N h South, ta opera"•• no-•"• Around 100,000.l.IS,GllO Oft ... 16 '"~ A ·number of consumer Vie ... ·-·-·-i....u-....11 to and temporuy pontoon w....-.-· ~,.su. bridgework hu been removed . goot!a 11.1ch 11 aoap, meat and readt draft 111 eachJMI', and Tbef'e ii heavy nil traffic matches are euler for people battle deathl tJI. North VII~ · China u--A1 to buy on the mar k e t . namese 1n the Soutb are = ~al!lc tr! n;;:,1~ Ho,..ver, ralloolnl remains In already al>out that hlch In Halpholll and to the South. eUect. including on rice, the 1961. Tbua, furtber ......Wes Moot of North Vietnam'• arms main otapte. Cloe third ol the during the yesr Woold Ip. aid from Ruaala and China la food grain Input bl In Rulsian perently _. the North Vlet.- b ~·" ll wheat, leu . palatable to JW11ese are lollnl ooldi«I II.Id to come Y rail, wuu.:; 0 Southeast Asianl \ban rtce. faster thin p o tent I a I and ~le itmDJ arrive by Evidence of I widespread repllcementl U'e barn. '°:i~t>bool u ctoned ~th1;::::==============================;:='-. ships w~Ung to be unlooded. Damaged port factUUes have been repairfJd and a new .quay built for hight.en. Tbroogbout bomb -ocarred North Vletnlm generally there SHARP If, ••• , •• .ii.,, tr1dtt, ·.,. th• DAILY PILOT'S .hfllfft Diii"!· A-LINE 1l1ulf11cf1d1 S1hlrd•Y'-M1k1 • •ett.r ~Ml, •• wh.tk1t r••'re.livyl119 er Hlllfll· •• 1 . ' . , .. I -., . ' - All Pe.,nney .Stores Open Ev.•~( [(11 l '. I; I "It won't be what people want -« th1nt they want. 11µ1 It will be what they need, the best medical care possible under the clrcum· ltaDcel of thole times," WU. bur aald 1n an eulUlive in- terview dealing with current and future problems of medi· cine. bur now 65, IJ a practicing .------' ' . " In the future, the family doctor will be almost a.s ex· tinct as a dodo. When you're hurt or sick, you'll a:o to the nearest hospital for emer· gency treatment, administer- ed by physicians especially trained ln U-procedures. If DIC9IUJ, you'll be fOo fWnd to & ip'd•Hd, wort .. las 11111 JI I imato alllct but ln I 1lrtt -with other _.,_,. lhlrlnl llldlltlel 11111' couJlt 11111 pmlde llJ!l)y. Yoa. mar not even aee the ......... ,_ laHlll -y..,. cue blllt«y will be Ill· "" by aallllnta -..... -Uy. b)' computon. ~'l)tlnod lldel may do -· ~of the ~ eumlna. tloa. , GROWING· TREND '!l;fOllP practlCI 1J the -Inf trend," llY• Wiibur. un ...... 'the doctor'• time -Ibero .,..,, nMrly lllOUlh ol lllem to .. a.-d -""" It llVet the paUent'1 moDe1·'" · Tiit kindly old gentleman -the bedlld• -.... """'1sfu1 In bi.9 dly, WUbor 11t1, but oocietJ can .. lollpr att..-d blm. Tllo .-dodcr llmoroelll- doal, """" oclentU!c """ lies oubjtcl to emir. u~. bo 11 -:::-... ~ """':,,:: .... ·.-w~...,.. u 11111 ... illllillllnl lo ICClpl ~ .. Ill ..... ol Pl" -r...ioo. . f "11'1 I*! of I normal trtpd In locl"1,11 bl ll)'I, •1n~e1111101-.,... Ylco, II Ila coocem far Ibo vldua1. We lrl DO loaproorveduwelluwe -to bo In lknl """ .... -. ' Tbe rtllltloolblp --pqlo """ -.... ~--­-II ·-.tin(, I. d U..llnodlonceclhl ·re-..,..,, "' Ibo -prooldenl ol Ibo. AJlA 'tllllur -the pd 1dallll »OUcJ ol 111,000 ill ... -·· .... !lb111· -. Bo -bani ud -to • pb)'licf"15 -he came to tbe interview from a round of hoopltal calls. And when be leaves h1I AMA post nert June he'll happily resume bi! apeclalty as an internist. "I'll be glad to be bact,t• he says. "I'd rather do that I than anything." Wilbur believes the revo- lution in medical treatment will come as an answer to today's Problems. FOUR BARRIERS "Far too many people are felling to receive the benefits ol a pbylictan." be uya. '"l'bse are at 1eul four blr- rlon wl>!ob IDlllt be-. '10ni ii ignorance ot the beoellta whlcb we find In DllJl1 lluml IUlll rural ,nu. Some limply do not - 1'1111--·-do far llllln Ud they .... to llll·medlcallon or to _qlllCb. . "Two dolely linked barri- ers are flnancfal and 1eo- 1V1Pblcal Ev'° where the modlcal servtCI la !roe, It may COit a lict peraon all ol a W<rltlnf d"1 tO 10 to and from a distant medical center. barTier. Mlncrity ll'OUPI art 0 Then there's the ltatul bittier. Mioority lf'OUPI art not comfortable ln the -ence of docton. 11>ey find It difficult to communicate with educal<d perlOMel. WILL TAKE TIME 11It will take time -to over· come thele barriers, but lt e111 lie dbno throuCh educa- tkln, pv.nmmt ·•ctaact Ud lllPnllltJ." Wbll will "" doctor hlm-1111 lie l!b In the !utun! HooollillY. ...,. Wilbur. ho wt1l llnl o1 ID bo a pod doctor. 1111 lmqt lilly -lie-of Ud1-ola enor, ·but bl wU1 lllll1 haft -lltrlbulu: "A aood doctor m\llt hive I IOUDd medlcal tralnlog and bo IDllll !mow bow to apply whltbol!nonln1...,1Ut will meet the -ol the paUmt," 11111W!lbor. 0 He mun be able, botb wllb _.,.,. ... 'llttll fn, tultlaa, to .......,. wil1 ,.. eametoblm-wbetbor,.. .,. m or thllllc JIN an w, -JllUWlftllobollln Oft wllh )'OU .... IOIDIWben tlae. I Stt by Today's Want Ads: • -lm't v-..... >"" C.O JM OD the Gcwd 0.. Mllf>W_ .... _ ..... L eU.-Atto ... Aad bet:'• ........,. io ... tbe-----•ir.. ....... .. -·· .., tlllo .... ... lllo *"' --· e0onY......U..,-•·· "-----"' the an1wtr to ~ -• a.ckoo! ! ()dcoo? ! Now II die time for dlat tJmtly btG' -YoW' own prtvate qmck! l Infants ~lothing and diapers, value pric:ecl _.. _, ....... 2.66 ..... 3t..$,I a-pnloldld ........ -..... -dlapanl ........ <-bit ..,.. wo•pooof pcl'llr. ilw '1"21 C.111*1 tol!Oft tralrirla ....... oizot 1.:ll ,..._.,,.,.,, ~n. '/"31 Girl's collon briefs in ~hit• and ._pastels I 4 ferl.22 - ,_1 1\111 cut to •-opoclflcallw 100%-IMI cetton'IMnl !og lor!ah, cbAile ......... n1ad:li• .... lo ot. rool llock44' price. Gitt'• ...... 6'14.., ... 1 COSTA MESA (Horbor Shopping Center) , Wo'1'.n's_ high fa.s~ion hose cit budget · price1I r Searnl ... hose 3 •• ,'I .. ' -. HUNTINGTON BEACH ' NEWPQRT B~ACH (Huntington Center) ' (Fashion Island) ,. '. 1· . ' •• • •• • • • ~ ' • For Bone1naoon Cruise? On Board Onassis' Lavish Christipa MIAMI CAP) -Christina, • Arlltotle Ooaull' yacht oo wblcb he and Jacquelloe Ken- , nod)' Oawll may~. 111 outllltod .with lavllh op- , pOlo-llld prlctleu art. , 0 A lwiiHnllne amphl)>lous alrplaoe and • ..,...,, launch .... bpi .. lhe -"' the : llllp wfildi .. uo 1arU Ion(. '1l>e -l,loallng ',pllnround cl I he ID- -llooll jet ... Is -· 'at lhl llOCClrld level with Its I main Alon, 21«11 dining · 'w and kit.chen. I ~ In recent Jell'I. Onuail bas • ; l!llllld lite OJrlatina into • f ftrlda poltl HV•al tlma. ' lladol 1111 Jul lrtp, Qmlu . Bosco, a bullet, wu pennjtted shelves llnin& three walls In to give rtporters ol the Miami the Ubrary1 Herald and Mlaml New1 a In the bar, suesta can lit on lour cl thi ohlp. whale 1kln bar lllqoiJ and Tilt pi13'room !'P<nl lllllo the fantail wbert there W 1 •wim- mlng pool the bottom "' wblcb can be raised to make a dance floor, In the main Alon alts a jade watch 1 parade pt magneU:: Buddha, one cl lhr<e that .,. mlnlaiur. ohlpo, from )llioeno-The. yacht, urned lifter lat. Queen Ellutbeth and the don 1o Milslss!ppl llelnl· Onuals' daagbter Clw!Jt!nl,.IJ A&• Khen own lhe other two. bolls, glide l1tund th e already equipped I°" lite Ken- nie Onwls atateroom iB cil<ular bar under alaaa. nedy chlldron, ~ and dominated by a knr-alung There are w ha I e. t e e t b John. Be t wee o, peat l:inc-llzed bod wllh Gr<ek handles !11< Upplen lo lflp stateroom& and the l>"r iJ 1 icom on each aide and a gilt-during rough weather. children'• playroom with hall· framed mirror on the wall Nest door, in the rumpus size tables and chaino original above. The bathroom is all storybook mtD'als . 1 and a marble wJtb gold fauett:J in =:e,. 'i:;ia!, ~i separate d1nln& areJ,. Uh and Her sinks. Greco, more boob, opera There are a donn auen The tub ii alao marble with scorea and 1 portrait of rooina . brl&ltt b I u • , fish.patterned Onuals' mother wbo died T.U. wicm 1nd d .. p JDOllic interior. when he wu a child. cuabkm are the: decor on Tbe lludy hu 1 high it<am-Ju in the main lllloo th. · deck. ed ctlling and a wood burning playroom decor blends Euro-One stateroom 11 Converted LOCAL . lireplaee, U. lhlt"""" Int ID pell and Oriental anUqueo. In lo. hoopilal complete with In Pia--· Ba-•-in A-tion N• .....,. .,.,.,.,., '•"• ,.. El Greco aDd a aolld gold &e:1· both area1, tbe furniture b ar· operating table equlpPed for •~o "'~ · ~ DAILY PILOT • --. Wftry tlay, •il•ut wlMt'• tant, a·glft.from Arabia's King ranged for euy coavenatJon. major surgery. An F lllA lngwl j fi hter bombe ..... •11 111 th. ,,. .. .,. Saud. Marble coffee tables, inlaid in The lb.ip takes a crew of 45 • sw 1'1 et g . r taxis down grounding the aircraft and aaid the cootroversial ~,!Oto. , C.1tt fM• tli• DIJLY Leather and wood ltt~ Flon:nt.Jne tradition, map out and a buqet of." about '5 a runway in Thailand 1n preperation for takeoff. ·planes have resumed. fligtlts. No com.bat missiona nu;>r, k boob --~ --~--J ~-.w... mill U.S. o!ficers anoounced cancellation of the order have been flown. The commander of the F-111 de---a-=======::!:...=ee:!:p:_::=:....!!~~=1~1111~=.~·u~-~pull~~~~-::.!-!::::__~~llll~l!.1'11"~~to~\!Pll'~•~IL::_ _ _::::_==.:..:==='...:::=::=~_::_:::::::_, tachment here said lllat only ~ missions will be flown until problems in the plane can be worked out. f{l)jlit?Monday 'Through Saturday r'.:,;f . .. . .. I . . ' ' • ~; • • Special buy for men! T •s·hirts and briefs I for COSTA MESA (Herl>or . ShGppio'fJ Center) $ HUNTINGTON BEA<?H (Huntington C.ntor) ' 'I I \. f "' Save on sheet blankets and acrylic blankets! -llanllet .1.99 3.99 / Natwol wibl1achld 100°/ft cotton ihett blonkets, 80a108, ond toll, fluffy, llghtwoight bvt warm acrylic blortbtt, 72 X 90, It fuft and twfn, in mass, gold, pink and peacock. ..,,,_! Boy's turt eneck polo and craw sock savings! 1.99 3,.,88c Aatlon tltnlonocl< polo . shim aOcl ooff oboo<btnt 100% cottcn crow-it. In""'"" ooly, ~-6-lOY,, ,_up far a-wihit. -•• ...., • dry """' in bluo, llo(d, rod, ""°'' _,, .. 646. ·NEWPORT BEACH JFeshion lslend} Greek Girl Gets 275 ·inmates as 'Parents' TUCKER PRISON FARM, Ark. (AP) -Nlne-year~ld Georgia PavUdald m a y already have a Christmas present. That is, il a lliO check from her "Coste~ parents," the in- matel of Tucker Prison Farm, bu cleared the red tape and reacher her at her home on the Island ol Crete. The Inmates adopted lhe c ... t girl about 10 months qo under the Foster Puents Plan and raised about •1eo in- itially !11< her IUpporl. They decided aeveral weeb 110 to aend lhe Chrlltmti.. present. Georgia's father wu killed In an automobile accldent about a year ago and ahe lives with her mother and two brotbm, ooe 15 and the other II. . Tucker Supt. Don Bassett laid Ute mother earns 84 cents a day u a rann hand. Georgia rece.lvea a~ '8 a mODth of SHARP If Y••'rt • ah•rp tr•d1r, u1• th• DAILY 'll0t5 f•tnou1 Dl111•·A-Ll11• cJ111in•4 .. J, fit. 11hl1p. M•k• • Nffw '''' , • , wh.th1r you't• t1uyrn9 or ••lfl,g. the bunates' $180 from the Foster Parent Plan. "This is strictly a project of the inmates," Bassett sakl. "The prison staff h a d nothing to do with it. But naturally we Ulink it's fine." LEADER IN DRIVE &uett aald one of the leaden in the drive to raise the money was James Dean Walker, terVtng a life aentence for the staying ol a North Lil· lie Rock policeman. About 'IS percent ol lhe 157 lo 300 in- mates contributed, Baaett said. ' The inmates have a com- plete hlslory of their "adopted daughter" and a picture of Georgia is posted on the prison bulleUn board. They have written to her and she writes back, Bawtt aald. Georgia bu wrllt.n that ohe would like to tee the inmates. She tlwtlt.t them and tells about heraell. 'l1le inmates have told her they w:ork on a farm and '=".': pJ~;:i ~ cott.on. 'l11e 1etterr are •fined "Tucker Inmates." 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS $1.00 ............ Moy be used on envelopes os return address labels. Also very handy os identification labels for morking personal items such os books, records, photos, etc. Labels slitk on gloss ond moy be used for marking home conned food items. All labe ls ore printed with stylish Vogue type on fine qu ality white gummed peper end pocked in reuseble mag ic 1101 top conteiner. Mr.. ChristM .... wn tff Poat R041d C..t1 Meu, C.lif. 9262t r----- -... - ----- --1 I flll 111 th!• .... , ... ,'"' ind mill with tt.oo t1 : "let Prl11tl111, UNI Div., l o• 1171, I I New,.tt l•••h1 Ctllf. f2t6J I I ' 1 I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••.•••••. 1 I ....................................................... I I I I ······ · ··· ·· ·· ·· ···· · ·· ··· · · · ·· ·· ······················· I I 11 11r• t1 ••• yo1t lip C.Jt J I I PILOT PR INTING L-------------_J ' FREE BONUS WITH EACH ORDER OF LAHLS WE WILL INCLUDE NII SIT OF ,ACKAGE MAILINQ LAIELS, - ....... , ......... ... • I I I I t l I 10 DAILY rllOT Wtdilt$day, Octobtr 23, 1968 QUEENIE ' Cleaver Issue 120 Arrested At UC Sit-in BERKELEY (UPI) University o( California police arrested the last of 120 demonstrators early today. ending a peace.Cu! sit-in at the campus administraUon building. Among thOSt arrested was one member of the Berkeley faculty , physics p r o f e 1 so r Charles L. Schwartz. A great majority of. the rest were students, including about 40 Tax Guilt Plea Given By Priest LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Roman Catholic priest pleaded guilty Tuesday of two counts of failure to file income tax returns but he did not admit to the $112,127 .37 total income sj>ec:IOed in the charges. Thi! Rev. Robert Daniel Nikliborc, 37, faces i max- imum penalty of one year In prison, a $10,000 fine or both on each count. Sentencing w.u set for Nov. 18. Nikliborc is president and chief fund-raiser for Boys Town of lhe Desert, an orphanage n e a r Banning. Persons who lived near hi1 $75,oob home in Palm Springs, however, knew him a 1 bu!inessman Robert Drew Rand, head of Robert Rand Enterprises. U. s: Dial. Judge William P. Gray Mondy: took under su~ mJWoa a defenae attempt to yleacf guilty to two of. the three misdemeanor counts without admitting to the amount of money specified in ·1 h e charges. Hunt Pushed For 2 Jail Escapees VISALIA (AP) A manhunt continued today for l'i\'O life term convicts who escaped from the Tulare County jail. Thelr attorney was present as Lewis Donald Frit.i, 36, and George Harp, 34, brandished a realistic looking plstol later found lo be fashioned from soap and a razor handle. Shcrlffs deputies converged on an area two miles west of th e jail after footprlnts were found in a field near U. S. 99. 'The men we.re barefoot when they fled from jail Monday night. Bloodhounds and airplanes rejoined. the search at dawn. Deputies said the convicts pulled the soap pistol while conferrlng with their court-ap- pointed attorney, Phillip Bian- co, in a jail conference room. They forced him to call jailers. Three men arrived. in- cluding duty Sgt. M o n t e Carpenter, and were disarmed and locked in the conference room. Officers said the escape was the tecond by Fritz and Harp. Earlier, they had overpowered a marshal near Merced.. They drove the car to Loe: Angeles, """' they ...... am!Sled several dlfs later. Man Held In Blast Now! One 8x10 and Six Wallet-size Portraits of Your Child . 4aa ALL FOR ONLY ... Hurry Ht now for the mo11 spectacular portrcUt .vent in townl You'll tet an 8xl0 for you to •Mp, and six waltef".sfzt to short with family ond friondL A kwoly portrait of your chAd Ka wal'll'I and wanted gift for famdy birthdays.. ..,_mb.r ••• )'OU can dtar;t ii ot .Penney's I ~Uu.t•TOM ON/tflhlfr Ctrl.., JN,...,., m-oa "UHTIHOTOM •U.(M "un!ln1!1111 C-r '"" 11oor, 1n.n11 fllWl"O•T llACM F1t111on l•lllMI Jr>d "°''' W ·r.111 I\, ~·. By Phll lnterlancli Rafferty .~grap~y Attacked Most Callfornl•ns· .. Youthful Dissent Disliked LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three out of every four Calilornia voters 1UtYeyed generaUy disappro\le QI ,Youthful d.lasent and ·demonstrations, the State Poll reports in . a copYrlght story published in to:day'1 L o s Angeles_ Times. The 1,007 interviews Oct. 12 and 13 showed that '1S percent ol lhlJse q)lellloned dlaap- proved; 11 pqcent IJ>lX'OVed and six pen:ent s a l d they didn't~w. -~ . . . When: ukl!d what ~ to mind 11hen U>iU1nc o I d ....... allon.s, Zf per<ent volced disapproval, lJ percent ~Ipressed apoval and lZ percent offued soJuUons to and causes of demonllraUons. Another .JO percent describ-· ed demon.!trationt and dissent u belng radically oriented, 10 per~t said demoiistrations and dissent were youth, blppe or student oriented and niM p e r c e n t literaµJ described d e mon.straton, d'emonstra- (l"•lf "'91Ullctl . .Ad'vW!ilef'Mnl} tioos or both. Seven percent ca 11 e d demonstrators f ' t 0 0 k I , ' ' "nuts" and "lnstigaton" and the remaining eight percent of. fared mlscellaneous responses. The poll1ter1 said Reputill,c~ , were m o r • critical of dissent a n ~ dissenters than wer• Democrat.I. The poll a1'o showed that minodty group meJllbers iwere generally leu criilc.i than •all per I On I queried and that men wert lea crlUCal than women. ...... .,.... ........ All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monda.y Through Saturday _I [P(§Gf]Gf)@Y/ @)filY/0 Al.I . boys and girls' i~ckets now Gif• °"""" ~ ,... Gf._... .... lr...., ;.lrllf witll ~ ....... Clltleoo _.., jodc111 1'1- s;..;.o. "" -.... 1--4 I .... Sli•• 1-'4. 1:-7·16. 5-...... tt.cMy _, ....... • ..... 5 NOWl2.80 NOW •12 l ~ - COSTA MESA h( ...... ....,,.arh lo ._.... '" ...,. .... "'--" ...... _,..... ~~l4. ......... NOW7el8 San on boy's lined nylon ono.-d iacketl . ..,.. .............. ;.i... ... ...,.. .. ........ d'lll.., ...... pW ..... .,. -~ ...... ~,,.,,---.,... 11-3-7 Reg. 6.98 5.58 NOW _ l:g':"a.98 ·. : 91 •. . NOWle · Save on girl's lined cotton blend jacket! Girra ,..,. ,,_. CGttorVpoJ,._1.-poplWi jocht.-.. with"°',......· it'• lllOdW -'mble tnl...,.... .. -.... blot ... goW, cta.ic-sty!Nw. 20% off OJI.~ ~ ~~ ~N'ili ARE ACCOUNT • TDDAY1 ~ """ ,._,. ,.,.. Oirt't r--.JW. Jlriwt ..,... _... ;r.cMI ... lor'• ,_ ,..,. * -1-i-w.~· ...................... .,.. ............ __ ,ot/ftoft,..... ,.na. ,... ................. . _ . ...,.._ wi• ,.,..., .. fiWfill. ~~wm.:,.-c.1w.,..,e1111M1-,n-·---Wri.. ... .-.s;.. .. u. MtWri "J.i. SI-. .. 1 ... .1 ... 1Lta . ...... . a.,.10.,. .... 10.91 NOW9.S8 -6AO, NOW8.78 NOW8.J8 ·-7-16 ..,.. ''"'' Sk .. ~, ...... _ .. ..., tt.n Nt:NI 1~ .... '-"HaW7n HU.NTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH (Huntington C•nttr) (Fuhion lol•nd) ii J • ' i 1 ' • " ' ' " r -·-~,.,....,,__-~~~-~---~---=------------------------- Jltit ..... J1111 StUl~lfOll:fes~ • • TM · Co1ta MBIG ··Republicans · Appear H~ade'.d .·for.· .Gain·s ' . llT llAYllOND LAlllt mY· -Dmlcrallo .... ~ Pl!> lour to ....., u.at ' .. ;,.. :llli ~. ..,i....'.;...~ In the • ~-lliud d -Go\'. · MlaNdToll I· trot. ~II U.. ~ N<I< ~ .t\'*""'" ~fn'a'Alo'•"lll diltrlcl, :=, ColllM fir 1111 --cl GOLF iND ~-;..:ovrn cndld:i>,,;. U:~-==~ ~~-"••Id ltfo1 No::r ~.fri .. ~·~~ .. ~":.~ ...,_Glor~- ..,... ·!loodod for llllil IJollli 11 ~ ·Ill -GUlclU.8.lwtaraces ~Gov. WllllaDI L. V~-w1rt lc->ln111tlOl!tQp'.-..,lle.A. --~-In d!t NOY.' -olalll, wttlt In -wUb wwbtrt Ww-. an Guy II tryllll . for: &D WI-~ 'lii.J:~.. a: Mitt If~'\!!+~ C.C~ .. .. ~lout 1Udiard If. Nia-Allessmonll "' tllo 'lUl!oo~ .... i..ak ~ • pin "' lour ~ foJfili lll'm . 'lit . u MeoUOll Uainil . . . .., Win the ~ IA 1be 10 .Utot bf UPI ,.. ~ oeata and w.wd pick · gllnlt t lllfolll bit by lloberl .well.. rln ~-· ...,_ G<#,-...., 111 . . 1'tdlt tio-s of ¢iiosreU 1>1uuua lndlcale the ·GOP up uvlli to 17 .11111 in the P. llcC1t11ey, a Blsmarcl: · 11'W;<1 t• o'n f OldllVllll;and 8111; IOlfPh'I: . ' Hw Of ·'Jlie .. Hiit "'9111111 o,._ .lllci. ni. Mnrf1 Lntoril -Teur111ment Of Shin · Hoott cl ~Uvu. 1>111neam•n 1 llump!U9 . ...,. JD. Illa 11qmo ;Clark II pllreol ·lclJnlt llep. · JITILt Alll:&1I ONLY IVSN lllLT etall,.tao11-pQ:tJ-Wi11Mn a •lUcllu\I S. lch-U Poblllbed polhl and uPI Ill ArHlltU, ~Wlllilirop cblnCO:tq-i&J4 ..... Un,JUn.o ~-- . . Ind! ~ •~ ~n llockef"''er 11 u no -.,, ··" • • ' . . ll N!iOn 1'IU IOath;~ -cAw "~'"' •• Is -, -·"-"",: .:.,,_-..; , ' tit A•"* ... ~fllrmer In ftoftl ol Vklt Prulclent moro lhin In • bat to win """"'~ ~A,>,u...., llepubUO&il Gov. -Gub- !Dllltrt IL Hwnpllrey, the roeltotlonOTtrD'emoerat JhSellale.?ocoi,t.rmirSon. llNd ll •uptCllcf IO dtleal Democrat I c presldeoUal Marton Ii. crm. ' Barry M. G,oldwater, 111M Democrallc 1e11. a.orp s. nominee, and George C. Montana also il1 a possible Republlcaf()t•1ldentl a1 McGonm. • • • r CorQia/ly Invites You ' S.ears .-· -· . · SA VE SJO ·te'.:.J50! l ~~;.~ l.learlng ~ds' •t \,, • \' I Wallact, candidate of the troub1e spot for t1't •GOP. One nominee,. IS Jilavl1y favored to _ T•••- Aq:terlcan Independent WiY· recent poll &bowed Democratic win the seat of rellrin& v.1.~no ftft\1111.t." ,. J. pictup . oi .,1.fi.ve Atty. Gen. Forett Anderson DemocraUc .Sen. Carl S.yden tn other Republican taraet gov~ woWd.i..1itf the with a 15:-point lead over Gov. in Arif.ona, :Rep. E4Ward J. 1tates1 Democratic candidates , Q()p to i.!lcitlllu'-lo!P of •1, Tin:.~~· "If ls aeeklng Gurney, (R·Fla.), Ii con-for seals now held by I "!'< m"'"'lbail·ll ~d ~Ille ne~. Democrats are given an tdge • • INS el~on In 'Wllleh!~t Republicans Mlll1d enjoy These Include Alaska, Con- To Inspect Its Club HoUJe and Golf Shop · ' · ' . FRI., .OCT. 25 Thru. SUN., OCT. 27. , 1>:-Eisenhowerwu-')>y control ol more•·iltalehou!es B'ask'etl.:'~11 . nectl<\JI, Idaho, 1,ndlana, a l•DdtUde maJO.riW.: !:. ;;1;, but what they waattmo1t after' 1'1111 Maryland, Mi8Dl.1l'I. Nevada. , TbeJ1M>ObllcaJitii6i<"\ii!1d,S lht pr'81dtac1 '*1•iaa!nl ol . Olilo, Orep lllld S~ulh s-lbiJ>I; a ~~ill Coqreas -al -ot Ibo , If:' • m·-Corolllla. . a relllll ol .. ~ --' ' . .I' eVel'> a.e . . . Th• !ncumbenls • m 0 n g _.back !ram ~'ii!iilifir '11loy have -bid ll10te those are fj<ns. Abraham A. low of If -1111 1*'iltc-thtn a lofnl hope ol f11anlzlllg BukelbaD ...,.. Is juat J!lb\Cefl, Corm:: Frank *"5-·!".tr! the Senate, w1me the aroundthlcomer'andl'omt ~ .• l.d~:~Btrch"!ayb, • ;i: wenty"""I 1overii"1filps Demoeratlc DW1ln II now 113 taJn Valley riiundballers art Incl:,. Danlll B-Bmnter, wBl ~ f1ll.i .thll-Y?f,t.'ll!e I<> 37. Tho GOP 1lMds a net aJrudy organizing tellll! for Md -1 Alan Btble, Nev.1 W1111e Delnfcrall nOw bolit-' IS ··~ pin of 11 -·tlDd the tie-the City Basketball league. L. M-, On.1lllldllrMll1. • thuei and-Ibo llepubllcallt lnUlnl wit ol' > the Vice als Ill Holling•, S.C, • eight. Onl,y two. of theae ar. In ]INlldtnl I<> late """" control. Olflcl w . meet at 1 p.m, The GOP <Ollld 1.,. two · populMul, plvQ_f.al states ...., OnlJ M aeat.s art tQ be filled ~tter2!v:tbu~~ll =~~= Senate 111ts 1t now bolds. , IllinO)s and Tlas. RepubllCon 11111 year, Z3 "'"'I hold by leanuo lhould 'contacl the city Domocral 'Hu&baf ·II favored ' • · 'lllcblrd B. Ol!IMa II favond Democrats and ~I b Y rocrutton department, ~ 111 lnwt and In Clilllfornta; Mu ~ .... ~'!:. · 14-1 GOY, S&mael Shaniro llqubllcans. 2424, prior u. 11111 date, eald' Rafftrl)', 'llllc> dtleated Sen. MESA ~ERO& COUNTRY. CLUI ..... . . In DUnnll. -u. a... lU AT ITAKE . Stan Stalford, dlNdor ol Th<au H. •J:MMI In Ibo 11...,,ow. $JOO WID $300 ~!· 5400 1·• •'-• .• 1 . , · ~imlth 11 --~ ·--' •· d-U ~prlmarr,latllonn-THUL. -'1>-t--,_..,; . ·1··· o· ,• .. • .. lo-~ Ibo -.~ ButaJi4.1SR&llareatllake par-an •-••a an. dordosapljulAllnl:ramlon, ruu. NL . ' SUN., . -_, .• . · "* J:JelDacDtl,: In Ibo ~ • .!!" potty, hostafford tald ~.league 1.,_ lll&la-ller. ' ' . • . • ,. ' ·: ....o!Mi' · • eJeciJnc Ibo ,._,, UlllalJ!' pea lo operate • .. ~ leanuo'l-::::::::;;:=:=:====,11 ' . . ... . . • . ·, \,·,· (( ,,,;, "' • " "'. . ::I;:!' ' .. elects • majOruY! 1" Ibo 1111 with preference given l<>lr ' 'OCA'' ·1101 Golf Course ·Dr., 'osf1 u .... J'ill"e4ialyla9il ... .,,. .• _tiia~"' '.-""'IN IOWA ' .• off.year eliclloolir; 'ilie GOP oqu.dl composed of Fountain • ., ~ ~ !WM -1d, ~ ...._ eoillllol. >fo ·J 0 '*"--, ijli GOP II ex-gained 47 Mtti, 11 llllhrl of the Valley residents and leanuo N; ~ ... ,..,.,.. hllo Y" ....,. ......,. .. eori!a poclld to Win the 1owa 211 needed< 1 .. e:..\iol They w11o played 1as1 year. m•"· ... ,. ,.,, '""' wi.•r· Telephone llo. 540_ ·7200 · · =:i: beld by: have since gained One more in H• added because the league 9oi111 • 111 Ifie ,,.. ... , E. u,, .. ,._ _,.,,,.,,, •'ectlpl(tn,fiH T &: C" elusifie O..t11f• C.1d tit• tl1 O>JLY ..._.6 .Tr' l'M m . . ,, .. oa. ._ ..._.., a.,__.., rrr• a-.• ~ra~ted;:"!~~t.a~m;•~-""'~·-:ed3::'~''~;;,· :~:-~==d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -!0£•f wbi '" ......., tar lht U.S. at vacancy. "A" and "B' are~;,..... Jl99 TnJ.&ir J'J1 ~ ¥Pi• J\ff -Ind II favortd lo win !(Oii of the otate-by..tata · · JIO _,. -X ... ·-.-;·r !J>t.-ef retiring llepubllcan reports In the UPI survey in- ....,...• ""'" • · Ion. llourke B. llicklnlooper. dlctted little chanQ In Ille • ...... ...,. ... , l'llla · Republicans al 1 o are lineup of House ~ .. ga~. w.rtac A* .\niltlllt 1Ulllt Nnllla ... , favored I<> dioplacc DlmocrafJ! Those reports ontti!lpatid • ..,.. .... •••••• 1n Vermont. where Gov. Phllip gain of ooe or two House seats HAIG NATIONAL OPEN ~ '." ~ ·~ . .. '-''I, ;;;...-"'-.... ' , ~" " ~ ... ri·:t:_'.t, •. , :- . I. ' •' ·~1 . • .i . - ' .. I . ! ' - \ \ HAPPY . HOUR .. 5•t:li,. DAILY TICKET SALES ' ' ~ .... ·-~ ' ..... • J -~· ·-t"I ..... ..--~ , . ~ .• -... ii::;• --~¢lldl~~andC:. ::1'~.:~:i'°1~.~u"I~ ft DNia:a,Dii&W,1ifti,MiJtMM;1'1iittfthMl1J ~-.... • -.,.,.. ' llllell C. lmlth.lt~ ......._ · 1 · · ~r·-" · « tw 11!!"' ' .. ...... • , ... "'"'-"= ,._ .. :· ......... ~ ~-.. ,_,.; ' :. . ' ; • . • --. ............ , -r, . ~c· v•.i. mofed ""'"w al . ·:m.1r1 nnnta•J ' r··· I ;~ ··•·r-·n~ . :::~:.onbip~~i! ... w~ =-the .In~-e . ~~--' THRU$ATURDAYONLY/ '"'"" ..... -l'O g....... ·~~ .::::.':'. .::.: .... ~&ALITV u· . E '-. ' · · • '· · \JQil. .-:J The' Indiana l•j,,~11, ~ " • ' . . l • tr · · i -;Goy· ' Bi¥~., 1110 ~~to . ,.SAYE 50.90 ON OUR PINNCPFST" . .:IAUNDRYTWINSI WRY DIQ,,'IBE BARREL RIDER'S WIFE BUY EeTRIC ~ c1MI~ DllYEll 'l ' , , Southllm C.llfoml• Ed/sen '( ' • ,. " • • . , . .. ' 1 ·r .I -F • '• w_, •• ;. I !1"' \ 1 , '• ••• ' I .. " .... ' Pi ogn1111rn•d el1111 lc dry.r, ••• Reg.154.95 Now*l37 ~.a--t 16 lb. washer .... ~ .•• . ... . . NOW. $.1.88 ............ -11 ________ -!(.-=::::::=::::i.WI ............. , +s••-.. . It. • ..., .... ; ..... lsall .. s · I ... • .... ,,1.,•l!'•SI 'di I • • ~ l 1NO...,-......... ..,.rrr•··. NEWPORT BEAC:H . Huntln.¢on Cem.r -.. ' . HUNTINGTON BEACH E1shion lil1nd • I ' I I • ---·------~ ------_... ~~ .... ____ _,_ ..... _, _____ ..... ___________ ...... ._."""'"-'-'--'-=--""""'""_""",,_._...,,.....,.,,,..,.,,_~.,...,,,..,.,..,.,.,,, ... • Federat =-Gun . . . . Control r Law ; • 18 -sjgni{i~~nt~,:-. Not . Weak "' ,. . ' -' 111' LOOlll biisa.a ..i.s ri ...,. ml , ... ,mi. ·"• Jlftll1 eood 'llW, 11 fir · C1111rto ·ha'f1 tt·fnllliat.d by bear' ... on tetUn ·:.S.. pawn abopo) must not "kiiow-that would transfer to law a would-lie. gun -bu).r II 1 WMHINGTON : (lll'lj r -tloo. Llw enforcement olll· u tt ,_... the -with which Ill dll· quote con!rol lcg!aiJ.. iD !ng!y" ae!! •flreanns lo IUCb enforcement agencies th e repulab[e · and reei-Jhl• Now lllll tho .,...ttnc Is .dall upect lhlll con!rola to The llw bw JDlll.on!or ..., could buy --by <yery -·" . p<nOll_I, la the cue, of the job ri ucerta!¢nl w)lelher penan. o..r, po -.'01 -tes mike I "1l>lllnllll -Illes ol pm DI' ummm!-matJ •cr to nuttSy 111\a . "Adeqlille legla!atJoa" oge restnctlool (no pistols -::;:;;;;;=:=:~~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~=~~ .,. beabmlDI ·to rtalbo that Uoa to the Diiion'• war l!on. . n FOVides 11111 over, M-,. fer Ullll' meana,, ID 111• ~ ldvo-' lo buye1t under 21, no rifles I DJLD· 1y· BROTHERS they got coMl<leral!IJ ""'? lia!ml crime. t111-eo1ui1er Aloi . 11111 be pie,' tiU '9a1-blf alrjCt ~ utes~u~ that aun ,or shotguns· to buyen qnd<r 1i . thin hi!! a toai trorn the ~ "We didn't pl aD we wul-l!lldo oal,.-1IJ' · leden!l)'-1!-!rola ...r .elm · Ule1: 'Bui tt • ~ · a Ucenlo· and 11), vendof11 can cheCk driv· eenUy .. djournecl Coagroa. ed, but we're happy with llils · ~ ...., a1oree, al!d Oll'1-bu' f~ l!ia\ ·17·"""" ol thai. · eat>Ol'f be n;glafer-en" licenses or 'draft cai\la. ' :HUNTINGTON VALLEY Tiley had wantecl -and • u . 1 •tart." llYI Quhm lo ..,-11 .ol II>' a!Jle ill · the l!rt*ml, • iD l:l'!me<i. 'ed' by al liumber-wilil Bui ~ven Ille moat ~!en-. dldo'I gel -a fedMal ala~ Tmim, uecul! .. d!reclor of which • 11)1 -~ 11 lacalad. in the • ~le ·-. !rotn blw-en(o:lemenl 11encle1. Uoui dealer ob....,!y; Will M-ORTUARY uto roqu!rlnf ~ ·all !ii.· . l!IO 'Jnlensal!oeal AJlodatlon (A l*JC\11 ""°' a · Dlllbbo<-Maine, Ii..; 11.,n~ or The -~ ol the llceM-find tt d!li!cutt to be 'siire . '"""'''!I"' arma be registered and .U of Chiefs fl. Pol1ce. "The tnc .s..tl , mar· buy • cun· V~ wbeie tt'• rtlaUvO.: lna: reOutrerbent wolild l>e to whether a pios~ve ' CUJ-For three. generation1 our fimily )\u gun.-iera llcenied.. 'lbe!r new law -w!I! mal<e tt dllfl. llom a -:llort IP h!a Ii euy' 1o· bu)< 'a gun, proven!' guns · being IO!d to tomer has a ciin\!na1 rec- criet ol dillqtpolatmalt A:JVfl' cult hr .PIOPI• wbo sbouldn't • state bu enacted lesblaUon "It's very . tmpartant that criminaII, youngsters, <hill ord. takes drugs, or Is I 'lit-icrved the community at time ot need. Coqrass' muaaI lo go lhll have lirearma lo obla!n authorhing !\f people lo buy the publlcmttae 11111 enact-add!cll. jr !llOlllally d!slurb-Ile off iD the head. 17911Beach l!oulevard, far bin 11-QllD1 ,\meri, 11-. ....i thal Is cerla!n!J a gum,ilUI otltlle.) men! of the federal law Isn't ed penons. Tbll'• wby Steinberg and Huotingtonl!each ct111 l!io !mprt¥1o\1 the ll!W. 'llep ill the r!&bt d!reclloo." Tile ·put -.alno ol lhelt the encl ri the ·l!glrt," Stein-Tbe ..,. federal law hY' othen lee! there is a grtal I (714) 842•7771. wllloh wu enacled In the David Slelnbert. ICl!ng ts· resli'!ctiOnl, SUlnberl "YI·, !be'.'.:rc~llYl~·-"W:'.:e~m~usl::..'.no~w~licenoed~' ~~v~ei~-.!oi~n~~(!ncl~udillg~:_· !-~~for~licenlmg~-~~proecdur>s~~~=====::;:======~~=:!. cloa!ng· days of .!lie' -Is ecul!v~ dirti:lor of the Na-lies lo l!io loci !hit they wlll1-. WNk and lnellectual. · llooal l'!ounc:!I for a R...,..-"l!w llale aun -...! laws Not ao. . . alble l'!relnnl .Policy, -a chance to -k." ,,,. .... l"""at!"' p1-that Ille mu.mi ~ f!na1. In the put, .• alele eould tdlP>Hk:ant · nolrlctlDOS on ly llD«ged from Coqi91 II et>ICl _a vert ·loup 1W1 law, Report8P~-·~"·Penney Stons Open Every Night M~11day" Throqgh Sahlrdar . Reds Planning New Attack? en0~9.1 · .. WASIDNGTON (UPI') -there had been no reducli<11 !hit durbli ~. rOcent AJ..Wlf:tfS FIRST .BUALITV '. 1~ . '. ~~ ;., ... oil U.S. m!lltery ~ Is In U.S. ground aclivlt;y In the they, ha¥e blln l!ddlng 1"9'. ~'<°!'' t~.-:;;:;;... still picking' up repi>rt.' that llOUth. They uld patrols still communlll llltill Wlllhrc to > ~ • the Ccmmunhts plan a new were hanting tht enemy, but enaqt iii. blttlt. , . 1 ' offeoslv< apinll SaJion, Pen-. ; tagon IOUfcel reported to- day. They said these reportl - f r o m captured documents and prl!oner. !ntemption. - haver continued dul:inc the re- cmt weeks of relative lull In tbe figlll!ng In Sou1h Viet-nam. Thia II <me nnoa mllltary men are not jumpll>( lo optl- misUc conclusJODI over t h e recent general movement ol enemy forces away f r om South Vietnameae 'c!t1es and toward tbe1r border anctua- ries. Olficlals aee Ibis II fillinl! !oto· the previooJ pattern of regrouping and resupplylng between enemy offensives. Militery oll!dals ill Wash- ington also 80IJ8bt lo p o I down speculation that IOI.Ith· ward movement of the U.S. "1ttlesblp New Jersey out. of waters off North V'ietnam wu part of a "de-acal&Uoo" of the ·WIL The olflda11·"""'1d ·not go beyOQd • acknowledging I b e veuel WU moving to South Vle!naniea ... ten ncepi lo .. , 11111 bid mthhtc lo do with ""' -In l!io -~ '~:f"i,7rr....., llao I lifd . ':,!: • ...,..._ HOTEL PrlMnle 'n>e Annllll BAVARIAN October F•tlwal 3-Day CelebraUon Wed. • Thun. • Fri. Oct. 23-24-25 SIA TERRACE DININ• ROOM AUTilENnc BA V AiiIAN DINNUS An INTERNA'l10NAL FEAST wllil Bnlriu Beer and Wine, Sonc and Dance to th• Winltrup Oleaen ·!land. Pleue·Yw'R-.anatlOD1. 494-1111 . ~ , 1.ap .. -•• • • A --. _...,..hohlo -. LAYAWAY . f _.....--. f FOR enn09•J ~ CHRISTMAS! #JJNAY8~~ .. .... ·:~. .j:·~ ' .. , ... ! ~ ·.· .. .. I ..• ' ..... , .. ue•YDUA EN NEV CHARGE ACCOUNT TOCllAYI instant elegance! ' ' THE FACE OF TIME GET A BRAND NEW 11 00" WITH OUR FASHIONABLE WIG LETS AND FALLS . IS .THE FACE OF FASHION . ""1tn time 11fllds the ~mes, :;ou moy o pei1lnoo a llft'lllc oertatnty that a Shtlfltld 1rafl11r.1M llltdllaad on lls deli111-Only lhtllltld llat I IUIU'I atft for Cilllll!I tht time lib It II. hw W1Y,.. -ta -It. .... -· A. "GURU " 19.SQ D. "FASHION SQUARE" 1~.00 B. "DANDY" 18.50 E. "GRANDE" 22.00 C. "TINA" '14.50 F. "GUARDO" 17.50 :::::ti " "-Dlau•• ........ w ..... ... __ _ MU•tl•f?Ott a1ACM H~ C9!11tf' -~ .. 0 .......... ... ,..,MAC• ,...,.. ,....., ¥~ .. ~-< .. ..., ' _ .. .,, - r a s Como In and soe tho wiglets -·ve specially priced. They're lustrous human hair in saft, natural shades. Glamorize your present 'do', er a90ft a brand new you in minutes. Comb it as easily as .,_ oilll hair. hsliloa dlct.tos tltt loog faU to create an exciting new you Ill a 111Gmet11'1 nolicel· Set and .tyle this washable syntlietic fall as -lly as )'!Ml do your own hair. It kioks like real hair, lovely natural ..... ' 7.·88 10.88 NEWPORT. BEACH (Fashion Island) HUNTINGTON BEACH (Huntington Center) ... m me•·s s t•:'GA? tr -emm zSVewt··c:ma,• · • e +If:'> +r n ... .... ' ' ' ! j I . • .. /· ,>... .• ,. ,"•, , . , , • , . . . • ·; .. } .' ' ' ' " . .. • .. -i .· '·· .! • . ·' ' '· le . "'· . :. .. ... ,_• -' ' . . . .. ~ .. ,.. .' F~N lllWill·NEWl'OAl.-r1 ':" ......... . ' 1 • . .. f ' 4 .( ' ' ... ' 'J' ( ' f .. . .. -·· ..... --. . •.•· .. . . -.. j .. ~ ,' 11' OlfW"fW: 'friilay, Sat~d~y : ·. qct~.t~ 24, 25'. 267-,See exciting ~~ng~s. ~ , all.'. t~~--~~ ,_ car• on the mall at beautiful Fashion"' l11l!Jnd in Newport . Ce~r~ L,~ooted on• Pacr.fic .!' Wa.st Highway between Jiunbo.r_ee, -~, Ma.cA.rthur. Blvd., Fashi~~''Iswnd is · jwt freeway minutes away. 56 stores · and fine re11taurants. Conveni.ent clOs,e ... by parking· can be 1een . ' •! ' J, ) ' ' . 4~tlll'ed abotie. • r I • · .... . \\ I \ . ' ' ' ' " " • IN NEWPOR'T CENTER. ' . ' ' ' " . ' .. . ~1 ' "' ' . Dnlers pttrfld ..... : ATIAS CHRY~LER-PLYMQ\J.Tlf>• ROY CARVER PG>NTIAC. CONNa( cftEVROLET 'HOLIDAY. ~M·t~K •• CRlal:_l~sCN-• ~OLKSWAGEN e JOHNSON a SON LINCOLN-MERCRY e llll JONES FIAT e DeAN LEWIS _TOYOTA e NAIERS CAOIUAC e NEV(PO MtQ&TS· IMC POOLE IUICK •· THEODORE ROBINS FORD e. JIM SLEMMONS MERCEDES e. UNViRSITYr O~D$MOlll.I. • GEOSGE Zl"'1_MEllM~ D.t.T$UN -. . --,.. ,. .... 1 • '' I '. . '·· ·-·. ~~ '. ~. ' ' ~ ' < -• -· , ' ' .. , . ' . ' . ., . . ' . '' .. . ' . . . . ,... . . '. .. ' ',,, . •' ' = l I• '"J ~--·; ' I ,., .• I .'i 'I" •• , • I • -»---· ... ' .. ' 1 ' l ' \ --. -_.__. _ _. . ,. -.. _, a;.------------------------.... -------... ----= ... --==-:111---.. • • --· : Gentle Generation? ! 'Confllet Wit~ foan'l I.nterests' , Drug Use Up, But Assaults Decrease ·supervisqrs Won't Back ·Anah~im Metroport BJ SANDI MAJOR ... ~ ,......,, By TOM BARLEY Of .... °"'" """ ffaff SANTA ANA -'l\Jday'1 youth ha• been called ?Oekleu and rebellious, but Orange OJunty Juvenile Jud&e Bruce W. Sumner bu dubbed them the "Genlle Genera UM." "We felt It wu Important (tir-I young perlOO to know Ibis," Judgo Sumner u · plained. "He knowa you are not klddlng, that H's not just ..,.. adult admonlijoo." Many 1ehoob use th e booklets as teachtr-aldJ in 90cial atudtes claase1 begin· nlnr In the alxth grade. Proba- tion offlcera distribute them when they apuk at parent. teacher Ol"•anluUon meeting•. area which would be centered ol the Immediate 0..ange O..ange County Airport." assurances that the metJ.,..-t oome 1,lllO lee\ llOUth ol County Airport. Opponen1' o1 Traffic geoented by the woulcl be limited In terms of Bitter opposltloa la the City An.tielnt the projec~ wllo pr.,..ted a Anaheim project would also, tt 11a_..mc< area and the typo o1 Anaheim'• proposal ta build '!bat f:l superv!son·wer• t,500-n, ame pelitloo ·ta the wu 1tre!8ed at the meeting, ol •-alt bich --··" troport with! !"" ol I 'I" d be In ••--t ·---n•ct w"1th au"'r w ~ \119 a me n a 11 .. t o a, wou cover a JeCtoi' board, pointed out that city uu~ \.wuu the facility . GIVE.i FAcr Anaheim Stadium led cow:ity friodnJ Anahelm.'I bouodaries plana envisage some 2,500 Ian-alrcraf\ ~rea conC!ucted A plannlnJ comment tpat supervisors Tuesday to ref~' 11tl.t1i S&nta Ana and . Garden 41.nai by a11 types of aircraft by Fullerton, El Toro Marine "land ithl nz.,.,t t "r.le jurist noted that ~·com· pared with years past." fewer youngsten area pp ear In I before bim on -:har1ea of assault. Aimed at the a ptrttnt of Ute county's populaUoo. under 19 years ol ago, the booklet Jives both aeneral lnformaUon (111ggell1lons for babysitting) and specllles (a table clt1ng penalties for varlOUI drug violations). SEND OUT "We're suggesUng t h a t schools 1end one out with Ute lint report cant; so they'll get into the bailds ol parents, too," Miu Grier noted. I id a,...;. -~ •"a-• •-"-city Ith! the I of c-a•• Loa A I a m It o a . •·-·• ·~!,.:" hen ,..d-'taJ!."_; a cty b for county en-,_.v ... ~111-J \.-cin.w1.110 w D irst five years ... ,.... ,.., ......,., llWIWU ..... i-.::u dorsement "the proJect. ol ·Orange. That rad I u •, the focUily'a oPeration ~Ith airporta: · unusable ind the p u b'l i c Residenta of Tultin and 11.1.Pf!Vilorl noled, would bring air traffic covering a t00-600 Superviaors also noted that educated on this point" dreW a Orange and Orange City At-lt pt:an1e and AD a he i m mile rt:dlua. statistica compiled by the Clty sc_athing l n d l c t m e D t bJ· torney Firman Roberta urged ac::hOols cloae to the flight pat-Wftb1n .three y e a r s , of Anahelm Planning Depart-Supervisor Baker. the board to. shelve any SJJg-tern: supervisors wel'i! ~amed. ~ merit ~ the ,servicing "Mueb of I.he area ts An Increasing percentage cl the 11,000 he sees in a year, however, are cmnl.ng before the bench for dnli abuae, he added. .. Fighting was a way to &bow your manhood back when ) WU in Khool," ht recalled., but fewer student& today provoke fight.I just for the fun or it. It expla.ina:Jhat a minor can be held aeooont>ble for pay- .ment ol a contract in some .,.,... Neither ol the juvenile cl· ficlall can recall whrqler other Callfornla counties had slmilar guides four yean ago. but. ma.o,y do now. The design of. Orange County's vef1ioo was an "original," they said. gested approval of the project _11>e dty proposal says the strwnent land1n& to::bniquea and operation of &O, 90 and 120-already heavijy developed or pending evaluation of the ef-sUggerted f1clllty would be would ~be applied flt the puaenger aircraft a\. the sug-, la under development," he fects of greatly increued ,1r pr)marily 10< helii:o!ll<r and melroportact.lh!J Woutc! coo-guted metroport ·"'by about said. His mOtlon that the city trafftc within the radius of the ~,~ ~ul" aircraft ~ 'flict with "90 perctDt 'of in-1175" -an appanot coo-~ be ·rejected Wu -.iggested metroPort. r-WOuld=:;:-bo'*g"'ear=.:ed=..:ln:::..:ae::rvlc~::lntl'!'.--'lltrum:.:_::;:::en::l:..:a:_p!'...!'.P:,r~o_:a_::o_::bc:e~1'....ta~_:t~r_:a~d~l~c;ct~l_::o~n:_~ol:_~ear~lier~-~~~·~~~ap1!pro~v'.!ed~.-'- Supervison, spurred by ·ap-'t~ YOUTH SMARTER Today's youth art "smart.er, better educated and quite sericp" and therefGlf: think twici about such things, he aaid. U n'fort una tely, their thoughts and better education f a i I them when it cornea to juvenile crime as a whole. J u d g e Sumner and County Chief Probation Officer MW Margaret Grier both acknowledge they see "in- creases almost daily." For this reasqn., the p a I r '-Youngsters CJIJl get in troq. 'ble not o n l y for stealinf I articles but also for buying or possessing a narticle f r o m which the serial number or manufacturtt's identification has been removed, the booklet points out. Although aueippta to set a uniform cuHew for the county have failed, the booklet does list the variaUon in "bewit- clllng hours" among county conllnunities. As Judge Sumner put it, the booklet is an attempt to tell youngsters they can be held accountable for their deeds. "I've heard people say yoo Clm't fine a juvenHe, but that's not true," he said. Public agencies w o r k l n g with Mi;ss Grier and Judge Sumner on the latest revision of the booklet are the Orange County Sheriff's Department and District Attorney's Office, 'the state Department of Motor Vetrlcles and the Anaheim Police Department. Big Brothers of Orange County, the county Scbool Superintendent, the Anaheim UnJon High School and Santa Ana Unified School Districts also have joined the county's Dellnqueacy Prevention Cotn- ro.ission and Juvenile Just.ice Commission and District t PT A in updating the booklet. plause from a crowded ~­ ing room, challenged the Qty proposal "as being in conruct with countywide interesta:." Increased noise levels wQllkl seriously interfere with 'pa. tient care in county hospital complexes in the area. and could cause acute distreM in mental patient facilities, the board noted. "Xir traffic generated ·by the suggeated metroport would be fn direct conflict with .the development o f industrial, commercial and -most im- portant -· residential sectors wilhin the area," Superviaor David Baker said. "We can have no part of such a plan." charged 111'ith handling children EXPLAINS RIGHT H hr G alter they've been in trouble The bookletalsoe%plainsthe ump ey els But supervisors agreed to comidtt possible county en- dorsement of any future city proposal wbich woulcl be bMed on alternative Sitea to the one rejected by tbe baord . -an have made an attempt to pre-rights of juveniles in their own vent ever meeting oome ol court, which is a civil court Barrister Vote them. not a criminal court. WORKED TOGETHER A juvenDe offender has all C1llCAGO (AP) -Hubert The juvenile oWcials have the rights or those over 17 ap-H. Humphrey was the worked together on a booklet, pearing in criminal courts, overwhelming favorite f o r called "Laws for Youth," with the exception that he is president among Northwestern which ia in its third printing. not entitled to bail or jury University law students who Music Recital Slated at UCI N ....... ,.... 1-·J ted to trial. The standard of proof in took part in a mock election ow ...... 16 cu"'u a juvenile coort is "prepon-Tuesda =~:e=t 8:: derance of evidence" rather '. Hum:hrey received 2 2 3 Piano and violoncello works ty, the booklet. was prepared than "beyond a reasonable votes, or 71 per cent, com-' by Debussy, Liszt, Chopin, for uae by students and their ·doubt." pared with 75 for Richard M. lbert, DeSalla, Vllla·Loboll, families. It is available free or More than 300,IXXl copies of Nixon and 4 for George C. Albenz, Ravel and Trroba will charge from thf: county pro-the booklet are. printed every Wallace. be performed at noon Thurs- bation office. two years. Police use them for Sildeen students said they day in 171 Fine Arts on the l:TC lt'a a compilation of laws af-public relations, City officials would not vote for president Irvine campus. i~•-· th in Fullerton have used it as a this year and other votes went Thert will be no admission ..._._>& you • which are scat-model for o-pr,. n t e d t El"-"d Cl 5 Di k h f · the tered lb-·~·t t h state' ""' o w 1 ge eaver, ; c c arge _ or p,r o gr a; ~ ,...,.._ e ' .. ~,·atty f-~uth ;. that G 3 and P t P ··•-·~ b the De civil ;_; __ , I he Ith ,,...... ..... ,,v .. , regory, ; a aw.en, presen-.a y partment , crUllUl&I, pena , a , 'ty • education. weUan and \lehicle 1_cooun;c.:..;;;.;_wu'--''--·------..:3::.· _________ _:0::.f..:M::;•::"":::_· ------1 cod.ea. To name a few. NO BOOlt AVAJLABLE Mllll Grier uld the booklet came about in 1964 "mostly -ol the need." No one state code covers all lawa porlainlng ta youth, she aald . That'• one reason it took nearlr· llioe mcmtha lac lS private and JMlbllc groups ta compile the booklet, wbich is rev1aed every two years. 'Ibe 1111 edition is the first one to contain after each cita- tion a reference to where the law ~ be fOund lo state codes. DEATH NOTICES SPETH Cl••• A. Spell!. 1011 W. llttl St .. C0511 lo'cw. 0.11 ol dultl, Oct, 21 . survived trr ...,.nd, H1rrt1 two _.., ltoblrt 8'ICI H. l.l!VI..,,_ S9efl'l1 d......,~l1w, G.-.a •All 1,._, Mi!Wf", Mn. E1'1e Cliff, Wl~ln; two 1r1ndd'llld...-i nd tour ,,..,. 1r1nddlll«w!L S.rvlcft. Thursd1r, 2 f'M. Finl ~"' Cllun:h or c .. 1. MeH, wtft! 11:.... 11.lc:Nnl Duni.. otlld1llntl. En!Ombn'leftl. IMI,_ Ab. birY ,....11!olwrll. D!A<'IM b'I" e..il ll"Ofllfw•v MornMry, 111 lr0Mlw1'f. COlll INN. PRESSLEY Junn Wllll•m Prtt111r1'. A•~ "· d 210 E. WI"°" St., COlll IMH. S..r- vht'IO by wW., M.Mte, d th9 t.MJ d-"len. INry V. ll11b, ~. 1nc111ne; erttie L. CM!-. s.11 Je11•1 L-L. G1rntl, Gffmanl'I Alma J, L_, H~, Nortfl C1r11ll1MI ~' C1rr11 Crtnfortl, ril Ch1rlolt9, No. Ctrollne: two •llttrs. LCIUIM ~" tllCI lllR Howell, betffl d Cll1rlath1 1 bra!Mr, "'""' E. P'"'5lev, "I~. Ari!-. F11111r1t 11rvlot1, Tllur¥11y, 10::» AM, WHtc!lff C~1pel, WI,,, lll'f, Lftltr 9. Sulld offkltll1t11. lnlt,.,,_I, Htrbor lhtl Memari.I Pork. Vlslltllon, IOCllY, Wedne1d1y, 1 to i. tnd 1 19 9 ,.M. Wu!Cllff Clle"I ""°""''r'I'• ..,._..., Dlrector1. BALTZ MORTIJARIES Corona del Mar OR S-9450 Co1ta Meaa MI 1-UU BELL BROADWAY MORTIJARY llt Broadway, Coata Meu LI l44U DILDAY BROTHERS Huntln,ioa Valley Mortuary 17111 Beach Blvd. Buntinrt-on Beach au.mt PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CemeCery • Mortllary Cllapel Siii Padfte View Drive N<i..,.rt Ilea .. , Calllonda -!711 PEEJ: FAMILY COLONIAL Jl'UNEl\AL BOMB '1111 Bo1u ATe. "---Slll'l1l'I llOllTllARY UI Ill* Ill. a-.--LEU. WEB1'<lLlrP .llOBTUAllT Cl E. 17111 llL, c.. -··- \ ~----~---- J • Atteathln ••• AU Jf'itclws & W a:rlocks ......... HALLOWEEN SALE 18 Piece Crystal PUNCH SET .. ,... __ -•l<Sqt.--399 --')<-.... ........ -and 1 ~. he. JO.OD , • • NOW ~., JI. PEA DINGER 8 W11110Eft sJl.l.E? An Equal Rueb lo E...., Ac(""' 598 ... 7.95 ... - ' -~ J" HALLOWEEN PARlY HEADQUARTERS PARTY DECORATION Orange & Black BALLOONS Bi8Bq 29 Only,,. c Join Snoopy and Llnus Jn ~ ''TM Grht Pumpkin" wfth: 8 Invitations ·-·----IOc' 8 Dinner Plates ·-_$5c 8 Dessert Plates -· _45c 8 Hot & Cold Cups -55c 12 Coasters • !le: 20 Napkin$ ···---. 45c 1 Brid1• Table Cover _55c 13 Inch Tall Centerpiece _$1.50 c.-...eo. ...... Sblkw,..,.. __ .. --• .rt~l STATIONERS --SHOl!Plllll ~ eon.A IDA IOUlK COMT ~ -21 LI iiiU •Ml-Mii -• -· ·--" ' '. A IDBIDBLIX ... IAPPEKlKG! =="'"'" . · COSTUME '€!'1 a ·~ LAROE SELEC110N MOUSTACHES ·.~ .. 'f#» 49° J .. _ .. r--......... -1-\ . · 2lit atrsclit: cl ciOlbiA••· COMPLETE SELECTfON ·MAKE·UP Not ooiJ ""' ler -"1 for--........ llll_. -...... ......___ .• s,lritl\llll, •KtW. . R• PuttJ, • .._ ...... lie ffOlll only _ ............ . ...,, ..... iiiif llllf ~gee HOBO OUTFITS_llc COMIC LASHES ... _lk . .-.· .. rn·lllk ~ I J:.llt . me ._, ot htt&Uf• fll1 ~ 0 ~ ........... ,..,,'" ' .,....~ .. !.-. HUGE SELECTION -~ MMKS ••• from only 98c .SPECIAL HIPPY HATS ...... ..... . ""'-298 UQHT.ul' PUMPKIN "HEAD FLASHLITE GIANT lB rNCH HIGH OVERHEAD MASKS "..,.., 2.300 -wili ... --1"-""-. Mle ... ald'• T.,-SweefllRak• For-1~and­ Wl• all tlM ~J'-eanpa• la J.S ..._at a 1'\f1RllJ)..._ llllllr .. .If - 5 Stores In Oran.,e County to Serwe You w " ,. • • • • • •• • • ' ' • • • • • • • • • • • • ' ' ' • ! • • ' ' • • • ' ' ' . ' ' • ' '. f • • • i • ' ' " : : • • • • • ' ' • ' • ' • • : • • • • • . • • ' • • • • . • • • • • • • • I PILOT .ADVERTISER-3 DAILY ~ILOJ JS News of' Coas~ Men in, .Service on Duty Around -World Cpl. M..i,' ~. 1111.; G~ut,' w-.r, ind School 'locl rocel...t an A. A. ..,...Uni In ~ Alla ~~ ' ~ ' USMC. II, -ol Mr. and 8tl 1.., c. lul, ... ol Mr. "-In 11111 -Or-Wilm ... put ol Ibo U.S. PYI. KIP* l'ldualld -Mn. C!wloo Jooa ol Hiil and Mn. Raymond w. Just ol Colli College. 8lvlnlh rllll bulc tnfnlDf al n. On! wllb Adon 11., Midway CllJ, 11 1111 Villa S.. Jadnlo, Saa --boaan. otr11n1 wllh Ille )'!rat ~ Cllmenll. llldarman lllman IM l!-1"11. -L """"' -!fl ll 1 .,.-ol COiia , rlno lll.illoa In ~ l .. 1J a .,..duato ol Gvdll/ De Loi Rloo, U!N, 11, aon o1 o1 Mr. and Mtl.. Jade JI. -mp llcboal and 11- 1111 unit, a dlVWoa lbal GtoVI High SCbool and II-l\lt. and Mn. IAo B. De Loo llapllo .ol 4'1 , -'*>did~ Coul Oolllp " belpo c.opture toc1· ~ -Orlll(e Coast Colle1< RlCll al 11411 Colombia Lant, Loni, Colla Mela, bu -beloro lllllrtDI Ibo ...XO. •"""I' 1......, IJ a11o .lllill" -.. ~ the Air J'«ct, Hunu.,lon lllacb, h lerVlnl IUlil*I to Avlallon lc:hool, ed In !'fYlc ·action _..., llbuU, a radlO ropalrman, i. aboanl the IUldtil miPill rt. )luctor, ~ lor tralolal ....... ""'""-'fnMlll L. designed to us!tt the Viet· a lll'aduato ol La Quinta Hiib dealroy<r, USS Towe rs, q ·u altorlll ,,..I.._,.,. B••l!lt. UIN, It, ...... Mr, namese people in lelf-belp l• , projects. I ' Colla Mua, h oervtng 1bolld the escort v...,I, USS Sample. The Sample, whose home port IJ Pearl Harbor, will operate wl!J! 1111 Paclllc Fleet. Pvt. l.C. TnV)' L. Hu~ 20, son ol Mr. and Mn. James W. HWlt of 1N81 "B" St., Hunu.i,ton Buch, ii aervlng with tho ll'tnl Marino Dlvl· olon lu South V-. Al a memblr ol tho dlvhlM he helps caplure ot destroy enemy force1 wJt.b tupport from Marine air 1111111. tanb, arilller1, amphibian lnclon and eniineerl. · Hb unit ii a!Jo qaged bl civic action pro&rl11\i deaigno ed to aalol tho -'people In Hll-Mlp projocll. LI. c.I. J... E. ..... execuUve officer ol Rud- quarten and 1.f•lntJmnct .. Squadroo, !.jJlrlne Corps Air StaUon, El Toro, lt-year vet- eran of tbe Marine C«pl re- ported In El TolO Iron> duty lllS1\E'S ·Candy Bars EVEmHING FOR ·HALLOWEEN AT "Confidets" "Listerine" . • • • • at QuanUc:p, Va. • Col. Krus<, hh: '!'11• ' .... five children make '••el r · home al 25ZI ~."DIU · Point. • ' . --,.. . ·: • Seamu Appn.J.. Mu D. J Carmel, USCG, 11, IOD of f Mr. and Mrs. Danakl A Car· ~ mel of 3tm NaUonal Park • Drive, LaguJ,. BeOO!i, • hU : been assigm!d .. to !niUat'·Ac-- : Uve Duty trafrilng aboard the ~ Coast Guard Cutter Lamar. " at Monterey, ·calif. : The Lanai"-vlllti J .vf1t1 • major port lrolil Sin il!ilii ~ lo Seattle and 11 ' tfil -~ ~ Guard'• only trainbia: ship on ! the West Coast. • • ' • ' • ~ Pvt. Luna H. DeBelle, 21, w-~. i,11\ Ol'ld ' Mn .. Duddley lleBelle and wife, Harleen, live · at i8a Blue Bird Canyon Drive. La- guna Beach, bas been a. signed u a _petrolewn stor· age speclaliJI In the atth Quarterinastir Coriipany, Cam . Ranh Bay, Vietnam. r PYI. Willer J.• 'smile, 11, son of Mr& G1rm Smale of 285 Monterey Drive, Lagww Beach, bu completed ad- ~ vanced infaatry tralnin& al ' Ft. Ord. Three Orange O>ut men haVf: graduated, lfter el&bt weeks cf tra.lnlni at the M.a· rine Ccrpt Recruit Depot, ·~ San DiegQ. They are Pvt. James M. Sharkey, 18, 110D of Mr. and Mrs. ~ M. Sharlooy if! 5042 Caspian ,J)Ul:le_.and Pvt Job, <;.;, ~Odl.. ~. , · son of RGtien 1'radforl of ~ 16381 Gctden Gate Lane. both : of Huntington Beach and ! Pvl. Stephen L. Berrar, 18, son of Frank R. Berrat of 958 Cheyenne Ave., Costa Mesa. , Seamu Appru. Victor J. = I.Ave, USN, 11, IOn ol Mrs. : N atalla A. LaCombeJ of Z«iO • Redlands Drive, Cp&ta. Mesa, : graduated after ntne weekll 1 of training at \be Naval • Training Center, Siii Dllp. . ' . , Pvl. l.C. leooW F/Bliltllj • '!M. of John L. Sailth of .190 ~ Lmln L a n e, Newport i Beach, has been appointed .. as an crderly to the. com· : manding general, Ft. Canon, • Calo. • • .. Pvt. 1.C. Vlneeat A. lnlk, 22, IOll ol Mr. and Mn. Louis 0. Senik ol ml 14' enzo, Costa Mesa, completed · a Nlll:e-Hercut. mlalle llec-• • tronlc matntenanct ooune 1t : the Army Air Delena. Schaoli : Ft. Bllsa, Tex. • t Pvt. Law, ,Q• -. IO, ol : 118 Koowell, Ciolt& MIN, CCIII· ' pleted nine Wteb of. ach'aao- ; ed training al n. Polk, La. ~ He recetvtd tpreellllled • training 1n tad.le1, map read-! log .. land mine Warfare, com-f munlcatlOI\! and firipg rifles, • machine guns and the 3.&-lnch ~ rocket. WO Candidale l!dwh L. Cootlq· Jr., 19, aon of~-and Mn. Edwin Cooling Sr., ol lll 37tll SL, Newport Deacb, . .• y!<oted • bellcopter pUot.coarae : at the Army ~rl,m•r1 Helicopter School, Fl lfci1tori, Tex. •' ·' .;' •· g • Hls nut a8"'rnent wlD be advanced rugbt traJning at the Army A vtatloll School, rt. , Rl}ckiT I Ala, -. Two Orup cOautJ -Ullgned In llle Air F CommunlcaUOlll llenlce lJldt, LIUoo, Pblllwi-haft """" recesnJled for helJIDc thilr units earn top ·-• lhl best --....... u.o In the U.&, Air F«<e. They are Airman I. C. Qartes E. 8lOltl; 1GO ol Mr. and Mn. Glem Shutt ol IOI! NO. I °" " ... -,.,.i .. :;-:~:::o .. ~ !: , AA11 LeMtn uft-. ft. • I 4•RY ....... -.f·M OAILY PU.OT •"' .., ""41M hll 1111 It'• "' He. I uhl-. _;·:-,._ . ' . UI ·is ,1~ $lit . • \ >J.~~9 .. ' . 98~ Gift Wrap Needs I Kraft Pa,er AOc l'1{I Heavy • • • 30'''35-11. "' '. • '.'I-I• "' ~T8"'25c . ~~=!4gc • •&Fell u ttOL\. •ox -' """ " Clllortvl ,...... .-eh ~::r:.:. ..U!lM ss""'' , -.,,,., • . ,. . £ze,26"ii6'1r11111s'J '59 ..... ..,. OWistml! desip;. • · "nwe·,i;er 11111 hi -Sofi<s Md 1 59 Mms ••• 26" rolls - total 1e!1&1JI Of 45 ft. I "Jonr Bows • .. ,, 25-3~" size In assorted 69C • loliday colors. ·-·Ribbal ll_"dOO. ft. ~lls &nc II _,Oii colors. iJ . CllHH Fro• . MIU. Clmc,i.te... · At ..... i ,~ "Lysol" · SPllAJ,. • Disinfecunt . iii~ 111111111 •Im . . . ""'Its .. 11 .. , 1111111 • 1.41 14 11. Sin ' 99c S'ITIIO)OAM ' 7 oz. c.ps . "l••,•" '-. fJ for·"'t onil ailll liquids, ' 11111 II 2il.OO 'Shy' FElllNlllE S'IRIH&E -tlll tlsllr, .,.,. ., hlill, -~ ir'hi.~ "' ... !old< tWG ll t5. Of watar. COiors. .4,95· 1Jf,4t(Jlftl LIQUID DOUCNI Clanses,_,., f..W.s llnqlly. 41L la.. Sin 1111 1.00 1.85 . "H' Soc' atv" RIC1IC ·• Ll~lck 1~e 1• p: " Goll·cotor ... 111111 2.50 ~ .. MDlllDr ., P!1rl r,-..... ,. • ' • • · "'CIEi ftfr ~Po•co.ct . ' ...,.~:...~ ' ' lit lliillt " ' ... ......... "795 ' • ... tlil""""' flt-r-• Costumes .. ft:...•llltl~ Ill CllNnl'I 11111 ·"BU\ 1.98 HATSI HATSI SAlllTAIY NAPKIN CHiii Ira• 1111111 Iii s.,., ltr 1112 "Maxim" IAWl-DllED COFFEE lfl CllClllrltli • ' • Jnt 111 Hlll11 nt1r • I 11. Sl11 1.59 AHTISIPTIC ... °"' llt9'•• 111,1 M°Hb' "'11 llP Hiii • 1.45 21 IL Siii Alka- Seltzer TAii.iTS fir 111111 11 UPSET Sn•11I-H11inln 11i ci111. nc 2r1 ~ 49c Pn Supplies "Slllry" Fiii Celll' ·1.,•1&1&11 t "SlllU!fl'I" -~Ill fleas 111 ovw JQUr pet . l:ri~ 1 39 moo~s. 1 · Biii Plllaw ... -----.. fOllll filled. "'-lloif IDHTKY IDT 11 Algene" WITlt !RISH MOSS C.*ltll ' ..... "· . lfffllllll·" 4 00 ' 111.1111 • " cov• wltll zlPfll'. 1r Sil• 2t" Sin 3.88 4.88 Rag Doll W/Crilf ,. , fw 59° ,.,, Ill'• --. -"Frlltl Hide" :~tt.;;.~ I . :m::·~l.19 l '·1111'• 1:1111 . 111111 ;,. W/1111 .. 880 ·-111111. '"llwtllt' =-:.~Jgc Mo I to It "111 t.U1 Tl flMTCI. , •••••• I 1- . .., Jow•I!" 1tll c~or 3 00 "Cl..r -4..,i -c111 W/lll1tti1r If , size wit!I rwt;t '°'" , 1111 fo'V• llf. .... I ishol linblt, 'I: " · Zeralds • u11n1nllrlMll\i!llDl'3lQllQWUIMllMllDIM"""'il°"' thru" top. 811tti· "Skin Care" ~llA' "'"j dl•.3.49 .. ~tflili,I "'"· Cra111 1,r l 50 a l!iflrill RHi CIH• "'lJI • oL E II Pyrex" · Dry .~~In Lotion I Pie Plates .... ,. . ... ,. I e· 1JXI 1.75 • • "Ii' llUL ._ Asserted "leroid" ri>bob !111,4 II~ mll· 4 99" .. ~·"·· ·~d ; Cllf, • • • • DYen • 9'UNTINOTON llACH ~=. JllWMRT llACH =..l:;J""-!: ..HUNllNM'ON llACH a:;o1 ' . . . .. . -.,- 1 ... • ' " ' ' • • 1!. ., , ~ ,. .., -1 • • ~~ -~ ------- nmnunc ·: ' 'Time~All' "Pursattes" · TM!IS Dll!IJ 11•1" wit~ ' ... -111-... 1t1tt .., co111,1111 1111111)' ,,.ltct .... .......... ::. I° . .. , . ' SCllJlll . '1heragran-M'' .• , ........ .,, Yl•l•Ptniilihr Wltll .M11111ol1 -::.iw:~ ,~ ,,5.98 • • ' ' • I : I ., l • ' \ J6 DAILY PILOT Wednesday, October 23, iciEa · Interest Growing LONDON (UPI) -The dssassination or Sen. Robert. r . Kennedy dulled much or Jo;urope's interest in the U.S. presidential campaign, but as election day approaches some Interest il!l being revived, largely out of <1pprehenslon. Most Europeans find little difference between Democratic candidate Hubert ll. Humphrey and GOP stan- dard-bearer Richard M. Nix- on, but have definite opinions on the candidacy of former (rl>v. George Wallace of Alabama and his American Independent Party. ' From Rome to Stockholm and Moscow to London, newspapers and p r i v a t e citizens alike ei:presS mostly fear at Wallace's campaign. When Wallace announced thal Gen. Curtis Lemay (Ret.) would be his vice presidential running mate, E u r o p e a n newspapers voiced dismay. "It is not only Hubert Humphrey who is getting the shivers," the Oslo newspaper Dagbladet said. "The American election campaign is getting more and more grotesque. Ominous as it long has been, it now becomes really frightening.'' The Antwerp, B e I g i u m Volksgazet observed that "Nixon is a lawyer of a kind \vhich exist by the tens of thousands in the United States. Somebody like Wallace is quite another ketUe of fish." "~feet the demagogue of the right, maybe slicker than Goldwater of unholy memory -but no less repulsive,'' the Volksgazet said. The Soviet government newspaper Izvestia referred to Lemay as "the atomic ex- ecutioner" and said he and Wallace represent "the atomic pair, who stand for an un· disguised p r o g r a m of American Fascism." The Copenhangen Berlingske Tidende, however, saw a blessing in disguise with the Wallace-Lemay ticket. "The choice is so disturbing it can only be considered en- couraging, since there are now two hawks with visible beaks and claws sitting together on the extreme right· of the ' branch," the newspaper said. The wartime popularity oI former President Eisenhower as commander oI the allied expeditionary torce in Europe has helped Nixon in the coun- tries liberated from Nazi oc- cupation by the Allies. "Nixon will be good for Germany and Europe," "West Berlin Dentist Klau Nagel said. "He served for eight years under· Eisenhower and certainly the Eis e nh owe r Administration had nothing to be ashamed or." One Soviet journalist said the choice between Humphrey and Nixoo "might as well be Tweedledee." But Humphrey had a slight edge among most the Europeans asked about the election. A Rome truck driver sum· med up a common feeling, "Nixon and Humphrey -they are both disasters. But I think Humphrey is less of a disaster:" The Antwerp Volksgazet, summarizing opinions of all three candidates, decided that "Democrat Humphrey looks like a good guy." But the ghost of the Ken- nedys still haunts Europe. President John F. Kennedy scored one of his major political triumphs on a trip to Europe and Europeans en- thusiastically followed h i s brother, Sen. Robert F. Ken- nedy. As one Londoner put it, "When he died, the U.S. elce· ti on died for me." Jurors to Probe Chicago Riots CHICAGO (UP!) - A fed· eral grand jury today begins hearings into bloody disturb- ances that marred the Dem· ocratic National Convention here in late August. Fly Air California between Orange County Airport and San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose There's something really special about Air California service ..• You. For without you we wouldn't he wherewe are today . , . Orange County Airport. We can only express our appreciation through our service ... Try us. Roomy new 113·passenger 737 Boeing Sunjets. Diil! nlGHT satEDUlE Oranxe County·San Francisco: 17 Flights Orange County-Oakland: 12 Fligbl1 Orange County-San Joie: 12 Flight1 C•ll Your 'l'n•el Agent°" Air C.illoraf•: Oranp Covnt)' (1lf) SfMSH WITCH US GIOll! Cominr. Direct fliihb to Oa•l•n<I ""' Sii Jae r-. MTAllO •waa -..... , ';CldlkZl) _,._,,_ -· ~·D11 .. "l) _::__JSlllllllmL:::. AIR ·------·- CALIFORNIA THll llASY WAY! "- ANAHEIM 444 N. Gelid. e 535~8121 Mon. ihru Set. 10 e.m. to 9:l0 p.m. BER "LOVELACE" BROADLOOM WITH LUSTROUS ZEFKROME$ft 8.99 sq. yd., instolled Guliston's "Lovelace" mode of 70"l. Zefkrome® ·ocrylic, 30% Verel® modocrylic pile with hi -lo loop and random sheared texture. Dec.orate your home in this beautiful carpet. Available in aspen green, astral blue, downy gold, filigree gold, linden gold, nomod green, Spanish olive and others. Price includes normal tackless installation over extra heavy 50 oz. rubber coated double waffle or our own foam rubber podding, with no extra charge for door metals. .•zefkrome® acrylic is e trademark of Dow Bodische Compony SHOP AT HOME Coll for o no obligotion opflointment in Y.OU( homo I l<· j .. -.. ' • ' NEWPORT 0 ~,.h;on hlend e 644-1212 Mon. thru Fri. I 0 e.m. to 9:]0 p.m. Sat. 10 •.m. to 6-p.m. " I , CUSTOM LOOK READY MADE DRAPERIES, VALANCES IN OVER 450 SIZES Now you can create great window drami!l with our ''Royal Victoria" draperies, tailored in exquisite rayon acetate antique satin, ready mode, ready to hong. E.ven the decorator styled valances are ready made. Choose from o variety of colors and now dramatic red! 48x30" size 5.50 a size for every window 48x8+" ••• 9.00, to 192x95" ... 63.00 40xl8" Austrion Volonco 6.00, many other sizes to choose from, allow 10 days for delivery. Draperies, Curtains, I 0 HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Enclinger A••· • 192·lll1 Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m. to 9:]0 p.m. ' ·--.. . ... I • • I I I . ' J, ' ,,.;· • "~ I < t c • '. J ,, " ... ' •• 4' 11",, .. "' ... ELEGANT LEISURE -The latest styles for leisure fun and party elegance wiH be displayed when members of Las Damas C1f Sun- set Beach sponsor the annuaJ fall fashion show Saturd'ay, Oct. 26. Vivid, "go anywhere" ensembles from Rita Herron's will be mod- Services Rewarded Chamber Seeks Woman-of-year Seeking a woman of. compassion and consideration -one whose many services to the community may have gone unheralded and all but unnoticed -are mem- bers of the Woman'g Division, Huntington Beach Cham- ber of Commerce. Letters have been mailed to ali area civic groups and organizations requeming the nomination of Women- of·the-year. ln addition, the group is reque6ting ttiat private in- dividuals submit the names and qualifications of resi- dents since many women do not belong to clubs and perform their good wor.k6 quietly and without any no- tice. Serving as chairman to select tile Woman-of-the- year is Mrs. Will Jenkins, and assisting her are the Mmes. Edward Casey, etrehairman; Neil Peermain, John Wilson and Robert Wall. -Mrs . Jake Stewart is serving as consultant. Nominations should be returned by Friday, Nov. 1. ln addition to the woman 's name M. is necessary to list the activities of the individual including her work in a hospital, wittl youtti groups, or civic, national or state services. During the last business meeting of tte Woman's Division five members were selected to serve as a nom· inaling committee to choose a slate of new officers who will be elected during lbe Wednesday, Nov. 13, meet- ing. The new board will be installed in December. Other project. planned by the group include the re- cruiting of Girl Scouts W remove election signs and Boy Scouts to clear. plant and la>d lots filled with wild flowers . Also on the agenda for the Wednesday, Nov . 6 board meeting are plans for t.he Christmas decorating con· lest. . • • . ' . ... eled for ~"' and gu-during a lundi'""1 in Long Beach Yacht Club. Displaying ei<\""Pl'8 of the )>rigbf, new fashlons are (left to right) lllrs. Bo· Flilke,. M'..._ Ron MOntgomery and Mn. Doo Fitzgel'ald.. • , ' I • WOl,IAN OF MYSTERY -Seeking an outst~ Huntingtoo Beacb woman to name as WOni.tiri-cf-Ote-ye&r Ii.re (left to rigbt) Mrs. William Jenkins, chairman, and Mrs. Neil Pearmain of the Women's Division, Chamber of. ComTnerce. Lett.en; have been ........ ,. Od. U. IHI Ha ""' 17 JODl!AN HASTI NGS, 642-4321 Fashions On-the-go Styles for on-the-go clubwomen will be featured when Las Damas of. Sunset Beach sponsors its annual fall fashion show and luncheon Saturday, Oct. 26. · A preview of the spirited, contemporary look of today will be offered members and guests during the luncheon event taking place in 1lll exclusive yacht club setting overlooking Long Beach Marina. Commenting on the moving look of today wiU be Mrs. Pat Os- born, and fashions to be modeled by members will be from Herron's in Seal Beach, with Mrs. rutra. Herron coordinating the show. Serving as models wlll be the Mmes. Don Fitzgerald, show chairman, assisted by Bo Falke, Bill Bodenloss, Bill Moffett, Ron Montgomery, and Dave King. Miss \Jarol Shut.t. daughter of Mrs . Roland Shutt, will model styles with a flair for the junior miss. Fash.iom for Leisure Time Fun and Party Tune Elegance will ai.d Les Damas' many area and international philanthropies. The 20-- year-Old organization sponsors ttie purchase of playground equipment, and youth and civiC recreation expansion programs. In addition the Club contributes to Dollars for Scholars and the American Field Ser .. vlce ·program. · Serving as officers oi the club are the Mmes. Larry Barkman, president; William Kuszmaul, fir9t -vice president; Don Fitzgerald, .second viice president; Betty Dunhapl, thint vice president; William Theriot Jr .. recording secretary; John Woods, corresponding secre- tary, and Thom8'S Fresneye, treasurer. lna!IW to many area organizations asking tllem In select someone to I>e considered for 111is honor. Deadline for entries will be Fri· day; .NIW. 1. and nominations also will be accepted from the ptiblic. ' With a Problem . Like This, No Solution Is Necessary 1 DEAR ANN LANDERS' My problem Is that my mother understands me and I hive a father who cares. · We Hve tn a modest but comfortable home. My wardrobe ls adequ1te and t ~ave jUlt about everythinJ' I need. t'here art rules and regu11Uoos around hert and I am upected to obey them. There iJ,., ... ..,.,. put privile(H. What more can I do! T told hlm 1 was ANN LANDERS [il writing to you arid we art both awsJUna your reply. -CLCY.l'HESPIN NOSE DEAR NOSE: YCMI cu u0 II c1rt:le11.H11 if you wanl lo, Hoaey, Mt tbe esper11 caU It lick, dct, tk:ll. Aa hripteM:r. LtUen like youn make my wert eaaer. without a sho~er. He never washes his Mu lt who ~ .. I.ht personal bygknt Ublta hair because "water will make It fall of a 1oat deman1trate1 two &llblct: Fln$, . out." I hive bought him three diilerent a total . dl1re1ard for otlltn. lecMd1 kinds of dtodorantl, but ·be neyer uaed IOIUt mfPtJ kink)' aoUon .._, lrlmtelf. them. He never brushel hi.I tffth. Your lila1bud aeed.I prof'etJltll&I Wp. nlng and aaving money for a reunion in Hlwall ne1l month when be ,ell hi.I Rest &nd RehabilltaUcm leav•. Yeat.erday h11 mother M>ld me lht and her husband are planning Ofl flying to HawaU to join u1. I near~y died . dltcourate yov ta-law -nor yoan. It'• •P IO )'OW ll•1bud. 1 Alltl& lie write te 1111· ,.,..i. ud .... -lo ........ ft< THREE OR FOUR DAYS. Doo't ,.,. set, they Miu Mm ud 1tYI MDI, IOo. • t don't want to make any family trou--Unsurt of. ywnelf an cl.Iles? What,a ble. but I've been drwnlnl nlgtit ind day -righl! What'• .....,1 Sbauld yoof ' about · seeJnc LIO)'d durl!ll R and Ii. We Sbouldn•t you? Send hit Am IAodoro'' have been married 1117-and havo-booldet "Doting Doi and non•11,0 -: been aport MUly hall the time. Iq With your -lricoota ln colll ao4 : My mother' doesn't wort and my father a-1 drtnlc. When I do """'thin( W?001 I 11e1 puollhed. When I .do ~pod I pl·prolled. DEAll ANN LANDERS ' My mother alwQ'I told me, "You oever know a man until )'OU Uve wi\11 him." HOW' ri&bt the ... I Ila.; told him a . thou....i times I "Tt11 ... doll ·y,. "' ....,.., • tloo Lloyd'a . JllG!ber nldl }lllD" oofumn a lollf, 11U-addreaod. atampod •ytiopa.: reliaJoualy; Cab you· aay aomilhlnl to Ann Lindert will b& «lad to llllp ,.: I'm a tt.yor~ld boy and l ·11k yco - !rlth a problem 110 tha~ '<ho needs a lolutlonl -JusT PLAlll HAPPY I DJ:AllJ.P. Happ)': Tllublor ... dt:I" \ lf&I, I Hank lo 14. I am ii. We have - mmled two )'tar& I dool Jc.-how l<t .. y lhil but I'll do my bell. WI I aomey aibjecl. Hank can IO for two montha can't tolera~ his carelesmea. He gttl · CDltttt 1111tll lte Seb fL \ mi.d a~ me and doesn't speak for two daya. Lall wed 1 liepl on .the couch < DEAR<ANN·~DERS: My hlllblnd II becaUM ,1-couldn•t llllnd·lo bu1ear·blm. ln·Vlelnam. Lloyd·and I baft been plan- keep bor and her.~ llome! -,. II? , with your probleml. Send them to her In CITY PLEASE care o1 the DAILY PILOT ~ • DIAi\ NO ttrY' 1111, 1111 "'1 plaa It aeU·addreued, llompod ""'alopo. • , _,,_ -___________ .. _______ ... ··----...,_ ... _ ----------= = = ·-----···. -·= --·----- . • l 1 " . • • . . • • ' J 8 DAILY PILDT Prominent Visitors ·;;;z Nautical Voyage Charted Trojan Guild Sails Nobleman Shares Bill Stanford Alums Board Bus for Game, Party A N autlcal Vora&• for cock1alls 11nd dinner has ~ arrang~ lot members of the Troian Guild of Orange County on Satw'day, OC!t. 26. The parly will honor new member& of the Univeralty of Soutbeni California or4f8nizat1on. Approxnnately 100 members and husbands will enloy cocktails and boating ia the home of· Mr. and Mrs. George Demos, Huntington Beach, and then take a boat cruise to the Huntington Harbour home of Mr. and Mrs. Kin& Cooper Jr., for a 9 p.m. dinner and entertai~ent., . Serving as cheinnan is Mrs. Roger Blanchard, third vice president. Mrs. Daryl Creighton, president, also will be on hand w\th her husband to welcome guests. . Mr. and Mrs. Donald 'G. Francis (she is first vice pr..,denO plan to attend and greet new members., and Mrs. Charles ,c. Reed, membership chairman, will be assisted by her husband when she introduces the new members to other guests. . . . AJso assisting will be the Mmes. Robert Rudzik, Bernard Pipkin, Robert Lee and David Small. .... New members from the Orange Coast include Mr. and Mrs. Frank E . Anderson, Costa Mesa : Mr. and Mrs. Robert Basma~ian, Newport Beach ; Mr, and Mrs. Carl Irwin and Mr. and Mrs. Herald Piper, Seal Beach, and Mr. and Mrs. Robe~ HunUey, Westminster. Maternity Events Tea and Sympathy Given You migh t say an "air of ex. pectation" filled the room at a tea in South Coa!t Community Hospital. For the guests were all pro- spective patient.! . . .of the mateJ:nily wing. Hostesiing the tea f o r mothef'!'-to-be were members • . of the Lu Madrinas Auxiliary, who.se name Is appropriately translated as ' ' t he god· mothers." The eventa take place the fourth Tuesday of each month at 2 p.m. under the direction of Mrs. Norman Benham and Mrs. Norman Borucki. "We try to make the pro- grams as interesting as possi- ble," said Mrs. Benham. "Most of the guests seem to have a good time." The teas usually begin with a welcome followed by a "just the facts" type talk by a hospital administrator, who discusses such "unwomanly" subjects u finances. Then there's a movie. "We used to show lhe movie last in case anyone wanted to leave." said Mrs. Benham. "But no one ever did. So now we show it first." The film is a graphic description of childbirth, so graphic. that yiewers are warned to "look away" if they are squeamish. Newcomers Lured To Daisy Factory "lf we didn't have this movie It would be like a seventh g r a d e physiology class " said Mn. Benham. "On!). onct did a prospective mother leave the room upset, but she came back and af. 1erWard 18.id she was glad she had seen it. Everyorie seems glad to know exactly what goes on .• , Alt.er the film a tour is taken ... a tour that begim at the front door. "We want them to know exactly what to do the second they enter t h e hospital," said the chairman. ·The tour takes guests past the nurses' station in the. obstetrics ward and past rooms where vacant ones art closely lmpected. Then on to the babies, where tiny pink and blue wrapped bundles are inspected through the glass partition, amld oh! and aha and nervous smiles. "We don't allow a t.our of the labor and delivery room GUEST Dukoof-d 'Flowery' Exhibit Planned Rosariw' and amiteur rose . growers and arrancen will have a "golden opportun).. ty" to exhibit their best neat Saturday and Sunday u the Orange County RDSe Society presenta it.a third lbowing. Westmlnlter Civic Cen1«'1 recreatioo building will be the "Oowery" setting. ~ tries for !lp"'dmen and ar- ranaement cllJlel will be ac-- cepted from 7 to 10 a.m. OD Saturday and no entry fee will be charged. '!lie show will op<n from 1 to a p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. Trophies and ribbons will be presented Sunday at 4. Cut rose 1pecimen1 will be posted in 14 secflons and con- tainers will be provided by the society. The English Box will be included for the first Lime. 'Ille Duke and -ol Bedford will be tbe dillin- ...-"""-liharlac tbe IPOtUOt ;tMm Jll4!PNr'I ud -al Cbapmen Collep . '-... Go!rn plher ... Mcmclo71 Oct. .. ol ID:ID LIO. In -llln. -Ana. . Durina tbe lllllllraled ~ srain. Ille Duke and his wife wW lnvUe tbe audlonce to Bhan --tbe a...-"' tbe .... -• villl lo Woburn Allboy, )loinea al 'Ibo Duba al -"" far nearly ., .... When Jabn BdMrt Bnwll, the 1Slll and -DuM, in-hct1"d tbe.......,, ...... and il.I ---JI04land, be found the Abbey 0 tn utter cb&m." He let lhout nstoring the estate to Ila -gran-c!M and io 1155 be -. the flnt ~ peer to -bis homo lo paying visiton. Author of two boots, "Boot ol'inobs" and "A Sllver- plated SPQ!OD." the Duke is conoidered the moot deJno. cratlc of Britain'• 25 bertd- itary dultes. The ~ the former Nicole Sclllleider Mll!nalr of Further infonnation may be HOLLY INGRAM received by calling Donald To Marry Berg of Santa Ana. --------- Dance Club Costumes In Order VISITING Duchat of Bodford .rn.nce. wu an award-win- ning film producer when lhe met the Dul:• during the cwrse of a film-making u - &gnmenl 'Ibey wue marrl~ in 19911. Chapman's Town and Gown WU orcanlzed la.st year. Mem· ben aerve as advisors on cultural affairs, act u bolll· eases for speclal visitors and provide counsel on college facilities. November Nuptials In Offing During a am.all dinner party given by Mrs. Harold Pickle of Irvine and Richard Ingram of Whittier, they announced the engagement at their daughter, Holly Ruth Jngram to Lemuel Alvin Fugitt III. Plam are being made for a Nov. 23 nuptial ceremony in the Riverside Free Methodist Church. Mis! Ingram ls a graduate or Costa Mesa High School, at- tended Azusa Pacific College and now is a student at ruverside University. Boarding a special bus to the UCLA-Stanford football 1ame Saturdoy, Oct. It! will be '/$ membtn of the Orange County Stanford Glul>. Goorge Eastman ol Newport Beach, chairman, reportl that tbe bus will leave 1rVine Cout Country Club with a ttoP at the Disneyland Hotel. The special bu> lrip is one of the Orange County alumni croup's tra.dltlonal eve n ts , which also include a group ~I to the "big game" between Stanford and will travel t.o the UCLA 1ame via the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles where special events are planned berore and after the 1ame. In 1 PrettJtte rally, alumni and friends will bo5t a silver flu party ltarting at ii a.rn. in the Music Room. After the game, the Stanford Junior Alumni will sponsor their traditional party for all alum- ni, parent.! and friends of the university In the Blltmore'a Rtnalssan<e and Renc!ez,ous rooms. CaJifomla and the annual stag ----------- barbecue: with S t a n f o r d coaches al the Flyinf B Ranch in Black Star Canyon. Other Orange County alumni Kids Like to Ask Andy ~ 'GLYCINE MEET THE NEW GLYCINE DAY & DATE Glycine i1 one of Swltzerl11nd'1 great watches. And now, G!yci•e brings you the Day & Date. Each 24 hours, the day and date change automatically. Both are aelf·wind!ng, water and shock proof. Gold-filled top, stainless back, automatic Day & Date, $79.95. Day & Date with Vacuum movement. Stainless case with 14 karat gold accantS, $125. •' Follow\ng tradition. Lido Isle Woman's Club again will entertain new members and their husbands during a. party tbis year plan- ned for 7 p.m . Friday,• Oct. 25, in the clul>- bou.se. for obvious reasons," uid 1be first, third and fifth Mrs. Benham. "Everything Fridays of each month must be kept sterile and members of Lace 'n Leather privacy mlllt not be invaded." Square Dance Club meets at a But after the tour, the · ·~-.... _ u-,._ •-n •• :. p.m. m wn:: n.au-.::a1.W11 "-'Cn...,., Her fiance , son of Mr. and Mn. Lemuel A. Fugitt Jr. of Riverside, is a graduate of Rubidoux High School and studied at California Slate College at Los Angeles. Costumed members of Xi ;======='='==""II SLAYICK"S Jew•l•rt Sine• 1'17 ' ' guests reusemble at ull:U Huntington Beach. Further in- lable.s for a "just fer~" part, formation may be obtained by •.. the door prilo-btp • calJ!ol Mrs: Juu Dllloa at Eta Pi chapter, Beta Sigma PENETRATION 18 Fashion Island Newport BeaGh -, 64,4-1,3 80 "We try to give away u • 535-801.3 · , · much u possible," said tbe ----· ------- Pbt. were presented a pro- frAPl an An Experience when the lfOUP met in tbe Garden Gmve home of ita president, N•1tl., ev•ryont r••dt th• DAILY PILOT, ho.~•w11 "'""'" ll'•ll'W for th• f•ltulout Or1n1• Co•st. 0.-EN MONOA'I' Al+O piRlOAY EVENING The setting will be transformed into a private night club will! mod lighting and a profusion of daisies which will symbolize the Daisy Factory, party theme. chalnnan, whole lilt includes everything from d i a p e r service to baby p h o t o 1 • Completing the afternoon ts a film on babies and the very pracUcal subject of ·how t.o give .an active infant a bath. Mn. William Barry. , 1:===: Mn . Jack Murray presented the program and special satisfied with the format of the teas. But there'• only one thing she would change. "U only we could 1et more fathers to come .•. " guests included Mrs. Ann Glaus of Garden Grove and Mrs. Ross Cooper of Fountain Valley. A band will play for dancing and listen· ing pleasure; billiard tables will be available for those wishing to test their skill, and a buffet table will be laden with an array of tempting gourmet delights: "We never know bow many 1-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j we're aoing to have at the 11 teu," said Mn:. Bmbam. "Once we had 42 and another ti,me, only 13. Most women come ln their final month.!, but all are free to come back u often as they like." Party chairman is Mrs. M. A. Richley Jr .. 8'!isted by !be Mm ... Dooald Jacobi, Jack Hamiltoc. Phil Slatnn, Heri>ert Oelke and Richard Mailander. REG.~12 lD •15 f'N'!llUS MAKE Ml'I. OR. HATill Mrs. Benham is very W OQL 'liWEATt\IB, ~ lllTS, l'Af'll.li_ t.\<im~d CApris fullij \illed, na» c.Oloft_ REG.41r.1D*IS semmwtAR . +go!> 2300 N. Harbor, Costa M• .. ' . . ' SHOE REPAIR SPECIALS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY HALF SOLE SPECIALS Men's leather or neoltte reg. 4. oo., ••.•.... 3.27 Women's flexible leather reg, 3.So ••• , ••.••• 2.91 SPECIALS ON WOMEN'S HEELS Sprayed , r-'eg . 4, 75, 3 .97 Covered heels, r'eg. 5, 75, 4.97 Many styles, all popular heights; we match your shoe~. Reptile shoes, slightly higher,. Hanct>ags repaired-attach new handles, reg. 2.so ••• 1.97 also avallables toek9, elasps, other ,,_,,... Shoe Repair. Reblnson's Newport ~ O'Keefe & Merritt. SCUJLJFTUU 38"' SCUl.l'TURA GAS RANG£ l& • New Su par Wld• 2S~ Gl•nt Capacity Master CM!!n • New Con.,,.,,ience Com~ment for H•ncl,y Storqe • • New RemOY•bl• Color Blended GrttQ • E•sy Urt·Off Own Door .... 111-. .... • U:cluslw R•mov.-end-Ciun Star ht Sumers • New Euy.Lift:•nd·Clnn Coot! Top • • Ma1n•·Fl•me S.r·B·Que Droller • Teflon Co1ted Oven Liners • Teflon CNted Built·ln Grlddlt. • Tru-\1ew Plnof'8mk: Bl~lc: Glass Window AmNTION HOMEMAKERS! Plan to Attend The 17th Annuel ORANGE COAST COLLEGE • COOKING SCHOOL Starting Wednes~ay, Octob•r 30th at The MESA THEATRE-Costa Me1a @DA\'15 RRl)WN • IJ 411 WT t 7TH S1'Rlff COSTA-MESA 646-1614 DAILY ........_TUllO•V ,., 011t' 22114 Y..- 111 ttt. H.,._ ArMI -~~~-~..___,~~..-..~.....-.~~~~~~~~~---­~---------------------------------------- .. • PILOT·ADVERTISER-9 WMntsda1, D<toi.. 23, 1968 t Newlywed s1 O.\JLY PILOT . J8 IN WEITMINITER ' ·.~ . ... ., . ' ~ ,,: ' I . -. . : ! ' f; .. .. ~ .. 'I •• 11 .. t !I :: ' .. • • .. ~ " f: ~ . ' , I i • : • ~ I • j i : I I • : . • i . ! • • • • : . j ! ! : • • : I . I I ! I ! i : I . . ' Establ ish CM Home Home in Co6t.a Mesa follow- ing a San Francisco honey- moon are Joseph C. Simmons Jr. of Newport Beach and his bride, the former J • n Gorman, who exchanged vows and rings before the Rev. Ken- . neth J. Krause in st. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Com . Mesa. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. John L . Gorman of. Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Sim- mons of La Canada. Given in ·marriage by her father, the bride wore a floor length gown of white satln with bridal lace and seed pearl trim. Her train flowed from the shoulders and her illusion veil was caught to a crown of lace and seed pearls. Forming her bouquet were white roses, baby's breath and blue lipped carnations. Ix-Coploa of Jowoll'J' •oHI .. ·11aowhoro for Doll•rs •-• In b'a~y blue chiffon over satin and carrying white carnations tipped with blue and baby's breath w e r e Sharon Richards of Newport Beach, maid of honor, and the bridesmaids, Julie Gorman, the bride's sister and the Mmes. Wayne Hubert, Robert Witting and James Blakley. Gift Boxed Jewelry •618 Wo1118.11's Panel-I Watches 2J•P-etray LlghtB•lbs Attending as best man was Frank Saeman of Anaheim, and ushers we re J o h n Gorman, the bride's brother, Larry Larsen, Ed Quarry and Chris Mannaud. A reception followed In the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. Circulating t h e guest book was Linda Hostetle, while serving the cake were Martha Brown and Jean Royston, all of Costa Mesa. Special guest was Mrs. Nellie Sprague, the bridegroom's grandmother. The bride is a graduate of Mater Dei High School, and her husband is an alumnus of John Muir High School, Pasadena and Orange Coast College. Pick Popcorn Wear these '' popcorn'' partners with fall coats, suils, pansuits for sport, town. New! Crochet crunchy "pop- corn" hats, handbag, with or without chain handle of knit· ling worsted . Patiem 7227 : bag, hats, sizes S, M, L Incl. FIFTY CENTS (coins) for each pattern -add 15 cenls for each pattern for first-class mailing and specla) han~Ung ; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks the DAI- LY PILOT, 105 Needlecraft Dept.. Box 163, Old Chet.ea Statiou, New Ycri:, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Addrell, Zip, PaUern Nunber. Book No. I -Deloe Quilts -16 complete patterm. Send 50 cent& Homemakers. Host Teacher Happy Homemakers w 111 hear AD About Llntngs at the nut meeting Friday, Oct. 25. St. Wilfred's Episcopal Church In Huntington Beach wlU be the acene ol' activity at 10 1.m. An tnstruc:tor at lbe Santa Ana YWCA and a teoch« ol the Blahop Method ol Cloth-tnc CGoltnlCllon will be the speaker. Tbe pa will ... plain the ... ol all types of fabrics and offer 1 few .ew· ""' abort cull. Baby·•ltting will be provld· od. Reserv•tlolll .,.. belJ1i liken by Mn. David Johnltoo, • lfl-1126. -. -~-- •Pl11a ......... TovrCholco 69c Costume ·piecM that go together in happy har- mony or 1tand alone distlnc· ttve)y. Neweat fubion colon, designs for Fall wardrobes. ... ..._ 19• tac 'Masks-·-· • oc.ottW' 69c P•._.pkln •••·•-···-·· Po•cl Bapl :'." Ani1nal Cook I• 29c '33"AllTr........_ c.a-dRadlos $2999 ..• , ...... . ottta .... F...,,_ in "1-les, 99' 1hapee:, col· ~-~ .... W.riftrlM111ull P 111•. =..=25• Wakel03· sic. ~· '"'*-· ... . ~-...Miili .. 'iilli' ••• .,.., ..... 429-..81 Str,.icle.. · x 21x21• Corduroy FIOOI' Piiiows --· $299 ..... 11.,hl i.tloo-Diy llolr 9 d UQISP ••• sc En en ... Afllr•• 11 . .............. . t?'"""l"'I · •mad Mix• ...... , ... ..., .... .f!~ss• •. , •••. J . •P ..... • .. 98• , ..... e..-"£ S~ Po~er1 ............. S i= . ........ .. ....... ,... fj'I• -----------------____ ..__ ---.~~-- 'IC3" I ( .. --~---. ' OAIL Y l'ILOT 'M I · onsters Rallied By NANCY MolNTYRE Seore a fiank steak and lightly sprinkle with tend.erlr.er. (One at.eat is usually ample for four). DZAJ\ NANCY : My husband wa.s born on Halloween. While he's a monster in ,the m<nlng, most of the Ume he's ~. This year I'd 11ke to itve hlm a lllr'p'ist. birthday party-however, l 'm ltuct fer a ICIJ')I party idea. Spread steak with a stuffing of I cup breadcrumbe whlch have been moistened with water and squeezed out, 2 t.able- Spoorll chopped parsley, 3 tablespoona dlopped green ooloN and 1 lea!poon • salt. On top of stuffing, spread a layer of thinly sUced ham (bolled, baked or canned). Then place 3 hard«><>ked ea• across the larger end of steak-end to end. THE MONSTER'S BRIDE DEAJ\ M. B, A IUrprlJe party la tllUllly lllfl!deot to tum anybody'• haJT ~ but mQbe your husband doesn't llCll'e eully. In that event, bow about a Halloween dinner from Transylvania, old world capital ot vamplrel and were-Roll steak and truss. Rub with sea· soned nour and brown in 4 tablespoons butter in a heavy iron pot . Add 1 cup burgundy wine, 1 cup waler and simmer covered for 2'h hours pr until tender. Serve with pan juicei. wolvl!IS? Thll blsarre Uttle country, Jmmortaliud b y COunt Dracula -the granddaddy of wierdo'1 al9o ii noted for lls cen- tral l!lun>oean cui· a1ne. We hut.en to add, lt'a very l'tlbr-- t.al food and not unlike HUD1arian. The following iJ an old taniliy re- For those of yoo llosting junior mon· ster rallys, here's a couple of where--lo- find-it Ups for Halloween. First. we've found a pllce that sells black and orange Ice cream. Black ice cream may sound api.ioky, bUt it's made from licorice candy and surprlalngly good. Kids love it.• cipe for Transylvania Flank S w was liven tu me by my great uncle Bela who aWl watcMs bis movies on the late. late llhow -dreamin( of the &ood old nigbU. And if you're looking for a fun cake, there's oa bakery we know that special- ir.es la Halloween pastries. Their cake "cartooning" is the most inventive we've seen anywhere. They also make theil: own E~an style breads including an Irresistible apple bread and dill-flavored wh1te bread. P. S. To warm up your monster rally, we 11.111est a fUZDlf d Bloody Marys. For information ragarding these gour- met services, call The DAILY PILOT at MM.121, and aai for "NANCY'S HINTS." Horoscope Capricorn: Be Discreet THURSDAY OCTOBER 24 By llYDNEY OMARR .. 11te wm: man controls his destiny •• ..utrology point.. the way." ARJES (Matth 21-Aprll 19): Accent on writing, com· municating, publishing. Your spftue of iDDuence widens. More people are aware of what you think, feel. clelir<. Break from restricUona:. Make the move. TAllJWll (Ap<il 2'1May 21)): Pleuanl ourprlte due In gill.- financial area. Luxury item caURS d.lsc:uAion. You could be recipient. Harmoniu lam!· ly reWlomhlJ>ll. Give and ~ou allO recelve. Appreciat.e beau- ty. GEMINI (May 21-June 02): Favorable response indicated for yrur effort.a. Greater recogniUon received today. Key is to separate the real from illu&ion. Means don 't be victim of false flattery. Know what's going on. CANCBB (Jw>e II.July D): Accolade received f r om uaoda.t.a, fellow workers. Day when your efforts an a~ pr<clated. Ralse In J>llY II a diatinct posatb lllty . Be IP'acloua -but 1et what's conthli to you. LEO (July 23-Alli. D J' El· citemenl of dbcovery I a featured. Crutive abWUes are t.erelted. You are able to get acfosa your style, v It w • Romance. variety art bJ th• picture. Reoult II joy. VIRGO (Alli· 23-Sept. 12)' Any purclwe for Improvement ol borne comfort ia favored. Keep pn:mlle made to family member. Bonus could be in of- finl. You are ropald for pa.st favor. Slate la cleared or debt. UllllA (Sept. 23-0ct. Dl -Ideal, !fWinp with ..iau-. Speal< up. Stata needs. Many now are willing practical. Realize lhat going to concede major point. Know uphill takes more time than titia. Move with confidence. the reverse. Think. Good news is on the way. Cb IF TODAY IS YOUR eer up. • SCORPIO (Oct, 23-Nov. 21 ): BIRTHDAY you are a loya1, Versatile approach results in artlstlc individual -you are gain. You are able to add to due for more freedom, greater posseeton1. Choose quality, opportunity for happiness. but a v o id extravagance. Outline requirements. GENERAL TENDENCIES: Separate meu desirea from "Cycle high for SAGITTARIUS: actual needs. • c A PRfCORN, -·AQUARWS. !AGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Special word to CANCER : in Dec. 21): People comment on any celebration, be moderate your personal glow. Fine .for Jn drinking, eating. prcb•/'d ftal"ir'Jg ipparel. Ybu can get just the right item for improvement of ap- pearance. Surprise gift •P- pean in -Offing. CAPlllCORN (Dec. :!Wan. ·tt): You are asked to keep a confidence. Be d 1 s c r e e t . Realize that some want to in· volve you in costroversy. Your role should be in t h e background. Hold off-wait and observe. Then you win. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb. 11): Fine friendship could develop. Individual you meet through family member proves worthwhile. Know th.II, and respond with open heart. Key today is generosity. Give and you also receive. PIJ!CES (Feb. 19-March 20 )' Cooperate in community pr()- ject. See beyond im.medi&t.e indiat.ioos. A n a 1 y z e am· biUons. Some may not be Nuts 'n Nibbles Attending meeUnp every Friday at 10 a.m. are members of Fountain Valley Nuts to Nibbles TOPS Club. The women have selected the Recreat.ioni Center in Hun- tington Beach for t h e i r meeting place. Mrs. Tom Spine at 897-7856 will answer questions about lhe group. To ~ Srdrwr Orottrr'1 -'>~•Ill bl>al<111. T~. Trutll Alloul AstrolOlilY· Nnd .SO cenll to O!Nrr aoc1i:.11t, - DAILY l'ILOT, h• 3'«1, Gr1r.d Cen!- r1I Sllllon, Ntw Yon., N.Y. 1«117. 1hop at home for eu1tom slip eoven 1.79 .. 4.99 )'4. reg. 1.99 18 l .99 yd. who IClfl you haY• to com• to th• aton to buy fin• earp9tlnq? Not May Col Call "' now and be "'uttd of ...,. looking fumitw< in time for the boLi· day ttl50n , • . 1t low, low Pall Sale price>! We'll bring you a full ruge of ule fabric samples ~at include the famed O,atrau and Union Linen group of the Kandell col- lection and the de- corator Spectrum fabrics, too. O>oose Our decorator·trained salesmen will come right to yow own home with aiaoy beau· ti.fuJ cupet wnples . . . ahas. abeared, oc:ulpruttd. IWUt , , . ny)Oll, tcryli<, WOO~ other &bria • , • Jtrle$ from plwb velvet ID lhap. for li•in& mom, dining l'OOCll, all ..,..,.d the home. for lielpful, p!Of•inoal advice Bi-in .,._ """ bomr. ..u n1.n11, at. 110. Oar Capotmahiio will -ID ,.,., ..,-.awe: · •" fmm -lin· .... ..,.,... -all toil resisttDt, mlor· fut and presluunk. Call us IOdarl :Mt.A.YOO "'*Y • MUth Hitt ,test, JJJJ _,ri&t.1 st., ce&t1 "'"• 5"-HJh .i.e, -4ay 111-h oolvN•Y• 10:00 '·'"· t. t 1JO P·"'· • " ' .. .. -. -...... . - Bell Rings For Class Significant Pr0gress Women Never Had If So Good , WASlllNGTON (UPI) - Tbt fifth ,.ion in the cur-Women have pe.vu bad it IO rent aerie• qa Home Manq:• good ment of CbJ]dNo With Lwn-Thats the fiJt ol a report Ing DisablULltt will deal with submitted to President John- Dlscipline and the Child With son which aya American a Learning Diaability. women have made "remark· Lecturer-wiU be Mn. Ma· -able gains" on. a wide front rion Parsons, Ms, p!ycholo-over the past five years. ·st fo the Newport-~esa The re po r t, off~red by &1 ., r , Labor Secretary Wi ll ard Unified Sch~! District. She Wirtz, chliirman or lhe calr has been an uutructor at Or-inet _ level Interdepartmental ange C:oast and Chapman col-committee on the statUI of leges, 11 the _bolder of • half w 0 men, hailed u1igniflcant dor.en educ.titional credential& ... progress" for women in edu- in the state, hu been a c~ c a t t 0 n, employment and room teacher and tJtt; a~· training, jury service and iatrator of specla:J education others. programs. · The results of the comm.it· The class, limited to 25, tee's efforts, along with &al.ns will begin at 7:30 p.m. tomor-made through effort.a of other row in lhe Psychological groups dedicated to improv- Services Center, 244 S. Glas-ing the status of wotnen, sell St., Orange. Wirtz said, was reflected in a The D•ily Pilot, Covers Boating variety of statistics~ In 1963, 72 oul of 100 17- year-<1ld girls wer e high school graduates ; in 1967, 77 out of 100 were. 'nle number o! WQmen en- rollad In. junior and comma· aon 'a executive otdt.t pre-federal employment and tl!.1 venting su discrimination In 1!>64 CivU Rights Act. nlly collegtl doubled In the i;:::==================j wne four yean. In 1963, 200,00<I children were cared for lo licensed day~are ce.nters, compared to 500,000 this year. The number of w o m e n trained under the Vocational Education Act increased from 2.1 million five years ago to 3.8 million In 1967. In 1983, tht percent.age of women appointed to profes- sional positions in the federal government was only 18 per- cent. Last year, It waa 3S percent. 285,000 unemployed and un- deremployed women have re- ceived job-skills through in- stitutional and on-tbe-j ob training since passage o( the Manpower Development and Training Act In 1962. The report also cited "'sub- stantive'' acts aimed at im- proving woman's status, chief among them President John- ~-VIRGINIA'S'--· SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE P'h ... Oltlole s.aoso 3334 E. Coast Highway· Corona d•I Mir PRE-HOLIDAY SALE 20% OFF BROCADfS & StlKS ONE WEEK ONLY! ~-----VIRGINIA---' ·Sears Exciting Ways to New Autumn Beauty by Shul_ton IF Y<Xi HA VE TO POWDER YOUR NOSE A LOT , TRY CORN SILK ~ Silt &i.9CI your &cc I Jowly 00-Jhm.thc-ec 1 lhlt lats for haun. h 0 tort>. n:C'CS' oil "Seu your l'lff.kcup without ldding color. 1, tn111pare1H, wotb wcU .,-ithtot with- out found.Ooa. You'H !i:e dte looL IF YOU WANT TO LIGIIT UP YOUR LOOKS, TRY nIBCORNSILK COMPATABLBS c.on Silk. Liquid ~ tioft f.MICS io lil: Jhades. oae right for ,au, st S2. AJtd. io make JOllf Jft(li- est face-Cora. Silk Blwh. COlM:ll ita puc.h, Dink and amber,. 3.,0. t,.,. thrm. all-from ShultOll. COf--"'- ~iii th=~-~p irresisttble for rourself- pcrfect as a gift. A GIFT FOR YOU Come iin, rcc:cnc a golden Com Silk compact, wit\ yoo1 j } oc more Shulton pUtcha.sc. Learn l'OOl'e .t>Out Shultoo'• heauey sec_rcts bit' coo1ulting 'lritb our rcpresen- tlltlve. Introduce Your Skin to Aloe Vera, The Natural Moisturizer with new Desert Flower "Wirh aloe vera skin care producrs. R.utarea.- A. fluffy, Jt"C&selen mwn with aloe Ter&. tM W'IX ~,,el tbu keeps & pl&nt bloomiog irl .the Gesert. A perfect mUe-11p base, &blorbed ~r • ..._ .uibt.,.. 1 -(Replsr 2-oz. liie, Sl.5ot Inuod.uctary kit Value $5 for 2.50 lllf•llt ere.-A deli1htfullr rich ble11d of aloe 1'Ct'& &nd other emollinu:s. N .. to.rat moi1t11re for p«tehed cella. Le&ves 1kin 1oft, atnootb, ~CSL 1 ot. (llea- nlu 2-oi. Pe. $4.) · All three one-ounce jan packed iii a ravel-easy while vinyl lciL Ch•••er A~ueamthat cootains PW'C 1loe vera &el, Mother Nit.t11te"1 1«.~t cf D1.tUral rnois- ru~ Wa&Ms or tiuues off fot IP&rklini cln.D 1ki11o '"'iulc 3.7 9%. 1izc, 82.)0.) S .. al ... '• e... ..... . Bea•tyAW• ~--....... ... "'..., _ ... '""'"' ble...U.~ lwnrio. ...... Hoi.Ji .... .... J..ocli.-loltod fl ol ....... ...i....., a>o11Wo11 IOc-.u.-.• m '"!!. . ...... CRMIGE 'l'OtJR PURCHASES Oo Se..n J.e.oolvi~ Ow,t M~et Florence Montgomery Shulton Representative Who will he in our Costa M.esa Store to help you select the Shulton beauty preparations right for you • • • Come in and meet her. Thursday & Friday .•• Oct. 24th & 25tli ' Sears -South Coast Plaza • . . ' GROUNDED NOW -Al Porco, Orange Coast College student body president, looks over tw0<seat Swift, acquired by college for its airfrl!Dl• and·power train- ing program. OCC Buys Airpla~e 'Swift' Designed for Air Program It'• called. a Swift -it has . sincf: it was new by a single maintenance e:r.cept llCtuaJ two seats, a l~horsepower owner in Bishop. In 20 yean, engine work. That .a>me1 dur- engine and a wingspan just tl\e plane' had only been flown ing the second year. right to fit into the Orange 730 'hour! I h Id Coast College Airframe and Dick . M c C I u r g • air . The college a so as an o Power Building. transportation instructor at Taylorcraft, which is a fa~ric The Swill ls a light plane, OCC went to Bishop and flew covered light plane w 1 t h built in 1946, and recent!)' the P1ane to Orange County wood~n span .• and P~ of an purchased at a discount for Airport. There it was alununum..covere<J gilder. $2,750 for the airframe and disassembled ·and taken by Most of the time . students power program. truck to the OCC campus. will be aclually working on Its retractable landing gear, Once tnside the building, it aircraft when they perfprm along with other features, was reassembled. repairs and ~o maintenance. qualifies the program for FAA The airframe ~d power This, according to instructor accreditation needed by program started this fall at ·George Bingo, is far more graduates. OCC. Students in the first year valuable than practicing on The plane bad been owned learn all aspects of aircraft dummies. Out of Object.or Form.s Draft Omits '~upreme' WASHINGTON (AP) -Th< Selective Service system bas deleted reference to a "Supreme Being" from fonrui used by individuals tequesting conscientious objector status. The move was ordered by Congress in revising draft laws last year. ln the new and old law, ex- emption from combat training and service could be granted anyone "who, by reason of religious training and belief, is conscientiously opposed 1 o participation in war in any form ." But the old law specified that "religiOUJ training and belief in this connectiGn means an individual's belief in a rela· t1on to a Supreme Being in- volving duties superior to those arising from any human relation ... ,. In 1985 the Supreme Court ruled an applicant need not believe in God to satisfy the "Supreme Being " definition, but need only hold a sincere, meaningful belief that oc- cupies a similar place in his life. Last year, Congress dropped the "Supreme Being" defirll- tion from the law altogether. A· draft spokesman !aid there was considerable debate inside the system. whether to retain in the new application form the question : "Do you believe in a Supreme Being?" L\. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the draft, decided to omit it. The .tpokesman pointed out tha t applicants could slill declare !Uch a belief in su~ port of their appllcaUons if they so desired. The new form also omits quesliom on the applicant's schooling, occupations , residence, parents, a n d membership ln organizations. The applicant is invited to provide personal reference!, but is no longer required to do so. Also . omitted were these items : -"Give the name and present address of. . the in- dividual upon whom you rely mo&t for religiom guidance." -''Un~der what circumstances, U ~y, do you believe in force ?" -"Describe the acilons· and behavior in your life which in your opinion m o s t con- spicuouily der'nOnstrale the coruiistency and depth of your religiOUJ convictions." · lfftakifl lffell11 Is Read.fl , CO S.neear Mrs. Donald SmUI! (from left) sets exp!enati.oo M!rn FA!Mew Slale llotptlal. teclmlclan Marioo EclwardJ, on how Muildy Molly will be und, u Bob Ev~ asalstant'to medk>ai director, cbecn the device ouL lleverely r6C>ilnllid Jllrls on Ward 225, where Mra. Edwards !J chief, will use mud and clay lnaldt Ifie box· like l"Jlllrapl!on, leaming to diltingulsh tu'turoo, eolon and form1. Mn. Smith, o1. 200f Velley :Road, Colla Meoa, and Mn. Louis Perroct, o1. ll461 Moede Sir, Ganlen Grove, built Ille ~ device, aided by donations. • ' •• -' - 1JISCOUJl1 SAVltd -SA YORY SPICED = ·~ •t. -~ 12-oz. CANS LU 1N1CH .E.O'N MEA 'T s-00 FOR WILSON'S • 15V2 oz. Cans CHILI CON CARNE. Fill YOUI CQT llTI SAVINtS · . ,... . . AT U.C. WITH .··BIAlllS •·o:L IOm.I 08# MAZOLA OIL ... -VT• 1-LL IOI itNSMINI . 33f KRISl'Y CRACl(ERS ............... _ •..•. WISHIONI --l·OZ. rrL INCL 4f; OPP 4'a. nALIAN DRE~SING ------··--··--4 'J'• OOLD MOM. -l·U. IAO SC" FLOUR .• __ ..... ~ i.59UieK --·-·-----·..--· 43c ~r r.;;."l-_'.~:'.":_°:'~-411 oo on• ITUIND -41/J..OZ. ...... 6:6c" IAIY FOOD -··-·-··---··-····---·-• ~ DOWNIT-11 .. ~-UICL•-·]19 fAlllC ~OFllNlll ..................... 5 , PALMOUYI -klMO 1111-tltCL 1k 0'P c U9UID DmRGENT ·-·-·····-... 9 CAICAH -GIANT SID -INCL 121 OPll ssc DISH DITIR6ENT ................ _._ DASH -JUMIO -INCL Jk OPP 189 DllUIMNT .... _ rcouP"oN', ' scon 1 : TOWELS: I Bii ROlL I I.loll °" ""' 1111 ~ I 1111 -111 m!Olll I I . I I C I I I L ___ ..;.J SHOULDER CHOPS _7~ IOuND IONI OGf: LAMB CHO~ ... __ v7• LEAN . ~MB IRE.AST ___ 1~ LAMB NECK -~· ~--29~ LAMB SHANKS ._39~ IMA~ LOIN 139 LAMB CHOPS ·-... COMRNED00iEEF1111 " 79~ ..... ...COT-II-OZ....... -·--····••M• .. -s& .. BEEF BACON ........... ·-··--7~ DOWNYfUKE K-SID WAffLES 1i .Cou11f GLUI sALAMI IAllh' fl.UN ANlltCAll!UCll ' All l.f-' 1.1Ji.11 •• Clu'- Sandwich !;HEESE llm ll'llCIM IW OCTOB II . GROUND BEEF PRODUCE SOUD GREEN CABBAGE BANANAS _ J· lbs. HOURS: TUES. ....... PRL 12,-·f p.-.; SAT. 1Mt SUN. iJ.S . CLOSID MONDAYS & HOLlDAYI' _ 3328 W. Bois " . I -SANTA .ANA lltllAll MAlmqll ·-• ......--~ • . I . ' /'> =· ". -. ' - -= = -- . -• : • . • - -. - • . - r ----• '• 'r "'•"'•• .. • tJ! Oll~'I' PILOT Wtdntsday, OctObef 2J. 1%8 LEGAL NOTICE -= LEGAL NOTICE ...... MOTtC.I OP U.U Cl•Tll'l(ATI CH' DIKOlllTIMUAIK" JllOTICI W PV.1..C SAi.i OP OP USI ANO/Of: A•AMOOMMIMT #loTot: VlllllCl.I t.'f' 1.1111 MOU>I• l)jll PICTITIOUS fill.Ml •l . 'W'TICI tt Ml•l•Y OIVIM ht, TMI! UMDE'"IGNED "°her., urt:t ' ~t " "'-t.lw ~ Md -vw.i, tMt, ~ °""°"" t; Htil "'" C.•MCI ~'I'll~ ....,.oe11, win ... '' tubllc •IOfi> '° *' Mu.14 ~ n. flcff"°"" Htr tlOllo •I '!\Nlfl st., 5-t Mtt9L k&l 11ttt19 of,. ..... LAWfll AND GAlltOt!NING , lftdl. ta~ .. t:• .. , .. P.M., 911 II 1"'1J ~ l"'f.. M~l'!rlMIM 11.oc' -·~· "111 11111 '°"' .. ~. I,.., Ctllll>rlllll, wl!IOI b!,111-w•• ...,..,., .,,. ~ ....,..,.. ~lllld _,..., fl>wlf: __.., ot,,,. 1ooowl111 H rlOM. w""~' •• • ' l9oll C-1ro, bod'JI IYll CPl!lM)f, ""°* !fl full itftd t!Ka ot nt10tne9 1'11 j r •:!l-A·. llOm.1271'1 il•h ol C•IM,, L.lunM .. ftlllOWl. !!>WIT; ,.,;)ta. tYI "'" Ttil1 t•t 1111 Ill .... 1111 llOf' Ml1!0' W. Held, nd •11111e Drl.,., , '"~1MIM. Mu11tll!t'°" aHl;h, C1ilf. t)J~,.llAlllcl Del. H, 1MI. G~ L. T~·· JS(l N1ncv OrlYt, • · • J1ck l10w1rd HUfllf119to11 IMCll C•lll ·•-,,; ~dlld D••Mt ~II 0.1" Pllol, Certlflc•I• for ,;,nucilon ol butlnftt ,,. ,,.Pct1 •. n. I... lllUI Ulllkr ""' •bovtl flctlllous .... ma, '""' 1!· • 11d1vll ol PubNce"otl tMttOI', ••e on lllo LEGAL NOTJcE In ti.. ollke ol TM County Clerk ol Ot•"'t County, ulldet IM prov!11oN o1 # ,..... Secllor. )"'6 ol -CIVIi (Cllhl. .:_-.,,; MOTIC'S TO ("•OtTCMtl WITNESS -"-l'lll 11111 IS!fl =1,U,l•ICMl COU•T OP THI Do;talltr, IN&. -ITo\Tll OP CAL.ll'O•HIA l'Olt H...,.y W. Heed T.,. CfH!NTV 0111 OltANO• GtOVtr I.. TllOIMl ;• ... A41.. Pubtlthed Dr•-Cotll 0.ll'f Pllll!, -,_ ... llUTH.L l'"AllLl!Y, Oita•Md. ~ "· n. )II •NI H-W 6, TJC",'f IS Ml!•EaV GIVEN to tn. IHI 1119..e ..a":'..:a:-i..=-c.:r::c' .. ~ LEGAL NOTICE ·"°"""' l l'O ~ ..... ta Ille tlltm. P.Jl+K '?~~-!? ~1. In trie otlla CllltTl,ICATI! Of< •USIHISI ~ II h abo.,. entltllld CfllH't, • .. ICTITIOU$ HI.Ml! IMfn. W!fll IM MUl&lf'f Tllll Uflllenltllld ._, C .... lfy hi II COii> Jil tllt ......., .. _ 11 llM ol11cl ducff... 1 ~-11 17'1 Wesklltt, C.. l"t"'-N, ATlorMY, .tGst ~ letdl. C..IU~I. Wldft" fhe II(, · Sult. 106, t.a. A-let. flllol.ll tl"" 1W1ftfi ot OUPONT It. toOOI. whldl II IM 11tci ol OEVl!LOPMl!NT CO. •NI lfltl will flml II !tit llndlr1l1111d Ill •II ..,..lttn II __., of it. follllwlM perto11, 1111111.Je IM "llh Gt Wld *«dtftl, ' •·•I .... olf« of N!I~ "' "*lt'M •fW "'"' flttt ltllbflc. ...... ........ ... ,. • thll Mtlce dma i. •• •o1iow.: i!M Ocl<lbtr i•. 1'61 F. C. Schnelder, ltlf1 Glenwood l ine, =:,., •oberl W. lrwll'! N-rt ihKft I ~ E~KV'°' fll 11>1 Wlll o/ DI'" C>efOber \, lNI I. '"' Ille 1bovtl NrNd dladtnl F. C. Sdllll~ .ft" Aat C. PI LTllOUll STATE DF CALIFORNIA, l« lkeld11111111!1 •11111, luolf• IN OllANGE COUN'l'Y: 1 11 ..._..., CIH"""9 ... On Do;t. 1, lt61, ~ Ille, • Nollry ~•ti 2111 ft'Ml&I PU'bllc In Ind tar WIO Sl1~, Per-11\1 r ~ tw llOIWTW •PPffrld F. C. khn11dtr kNIWn to ,..... to ..... :._..1 be the"""'" whose .,,mt !1 1ubtcl'tbeod ~ Jl-t~· On111t1 C11111t D1$1Y Pllot, to fN within 11111rumet1t •nd 1c~nawlldg. *'" lf. n. JO 1nd N-mbet '· Id hi •Xl'Wltod ,,,. wma. M l1'.S... (OFr<ICIAL Sl!ALJ tEGAL NOTICE f!owli. C. Knox Not1ry Pubhc • C.llfornl• Prll'!dHI Offlot In 1 ~-';' MOTIC.I" O" SH•llll'~'S Ull Or•l'IM (aunty I M. MAC CHA.LI!$. l>i.1 .. 1111, VI MY Camml•lot1 £~p1,_ + W. MAC CMARl..ES, Otftnda .. t, Jul'( 1, lt7t IAU Publlll*I Dr•1t111 Co.I Olll'f 1.!_~~1 V'\l1llt et In IKeCUllon lll\lld Oii » Ociaba" f , f , 16, 7l. lNI 1VHll IHI 1W 1tle Su,,_rlor Court, (Of.In. l------.,-"°'::::=:::::----11 en ..... Sf•I• OI C•llf«nl•, uflOn • LEGAL NonCE I 111111""' I" l•vor et AVIS M. l--------------11 CffAlltLl!S, Pl•lnlltf 11 ludvmenl p.J1J1l "d'Wl'-.rid ... lnll KEITH W MAC ClllTll'ICATE 01' •UllHISS CltA•L.°1:$, Oll9ndanl •• IUOV..,.nt dfflt· l'ICTITIOUI KAMI ,..., ll'tDwtnl 1 NI blllnc. ol u1i.11 ••· Thi undlrsl1ntd dDes c1r111y ti. II Cl)l'I· -tuel1Y due or. .. Id ludv..,.nl on tht d•lt ductt,,. 1 bllsllltU 11 Corti fMM, ~ iuu.11o:1 II wld uecurlon, I "-" C•lltoml1. ullder 1111 flcl111ous flrm .....,,. . F,;..,._... VPOl'I •II ""' tllftl, title •nd lnltt"HI al W A. T I! II AND l M I! SKI ,, " wld ludtomlnt debt..-Ill '"' i..Nllold PU8LICATIOHS Ind IMI wld llrm 11 )o •'1119 Ill 111t praptrtJ' 111 ""' Coul'!I'/' flf tomPoted ol IM foll-"-"""°"' .,..,_ p.· ::::::· ''''-" (.llltot11i.. ~btd II :m,:.i!,'.u!I ..... liaq et l"flicMnCI II -r Lot s. TrlCt Ho. ......., lllCMll111 111 lllCHAlltO L. KESEL, 1'17, Ve""8111 l'r· bulldlnn llld ltnPnwt!'Mllll " :tr.wn LIM, """""''°" B:e1dl. C1llfwll5-. :r .. '""' """*" rKOtdld 111 boell. Ho. D•led Oc!OIMr I, lHI il' lG, "" '°' ta "6 hlc:MIW af RICHARD L. KESEL •'' mlKillll-'""'" recof'df ot Dnl1111 Slit. al C•llfornle, Ot-COUll1v : :·' Cof.lntr, C.llfor11l1. Oii f)o;foblr I, IHI, beforl me, 1 Net11rv TllPlller wlttl •M 1nd sl""'ltr flloe Public m ind for Yid Shlll, persot1•llv' ~ """"""b. htrllllll,,,...ta, •nd -•P-rtd lllCHARCI L. Kl!Sl!"L k-n la l'Ut1-na. TMnunlo belonal111 flt' In ..,. to Ill' flloe "'"°" wrio.. n•""'° ts 1nl'Wl1t -11lnl1111. IObscrlbed ID lht within il'!slniment •nd NOTICE IS HE"•E&Y GIVEN thtl an 1 ~lldlld lie ••IW!tct tt.. .. ,,.,.. '.f Novemblr lHI, al lO :DD o'clock A.M. In (O FFICIAL SEALJ .. ; tranl al n.. murtflauM • """"' 1ntr1nc1 -Jasept, E. D1vl• ~ .. In !hi CltY af Sin!• AN, Co•mho of Nol•rv Publlc..C1Hfratnl1 I er ...... 5111-t of C•lllor1111. I wrn Mii ,, PtlnclPI! Office In • PUb11c •ucllon !ti 1111 hl111et.I bidder. tor 01111111 CDUntv .t Clll'I Ill .. wful ,._ of ll•t Unlled Sl•lf$, My CommlH IOll Explte1 11' •II flloe r11ht, ll!lt 1nd lnternt of w ld J~ne 11, 1'10 ;" l'*ment deblar In lhe 1bov9 dtserlbed P~bllllhlld Or•Me C01sl l:f1lh' Pltol, ·1 p_...,, or ., ml>dl ~rlO! 11 m1v IN Oci.:.ber t, 16, tl, 30, lHI ll(Ma 'i _,., tto wtlm wltl execution, w!lh'l----:-~O'C~-:"c:=:r:=:----11 •cuu.d lnlel"flt •NI DKta. LEGAL NOTICE .. ; ..... ._ lea!". M4•JM6 t-•tnt 111• "'hi'" G•~"i• P1pp114 "WHt't S• IN AIM.rt Ffflhit Chell" ,,~ "A Le•efy Woy T• Die" with kirk 00119111 San Clemente'• Favorite' Spot Pl\ESENTS JOHN ·cooK Pop ular Guitarist Ap piaring Wed. thru Sunday C... Ju Yo• .1,,.. • DIRlCTIONS: Follow Coast Hwy. to San Clemente, or use Freeway. take "El C&m· inc Real" turn-off. then left 2371 SOUTH EL CAMINO UAL For Reservation · 492·ll72 San CJemcnte -- J\'Jadrid Movie HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Richard Widmark bead& for Madrid Md Paramouot'1 "A Talent for Lovini1'" w J t b Rifbard Quine. d.lroclinf. Kids Like to Ask Andy O..lld •I S.nl• An•, C•llfllml•, 1, 1-------------- 1! Odob«'~:;, A. M11tldi 1A11 11" Also Pl1ying .•• S11ert1f SUl'llllOlt COUlltT 0, THI' ---IJ- tounlY ol Or•ftlf!, Cill+orn l• STATE Of' CALIPOlltNIA FOii BRIGHT Cciii• .... ..t. ,,266 Thi DAILY PILOT m•k11 ih Iv (, A. 111~!1 TH• COUNTY o,-OltAHOI' ~- ,• PAUL ~MA MOTICI OF Hl!AF~;o OF PITITIOM n•wi co••r•IJ• light, tight ,nJ ..., , -t .!!T i: '1' •• 171111 ''""' l'llOIATI 01' WILL AHO 1'01 bright. R1•d your hom•low11 , ~~lwlll• tutr Lli"EllS Tl!STAMIEHTAllV ttlitian d 1ily •PHI t njoy ih1 • 0 E1"t1 of RI~ R. C•thtrt, DK11Hd. f PublllMd H!tnfl""'ten llM(tl •llY Pllol, NOTICIE IS HEREBY GIVEN Tft•I ntwi. r Odllller f, ,,, 23. lHI lJDa Fr•11e1s M. C•rh•rt ft11 llltd lletlll'! 'l·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii :. LEG•• NOTJ~ petition 1..-Problte ol •Ill •rNI !or i.. 4A.1 \..r.. ...,•Mt ol i..tletl lest•m1nl•rv lo Ille ~. --------------lpet111oner, l'lhirtrce lo wlllcn Is m•OI NOTICI 0,. PU.LI( SALi far tur!i.t" Plrtlcul1t1. •nd lt\1! lhe Time NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN 11111 on •"II olace o1 lle•tl"' ttw """ hal bee~ ~ Tuetdl'f, Mewmber It, IHI. •t 10:00 set for Nov. 11, lf61, 11 t:30 A.M .• I" 1M I" o'Clodl A.M., •I the Plitee er! blltl~I o1 courtroom o1 DeP••lmel'!I No. I ol w ld I" FINIS J, CLAllK, dtllll buslMU II <;OUrt, •t tlll N. ftrOldwlY, l~ ltw C!ly ol ·" CL.AllK T•UCKtNG COMPANY •NI San,_ ...,,,., C•IJIDtl\!8. ~ CLAllKI TllUCIC COMPANY, 11l:)! Cl•l'td Oct. 21. 1'61. .~: NICMll, Hullfl111lor. a..m. C•llfornlt w. E. ST JOH N, (ounfy (letk ~. 1M '"-~·~ molar 'l<!lllcln •""' •1ct11rl '-NtW11tl ~ ::~~~:~~.:..u=~I~ 1:~:!:; ~· !.~1~I~~~~~ fUU ,.• (Ml'Ol,..lftr aallecllv1ty ttfttted lo •s lt!e Ttl: (710 61.J.Un '~ "CoHtllf'•l"l, mote fU!l'f 'de1cr!btod UPOll All•tlll'f fff P1lllll ... r tt'll! •lt•Chtd l!XMlftlT A. lr.con>or•ltd ·Publl1hld Dr1nv• CNsl Dilly Pllc>I, ,• htr•ln bv rwt.renct. or In the even! !Mr• Do;t. n. t 4, 30, 1'61 lllWol Is na l!XHlftlT A l lllCl\etl herefQ, tnen ;. ""'°" lhe Kileodul• ol w ld Co!l•!et•I on LEGAL NOTICE ,• 1111 Jn .... olllc• ot NATIONA.L 1--------------11 ~·ACCE PTAN C E COMPAHV OF IAll·lttl ;~ ~~1:i~~~I:. ~,r,:..~1~1:~ ::::1•.v:;:: :~:~:1:~ c~t~::11:iA~~= •" Ible for ,_,IOI! on requnt, referl!fQ THE COUNTY 01' o•..t.MOll ,~ to whlcft II mtci. tar furttl« N r11cul•r•. Ht. A"""ltH ,~ Jf FINIS J. CLAllK, doing bu1!M» •• IOIOTICE 01' Ml'AlllHG 01' P•TITIOM :: CLAllK Tll.UCK1NG COMPANY t nd l'Olt PllDIATE 01' WILL AHO 1'011 , .. CLARKS TltUCKING CDMPA.NV (Otb-ISSUANCI 01' LE"lillS TESTAMIH· ,. tor), Whldl Coll•ler1I h .... 1111tl to lh1I TA•Y "' Ell•le ol VI RGIL MOYT PtZEll, all<! :• t;lf'f1ln wcutlho IOt-.,1 enlll~ "Cht l· kltown 81 VIRGIL H. PtZEll, Dlct•1ed. _. !ti Mor191o• Security Attttfntftf ' N llld NOTICIE IS HEREBY GIVEN Thal '.' DKtmber-'-" lff7, ·Ille<! 111 !ht Dttlce ol Helen Cltlt Pizer "-• llltd het•I,.. • pell· ,1 11.-s.enterv al 51•1• o1 !ht Sl•hl ol tlon tor probll• DI will tl'!ll for 1Qu1~ ol "' C.tlfarnla or. Dlcember 5, 1tt7, b9itl"' Ltfltt1 Talllmentirv hi Pttrtlonft", ;; ll'!de• No. D 100 .Ul, wUI be Miid •I PIJDl!c "1tr"'°' to wllldl 11 mlde for turthlt ,• ....._ .. Ptl'llC1.1l1t1, Ind 11111 ll'lt ttmt Ind 1IKI ,• Tftk Nie 11 be held to ..,+oru 1t1t of hffrl119 !ht Hmt h11 been tel IDf ,e tl9hls Ill NATIONAL A.CC'l!PlANCE Novronbe< I, lHI, •I 1:30 •.m., In lhl ,. COMPANY OF CA LIFORNIA. ...., court,._., of ~rtmtnl No. 1 ol wld ·! Wlithl,. lloulelt••d, 8fv1rlv H r 11 I . court. It IOI Hortll ll~•Y· '" .,,. City '• (.lllfomla tmll, 11 •ecured ,.,,., Ufldtr of 511'!11 An•, C.llfotnll. '~· •nd PU'IUllll to Thi 1toov....,e"lloned D1ted October 15, 1'61 ;. J.KUr1f't ,,,-.,1 •nd Fll'!lnd "' Sltlt-w. E. ST JOHN , ... mint. CounlY c~~. ,,. DI ... !hit 11th d•v of Oclobtt, 1'611. MAlllltOOO, S<IDl!H AND .. 1 NATIONAL ACCEl"TANCE AOIUHSON, • ~ COMPANY OF CALll'OltH!A "" VII LI•, ~ Iv SltPMn Cftrv1tt1 N-" htcll, Clllfw'illl ,,. Aullwlrllld Agent tnd T•I: (114) ,,,_... ~ All!:wntl" In F•CI. AllwMTI fw P.trt~. .,. sns.oc Pllbll11'1td o,.,..., CN1foG•llv PllDI, ~· Putllllllld Drano• CNll O•llv Piiot, Ocloblir 16, 11, 23, l NI lm.61 ,• Oc:I. 2J, lfMI 111'""""1-------~~°""°,----·ll ;~ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE *'' P-lU1• ~: PUILIC HOTICI ClllTll'ICATE 01' •UllNISI To All Concerr>l'd: l"ICTITIOUS NAME ·! Tiit IMrd ol Olte<I«• ol ltlt COfl• Thi und..-tltned c1oe1 ct'11ho he 11 con- ., .V..S. County W1lwr Ohrrlcl h1rtb'f t l"8 ductl111 1 busintJS 11 11.U. De~!11!11m, ,. no!IOI lhlt "'"" wit!,•' 1:00 o'clock P.M. Fount1ln V•llrl', c.111ern!e, u..,,.,. lt>I tk-! "" llwtldl'f, November U, IHI, •I ltlt llllOUI llrm n1me o1 CREST TERMITE Cont.re11e1 11-. ol IM CllUllCll COMPANY •nd 11111 wld firm Is °""" •" Cl>t"'bers, T7 l"1lr Orl\<i!, (0511 Mn., Poffd 01 Ille foll1,_•ll!t Pff'toll, """""'9 ... 0r ...... Caunty, C•llfrarl'!I•. r1etl'l'I r .... """" II'! lull I nd pl1ce Ill l'ftldtn« II II .• vii•!'-ol 1111 hlrtll'!ll!..-delctlt.d n•I tollowl: ,• " 1>..-tv c-.ct 111 '""ro•llMl91'/' 7.30 .1oM F, Ml~<91f', 11.U. Oi!tplllttlun'I, " "c<n, on Slx'""'ll SttWI W"! of r<oul'!l•ln VIiie¥, C11tlornl1, Montwl• A....,w, Casi• Mew. T'-1>to-D•tl'd Octotitt U. 1'61. ~ _..., It ISH(.r!btod 11 follows; John F. Hlnsbervtr A oortlon ol Lei 101!. NewPOrt MeM St.le ol C•llfornl1, o .. ,.., CDIHl1Y: ~ l ract 111.,.1e4 In Ille (Uy of COl!I Oii October lJ, IHI, llelore nw, 1 r· 1M$1~ Coul!l'r ol 0•-e, C1llfatnl•, •1 Nlt•rY Public In •"II fer w ld Sllte, I" .no-.. on • Mlp 11\ttl!OI llKflrded 111 .,.,_11v •-••od John F. HIM1>tr91f' . ~ ... J, PIOI I o4 Ml..:•llt..-1 MIPL kllOWll !ti ml "' be ,.... person w!'lllM ,. llielrdf ol Dr•nae Countv, C1Hfotnl• n1m1 11 1ublcr!bed lo Ille wlltlln In· . .; more "rtkul•rh' described 11 fol_,,: 11r'vfM<!I •nd 1ck.-led9«! '-1x1euted &EGINtflNG •I tt.e ~hwftltorh' the Nmt. ~ ODr1"f" ol P1rtt1 "A", •• ll'lowll or. • (OFFICIAL SEALJ Mto llecotdld In &oalr IJ. P•tt lJ llf .JoSftlfl E. 01vi1 P1ral Min. ltKOtdt ol Hid D••"" N011rv Pufl llt • C•llt!lrnll ' Caunly; lt\ttlcl "lcrlft O"Jt'll'' Wnl Prl11eloll Dtllct In .. •tont IM w""'"' HM ol Mld P1rc1t 0r•l'l9e COU11ho :;. "A'', • dltl•IK'I ol 300.01 ""' "' IM Mv Cammlnlon E~Pll"ff ·)I ~!trtv Corntt of wld Pan::tl JuM ,,. 1910 ~ "A .. ; !h.nco North tt'"'SS" Ettl •lont Publltllod Dr•111• C011t D811v' Piiat, • • ''-NorlherlY llM ol 1•llf P•rctl "A". I Od ober U, 2l. JO •nd Nawmber '' dlllAntl of l!Sf.OI /f<!I to !he 1'61 1'9Mil Nor11'11111terlv' co•,..... of Mid P•rcetl-------------- "A"; """"'' 1ou1~ 0"36'5'" E111 •Iona LEGAL NOTICE A= tht f•tl«h' 11111 ol WIO PArc~I "A", I •I dttt•nce of ll.IJ *"'' lo I ht P'-llUJ C••TIPICATI OF aUl!NllS l"ICTITIOUI P'l•M NAM.I Nor"'"1ter1Y eorntr '!II P•rcet "(", 11 r.haWll or. .. 111 P•rcel M1•i lhtnl:• S«rltl lrn'J7" Wnt 11Dn1 ltll Korllw· t'( ""' flf wld P1te1I "C" • dl1l1nc1 "' The UndltlltMd does he•tbV (lf'!lfy ,..7,00 fM1 ta 11>1 Nori?"''""'"' awner 11111 '-It ~11111 •n 11•k:ultltr1I of .. Id l'•fct1 "(-; thf'nQ loulll bull-(I I •11 lnd!VIOU&I) I I P111m1 rw•• 1!•11 •lent ""' Wnhltl'r 11,,., o1 V•llt,, S.ft Dlet0 Caunly, •NI Or1ntt .. 111 Pal'UI "C", •.DD tHI to IN COU11f't, C•lltornll ul'!der lhl flClillOUI ~tr ,,.,._ ltW~; llltnCI """ n•..,. '!II RE D llAVIEN CDMl'ANV ~ ltol1tl "12"57" 1!•11 •lent ,.. Soulf>ert'( -.... , Wiid "'"' ll ~ "' "" ~ Hiit ot 111d Partel "C", I d!1lll'IC'I fll follOwlnt .,..._.,, -... ,.... In fvN .... ,, .. fM1 to "" ~~ ~ o1 •Ila o4 rnldMl:t h 11 fratlowl. to.wit: I'~ ''I ", .. .,_ or. wld P1rc11 Nelton D. J-. P. o. lloJr DI& Mt11 llllftOI South l"WJI'' l!nt 1ton. tWN P.,k, C11J,,,..,,I• t0'7t. ~ #'le Wft""' lfnl flf wld PMct1 "•"• D•lld Octobtt I, \NI. 117 ... fief .. ""' Sou"'-ttH"' i;w,,.,. Hellen 0 , J_, If .... Ptr'O'I "I ": thtftClr 5o1f11 STATE Of' CALIFOllNlA, ~ lf"U'V Wal •lent Thi lw!Nrl'll' COUNT'T 01' LOS A"IGIELES, Q ~ fiN 11 111d P1n::.t ".I .. , • Ori Dclobf'r I. IMI, bltatt ,..... I NO,.'"f dllt-11 8'.• lftl tio Thi Pein! rJ1 Pubtlc In Ind llr Wild C_.., ""' 11111!, ,_ 9""""' II ltlk -.crll'llon. "'"""'nv •-•tad Nth,,.. D. Jont1 ~ IUIJl:CT TD: All -1111.. ri.i.n. kllOWll le rM to "" 1t1e "''""' wt.oH .1_ rltM•lf _., 11'1111 H.""""" ol ,_.., 111m1 h 1ubtc.rl9" to ~ wll!lln !fl. ~ If k .._...... l'lifl .,_ ......... to '""'""""· •1'111 ICl,_INl!ld "-"" ltl•I ;;!!_ ...... dlMf .. Ill .,,,....,.. CMll ..... (-lw _.,,..,, IN IMIM. ,., ..... DilH1d '°'"' ., ~ ~ '"" ,,.,., ..... -·· ,......... fM rf1f1t 19 .. i.... -. It· IMl'-IGIAL llALI ' ,....,..,,.,. t. t'lfKf _.., ..,. all ......., JtrOI ._ Hod.- " ·~ ......... -..... ""' Nottrl' ~ • Clllienlll ....,. ....,... .... ~ Olttrkf. rr!.fit1:i~-" . A--ltltll~ll ...... ._.. .... .. carftMll 1J1t ...... 111 ffll Mnn 11 M• ComiTll111t11 .... ! .... ~ -·"""""" ~ ..,,.., .. flt ~ •tti. It, 1'11 --., "" Gel .. ~ c.evntv Wlflr Mo\C .. A•UMI, ICNAIFlll ' HAUN Dl"'1d W lllNdl Wiii ... ,_,.,,... IM-l t'i ''"* •. Dl911Mt I lftliflt,.., If Offlf" la llOt ~. A"'""" ;c ··~ Wtllfeit O.,Wllltll,. ......... kit• ttll ? ~ a.. o\Mt!M. C1lltlrlll1 •u _, C..1' Mitt ~ nu.oc I W9'1f Otlh'ld -ltutllltllM ~ Ce11t 0.llJ Pll .. , ~ ~......, or,,. ce.e .Z.1" "1111f, DtMiH' ..,.. "' » .,,. H.wtmt.r " ! ? "It. rt.11 . .,,.. .1,,... '"' ,,..... ~ & ,IA DEGlltMAll l THOMMY IEIGGltEN IN Etwra Mad~an ,LUS-DUSTIN HOfFMAN l ANNI IANCll:OFT ACADEMY AWARD WINNER aeaT DIRECTOll-lltKl NtCHOl.S KlSEPH E. LEVINE ......... MIKE NICHOLS-LAWRENCE TUAMA~ '!!!is is Berliamin. He's a little worried ahoat his future. ,ElFOltMANCl SCHEDULE W"k Nlgirt.-7-•·11 p.111. Sat11rfty-S-7·•·11 p .111. S11ndov-l·S·7·•·11 p.111, "Bond" Sale GIRL-WATCHING BOND STYlE ~U;:'~~~'i~0':::'"'oit.o~ NOW THRU TUESDAY • P...aVIMOW *Plifi1 """'t4 .... UMrl'IDMTllTS • .. • . -· -· -. -~ .... ... . ... -. ••• ........... ... ··- T~ieater Notes OCC, Huntington Opening By TOM TITUS Of ltll Oftty '°'" ..... Orange COuniy approaches the Mt11r1.tlao point in living theater lhil weekend wilh et1ht producUona on l h e boards -including a trio pf newcomers from both the com munity a n d collegiate clrcUit. First up, on Thursday night, br Orange Coast College's "thoroughly modern" of the· Greek antiwar c 1 a s s J c "Lysistrata·• -40De in cOn- temporary dress against a IOplcal background, The Huntington Playhouse opens its new season Friday night w1th the comedy "Sundy in New York," wh.ile further north, t h e Fullerton Footlighters bow in for 1968-69 wilh a familiar of. fering, "The Odd Couple." · The OCC J?fOOucUon is the first by the colle8:e's newly organized repertory theater group. Directea by student Dennis Hanrahan, lt will be staged three evenings, closing Saturday. Lynn Harris takes the title role of Lysistrata, w i t h Michaele Cannon p I a_y in g Kalonike and Angela Collina as Myrrhine. Other cast mem- bers are Shirley Bar:rus. Glen Marlin, Ken Wilson, Dennis Perrin, Barbara Smith, Steven &ott and Walter Douglas. The OCC curtain rises at 8:15 p.m. ln the college auditorium. Tickets are free, but must be obtained in the campus bookstore. UHIVUSAl l'ltUNT'S ;,, 1fCl*-llCOlOf8 "MADIGAN" RICHARD HENRY WIDMARK FONOA INGER SltVENS THE LUXURIOUS NEW 7f<titai A 7tiJt4 I \'/ 17'h ~/ltlT'1 '1'i ... M:Hl• r ~•r •,\ -~q _,.Q181 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER ...,. ·-CTOll--llltCMOll, JOSEPH E. lEVH: -· _,NtCHOlS LAWRlNCE_N _ THE GRADUATE ,,,. .wco ElrieWY l'UI Ill.OR ---~- A~ H.,_"' "Wilt 'Until Dirk" NIW,OIT ll.l(N -.. IM 1nl••n<t t• l•hl• .. lM• l•l• -01. l ·tlSO Rico comedy. .Rounding out the Mesa cast I.rt Rick Gunst, Ray Scott, Bill Graydon, SU!Je Scott, Helene A.ah, Pat Harp, Jeanct.- • te Baker, Herb Johnson and Jerry Thoma•. The play will be staged at the Community Center Audltorium on the Orange County Fairgrounds, with tickets avail.able at au. 5303. • • • Winding up Its run with a single perfonnance Friday night Is the comedy "Under the Yum Yum Tree" at the Westminster Commun It y 'I1leater. Jou Hagerty ill dittctlng. Burt W a r n e r , C8therine Myers, John Moran a n d Barbara Ratica comprise the cast of the show, which plays at the Westminster Center mall theater. Tickets may be ordered by calling 893-5443. •· . . "The Homecoming," Harold ~inter's chilling drama. enters its fifth weekend at the Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa. under the direction of David Emmes. 'STOP THE WAR' -Miniskirted Lysis trata (Lynn Harris) pleads with the commissioner (Glen Mar- tin) to stop the w-ar in this scene· from Orange Coast College's updated version ·of·"'Lysistrata." F ea ·turlng Clement Davidson, Jack Davis, Michael Douglass, James Baxes, Don Tuche and Bonnie Gallup, the play resumes Thursday and runs through S u n d a y • Reservations are available at the theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., or at 64&-136.1. • • • Ron Albertsen. winner of the Huntington Beach Playhouse·~ best director award for the past two seasons, is staging the theater's curtain · raiser, "Sunday in New York," which opens Friday for a five· weekend run. Starring as the indecisive maiden Eileen is the director's wife, Marilyn. with Randy Keene cast opposite her as the romantic stranger she en- counters on a hectic Sunday afternoon. Ron Filian plays her brother, Adam and Ralph Quick is the boyfriend from upstate, while Bernie Simon and Ann Filian complete the cast in multiple roles. The comedy unfolds at the N.ITIONALGENERAL~PORA.TION f ii"i M!i'"l'J!!! S•ft tilt" FrwY. 11 ltitltl • S4t·2Tl1 ' Open Today 6,45 Peter Sellers IN "I Love You" "Alice B. Toklas" IN COLOlt -·······-·-·---- Barry Evans Judy Ge.son "Here We Go 'Round Tiie Mulberry Bush" IN COLOlt F1RST RUN WHk Days 6,45 P.M. ..Cont. Sun., 2 P.M. Pllllty ef fl'• ,orklnt Player! ... Barn, 2110 Main st., Huntington Beach. Reserva- tions may be secured by call- ing 536-8861. • • • Orange County's latest "Odd Couple" shows up Friday night for a three·weekend run at the Fullerton Footlighters' Muckenthaler Center. Kathy Davis is directing the Neil Simon comedy. Richard Mooney and Robert G. Reines portray the mismat· ched roommates, with William Feeney, Joe Gonzalez, Walter Orlhe Jr., Sandra Clark and Bonnie Dillingham completing the cast. Tickets a r e reservable at 52a-8039. • • • Closing out this weekend with the l~t two of four holdover performances is the Costa Mesa. Civic Playhouse'S "Dream Girl," directed by Pati Tambellini. Linda Bauin and Tom Titus take the prcr minent roles in the Elmer Closing a thf'ee..weekend run Thursday through Saturday is "The Heiress,'' the opening procluction of the S a n Clemente Community Theater season. Thelma R u c k m a n directs the 1850's drama. Major roles are taken by Patty Broderick, Steven Reed, C. Gordon Smith and Ruth Taylor. The playhouse is located at Cabrillo and Ola Vista in San Clemente, with tickets available at 492-0465. • • • Gilbert and Su l l i va n's operetta "The Pirates of Penzance." presented by the South Coast Light Opera Association. runs to n i g h t through Saturday at San Clemente High &hool. Directed by Richard Anderson and Edward &hick, the musical stars Richard Gower and Lana Walker, with William Sandidge, J e a n i e Chabot and Bud Scheele in major roles. Information and reiervations are available at 492-5761. SCR's 'Homecoming' Attracting Students Harold Pinter's ' ' T h e Homecoming," now entering the final two weeks of its engagement at South Coast Repertory's Third Ste p Theater in Costa Mesa. is drawing a significant portion of its audience from the educational community, ac· cording to SCR executive director David Emmes . "Theater parties f"r o m various colleges in the area have seen 'The Homecoming' at the urging of faculty at their schools." E m m e 1 reported. "because it I 1 particularly indicative of the direction and concern of moclem theater." One large class, at the sug- gestion of the students, used the play as a discussion point for a class unit on con· temporary moraJity i nd the handling o f controversial issues in art, he noted. "Superbly acted and directed." L. B11clt P.T. "THE HOMECOMING" THURSOAV THllU SUNOAY -l :Jf P.M, INFOllMATION•ltESIElllVATIOHI -"'6·1J&I Thlr4 St9p Ttltctm, 1127 N-port lh'd., Costa MeM Oe'll!lh!IUI Ch!lcltPl'!'S T~atrt -"Hansel INI Gn t•I" Sundav el l ·QO aNI 1:JO P.m. Wilt Disney's Best WMk Days, 7 P.M. Cont. Sat. & Sun. FrH AND -. ---~.~~UUM .... "----....... _,.... • Alto a Gr .. 1 Comedy Alan Arkin .. Inspector Clou .. 1u ii!ru !'!!-·-- • • • I ' -------~-----------~----------·-~~-~-------.:...-~~---~----~------------------------------..1•1111·· -~ ! ...... ;:;:,.,.liii':::::::::i.tlli;;Joco;;:':::il;:;;:;t;;-;;;:~·J;~~~;~:~i;-;;;:;;;:-::;;;;;:--:;;;;·;;;:;-;;;;;;;;·;·;;;;;:·:;-~·~~-·~~·~-·-.. -·:-~·~·~--:--'~..-·-·-··-1~·~·--~·~·~•""~"~"""'.':~':°:.7:~·~:-~.~"."~::-::::~;-~.T.-:;::'~~-~~~ D<\lLV ' LOT ,. . • • ........... Wtd11tsday, Octobtr 23, lw.B 'Petrified Forest' Rules Film Festival Opens • ID. •'r· Huntington Awards Night ' PAMELA BROWN 'JAM ES E. -SMITH Top Performers of Huntington Bffdt Season 'Just for Love' New Play Simple, Charming . • • • ·1-• ·¥lie ·~·~ of ' -~·' · ·COl!<io will ~."Ttit Madwi>Dlan ol Challiot'".'ID' lh 0-pti'formanee• otartlJig 'l'hur""y oyem.g, In '!lie ~ 'l'boa\er. ' · ''The Maclwo,man of ChalllQt" ii ,. klrid of poetic and comic l•~·-··Oll •. plot by a gro(Jp of promOters' , By JACK GAVER friendly, warming way, and it this entertainment. to tear up the,btauUful city of NEW YORK (UPI) is de1ightfully performed. The Comors .handle the Parl! io uOea,rtb the oil which The show has been neatly dialogue -I don't have to use • proipect:bi-btUeves he h~ Simplicity and charm best and knowingly put together by the word "sketches" becaUJe located und~\he city streets. describe ''Just for Love ,'' an Jil.J Showell and Henry Comor, the word is not right for much Performucu of the fall unusual I n t i m a t e en-man and wife, who also ·are of what they do. They are ex· pl1y 'lln scheduled (or Thurs- tertainment that opened two of the four players. Not . perieneed actor1, and they in-day, Friday, &rtd Saturday the least of its virtues is that. ttrpnt a wide variety of ~eninP.\-~~-,if,: 35, •rid 2', Thursday nicbt at the it is just the right length, no'· ' material with fi~e, V1rsl.Ulity~-!. ~~~...-P.:-.'. ~ ~· Nov. Provincetown Theater in too long. · Among the 11 BODgS that are . ;.,.-~ ~ ,, m. with Greenwich Village. The other members of the dovetailed into the. _di8:1oCU• -~Ls l '1~~-t:I . and _ The show is exactly what cast are Jacqueline Mayro and scenes are such fanuliar items '15 eta or, ·~ ·' e title says -it deals in Steve Perry, who d'o most ol u "Come Live iWth Me," song and dialogue with many the singing. It should bt added ''Jenny Kissed Me," "What is spec ts of the human . con-that it is a pleasure simply to Leve?," "Man Is For Woman d1tion known as love as look at Miss Mayro. Both stng Made" and "So We'll Go No treated through the ages by well. and they do their songs More A-roving." many writers. It is un· with a simplicity that exactly Si.fa the program credits pretentious but effecUve in 1 fit! the e1treme intimacy of Michael Valent! with "original -'------------------score," there mllli be• eouple of songs written especially for Crossword Puzzle AC~OSS 44 Loolc to be 45 Dull 1 lil uslhl 47 And othm judge SG lrtw«Y 5 Kind of product lu111ber 51 Flsslle rock 10 for11 of 52 KirMI of Elizabeth forte l• Remove 56 Lariats a lid 60 Platform 15 Uid.e amends 61 Havrng a 16 Btlng: Sp. va1enct of 17 Eltttlon eight this . show, but they art not ldenUfied. pmonalltfts 6• llss So11111« •. 1, Wllei'f: 65 Prac:Uc:al ,~ Stberla ls -6' .f1~1rtl~t , . lGIZl/61 , 20 Dress _n111ie • 0 LI I 21 London, 67 Swutso' N Stilt cif' . • · ts ow : Ch actl¥1ty .2. words Ont., 61!1 arges 11 John ·44 KhJd of university '' Contlntet In Efrt cflt11ln1I 23 Cape of DOIN 11 Asian "6 Brltf No¥1 t ln;dOlll cessation • Scotl1 22 "''"oem1kff's 48 Culs with " fHI re-1 s. ""'"· ~· I I morse tor shr11il 111aterl1I prK son 27 Sorrowful 2. ·-on 2" Can1ry's 49 Lll1r1r y nom Person the ba ck: re11!1Yt dt plu111t d 25 Fruit 52 Fig11ent 30 G1¥t t lf• 2 war " -Ettlesia:sllt of tht prtsslon te · 3 like an '-' 1 1~ ~ Ellge d a 111Dld-lndent&tlon 1•111ent hlltt n1 n -,,1: var. •Certain 21!1 use ol l)'Nc 53 Qtnnlnattd 1 di ators poetry grain 35 Upbr1lded n c 1' ScOttlsh •Ir.tu,. 37 Pro)tctlng 5 Hl¥lng 0· usiclail s.t Fish proc1ss rhythlllt OUI Id )I .:c:llst: fa ll 31 I.ind of 55 s e: I bl abode C•b. fot• A • ' Tilllt 1 e 31 Klftjl of 57 '•rt of 31 As lin abbrt¥llt\Olt anx\0115. f'r"'th11an's 41 Ath lttts' 1 Period ht n Enterta lr· body group: A.bllr. I Once 1111 11ent fol'lll !8 Archfttc:turtl 42 Used '6 9 Certain 34 0111tlst's Pl• • Gown 1tt11td conc«n 51 111paqte •l Flexlblt forces .... , '' l'rtpar1 wlnt •2 Sts .. • 1 l}Q:ullnlcd 10 Deha.,., AT serving 63 Each ont o Joint. 11 •°""""'" ........ ,.... ......... -' " , ' ' ' PA ULO -,..., ..... ' ..... ,, ..... ll~Alth ..... ""'_ .. "THI PIODUCl•S" .............. '"THI PA"T.. . -----I Nl·lt71 ,l , ' • -------------~ -----------..... _..__ .. _ ~ ---~ - Elbabtlh Borpw~p· [<cl fn MVttoJ llolJ - In the late -.'. A Samuel Goldwyn Aftne - for the btat film madt Iii f!IO' Unlled SLaltl IM pnelf .... year -win lle·Jll:~on\oc!Jlov. 2. Tho wlmer Wfll. be ile1ecftlll Ill' the .-.. HeUywood r duce-and • -""" ml-""'1t the ftolf,.I • . -. POSITIVELY ,N.0.-~0NE UNDER . 18 -ADMITTfO ;, ..- 1-• --i:·' . -.1'.< 10 THESE T"EAl-E~i .~URl~Q THE . SH9-Wl~Q ~~:~: OF THIS -·TORRID SOCK·.IT·TO·ME MOVIE~~~:: __ , • ·' ~ J 'I.. ... 4~~ f'laybo)1 magazine readi~ were stunned (and some were even embarrassed) by the October Pliyboy photo,sprea<t that direct to show . the actual, zingy, revealingtorrid si:enes Of Barbara MtNai r ~nd Raymorid St . Jicques ... - .... ' .. ' . . ' : ~ ' I _. ..• . .. _ ::. , .. ;,.·;,· .. ~·-~, .... ...,.. '• ···'··-·::: · from this far~ut swinging movie. •; . '' ; • I' . • ' . .:~ '' ' ' .. , ~ . -.-... ' .~ ' _, • .....,;·,1 • ,,. ~. ~'1 : ,.·, . .. ' .. When you see this groovy movie, you 'll understand Why community advertising standards prohibit publishing these actual far~Ut "hapP,ninc'.' movi. scenes -and, of course, you will also . _ . · unde~and why theatres ... . . ' ; PQSITIVE~Y CA~NQT ADMIT ANYONE UNDER 18• --------- -uNuW AocoMPANIED BY A PARENT OR AOULT euMDIMt . ' ' . ,.~ ... • . . : ·. >.:c::, 'l " , .... .... ' ·'. " ' . •, ' .... ' " .> " , .. ... l ... " ..... . ·-·· ·'118JJIQJJ/IS.llTHJN G/Jr .: • W\lllB · .. Sl. ·ml IMMllHY • ~M1110'1M(U ·•.W lrMI~:'.,-. ' .. ' \ ,lltilUlly .. k11flr' lln lillti • Prt• Ii• r..w ~ 111111111 . ... lflllTlill"H1i.1t111•1ti.,lii -&----.. "" GIP " .. I ' coi.011 av •ASTMAN ,• . NOW .SHOWING , AT THESE THfATRES _ ' I ' • • SPECI AL EVEN ING SHOWTIMES AT 7'00 AND 9:00AN G11 00 PM ' ' . LA . HA.RA · DRl·VE-J~ THEA r1E . IM,llllAL Hl~y.tAY. IETW!EN IEACH & HAlllOR ti.VOS. e 171.J ut .Q.ANGE DRIVE-IN THEATRE SANTA ANA AND GAltDIN GROVI FRllWAYS e 54~-4011 FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRi'lE-IN THEATRE SAN' Dilbo FREEWAY AT 1.RQOKij UltST SOUTH ·Off·ltAMI' e NJ.Mal GRO~E WALK -IN THE.IRE -'1'11 'o i.ltDI .. GROV E ILVD. • U7.UOO HUNTING~ON' CINntA WALK~IN TIJPT~' ' MACH, ~D'· ~T'.~~91.; HUN T!~~·-~ H • M7--' . .. 'lftir·COAST WALK -IN T HEATIC-. -' . . 'N. ~I~ ~'f." SANTA AHA • 54Uf17 ., 10lt MA TUU AUOIENCIS' ... , . ••• ' •• ... .. --. ~-. , ~ J ~ '· .. -.~ .. ,·s~:: oJ • ' . , . _ ...... .) ' .. DDLY PILOT EDITORIAL •AGE •" :· - ' • !·• • .. (-,,; • • ' Uncertainty Removed For three years, leaders ol Weat Orange County cille.s, along with the Boan! ol Supervisors, various citizen 1roups, state hiabway eoglnttrs, and finally the state Highway Conunissloo, have lnveoligated a route for the f\llure Hunllngtoa Beach Freeway. On Monday, the commiuloa adopted the Orange tine east o( Beach Bou1evard, a choice wb.ich is bound lo be popular In W~stminster and certain to be unpopu- lar in Fountain Valrey, Gtlnlen Grove and Huntln~ S..ch . .But • decision has been made and this is the one thing everyoae wanted from Ille HlJbway Conunifision -. early adoption ol some freeway hne . Now we await the readioa b'om those affected • Some may choose to fight on regardJess,of the eventual mot in delayed development ol land adjacent to lhe Uw.n,y Une. , Lei us,bope that, relller than to fight, all will join oow in a stroog campaign to get the needed freeway built as soon as lJOH(ble. , No one need.~ esbamed ol the beWe roua)>t ttius far. n,. Huntington Beach Freeway has been 'founded with enougli ·worcla to fill a modest library. Selecli<Jn ol the freeway line-bu been an exertise in democracy. Everyone who l)ad ideu about where the -.y should go bad a plaUonn. Perhaps no line anywhere in the state bas been ,50 thoroughly investi .. gated by -official and citize11 groups. The decision was made only alter all had ail opportunity to be heard. · Next step is lo get on with planning around the new freeway line. Many adjustments in zoning will be need· ed. '!iiere wlH be mucll work needed with people lo make the 1ransitions required as easy as possible. For several years the alternate lines tied up. d~ velopment in thell' areai;. Now they are free for plan- ning and development. Despite all ttie talk and argumeal6 ol the past, tho Orange line odoption does not spell doom for any of the commuallies through v.iiicll it is to run. ll can spell greater prosperity for cities whose leeden can recog· nize problem• 11 opportunitl .. awaiti_ng the lakl.nJ. Until Monday, treeway d1scus1ton bas centered mainly on the detrimental point. ol p0<1ible routes. With ad<>ptioo of the Orange Une let us now turn the dUcuuion to the assets of the freeway and to a Mur.t: w!lh oae 1 ... uncert&nty. Manipulating Lot Size Fountain Valley is ~sidering a reduction of mirii· mum l'J'sidenlilal Id! •ize from Ille 91.andanl 7 ,200 square feet lo 6,000 aquere feet throu(h the variance approach. Counc:U ac1ion in gran11ing a tract l>tth 1maller lize lots comes in the wake of more "planned communities." Presumably there will be more developers planning specialized. tracts with smaller lot sizes and calling them plaDl)ed communities. The city lhould be cautious. Planned developments should be spe<ialized pl<Ins, not standard rHid-al devel.opmenll. Councilmen have only to look lo Huntington Beach to see the predicement a city can back itself into if it bends and interprets loosely its own laws. Lot sizes in Huntington Beach range from about 4,000 square feet up. The council has at times spent energy searching tor a legal mean. to do the illegal, and l<IO often wound up trying lb justify illegal ac· tion..s resulting from lot size manipulations. It is a trap into whiclI tile unwary City Council can drop if in it. zeal for a b"11:er community it fails to keep its laws as current as the thinking of the land deve-lop-en;. H A Uni versity Politicized ls Doomed 'Teachers, Scientists, Scholars Dominated bfl Rabble Rouser•' What is "a university"? More Important, what should a mlversity be? Morris B. Abram, recently inaugurated as . president of Brande.is · Unive!'sity, grappled boldJy with this question in his ritual of acceptance. It WU a probing, prdfotiod address, too occupied with !lelS'Chlng to try for eloquence. Yet, the eloquence o£ it lay in its direct honesty. -''The unfverslty 11 truly at the vortex of the crisis of our time In the United sta\es, in France, in Me.iico - e'etywhere ..•. " ThiJ was tht beginning of bis theme. He...developed it carefully. , "IT IS A COMPLIMENT to education that men in this time of trouble should crystalize their attention, anxieties, frustrations and even a n g e r s on the university. In effect, they are saying. fr~ quently in unacceptable ways : 'Our socie- ty la in deep trouble. The university has the capacity to redeem or reform society if the university has the will and is itself reformed' .•. the critics are saying that the university is more Important than Its supporters say it is ..•• " Before him was one of tht nation's more learned and competent faculties ••• also one of the more questioning. It may be assumed that all faculties, save for the hopelessly obtuse, are disturbed and are themselves trying for answers. It is inescapably true -faculties being human -that many have been deeply frightened by the student rebellions and by the occasional violence, in which the leadership often is from off campus. (The hard~re nonstuclent forces, dedicated not to reform but lo destruction, ARE frighte[\ing .) Btrr THE INTELLIGENT f a c u 1 t y knows that mar.y student objections are valid - especially as protests are related to teaching . Universities of great quality, have, of course, learned scholars whose research la itself instructive. They are there to teacb -but to learn and to allow others Lo &hare in that learning. But, Abram said, speaking ol the 8C8l'Ch for truth: "The i.nnennost. truth.~ in aome social sciences may bt not only ln tei:tbooks bu\ also in the laboratories of life .... " "It. wUversity ... .is not a church nr a political party. It doea not itself vote. lt Dear Gloomy Gus: If Joseph Ferm and his secret pals are so interested in Hunting· ton Beach, why don't they try mov. ing Ferm's trashy signs that are litt.mng. the city? -D.R. S. 'r1llt ... hi,. ref~ ~ -..., -nt ....,. If tllt _,, .. r. SeM .,... ..t -.... _, en, D•llV ~Ii.I, should be crammed with people who think, vote and particiJ)ate: in ever}' Jevet ,' of life; including politics .•. l applaUd those who feet a special obligation to speak out becai,ise they are learned and influent.1'1 men. Nev~les.s, t h e University .mu!t not be dogni'atLst. It must be a free and open place. , • .it should provide the forum for individual and group study and experience. . .The university must hold the soapbox steady for othen to stand Oii. , .to study, to declaim, and t.o preach whatever truth they see or fee l ..... "BIJT, A UNIVERSITY politicized - radicalized or conseryatized -is a university doomed, u the lessons of German univcrait.lea: under the Naz.is pro- ved . • • It. dogmatic institution is hos- pitable only to those wbo support ii.II dogmas .••. " Abram noted that in some circles today it has become fashionable to downgrade the tolerant principles of the liberal political creed. "( am willing," he said, "to examine and. re-examine every substanUve opinion including those to which I am moat com- mitted. However, I am not prepared to reject the liberal methodology of fair play, civil liberty and due process u the only way in which a civilized society can pursue truth, prevent the encrustation of error and insure the fulfillment of man's creative talents and inclinations. THERE ARE OTHER conclusions, boldly, calmly made: "The right of student.II to protest seeml!I to me to bt a right and not privilege .•.. The right of students , faculty or anyone else to disrupt lhe learning proces5 is no right at aU .. .It is wrong." There was a proper tribute to "this generation of youth.'' It is a great one. It is disturbed by a society in which reforms are necessary -sociaJly and educationally. More than any other man in education, it seems to me, Abram articulated what a university should be -and, also, delineated it:!: failures in teaching and yet, as firmly, declared that lasting reform comeJ by dut. process. Armament Over Curing 1'ovpll al WI" XilUng is more import.ant than curing, Jn the new feder•l budget; for cuts In ldenl.Wc and med ical research have eliminated pub"c projectl teelting a lbetapY for cancer, whtle armament ap- pf.Oprtltions continue to e1pand. ' . . . Both poet.I and mllltary Leader11 tend to have beet'I boy1 who were: sickly and mbtber-dominated in their childhood -lodlcathii lhaL CMllJU.Uonal factorr are Ol!l'tainly as important u environmental anil lti determinins Whkh way childre:n ~ under much the ume 1.,. ""'1*· 1 I Whal Is wrong with our democracy Is as ()bvious as It lli1 intractable: While every Americlln 111 a cltittn, hardly anyone 11 1 "citlr.en fint," In the sense !hat ht plttts the broldtst needs ol the n.aUon abow: his nwn ; rather, each ol UI lends to tilUlte our own partiJl, parochi1l, dus, geographical or ethnlc Interest.a with "tht 1ooct of the country u a wholt." • • • No courte 1ho0ld be labe.k'd "CttalJw Writing." which J1 a fraudulent claJm - for onJ)' the "9-ertltift Upectl ol wrtttnc tor any f)(.her a:rtl can bt tauaht Or turned In any did1ctJe way. • Charges Aldric'h Supports Rebellion To the Editor: Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr., on tht front page of the DAILY PILO'T of Oct. 14, speak& of the CleaYer affair, and sup- ports, · in fact , the faculty rebellion againllt the university regents and again.st everything legal, moral, and right. It ill not strange that the breakdown in law and order in the land continuCll to spread ' with ever-increasing virulence where there is such a lack of concern for, and enforcement of, the well-established and reasonable rules and regulations goveming students in our colleges and universities. on the part of the chancellors and othen in so-called positions of authority and ~eisponsibility. TVmON FE~ in all our colleges and universities woold assure enrollment of students with a desire and purpose to learn, and woold help to weed out the troublemakers, slobs, riff ratr, dissen- ters, and incompetents, who are in the schools for the purpose or making an issue of so-called peace, and freedqm of speech: i.e .. license to say anything. Mote would be weeded out for lack of in· telligence and/or ambition to sucteed in constructive pursuits, if they had to perform satisfactorily in class. In tax supported, as well as in other colleges, there are almost always some rules and rtgulatlona relating to behavior and performance, and this must be so for ordered progress. IT IS PROPERLY within tbe province and the responsibility of the directors and authorities of .these institutions to in- terpret and enforce these rules and regulations. The academic senate and student organ.iµtions m~y properly sub- mit and petitldn the authorities in charge to comlder their views but they have no right.s to coerce or demand any con- cession other than a fair consideration of their requests and an• aMouncement or the decisions made. If the regents of the university system are Incapable of hiring competent ex- ecutive and admirllstratlve heads of the various campuses, who. have the guts and intelligence Lo properly ruA their respec· tive school.$ and to lollow and enforce·the rules and. regulations, then it Is in- cumbent on the appointing authority to replace the regents with men who will do their duty. THE WHOLE MEM is simply a ma~ ol the failure of the so-called' leadership group to carry out tr.eir reapomibilitiea to t h e students, taxpayers, and parents. It seems that the student bQdy leadership group today Is, thrOua:h the (allure of the weak-kneed vacillating and ftmy-minded faculLy, mlodlrecling and exerting LOtal control over the actions of the men who are being paid by the taxpayer to ad- mini!ter and direct our university and college systems of education. lt is a sad time and tum in aUalri in our state and nation when the teachers. scientisU ind scholars in our schools att being dominated by the students and rab- ble rousers who are nothing but the agents cl vlolenet and dtstruction. It ts time for the 1uthoritieJ to awaken to I.heir reaponajbUilia and properly perform their dutiu· ln our toClety If we .---. ., ..... ,.,., Dear George: Every day I rud your column and enjoy it because I think we all need a lauah lo ofr..t the "normol" news. However, l'm in an arp ment with my •tfe -lhe aay1 nobod¥ but an imbecile would raad U-columns you pul In the PIP" day aftet dl)'. Whit can I 11.y to her! FAii Dear P'a.n : Alt her -abe - lttltn flrtm Nlflitt .,_ ....__ Hwm1llJ W!'flWI 111ou1111 mflW'I' hlr -1199 Ill a -rdl "" llu. TN rl9t'lt,. ~ llttoWs·t. 111 . .-c;e or sllmlM'I• Iii.ti la ._,..,.., All liltt9rs mllfl IMMll a111111tu19 •M m•llfnl Md.-,. M .....,... wfll 11t wfthMlll •n r111"'9ff, • are to· avoid .the. impending decline and fall of American" i?ivillzation and return to the barbarism.and Ignnrince of'the Mid- dle Agts. · · RAYMOND L. BEACH • < . ,, ...... IMUt• ~~!-.i:i,J,, .. (~_ To the ·.qumrJ ' . , 11le Acliiemj,~ Senate rl. UCl "rejected on OCt.114 a ie&olution by Dean RaJph Gerard whjch supported a ·c a d e m i c freedom only when it 11 e1ercista with respoosibilitY..,Because Jt was interpreted as an act of censure of a fellow professor {Dr. Stephen Shapiro, who he invited Eldrid&e Qeaver to lecture to his literature C\aSf)_, the re!OIUtion W.is defealed, preclUding; a rea30nable aotu~ t.lon to· a ·~ dlviaiYe problem. Cleaver11-quallBcaUons U:a unlverstty lecturer rftay be q~onable to many within ·the :i\ctdemic Senate, yet that body' demands.the· tight to make its own unfortunatfiMcbbices. 'Ibis in!istenct upon freedom frem., responslbllity in.stead of freedom ~ responsibility draws us closer to a .coilfrontation that will benefit neither tbe uniwt&lty nor ourselves u free men. PATRICIA L. Af>IDREWS Dlspla11 of G•rbqe To tht F.ditor: l recenlly attertded the Eldridge Cleaver fiueo at UCI to see for myseU what was occurring at our universiUea. I was disgusted w:ith Cleaver, but even more so at the officials of the campus who allowed this display of garbage under the guise of fret speech. I do think the.st" appearances have done ~e good -those of us who are paying for these universities may now start working to oppose a<:hool bonds unUI t0me common sense returm to aome university heads. JERRY R. JOHNSON f'..Olbh...,••, Wat« To lhe Editor : The .. commoo man'' strikes back. Pam Coktt'a lecture to the common people, (Mllllbo.i. Oct. II) Is supposedly in answer to my earlier letter ol the loth. It mlsaes tbe. enUre point of my lttt.tt '° comple~ely, however, that I wonder if writer CJoker reJds well. The v ltal missed point ill that q•alifled speakers are available to ln(elllgently prt:sen\ jt$ •bout any point of view on any iubject. Therefore, why pay out one cent lo hear a foul·moutbt.d, convicted fek>n utter ob9ceni.UeJ~ • 1 The hiring ol Cleaver amounts lo Ult! same thing u pouring tax dollars directly Into a sewer. Anyone who con· tends that the "common man·• (Mr. Tax- Plff:r) 11 not qualified to and dots not havt the Tight to 1peak up In apposition to this type of fooll&hneu and waste is in- deed "uncommon" (fortun1tely) and al• comple\ely out of touch with reality. M. L. SORBER Sapporu II.IV. To the !;dMr. In your Mailbor [Oct. 11) appHr<d a lettu from an irate reader proWtlnr: that the 4lh " JU\y did not rOoe!vt thO c:onailltttUOll that the qpaiml"' lJIIllod Natr..a Day, Oct. 24, wlD h.._ One very large aerospace company granted its employes a holiday on Oct. 21 and orgariized a picnic for them. The same irate reader complains that they did nothing on the 4th of July and cannot understand why anyone would com- memorate an "ungodly alliance" such as the U.S.A. joining the U.N. I must lake exception to the words ' 'u n go d·t y alliance", "get us out of the U.N." and "who needs the U.N.?" IN THE LAST YEAR the United Na- tions vaccinated It million children again.st tuberculosis, supported feeding programs in 55 cowilries, developed literacy programs in 48 countries .. "Who needs the U.N.?"'Baby, we aU do! On Oct. 21 the Bahai'a ol Hunti.Daton Beach planted a black pine tree at Golden West College. On Oct. Z5, a p.JD., at the Chapman College dininc hall in Orange the Bahai's of Orange County, in cooperation with the United Nations Association. will sponsor a program in support of the United Nat.ions. All are in- vited to quote a world famous teacher on the subject, "The earth is one country and all mankind are its citueni;." DICK WYLEMSKI Pod'• New Sapport To lhe Editor: .. Nell:t time .someone points a righteous finger at some alleged "well-heelei:I" right-wing pressure group" I'd like to d._ reel his attention to an obscure item ln this week's Business News. The once-respected Saturday EVentng Post has been dropping an average or tt million per aMum for the 18.St .even years since becoming a mouthpiece for the liberal left. Yet an outfit called Perfect Film & Chemical Corp: is step- ping in and bailing out Curtis Publishing to the tune of •15 million in fresh capital. NOT ONLY IS Perfect F i 1 m (whomever that might represent) prop- ping up Curtis. but its spokesman, one Martin S. Ackerman. grandly boasts that Sat.Eve.Post Co. will have the scratch "not only to expand but to acquire other publishing and communications opera- tions." That the libs va lue the Post highly as an outlet for their philosophy ill plain. That they hive the vast finaMial power to expand their stranglehold on the com· mWlicaUons media ls now even more ob- vious. WHAT "RJGlfl'.WlNG" outfit coWd « would have tlku 1 Ml million bath wllhout. blinking. then toss Jn another dozen megabucks without lnakiog a sweat, all to keep in operation a pro. pa.pnda organ which obviously Isn't making it on ita own merits? "Idealism" eets pretty ti:pensive IOfneUmeJ, doesn't lt! Oh, yes. Just so's your kids 1'111 grow U,P with the "right attitude," the Post CO. will keep oo publillhing Jack and JW, too. HARRY WEISBERGER r -ae1- To the Editor : fn your editorial et Tlleoday, Ocl I. you called Prop. lA the beat IJll\fer to the "feast·• of property tai: riUet prop. Olals oo the Nov. $ ballot Prop. LA la not the answer to tht pros>- erty tu bunlln et the li111Jlt lamlly homeowner. Prop. 1A it "lal nillef," tNt simple "tu relltr' u OU1l!r"'1 by tlU .......,. fails to llOlve the prditom. It .. -1> tho -bJ.portlwI ,,. Iona of C... ~and the two bauset of the Lqlllatun lo lorulall total tu reform rar the dtl.m et Calilomla. PROP IA proridol proporty tu rWlel Mly 11 llincla .,.. ava!WI1' lo bo relunded lo llatA! and clly _..., an4 IChooll to --lalt !ram decnued .""" ... . . ~ -. # • ;• , • • • • • • ' • . . . ... . .. .. - perty tax revenues. U no such funds are found, property owners will have no relief. Prop. lA fails to aolve the problem and its passage on Nov. 5 will only de- lay much needed "tu reform." Total reform or the tax a.nd fiscal structur:e is the only solution. Five state tax reform commissions have failed to offer any workable alternative to the fiscal and tax problems. ptop. 9 offerS total ta:x reform over I five year period. This measure certainly merits the considtration of every Califor· nian on Nov. 5. G. A. CARTER Tear• ln Ber E11e• To the Editor : I don't think you will print this, but l will say this: I am white, 38 years old and I wu born in this cOunlry. I was proud of it. In the past few days we baYe won gold medals and other awards of honor in Mexico. We need the prestige and pro- paganda in tlle eyes of the world. Wh~n two of our fine athletes felt like bowing their heads and raising their fists because the national anthem doesn't really include them -I got tears In my eyes and a terrible pain where our hearts are ·supposed to be. l was ashamed to be a white American wilh this guilt. M. RICHARDS Four Cholees Tn the Editor : ·Soon all registered voters will havt. four choices they can make with regarrf to presidential candidates. They can vot.e for Richard Nixon , or Hubert Humphrey. or George Wallace, or they can refra in from voting. Many pseudo-political scientists will say that voting is a privilege and that all good citizens will vote for some one, when the real truth is that each citiztn has the right to vote or the right to refrain from voting. Then there is the fact that the~ la no legal way to force a citizen to vote or else. This is not true in Russia or even Greece, which was lhe cradle or modern civilization . THOSE WHO Will. vote for Nixon nr Humphrey can look anyone in the eve after the eleetion and state that they ex. ercised their right to vote , even though U~r man lost. Those who will vote for Wallace will have a more difficutt job nr jus,lifying their choice. Yet, there ha ve been other minority partiei that were M popular that the two major parties had ta •~pt some of their better Ideas. Thus, tbQ9e who will vote for Wallace may ol). tain change even though Wallace only w1n111 a few Southern st.ates. P.lease note that the placing of Nizon'a name tint was intentional. WillRY B. McDONALD, JR. • -___ __. _______________ ____ ------- I ........... -. . ' ... ( I Wcdll:sdq, Oct.obtr 23, 19\>8 .. 1. .. u,v Pl10T .~, Oly ~pic Coach, • Paddlers • Ill Bitter Clas Ii By GLENN WRITE ot flit Otllr 'I"" "'" MEXICO 'CITV -' A war of word1 broke loose at Ulll citf'a, fog-shrouded Cuenmaooo Canal Tuesday morning u United Staw 111eo•1. lrayU coach Gert Grlgole~ and "'rtaln members ol hi> team clashed ovu plece~t and last. minute change ot·penonnel for the 01l'm- plc team's compeUtJon. Especially di&eOchaot<d were Newpi>rt Beach's duo cf Bltl Jewell -and Pete Weigand. Jewell found out he had *n remo-ied from competition and put into alternate atatw less than live hours before he and other members of the four man (K") unit were to take the water. And be learned of the switch second hand, via a note on the wall outaide of his quarters. at Olympic Village. J,eweU caJll'd I.he chana:e unjwt. "Q.U!er (Lei Culler of Coat.a Meu) came into .my room and told me to look at lhe note on the wall out.side. "I did and saw my name had been 1eratcbed from the K.f boat. In its place WU that of Ernst Heinke. I tboµght it was 'a joke at first. figuring one of the other guys on the team did it," states the vetµan of the 1964 Tokyo Olumpics. ·•t 'couldn't believe that he (Grlgolf.lt) would do a thlng like that without at least 1elling me first "Certainly 11m bitter ... gr<mly disap- pointed. How can you judge hctw in· dividuals an doing In a team boat? The rest of the guys in K..f went to Grigoleit ' and a:;ked him not to malr.e the change because Heinke rocks the boat too much. "But he wouldn't listen. He has cbang· ed. the team around al '"5t iwlce a week since we got here. But Les and. I have always worked K..f," the Newport Harbor Higb grad lold the DAILV PILOT. Weigand w., wo .mildly unhoWf about his alignment two-man (K..J). "Grlgolet led John Glair !Newport) and l to believe we mlgbt be paddling K-2 together so we've been 'working out in anticipaUon or that. In fact, We worked out Monday night," Weigand stated. But Grigoleit wound up placing John Beachem with Weigand, arrangt.na: a comblnaUon that had paddled together only four tltnes, according to Weigand. The latter and Gtair have paddled K--2 fot Uu:'eo years, however. Crigole.it wu ooticeably upset wheo confronted wUh hi.a team'• ccmplainl "J am Vtrf disappointed in th e J r sporlsmanshJp, disc,i.pllne and thelr show-ina:. I 1ave them workouia and they tell me they ire too hard; that if they were going to have those kind of workouts they might as well be in swimming. "I reserve the right l.o take the strongest men in each boat and that is why l made the changes. "They wail.led to keep Jewell in K..f for personal reasons," Grilolelt says. "But I .,don't 10 by personal reasons. And I don't int.end tu let Weigand and Glalr £0 toj;ether in K-2 because none of my team ls JOl.na: to be In two races. "Some guys on th.I.a tetm talk loo much and I don't want to comment further on it." "I will say that I cbange.d the team around because we had a lot of &lckneaa." So goes the rift. Today the Americana were battling for survival in repechage after diama1 ahow· ings Tuesday. Glalr was last In his heat of singles with a 4: 13.0 clocldng but feels he has a fa ir chance of getting among the top three in repechage, thus earning a spot in Thursday 's semis. Weigand and Beachem were far behind the rest of the pack · in K-2. heats. But Weigand said later they deliberately went alow. "We were ill a heat with lhe fOW' -·' fastest paddlers In the world. We '~· we could paddle OW' beadl <>If and 111111 not make tt. So we de<lded ID Ai; ourselves for rtpecha&e, where we haft a chance." The K-4 boat, with Culler oboard, - also last J The feud between Grlgol~I and ID paddlers bu been brewing for w;eekl..11 la oo secret at Olympic Village that ~ finally took a vote on makeup of · the boats during practice because 1h9 believe Grigolet wu being too tndecill+I aboul the vital matter. ..~ Aa one paddler told the DAILY PILO!\ "ll takes all lhe inspiration out of yoQ when you don't know fro m one day to another what you are: going to be dol.ng or ~Ith whom you 'll be paddlins. , Casper, Chichi Favored ' • Ill Haig Opeq Payoff s Charged In Games MEXICO CITY -An investigaU,Pn has been launched by the United States Olympic Committee into reports that ath- letes on the American and other Olym- pic t.eams had agreed t.o use equipment of athlete goods manufacturers in re- turn for payments of cash, The Associa· ted Press learned Tuesday night. No one in a position of responsibility on the commltt.ee would comment and no athletes were available for comment. According to one report, six American athletes were at first suspected of ac- cepting the cash payments, which would be in direct violation of the amateur code. But as the investigation progress- ed two have been exonerated. No names have been disclosed official· ly but at least two athletes from other countries are reported to be involved. The USOC was reported to be In' con· sultation with it.s lawyers on lhe delicate situation. Payments to professional athletes for the endorsement of athletic equipment are both common and permissible. But amateurs are not allowed to take money in return for using specific brands. The Washington Post reported the United States is considering giving up some of its gold medals because of ath- letic equipment payoffs. The POl5t, in a front page story sald "certain black power militants on the American track team" were the athletes under investigation by the U.S. Com- mittee. The newspaper did not name them. The Post quoted one U.S. Olympic source as saying the evidence included endorsed checks cashed by members of the American team. The 5ource. said lhe scandal could be "the worst thing ever to happen to a U.S. Olf.D1pic team." Davis Cuppers Will Compete At Bay Club America's Davis Cup team will make Its only Southern California appearance,. before leaving for Australia at the Balboa Bay Club December 5-8. The team members will compete in the 18th annua1 Bay Club ·Invit.aUonal. Ex- pected to be on hand will be Art Ashe, Charles Pasarell, Clark Graebner, Stan Smith, Bob Lutz and Jtm Osborne. Foreign entrants are Die Nastase, na- tional champion from Romania; JUchal'd. Ru.ssell, Jamaica champ, and Mexican Davis Cuppen Marcelo Lara and Joaquin Loyo-Mayo. Tournament dlntctor Is Bay Club pro Hugh Stewart, a fonner Davis Cup player himseU. Sor seats and general admls.s.ion ticket! for the tournament will be oo lale aoon, a Bay Club spokesman said. .. '°'·· ·--..-., • .* "' -. • --· --·"·~-.... ,~--· '""1-···,.-... -·--::-.-.~..,-.... , ~· ' - ; I f ·. > • . , -• J ! OAllY l"ILOT l"W9 .... L. l"IYM EY_ES $12,000 -Don ~assengale, 31·year-0ld pro from Texas, will be 111 the field when H&g National Open play begins Thursday. He's won over $30 ,000 the last two years on the toor. He's a fonner win- ner of the Bing Crosby National and the Canadian Open. We Toughed It Out, Says U.S. Polo Coach By GLENN WHITE Of Ille 0.llY l"Ott St1n 'MEXICO CITY -"We finally toughed one out. Jr we'd have done that in any of our pa~t three game's we might have won them all." So !taid U.S. Olympic water polo coach Art Lambert after hi& charge1 subdued West Germany, 7-5 Tuesday afternoon in ttle lut regularly scheduled match of Group A Olympic competition. What was most pleuing to Lambert wu his team's ability tu come from behi.od on several oocasions and it's abili· ty to uclwige pbyilcal abuse. with the losers. Now the Yanks must eye today's Cuba- Hungary dp.el, hoping lhe. former will lose by at least two goats. Otherwise, the Cubans will wrest third place In the group from the. United States on bas.is of better goal averqe. Assuming Cuba rans to the deleoding Olympic cbamptoli, U will share third with the Americana with a 3-2-1 record. The two abow-flJ)Ot flnisbetl fought to a 6- 6 Ue a week ago. U Lambert's ouWt Is third, Jt will face the fourth pl9"' leani m Group B sometime 1'luraday. That rival will pro- bably be Holland. U !be U.S. places fourth In Group~ It will meet Group B's third place rJnlaher -East Gmnany·or YugO&lavia . Olympit! TV · Dave Alhleigh of Colla 111-and Dean Willeford o! Balboa (f~ly or Jlun- tlngton Beachr played a big bond lo Tuesday'• wln over the Germans. ' I roDAV J-1 p.m. 4,.s (Re-na M,a p.m.) DIVING -Fluk of women'& tawer. BOXING -Quarter !lnal&. GYMNASTICS -l'-iblo cove.race 0( womet1'1 in. dlvidual and team exerclset. SWIMMING It t>!VING - Finals of rnen'a 400 fr.Mityle and 400 lndMJ!ual medley; final& of women'• 20 O breaat•troke and 100 becbtroke.; womec'1 tower -· GYMNAST!~ -·Po111ble coverage Of women's In· di'ftdual. and tum exerc:i.ses. Tlnin•oy,. Delob<r U 1.: p.m. SWIMMING -Ma'1 211 lmtterflJ ud no 1,..,1y1e Mats: womtt'• :M ba&- t<rlly ...... , Willeford hll our third ,goal ol the firlt haU with a nice lob abot. which aalled OV· Ir the goalie's bead. And Ashlelgb oet up our ao-ahead sl%lh ,goal with 3,41 left lo the ganuo, maklns • pM'fect pau to Ruu Webb ol Fullerton and the latter whipped It loto the aoeJ. Tben 4f ""'°""' later, B orry Weli..tiborc whipped In o peoolly ahol to cinch -Ille •eratcl. · U the U.S. meeb1 Holland on Tbun<!ay, k wHI be a matcll l>f bn>lh<rs. Tony , Van Dorp 11 lbe AmeriC.o goalie. Hill brother 1 Fred playa for the 0..ICh. Billy Could Become Golf'.s .. - 1st-ever $200,000 Winner. By EARL GUSTKEY Of TH D1lb' l"li.t ltlH The greatest names in goU were poised today to take their best shot! at a $22,000 first place paycheck in the $115,000 Haig National Open beginning Thursday morn- ing at Mesa Verde Country Club. A pro-am warmup began this morning. Celebrities in the field included Don Drysdale, Donald O'Connor, Jack Lem· mon, John Agar, Richard Arlen and others. It's the richest golf tournament ever held ln Lo6 Angeles or Orange Counties. Behind the Scene Man in Wheel Chair Was a World Great . MEXICO CITY -One of the great per-. sonal moments so far at the Olympics was alJo one of the saddest. As I stood at the south end of Olympic Stadium waiting to chat wlth Olympic decaUtlon champion Bill Toomey of La- guna Beach, I noticed a pale lookJng fellow ~tfil}g agai"-t a cemt;nt 1Upporter Jn a wheel chair. An attendant helped him sip a s of t drink and U.S. track coach Payton Jordan went over to chat with the young man who had two withered legs. Payton exchanged greetings. knee1- ed beside the chair and talked track tor several minutes. The young man smiled, obviously appreciative of the attention. I still didn't recognize him as former pole vault world record holder Brian Sternberg, whose bright career was end- ed in a trampoline accident which left him partially paralyzed. It was truly a sad moment when I learned who that person ln the wheel wss. * * * Decathlo11 performer Rick Sloan of Anabelrn, Fullerton JC and more cur· re.ally UCLA, llnlsbed seventh In week- end. Olympics action wi th 7 ,69Z point.I .... But-Bru in coach J im Bu1b, former Newport Shores resident,, say1 It l1n'C 11 k e I y Sloan will compete four more yean to gird for Ute 1m Olympics in Munich, Germaay. "He wants to get Into coaching: a n d he'• 1etung married in a few months .10 J doubt th at he'll be able to work that long," 1ay1 Bush. The UCLA tuior say1 be bu a sopbo. more comJng up who could be a 1plendJd decathlon prospect -440 whil Wayne Collette (it.I). * * * . Rumor at Olympic Village ts Uiat Negro protesters Tommie Smith and John Car!Qll were going to paint their shoes black before running In the 200 roe· ters, here, aa a form or di;monstration against "white America." However, sources say, the shoe manu- facturer learned of the plot and paid them $200 each not to carry it out. Ap- parently money talked because their shoes were not painted. * * * Voa'd be nrprhed bow thln11 gel lwhled """"'d la 1lte othleta-preo& la- ttrvlew room 1t the Olympic Stadium. The woman tran1latlnc from Engll1b to Spanish bas of&en left me wondering lf we were lls&ening to the same con- venation. * * * Russian javelin thrower Janis t usis, 0l)'J11plc med8~st last week, is a 'll«Jlten· ant in the Soviet l'.rmy. The 29-year-old WHITE WA.SH .,,,,,,,,,,,,h •L•NN WHITa world-record holder repeated what every athlete has ever told me: "The goal of every sportsman la: to '!in the Olympic Games: not break world re- cords." * * * Look for a surprise wedding announce- ment next year betwee n a ll&t Olym pic cham pion and a 1968 Olympic sold medalist. * * * And don't think UCLA's Bob Horn isnt' unpopular with U.S. team coaches: after he resigned his team manager'• post during altitude tra1nlng in Colorado, and alter the things he spouted off about Jn a magazine article. In the latter he projected the U.S. would flatten all the good European teams. The arlic\e got back to the old countries and everyone was laying for the Yanks down here. U.S. CA.G ERS WIN; RUSSI A.NS UPSET MEXICO CITY -Jo Jo White, S-foot-3 sharpshooter from Kansu University poured in 14 points in the first half to lead the United St.ates to a 74-63 victory over Brazil Tuesday night. ~mazing Yugoslavia, beaten by U)a United States 73-58 In an earlier tourna· ment encounter, won a dramatic lut- gasp victory over the flvored Soviet Union, 6U2, ' T h e tournament will be teJevW Saturday and Sunday aftemoon:J over Channel 11. Rated as co-favorites for a big payday ]ate Sunday afternoon are -Chkhl Rodnguez and DUiy Casper. RodrlgllU enters the Haig with the hot hand. The 125-pound long ball hitter won the Sah~ Invitational In Lu Vegas Sunday ;w1th a sudden death victory over Dale DoUglasa. He won $20,000 for that one and bopel he can pocket a total of $42,000 on ~ cessive Sundays with a Hali vlctoey,. · Casper, of course has to be a flvorlte every Ume he laces up his golf lhllfi. He's on the threshold of becom1D& t b • biggest. money winner in hi.stori f~ ·a single year on ijle tour. :- So far he's won $179,446, after fin1sb1n& third at Vegas. A Haig wiJt woutd"n\ike him the fi rst golfer ever to top $200,ootn.n a single year. Others on hand who have been ctoae tb victories of late art Frank Beard, R0n Cerrudo, Charlie Sifford and 'A 1 Geiberger. • Consistent with the current OlymPfc fever, the Haig also offers an in- ternational flavor. Foreign entrants art Bruce Ctanipton (AmtralfaJ, "MalcoJJh Gregson (England}, AJ'BakUng (Canada ),, Rodriguez (Puerto Rico) and Hidrio Sugimoto (Japan). First Tff 7:JO-Mm ktlmldt (Slnt1 Mil, Jim W•"'*" ·JOlln llueCll 1:31-.Jl<;k Ewin,, 0-tl Johni«i. Clltrlt$ IWvf9 7:~hrl1 l1Dck1r, J1rry ,\l)bolf, ctildr. EwM J:54-0ff"'9 lt!'Nn, Jltm lltl!, T•rrv WllCOiit, , l :C2-0all Oou•t11, Ml•• HUI, L1bron Hitrrll "' l :lll-01vt Slodi!Dl'l.o L!OMI H'r.irl, Clluck C-9- ~' 1:1t-Dudt.Y wnan •• JKll l'lldr. 11o11sMon v~ 01vt HUI I:~ Ulf!tr, Tomnw J~ ID Hlllm' l ::U-lrute Cr....,~. 11'11' &um. Howlt Jflflllo -l :Q-Chl Cl!t lladrlt..,.1, Oout Sllldlrt. J1d. M,t, Gowin 1:511-Tarnmv Alnlll, llon C.rrvdlt DOl't l ilt l :Sl-!1111 Llv•l~, Joel Gold1fl'ancl l'r...it ~ -•:06--Ch\ICIC l"lecl!I, Jotln Lwlnlon. Gr'ltt' JM 11 :30-Mtlcolm G1'911ton. llo4t' L..,._,.._, lff , .. 11 :lS-.S..m (lrmldlltt. Dick llll!Y•n. 0.Yloll • -11 :~ldevo lu.lmgfO, Jtkh•d Cr1wfl!N. O.Wllt WttVtf 11 :"'-S19V11 Sprrt', IOll Jtnltfl, Hi ii lrwtft , 12:02-G-rwr Oldllnt0n, Jl(l<r Cupit, Jim il'.rittr 12:10-Ktrmll Z1rlrt', Jlmmr Cllrit (Hllntliiir• lltcf!), Ml~• l'tttlllk 12:1t-Tommy lloll, 1111 JoMllOfl, t>on;Whltt l!:~lltrt Y111C1r, lilly Mu:well, "'""'9 lllll!ne 1,::U-.0Gn MllMMllt, l"tl9 llrowft, l"lla'.aodflrt 11:0-Mlc Mc:L-Ofl, Rocky ~ ~ C. ..... ~ 12:50-0lv. l!k1"4111r-. l"IMr lt~""loli 01cklan • -~ 1l:Sl-Jtf'T'I' e..rct. Jli'nm'I' 01r, W•llr ll'tdln (ktrtl AN) 10th Too 1':JO-kb Clm l"nl• AM), 11!1 OlfY. 0..... Cofl.,. (Cotll Mftll - 7:3'-Rlck Jllf9r, Olde Loll, Jim Hi.a;'l 7:..._Johnny S1twru. Jl:ldMrd ""'-rfl"'" t.alUlll lffel'I), .l(>hn Lall .. ' 7:54-Monty K111r, TlfTI Sh.w, I.Id; 9-ft t:~ITy H1MOft, IEOllMI SuMna. Old< Gl!'llll# t: lo.-1!\llMir 11....,, ll..,., G ....... , 0-Flnll'IP -· 1:1 ... Rod 1'11111ff!I, J1ny S.rbll', Al ••ldlft9. l :U-0111 $1kH, Sll'VI lltld, MIQ Sol.lcf!Ut ;-, 1:14-111. H, Slk ... 1111 Colllflt, &ob llot.bllrt 1:42-0rvllle ""°""'' Offn 11.-r1m, lltY• 0,.,, -· l :so-t.1uri. HamrMr, JICk Mort1'Qomltrr, Jlftt Colr.irt t :Sl-Jlm Kint. Jlmi"" .. -el, J°"" ~ ~-1 •:~o 0.-.1" Jim WIKMn, Jlll'rr Meo-.,. .... 1J:J$-Mlkt Hllillna. a.or. '°""'I~ ll.ndr """ 11:Jl..-Jtrry S'-liltnl'lfl• OeMh ll_., M l"0111f 11:4-11111 ltttt., Jim Gr.,,1, l"W1 ~ l\:~rry ,,..,,,,.,, lell lofdt, (di Mtrr!M ' 12:~1111Y c-. GMtw ~,..,,., "*"" -· 11:1...,lllrt W!"vwr, 0-.. ..,..,., 1(1n 11111 , 12:1 ... Frri .._, Clltrlft COOl:IJ', Id> Mc.A\lfilo •• 12:~1ob lll!WI. Al <hi..,_, lt.y l'lcwd 12:,._.ott Mlll'JllW, (M ..... lff1'ltnl, J1r H..,.... 12:4-llotlCrf MitdMIH, llll'lkl' Htl'WY. De ... Glll'l'lll9 12:._...., O.-, """' Iii-. LM llditr 11:...._..eny r~. """'-ltf'llfiln. au1 ~ Bolt Isn't 'Terrible Tomm~~ By EARL GUSTKEY Of TN DMrr l"hll ltlft You remf:mbet Tommy Bolt. He's the guy who used Uve:n up the pro goU tour by breaking tits club1, throwing th e m " wr•pr.lng lh<l1I oroond tree&. Terrib e Tommy, they called him. "Now you tncw I never dld t b o 1 e things, baby," Boll sald '!'Uesday Iller· noon., at Mesa Verde Country Club's prac- tice lee. "Those were an newspaper ·stor\ts. I Wouldn't do anything like that" H• laughed and hit o crackling thrff. Iron &ho!. long and llralgbL 'l'ha fin! thJnC you have to ~ aboo1 Tom!l>1 Bolt I& Ibo! be I& o leadtr In men's fashions oo the PGA -· 'J'Ueo. clay, II wu o btaclt, IOf1i lleovl!ll turtl .. neck and blad: and while checl<ed cull· Jc;s panu, pleated at the aide seama. Al i\O, be'•. &leek ·and flt. '!'ha loot Is ruddy, offerlti.c a hint o( volatl:!!t;,!' u t bis amusing run ol cbalter _ bl& r.potatlon. . The tournament director and a friend of Bolt's, Ron Relf, approached \he drtv· ing range wearing a turtleneck IO pink y'ou could've seen btm on Cll&llna on a clear night. . . "Ronnie! I've l<lt to have one of thole shirts, baby! That'• atrqth! When can I nl one ol U-1" "rn ti. It up lo< you. Tommy.'' &Old lleU, who is the pro al Colla Mesa Coout- lry Club. "We've 1ol 'em In oui-pro shop, 111 have our Jlrl Ihm eet a C<X1pte· ulde for you." · "WW you R«u\le, sure enouch! 'Ibat'a 1Teol. l'vt iol I po)r ol poll!& that'll JO creat wltb 'em." Another Iron •bot. Tbl& .... tallod oll J\Jll •bit but TCl!lm,t ~ tt OU. He hid 1 gallorj now of ~ a -·· witching lllm lodaen up fof 'the }ta I & NaUooal Open. ' Another friend appearod and TOllllJl)I ,I • ' !iowned wben !be ocqualntanco WI~ ol a sllflenlnc -· "Man, you'va got to wort U-thlop out. Cort1aono I& ooly lanporarJ rellol, ,w tinow. v ... ·,. rot to u.p p11.y1n• - heck, I had meybo a lbou&ond - llhob ye&rt "'° for -lnlll>lio . "I jual wen! out and ~ llatder.'.1\14 "'"'lled It rllhl cait. I \ad nol ~ olll& palos then ba1 I alll't Fl ' DOW bal>7 I". n.:i1 lotlnll1 -Iba -••d polnl of older -.. Ibo bani • ol their earner yean. · ~ ·' "You tnw, there'a tlda on thJs.-&eur' -that dco't -what It'• l1l<U> ..... rJ I bq around !be C<IOlllL 1 -n- mtmber earrylnJ two mund .,. t ;: ~and~-..... ~ Alt Tmlrn1 Ude o1 11tiil:llll, ~fuou~ C . lo« vp ancl ~...- (Seo BOLT, Pap l'I) ~~ • • -___ ,.~--------...-...--·----------------------· ............................... ,,__.,,____ ........... -.... h •• -··---------------·-·----~-------------·------------- ·---·-·-·-.. -------....................... ---------------------~--------~~--... ·---, ~ -~· -~·-'T -------·--......--.-----~ ----· I11jured Mounties ~,;... Next for Pirates By JOEL llCllW .\RZ Of ... O.tt'I' ,, ... llttl Of&n,ge Cout COUerie ran Into a b!Jn. aw of a running hick list week In San Diego M,.. tailback 'l'yn>o< Young, but tbl Piratel can thank Golden Well, Oilers Lose Pedersen For Season Cul p-the bla..t h I g h ocbool back In Oraoge County, m•y have played his lut football aune for Huntl!lgton Be•ch Hlih School. The~pound wlngback suffered two crac~ ribs while llCOting a touchdown 1gainit Marina last week and the med· lea hive ruled him out of game act.ion "for two to four weekJ," Acconllng to OUer;Coach Ken Moata. M~ llad to drop down 75 pounds for a rejlacement. Junior Randy Lloyd (160) :;rm start at wlnibac~ qainat Ana- heb!I Frktay nlJ)>t at La Palma Park In ~-p~ -also a basketball player at Hmttlngton -bu been a football staM for three sea.sons. He's been startiig at both defensive tackle and at "~ Ulil year. "Tliis will really h\lrt ue against Anabam," Moats commented. ~ "His the boy we've been run- ning -iver for the put few games at tacklt, He's learned to be 1 much bet- ter bitter thiJ year." Bob PeatolesJ, the Olien' fullback, ls also On the wounded Uat. He tw a st.raiJiW neck muacle but ll eq>eeted to play hiday. . Moala aaya hiJ out1i! took Ila lumps qainst Marina, although the Oilers won, ::&B-7. or all schools, for sparing them aome defensive headaches this week. The Pirates play Mt. San Antonio Col· lege Friday night In LeBard SLadlum, but the MounUtJ will be wilhout t h e sevlce& ol their Lalented tailback Brian Shaw. Shaw received a concussion agaiMt Golden West two weeks qo and will be out of the Friday night game. Sblw, tbe brother of USC line- blcktt Jeny Shaw, wasn't the only player the Mounties lost against Golden WesL Starting left guard Lou Gonzales broke a colarbone against the Ruatlers and is out for the &eason. Injuries actually have been almost the entire story for Mt. SAC in 19511. "We've been riddled by injuries all year long," &aid head coach Don Greeley. "But things are looklng up a little - nobody got hurt last week against San Diego City College. "That means we'll be able to st.art lhe same II men on offense two straight weeks for the first time Uilil: year. 11WitJl au the Injuries we had and all the changes we've had to make ev· ery week it alm05t seems like we're still in the second week of preseason drills." Greeley's starting quarterback J..ar.. ry Maucere, has been hobbled by a bad i:nee all ae.ason, 'but lut wek he was able to play the entire game. "He played a fair game, Greeley said, "you can't do anything good when you lose. But he'll improve.'' Maucere is a sprint out puser. but he's had trouble with hi3 MounUe re- ceivers. "Our receivers are onJy fair," Gree- ley explained. "Last week they h a d five passet right in their hands a n d dropped everyone of them." Greeley prefers a running attack, but since the injury to Shaw has had to re- ly more on the pass. The results haven't been e ncoorag· tng. After an opening 21--0 victory over Riverside and a 21·21 tie with Long Beach, Mt. SAC has dropped all three of its South Coast Conference games. Santa Ana outscored the Mounties 3.1·21, t h e n came a llJ.-0 blanking from Golden West and a 21· 5 lo5s I a s t wtiek to San otegu. '.'• •• The Monster-No. 13 It's called "The Monster." R's ruin- ed many a promlling game 1 and soured the disposition of golfers for days. It 's Mesa Verde's par five 13th1l.ole, where HaJJ; National Open golefra will be put k) their most eii:acting testa durtng lhe $115,000 tourney this week One of the longest boles in Orange County at 585 yards, the hole someUmes treala the long hitter and the bullseye putter kindly but It is more often the crusher hole. "The real strong hitters have the best chance at The Mon5ter," a.ays Mesa Verde pro Dave Coffer. "l doubt JI anyone In the tournament will reach the grttn ln two. And we're not even uatna the back ~. tither. We've moved them up 40 yarda because of a gallery seating problem. "The green it big, favoring the good putter like Billy Casper, but It'• welJ.. trapped on three aides and there's • lake at tbe right. There . are trffl on the right and the !airway II a dof leg." Coffer predlcll lqng bitten Ill<• TOIJI Murphy, Marty Fleckman· and Dole Douglass have the belt chance of llllrVIYing The MOM!u. It's doubtful any of the t.ourinl prol will t o p the amutn1 feat of M e • a Verde club manager Bob K_tlly. A month ago , his aecood fairway wood shot I.tickled into the pln for an ea&le- Santa Ana ls Unbeat,en Linemen Doing Great Joh By EARL GUSTKEY Of fM OtllY P'li.t Slaff ln 196&, Santa Ana College went 3-6 in footblll . Last year they were S-4. At the moment, Lhe Dorui stand 5--0, prompting one to uk the coach, Dick Gorrie, what aort ol brew hia llOJ'Cettr has concocted. "We have four freshman boys from county high achoola who are doing a grut job in the interior of our of!eMive line," Gonie eiplalns. Of Golden West, Gorrle says lady luct has dea1t lhe Rustlers a"cruel t>low. Baldwin Says Saints' Year . . Flip-Floppy !JI the •law " -...ii. ,.... - win, 11'1 -a lu(Hlop -for Son-ia Ana Hltb't Saloll. • .._ tlltt --. I lllOaPt .... ~ be ..,...., 111...i..i, and -· .. dfflllll¥OIJ bat • ., -jalt Illa -11e.· Baldwin 11111- . 8aJdwin bopel thlnp --out .• bit Satunlay _,_, wbtn bJI i..m ploys uabuton Nawpcn at S..ta Ana Stadlwn. "Wt'•e been ltrOn& dtftflltve!J - that hun1 -our """1am." Baldwin..,._ "H "" tan _. Iha llaJl aplnot Newport, we'll win, but I'm net IO IW't we can move the baD." Newport bu fi•en up Jul tllreo touchdowns hi neeptni throu&' tiv• foes and acbJ<V1ns tbelr best '""""1 lince ltlt. Balctwln WU uked for an.evaluation ol the Sallon. ''Newport does a lot of ~ on d e f e n 1 e, they move a lot of Jieopl• a.round and confuM :fou. But there's . always a danger ln doing that -tr you ft! caught Ieanlnf tn the rlfiJI on a play rofn& tn the left you 're In trouble. "In that rupecl, Ulll 11' the lllllucldeat year I've ever had tn cat.chin&-11te ofh.. er teama ....,~ tn be ~ rl1bl tn where we're runnllll ti,e play. Maybe everyone bu us figured out now.'~ Baldwin say1 111!1 11 Nowport'1 beat teom In II Jftll. "I've been In Ille county . llnct ~7 and lhil bu I<> he the hes! Newport team I've seen. The unique tb1nJ about them 11 their u:ecuti!:n -they do it much better than lft10DI ·ellt we've seen." "They're very qWck overaD and they're well-balanced." While pralllnf Newport'• deftnle, Baldwin -that hll lan1 .. bad, •ilh-•• "We've given up Iii toucbdOWn1. One of them WU the btottn play that Ana• -heat ui with -aUuldt ol that when our eenttr biked tbt ball over our punter'• bead. .. "We got beat up more 1n thlt game than any other we've played. Marina hit u.e from every direction." Moats ls greaUy concerned with the passing lhrut of Anaheim'• miler quarterback, junior George Fraser. "With that bootleg of hll, he'• the most· dangerou1 threat ln the Sunset League, That'• how he beat Santa Ana. "And :Anabeim ts very under-rated size..wlae. Their line fl very big, they're all 200-pounden." Western Passing Game Worries Lions' Boswell "They've enabled our ground game to keep the ball and we haven't had that for two years bert." The Dons take on Golden West at OCC'a LeBard Stadium Saturday nlg)ll The four eiayers Gorri• named are tackle John Haya (Ul5, Santa Ana Valley), ctn!« Mika ,Dunn (:IGO, -. Grandt), fuird Mike Chadwick (113, El Modena ) and tight e n d Randy Rendon (230, Sanilqo). "Those dam guya are tougher than heck. Golden West bu 1 rea1 .crappy ball club. They cru1d have beat.en San Diego and East LA and gone into that Fullerton game last week 4-0." While Golden West wu being bombed by Fullerton, U-0 Santa Ana WU beating Rio Hondo, 2&-19. The two llChoots bave been ferocious rivals since Golden West opened lta doon in the fall ot '86. The first off·DeZd .con- frontation betw~ the two came from a . recruiUng bissle ·over recette.-· Randt Vataha, who Wound up with the Rustlers. Loara After 23rd Victory This Week Ml&hty Loua !liP l!chool, wlnnln ol 111 lut :a lllralfht Jrvlne i.a.,.. fool· ball ,..,.. and ~ llC<llp7ln1 the number om' polttlen In the CIJI' AAA lfld ranklnp, II nut on the list for Estancia Hlfh School . . • UCI POLOISTS SUBMERGE AZTECS UC Irvine's water polo team thwarted San D leg o State's baU control tactics Tuesday afternoon and pulled out • 3-2 win in the Aztecs' pool. • San Diego took only aeven shots the en· tire game. Imne now hu a 10.1 record and plays Cal Staie (Fullerton) Saturday at 10 a.m. In the Ant.attn' pool. They play USC ne:rt 'TUeaday at lJCl. Irvine held a Z..1 halftime lead and was up by: 3-1 at the third quarter mark. Fred1_ Mulimino llCOl"td twice and Steve P~ once for Irvine. ·~ ·-- The way Westminster High football coach Bill Boswell figures it, anytime you play a team that has whipped San- ta Ana, you're ln trouble. Bo8well was taken aback when asked If he thought his game with Western Friday night was a breahter. "A breather? Listen, Western beat Santa Ana .,o they have to be a very capable football team. Their only pro- blem has been inconsistency -they've sort of been up and down this year. "They lost to Newport, but Newport has a fine team, too." Boswell rates Western's passing gam.e as among the best around. The Pioneer quarterback is junior B o b Miller. "He's a good one. He throws the ! -.. ' .. ; Oly1Dpie --seoreboard J 00 B..,,katrolce ... 1JM,I 11•.S htl.I l ;ti .~ ,,., .. .. " ~ Womea'• 200 Free t11tJ .. ,, ~ ....... u.tttf """" .. ,,..._o~....,.., ~ a, ,_ ...... U11"" 11.._ 1111.1 '"· t. '-....,.. .. , U11tt.o1 ,,._ 1111 .t : • .. ~ w.nq. 1 .. 1 .,.._,.. •~n.J .o . I. Mir""" kfrt, Y-lev!1 J;U..1 ~' .. L'"*"' ttll, AWf11111 2.U.I ~ 200 Breutatrolce .. .•. t:l'I,, ''"·' 11n .t J::ID.J ,, •.. tlD.t ~lllMll-N . Morocco SI ,........., II.IQ 11. Cut. 65 'Ollowl 6', lttl., li1 Mt•ic. n 1Hln n WATER POLO VOLLEYBALL -.. 1a1tt1 ~ l. Mm<lco t _., Eid c;...,...,., l. Uni ... llti.t I 8tlfllom J, Me•ka I , P'olt ncl l, t r1 UI I 11.unll l. J1H11 I GYMNASTICS the long one very well and ht can eat you up with h1I short passing game.'' Even though his Lions crushed Valley Jut week, 56-0, Boawell found room for Improvement after watching lbe game films. "We're working on fundamentals all week . We continue to have blocking breakdowns and lhe tackllna could be a litll111harper 1 too. U Injured Tell Grid Story At Magnolia lnjurle.s are sWI the story of Maanoli• High School's football fortunes, but you wouldn't know It by looking at ll! opening game victory over Fountain Valley. in Irvine League action. The SenUnels romped, 25--(1 with a cast of supposedly cripples. They I.An- gle with Costa Mesa Thursday Nght (7 :30) at La Palma Stadium in Ana· heim. Thia week's lineup again Is injury- riddled with Art Lopez, the :starting left halfback, out for the season. Lee Long· necker ls out again with a bad foot and Bob Walters, the aecond team hallback, will be replactd by Ken Panique, However, 1 quarterback b)' the name of Dour Omer ts hanging around, and reports out of Magnolia say he 1.s hca.I· thy and ready to conUnue the SentJnels' winning ways. Magnolia'• only Joss of the sea90n wa1 to La Quinta in Ill final pre league tuneup, 26-25, a n d that w 1 a without Omer 1t the controls. Coach Don Lent figures Costa Me.u lo be a stronier team overall then l&st year when the Means recarded.. 4+1 seuon. "They don't );avt as many lndlvldUal stars as last year, but they have mort aggressive kids this year," he said. He added that h1$ chief worry wu Mtu.'1 quartlrblck and Skip Pike, one ol Mu1'1 wbl(boeka Claude Kelly It the quarterback In que1tion. Kelly hu thrown f« 411 ya.rdJ In five 1ames on the strtnctb of S2 complellonl In 71 aUempll. Rustlers Win, A wait Pirates Goldao Wiit luMd up I« a l"rlday ••W polo mateb wUh Oran.le OoMt'a c11111 PtnUO Tuold17 by whlP!bl San 11tman11no Valley eoue,., t).7, In an Eutern Coftler""" tilt In the Gl!C pool. The win oppod the llultlen' Iutu• record I<> l-0, and Ml the llqe f0< their blgeot pme ol ihe year. On the -Golden Wal It II_.. In ~dlt1on. to those four, Gorrie singles out returnee tackle Bob Lewis (21»). He's one of only three offensive · regulars from last year's club. . The atart.lng left guard, Jim Sawyer (20$), played for the Dons two years ago. Santa An.a'a Offensive line opened up enough holes to enable the backs to gain 3XI yards ruahing against San Diego M..._ " Then, last spring, Santa Ana charged GWC with conducting ill~gal practice sessioM and displayed films of the alleg· ed illegal workouts. Santa Ana came out the loser oa both occasions and have Jost both football e. counters, 32-0 and 18-3. "Yea, we've bad a rivalry from the first game on," Gorrie say1. "But I don't think It'• the rivalry Go-W..t bu with occ." Coach Not Discouraged. Key Injuries Plague Warriors All Season Coach Mike Kuklenski of Pius X's High School football team Is • guy that has been through the mill. His team's next assignment Is a date with Mater Del at Santa Ana Stadium Thursday night. So far the Warriors from Downey have e:1perlenced a l·J..I record, including last week's 45-13 beating from powerful Bis- shop Amat in their Angelus League open· er. The .season started off wrong iri the Warriors' firat game. In their 12-12 tie with Serra High, Kuk· lensld's troops fumbled on the oppos.!Uon one-yard-line twice, and had two touch- downs called back on penallUes. Pirates Romp Orange Coast Callege used Ill first team for less than one haH Tuesday to alnk Cypress tU In an Ea.stem Con· futnee water poio game at Cypttas. OCC will &ravel to Golden Weat Friday for a 3:30 p.m. conference encounter. Then, on the final play of the game, a Pius back returned a Serra punt nearly the lengtp of the field on1y to run into one of his own blockers and fall down on the enemy's three-yard line u the iun went off. "We've had 14 key Injuries so far, and that bu been the rnl.in reuon for our failure,'' saJd Kuklenski. But, the Warriors ate lir from di• couraged. "Our kids know they have to be mentally ready to just Ila, in the game with Mater Dei. "Mater Dei 's record is a fiant flub. They have as fine • team u anyone Jn California. They're young and lmJrov-\ ing. Their line technique la the best we've seen this year," said k.ullenskl. Kuklenski conimtnt.ed about his team's loss to Bishop Amat (U-11 ). "We're a better footbaJI tetm than that Some brtaka opened up fer thtm at the tnd of the first hi.If Ulat broke tt up." . Rick Minnick, the Warriors' rl&ht half- back la the key to their attAck. The quarterback potlUon Is up ln the alr, with Dave KOOi , a tophamore, slated to take over for ltJJurM Johft Ttruchuk, who ta out with 1 bad aftkk. . Coach John Lowry'• EltaMla club ls coming oU a 21·20 km to crou-town rt. val Coata M.,. and II ........,Uy holdlnl a i.s record. Loara, meanwhile, ls M, with Ila Jut win a St·• declalon over Corona del Mor. · No injurlu are reported wt of Loara after the <:Orona del Mar conquest. Coach Herb Hlll related that ht wan't very happy with bil tum'• effartl on the def0111iva llde ol tha pma with Co- "'"" de! Mar -allowlnC » polnla. But ha added, "Honver, tbty bavt a good team, upeclally lhelr quartul>tck (Dave Terry), ll a rood athlete." Hill is dubious •bout Eltabcla. 11We onl)o heal them l H lut yur and tlley ICOf'ed one touchdown that WU called back. It saved our Dfe." Another Passing Blitz May Hit SJC Saturday Saddlebact J.-Coilel• llu hM .... <kl•.,. prOblem• all -loof and thlnp dmi'I figun to change m11t11 la1ur. day nlfht wbtn the GaqchOI .,. al Million Vl•lo Hlih School to pll)' Ult ()o. c1d&.w Co1Iece l'!.ob. · OX'/ -IDie tha pma with ""7 •I· i -. l!lll the n,.,. .... ~ club and that -tnublt lit teach Geor ... 11u1znu·, lalnplltatily llllall Md lnlurY-rllMlld squad. !Ii ,... In Iha OX'/ attack is quarUrbaek P I t a LaboNI)', wllo'I eq,,..U, adept M I tirtp ~lcl or nllout -· Ila's~--lllul ulf ol hll tllrowl Ulll -&!Id ... _ ltrftin--. ,,,. Tieon a1ao11a .. • 1*lr ol -le l\L8nll 1n M.,.u. P•lorftll w vi- Jowell (llOUI wtlCh ~l will> .. aaetlltnl ~ ~-lti .,..., with a .. IS Win ,,,., tho lAl'6ll Jjyvtel, llUt ~ Jiii .. the Cal ~ .. Cal StalO (Lin( -) 119'11, IM aM lll-11. Tillers Have Puzzling Year Can 1nyone figure out Tullio lllfh School's varalty football record ? r1nt the Tlllen bl.uted favored E .. tancla and Hunllng10n Belldl In pre- leque actloo. Alter that they went Into a talllpln, flttl being tied by Villa Part, t h en knocked nlf 0.-ange and cam• rlfbt back &o Jolt to El Modena in another \ll)let. Tht Vllla Park ti@, 7-7, wu dMe with· out 1LJrtJns quartubaclt Dave A.)'de- loilt. lt11 heet'I • funny IUIOn. c.o.ch o.tJr'et Allen, however, views the 1ilua- lion I little dlfftrentl.y than 11fUN\J." Despite the upoet I<> El M.oclena, Tut- tln 0 ·1-1) k>oml .. \ha ~ !heart left "' Iha Laguna -odiadui. ..a an undefeated ltClilar -. Mier ~llini the Artllta -f-0.-aoga, -Viejo Old San (:le. ll)ente, ln that otder. But lint Iha .lnlltl ..... - with Tultln. . Al'delolto and Ille -ol the 'l'lllera. Aydelotte ron •not puood bk matet to an lmpreulvt win over HuntlacWm -"""" Jo •Illa year. f l!e pa'* lbr IM 7*1* w~Ilo -- £....."--'--------------·---------· - ----------. -..... -........ _. ----.------.. . -. ---·----------------- •• ' ' ; • , • • ' . , -' ' . . ' . .. • •• ' • • • ,. . . .. ... ' . . ·' ' . • Healthy Orange QB Aids Panthers Friday In Creotvfew League action. Tbey're feeling a little be~ ter over at Orange High School. And thal'a not &ood newa for San Cletnmte High School and Ill vanity football team. The two achools colllde BOLT .•. The Panthers finally tasted victory IQt week. romping to . a M decision over Mission Viejo. The Orange crt\Y rack- ed up those M polnll In the !~II hali and then coasted home. Tiiey did It primarily on the eflorta ol ~ healthy quarterback, Gary WIJIJI. (<JoOtinoed mm Pqe II) "fleck, you, kno1r there's kids on thil tour. · -I doo 't think they've mWed three putts in their life! Now they go to scho9l ~o l~ar:n ~ to putt I sw¢.~gives old gu)'J lil<e "" • complex, San Cltmenle, meanwhile, was busy winning Ill first game of the year wlth a com~ from-behind 7-4 effort In the lut moments of the game against Villa Park, a crew ' that had tied Tustin,' 7.7 earlier. "You· see .a kid bole one in from the edge of the green and I gel tha shakes stariD' down a six-footer. "Bui IlU tell Yjlll·lhil -Ar· nold Palmer Is the greatesl putter in the ~·over the last 10 yean -'ba and. Billy Casper.'' B o 1 t.come into the Haig a winner. He shot a fiist-day U.34--42 -and. went Ql1 .to . win lhe U.S. Na~onal Senioi'opPen at. Lu Vega. reC:entb',: win- ning $7,lOQ. . ' .. "Yeah, r~e been playin' OK. Awl!li tGJgb 'olaY!n' allead of these kida, thou&b •••• " Polo' Results Tustin whipped Orange 28-4. But that was without Wann and his efforts for Orange-. Says coach Vince Deveney: "We got our quarterback back and that .... the bplc dil· ference. He waa about 8$ W- cent lut -k and I exp6ct him to be around 90 percent ready for San Clemente. "We got lucky for a change, · too. We capitalized on all the brub we l'Keived." Left ball Rick Weaterpnl 'Wiii the big perf<rmer for Deveney Jut week witb 141 yarda in the rushing depart. ment Be also recovered two fumbles cm defenie. Deveney claimed n e w reaped for San Clemente after the Trltona Wdbited the abW· tyto win.. "We're both looking for our oecond win ol the year. Our rocard Is no better than theln, 10 you can't expect me to be overconfident," clafmed the Orange boa. In regardll to bis team'• 1-4 record, Deveney mustd, "I've c:eued to try to figure this game of football out." Los Alamitos Entries 1"tr W ..... 'f'. Ort ... 1111 "-' Tlf!M 1 .. M. "llllT llAC• -:UO "rdf;, S ,...r old• •nd VP Ill A Mlnul. C•Hfornll b....SS. PUflll ltD. "--II •llfto fJt Ad11f') HO "•rkff • .,.. C .. Cl'olbY) 11J e ro a r'IHTllMI l K IN. Jt.rrnotdl I 1111 TOii• Allll {H P-1 117 Mf. Eultr hy IC Smlltl) 111 $t1r a.r Twn CN. P,att19) 117 Minni. No.-(H H•wll-) 11• e.c1c· court'•f9l fli'tilklftll ... 111 IN:.C0'1"'1 .... (T Lllfttm) 11• SS.COM!> JtAC• -"°° ,..m. 3 ye11r oldl •nd llP rn Gr•dlt A PIUL .. UrM """' Oo Wilch Ct C SmltllJ 117 fel!el!v (W $lr1uul 11• RMlm Plev ti 0 C1r.tm:•I 1'0 ~leo Rodtel (H H1wkenlolll 117 Ht1ther H_., CJ Rlcll1ronJ IU Trucklln G.i IT lh1h1m) 11• on Prlnc:M• (It Adllr) .11• Luck.,. &11rlet CK McJtevnoldl) 117 lllV llulhff tJ WllHlfl) 117 Miii N«tfl ~rlnl 11• ......... 1 ... lltlli' Obie 04 Cl"DlbY') 1111 ov11..,. ••r Bair (1 c Jmltlll 120 SI"" TI.. Minic (! 0 C.nkal 117 Lll'IO Mitt (J Ktinl1) 117 TMIJtO IACw-=-c;o .,...,,.., 2 ve1r old rMldln1. C1•1m9. P'llrw 'SIM c 111mr ... 1r~ s:aoo. Moc>n$hllll-8tr (P CroUrl 120 A1>rll'1 eld fH c~ · 1111 Tonv'I Sllftdblll (H _P'lttl 120 l lld<Y $<JllP!'lfft9 (J 01'1'1'1•) 120 su .. 'N II-•· lW INl.....ii.dll no 51/n Gl'mt CM "•ttlol 120 Fiiia' Wiiiow (I( IN:.llt"l'llOkhl 110 Wtt'tt! 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Flvl1'19 COOi (R: fltl-) 111 Wiiiow Gold IK MCJt........ictsl 117 Mlc:k'1 M1rtt Cl Wri.1111 117 Llk1 A ltod:l'I {C Sm!lhl 117 ....... , .. , ReCllml CW Sl1N) 111 Zee'I P'1r !H .. 1oe) 117 Jt'"'91 II.let co ClrdOlll 117 P1lle0 ll1r Tll'llt' (Z CDllll'll) 120 Los Alamitos Results old1. Ct-""1111. """" lllOI. J•ll o Jtt (Smll'hl ».ao 10.IO ,...,. Truckle it-( .. 1 .. 1 a.Ill, ... •""lfklot Bolo 1•rlnklt"l'l 2.20 Tlme-11 2110. AlllO "'l'l--G1n IWY, Oollble H•1tv, Yt10ffl Tonto. Elthl Jtockl, Cl- 111vlplor, Lottnon. kr1tdl.o-D11Wt V11or, Khllt """' SIXTH JtACI:. -y ...... 2 .,.., oltls 1N .. 111 Orffe M MlllUI. ,...,,_ 11100. Dedt Jldl. IL'-""'"1 .... IU 4A ft'W'J 9-le !A.NlrJ '·" S.to Ml• llttl1 Oedt tColllfll) 2.IO Tl~ •111. At90 Jt.l~MY .. 3!il9, 1.lttll l!mmy, JIM SICll:I•, Cl'llrM ll'll•I, No K~~· llYINTM ltACf, IJJ 'fl"*-t Y"r Oldl. Cl•lnllrit. l'111'M 11980. ·,.,,,,,., Miii CGllllNI S..tO 2.llO J.fO Altrll1"k' flrltii...,1 t.llO J.00 ll•ld .INN ll""l'lll 4.tll 1'"'--'' J!IO. .,.. Jt~tY ••r Ftr, our ••bit MCCllr• 111?'1 It"""'· SC-O' ,.,._, on J• Mffl -...... "' ... ,., .. ""'. ktMOJa• Oh Mv Dart1111. .. ' . . ' • WtdntSday, Oc tol:Jrf 23, 1968 DAILY PILOT ·-... All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Satufc:lcij' ·. i:Pf]~~~W ®filW@ c54 ~old c54me1bn "Tdditiol/. It's great to be a stay-at-home especially at these low,prices 8' pro-style pool table $299 Pq as little 11 $12 per monlfi " 1'hll forenioel9 CUltom tabl• t.otvN. ~· SlatrOn bed, uni-body steel construction, 11..i frame Jegs; pro«yle scoring counf.o ..,, 2 ·cu .. , official sb:e · Belgian balls, plus accessories. Walnut grain finish Ov.r: hardwood top rail. cind tfd-. Mcafee your llome where the fun It hopptnlngl ® Foremost 8' pool table $269 Pq 11 llttte n$11 per month 'nits tcible featvm.coMruction of many hlgl>or priced tobln• Sllel uni-body con- --I In""" leg-. full !Ii" Pl' blend btd. 100% 11oo1 billiard -. ""'""' 1op .. n....i ..._ iDllflotl Wllb puf1 1trl ao»ecrfll. Jljt " ~ ,;\ Bicycle Exerciser 32.98 Pq 11 little u $5 pet month Grtot way to ;mt leg~ wollt and mtdrfF into shape! Adiustoble handJ.bar and ..at, choin action drive, plated chotn- gwrd, pl111 extra fine ~ control. A P9Me(1 Fottmost9 u:dusfvtl Double l<fion -dMr 19.88 - • ;/,, TOP THIS ••• Foremost 8 ftt pool table PLUS complete access~~--packaeeJ ~~:~~~::::~i~w~OP $199·. btrhard clo~ pN-formed ball return, wolnul gralli flnbh "'"'hardwood body, i;• ply-blend Nibtr cvshlons. Accaaorie1 mclude: two 52" tuts, offi'ciol size striped balls, plastic 'triongle, bridge attac;h· ntlftt, chalk and full Instructions. Table tennis lop wily con"''" yoUT table '""" pool playing to ping pong, 42" U.S. Nova ply plywood Im a -plelely prHlripad play• """"""'"· co111pl1to Pay as little al $8 por •atll " 1 pool table '169 ~ acceuory package '11 table ttnnis top •19 • .tt : ,f © Foremost weight set 19.98 Deluxe rowing ·~ machine Pq u lltlte • $5 ~ mGnlh Plollk Jod<tlld 110 lb. We!Gl!t IOI lfiol knp1 you r.hy•lcally fft, ~.for adult• and Khoof tvtl othftt• ••• Thll: llt ha1· on ottractlv• appearance, I• eaty to cleon, do•• not mar ftoon, $unburst loterlockplot... . 24.98 NO MONEY DOWN ... UM Penneys Time Payment Planl . . ·' ., .. .~ .. . .. ..... , .. , ... ' ... ,, .. --· - '-·~·~·~··~·~-~--·=--•••==•=w-=-•-•-·-==-~·-·•--·-·=~·-··-·-·=·-w-----=-=---=·--·---·-·---·----·----·-·-·-=••·--------------·r---------~-------·· : • .&I OAllV PllOT ' Once Around Coast Area Greens Prep: Stars of Week Club Champs Du~ped in Tourney BRIAN STERN -do!- LEE MOORE N9trpert lbrW EI Modena Still Eyes Loop Title 'l'be Vanguards of E l Modena have won four of live games this year and are eyeing the possibility of a co. championship with Laguna Beach tn Crealview League action. El Modena dropped a crushing 28--0 decision lo the Laguna squad in the opening week or Crest.view hostilities, but have come on strong with wins over San Clemente and Tullio. The Vanguards knocked off San Clemente, 33-14, and lhen overturned the up-an<l~own Tillers, 1~14. Now, the Vanguards must win all their remaining games and hope that someone can knock off Laguna Beach in the tinaJ four weeks of the season. TulUn is given the best chance of surprising the t Artist.I but Orange abo figures lo glv< Laguna a loogb game. Meanwhile, El Modena must win Le ILiy tn contention. lb lot I« this week is Mission Viejo (1-4) and m1ch Bob Laacr sakf that his c.lub can- DOt lel down a.gaimt the llilbloo. "Our bigal pn>bl<m -~ t.plna ,... -le up after boe••na oil TuJtin lul weot. Ye c:an °1 overloot Mi111<i11 Wtjo. _,.,,,.,.,,. YOIUJ-lmprvved. 'l'bor IOll blc lo Or1111e· 1Ut i'lit but Gary Wann ol ~ wu really hlUlng and ¥l!jD WU Wllhool! Iii top m~-.~,._.,.,_,.,..,., 111o-. DAVE GLEASON c.a.-RON BRANT &taacla DARRYL BERG We1tmln1ttf Thn!t former club cham- pions bit the du.st a t Meadowlark Country Club in the second round of Ute men's club champiomhlps. The 'third ex-champ, Craig SCOfed an ace oa the 156-yard Olson, was beaten . by Chuck 'aeve.nth J!ole~ Mahakian, Gale Bouk. and Bill WaJlact were Ued for second wllb 711. Bea Regan took the second flight with a 110-Z7·93 and Elise Stipes wu lint in the third flight with a 11~. Beatty on the zOtb hole. . . • · Jle ~· a alx-iroa in ac· Other resuJ\s inc4tded'Terry CoiDpllSblng the feat Don Winterhalter, a former champion of the eventi drop- ped' 1 dec ision to Tom Hickman in the championship Hanstad taking a three and "Costa llle•a two decision f~ , Ralph · Decherleui., Bob L.y man Q"ack Towle and Jack Valsek defeatinf; W Ryden, Lou ·~.With 7Ss to share honors Va~ beaUng Bob' Cook on in a low gross -low net event ttJ:e 19th hole an~ ·Don Boaz , on'Saturday at Costa Mesa. with a twCHJp vlctoey over · 1 .. '""A •-·-net di · · F-' Rick Young·. ,.,. "R' ruw v111ton,. '""' In women'• club action on Friday In a selective nine event, Marty Schneider took first with a 9l-18-74: (27). wilh Martha Ciampa second at 88- 11-77 (2'). Shirley Hawkes, M a r i on Voss and Shirley Cummaro followed In the third flight. Activities at Costa Mesa ia club action will be at a near slandstiU this week with the ruMing or the $113,000 H a i r National Open GoH Cham· piQnship taking the spotlight. flight. . And, Hank Gowdy' the defending champ, WU knock· ed ol1 "'°""P by Al Coast. A bole In doe Wu recorded Fredensberg {7'1·7-70) " a 1 on Sunday when Bob ·Nau tops while Len Erickson, John Third place in the first fiight went to Alveme Forrester and Hazel Webster with 91-19-72 (3111) and 84-13-11 (31\1). An PenMy Stores Open Every 'Night Monday Throogh Salurday ··:' 1 -.SSl:NGll Tiii GthllANlll · ·~.~ l u1iaANTf.E A;AIMST f'AtLUll ,. ,~ ~&~•••!lees ellef)' foreinMI• ti,. •l•i"st en taihntl ifl 111•-lhi1 l~ln· 1~ 1a1ts tor 1h., entlr• auar•n~ pt:riod st•ted kit e.ch lirf!. U lh• tire feit1 dur- in& 1tw: 1u•r•nl.,. pe1iod, retu1n it Wllh your i:1,1a1.1nte• certil1c1te . •nd Pf!nneyS will, el "' option: Ill repair th• ~Ire, 121 reol.ace ii w+ltl • new tire, « ll) ,,...., you ..., 1 m~dilte 1e1 .. oc1. 11 .,.. "'Plfee lht ,,,., .,,,,nl lh• free 1eplac;f!nMnl pnlod, lhe•e is no cher1e; ii Wf! repl.ace IM life 1tte1 llM lrn: reolecem.,nl penod. )IOU pay 50~ or 25~. Jess th.an lhf! eunenl 1•llfn1. pricf' ot th., 1,,., 1ncll>d1n1 11\t red111l E•cise T•i 1see g1,1•r.1ntee at;.air'll\ l1ih"1 th.a•I tor delad1). (';UARANTEE AGi\INST TRf.i\0 WEAROUT 36 MONTH GUARANTEE WITH 18 MONTH FREE REPLACEMENT Now 522 Pin Feel. tax and old tire White hlbet.11 ,., ' Sin . , .1.. leg, fed. l-..: 650-13 ,., .•..••• •-4 . 23.95 ••.. , .....•• , 1.M 700--13 ................. 25.95 ••••••••••••. 1.92 '95-14 ...•.• : ...... 25.95 •••.•••••.... 1.95 NOW 526 Plus Feci. tax and old tire Whit• tubele11 Mistakes Have Burt Penn«ys &UifalllHS eweoy Forf'.-Sl• \1"' (eiicf'pl the 72 series) 111in1I htlld 'f'I••· ewt •~ t h• t'nlirt l"arantf!e period. You benefit ,a) 1011-s: ol your ,;,. we111 oul c1u rin1 llM li1st h•ll o4 tn.. uiaranle. pe1iod rel11rn it wilh your 111•r•nttt Ctr· til1cat~ a nd Penneys will replace your lire w•th a ntw tore Ith., char~e l<>r tnis will be so~w of ll>e cu .. ent 1e111n1 p1ice ll'lclvdin1 F~r•I [XC•5e Ta•); it your tire we••I out dvfO"'ll the ~econd hall, the c;t11r11e ..,;11 be 75~ o/ 11\t CUfff'nl s1U11•1 prlct .ncl.idin1 Ftd"'el EaCiH Ta•. Sl1.• I-a. Fed. lox 735-14 •.•.....•.••• 27.95 •.•.•••..•••• 2.06 775-14 .•.••.......• 2'.95 •.••• -.•• .-••• 2.1"9 Pickl ord Worried llltM 1.i1ran!e1s dO ftot •l>Plr 11111 - "'e1cial vse o4 !o<tS, Here"• Miw .,_ .--.... Mt feil..,• werko: 775-15 .....•.. ' .... 2'.95 ... ·-· ......... 1.2-1 -j ... ;.. , __ , .. ,.. .......... 36 ......... ~ ...... -............... l·l•~ About Sea l(ings SO"-.. ,.. ................ ,,_,, .-111/' JJ"° ...... -.. .. , ........ H -K_.,. Now 529 1'Five lntercepUOtll and a fumble. You don't play a team like MagnoJ.i.a and do that U Vike-SAV Tilt Close lo the past two weeks, Sanla Ana Valley High School has lost football games to Suilset League co-leader!i Westminster and N e w p o r t Harbor by a combined scored or 90-6. That's enough lo discourage most men , but coach Bill Mills of Santa Ana Valley has high hopes for his team's chances with Marina High Saturday night at Santa Ana Stadium. Says Mills of his club's leis.'> to Westmfnster (50--0), "For the first 11 minutes we played pretty good. then a belly play fooled us, we got a penalty or two that hurt us and the nert lhln1 wt knew we were back 27-0. "Wt tried to p]ay catch up in the second half running onl7 twice while throwing 2 $ ti~." That's past histary, however, and the Valley coach's only concern noW' is with Marina High's winlesa Vlklnp. "We saw· them play Hunt- ington Beach and they look like 1 pretty fair team to us . .. tt lhoold tie a ck>R game,·· ht aald. ~ you're going to win," said coach Bruce Pickford of Foun- tain V alley regarding the Barons' 25-0 los& to the Sen- tinels in lrv;iDe. League play. Saturday night the Barons will try it again, this time with Corona del Mar at Davidson Field. Both clubs are 0-1 in league play. Game time is I. "Corona's quarterback bas come on good. We knew they had a couple or good runners in (Mike) Ezzell and (Ru) Snyder. "And they always have that big defensive line," he noted. Pickford worried about the possibility of Corona's Brian Stem (6-Slfi) running amuck in the defensive secondary where the Barons are stocked with S- 7 backs. Healttrwise, F o u n t a I n Valley, a! usual, ii hurting. The Barons will be without left tackle Gary Rocheltau, cent.et Doug Ha)'ftell. laCkJe Bill Champion, bac-Mike Chlldret and their belt all-round player Mark Allegreua. · · Rocheleau Is suffei1ri.1 from • pinched nerve in his neck • " " • " UBE YOUR nc=.rA"lfde' .' AcCOUNT TCDAYI ~~ ~':'1~ ~= ,b:,O • FREE tire rotation cusk>n in the Magnolia fracu. every 5,000 m if&sl Plus Fed. tax aRd old tire Whhe tub.le11 .... fed .... 125-14 •. : .•.••.•.•• ll.95 ..........••. 2.JS 155·14 . ' ...•.....•• ll.95 ... -•........ 2.56 115-14 .•...•....••• 35.95 •••••••••.•.. 2.15 115-lS ••••••.• , , ••• 31 .95 , •••••• , .. , • , 2.36 145-15 ............... 33.95 ........... _ ........... 1.5'4 OUR P.L.M. TIRE IS EXTRA WIDE FOR GREATER GRIPPING''p0WER! • lxtra wide 7 rib tread cle1igft g;w.., greatier hOdieR t1nd•r all drrting"conclttlons. • T•ugh" 4 ply p•lye1ter cord won't flot ........ , • eli...f.. nate1 1tart up 'thump' ••• protects aga1,,.. blowoots. • Loni wHring polybutadiene rvbber odch extra MM• 411• te n•ry P.L.M. ti,., • FREE puncture repair for life of tre•dl . • FREE mounting of 1U Penney tiresl Chllden II OUI wllll ~ imff ligament and Champlori' ii out ~.~~" 11"~.: ':~tba: ' No money down ... use Penneys Time P1yment Plan frulowtn,:weeL !.-~~~~~-:--:-:-~~------~~--:--:--~~~~~-~~-~:....~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~~ "I was ham wtth the wayll oorkid1hltlntheMapolla NEWPORT BE ·ACH HUNTINGTON BEACH game. tu would hive been 0 • more lndicaUw of MJw we (F h" I I d) (H ' p11yoc1 aga1no1 , b. m .~· as ion s an, · : untington Center) Pickford uid. t • • -• , ------------------~------~ -----·--..-........ ----... .. .. • ... -..... -.. ~...-..--•• -+ ' . • ] ... • • C•• • M! • • Hu,_: ' ,, , "" • • I <1 .., • • • "1 •• ~ ' • w: "" i "1 ' Ci "I ' Fo ' ' "" "' Mo ' Mo ' Mo ' MO ' "' Mo ' M• ' t Mo ! Mo ' ' Mo ' Oo ' O< •• • Mo ' Mo ' Mo ' Mo ' Mo ' Mo ! O< ., • "' ' "' ' ' Mo ' Mo ' Mo ' O< •• ' "' ' Mo ' O< "' • Mo ' Mo ' • Mo ' ., ' "' . Mo ' Mo ' Mo Mo 0 O< Mo ' Mo ' Mo • Mo ' Mo ! Mo ' Mo ' Mo ' O< "' ' M 0 Mo Mo Mo O< • • Mo •• "' • ........ -. . ...... For the Meetings AIM '"""""' """-Slooo Al = .... Record • $m9.00 VAUit -$2]91' SEC ARD ......... 532.1992 ms....., St .. °'""'P '" • Wtdnndq, Oc1*f 23, 1968 Actress to Take Daughter's Role ANAllFll.'101'.NI !I ~NC HI 111 OR! Ni ','/PORT Bf AcH 111 ll PIJ~I 60 FLIGHTS PER DAY 15 Minutes One Way 'Time U..!ioll: Just "rtll of tlto Oisn11land Hotel lftd jnl wat of Oisneyfand Pm on Ce!Titos Amut. ,,,_ (714) in4380 22 FLIGHTS ~E~ DAY 20 lmtrtes Oiae Way Time .__:Jortl! of r.oist Hie!t<IJ on tht wt1! Mt of Jomi>orH Road It tile N..,.n. hNI, """" (714) 144-1717. ,_ ................ ••-11fllo10:1: S. JtW ltMI 11aW tr »Miit Clflrc. « ...... JM 11C111 ~ ~ .. , 11:00"' 6:~ Dap • W•k c1 ..... woc1 • ..,ayo a._ ..._ -..._ .... _ --.... - 6 -• ·-. LEGAL NO'ltCJ: ' • -=-~-,----·--··--~-·~----·-~·----------· ----.. ----------......----.--...--......._.,_..._..---.... ----~--. ~-...... ......... ._. ...... --------.... • ·~ r ., -.. • .--, 30 0"11. Y PIU>T \YtdM~ay, 0<.lobff 23, 1%8 New Car Insm·ance Proposed • :, .. ~ WASHJNJ:;TON (UPl) -An Jones. The National Association ol. ' Wun.net 1 s soc I at ion Under the p~t liability l1'1dependent Insurers (NAil), ~ling 160 companies insurance !i}'Slem, for the wblch says ib 480 member -U11s wttk unveUed an auto in-most part, there must be a companies write more than .&!ranee plan designed to acrap determination of who is at half lhe private car insurance the ''who's at fault'1 payment fault btlore claims cu be tn the nation, said the 110-fault concept. paid. scheme would shift to each · Accordilll ·to the American motorist "the entire burden of lmurJnee Association (AlA), The new plan would be com· 1nsur1ng h1rnself against all hi! .:cldtnt •icthm would have pulsory -that ls, a person losses -both those caused by Uie1r economlc lOS3CS and would have to meet insurance himself as wen as those caus- medlcal espe~ pakl by coverage requirements t o ed by other motorists." their own insurance com-operate a car. In return, there State Farm Mutual ex· panies. Tbtre would be no would be complete immunity pressed doubt its 11 million court litJgaUon or settlement from court suits, Jones said. pollc)"holders would want "the between opposing 'companies. The proposed system would cost of accldents shifted from Known as the complete make no change in automoblle the reckless driver t(>· his vlc- .persOnal protecUon automobile collision, fJrt and th e ft tims." insurance plan, the proposal policies. Alstate Insurance said the would cost "up to 45 percent lmme<liate opposition came AIA proposal would mean "Ir- less than the cost of the from other insurance com-responsible and r e c 1t 1 e s s present system," said associa· panles and groups not con· drivers would be held finan- tion ~ident T. Lawttnce necttd with the A.IA. dally blameless." ==================~\ ''Speet/y'' the roadrunner says-try Printing While You Wait AT SPEEDY COPY CENTER 1886 HARBOR lLVD. 0 COPIES s3ts Our Stock: White or Color D"'P By Today and Or<for Your FREE Parsonal Desk Noto Pod • BROCHURES • LETTERHEADS • BUSINESS FORMS e BULLETINS •PROGRAMS • PRJCE LISTS SPEEDY COPY CENTER 1886 Harbor Blvd. Cost• Me11, Calif. 92627 • 645-0040 • Drop by and Pick Up Our Complete Price Liii Get $100 or more month after month after month! lml&il'lfl ••• H1vin1 1 retul•r monthly chtck to look forw1rd to! Mooy of th°" who hlYt 1 wondertul MONTHLY SECURITY ACCOUNT ••• ori1in1ted ind lont tested by Newport B1lbo1 $avinis ••• sllrttd by simply openint a dlvidend·e1u1in111vinp, _.,t Olhto l""'tld 1 lump sum. IQIL ntE COllPOll ~Oii COllPIETE DmlLS Oii ntE MONTHLY SECURITT ACCOllNT PWL (,.,... •IJild II ~•ltli1 " $K 1104 « lht CltllmO. f!Nlltltl CHI '*-"' .iildl • ...iao •H i..1 ._101.., .. , JIM .. .., lb rlctill 11 •-.~''• ., .. • .... ..._ tlf m11m1 "'.tM ..... c .. ,.. .. ,~•11...i '"'"''" Mi """ ... ,,,..,.,. ,. -&t ,.. .. ) ·REGIONAL COUNSEL R. J1me1 Shaffer R. Shaffer To Counsel District Adds •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • ; ·:.: IlOWPORT BOI.BOR SR\7108 : : ''' • ' ,toftll941 In ltJI ••• i.e•M a•tO•IAT•Oll 0 -"' : .... VII lWI\, ~ hec.11.. C.l'H•nl• f2MJ • ......... 11WlJO 1 2166 [. to.11 H""t·· COfOtll daf Mir, C.lllo'"'' tMU • l"l'IOrtt 675·5tl50 : • "9:tourt" 1" ~ fllf Ort. H1111d-.d M1!llon Oolt1,. o -; • • P, A.~ O.lflN" Of 1'" ... rt AGl'ttl ILOMQUIST, Pr•1ld•"t e -¥. . .~~:rl HAM£ • : • • ~ . . ~-~· •• • ~ . • ~. • CITY TAT P • . ..... ___._ _ ... _ . ~-~· ~Of.-t... ......... .. ------~ • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ··= t:: ' .L.. ( ' . ---~--~--------·-·---------------... ~ --...... -- Over The Counter To Rescue I ....... -...._ --------~-~····--~----~·~·~· ··-·-·--·~·--·-· -·-·~·-·-··-·"'':..--.-...__ ---. .. -·· .... ... lCC; ,. • • -" •• .. • ~ • ,, "" ' . . ' __ 1968 Tuesday's Oosing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List " .. -~ -..-._ .. _ -..... _ ..___ ~ -.. --... -- • -· - • : AT ,. 'ilUti• ,. , DISCOU:ltTS :~,·on ltLYMOUTHS ·t..·CHRYSLEiS . ' . ' ,_ ·" .· ,, · 4a ' MONl'HS BANK FI NMCING-·:;. · · · -'AVAIL:ABLE ON ALL NEW ,cAl(S '': -. ·" -J ' • j • . ' ! • ,, ' -. • . ' AT THE C'OMME~CI~'. 6ANK OF WESTMINSTER ON APi>ROVE'd'.MNK CREDIT +"TAX I. Lie. IMMI DTATE DELIVIRY ~f:.:·~:::r«'.'~:::o;";.~~r;.:.~ $2187. . !ront1"t1r HI! belts, •hoo.lldfr tiarneu. NOded dffl!, W.$.W, OJlllOflll. , , RUWl!I0.7«1 FACTORY LIST $2671 .. ... • ' i, .' $195 D._ $55 M•. + TAX ~LI; • '69 Valiant - 'iMMEDIATE DELIVERY Our Discount Price ,~i~~~;f;-;~=. $1977 ' LOfW mil .. !X'fLUl l, · FACTORY' LIST $2UJ $53 ••. $53 "'' ' ' . ' ' '69 Belvedere Our Discount Price '69 Roa!lninner -. ORDER YOURS TODAY ''69 Fury IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Our Dl1courit Prin l'1tlly flCION MU!pplld, Heltw, 'tied. :::::..:':::·;.~-=-::::si..,,_ 5 7 7' P9Ckllll dell\. 'Ill.I .... 0Pllcln1I. ' FACTORY LIST $3123 $195 ... $69:.'.. + "'" '" + TAX 1.·LIC. IMMEDIATE ·DEL IVERY ! HUGE 1969 SELECTION EASY 1969 TERMS LOW·LOW 1969 PRICES ALL NEW CAR PAYMENTS ARE BASED ON 41 MONTHS INCLUDING TAx lo LICENSE lo FINANCE CHARGES ON APPROVED COMMERCIAL · BANK CREDIT '' -,~---------~------~.~..---~---~~~ ---------... ,..·-......--~--....... ... ' .. . .· . l: . • I ~ '' ' ; IUY EVERY, USED CAR' WITH CONFIDENCJ ' ' 7 DA:v; · TRIAt · ~Ct,tANGt • ( :"f. 'J·~;t,q(o ·GALAXIE 500 $47'°'7· i< Jil..""'u$, ""1"""6"' ~li'.'"'$'"'1· <H6•M ~~TAL · .. i,tlCI DOWN MTHl.Y. _ , · + T r. L ·PYMT. · PYMT. •LUI IOOK ·ptJCI Sl021 '65 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX A.Ir "°"""' ,_, llMrln1, br•fi•., wll!Dowl, radio. heal9r, all!Omatlc. $1 A."J'7:. "".TOTAL $4~·'9"" TOTAL s49 TOTAL . ·~~{'., ~~·~·~I.~·" .t. . :j:r~ ~r:~Y. ~&5 C:HEVROUT 4 DOOR ~ t.Mitr, ..:mm..'t~.;IS.,., No. U669'91l!'Ut ,'·1 '.PalCI • . . DOWN MTt4LY. ' ' '66 FOR0•4 DG'OR . . ·; , Vt. l utoma11c, "°'"r •lolerlnv" r.fdlo, healer. (UOAllll $m TOTAL $26 TOTA' $26 TOTAL ,' , PRICE DOWN MTHLY. • ·' j +· T r. L PTMT. PYMT. •LUE •OOI PRICE S15tl '66 OLDS STARRRE RKfo, hft!W, VI. 111loma!k, air, ,ower wlndowll, till wllell, PS, Pl. tTGR 5111) $1. ·m · TOTAL $6'3 TOU.L $63' TOTAL . : . ·. ;. " PlttCE • DOWN , . . ·MTHLY. J +.Tr.I. PYMT. PYMT. , 11.UE IOOK PllCI $2060 '6l PONTIAC BONNEVILLE $8·77· ,, TOTAL lt-29 TQTAL $29 TOTAL + T ,I L PTMT. PYMT. Radio. Mater. aul!:imatl<:, l>OWff ileerln1. CLE\'1'2'0l " .. , ...... _ ... u ... IOOl(,.,ftlU-ttl6J .,~ .... Q .... ::i~,L. .. 5]6 ':6~~ .. s,~-r:~t.,. '64 CATALINA 9 PASS. WAGON ""-fllJ + T • L nMT. V nMT. $'JA., ·o-jj "'Tb1".t "$''3"· 6-.'""';~t,:rio.. he3••6r. iSJ;o~~L PllCE DOWN ~ MTHLY. + T r. L ~~· mtT. '65 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER VI, All ,_.... _,r_.,1, t lr colldltlOnlnv.· INIOltJ $-71~ TOTAL $53'TOTAL $53 TOTAL '. 1. 5 , . PllCI DOWN MTHLY. + Tr. L . -PYMT. PfMT. 11.UI IOOK PllCI $1140 '68 PLYMOUTH FURY IH 2 Door ... ,..,,,..., VI, mom.trc.. -r 11wl'ln1, radio, hefiter, •Ir earldlUODIJIL . tVRC 750) '·' S2677'r':~~L lftl\l:::HL s90~~~~~-+TIL ""'""7UrrMT. PYMT. ILUI IOOK PllCI SJJ21 '6' MERCURY CAPRI 2 Door H.T. l'"ktotv ek', 1~. "'°"'"'° 11Wrlftl, radio, ~r. (W'EU 71t) 77 TOTAL $33 TOTAL $]. 3 TOTAL PllCI . DOWN NTHLY. +TI L PYMT. PYMT. ILUI 10011' ;11c1 $2140 . · '64 -COUNTRY SQUIRE 1 ~~ ''"~lt'ICI, rtolflo, 1119hir, ~vtcmellc. fVWW<l'l , $671' .TOTAL $2] TOTAL $23 TOTAL · ' PllCI DOWN MTHLY. .~ + t ·& L PYMT. PYMT. ILUE IOOI PllCI $1110 '65 DO.DGE DART lt.cllo, 11Mttr;.1~k. (NA:C "°' $1-n TOTAL s 26 -TOTAL $ 26 TOTAL _ 'PllCI• DOWN MTHLY. "' + TI L PYMT.. PYMT. :· ILUI IOO:ll ,NICI SIJll. '65 PLYMOUTH ·FURY WAGON l'"ur-, 11.;vi. ~. ,.,_. ,,....,111, air cenclll!Ofll,._ (ltUJ ~Ol $1 117• TOTAL $39 TOTAL $39 TOTAL .. PRICI DOWN MTHLY. ~·yr. L . · PTMT. PYMT. :tLUI IOOI PllCI SIUI . '64 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR t:3TJ, TOTA("'" $""'1""'3· '"T':>'T:' $13 TOTAL ~ PllCI DOWN MTHLT. .:·'+f,IL , "MT. . nvt. '66 PONTIAC Full~ "ul1>1*1. R&dlo. hultr. (SYC !Oil TOTAL $29 TOTAL $29· TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLY. + T I L PYMT. ' PYMT. ILUE IOOK PllCI $1155 . ' '.64 ·DODGE 4 DOOR loa~d fnc:l udlf'lg t utomitk:; CNGJ ts.II $3,71, .. TOTAL $13 TOTAL $13 TOTAL PllCE ' DOWN . MTHLY. .+ TI L . PYMT. PYMT. ., '64 CHEVROLET BEL AIR ~Door. Rlldlo, l!~afft', Mllo!Nl llc. (OLK WI , TOTAL $23 TOTAL $23 TOTAL PRICE DOWN MTHLT. :f-Tr. L PYMT1 PYMT. '64 OLDS F-85 . HARDTOP ~5n· . TOT~· ,,$ ... 2"'"3"'"=t '$""2'"'3' -TOTAL -"~ • . PllCI . ~DOWN MTHLY. ~ \ ) +TI L' . .• 'PfMT, · PTMT. . ...... .. ... _ __. --""' --. . ... "-• ·~ ---· • -------------,..,.,..,-..-----~-------------. ,.. -........ .....--...-~ -~ -------~ ...--------· Wtdnesh)', October 23, 1968 PILOT-AOVERTISIR-PI ' DAILY PILOT FOOD SECTION , ,. Vegetable, Fruit, Be·rry, Tomato Has M_any Uses Consider the tomato. It is most." Compared to others, fragile. 'Ibey can be ~eft on sold in a greater variety of your state grows the most the vines to 'becotile firm forms than any 0 th er tomatoes for fresh market and ripe, only When the vegetable. And ttlat's in spite of the fact that few are , and CalifOtnia food pl:ants distance to mtrJcet is very frozen. process t1le most tomato short ... like now. "Field Coooider what a tomato products. Somewhere 1 n grown" is an advertising hi. By cultivation and use it California, someone picks tenn that usually refers to tt>rnatoes every month in the these tomates grown in is a vegetable. Botanically it year. nearby areas, picked at the is a fruit and among fruits it 10 is a berry , .• because it is Late summer and early ful.,-pink or firm ripe stage. pulpy and has one or more fall is the time tomatoes are They may need 1 om e seeds that are not stones. harvested for processiDg. It further ripening when you Consider yoW" dilemma if is also the time wben an buy 1hem, but tbe ripeMng there were no such thing as abundance of fresh i11 no big problem. Just a tomato. Yet at one .time, it tomatoes i& in the mai:keta. remember t.o leave them at· was looked upon as 8 You probably like these late room temperature out of the beaUtifUl, but thoroughly sum.mer tomatoes better sun. poisonous plant. There w:is tihan any others. 'Ibey are Contrary to wbat the term no ptzza, no tomato soup, :io juicier and have more flavor su·ggests, "vine ripened" catsup, chili sauce O!' fresh than some tomatoes in the doesn't mean tomatoes were li ed t toe market earlier. You can firm ripe when picl$:ed. More sc oma s., .. AS a tomato grow\ng state, gue&S the reason. likely, they were turning FLAVOR APPEAL ADDED TO FAMILY FAVORITE consider California "t be Ripe tomatoes .are very pink or completely pink. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-===::......c:.:=:::.:=:..._c..:...:..~=.:-=..::....:.:c__:.::_:__.:c..:.......:....~~-=-~:.......:.~ . Jelly Roll Fashion Same Old Thing Shaped Into Exciting New Dish Meat loaf, that popular rich, smooth tomato sauce! standby for c o n v e n i en t , Sound intricate and tricky? economical meals, risk 1 You'll be amazed at the ease becoming "U:te same old with which this rolled meat thing" when s e r v e d fre-loaf is prepared and delighted quenUy. with the delicious results. How do you do meat loaf to Canned condensed tomato give exciting new interest and soup, that double rich, ex.- flavor appeal to this family pertly seasoned soup that favorite? performs so many wonders as A colorful, taste tempting a cooking ingredient, is the rolled meat loaf is.one answer. flavor secret of this loaf. Part Imagine a juicy, seasoned of the 59UP .goes _in.to . the ground beef ~re · n>Ilfd · -~unc1-beef !Ilinure, along around a succulent fillinC or wilh 1 egg, onion asd bread thyme and gfeen peppet crumbs, imparting moistness seasoned com, topped with and extra goodness. The re- golden cheese squares and maining soup is heated anft blended with the meat loaf drippinsg to serve as a perfect Fresh, Crisp •i;::-o~~~~. for making the loaf into a firri'I i'oll is easy . . . a waxed paper square helps achieve t.:1e neat and tidy finale. Accompany rolled meat loaf with a crispy green salad , robust French bread and bak- ed apples with a cinnamon glaze for dessert. noLLEO MEAT LOAF '~ cup minced green pep· per 114 teaspoon ground thyme 2 tablespoons butter <lr margarine 1 cup cooked corn I can (10% ounces) con- densed tomato soup 11h pounds ground beef lh cup fine dry-bread crumbs v, cup minced onion 1 egg, slightly beaten 1 teaspoon sa1t · 4 slices (4 ounces) mild process cheese 2 tablespoons wa~ Drippings . In saucepan, cook green pepper with thyme in butler; stir in corn. Meanwbile, com- bine ih cup soup, beef, crumbs, onion, egg and sail Mix thoroughly. On waxed paper, pat into a 12x9" piece. Spread corn mix- ture to within 1-inch of all edges; pat into meat. With aid of waxed paper, roll meat tightly jelly-roll f a s h i o n starting al long edge. Seal ends; use waxed paper to · transfer to baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees F. for 50 minutes. Top Joo! with cheese; bake S minutes more. Combine re- maining soup with water and drippings. Heat: serve with loaf. Makes 8 servings. Food Shopping Tests 9422 IOY.i -20l!i r.., 11f ....,;..., 1{fr.;r' .... SNAP, CRACKLE, FRESH Is the effect <lf the crisp, scarfed collar that tops this streamlined shape. Climaxes in pleat! front and back. Printed Pattern 9422: New Half Siles 101'1:, l21h, 141.ii, 161'1:, J8 Y.s, 201fi. Size 14 (bust 37) lake! 4 yards 35-inch. SIXTY·FIVE CENTS In colns for each pattern -add 15 cent3 for each pattern for first~m maJ;ling and special handling; othenri.oe tblrd-cla!s delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian . Mt,rtln, the DAILY PILOT, 412, Paltem Dept., 232 West l&th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, AD- DRESS with 7JP, SIZE and STYLI! NUMBER. Wbat's new for ra111 un answers in our Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Free patttm coopon In CtWog. Send 50 cents. ' Budget-weary's Skill "Games People Play" ... the newest fad in do-it-yourself psychology •.• may even fit your weekly food shopping trip. Ready? Then get set anrl go for "Games People Play in the Food Market." First Obstacle: can you or can't you get into the parking Jot, park the car, then get out again wilhout a scratch, a bwnp or at least a scare: Check your c8f'd!I and· see if your insurance company is among the addresses. Next Hazard: Getting ins.ide the store can be quite a challenge., Is that an electric eye that notices your approach and throws the door open with a welcoming swing? Or Is there no eye-opener? Will you lose a turn as you walk flat in- to lt, forgetting you have hands for pushing? Worse yet. do you go back a step because an unattended child is playing just Inside the "In" door ? You are inside at last! Beautliul lighting. soothing music and the aroma of fresh coffee. This game should be fun. But now wAit a minute . The next play can set lbe pace ftr the rest of the game. Oteck that •bopping cart. You can lose another turn ll'blle you bulf, puff, jiggle and inutter, dislodging a cart from the interlocking train. How many turns will the bow-lee- ged wheels cosl you! pcrs do l leads lo impulse buying. No list also encourages forgetting staple foods .• , cof- fee, butter or margarine, bread and milk. If you have to make a second trip to the store this week, you lose the game. You found yaur list. On you go around the aisles. There's lhe meat counter. Turkey is on your list. You gel extra points. It's in heavy supply'. At the canned goods shelves, you check to top row and the !xittom row for bargains. More extra points. You learned to do that when you discovered mo.tj; shoppers buy from shelves that are waist-high to eye-level. They may miss bargains. You won't. Finally, inlo the checkout line. Your list helped you past lhe impulse-buying traps for unwary players • . • l h e household gadgets, the candy and the pickles. At the checkout counter, you at.and where you can keep yaur eye on prices as they are rung up. You remembered every one. Most shoppers only nimember prices ror beer, cicarettes and sort drinks. Home again, you won the game! Your prize is big. Not just the aaUslacUon of having the food allopplng out of the way for another week. The real salfsfacllon Js knowing an important . job was wtll done and a family will be well nourished • • • witbln -the budgeL Want to play aeain • ' , IRISIMAB· BARGAIN FROM llU BBOS~ Cll I H! . ·ll'!·"~~...­', ... '1"' ....:, Wiii Ploof of purcha8e from Hills Blos. Coffee-Ground orlnsta11t LOI WHAT YDU IJ: • • 11 'rolls of 'IS••ll••n"rlbbon •'s~ta'of gift wtap paper . - r---------------------------, I ~ ... ·-.... "°"' tof"1t •roe. ,. .... IWld ... _Ml"• "-· etin.1111. I • flt ot 11!1111111t HU .. 8r• Qffl Wl'lp Pack Giit Wr111 P.eQ. I ~'°"' f-c.rtk If lhe ..... "HllltH eGl ,_Ill• PINllC lid of P.o; ... '"t PKt ta.00)_ Mid ,,. "'~ I • ~ ol H1llt er ... eon... . lt:ftMtl, mMI Mlli. lroa. ()oft", P-or ~ 9'W -• I Mlm.-11117 ""'-•"HM .. "911tff9Mlh•,,...tloHfe' • -ot Hiii• 9r'ot. Cef1ff "tr 111• IMllf .... ' I .. ffOfl'l •• ,., OI ,,..jJ, Miiii ~ eon.." . I I NAMl:--------==~~----Qll~ priflt) • 3"Suheen"lloWI l ....... ,~. ------------- • 1,roJl .of "'Scotch" .i CITY· "'''----"'~'--tnint.P~rent tapt '.I ' I ,,, COOi llUtf .. lltOWM T~ AQIJllll OlllVlfl't' .. 'S•~~ .. 'n"f'"l"'-rof .... , d'l.c• °' .,ofitt'-orMr ,.;ib .... H11i. 011t w,.,. ,, IMtlf'I >HI V ,.. I dell....., by Cl'ltitt11111, fO'ir twdlt '""' M llKltlfttl t11 H11tfM6Hir 15. ,gl~ wrapp ng hfnt• I 1 .... °"-'°" w11u. •1111111v 1 .... Goo4 Of!" "' ..,. u.1.• .• I \ltld wtltf't Pf911i.lltd, tu-49 ot '"ittctM. L e H\111 8'ot,Cof'lll 1911 .J --------------------------- • New INSTANT SEWING Book -shows you how to sew It today, wtar tt. tomotTOW. Over IW» p!cturrs. Ottly 11. The cart problem solved, away you go. Whert I! your 11hopping Jisl? You Jose poinUI U you don't have one. Shop- ping without a list (11.lthough 1-than hall the food lhop-next week? !-----------------------------------·-'--------------~ .. . e • W.1 • --·· -----_,_. _____________ _._ ........ ~-.:...-~----:__:c.;o;__;;...,;;.~--------------'-_.;;..._~=..:;;;;;;;.. :'!;( DAIL~ PILOT --. 'j I • < • ' Stiel 121 e • WHITE .. ,.FRONT;_ UIY • SlME • DISCtltltll' • INHGNl't u:s.D.A. GRADED c'HOICE .. BEEF E'XCLUSlVEt.Y At·WHITE.·fRONT . TABLE IRAl\ID , BACON 39~ llOliMEL2 •• Pkg. $137 RANGE BACON ........... . HORMRIONILESS' $129 CURE 81 HAMS........... lb .. •• LEAN~TY lllEND SAVE WITH WHITE FRONT'S LOW EVERY DAY DISCOUNT PRICES CAL·FRISH or S&W ~tit . . ... COFFEE:.~. · :. • . GllADIAA LARGE EGGS· ""' , . DOZ. DUNCAN HINES CAKE .... Pkg. ft KWNEX Y FACIAL 2=~ TISSUE. 0 DELMONTE ' /-'/((}/./, \ /·()()J).'i MIXES .. PEACHESc'A~ ... ..,NIWlll' ... Qt. PRUNE JUICE c Fluil , " VPAONCAMRKP'S&N0.2~ " ARDEN ICE CREAM Y Y FLAVOR FRESH 69c BEAN$ 11!~:1 ~:~LOI . F $ ·DRINKS , . • • cHiiiftuiA 25c C-o-RliiLAKES J9c ;OMon '=; ·25c · COhiCE·CHEESE.29' •ID'IGlllll 4• ,. MDINlllNT 4ftt PIZZA '#., 7-:t 7-SOUR CREAM ......... -7- D.t.11.YDllTTALLCAH 15 $1 A-'APINT ·5· $1 DOG FOOD -..... i YOGURT,_..................... i CllNllALMIU$ CHllllOS 3(s 1 AaDIN, •• Sis 1 CEREAL.~~~s ~ i MARGARINE.-.... ·DILMONTIQt. 2• ORANGE JUICE-...... 4~ 1 TOMATO JUICE-~-KlllMIN'SIOZ. re;:;, 6~s 1 YIVICllTAILl'6.0%.." 3• MEAT PIES-~·-··-R cocKTAIL JUICE_ ~-JOHNSTON'S9"ASSTD. -=~· s• PAClflCITA.cllSP 31 c . FRUIT PIES ..... I.~!!~.. ~- CRACKERS 1 L-............ GINO'S CHEESE PIUA ........ ""'' ' ,, '" l&DZ ..•• 55' MAiGARiNE 1 ~-.......... 3 CJ' mNo:s CHEESE & SAUSAGE PIUA ........ n az .... 1~ aua·-....,1 . 28 GINOSPEPPERONIPIZZA ......... noz .... 75 .......... •. c ~~· 85c MARGARINE ...... ·-·-· SWANSON'S lAYER CAKES '"' 140Z.BOTILE Del Monte CATSUP C Mivoit. c il"cELAvoRs ~,.ml NAISE 'FREE . PUMPKIN 2 to S •. SID, UMIT t PUMl'ICIN to ADULT CUSTOMD$ ONLY, 0000 OCT. 24 lhrvSUNDAYoc:t. It • MIXES HA.LlOWEEN PUMPKINS WITHOUT COUPON ....................... . AU.MEAT!•. s• LUER WIENERS ... ·-··· 7- oi.· VIRGINIA 5nc BOLOGNA. -~~r ~lb IOIDENIUOIDAMUICAl!CHEESE-H .... S2.ll BORDEN !MILE BRAND NEUFCHATEL -IDL.1.Uc COSTA MESA lllSTOL AND PAULARINO •ON. TMIU"'°AT. 111JOA.M. to t :JO P.M. SA'fUIOAT, f :JO AJA,•• f:JO P.M. IUHDAY. 11:10 A.IA . T071lO,.M. • --· -. -~-----.------------------------·---~~---------._.,..- PILOT·ADV ERTISER-7 w .. .,....,, °''°"" 23. l'lbl -------·~ ..... . . MR f SPECIAL! ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • SUCjlD •ID • CO•MD •KU REG. 3 $1 • sucm NAM • DA•K TVRKQ' 3% . • SPICY 81U' • SALAMI £A. PKO&. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BREAST OF TURKEY ~\;·2 89' SUCED CHICKEN ..._ ""'· BAR-MALL MEAT BULK WIENERS BUY 'EM BY THELi. OR 5-LB. BOX c ' . - I EASTERN GRAIN-FED PORK SMALL MEATY RIBS 3 POUNDS OR UNDER GROUND DAILY IM OUR STORES . UAIL'f PJLOT ,. SLICED BACON TABLE BRAND 1-POUND PACKAGE RIB ROAST U.lDJ.CHOIOEOISTATU/ I IROI. CEITlflED IEEF -I DY.EN IUDY CllTIHORT •· 6TH & 7TllRIBS FIRST 5-1115 ••. at c LB. ·c 4. ... iii ROAST 1&49« IONB.ISS-...0- SAVE 10• SCOT TOWELS LB. r::aoriE.STEAK. I& $1 15 Poiiiiiiio1 iJSE.1& $1 19 TOPTIASIRLOIN _I& $1 49 BEEF ROAST _ ....... LI. 7 5c· cu·Bisiiik .......... I& 93c llQ ROLL AUORTED COLORS tic OFF REGULAR PRICE WITH THIS COUPON QOOD ONLY AT STATER IROS. MARKETS QOOD WEEK OF OCT.14.0CT. It RUMPROAST _.LI. 7 5c STAnRBROS. 3-LB.CAN ... $1.75 S9" COFFEE ~-·---........... -..1-LB.CAN c FARMCREST 2 9 FIG BARS .................... LB.PKG.4 c . VANCAMP 9 BEEF STEW ......... 24-0Z.CAN4 c PiiNCH BASEouART99c M.J.I . DEALPAQCACif 89 TEA BAGS ............... c6~NT c 2 LBS.'4 LEnUCE lAIGI FANCY catw HIADS MJBRICE ~ LONGGRAIN 6 IC WHITE 41-0Z. PKO COFFEE M.l.B. 69C 1·POUND CAN Hl.C.IM_.tl.• ::_ 11.37 POP CORN JOLLY-TOME -WHrTl 01' YELLOW Mil. ..... CHILI l BEANS "''"'" __ ._II' PET DRY MILK NON FAT -.......... NOODLE SOUP Milt ~'iiL~~3l' CAESAR DRESSING ':"t-IM>f.43' KAVAINSTANT "'! 9D 11 59 COFFEl ·----·--J.OZ. • II .. ca • IALAD DllllltlGf YANDlkAM'5-l.OUI' 3ftc 100011.-llAIOOD-1'.AITAI YIM, DIAL SOAP __ 2 :Hi 2f -21' NABISCO SALTINES -· GLAD WRAP ____ -ar GLAD STORAGE BAGS ,......,..,31' INSTANTCOFFEE .. J.L -...... 11.21 SWIFTNING .~., •• -3 .t:. 71' ALLSWEET MAMlARINE~ .. 21' VIENNA SAUSAGE swim--28' SWIFTS PREM l;."lil"!~~-,...._ 53' SLICED PINEAPPLE "°"'-~21' e. '""""' -;-. s..t .. I TOMATO PASTE wu'"' ftoo8' TOMATO ROUNDS,..,..21' ,. ... II' SLICED TOMATOES ,...... iio/ -:._ • • • • • • • I .' • ' 0 -' •GO DllT FOOD PmEOTOMATOEI -'°'"""" -~ PIZZA MIX If-OUNCE ,...41'! • 2 ,. . FOR ;., • •Oii X-FAHn' Y. 2 2 5' CUCUMBERS GRAPES ....... ~ = J.29' l'IHll,_..CMP 3 29, RED YA{IS CARROTS.-"t.\1.-. . ~~·· l29' SAU PllCIS lfflalVI 7.fUU DAYS, TIVIS ..... WIDS. DCTOl8 Ullt-..._ . . --- CREST CONOEITAIDAEROSOL ___ .. ~28• -..:.r.67• TOOTRtASn DI-GEL TABLETS ,.,15' "'·'""' WHITE RAIN HAIR IPIAY-....:11.lt MAXw.L •::::1: TAMECIEMEllNIE ..._17' HOUSI . 1-l.l.CAN69 79' ILTHlflllHT ....... -....... _.,,. COFFEE" c SKINIRAC0 ---.11'!«~.11 MDlllEll oa>DOllAllT ---· ~ ,, ----- ..._ .... _._._,__._._,_~_,..~~-----...... -------------------~------~---- ~ lf IWl.Y PILOT • .. ( . ---· ·" . <If •tJUtft ··. . -, fantastic~~14.59 ~ av1nas In ·thi ad . . ' i Does Total Discount Save You Money? Mrs. Flynn of Glendale says ii does : •tettl 11'11111 '1pre 11 ComJllllM Git 1111111 U!llt ,llfdlun, Tiie "'Ill"' WOukl II MllCll HI• tf Y• llltludld Thi Dbcclwt lnlllia Oii Mitt I. "1111• Wllldl AN llot llllCl ... II ltlk t z , [ :...---- . Yt1r ll.PllA IETl ltlphrh114 lut9hn {lht 1111 Iii thi llt41 lprtn) Prou41J Offtn BUTCBBl'S PIIDB MB ATS MEATS YOU'U IE PROUD . TO~. I 'f DUCOUNT PllCED • fLAVOlt-AGID c«ottAOO lllF i 91S~ ~VERNMENT INSPECTED IW , •QUALITY & SATISFACTION GUARANTHD . · "EASTERN 7.u/. •FAMILY FAVORITE!. WA MAID BAM ~FRYERd PARTS c .· c I~ IWE£T SMOKED FROM HEBIWKA ALPHA BETA BACON ::~• 59~ ftO BACKS OR HECKS 'BEST al the FRYER' 49~ BONELESS • FULLY COOK ED ECONOMICAL DUBUQUE PICllC 43A $ ta LI. DAI El 01181.lQUE lO't'Al l umT 3 1211 CANNED HAii 11 "" S.ftdwld flrl• . FARMER JOHN or HORMEL 'IED IABll. £ASTERN QllAUIY 59! ALPHA BETA • BUJCHER'S PRIDE BEEF • U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED SLICED llCOI ~GlS STANDING SWIFT PRElllUI llCOI •••• : • :11r. RIB ROAST FIAVORF)JL • JUICY $)29 T-BOIE STEAK lb. '?-' •11111QQ'SlllDE-llulllG43c GROUID BEEF !~~m 1b Wo' 89~ . CHUCK STEAK 53~ '7-' • BUTCllll'S lllDE 01P01dlble Quo!IG 78' GROUND IOUND Wll I FUl'ORflll • CHUCK ROAST 49~ BONELESS FAMILY $TEAK ;Uiusii'isM 29c IUV!lRFUL95c lllCY lb BDIELESS STEAK $)59 TOP SIRLOlll lb. BOIELESS FUvoRruL87C 1·IOIE ROAST JUICY lb """""'""""' 4/'1 IUU' .................. 111 "'""'"'""""'11' flH PUFFS 7-0L "< IRUDU SHRIMP • UIOED MAUI UT • 1lllSi lllW lmCTI)[ lll\IRS. -WED., OOIOBER 24'1<1 ALPHA BETA BULK CANDY CANDY CORN Q,,u~ -ml ' lncl.Ud .. ~ PACIWIE OF 37 •T!Wt•Mll••lttnk. •Mllu WU ... 12 OUNCE ~~et~~ PACJtAGE SOM[ • SnlUtn Jn. So1111 Stor11 75' CH.t.111;[ 7k ~\IE 34' ~~· ... 39~ •'"HA BETA · WE CAMYACOMPU:TE UNE """ •t-OtPllGI. ' or COSTUMES AND PAJl:TY DOllUTS .r . NEEDS ' "'"' • CANOl.£5 •i 34' ':,.~!PnNB • TABLE COVERS DOllETTES v A · . lW!o~°' ~'lfr . ..,..,., TOTAt DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY ION! AllKA IETA STOllES · OllCOl/NT ClfARIOC "'IC( JllPl:IA_tETA • PACKAGE OF 10 41 ' WIENER BUNS & VJJ.llE S\lNS!llNE • l.tJI. BOX .__ ... KRISPT CRACKIRS .., JN' 4-ot. PKG. ; JMPORTED• &k Valu• 61' ALPHA IETASLICED HAM h'Afo'J'ft~~i ·H1llr11Ttl)89c &&1 BIG 10 • 9V. OZ. TUBE soUTHEllN STYU: er BUTTERMIU: 22 ' BORDEN'S BISCUITS 24< lOT AL DISCOUNTS EVERY DAV SOM( AlJltlA 1£TA STOIES 011COUHT CHARGI PRICE 1MiR1Ht"· ~~tl~i 3-t.B. BU. 1211 ~ Rl,Hll Ifill. I( OUNCE CUP ~·PEACHEE P"''1Q0§. • l·OUNCE .48' MOUAIUIA CHE£S[ 5.lc 12-0UNCE 'r.k: t:::D;ii;'\ HOl,,l.YWOOD Salllc-r ~ MA"BIRINE l·IB. 39c MFMl 1111 •WISCONSIN ... tsc LB. VALUE 83 LONGHORN CHEDDAR CHE!St ~ , SALAD ""Vol"• "I can save about 89, to '11 on t 1a weekly · grocery bill!"* , \ ' ' . *In a recent ~;.,, with .Dennis Bracken of KNX, Mn. flyn!l'of Ql1ndali~lso sla!ed, '1 Ub Alpha ,"8.N ~~J think they• ..., ...... ,, . Yeiy,..,..... . I' ,~, c llU,1 I f ; ft 1 [ A I .... @=o;..,,.;.,...w . @FarirtTllSc 41' . I i'i\ WFriE"' °"ft:· . ar :2-lb. CAN !le,g., El.c. J.,I 11.IJ a.LB. CAN Jte,g. 2.05 .tlM' 'CIAI r,1sr.n u"f'; £VEl!Y OA'f wa~sJ~ .... ~ lif.-~iA~""' .. 80' 'e.' lG-OUNct JAR J.39 fl.Jt @ifa''Rici . '-°""'13c 56f ~"j'ri'°JA'tANT COFFII 124 . 11 II tw'of (~All! 1U lie w 'UM' Mll's'ra'o 21c 11' le:'.' iiiRTaiiii''" COLORSw WHrrE · . JjllLiT TISSUE 39c 321 '=Y. 'iittiic'fi'.m om 33c 271 • v tld!• •He. 2 Can .. Crushed Cl1Chun}31' lO CAL PINEAl'Pl£ 31c . . ~U DI!• t•oz. ~ 29t ~ rRENCH'S • '111 OZ.• lNST 341 ~-, ... Ptt.11111 43c AIJ ORATIN • S.0Z. .cSc ae POTATO PANCAXt o 8-0Z. 4k 2k CO-. OR ORAMOI .1.'i< MTTI' ""WU . 14.0IJNct ·llUFflN II · 4"' -· COLE ' W _GA!. • 3031lAll 281 nurr Got:KTAIL 2Tc :llF""~~llr """'11c &8' !REDD'S • !~ fAR PEANUT BmER & JlllY l9c ~ GEBH.ARDTS • 40-0%. CAN ~ Erll!l 'c'i':~.... ec ~ G£BHARDT'S • 21/:i CAN ~ JUMBO TAMALES 45c IVAP9.MTED PET MILK We. I Toll Cmi. lk 81' 16' 311 12# 55c 62' 21' 38' BOX OF 12 • !tEGUUI!: 34• CDNADETS """'' °" 40c · • BOX o r 24 •fl~. er 1!11.1.,.r 1NCL1.1D£S JOc: OFF 7$o: lie l2S FOO! ROLL 31 • ILAOWRAP BONUS PAK 33c • GU DWRAP • PA.CV.OE OF 2S 36f . STORAGE BABS 3lc ~r~tw'if n<10I ~~ 8&' 190 SHEET GIANT !IOU. ~ ASSORTtD COLORS OR PRINT ~ZEE TOWELS 31c 25t ~ .a-ouNCE CAif 1.45 11.GJ Better Produce t1t DISCOUNT PRICES CRISP • SWEET oAKG~IN aoMlllAU'fY APPLES FllOM FAMOUS MILE HIGH OAK Gl£11- FOR SNACKS, .PIES or SAUCE JACK 11 LANTEllfl PUMPKINS llAUOW!EN DISCOUNT! r;iii\ 1111:1( « TIE.IT ll'ICIAI , Ill. !Sc 1 0 t ~SALTEDPUNUTS ~,t • Vtc LL MAGUERITE DA,SIES "'10.IST QUAltfr 4 If rtowr•s ., IHKOPJHT HfCll" & lHEllE PltlCES EFFECTIVE THURS. throu WED., OCT. 2.\.30 STCmE HOURS: MON. thN FRf, 1Dt\.M. to9 ,.M.,SAT:. ond SUN. 10 A.M. to 7 P..M. COSTA MES,\--241 I. 17th St. HUNTINGTON BEACH-9045 Adtmt HUNTINGTON BEACH-11611 N. Main St. fOUNTAIN VALL&Y-t930 Wimer LAGUN~Dl22 $, Coat! Hlwoy \ s F ~ - fl s F ~ - • I fl-PILOT.ADYlll'TISllt -Wtd-, -e , lM . . EO Rancho orings you ·tlie plumpest~ most' succulent· fryers anywhere .· •• . lreaN King-size .California Golden Fryers! Broad-breasted, ·chunky~leggea! . .lfMlo .. Fryer Legs and Thighs .. : .................. 49~ Favorite portl.0111 ••• cut from top quality California fryer1 J With it, 1erve Gallo Vin Rose ••• \.)-Gal. deeanter-fl• 1 F ·a t ·5·9c ryer reas s .................................... ~...... 11. Sweet tender white meat ... and for a dinner companion, choose Gallo'a Chianti ••• 1t)~Gal. decanter • ,. • •t.81 Chicken Livers ........................................ 59~ Surprlle 7our folka l Offer Utem thi!·rounnet treat fn their favorite fuhion .'..and graciour.ly aCcept the complimentl ' Fryer Wings , .................. 25~ So much downrirht ~nesa on then ( Sliced Bacon .............. · 69" El Rancl.o•e Ranch Style ... lean meaty ~lieu ! ' -' 1'1'i!•.l . Take . adva.ntage of these specials, too . "·: for exciting week-end menus! , lhai11ubr11nd lur1111111 'The King of Steak> ••• for a feast that'• fit for a King! U.S.D.A. Choic. beef ..• And serve a hearty wine .•. Bertolli's Chianti-••. quart .•. $1.99. El Rancho Grocery Specials Johnston's Pies ................... ~~,~~".~~~~~~'.; .................. 59:. Tender crwit. heavy 4(ilh filling! Save on "Reddi-wip," too ... Reg. 69c 1!!lr:e. Special at 49c! Cottage Cheese ............... ~'.~ ....... 31e ............ ~u~~ ....... 61e Meadowgohi'a •.. fl'ffh and c:reamy, for delightful salads, dessert!, and saving!, too ••. at Et Rancho I Glorietta Pears ............... 3 for 89¢ Ripe Bartlettl !n heavy aynip ••• No. 303 cans. Duncan 1Hile$ Cake Mix 3 for 89' Reg. 39c vari1tiesl Set the new cookie recipes. V, B. Apple Sauce .. .. .. 6 for '1.00 A blend of choice apples! ••• No. 303 cans. Macaroni Dior : ............. :·.: .. 43; Kraft'• deluxe ••• a meal In mtnutea I t• oz. pkg. Sego Dietary . .. ... .... .. .. .. 4 "''1.00 Choose your flavors ; •• convenient 10 ounce ean1. Del Monte Green Beans 5 for '1.00 French style or cut •.• save on No. 303 cans. Krispy Crackers ..................... 29; Snapping crisp ••• from Sunshine ••• 1-lb. pkg. Sara lee Coffee Ring ............ 59•. Schilling~s CitmamOll .... : ....... 29; A mu1t for 1onr fall baldnsl •• , 11,i-<>Z. tin. Friskies Dog Food ...... 8 for '1.00 Save on a brand dop prefer! Tall 15-oa. can•. Yuban Coffte ........................ '9~ Deep deliclo .. fla'°', .• hoe pound ean ••• $1.37. Blueberry or Maple Crunch I ... Broakfaet treat I Royal Host Ice Cream ........... 69; Caterlnr "quality ••• favored flavors .•• Vs gallon. Cascade ................................... 59; Di.shwMher detergent! ••• 1iAnt 35-oz. package. Miracle White Bleach ............. 59• Non Chlorine! ••• aafe for ail waahabt .. r ••• 2&-oa. El Ranclto Delicateaen El Rancho Liquor, . Wines Dips for Chips ... -.......... 3 .'1.00 Boon to homemabn I Miu Wiaconain .•. 4--oz. Wolfschinldt Vodka ........... Ql.'4.99 Try the new, sensational "Clam Digger"! Ptn and Quill ••• 8-cu pi ••• four kinda! Shredded Cheddar ...... i 3 "'~1.00 . lauder's Scotch ............ 11 c.1'11.99 Extra lifht ..• Imported. , • 86 .Proof! Rlth llllch Meats ....... 3 • '1.00 · Straight Whlsl~y l ._...,.._ .• '4.79 :a. awl~''::' ........ l • allood Bolosna, Pickle, El 11.uchO'• • n. old ... Qf. •• ;."51111 s ... 10"' °"" .Oiet .u Ii• I~ i.ofl b7 th,_ .. ·.~LOO on~ilottlwl '(,.,' l 't 1.-- ~ •• ilonnel'a great ham! Fully cooked, boneless •• , flavor b@.. yond comparison! With it, serve Gallo'• Rhlnell'&rten ••• l;J-Gal. ••• $1.36. Dry .•• Delicious I El Rancho Fresh Produce ' Casabas .................... 5~ ' Ripe ... aweet meat.' ... l~ciou1.1oo'dnesa that invites you to help your- self to another alicel The 1prJce.i1 inviting, tool '·Fresh Broccoli ................................................ 19~ Wb!te heads ... stalk• tender yet firm! ••. sprinkle wlth rrat.d cheddar. Cauliflower .................................... : ................. 25:. Firm compact heads , •• creamy white ••• tender and ao very ta.sty I Banana Squash . .. .. .. ... .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. . 5~ Delicious baked! Or cut int.o th.in 1lice1, sprinkle with brown au.pr, I ult and pepper and deeP, fey until tender I ' Prl.,.. In effect at all ato ... 'Thur. through Sun. Oct. 24, 21>, 26, %7. HUNJIN&JON B~_CH: Wamer and 11iQl1quin ~J~s.t-Eas~_ofJluniiogton. H~rbOur) IOflRT lfACl: .2727 Newport OW. • 2555 ~lk {f.a$tblllff Village Center) AJk~~lloN mGIUJllfr. . ..J-·r'~~~(&U.nt ~rge ~llJat& -..-')"', ',-,• '";\r-' r·~-;--t~• ... ;...:; !l. ' . -' -----~---~----------..... ' . ' -' w-.r. -zs. 1911 ' 'SOLELY' POR 0000 IATINO Fish Fillets .Hook .. Diners You w«t't have to fllb for complimedtl when you serve tender lllleb of sole topped wltb ·a mixture of mefted Swiss cheeee end browned , aoft bread crumbs. U1e fror.en fillet! thawed slowly (8 hours In t b e refrigeratcr or 4 hours out of the refrigerator). Slowly thaw· ed filb loees le&!I juice and is more delicate when cooked than fish that It quickly thaw- ed. Separate . the fillets and top each with a mixture of lemon juice, All and pepper; then Refurbish It '7054 ,,,, A6u B .... & Make ok! chain like NEW -'·" n w1Lh the CJ.pcrl help of th.ii upholstery pattern. RelCUe tired chain, uve money! Step-by-llep dir<OtlOlll show how to retie springs, sew c o v e r s in usy-to-follow lnstructiona 7064. FIFl'Y CENTS (coins) for each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for firsl~IBS!I m.Ulng and special handling: othenriJI tbir<l-class delivery will fake th:. weeb or more. Send to Allee Brooks, the DAI· LY PILOT, 105, Needlecraft Dept. Bo< 113, Old Cheltea StaUon, N"' York, N. Y. 10011. Print Namt, Addrt11, 7J.p, PaUwa Nambtr. NEW t• NE!DLECl\APT CATALOG -"belt fuhlonll" "Moot new deli,no to knl~ crochet, MW, wuve, em- broider!" "'11 edit.... ThrH free poli<Mll Inside. IO CIDll. -el u JlllJ lllp -complote patteml -ln--1••· wy to mab. IO --. Boot No. I -Dolut Qodlta -11 complete patterns. Send ·-· BoOlc 'No. I -MUHm ...., _ pou.n. ,., 12 qulltl. ..... '-Ho. I -Qodlll ft< 11 I .. 0 .--erltln( ; 5 -~ <OlleclleD -1• complete pol- -•..,a, . _ ..... ,, ..... ..,....._ Xllll, Cl'Odlel 12 1lp1n1. IO ...... • I bake them WI Ibey become tender and flaky. Remove the fillets and top each one with a mJi:ture of Swiss cheelfl and butter-erumbl!I. A quick return trip into the oven will tum the topping ligbUy brown and bub- bly. Delicious. Swiss baked sole I! ucellent accompanied with RJce Stuf- fed Tomatoes. You can pick the tomatoes right out of your backyard. Or, ff your green thumb ltn'l what 11 uoed to be, vine-ripened tomatoet a r t right In ""°" and avallable at your market. Hollow out each tomato, aavlng Iha pulp. Saule celery and on.Ions in butter and blend In floor, salt and pepper ; then sUr In the tomato pulp, mushrooms and cooked rice. At the last minute fold in a haH cup of de.llcloua dair7 llDlZr cream. 11111 addl "'e J: t-r a tanaln... to the flllfng mh- ture. Slul! the tomatoes and beke them for ZO minutes. You ca beke them rtpt along with the fllh, '° the wbole meal comu out at once, piping hot. Serve with milk -big glusea of it, and you 'll have a 1ood balanc- ed meal. SWISS BilED FIBB I packagee (I pound eadt) fro:zen fillet of 1 o 1 t , thawed I tablespoons lemon jWct .Salt Pepper I tableepoo111 (II otlck) butter 1 cup soft bread crumb,, 1 ~ cups (6 ounces) lbred- ded Swlla cheeie Paprika Pat fiah dry with aboorbenl toweling; place 1n a ltngle layer in buttered shallow bat- III( pan. Pour lemon fulce over fish; oprlnkl• lightly with ult and pepper. Bake in a preheated 360 degree oven 21>-25 minutel or unUl fish nakes e11ltly when tested with a fork. Meanwhile, in a skillet melt butter; stir in crumba. Cool olighUy. SUr In cheeee. Top fllh with .i- and crumb mixture; sprinkle with paprika. Place under brollt!!' 4-1 in- ches from beat source ; broil f. & mlnui.. or until lllh!lY browned and bubbly. Remove to serving platter. Makes a &erVinp. RICE S'nJFFED TOMATOES I medium tomatoes I tableopoons butler 1/1 Cllp chopped celery II cur, chopped onion I tab-Dour l~llh Duh el pepj>er I cup tomato pulp, chopped and drained I jar (Ill ounca) sliced muahrooml. drained I cu-p coobd rtco II Cll'P dairy oour orwn CUt • tblD alJce oil ..... and " IAIDllOll. Scoop oul .w.. loaYllll aboul a l!.lllCI> tlielli ...... pulp. '!'Uni IAlnlloa upolde dewn to drain. In a I\\- quart saucepan melt 2 tabJes. poom butter; saute celery and onion until lender. Blend In flour, •It and pepper . Remove from heal and otlr In tomato pulp, muallrooma and rice ; fold in aour cream. P'tll -· piaCI In 11>-quart bating d!lh. Bake In • preheated 350 deeree oven 20 minutes. Makes 8 serving• . ' ' -=--=--::.-:-:-::-:_:::::_::_:::_::_::--.,.------:.~.:-------;. --:. :;_::_:-::===::-=-:_-;;-:;;_~.::======--:::-=--7 -7 .: ;.4'-- CHOICl .. -BONE:IN RUMP ROAST Romp Roast:Llme Pork ~ ~-89' Rump Roast m':"!!-95' Bacon •.. ~Sii. 59' Cold Power PRESERVES =-., ...... -... 311.39° FRUIT DRINKS ~~-·~ ............. 25c MARGARINE .. 1 ... s.11 ............... ~.4/1. TOMATOES ~'.~ ................ 1115/l. ( -·~11:0T.;.Q)Vllt1'1Sllt ':clfma 't-80NE -:STEA COLD WATER DnERGENT Detergent HYDRox:- Al.IHTSDM'S . ' 55c All PURPDS(....... .IT. Ulllllllll Cllllll-atr.-.. COFFEE i;::~~:.... .................... 1kr. l11 . DOG FOOD=~ ,. ... g. FLOUR ~::."~::~............. . ........... 45c SODA POP :11.~~--10/79' BROWNIES ~::::r. ........ : .... ~ .............. 49' CRACKERS ·=~• . .;_--45' SHORTENING:.~:~ ... ~ •.• ,,.,. ... 5f . FIG BARS~~·~---....... 6' -. . .. • ... • J " " • ,, • 4 ~ ----~~~~~~~~~~---------------------------------- .. J.J Ill ' TRI FU RIG ''Ill . . H ( • / ' LB. Sile PSJi:h Flfll nae flUlll ... LI. ilU- ::i:: ... ti. 79" . . . ~ -·~ .l.lllCH PIE · 'lJTil TAllCY TRUE lEMIXf FLAVOR -PILED HIGH WITH J•RINGUE 1:coMET • .. HILLS BROS. COFFEE ~--. ·---...--~-....-------~--------,-,.....--------~ ,,.-..-~-----~--=--~---~~--,...,.....,......,._ . 1-1.1. TIN PILOT,ADVERTIS!lt-FS , ·. EV·E.RY· CUT ·oF MEAT TO BE . TASTY-TENDER OR YOUR · . MONEY BACK-ENJOY THE BEST FULL CUT BONE-IN ROUND STEAK Swiss Steak ~1l't75t •. Ground Roundu.79" Round Steak~l'f-851.. Ground Chutkt1.59" , .. Crisp French ' .ROLLS LARGE A-A EGGS \ .. , ALBmTSON'S HOMOGINIZID . MILK 2~~97c ROD'S IMffATIDfl 36C SOUR CREAM PINT, ' AMERICAll ,BRAND 49c FRANKS ... LL . MIDGET =::t. ................. 12~ •. Sf . DIPS :::.~::1J1 ..... : ........... : ........ -...... 3/1. · BISCUITS PIJJ.lb~ ¥. · ·. 3/211& · 1.olllrl, ~111' I/opt...... I.I" · CHEESE :::: ~ 11111, i.... . ............. age . CANNED HAM r:L ........... -439 "SUNNIESJi' ORANGE Concentrate·:· CORN/PEAS ~ttc ............................. 29' CHUN KING ::Jc~,~':.............. .. ...1Hr.SSC CHUN KING 1r.~~:~'..1~~...... • ...... 17••· 75c CHUN KING :J'.'.!~-...... . .......... 45' CAKE ... '-........... "......... ..19" ' ' • , I 1' : . ' •1,Huntil!CJ'Oll Inch -8911 Adams Fountaln :V•iey -1'042 Magnolia 69c • ~c~~ del Ma~\ -3049 C-t Hwy. Laguna ltich =.. -70o So. c_.., Hwy. Costa Mesa -1535 W •. 19th Huntl"t.'°1 a.ch -.155.U. So, fdwards , ,\ •• f ' ' ' - Wtd~a1. Ckt.obtr 23, 1968 D~ILY PILOT 39 DELIGHTFUL APPETIZING SNACKS Fascinating Casual Meals 'Beefed Up' Sa1ad, entree or ' snack -ment paper or butcher's wrap. versaWe CaWornJa beef ap-21,ii pounds Cali£ornla beef ~ ih \he most fa!(:lnatlng flat 1rtn roast• waya. It'11 calorie conacJou.!I 12 1 ...... e lhushrooms ~ economical. By way Qi -.. a Slam,· California beef top I teupoqnll salt ~ teas.- sirloin makes a zesty entree JK!Oll ~ salad. t crushed clov~s garlic Simmer thin beef sliceo In a . 1 cup fil!el! chopped parsley cider vinegar and water bath 2 table!pOODI grated. lemon Jn a Mongolian cook pot, U You peel , . , happen 'to have one. Then g (101:14-inch) sheets. parcb- serve on crisp salad greens rnent or butcher's paper with a peanut butter l!lauce for 2 white onlorui which Siamese cookery II 6 small bay leav~ noted 81 .tastyUnuaual, we agree, but Cut beef into I-inch cubes mo · end qwirter mushrOoms. Ml< California beef arrives en with salt, pepper, a:arllc, paplllote for a ~ meaJ.-. paraley and lemon peel. Place perlact!Y wonderful for ..,. beef and -mushroom mtnure joying while watchb!g a TV on papers, Top each with oP<Clacular. Combine cu~ of onion-cul lnlb thin ....tges and boneless Oat Iron roast with •bay leaf. Close pirq&ge with mushrooms, oniorui a n d cirug$re fold, twtst:~ and seasoning. Wrap 1n individual tie Wllb string .. Bi.te in slow parchment packs tucking a oven· ($25) degreU · F.) 2 bay leaf inside each one. hours. Or combine ·all ln· AJI French chefs know, thl3 gredienla 1 .,in( ooJy 3 bay method of waterleaa cooking leaves in· ttgbily covertd preserves all the succulent casserole.' Bak• same time juices of the beef. If· you and temperalure. Makeo I prefer, bake tho beef dinner In servings. a oovored cuoerole lo lieu of -~ clluck l<lUI. · the paper jacl:ell. rordellghtful a pp 1tI11 r IDScb, combine ground betf chUcl< with green oolons, bam- boo 1hoota and Oriental seasonings. Shape the beef milture a n d refrigerated Parker House rolllJ into buns and buds. Then as your taste dictates, oven bake or cook 1n a Chinese steamer. -SIAMESE BEEF SALAD For a dfflereot look, roll !ht sirloin ance. lo a lettuce leaf. I pomidl lean C&lllornla bee! top sirloin a cupa water l ·CU(ll·cfder vlnegar , I tabl_., ""i&r I bay leaf western Iceberg lettuce Fresh mint or watercress Spicy Peanut Sauce Slice bee! on diagonal lnlo thin, long allces. Heat water, vinegar, sugar and bay leaf to boiling in a Manc_hurtan cooker 'or en electric ¥filet. Spear be!i with. fork er UM cbopsUcb. -Cool< In bol .... bath. Place -on top GI let- tuce Ind ..... wilh ..... Mak•l....,urp. IPICY PEANlir·BAUeB MfJ together l UUlbed dove gorlle, s ta~ Jemm juice, 1 labl.._ chf11 sauce, " leuj>ooli pepper. v. eup flneb'·mlnced green oaiolll, ll cup·chunlt«Jle peanut butter, V. cup lllad oil and l ltll(>OCI! .. 11. • Bl:EPAND Mtl8llllOOllll PAPIWl'l'll -ad ........ plld>-' ' t211NES11 BEEP BllNI AND GINGER BIJllS Take your cholot .of otam- lng or bating. 1 pound finely I r o u n d Callfornla beef chuck I bunch green oofona ll cup · ehopped bamboo shoots 2 tablespoon1 chopped Chinese panley• 1 tablespoon soy aauct I t.aspoon All I teupoom grated lreoh fllnier l teaspoon' ougar I (kunce) can omcked -I tablespoon grated lemon peel 24 rtfrlgerated Parter House rolls (2 packages) v, cup toasted sesame seeds Mix beef, diced 1 re en oniOM, bamboo 8 b O 0 t S , parsley, soy sauce and I.BIL Divide mi.we In ball. Add ginger and sugar to one bait and chopped O)'lten and lamon peel Jo other baU. !pllt each roll In two and pat Into llMnch rounds. Cent.r each with -'"1'"' beef IUllng. ' ll'old dough ammd Oyster beef IUllng with oeam al bot- tom to make lnms. P1lll dough up around rJniot bee! ml pin- ch to mate buds. Place oa • 1111111 oquam ol """ paper. Sj>rlnk1e with-.....,. -Steam over bolling waler In a.s.... -with lid IS -Orbakoll>moderat6- ly bol ovtn (I'll dqieu F.) IS mlnulet, until eoldeA' -lfakelf-. •co: ~ panJor ·-·----·-....---..,--. . . . -----------------------.. -~ --- ff D.llLY PILOT Apple F·lan:-Econc;>mical· Elegance --• ·1 • . -" ... • • ! o..-. bud(~:JOI -.. . . . . . ' . . . .. . - 1m.-.i.. -! Bring ecODom1oe1..i.,_ 1o )'Ollr table In the form oil Apple Flan. Alnnled In , dellcllel.Y lemoo-flavored P*lley, I h • ptnkllh 1ppl11 hold 1 flavor -=ret of their own-a hid· den eJ:lch•ntment ace<mo- pllahed by the ~ addl-> Uao of, clmiamao," ~. and. mace. . ."!' lloqulllnl apprcldl!lato!J, 9'• •IUle iD&redtentl . ., _,.. ·· pie pie, empt •!1!!'-!l·dll.· ' fer9BtJ,,J, t h l 1 dUHn ls _.,,_to &1•• that ..... trl'fOIJdt" to 1111 occulon. " 'APPLE .PLAN I cup INltr 1* CllPl,Wl!Ar . I S-lnch plece.clmlamOD J wbolt alJ!plce '4 taupoon m-l cupl ~plo llleel, ahoul · • lal1• lj>plu, cut In o!abthl . ndlood oolor • . I recb>e far Flan Putry COmblne sugar, Witter and oplcee lli4 br!lil to a boll, ~ unlll ,,,... melll. Drop • lllco• IDl!I· jht boilJnl" l)Tqp end coak )111-lil juot tailder. llemOO(e wtth llotled opocn. Add few drop• food color to l1l'UP and boll rapidly 1111111 1yrup thickens. COol.1 then remove whoi. oplcM. Prepare ll'lan PulrJ and line a 9\!o•lndl lllA rln& (a &-Inch 1-cab pan may be Uled). Arrllll• apple 1lloe1 In putry 111c1 polD' lyrlJP ,,.,., all -ln 370 da-• P' l oven I hour. Sllp flaA oat. plMe lllcl re· mova lllA rtns. lllakM I 9\!o·lnchlllA. FLAN PASTRY 2 cup1 . lllted 111.plD'pose !lour Vt cup IUIAf l!o .. _on..U II!. teupoona lemon bllo 'I• cup chl.lled ·butt« 2 egg wbltes Sift together flour, 1ugar and salt; stir in lemon bita:. . IMPRESS OiJisTI WITH AN EXTRA SPECi.t;t DESllllT CUI bull.er Into nour mix· in egg "4lltM, worklnl until ture until butter ii size .. of mixture lta•es 1lde of bowl amall ptU. Wl!l>a,fork, slir and fccm1 a ball. Cblll Wiii. Roll out o~'IJ.Y noured board to · ll!laS than v. IJlch la •• Lin• the flan ring belnl cartful not to Wet.ch pasttY. MU.1 I ll-or J.O.tncli flan pastry, Home News and Views • National Pastime Brings Big Business : By DOM'IBY WENCK C.Ullb' ,.... ........ weight w"o t.li rn·, hu btcome a natlon&I puthne. And foods fer dieters have . become bl.I buslnea. But few people reaJiy looe welfhl, and more lmportllt~ ltlep n off. So •hll'a Iha problem! · Tho lll'Ohlem tt twofold. Flm, tM fdodl for dlllera often.,..., really.,.,, low In .ftJorle.s. And second, merely eatipg. &t w}ly bother dietina a dJ!':t .. i>Janne,d_ !U'Q.Wld the which Is made from nonfat -'"''"• to. . I .,, ·lower ' in tlie tirll1llaee? "Suic Four" {ood groups milk, instead of whole rnllk ··'!~· · • .-~ !. -·· · Tile gO.fOf every person dDM"'.""lt'.wouldfnc~~food1of · chHle ~u cheddar or. talarlo ·10fd' ltn't ,I01111 lo , who no.di lo !Oii weight ·lht to ·inlllt.'*;,..milk, brtqjlcb ..... ~lp • dltttt la.e ft!Mbt. should bl(·to flhd new w1ys of cheese ice cr61mj ·li) meat -Make•nontat salad dru§. , Wlµlt he "11111 do II change his eating w)lch-are 11UJl)'ing, aroup. :'..,. ineat,: ii.iii, p0ultry, Ing lilli!J dobydcated mil" tatlnl habits ' ... not tern-·healthy ct.bat la, well balanced eggs, dried beaz::i~t .P.~ as, and vtne·aar and subst.ltute porarllJ, but pmnanentJ7. nut rt t~ On 1 l l '1) USYi 1>9DutS; (3) fnntl and water for oil (or use tomato If the change ii 0n11 tern-economJcat, · acctptab\1 over -vegeblbles;·lnd·(t ) ·bread and jutce tn place of oil ud porll')'-wbllt en the.diet-the long ipull and somewhat cereal. vinegar). ibt few pounds lolf.,1tlll quick-lower in ctiortn. 'Ibe, wetaht watcher needs to -Use cocoa in reel~ eall-b nturn IJ IOOD u tht dieter Few fid ot "crub11 d!ets eat all tliese foods, but 1n lng for chocolate. •* b&ek to blJ uauat way Of meet theJt qtlllWeatlllnl, but smaller quantities than his -Eat cakes such as an•el tJilrl friendJ. cut down, but not food or spon&e cake wb!cb «it, 11 a 1ood motto. A serving have no fa~ Jnstead of b\ltter of rnNt, for example, need not cakes. When makiD& cakl!, be a 1J ounce steak, but one a muffins, and bm&itJ from your hlli or a third lhls m.. own rectpee uu hill as much Anothet way '° .... many ,,, u thl 1'9Clpt calla for. calories Is to cut down on fats -Season vegetable.s with of all kinds -b u t t e r , onloo, chives, herbs, l!lpklt!, margarine, cooking fatl!I and lemon, or ·vioepr instead of oila, meat fat, milk fat and butter, matprlnt, or chtete othet 1'hldden fats" such as sauce. · those ln nuts, ..avocados, pit QlJll'nONS WI cnit&I, cookies and other foodi. Al\l!I A8llD .. You make your biggest aav-Q. MJ family loves pumpkin 11111 In ~ when you cut pie and I llko to makl It out fats , for they have two and bkaUBe canned pumpkin ii Jn- a quarter times as many uptnlivt. But it'• 10 blgb hi calorJes per ounce as sugan, calotlta. 11 thtr1 tome way to starches and proteln. use rumPkin that WOUld blve As an example, the wise fewer caloriu? dieter doesn't slop eating A. Tha lilllk ol Iha calorlll pOtatoeo, which m ·gooct for In pumpkin pie ""'"' from the you. He might eat half of one pie crust. Why not just omlt instead of a whole one, and this and bake the pumpkin he eats · il biked or boiled "pie" in the plef)ln without it? wtth·Uttle «no added fat. He You ctn Mtve Jt In •edltl 01tt ~"1 !IW pqta~ frtld 1n j111t Uke pie. fat -P'tench fries, shoestr-Or you can mix the pumpkin ings, bdh broWns and potato fillinr and pour it into in- chipa -tor thest b1ve three divldual eustard oupa and to ltvt tlmll·u man~ calorte1 bake in a pan of bot 'Water, as plain potatoes. just as you would bake regular Here are aome other ideas custard. You can a1'o Ult for cut:Una down on fall in pumpkin in plact Of Ip. your diet ' plwuce In recipes Ilk• cake -Make fat-free corn chips or quick bread. by cutting com tortillas into wlldges, spreading them out on Q. I thought the "truth tn a cookie lhtt& and bakinJ peci:asinl" llw wu IUppolld lhem tn I ho! OYlll unUI crttp. lo CUI down Oii Iha number of HIAllTY PEANUT BUTTER, IACON COM81NED IN MU~~INS • ·Miiia meal loef •lid mOll dlfftr1nt 11111 of paclca111 of balls without added cracker or lhingt like detergent and salad brlld crumbs, tihich ab!IOl'b oil. 'Ibere seem to be just al the meat fat. When UlNe are many a1UI of thfH thlnp a1 omitted, 'the fat will dtllD out eftr. of the maal at 11 <Oold and A. Tho "truth In pad.a · •f" ... he pourld off bafort you 11w did ""' 1pea11, thaF tit d d d kf 1erv1 tha.-L number of p1ckl1' mes bl Zest A e to Brea a St -Remove Iha skin from reduced. It providu that il thl ~cken er turkey before Se<Jrttary of Conunerefi feel• ealinl II 11 llltrly all Iha !al thel thoro 11 an undut pro- ' . of poullr)' II juel Wider Iha Ufer1Uoa of packl11 111111 IOI Ni. wlleat lloke muffins, . I t •• Ip 0 0.. bakln1 powder and uk. Baal peanut •ldn. cut off Ill •lllblo fol • product, he mus! ooavene. Dllliut butte!-fla•Offld and PoWdtr butter, butter ot margarine, 'A 1rorn meat before eating il conference ·at which industry, &.... ~ 1balqi I trand 1L 1• cup brown murar and ,..,,, until ~Pan broil or fry meats in consumen and other In-.._,.,fir lhl. ~~I ~teaspoon 11 ' creamy. Stk silted di;. In-Teflon coated pans with litUe leresetd groups agree on · ~~·· "--'-~ II cup craemy or cllunk· gredients and milk , aHemate-added fat. Omit bread!nl « volaatery standards for ,..,. wwacu ltJlt ptlllUt buttlr ly, into creamed mixture. Add other coating which absorbs package sizes. tD • JI.lit ¥. C"" butter or mtrf1rln1 cereal crumbs and bacon, Jf and boldl fat. Seaton mut Mo.nv industri• have volu& tld liil lll1lflllll irlth 111 .U;; brawn su111r. picked used, and mll' JUll unUI dt'f "1 t 1' ,,, o r c ha 11 arllllre, tsrllrvcut back on packa(M, ~ "*-1.llld.mlllt. 1 •11 Ingredients m m-. berllecue, or lt<al: sauce, ror .. ..,p1e , dry detergentt - Ill ·111q bl !111*1 1 cup milk Spoon lnlO .,.....i, muflln ;which llaH 'Jn ootorltt.; lrOti II idlll·,. I ; r:eraols ,.d!nf,~'fnlh<! 11! CUP'!~holtwh .. 1011kt1, pans (211r1% incha). Com-RA!mov• !et (;om dttpplngs from 33 sizes,. 11; PIP'! Tifllf ,._,~ ' erulMd to mak• I cup bina ranlllnlng brown • oupr ~orl making F•VJ· . towels fro111 .1!. •!Jlt' tO _If ~ ·~~· ·· crumbs. and clnn11m0n : mlr lo!11'111ll -DrlrtkllOl\IAtmllll (ill>ll<>W green olive1 from IO sizea to \ ......... ,,;, '"~. :~ '., 4 allefl crl1p b aco n , 1prinkle over multin bitter. fit -ft has 4$ more calories 15, dry milk from 20 sizes to .,, _ _,...s . -• 1 ..--arum.bled, optional lJake in hot oven (400 degrees per cup). Use nonfat milk for 10; and cooking oil from 15 to CDltL Ml7lt'fNI 1t teMpooo cinnamon F) unUJ done, ti to 20 puddings, sauces, c ream 7. Not all of these changes , 1% aqif llfltd !lour SJll .. ~!her flour, baklnc minutes. Yield ; 1l muflinL ooups. Use collage ch-, have gone Into effect yo\. fil '· .... ' Wotllflday,1«01>or 23, 1968 f2-PILDT-ADVEllTISEll ' PiJces EffeCtwt Thurs . .SUn., Ocl. J• tlvu 27 1\ Slfowiy II ... •• us . . ;~;.;·;·s~ia London Extra Dr/ f lfth 80 Proof Kavlana ~odka$ Distilled fr-0m Grain filth BC Proof Old Calhoun $ Kentucky St11laht Bour~n 86 Proof f lft~ , Winner'• Cup Scotch $419 imporltd WllltilY 80 Proa! Fifth Winner's C1p Gin ~99 80 "" f Fllth London Elltft Ori "00 , 9 Winier's Cap Vodka •29 · ' Distilled From Grain I> Proof h' ~·"' $3l9 . Winner's Cup W "":l . e11nd1d Wtisl<ev 80 Pioof . · 99 1000 Bayside ,Dr.-New,Ort Bead., , : 24 Monarch Bay Plaza-South Laguna _:~:_---::~·=-=:-=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;~·~·;;,.;·;,;.,_,...., ... ..;.·w·;-~-;..;;-..;.-~·;...;-;..;,·..;,-~-~··-~-;;.,;-;;.o-~-;;.;-;;.;,·~"iloil I I I • PILOT-l.OVERTISER-F3 Wodntsday, October 23, 1968 Wrdntsday, OClobtr 23, 1%8 DAILY PILOT 41 . " ••• and why we are able to make our famous money-back guarantee J""7 ""·the--•-.Y lllfonJ'---with lop qaalliy.-11. All.., ..... ·------~ tlio ~.,.~with-al. the-···· <raali17, '11ifl lo llio 11111' Jdnd al-.. --tht hit!/ ;Wh•JOVHpo1alim•!iu1>ec-""~ml!tta.,.,, aon\--- lllat-lop qaolily. n-lio !he ---OJtTY cut will be ri&bt and why "' cu 'bacl: ~lllewithcm_..wofemnpleterati>factioa: ~./ USDA CHOICE Beef Roast . ~. -...... a.. lolltd&Tlid 1 IOl>ltllolco -lT"* ........ a .. 1ou1 ~::' ... ,. l c Chuck Steak ~;:~ 1;49c ' . . . 7-Bone Roast ;a; 1;59c .. ·Boneless Steak E 1;7t Leg Of Lamb ~=~l;a9c low. low Meat Prices! PORK Steaks :::."f.."':69' Veal Chops =:-... ~ .. 69' Veal Chops ::i.:-.:::79' VealSteaks:::::.:=:.•1 11 ....... . . ! ...... _._ .......... _, .., (•....,.a..ta-..... , Qlllt ..,, ..... •• -~w fiCJij ~--.................. ..,A-' .................. ..... Bel-air Orange '.Pies Juice ·---·-~=s100 5 :;:$100 . --······---Ham Slices ~ ..... 7fc __ ... .... _,.. .... fNlhPthk Spareribs !'!-.:. &Ste 1.-.... .., .. ........ Skinless Franks :.! 59' All Meat Franks .... c ........ :.• ::39' Safeway ltlopa :! ';.: 59' SaftwaySal•I ::, '.\:'59' a...ctiMt111 :.t.:1!"" •::st< Cttlctd ... :.::. = ::. 57' c:Hpptd ... =---:; 47' Cettlt• a. .... =: ::. 311 Fl-Ttrtlllu l:'" -39' ........ :=',!:" .::. 19' ..... ... en..:. 49' Jack Cheese .. ""' ---.... --~79c DINNER PLATI (tdt~•-tf ........... ...._ .................. ,. ...... .,_,. ,..... ,.. .. ~-.. _.,.. ... ... """""'n-'li • lhlt; ........... ,...... "' -_ ........... .. ................ ~ 15~ 29' Pound Cake ·-.. 3t ......... w. r.-.. ...... -- Coffee Cake ·-u••35c .-:. Donuts ........ ---. ....... T•Ttlllfllllf ....... 3• ,,.. ~- ·' -Safe•if Sefeway --ludgit. M.!!!.-~ ~'!~r.rs J ,_~ . ';·Jgc ;;4gc :~29~ Plileapple Juke ~--23c """'........ -Sliced Pliltapple ::.""..::::" .. -35c AMI ....... rllll -_ White Rice Mix =.:=. 3-sw ~ulliliM,f.llllJ ............. . .. _. __ ...... _ .. LM:i .... MkflMrT1i:-. ...... . SAFEWAY EKTHA VAlUES! £~ ,, . ) k~~'I.;· r.:; ~~-~ . -_..._ .... 1111 ..... Flour Ira..,.,. ..... s~.3tc r.. Doz ,... a ~.: ft' c•11k T•11 ::.:"'" "t. .. Z7' • . T oaatoes :=""" "::' 251. lomatoes ,e,3t ·Yellow Onions . ~ 3 :2t Carrots '~..:-7~ 3~2t p,,_,,, '!!:~ • ... 39' ApP!•• ::.=:;::.,,. ''"" c..... ~ . ..;, 9' lrull llllts -:: ............. :r:~.t• .... .._. ::.::• ia = ... ......... =~ :'IP .•.• " .. bf rt =: 1if =-.. .............. ~· ;: ,,. Ml'• Pim hlls =,:, == ... ........ , ... ~ ... = 29' ,_ ....... ~ "= "::' 39' L, SAFEWAY 1lilJ lill!S ::: .. S' Ca., .. 1::::.. .. 1• llilllll =..""=... ·2.; ... ...... =: .. 1 .. 211 E. 1711 SI., Cos11 Mesi 1000 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach 2' Mon1rch Bly Pl111, So. Laaun1 -636 N. Coast Hwy., llaan1 leach Santa Ana Freeway 11 la P11, MlsslOa Viejo ' ••• ~ ' ( )'. I I WtdntsdQ, Octob« 2.3, 1968 Bird's E11e View lilllllllllDtblnl -eyo to oyo wltb Lee B. Walan of Cal State Fullerton. 'Ibo coU11t'• -.11o11 llOOl1 will ecqulre lkcnt Tucker Wllilllfe Sallctuary in Modjttlia Ceym for nature reo~. State Official Picks · Mace Ove r Bullets SACll.UIENTO (AP) -'!lie chafrman ol • lqlllatlvo com- mittee, hit dlrectly in the eye with the rl o ~ clmnJca1 Mace, ..,.. hi .. no reason why the Ule of the chemf<al *'1ld nol be mend- ed lo Ill types ol law enlorc:e- 111111l "I'd r at be r be lhot with Mace thin • gun," 11ld Ju,. *1blyman W. craJi Biddle. ••You can't wipe off 1 bullet." Biddle, chairman ol I h e A 11 e m b I y Crimlnal Pro- cedure Committee, and Af.. stmblyman Floyd Waklllold, Mouth Gate, volunteered to like part In a demonstration of the chemical's overpowering effect.I during a committee hearlns. Standlng In 1 field on the ground• of the C1UlonWI High- -Wlf Patrol Academy. BlddJe, • 11 Republican from River1ide, took a shot dlrectl y In the face. Althou.e:h he w a s wearing .a-. be saJd the cbemlcal blinded him -t.ly. He said U felt llkl a MVn IW). burn, and ha still complalned of the bumJn1 oensation 15 minutes lattr. Wakefield llllmbled sll!lhlly "hen he wa1 hit by a spray of the cbtml.r.al from a preuur- lr.ed can. He dashed to a near- by water cooler to wub out hll eyes. Aliled II be lbouchl an un- rilly -tor eould be Jn. capodlalod by lbt chemical, Biddle, with !WI ~ down hiJ face, replied, "I'd MJM have dropped my llcn·" A San FranCflCO doctor IP' pea.-ed before the commlU.. and said the cbemlcal -not be put Into the hand I of law enforcement officers until It has undefgone further ten.. Inf lo aee 11 It luu any laetlnf harmful effect.. Dr. Gordon Stewart oald Mace haa: not been given clear· 'ance by federal a1encies auch a.a are requlred of evett the mildeot drup on the markot. But Dr. Walter Byers, chief surgeon for emeraency aerv~ ices at Oakland Hospital in O.kland, aid the chemical "i! not harmful if properly used.'' Byera aaid proper UH would require the pollceman to be no clOlel" than three feet from lbt \'lctlm. Tba cbemlcal, ha added, abould not be uaed in a smaD enclosure auch as a car, and the best treatment 11 a quick wuhing ol lhe effect- ed area with plain water. 2nd to Heart Dlseruie Emphysema: 'Fast Growing U.S. Killer' EmphylelDa I• considered the luteot "°""'' crippler and lcllJer In the U.S. today by many medical <lperla. Abwl 20,000 Americans will die of lhiJ 111111 disease lhll year - seven timea the nwnber that IUCalmbed to it a decide q:o. "Nnt to heart dlleue, emphj>Jema ii the -greatest cause of disability in the nation," said Dr. Robert Wri,bt, UIOdaJe prof-ol palhoJoa It the Unlvenlty of Calllornla'• 8tn FrlJICll<o Medical Cenltt. ,,!'acton contributing to the moeue'1 lncn!aae, Dr. Wright --. Include -.. air pollutlon. the 1ncrutm, proPof'tian of elderly la I.he Bea ch Opens 8rn.m 'Flick' papu.Iation (empbyse.ma I 1 tradl.Uona.lly a dile:.. of malts over 50), and mqre ef· lldent diagnostic l<dmlquel. In an emphysema patient, the lung air sacs are grtatly enlarged and severe.17 deform- ed. Over-inflated and leu elaltic than normal, they can- not npel the air that bu entered the lungs. "Symptoms 1 n c I u d e in- awln( --ol breath and cougbtnc," Dr. Wn,ht ll1d. 11.M tht dlleul •d- YIDOel, dropsy may appear Jn the abdomen and ankla, and there may be neuroloatc:al l}'Dlploma, llUCb u headaches and difflclllt vltlon. Mental de:>realon -IC<Olllpanf .. lbtdlteueulbt'ricllmio foroed lo -bis J>b1tfcaJ acthlly due lo lbt llraln ol bard bruthtnc " Somtcbelt •pee la I I 1t1 belleYe that II empbytema Jo detected in its early stages and treated proptrl7, patlentt Co • • may live for many ynn mpetition without becoming respiratory cripples. Movie maken wbo do their It is diagnosed by ming 1 thlni with &mm lilm are simple breaUting test called Invited to partlclpote In the spiromety, analy1Jo of blood Imm film competition beiJll Ol}'pn and c&J1>on dinlde lp)nlOl'td by the Huntington content. and by chest X-ray. Beach Puhllc Librll'Y. "ltuenUal to treatment ts Then 11 plenty of lime ror rlddfn& the p at i e n t • 1 en- tolllna: the cameras btt.au.se vlronmenl of all avoidable the deadline for eotriea 111 not pollutants. This may mean until P'eb. 3, 1989. Cltegorie! changing jobs or places or lnclode individual, w 1th rel1dlnce. Jt always means dlrialma for °'"'and under II li•inl up IDIOIW>r-Other ~ ol qe, Ind tcllooil, trea1m<nt methods Include cluba or -and lhll "'-1iial dllaton, -thing -la dtridod lnlo tee--... tplClaJ -P'"' lleat for .,.,_,, ICboof if&tnl and 111Ublotl<!. lfl,bfati-qallldadull. "Hoftvor, too on.n Uthe -1U7ba•-dbeaal ,...,..... rtlenu .... .. -llDm lllm, blacll llld ly, lba palie!ll diol of sul· -or ....,. llld • "'1 ail> focatkat or """"'-to com-Jad and al tllf lanllh. pllcaUoM OJcb u brllncbial ~ Jadllal ol -wlD ,.....,..ia. llwt failur<, or ba "' • prallalloaal lllm --de poison!q," Dr. -· Elllrloa 11111 ....in Wflibl ooocluded. Iba property" Iba ......... .========J wru be returned 111 Iba doao o1 BEST c:ompeillloo. Awti'd wtnniQ1 rllml will bt Tlte DAILY PILOT itff•r• ''"'' fqtured 1t 1 public lbowfna: in ff th• Md ft1tur••, .., ,,.,.,1 U.. llbtarJ. All ~I• muat ••'"Y .t ,,.,,,.., , ... u.~1, h1 be orf«ln1I. •"9' ......,,,., s. "-••ti•"· .v IOTTll! Of 365 TAlllTS '2'' MUL TIPLI IOTTL! VITAMIN• 0:i.\~ faUITfLAYOUD •11• CRIL8'SC ... MLI MULTl·YITAMllll . . ltftf• of 100 TabJ.IS fJll·l=i·>ii!+~ •.'STOCK YOUI IAI SAUf llASHn .*VODKA ''* =··· •OCKINOHAM ~ *KINTUCKY ~ WHl•KEY ~ IMPORTED WHISKY , LAUDER'S SCOTCH . ' SAYIH• a1•,•tt.ff ........... ' .,., ,_I, 0fULL ~ HA.LP: GALLON •l•SOWS •LD fASHtelllD HARD CIDER PHYSICAL FfTIESS NNTATHLON 0.. ffto~h. ""Y w...~ ....... .-.,, ,...,, 2, 10•.•· P....i1 OloM c.... *"!-· la ...... ltwd, B!ECIHIU,T-STRAINETl BABY FOOD or JUICE ~ 1oc cf ,,. EXTRA SERVICE CHECKS WHED AND AMERICAN EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS SOLD HERE All GRINDS MJB COFFEE I-lb. can, ... , •• .69c 2-lb. con ..... $1.37 3-lb. con ....... $1. INSTANT HI-oz. !or .... $1 .19 • mLARfrW HORMEL BACON linPsiiciir Iii•• W U.U.A. QtolCI· ........ t 59c ~'!~~.!'~!~ 1.111. YIAL SN•D · . P• .. ,,,_, ,,. , camuvau 'I . fl!OZl!M LCJ.CAl-Rm, GltAPf, OAANG! \>-, ............. Hawaiian Punch PllS RED llPE MIMI et P11tnpkl" WholeTolllalOes f .J .. h 4tc ARCKWAY ·-2 1!1• , Fruit Mix .. .:: ~ , 2~43i ' MAG JCCHEP MA PERXtNS , Mayonnaise TOMATO ~· SAUCE , MOllTOH HOUI! 5;!4 .. L 11 Baked Beans 3~.~2tc CAllNATION -COffEE CR!AMH 1·~91· Coffee-Mate I•• '{ • fOODeUUIT HLVXl-HICID WIUON'• CORN KING WISCONSIN CAN HAM •AMlalCAll • PIMlllTO 1·01. PICe. . •••••• LIO'S CHIPPED MIATS • lff' • DAl:K TUIKEY 3 3\AJ:·•··'I • HAM • CORNED BEEF ,tt1.. ao111L1•• --·--'' • 49 -·-..... IUlZll ·:: ••. l •LD, CAii • ..---11 ... a c1111H sau---"1 DAN"1iii-ii'iciD HAM 65 . iWiuolisi0 1LICl .. 5 ' , • • .. J:i I • C • Co1 • II 10 • •SH r • SHitr •TUN 'Frt • BEEi" i 'TURKE •VEAL I REGULA ••. , MAR· CAT FOOD fM.HAT-MA w• JA TSP FLOOR CLEANER KAL KAN MPS 26v.oz 33c RICE COMSTOCIC APPLE PIE. AL LI NG Ddi.E hJNEAPI c,RUSHtD (110. 2 canl st:ICED OA oc6 NK (Ho. 2 ctN ' I JUICE ("6-01, con) cons 3 lb 63 5.fb. 98 EATIME DR26v.oz35c pkg'. c pkv. c BITS OF BEEF , cons 26-oL 29 C pkg. . 2300 Barbor Blvd. at Wlhoa St., Barhr Shopping Ceat er, £o1ta Me .. I cannorr I •• • . -- -·------------2 .... ·-·-----2 nnac nn n ---~----...--..---...---------------------------~·--~-------...----.-. ... --------- : -.... LIDC•e11•1a ~~:BONl·LESS ROAST •.l.D.A. CHICI DllP FLANK STEAK lb. HIADQUA•n•I PO• HALLOWEEN Trick or Treat CANDIES ., . • ·: MA!IYILU• PRlllRVll r. ! ·~:~~~:~~ 49c • ~.YllNIURY · HoOZ. ~ •.OIUUJI .IA• \. FROZEN FOODS SAUL.I CoffeeRIR91 • Bluebtf'TY • ltcrtpberry •Maple 10 .• ~ 69c pkg. GINO'I CNllll •tzu "••· 3•c'"•'·59c pkg. • pkg. ' PEPPERONI (7-0L) ate dick~ Of The Sea Dln•en • sHR1MP CRIOLE • sHRIMP CUIUIY 3 5 c EACH • SHi:IMP ORll!NTAL 6-ot. •TUNA HAWAIIAN or A LA klNG l>kg. PrHz•r Ott••• 8.tfet l•tren • BEEF ··CHICKfN . $1 I MEAT LOAF • TURKEY• SAll!IURY ., 7-lb. • 121 •VEAL PARMA.GIAN 2.·lb. pkQ. pk9. REGULAR OR CRINKl! CUT POTATO!! j .le. uc·99· c Flav·R•Pac French Pri•• · MAR·KiS JACOUITOI ClllCklll, WHOLI Ull er THllHI ...... FRYER PARTS ·c MIDIUM SHRIMP Pl!SH PILLIT OP IOU s121 lb. 891~. ioiliil'iar. ilaL•••' ·;t:·83 • Clfn.PllM!-NOJIM SKll!IUll PIRCH :t!: 63c viliir'ltoo POOD 3 !:! 29• LONOOlAtN •1-n. tsc M.l•RICI ,.,. PURiNA .. DOG CHOW 139 LUNCH IOX P'ACI( 14. 29c SUN•MAID RAllllll '~;.'. .... 21· "" l(f!P $ANOWfCHll •UIH WAXTR •AGI ' CHUCK STEAK •un •OllTHtll c~~:. H4 M SCOTT-'A'H VIVA NAPKllll pk•·2Ac tit .,- (Incl. :le off) 59! TNT YILLOW POPCOill 2·111. 29-c ..... a'Jl'fllA tAllcY 'flASlllM•tOM RID DILICIOUI , LARGI CRISP JUICY FlESH •RUlllL SPROUTS ..... c;ompact I OC • u ..... • ... 11NEAPPLE CHOCO!ATE MILK AMP\IFIER SEASONED KRAFT'S KRAFT'S DOLE SALAD DRESSINGS DELUXE MACARONI o. 2 con) 37• BOSCO GRIEN BEANS (8.()L Bolfles) DINNER 49c "' FRENCH ....................... 31 c 14-0L pkg. 39' 22-0L 65( 1011 27' 1000 ISLAND, SOFT fARl(AY 31 ' or CATAll N~ ................ 39c :: 43c ~ Cfln) pkg. 303 con · ROKO BLEU .................. 45c MARGARINE 2800 . Harbor Blvd. at \VUson St., Barbor ShopplnM «::enter; C: 01ta Mesa ~ ·' -~ ,.. ,. • DAJlf PILOT '-f : Lessons Learned In Cooking School A cookln& schol which has met with .au<> ces1for17 yeon will •=b• 1ponsored by Orange Coast College ·' g Oct. 30. Next Wednesdar Foods Breaktalt 14 Brund! wW be dis<:1111ed and demonstrlltd by Mi,. Gerry Gerken and Miss Pat Mosan, hOme ecooomlata. The next three consecutive Wedneeday1 th~ plOiJ'lltll will lnclud Sllgbtly Slimmer With Calorie Control ; Sweet and Saucy; Meat, Vegetable and Dessert sauces, . and Feative Foods: Hollday Hawlllan Way. . SeWng for the gatherings la the Mee• The&ter, Costa Meea, from 9:30 14 11 a.m. Co-sponsor. are Alt>ha Beta Marl<elll, South- ern Counties Ge! ~.,_Devis-Brown, O'Keefe and Meerltt Co. and Mesa TbeateT. There II no adminion charge and twi!ler Information will be available In tcmorrow'a Social Notes 18Cll011 ol the DAILY PILOT. Five-Part Serles OCC Gives Sea Lure Lectures This Month A five-port aerlea oa lbe lure of the sea and man's age-old fascination for it will be of- fered by Orange Coast Colleae thil month, with a series ol lecturers who have "done ft all." The ll<riea will be offered Wednesday nlghtl Od. S, Nov. a. 13, 20 and 71 from 7:30 to9:30 p.Dl. lo lbeColta Mm-lllch School lyceum. There ii no admtuJon charge. Openlni lectnre will be Od. IO on the topic, "Why An We 11>ere?'' lt will cover man's curloslty and the call to adventure, and how the sea can be utUb:ed for population IUl'Vival. Lecturer will be Tom McDonald, diving officer and manqer for the N o r t h American-Rockwell d i V i D g operaUons. Topic on Nov. 6 will be .. New c.oncepts of Undersea Research and Esploratioo." McDonald will lecture. On Nov. 13, the lltle will be "Phyalcal · Oceanography of the Oranae Couti'' covtrina: topography, wavea, Ude. and thelr cons<quences. LeclUm wiD be Dave e.-u, who teecbM physltal _.p11, 111 lbe OCC evenlq college. "Morine Blollllll' of I be Orange Coat" on Nov. 20 will cover undenea flora IDd fauna. Lecturer will be Dr. Peter Dixon, pro!.-of biology at UC!. Final lecture on Nov. 'ZI will be ;•Recreational Op- portunlUes of lbe Oran1• COUt." John 11..eck, pro- feuor of biology· at Santa Ana C.olle1e, •ill cover skin dlvlng and !CUba diving traiolng and qualification1, beach combinl and tide poolina;. Moderator for the 1eria will be Dr. Lewis Follansbee, pro- feaacJI' of biology at OCC. Follansbee Ml been alllllai.d with the office of Naval Research since 1949. He is a member of the California Department of E d u c a t i o n Committee on M a r l n r Teclmotogy. Black Studies Now Offered at Berkeley ' . Four courses in B I a c k 20th Century" (History lM). studies have begun thl!: fall at . The teacher le LeVell Holmes, the UnlVenlty of California at who holds a m&:Ster's degree Berkeley. in hiatory fnnn San Francisco Dealing Jn upecil of Black State College. < culture they are deolgned -"'!'be Black Family" prlmAritr for Black atudtntl (Sociology 191.J), which in. though are open to othe; vestigates the IUbjeet from its studentl as well. The eounes historlcal context in Africa .,. In department. wltbln the throup Ill devel_.m In COiiege of Letters and Sdence, thll country. Teaching this and are taught by Black coune 11 Mn. Elizabeth P • faculty members holding the Morgan, who worked until title of Lecturer. Three ot the recently with the Alameda courseJ each carry five units County Welfar!_ Deuartrrent .. credit She )taduated lii anthropo)ogy · from Vallar and earned her roua COURSES Muter of Social Wellare Jn addition to tbae four delJ'ee at Berkeley. course., initiated by the cam--"Art ot ·Black Africa" pus Afro.American Sludenil (Ari 121 A·ZB), an historical Union , a number of othera IUl'Vt)' of dwical Black have been recently developed African art mi Iii lnlluen<e tn 8 ever a I departm.entll, on modern EUropean and repreoenllng • beginning lo • · American art. A nationally 1eries of olferlnp apeclllcally recopb:ed painter, Irene L. designed to brlnJ oat lbe Sawyer 11 lo charp of thir relevance ol' the Black ~x· c 0 u r; e • Mia Sawyer perlence to academic studies graduated from Milli College in the Universlty. where ehe e8med he; 'l'11e four new couna are: master'• degree, and took ad4 -"The Black EQerience vanced wait in art history at' from the Civil War to the Early Columbia University. She has Supervisors Open Bids County sUJJerVllon have set Nov. 4 as Ute date on whicb they wJll open bids for reconttruction of the first floor of the county ad- mlnfllratlon bulldlq. It bu been ..U...tad that tt will cost abool $50,000 to re\ramp the area for the u.1e fJf County Admlni8traUve Officer Robert '!llomu and his llaH. Thal flaure JnclUdes minor ad· ~II to be carried out on olhtt noon. Couniy Clerk William SI Jolll! and his llaH. pmenl oo- cupanil of the lint floor, Wiil be movln& to the new county courtboule ln mid-November. Trmtees Relax Time Rule tau ght at California College of Arts and Crafts as well as O.kland high ochooll. NON CRI!Drr· -SUbjecl A. Thia noo<:redlt coon:e for devetoplng com- poollional okllll mull be _. ed by a 11 undergaduate studenil, althoagh many take It by eumlnatlon upon en- lering the Unlverllly. This special Mellon bu been 1gded t~ 32 othen to emphasit.e the Black penpectlve, U11nf Black literature and dealing with lhe unique llll&UIP 111qe of Black people. It is belng taught by Mrs. Sarah W . Fabio. who has been the coordinator of Black studi!! at Merritt College. Mrs. Fabio. a published poet, is a i;uaduate o( Fllk University, Nashville. 'tenntssee, and earned her master's degree ln cre ative wr!Ung al Son FrlDCilco Sia!• Colle«•· InllfaUve for liartlnl lbe lour --..,.. ll'ml the Afto.Amertc:an Stadenl1 Union, beaded 111 Olarlll Brvwn. Lui IPdnl thll - Newport ·Mell IChool -a:.dlilllod """ -11rre·decfdod1onla -·-11o-"'"' their five mfnute ratrfclfon... 8-w. lieynl. n bu - penoo1 wllblng to apeak at 11 ladlltattd 111 Wallor llnllbt. tchool bolnl meettn&. dean of tbe C.!ltp of Letlm A new policy hu been and 8clenoe : A 11 I 1 t n1 I adoptod pmnilllng <llllenl to Chlncollor !or A<ldemlc M· atldMI lbe boant for niore fairs Andrew Blllfnialey: hi> than lfn mfnute1 ll a time n · .. 111ant. graduate 1tudenl I.,. fl requested end a Cleora• Napper; and fawlly aatbfactory reason given. members. I r I' ,! " ., I I . -= = '-=.;:. -• • ...... ..,• •-:::;:-'"-;"..,._-;;--:;;-: • 7-: _.., •••• -;"' -~ ... _,, .. : O"::::::ii' r ~~~·-,,~-~ .. :-::-"'!' ..... ~ .. !.-.. ... _.;: .. ~ -===-~_.:::._::::;_::"."--:_;.;.-~C::.::;:_:--;:_:::;_~.=...-~~ '·-.. -• l • .... • .. .. • --· .. .• .. .. .. -~ ... ... .... .. --1 • • ... • .. -•• .. • .... --• ........ • ... .. • ' • .. .. ... .. 44 DAil. V PILOT ' L'4RGE FRESH GRADE AA SALAD IOWL • -SALAD DRESSING . • RILL QUART · YALUAILE COUPON NINE UYES :--6 Oz. Ca~ ' ' ' D~.J~~NT 4,9c Good Qnly .t Bargain Basket Wtrti nh c..,.. M ss.oo Mllll•• '9rsHM: limit 011• box p..-co11poit--0n cotpo11 pM c11itomet', Alcoholic 8e,,.t•11•• 11.d fr•Ji Fluid Oeiry Produch bch1dtd from Mi11irr111• 1'11rch151 b7 Li-Void aft1r Su1uley, October 27; 1•6t. ROYAL -8 OZ. CUPS · 3 LB. CAN CAT FOOD YOUR CHOICE OF e ALL TUNA , . e TUNA & CHICKEN e TUNA & LIVER HOLLYWOOD SAFFlOWER . MARGARINE ~ YAMI YOGURT 1 LB. CARTON 2 LB. Can ....... $1.37 1 LB. CAN ..... .. . 69¢ SCHILLING -3 OZ. FOREMOST SPRINGFIELD CAMPF.IRE · GARLIC SALT APPLE CIDER MARSHMALLOWS IMITATION •o•Mosr BUTIERMll:.K "' ••.~ 33c PACIFIC •• SODA CRACKERS , "· 2sc OHf POUND USDA CHOICE GHIRARDELLl'S S·EMl-SWEET . . CHOCOLATE GHIPS USDA CHOICE ROLLED SHOULDER CLOD EASTERN 'GRAIN FED CENTER CUT RIB BAG 7 oz. JAR HOMOGENIZED MILK 1/l GAL . BAZOOKA BUBBLE GUM BAG ,OF 90 le PIECES ·LIKE 'SODA . . POP . 23¢ 12 OL BOJTLES EASTERN GRAIN FED LARGE LOIN f . ·0 R F O· R EASTERN GRAIN-FED . FARMER STYLE POIUC CHUCK STEAK BEEF ROAST PORK CHOPS PORK CHOPS SPARERIBS . USDA CHOICE EASTERN GRAIN FED EASTERN GRAIN FED · BAR M WESTERH STYLE BAR M WESTERN STYLE . ' OUR OWN GRIND KRAPT 12 OZ. SLICED ROUND BONE Whole or Half PORK CHOPS BULK SLICED ALL BEEF GROUND SHOULDER AMERICAN BEEF ROAST PORK LOIN BACON Salami Ch.ubs PATTIES 69~ 69~ . BAR M WESTERN STYLE HICKORY SMOKED TAVERN HAMS Whole or Half LB. BONILESS & LEAN • Center Cut Loin CHEESE 89~ 69~ 59~ $l~!aox 59~ ••••••• : EXTRA FANCY . ... .... •• 61,. ~Nf ... ,_,. : DELICIOUS -GRAPE'S ••••••~ Prices Effectives . YOUR • Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun. CHOICE : October 24, 25, 26, 27 : APPLES · 2 lbL 25' BULK e rr1c .. ..i.fKt 1o -t .. ....,d. CANDY ! ._ ___ .__. • • • • • • • • i 6i$1 •••••••••• PUSH 6UIN CABBAGE .sr. • • • • • •m• PA•c• e SQUASH 3 ~ $1 ! 2•bL 2~ s • ..................... : WE GIVE BLUE CHIP · STAMPS COSTA MESA PLACElfTIA WE GIV! BLUE CHIP STAMPS 19th and Placenll1 710 W. Chapll)ln !I: :i '1 : fJ., CAIL Y ,,LOT ALWAYS · IVERYOAY . ... ~· .. ' -. . , • ·<'" .•· ~· . ", •• .• ~4 . . • Market · Basket D!icotlnts . ·Prict$._, Qi. 'Suality Products~. No Games, No ·· Stamps, No C-ostly -~'~tras'' ••••• · .. Most· storea claim to have low prices. But on what -on a hand· . or your mone,y ~~k on ..,_ry purch<I•. True, 'fOU tfw up luff of !toms, or l•forlor produfts? Not Market Bosket. Wo dis-gomes ond lfllmpl lo ohop ot Market llaaket. But you got cpunf. prices all through the store•. And Guar'antH aatlsfadion bargains and _qudltty afwoys, ~ryday. ·See for yo~rattf. •bUpl fa.Jr.fntd.d °' 90'MT!l!lenl conlrollld prlc.., · ~t:· ' . ::tt=i~~:tc:aa IC:tmlXMlllMXllmt~:tmllCltic 'w• • 2 75° • ' . Jt-0.t . Juice •• • • • """· ~-,-... .,....36° Wmlll:.f:••··,.·· Pit IHNJ. ;.INCH, .... """"""" ""'""' 22° Mlcaronl ••• ·~· ~·· (;f1iti Rich • ~ 27° Mlrk .. 1t011111 ~ 5" T ulto1 .. ;·.~ ii ' I I Y ., m"" iluomplotoly IOfkflod I with any~ ltlskft ,.,odliee ~ou bvy or ~ htin Wlff bt ,,.. p!octd'oryoill' rnon.y rrul)Otd. M;;i=...-,..::! 69' .... -. -2"' Pop Corw ....... 11· . !INCL 10. Olf LA•l) SClftlNl'l ~ FINAL TOUCH' 69c . . ; . ~'.""' ..... -....,,_l!Oc ~ ••• ~ ...... Uil l5""-"'""'t ... 47c .·l11,.... .... . 1 .. ~ ...... 3lr I . '"" •••• riro.. ·!':'"°'""°"'°""" CC.· •• hfelw11t ... .,.,. .. .,..._ $1"" ·~ -• • • ••·~·· m: , • . , . ..C..' Chili.Olis -. .... ·51· I It-OZ.~: j ' . ;-:.:-~ ..... 3 •""'$1'' ~ ........ .ms. ·, iti;~.~. ·~11° ..,,,............ 31°' ........ ~ " ._ .... ._ 87' P1u111. ,_,, ••. ::: I 11.0Z,PlnlD, • " . . -Ul.o.A.ChebT ....... ... hisi111 Strips ... er . ~~ •• ;;;; :-: .ll 28' Meiii;.f~ ...... 59' """'I":-'''"'•• 41111 Pones-.. ..... ;i-- ·~i':':'.....,_ •& .-s ............. .. r:----aa•Kft •A I ,, .. l'ILOT-ADVIRTlll1t-1'7 . CJf....Mttt ~ 27*.: ··ll.OZ.~1141 ' \ U.Wo!.t-•..... ., ... S110 ••••••• '~m­....... ,,,,000... .111\:D ' Tolltt n11112°,.,-! v-.k lul1•ts ~59' ' io.a.."ftM ::.::-· Dll;';M.6·~4• WHJ . TRUST ·ro LUCK? '.Take U.S.D.A •. Choice- . Tenderay .Brand Beef ~ ••• .· bon 't b.· illcktred by gobbltdlfOOk. .,aoM leir ""'1 ' ",U/S.Q;.+--Cholcai. ''T~rm-lit." IMf Isn't u.s.o.A. ~ On'1 U.~.o.A. Chi*;t 1a .u.s.o.A. Oioicel And a flederal Gia.ua;:a: ~rt 1ar.·lo with a p11rpl• •mp.rfOhl an ttlt fllllit, ' h1ktt ..i •only u.s.o.A. cnoa hef. Anet entyMorW....., 1111• k .,_.,., ....... WHOCE HAM. L •• U. IONUS DIKOUllT IPIQAt i . • r : l I • . ! • • i • • l 1 • 1 • . . " • • ' • ' !. .. • . ' I I • . . ' . • . . . . . ' • r I t t : • f . • ' I .. I ' -· ---• ) • ,c9 DAILY PILOT Congie·SS for 'Budget s·1ashe~~-Except at Home WASHINGTON (AP) -the mlllor federal ochool,ald were HO who 1lso voted for an billa came up ln the House oveN.11 JS.billioa, 11uh lo. June 11,, economy lost some federal sPendlng. . ' , ' • propciaUona commttt.e told edd1Uona1 cutlable !toms to his coll•-they • ha d bring the whole •peildlllll ''reduced Jho. budget ,._ts {<dtJ<:Uon to 16 )>IUioo. At the of thefexecOUV'e branch'by a ·same time they marked -off great,er amount than ever • large areas be was not to be(orJ ip_the nation's history.... reduce. ~ and Means Committee, and In the Senate by Sens. George A Sma~rs (D-Fla.), and John B. Williams (R-Oel i). •11t will do no gll>d to like $10 bllllon out of the Amerlcan RAMBLING D ; w Ith the nation's ecooom.1 foclng the wont crisis In decades, Congress yoted for record billions in budget slashes this election year. But many ol the members who backed at national programt. jumped the traces and vot..i eitra mUllona for b<:mt area projecl.I. luster. 11Us program channels ~e of U1088 who ham· school funds into more than mered toodest on the sDeDdinl 300 of the 435 congressional~, lid didn't hesitate rO pleid districts. with the Pu~l(c. W(!rti: ~ n..e House voted 228 &o 13.1 mittee that reservoir, ·nodd' to Increase the budget figure cootrol'ind similar projecla In for this aid by $91 million owr •their own districtl be spared. President Johnson's recom· , Congress did cut a.t>out •.11 meodation. And among the~ billion net out of Johnsori's 1iu<fiet requests o I ap- prwriatlons totaling $138\Z blllloo, for the fiscal year that began last 7uly I. Since there ls a \ i m e lag between ap- propriations and a c t u a .I outlays from the treasury, the aps>roPriation and the spen- ·dmg figurts for a given year do not agree. But be added that I.he actual The 1968 economy act, which spending reduction this yeai was combined with a IO per- brought about by Congress' cent income }al surcharge, actions would be only •bou.t M was championed in the House bi!Uon. The Iawmarua told by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills ([). the President to· find enoogb Ark.), chairman of the Ways taxpayers• pocket if it is just l;t::::=;~l_ &rooght to \Vashlngtoo and · spent on addiUonal federal ~­ pendlture.s," Mills told the House u he called June 20 for strict financial belt-tightening. • ' ' I • One example: When one of EVERY WIDNESDAY "lid/ Cq/fll" ' 11111 Butt 55c End ... ~WT. 111 BONELESS HAMS , At.lilft :iott. WIKKl OI: HALI' TAVERN HAM FROZEN PEAS OR CUT CORN fllvfi I Pict1weet 6f 10.oz. PKG. MARGARINE /V/O/N/,SJ Pu~~.. . I · High 111 ~lrab1e CTN I Pur• V•tabf• • •. l ·tB. \ Polyun.eiturotiis ·' FRESH BREAD Chairman George H. Mahon ([).Tex.), .of the HOllS" Ap- '1"" PUMPKINS '· ,_;_ . 3. J~ C1 i-i.. c • All 91AP£S • ...,.,,.. BRAOl'S JllY BEANS ':.':" 19' IRACH'S BIRT DROPS :, Bf BRACH'$ IAG 0' POPS ""·""' ' -PIES °"""""' ...... , •PIU. 89' FROZEN ~·'" ~"'~"· PIE SHEUS ............ "'.~".::' 39' 12 Of M WOM.D'S GllATIST IOOKS fOI CHR.Dl!N YAN DE KAMP ·--._, ... .... -·-.......... -........ .... _ .,. .......... --·--·---.. _ ... ·-· .......... .... _ • t > " I , ~Ol ND I 1R£ASUR£ ggc ISLAND ..... , ...... •llr 11.11 .... FRIED HALIBUT -........ 75c ::-r:':'c:-.......... .. PRIZE PRODUCE SUM PRICES! I VONS flOWfl at • OF THE WfEKI LGE. BUNCH . -Ptalic llew .. """"""""' 11' . ~ ............. .. Golden Yams = 15~ lose Pears ..::."f'wm 19~ Fresh Spinach = 1 O' ·• Cranberries,.~~A~~'c;29'· .. ORANGE JUICE. ........... ~.':.:::$('1 SPAGHml 1•r1111s~21' . . XI.NT . . MEXICAN DINNERS • ..., fndl"""' ..-. • Chffa f11ehilodos 1i!.ort. • MeJlcon Din•Mtr !•Ii.On. •r~ ... E11e111.on. ... "' ROYAL' mm. VODKA 45c .. .. ~ JOO" 'w•,N.mol S.,Jrirf : .~~;~$3~! ~es BEER Now in linf 11111 Top C• I I I I ="98t ' USDA (HOKE STEW .BEEF ·USDA CHOICE 79 . ~ BONELESS CUBES ,. OF TENOR IEEF I ·lot aom. Wil1f ••• ,fl I nd Gcuw. Wins , •. •1 3 rd Go,.,. Wi"1 •.••• 4th Gome Wh11 •. Sii ath Go111e Wini f100 .,..Go_Wlnl,, ... I .ENRICHED FlOUR N/O/N/S/· 1• u:~ s~:, . ~ I HUDlSttoULDERS .• 0:::::'3' GlEEM TOOTllPASTE-":::·791 ARRID SPRAY ...... ~:';."¥ 14' ltmZlil $2'! i P.n. of PreslMts ................ ~ ........... c ::. '.: :i=.:~ 19-., 1 Wll 11&nw:1s FOR THE.,.. j BASKETBAL GAMES ; • l t - 1 ' -al Soflit11 Cracker& ,.,.,Niii. ,.._ ... ., .............. 35• "*"RI.it Shoiflpoo tt.on. ....... JI ............ 'J" lee.Ifie Treafl NI ............ ,. .... , ...... ·--·· )9'1 Chocolot. leods , ..... ,_ .................. 59'1 Oiocicilroilit Ch;,.~---~ ,_., ;·· 2" Libby Cli119 f'lochM llM ..... " UN .. ~ ......... 29' lit.by Slk:ed ..... ,. ~ ........... _,._ .... 21' llbby COf'Md IMf Hcnh ,._ -.. • .':.: ..... '7)., '""' LibbyTOll'IOtoJua -.CAll ............... J/25• CAM ~ ,.!'M'.-........ ..,_ M·J-B Coffee • • • • . . • I ~=~ AND MONEY El'el')b)dy gets in on the United Fund Drive ac: ..• This year the b:i5ht ligbt in the Volwiteer wcr;..ers Si:ene Is the s~tor h i g h school age OOY¥ and ~tls from the Boys. Qub, Boy and Gld Scollls and the Y M C A • In.stead of ringing dooroeils and telling the United Fund story, they hang llterature on door knobs a.nd let the bro- chure sell itself. Quite a brochure! Poster too! It contains 6 small try ff sta±Mtepping ages eai,:b.dr- rying a banner. saying, "SUpport Your United F\mc1 Now."~ kids are all from Balboa Island, Md the se- cond in line, the one boldin& up 1he mr:mey, is Tam Cooper' 1 son at Studio I who took the ):i1o00graph. A lot of credit sbould go to Mel ' Schenkel from O>llins Radio wbo is doing the publicity this year. The large poeter1 all over town with the same picture, but with "Love . Costs Money'' written across the top, rate top priority on the "I want lists" of the boys and girls who gpot 1hern in our school administrators of· fices. Read the brodi.UJ"e • • • The goal b' 1968-69 is $184,9'JI: and the Newport Beach United Fund hat never rot nw:le their go&L The drive is NOW. The ad· <trees is P . 0, Box 1284. It yoUr money is too hesvy to me.II, call 641).3818 and somebody will come and ca.r· ry it over for you. PIE PLATEE WEARING K NEW LOOK Heart-warming golden and dellcioua cnamy slices o! pumpkin ple are making the roonde of the coffee shop. All OOl.1ed aver with dreamy mounds of whipped ' cream, · the Octdber c:oncoctJon of the hour is having a homecoming alter its long swnmer sleep. R.aixin pie, too, is satisfying aN>f'tiles searching for a new taste. 'l\No of the good old flavors "that~ pme out ot summer h~ every year to win it e w popularity all over again. A» <A. the pies.i pastries and 00 •nm. served in our coffee sbap are made in our own bakery rigi:it here. Rattler a unill\19 · way of tasting before you buy and havlng'tun doing it. You'U love the rtch flilkey pie crusts so tenderly delicious and t'he loving assortment of ridi Danish putries. Perhaps you'll choolle a honey almond all sprinkled over with nuts or a tender a:wle deltcat.11 flavored with cblam'.n. Thi bakery that daret: )'OU te welk by and not stop. SAM OALl.lNG Now 1 hale tn be naggy, but the post office ha! set October n to Noovember 23 as the time to use thia in· e.'t'perlSive fast service 6'r getting packages to the boys oversee.a in time tor Oriiblnas, and Tbankagiving isn't even here yet. Try on this padal.ge for Thanksgtv .. ing clinner to tt0meone fat" &Wllf • • , 2 cans of Swanaoo's wtrlte turk e 1 meat which also makes dclicioul san dw !ch es tor civilians .•• 1 can S and W tiny wboif! potatoes, which do lJP awfully nice when you brown them quickly atoUlld a beef roast . . . 1 can Del Monte cream style corn, 1 can Ocean 'Spray cranberry sauce •.. 2 padcage1 Kool Aid ... Meorted cello bags o1 oandies, black jelly beans. CMdy eom, and cinnamon red mts, 2 package-s of life aavm, 3 packages o t pell!uts, 1 package of eh~· ing gum, Md a box o! Pep- peridge Farm 01ocolate 01.ip cookies. Wouldn't MY boy go !Dr 'lflal? Yoo can see II on di?Y;ilay in the candy shop, all packt!d giVing gay with the sunny gold CC'llo stuUE'd all around. This C"1 be you,.. ,., send for SS.ff plus Sl.35 to handle postage', insurance and Wre.ppln&. Nic.e? A bam can be aOO.Ututed i! )'OU wilh • NO'l'rn FROM GERTIE'S LrMU: l'FJRSa<AL SHOPPER BOOK "..\ pleasant chqe tor oonvalNCmt dvtrir could be • "Snack Aton1•· tood aut PQck . . . •II mrta cf tidbit. for lnatant n:iucfltnc ... nuts. muahroom. ntbble111 cocktail 11.tu1area and thlnp ... 80 very alvlnc It.>' wtlt Its ::'="" ""'II .... happy 011 Adicr ~ye.; at lraoldlllst, Huntington l1act. '. I • it22 ~dint« ..Ave., at 5'-riftldale, Hllnti11gton leach .17950 ~. Fountain Yaney I ......... _...., -· lht.Pqlto ....... ~ lft'VQ is ~our VfltY bnt bullon1. I ' .. 4 !/ -. - • I ' -- I I • . , 0 Tl Fl a T.T ·p Tl Fl'IST SJ&EC! 4\U& Eld! __ , . & W<dnel91, Octabtr 23. 1968 DAll Y PILOT 1 215 T 112 c sn11a·uTra'LTJ Tasr lfl2#1 ... #Pll'lA&\£ari•••••~::;~~~-------~· pt{QNE,. 613:,6360 FOR HQME DELIVERY P~t CES EFFECTIVE OCT. 24, 25, 26 " Organ Sere!'ades For Your PIHsur• by •· Bomico NY. ··~, "' • ~ • ....I-• • • ··LIDO MARKET CENTER . NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE"~NTRANCE TO LIDD ISLE • • ..o RICHARD'S TOP OF THE GRADE -USDA CHOICE ' . ',MR. RICHA~D " ~OE PA'(N? • ., ROUND, STEAK t.lf.,;•lou1 for h•I Roul•d.,, stuffed • wllft Bacoo,,ooioo •od dUI pkkle 1Mpl SWISS STEAK Br•i•• wn~ ve9etoble1, boumoo ••d w;•• BEEF STEW H~orty Hffo9, w;t\. oelory, oarroh, , , • ' on10.n1 a11d potatoes! . BONETIN ·- RUMP ' ROAST Hive 1o~e left over for berbeoue bu/ 11odwichH ' BONELESS RUMP : ROAST Tules 10 9ood 1~if roe1led over 9lowlo9 ooel1 OUR FAMOUS, LEAN . ; GROUND BEEF Ho.-•b.oul .ground bHl 1lro9onolll . 79~B. 98~1. 4~B. PERFECT SIZE FOR CARVING JACK O' LANTERNS , JONES DAIRY FARM · ' LINK SAU ·SAG!'n.~-~l old leshioned k;od! ' ' FRESH FROZEN:. ,, .... • • •• · • • • • • • • .. ~ ~"' ,;.,, .. ~,, .. ---· .. -., NORTHERN HALIBUT·oen~ with Persley BJtter .. f: ~;,.. '". :. " 89cu. WE HAVE FRESH COOK1:D WHOLE LOCAL LOBSTERS ;l;ND FRESH EASTERN OYSTERS, TOO! ' ' MINUTE MAID LEMONADE 'OL 10 .., $1 BABY RUTH SUNDAE BARS , •'· 49c AUNT JEMIMA ' oz. Country Waffles 3 ,_:•1 AUNT JEMIMA ,, oz. Buckwheat Waffles3 ""'1 -AUNT JEMIMA ' oz. Buttermilk Waffles 3 ,., 51 ~ENO'S 8 VARIETIES PIZZA ROLLS .... 59c LARRY'S "POOR BOY" SANDWICHES I Lb, 69c I 000 SPRINGS BONED Rainbow Trout ••• 69' SEABROOK HO(LANDAISE ASPARAGUS f OL 39c SEABROOK BUTrERED ' n. Parsley Potatoes ~ ... $1 SEABROOK ' oi. Creamed Spinach '3 ""51 ~~QIH.t,'?(M, w~ MRS. JANET ALLEN Founfain Valley MRS. ARlEAS WELLS lido 111• BOB $TEWAAf N...,..t ,_. -' MRS. :re J. COOK( Cc,ol• Me,. ' . • •''''I . • ' I ' ...... FRANK SPIELBERGER . ~aaan1RY • RJCHARD'S LARGE · f AA'· EGGS do .. 49' GLORIETIA 303 Stewed Tomatoes 5 ,,. '1 KERNS , APRICOT-PINEAPPLE, STRAWBERRY, BOYSENBERRY PRESERVES ,. ... 3 ,.. $1 NALLEYS, with Beani Chili Con Carne,. ... 3 ,_ $1 KNUDSEN LA BON BUTIER 1,..,:1~ NABISCO . ' FIG NEWTONS ' , ... 35c YUB~N COFFEE I lb. 73' YUBAN COFFEE 1 u.. 1.45 SPRIN~FIELD J(ujlrshma flows: , ,.. 19c POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL , •• 39c PLANTERS MIXED .HUTS WITHl:~~NUTS 69' CASCADE DISHWASHER .. D'.ETERGENT • ..., ·.s ... ~RORA •• •· Bathroom Tissue,,._ 4 ,.. '1 &ALA Zit Roll Decorated T oweJs ..ZCk _ ' • • ' WITH $5,00 OR . MORE PURCH,..SE NORM HOWARD DELIElTEIXEH =J)~~- FREE SAMPLES FRIDAY AND SATURDAY BRIE -CAME~BERT -ST. PAULIN -ESROM TILSET -PORT SALUT -CASTELLO RA TH Al~ MEAT SLICED BOLOGNA OLD LONDON, PLAIN MELBA TOAST . REESE MAHARAJAH .PEACH CHUTNEY CY PERKINS Jh• mH who knowns •II abo11f fine win" •nd llquorsl 6 01. 3 lor 51 ••• 3 ... •,1 10 1/J .. 49c STEVE MIHUN Stop In •nd ••• hi"' for• tn•ck or lunch In our Coffee Shop, " AL CUSOLITO PRDDUEI:· "GOOBERS ·FOR GOBLINS" · FRESH ROASTED TREAT, TIME! PEANUTS 29'12 oz. Pk9 • TRY IT BRAISED! c.RISPY, TENDER, LARGE CELERY 1 '8unch .STUFF IT, BOIL IT, SLAW ITI FRESH, TENDER 0 LOCAL: CABBAGE • .. , ·-, •• , DAl.E D\J.ir.ON ~ . " ·BllCB&'f · WHEAT TEA ROLLS A 'SPECIAL OcCASION DESSERT •• ' ' • l : . \ .. ' . .. . I ' ~ '· ' • j RUM .CAKE 97~'' POOR BOY FRENCH BREAD ; 11C ' . FOR SUNDAY BRUNCH ' APRICOT-DANISH ..., 15c ,. . ' CLARK KENNEDY PLOWER ' IHDP ' FULL. BUSHY ' CHRYSANTHEMUM · · ".'. PLAN 1 :rs : ·. • r YELLOW, WHITE, BRONZE, PINK, IN 6" POTS. , re9. fS vol"° 2.86 · .. ,b , . , I, . , . . , I . . . ! I EllDY '. SWEDISH JELLY CANDIES , BERRIES Rod on4 . Blodc -· FISH . , . , Auorted Fruit ·Flavors RE6. I J5 Lt '(OUR CHOIC! • ... < 1 "O ~ . ~""' .... " el1 LL . T"I.; • 'f,W,_.J•.,_ ~RK~T HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP FLOWER SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR CLEANERS OPEN DAILY 'T1, SUN. '·' OPEN DAILY •-6 OPEN DAILY ,.6, OPEN DAILY '·' DAILY t-1130, SAT. •·I DAILY e:JM, SAT. e:JO.I ................. ______ ..... _____________ _ I I' ( - -----------· ~---------------~-------------------·--'-'---------~ ,, I ---~-------- ... ~I.I r ,U,11 ··--··--·· --····· -· ---· SIUer Writa Can Ulc ers l(eypunch o ·perators: 'F. · .1.nger Picken Good' Get Start In Teens? By F. 1. LAIN must be led lnfonnallon and CAR' EE R C 0 RN ER . the card. The keyboard has and eyOHtraln during busy per· tng Is offered by ...,. prlvall Mlss Lain awards a new frequently lt'a the Keypunch .,,~P.J.... ._..,.. more keys than Lbat of a trpe-lod. Part.time wort is often bWJl.neu IChoola and vocatlon- Mercury portable. courtesy of Operator who •tarts the ball ·--....-.-·--:-',::.: writer; these control feedl.ng available lhroup temporary al high ICboo1a -many have the Royal Typewriter Co., to rolling: by transfering inform&· .:..._., and posltionlnf ol cards and 1 employment 1UVices. placement a er v t c e 1. ~ ,,,...... RuUand, Indianapolis, lion from records onto punched Who Tells Computers? coople ol other features . QUALIFICATIONS' A high VANCEMENT may be"' moni Inc., for her question; cards (computer food). JOB CHARACTER.Imes: school diploma ll needed u a difficult wort lnvolvlng great· "I'm • high school graduate Once a hole's punched In a ing and statistical Wonna-which is an electric machine Usually steady work with oc-rule; operatpni of alphabetic er responslblllty and more By PETER J. STEINCROHN who is very interested in t.U· card, it can't be pot back, so tion; I think ol them as ances-equipped. with a keyboard. aim-casional overtime during peak keypunchea must be able to money, then to supervisor ol ing up keypunching. Could you you can see why keypunch op-tors and workhorse partners llar to a typewriter'• (or with periods ... operators sit most type ; they should"" have good keypunch opuators. Dear Dr. Stei.ncrobn: Ul-please ten me qualifications, erators must be "fingt:r piclr.ln' to the Big Daddy compute.rs. a numerical keyboard). In-ot the time, working at a reg-eye-hand coordination, good RELATED JOBS : 1be DI.ta cers and high blood pressure compensations and what it good." Regardless of the enck.lser ma-stead of typlrig characters, it uJar pace for Jong periods . . • vision, facile fingers and be Typist prepares paper tapes begin ln people much earlier takes?" THESE SAME punched chine(s ) . . . punches holes in cards; each work is repetitive •.. sur· able to remember details. Ma-instead ol punched cards; the than you doctors realize. I am A. -Have you ever won-cards are also often used with HERE'S HOW THE KEY-hole represents a speclflc item roundings are often noisy -chine manufactuun frequent-Verifier Operator double- a 15-year-old girl who has the de.red how computers get so tabulating machines. Tab ma-PUNCH OPERATOR WORKS : of information. The locaUon of much of the noise ill caused by ly give on-the-job training (one checks the keypunch opera- job of watching my I-year· smart? A.side from bullt-ln de-chines sort, count and print She (women predominate ) slt.s the boles tells the computer or the keypunch itself ... oper· to three week&), to employes tor's work usl.ng a sitnilar ma- old brother while my parents 1_•...:ign:_•_nd_:p_ro..:gr:...amm __ 1n...:g::.,_th_e::.y_:l.::ar.=g•::.:::q•.::an.::ti::."::.":..-_:of:..::•ccoon=::::t:..·__::w::hil::•~oper~a=ting:!..:• .... k::•:::YPll'.:::nch:::., .... tab=.::m::aCJ::h::ine:..:bow:::_::t•..:dul=..:wi::lh::__:•::ton:::_..:are:::....::'"::b::Ject::_::"'~tem:::i•::•_:•::.f ::tbe:::ir::..::=::::tom::::ers::·:..:K::•~ypunch-!::::::::._:chine::·::::.· -------work. I don't mind watchlng1 him when he's good but that's only when I bribe him. T h e house is filled with toys and my wallet is empty. (He nev· er plays with them, either.) To top Jt off he is 1 whiner. Anything I try to do for him . is wrong so he starts jlCl'U?D· ing, '.'Mommy ! Mommy!" When be does wrong he laughs and aays, "i'm gl"ad." He never tells the truth un- less it's In bis favor. W be n he talks to my mother be uses his cutest voice and says, "Yes mom," then atarta laughing at me when she turns her back, after praising him. IT MAKES ME SO MAD when he gets praise when I should be getting a medal for putting up wftb sucli a cry baby. I'll have gray baln at 16! And of course, u1cer:s and high blood pressure a few years later. My brother is a brat and I'm a fed.up baby· sitter. (I won't even sign ei:· cept as Miss X). Comment: Ulcers may oc- cur in very young children and high blood pr~~e is, not unknown in the t e e n s. Of course, baby sitting or "brat- sitling" bas not been consider- ed to be a common cause ol u1cers or byperteosion. Yet, thousands of similarly tor- mented brothers and sisters in the United States will sym. pathize with Miss X. She is not alone in her frustration. BUT SHE MAKES A good point. It's possible that daily, simmering resentment may be the beginning (in those 10 pre- disposed) of ulcer or high blood pressurt. Lack of com- munication between children and children, and cblldren and partnta is the root of many evils. Dear Dr. Steincrohn o My doctor tells me that I have an "~ical bual cell 1zyper. pluia ' of the uterus which be calls precancerous. He says I must have my uterus remov- ed immediately. Also, my one remaining ovary. Since I am in my mid-30'.s with four chil· dren I am not too concerned except that one hears so much these days aboot "wmeces- sary hysterectomies ... As I have not reached the natural menopause I am won- dering wbetber hormones will be in ercler. after the opera- tion. I know a woman of 60 wbo has bad neither uterus nor ovaries since the age of 25. She takes a daily hormone pill and is remarkably young looking. MY FEAR JS that I will auddenly become at least 10 years older upon lOling my uterus (and ovary). Would you advill the operation? - Mrs. G. Comment1 If the doctor's findings are as you state, you really have no choice. Opera- tion is imperative, and be thankful that he finds your condition precaocerous rath- er than cancerous. As for hormones postopera· lively, their use will depend entirely upon your doctor. In some cases lib yours, doc- tors hesitate to prescribe them because they may aggravate the pre-existing condition - even though ut.erua and ovary have been removed. BUT RA VE lJ1TLE fear the ope.ration will "suddenly" age you prematurely (with hormones or without). What's most important is aging long enough to stay alive for a good long while. "Looks,• al· tbooP on Important factor in a woman'• (or man'a) Ith, .,. onl7 of _.., lmpor· taocc. For Mn. G.1 Vitlligo refers to a skin condttlon of unknowt1 cause, characterized by pat- chy loa ol plgm.,., ...Wttng in a "pitbald" appearance. There tJ: no specific treatment. "Cover-up" faclal pttpar•· tJca on quit< lf!eatlYO In ~Ibo .... ;rn. Ora1199 C..tt'a Most Complet. PRINTING SERVICE ~ ..... ~, ' (OP'l'llGKI• 19'1 llylw.-,.51-. Joc.~MI _ ........ ~I ~s- MRS. SMITH'S l!llS·--89' ~-­t91T~UlfM91 ORANGE JUICE ~........ 25' --....... ROUSUlllTIM'OlttlMU••M-59' r1&.&.111. Mll9)Ml. ...... ~···•··•- CHOW MEIN ='r.':.~~.~-75c Pntn'l.-C.-· CREAM PIES lT~'.:'.:'.::~~ 27' COOlllN BAGS:;.'::'-==' .27' P1RCH FILLET=--=' 59' ... Kit &;/.--. SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS 1-POUND BOX a:a.o llADDOCl =1'1:' 77' l(OIJI lllST =-::.~ 89' MORTON MACARONI :=.-22< tVffll RICH::;-.,,.___ 27' . ....... .. ,... C1IT CARROTS :=.::_ · 31' LARRY'S SANDWICH:::'.":-75' ' , ~ ~ ~ . "I ~· ,. ~~ " ' . _.__ ......... ' ~ . . COOKIES ~~~--~44' PACIFIC CRACKERS ll::;"' 33' llAISIN BRWI ::::a..:• 31' MIATBRIAD ==-~· ···Kit &;!.--. GAUCHO & fUDGtTOWN BURRY COOKIES 16-0UNCE PKG. 46° . ' ' . • ·. •:.. I 1 ·" • • ~ • ' '. ,. <"> •'""' . . .... _, ... APPLE BEER l=-"'~ . 79' DENNISON CHILI llt.'kw 48' ... CUlllGAN WAHR=··~25' HllNZ KnCHUP ,M,..,..._-··-·-· 24' ... KRAFT DRESSING :t=-..33' CORN BREAD MIX :::.'::".....,-35' ..... ..,. .... ... OATMEAL:::--39' ~-.,.-.. , ...,---·-----· GW• QUISP ::.-:..-40' mt-RATION :=' 17' OIAM Of Ria =:-.. 43' rt..' ... /(;;&;f.r-- 'q GOLDEN PRINCELLA YAMS LUCKY MIAT IUYllS llLICT FROM 'rHI flN,IST lllF AVAILAILI ••• JUST ONI our OP FIYI PROVES OOOD INOUGH joa THI LUCKY "IOND.'' AnlR TKl lllf HAS PAlllD OOVIRNMINT INIPICTION POI WHOUSOMl- NISS, IUT •1FORI GOVIRNMINT GIADIRS HAVI GIA.DID, OUR IUYIRI CARIPULLY SILICT THI lllF THAT WILL PAIS OUR SPECIFICATIONS FOR FLAVOR AND QUA.Un AND II WORTHY Of THI LUCKY ''aOND''-lllF THAT All IXTllMILY FAT OR WASTIFUL All IUICTIO. THI HIGH STANDAllDS WI sn ~•OvtDI LUCKY CUSTOMlll WITH THI lllT JOOD VA.LUI FOR THiii FOOD DOLL.Al. ••• AND WI fllltlLY IT~ND llH.IND IVIRY PUICHQI WI.TH OUR MONIYIACK OUAUNTll fOR tOMPLUI SATISJACTIONI roa TOP VA.LUI, FOR TOP QUAl.J.TY, LUCICY'l ·#SONDID'' MIATS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICIS All YOUR llST IUYI lUCIY'.S TOP QUALrTY "IONDID'' MIAT.S ••• OUAUNTllD IOI. FLAVOR & TINDllNISS. CHUCK ROAST 35C ROUND STEAK.o. •• .e:'!' ••••• 79.t. ~;• RIB ROAST ••• !!.1:':'!' .. =~ ... 88.t. lU(ll IONDID .. J.Wt AIOI TINDll.-......... ••• PORTERHOUSE S11A1t •• ::r: •• •1l,! ROUND STEA mnn C SMOKED PICNIC ••• :=::i: • .3t~ K 69. --. 11m IO--.fllilJ TOAaolllllt ..::... .. HUii U:S.D.A. RADE A $J1 FRYING-CHICKEN !;!.~.!!oi'IJ.!.~.......... ~ WN:W1~0DJ-29! RIB ROAST :i:::::: 78< . -. TlltDU, NKY AND IOllDID fOI TINDRNHS .. .. OIUCK ROAST ....... ~· .. .45 .. GROUND BEEF 43 HAUBUT STEAllS ... l'!'l'l!' ••• 69tl. C FRESH SPARE RIBS ••• ~ ... .59tl. flUH,UANAllD _____ '""". ... SUCED BACON CROSS RIB ROAST ••• ~ ••• 77£. =r:--· ... TURKEY ROAST-,".':'.'.:.~.~~'2". SMOKED HAM c :::-..:r.Au~.~.~-................ _4911t. ~&.OW IVl•YDAY ;alCID DlllCATISSIN SNACK lflMSIJ·:unT:rr1*tl'MIJ LUCKY FRANKS ~,;,,. 53• (JHZ.PU.Al&MIATM.-. ~N~~~-~~~'-··--59• LUCKY AMERICAN CHEESE 62• lllDIYIDlllU.T W•&P'O RICU,,-1,_ Pll, PASTRY TURNOVERS 'WIU•T ArPU, lllllllllf ' s 7c •llO ClllllT .......................... , •••• 14-0I, Pllf, ~!~~~M~(~l~J.~~'~'~'~'IML m, sac ~L:~K~~~~~~.~.lMt.,., $101 ~~U,:1!!,E~~A~!·~ ...... 48c . . '. ,.L:JI ::< ' 'It I~~ .W 1~• < a • • -• ~ -- WHISKEY ::"0:.0:::::.~ •3n SCOTCH WHISKY ::r~-•511 BREW u102'' =:=.:-~ •1° LUCKY BRANDY r.::::., •3n SHASTA 8£VERAG£S ~--9' !SOl lT,'901" AYAtu.IUAT AllfTOlll) ,......v,ur LOW E.,.r)day Price! MILD CHIDDAR OR MONTEREY JACK LUCKY CHllSE CHUNK 79' POUND ' ',"'. -~ . . _..... " BIG DIP ::::"'"-55' MARGARINE :::~.~ . 38' LUCKY MARGARINE n:'."'--·--29' ;-<" 1,, LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES 8 BE AUT Y AIDS -w Crest. II TWO R.AVORS . . LIQUID PREL,. SHAMPOO PAMllT SIR IDTTLl """'•lltn .............. ....... tt.t '" ... ,.... .. ,,...,. _ ...._ ........ --$115 -'-' t..k-et lh --...., ei1.. r-llr M" ...... .. --. . . '~ ~'ii=:.. .. .:=.·~ .-. ', '·' l\r•{' • .... '""' , ..... .... ~~,~~.~~~~.~~··-·•••O .. N0-56c ~™.:.~~~~~!~.':5.~-"--59• OSCAR MATER OR SWI" 68• .-u.....,1.u.m ... ,. '. THIN SUCED BACON · 79c elCAlllAT•l,,_fl..__, ___ _ ~~ .. ~~.~~~~·~·-2 ,~;.$)15 r~,.­ MR. CLEAN CLEANER ~---.66' COMn CLEANSER ,,~--25' ZEST TOILET SOAP..,. 20' WINDEX == 43' ENDUST=~ .76' ....... -.... ::r.· '""'' .......... ,.... .. s. .... •rte.-QI!""' .., ••• ,.s..,. ...... l~ CHIQUITA BRAND -~ ~ · BANANAS THI flNUT 10 QUAUTY ( IAllAJW . .. YOUClliUY U.llO.lllllll RUSSET POTATOES l0~45c lWllfl ~an de Kamp's W1W! tt.n.IWw ... Oct.Jt.21,..._ ~.~~~ ............ $)15 :=r£~ ...... -•u 39c =~~ ....... ~39c . ..... • .-r.,_, I ' . BllCH-NUT :="'""-JO< JUNIOR BABY fOOD::.-.._14• SIMILAC UQUID :::c-26• illll'IM HILLS BROS. ll:"oa 69" •-HILLS BROS,:::" 1P' HILLS BROS. \IT' -· •1" INSTANT COffH=.':'t'l" lUCllt TEA BAGS--48' ~··~ APPLE CIDER 'h GAUON BOTTlf &9° B&M BAUD BEANS-.. 37" LIBBY'S SAU£RllRA!IT 19" ONIONS ::'J:-31• STOKaYCORH:-~--23" CUT GREEN BEANS:= 24• HARVEST DAY PW••• 17• HARVEST DAY,TOMATOES .. ....22" LIBBY TOMATO JUICE ... ...:...J1• fRUITCOCllTAIL :::"""' 23• HUNT'S PEACHIS i'::w 29' ~· •-:i&;/. PINEAPPLE JUICE . .46-0UNCE CAN APPLESAua:::: 21' PIMEAPPU::=.,-20' 6RAPEfllll1T::.-29' BLUEIERRIES.l:!".:' W FRUIT DRINKS=:."'"' 24" PRUNE JUICE :'lT"'"'"" 57~ .. t;.; AURORA TISSUE :::r.. 24• GALA TOWBS :::: 32' ~· •. 4s.y1. __ fllf1ICll'S llSTANT MASHED POTATOES 7-0Z. IOX Kl.EEllEX fACJAI. =-~ ... COLOR'IEX IW'llllS ==-- IOTEXIRA ==-· 71' DOWlffsetli•=--' 79' CAMAT tour SllAPm. 15' \ --.... --. ·----.. ·-----~-.. -··-----~--------------~---__,,....._.,,...._, __ '!P'll'..,..-;"~- Wednesday. Octobtr 21, 1968 DAIL X PILOT If State , Legislative Analyst Brands Prop .. 9 'Vague · ' llmltallaol In ProposlUon t "It cannal be aawned that II urt will climb lo about lllilO taxet lhtl will bt needed In lho lmpoollloo Gf ttate lnher· ent to IU peram Gf lho to-cooll." t Propoeltlon I, 0 lho l'OP-will pm<enl most school dil-will be lnterpttled or defh>. mhllon ~119'1S-7l comlrli yean 11: $A1 mil-Uuct ar llft lues ID'tlluo· tal 11111 td •INlllGo In 1he P-of lho Wal••• erty tu ..tie! wue ad-Ir I c It from bsu"-..,, od lo be synonymou.s with~ J.Dokilg al ute lam. Poot !loo In ii'"': '911 mUllon bi llono whml pn>perty beque•th· otate. --.Id thlft -9 vocated by Loo Anaet .. Caun-bonds. As '1 mult, he ttat .. , public uslstance." warna that u the w a ts 0 n 1971: l!'lt mlllloa In 1171; 111<1 ed 0< grlllled ha1 alreadJ "our Clleulatlonl -lhot ._,._ lilr IChooll ud .. U' AlaeSIOI' Pbllip Wataoo, "the stale will bave to ab-But assuming th8t the Wat-measure is approved "the "a ftnat inertrMatu tn 1m of.· nached or will reach lbe ane tax lncttases need to fbiance 110CW welfare to th9J ltlto, bu been braoded H "u-&Orb lhe!MI capllll o u t t a y iloa 1.._e Implleo &OCfal toajalaUVI tu committees IOOI mlllloo. pettml property tu limit." the Wat.I lalltatlvt do not Poot ,... on. lie jhdlcla ' tremely vape" IDd w l t b-ccm. wblch will totll about welfare COit. Pait ltltea, tt will flCe U. dflniandlng tuk Posts pr'el(tictl, 11 tIre1 e Poet e1amines the effect of Include any funds to PIY fot that the expe.ndltare ,,W bl • d'J..;;e~ ~ lelll flOI million by Jm.71." couldcal be oppUad to categort--J.....,. ol dMllng a ttate tu lncruoes wm total lhe melSUr< on local bonds the .. pita! wUay cosu cl •Un miUioo d\11111 -.' ., llllle LePla-'!llnWw to -.ii ... , Post -...., .-nl reUel Ill P"'l'llll tllll will pro-at least IU blllloc by lho and llateo: "Moet local..,.. cltlea, .....U. and special '!be w!yst ..-U!al live Analyst 4. Ala Pwl ' c 1alm1 that local welfare and Medl-cat clJice $1.1 billion in new rev· nfth year ol tills pba»OUt snmentl would be prec1ud· d!ltrictl other than 1ehoolll." the tvb! COit ff ftuncin.I In 8 lO.Plll _..,. pr-. ClOlta of some "twf a bil· Post etttmatea Cloat aoclal enue for the t•'1t ft.seal cycle. These tu tnereues eel fram issuing new bonds or Polt Idell. "Slnce most local the c:urndi ope1al!lrig Ootta Of sented. W. wett to • joint Uon dollars" wut have to be Mlfare costs -without in-year. will be· lD addltiol;l to au,y re-1elUn& authodud bonds after ptdnmenll would not be ldlooll amt IOClal treJlan meeUng Qf tho Aaaembly and flnazx:ed by the state. cll:dlng auch programs as hoa-"Such an· action." be qul""1\enla tho llate -. to Nov. I, 1111 becauae t h • t r a1>le to -bonds to fl. plus lho Clllftal oullaj c:ooltl Senate teVtDDI· aocl tuatW "."The term "weUare' b not pit.JI support, crippled chU-warns, · "will only be the fund Us UilUDg procrams." debt Umtt wau1d a 1 ready MDCI U.. expenditurt1, of ldklok will be ti.yo mu. cunmlbll t~~~.~ ....,.. lhal dellaed ••• 'and It does not dr.n's aid and -.i b)lcl-down payment oa llnanclng Poot adds lhat "l'roposl· bPe wen reached.'' He estl· they WGOlld llave to find new lion tn !116f.70 and .;ID I& pu c UJ.Kwuma ol the frd... have a preclse de.finltlon else-edt -al .. mD.Uon air-tbe Watloa lnltlatlve. He tlon t la p:naect kl IUCb a mated thlt staiewide local sources of non • property creue to $f,5a mDJloa b1 tlaUve has centered OD the where ln tbe "law," he addi. rally. He predietl that fl&-forecuta the~ of new manner that tt mQ DtClle debt GUtst.ndlng b equlval· tax revenues to cover 19'13-7t. uggested OM perceot prop-,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'rty tu limit. "This ls only the Up of the . b " ........ ce eri, . ~ •"""#•· ·From a O~J f ' , he other two1{ nitlatlve will •Ye a • _.. dramatic effect m ttale md local ·go~"~ J~ . Posl,JilolJl!!!oo tjlo.l,ret ph .... ol,Jlit ·---ure as ~llted ·_.. lcel!, -·~'"'1\lll llld rat• limJt. · ~ r- 1be ~,¥'dlat~'t and "irelf~;, ... med j tn the · meuure are v acae, Posl dlhm, be<ause; .''he 1 c ope . o( local f~lons whfch mllbt be ~ by lhe ~ ,ud !1"i Legtl.. lature to ~· '~ tlon,' 'welfare' or 'people-re- lated' 1,t' almmt .limlt151." . Wataoo's plan wUI • fO be- fore tbe,.~Calllornla electorale on the Nov. I ' ballot. Tbe u ........ -· through · .. amendment to the stlte C09" ttitutlon, to llmlt Ji!'OP'!r\Y t a x e s to one percent {JI gr~ assessed valuatloii. The ,measure propooes • that col~ pnlperty taxe1 be · used "'11 !or ~y-relat· ed~. f'lnonclng .. of tcbooll . ·•ad wel!an' services wuuld re- vert, II Proposttlon · .. ls en- doned; to the state. Wtllon hu · iUu-· ·llilahClili· · or · · the new state resJ)OlllihlllUes through h !k es Iii liicome; 1ak!s ,and hlherftanee tafts. Po1florecaita that "the bls- torlc OTotem of Joe.I eoetn>I of IChooll would~·be JOit"· if the ltate h~ . to. finance both support and copltal out- lay costs. "Wlljl total flnan. cial resporuitllllty goes cost control goes policy and, uJ.: tlmately, management COD· trol." · If the proposition passed, Post polnll oul, Ill al the current COlltl tJl. I o c a 11r.hoo1 ~·.would ..tit ,hifted to the ;tate OYft' I five-year period. Local schoiol costs at the uresent time total. Poet · caJ. culates, about # b 111 l OD 11nd "probably wiD grow to 13.5 bllilon . .,, lll7$-7f. 1be Jo. cal property · tu will coi>- Unue to ftnanCe ~ school hood Interest anil re- demptton eostl." Post r.-that bondlq OINS OPIAATION .l'EP L,..,·Arr'i'n•t• Operation Pep Adds Coast Man Leo Arranaga, ditedar af studi!nt services far fCIWPOli: Mesa Unified School Dllirict; , bas joined "Operltloa Pep" training proaram ~ educatofl. One h u n d r e d tchoolmea from lbroaf!loul tl>o llate nave --Ci •)!<!n4 1even 11tll•-4 U.--dayl: each . "' detoloplnr llJlleml for educaUonal plaMlng. ni. pnjecl b fUndad bJ I federal grUL . • . Al .directer of 1tud1nt terVJtei. ·Arrr Fl' LI In c:bar1• .,. ... ~. counta1lnl .... .........,., .-. llbldtlll dlll:lpliDI tnd student ....... Prevloutb', 11a -di,_ ol otud"'1t aervloll lar tho olcl Kewport Barbar Ul'lloo Hieb lldlool • lllllrid. He..r~-:-~• -four -lllchlll, 11:.l•n!Dl, 1'; aw. ..... lilltJ, '· •, frozen ,p~·~ COUNTY FAIR 8 lllCll large baking ·~~hens I .. Wff., ( -1?07 .,.AYI. ~ .. . . ....... " vana•u• m 1 .Slko . ••a• 1u.11 wnlDIMlff CIUM CIM Mal lllTI NO 5 1 1 ::... . for • With thlt CHllO• 'Only chu11k tuna' eM.SP"K IPICIALl•M AIC · •w. 59 ~~~~:. c .~;~ ...... 39' -MAY.nllH · •s -~~~~~·~ c ;;.!'.: ........ 79c SAIMflCll . 35c !~~,OcotM ........... . ;~~~!~_49c llOfFMAN FUllY C00111 smoked hams lwttt .. 411.1~.HALF I : _ " _ s.... ~ '-' "" POllllfll .. . .. ,,. ... ,, .... ' .. ~ PORK BUTT STEAK 59~. BEEF RIB STEAK·ttt:: ....... 98~. •••• ..·••con BOMELESS HAMS ::.~ .. ~l: $1 2' SHORT RIBS of BEEF ~ ... 3·9: SMOKED PORK CHOP5~':'r89~ STANDING RIB ROAST=89~· ~w.c!~!~~EIOlt .. : ..... 49c !!~!~o~!C.:.:· 59' !~!',_~., 59c :~~~!~~K~~~'6'!r.no., 6tc =~~ l~~:':~~ ... ate ~~f~~~-~~ .. _ .. 69C ---· ~Ma)falr fm111'f1...,. J11'i0duce--- fryer parts :r. IWHT IMOID CCIRID '-!SH. ~-·~ Por~.butt-. .. roast ii ii TANGEL~S bulk candy =~s1•1 . uss5 e c THIGHS • 1-IAIT · ~ Ii. hallowt;en 2! pumpkin....... . • BONELESS STEWING 1-Ef ~t ...... 1.?• CENnR CUT NEF SHANKS =t., .. 49• ~_,,it ' n,. •• ,; · ·,_.., •r••n1chw~l91r 3 $'1 wtl.SOl(S, I (1%. CHUIS •.•• , • • lor • ~ !!!'!~'~-:.,-""_J iJ9c !~,!~ __ 3 ~25c J~,~~~!:, PllCI .... . .... as~ ~~!~t.eo~~I. .. =:.:.. 35• ~:d't:; ........ ·....: ....... ....... $115 ........ "" i. p:. ...... -~-· ........ AIDUI CHOC. DllNllS · ~::'. .... 23' · SIM llSIUT AlDQI SOFT MAIG~NE ~'o. 35' 1111 Mii lllU CHllSI DIUlfNO • • 1 , , ... loeU'lrOllf,,,., fie KllAnAMlllCAll Cllllll ... .-. ...... WILl ... IAU.MIU ...... llA ··I&'!', K11APT:cutx11 ,._,miff A7fo l'UCHl,IS MOJIAliL&A Cllllll ot 4t' .:: ... EAST POINT Sllll• .:.~: .. 49' CINllAMOll WAfllS .. :~ ... ,,. fOlGQIS lll5TMT COffU ~ as· • MIU. ...... ~.-~ ...... ~··' ' . ' . MUCllA Oil ..................... ..:. .... 97' ; • • I • • • _ .............. --· 15' l'r"' ..... "" .......... .,....,..... ... "." .. " . ADYIM'lt• PllW IFPICtJ'fl.J :fll,l. IAYtiii THUii., oa. 24th. thru wa., ·oa. 30th , . MAYMll , MARUT-171 ii-' 11!11 •• C.. ltloM ftffw.1•.• ...... .-. · ... tns•eli''t•• .... .,_ ~.u"~.~~!!" .,. ~-!' "'"'" ·, · · vodka ~ . ~$29~ f !!'..:.?.J.2'! CIAMPAll• ·--·•" I< aem.u ................... .. IMPllid ICllCI .. ... -·~0 ........ -"""' .-.~ ~~!!~.~ ... !;.;.•a!' I , • • $0 DAILY PILOT w.s......,, 0ciow 23, 1968 l'°f>-PILOT-ADVERTISER WINFBEE • TRIP FOR TWO PERSONS WESftRN AIRLINES ·,~ROYAL CANADIAN11 US. ·;}). A 1• "Choice '''Steer /Jeej 511 5 LE All STEAKS TIUMMED Of f:XCESS fAT AND WASTl . . H011DAY IN ~/·:·&VANCOUVER, B.C. lEGISTU NOW! NO ,PU.CHASE UQUIUD FROZEN FoODS IU,Ell'S-12-0Z. •r:•. ~,, FlllD HALllllT ,.LI.II',.,"" ... V ... lU,ElT'S-12-01. 'IQ, 19' NllD SOLi PU.LITS ..... ,. • .,,. - l U'1:ll'S-U.Ol . PICQ, 19' N110 PllCH 1'1um... ........ -. l U•ElT'S-14-0L PIC•. • , .. NllD ICALLO" .... , • •••••••,.. - CA.tHA.flON-1-ll. PK•. .&f• ••LUT 01' SOU .............. , V - CAlNATtOH-12.()l. PK•. 39• PllH CAlllS ................... - Ml$. FllDA.Y'S-1.0Z. PK•. 89' 1.0.P, SNllMI' ................. .._ IONELESS 1.ASY TO CAIYJ-2.LJ. a.Ot. ~s:: .................. '2:. IOHEL~SS TOP SIRLOIN • .. • -. t, ~··' • ~-. ·, . ·, '-t ~-: ~ _ ;J'1• ~ !JfUC14lUI ,. • '. .• -LIAM .ru:n ,·1 :e:lii ~I ••~: .. d':=:~ SHANK·· HALf ' $13,! $198 i $119 i .• 1m ~t9 ;,:-.. •'f119 LI. 1 U. 1 'I LI. , ~ -LI. -······ARMOUR'S ·-·····: u.~~~D!~6~~:~ .. ! PzOiRTE·RHOUSE •••• ·1~.~ ;...., 1 LB. TURKEYS .! ' BllEAKFAST SPECIALS SEAFOOD SPECIALS Bun CUTS I cENil• i ·w1toLE •. ··~~:-~m~~· -. WBILSONA·s CRl~CPRITEOSLICNED 55 ~~N: .• 'i"~ ................................ ~ ... 89:. ILICU I HAMS 5 5 . . ~r.~: c ~~rt.:Jz'.' ,,, .................................... ;:~ 'Clb PACIFIC OTSTllS "'"""""''""""'"''""""""" • 5 5 II 98 i 5 5 ~~I~~~~~~~.~~~:.~~~~~~•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 65~ :~.;~NM~~:~~AKS •············••••••••••••••••••• 79'1 ~ -~ I ' ' ~ . ~~;:·~.~U~EG~~~::~:~~.~~~: ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 27~ ~.~~~ :~~~~:E~~~.~.~~.~.E~·E·l~·E·~···················· 89f. I llRD FARll4 WHOLE HOG-LI ROLL 791 C•oli thtimp ;" Doilint wat1r f9? tw• l'fli"uta1, •dd • littla 111t. ' '••••••••••••••••••••••••• POil SAUSA .............. : ......................... , • • '""""''""'°'"""I••• mktollo. SHERBn ... ~· .. ; . . . . ;IJD DRINKS .... : . . TINS 'J)eAcafeJJen .J'fiecialJ I) I I t ' C"J mJ n -JI AA ~r;" I, ..------VVej pac Jrozen ------. V-' J<lll ~.da LUER-6-0Z. PKGS. VEG ET ABLES PIMIENTO OR SANDWICH LOAF. c IA. PEAS, CORN, MIXED VEGETABLES, FRENCH FRIES l CRINKLE CUT POTATOES, GREEN BEANS $ 20-0Z. PKGS. 00 2 T~~··· I 3 ~~N·1•9 JAMS A JELLIES C.H. B. -2·LB. JARS KRAFT D!l.UXI -U.OZ. l'IC.._ 5 9c AMER~ CHEESI ··--VAN DE KAMP'S -FRENCH f XLNT-ENCHILADA AND FRIED HALIBUT Ii MEXICAN DINNERS STRAWBERRY APRICOT, GRAPE JELLY; BLACK CHERRY, APRICOT-PINEAPPLE JAM 49~ D/\NOLA IMPORT!!> -41 . .o!L l'IC .. _ . 6 5 C DANISH HAM.!! ... ~- . 8\:UI SEA( "CA!IN CREST" -.yHITE or WHEAT LICED BREAD 11-0I. 22c LOAF ' ./<. .... ~'i 691 v!t~1 39~ CLASSIC TONE ORCHIDS-60.CT. Pl(G. NAPKINS 10c BIG 44.oz . CLEANER WITPf AMMONIA LIQUID AJAX INCL. 7· 9c 20c OFF ''!J/ !Jt~ !Jn 'Seajon .. Jf j Jn :Jfiriftimarlf" ; LIQUOR DEPT. I -YEAR OLD SCOTS MIST -DEluxt FANCY JONATHAN SCOTCH '4~!. I v, FLAT TINS SLIGEG-2 H-TINS CRUSHED, !IDB ITS; CHUNKS --3 '1 00 1" ............... ,,. OllUIR JUICI '"' ONIONS .. .. iiiiNAs 2 LIS. 25c: I 6.YEAR OLD FAIRGROUNDS BOURBON '3~!. KENTUCKY WHISKEY A BLEND HILL RIVER $ 29 FIFTHS $ 00 TINS ill'~~ .. conAGI CHDSl .. ,_ .. ,,,, ..... 6: 29~ DOLE -lOl . TINS ·FRUIT COCKTAIL $ PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN., OCT. 24, 25, 26, 2 ' . 2701 HARBOR ILVD .. COSTA MESA ' A I f, • 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN G~OVE • • 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA (\ I -' --LEA-DS ·THE ·w A Y '68 CONTINENTAL-4 to choose from 4-door, full pow•r, ell luxury feetures, factory air of course, one owner, Beautiful m•dium metellic turquCis•, with match- ing interior, leather. Servic ed end maintained by our service department. lie. VCK-803 '.67 CONTINENTAL Convertible Full power and factory air conditioning end ell the luxury features, less than 8,000 miles, In ell respects, like new. Special purchase of Studio end TV cers from Ford 1Motor Company. Lie. UKN-721 '67 CONTINENTAL -5 to choose from 4-dOor sedan, fully powe'r equipped, •u+ometic temperature control air conditioning, tilt steering wheel, Embassy roof end many other luxury features. Lie. VEY-856 '67 TORONADO Deluxe coupe, full power, factory air conditioning, one own- er, like new. Stk. 4244A s5295 s4795 s4395 s3795 A FEW LEFT! I BRAND NEW COUGARS ••• COLONY PARKS .,. WAGONS M_~URY SiDANS . -••. -~-. --"' HUG!: SAVINGS -Hu•m DoN'T w•m '67 MERCURY . COLONY PARK STATION WAGON. luxu.y o~u;ppod plu• automatic transmission, power steering, pow•r brakes, Fae. tory air conditioning, radio and h•ater. A on• own•r car. lie. TXU-372 '68 COUGAR XR7 Coup•-A r•al leader in the luxu~ sports car fiald. Im- maculate condition, with automatic tfansmission, power staaring, powar brakes, radio, haatar, landau roof. Only 6000 actual mil as. Lic •. WXE· 1"91 '65 CONTINENTAL Convertible. Full luxury equipment includin9 full powar and factory air conditioning, attractive medium blue with match. ing interior. One owner trade in. Ba1utifully maintained. L;c. PCT-394 '66 OLDSMOBILE 98 o4 Door Hiidtop.·_ Equip'ped with all +h• luxury faatura1 in- cluding factory air, landau top. Local on• owner car with only 18,000 actual miles. It looks and drivas lika naw. lie. RZU-749 '67 COUGAR Hardtop coupe, aut.omatie transmission, radio, h•afar, pew· er steering , power brakes, landau roof plus many other extras. lie. U-Tl-083 '66 MERCURY Colony Park 9-passenger station wagOn, automatic trans· mission, radio, haataf, power 1taarinljlo power brakas, plus many othlir'.•lffres, O'l.ll owner. lie. TAZ-862 '65 MUSTANG Hardtop coupe, automatic transmission, radio and haatar, power steering. Lie. OXS-225 s3595 s3495 $2695 $2695 s2595 $1695 '65 CHEV. IMPALA $1595 Hardtop Coupe. Fully factory equipped, including •uto- matic_ transmission, radio, power st•arin9, ate. Ona of tha ·nicer can. lie. POE. ~ll:r • ' · T,. •llDY9 llllW c.tr1 ,,. • ......,._; llf 'M '"'"" "iu.. Mlolt .._. Mortw C.. ~ Hlf'ld eernr M'JD l'ectory W1rr8fll'r'. NEWPORT BEACH -USED CAR SELECTION 600 w. COAST HWY. -PHONE S48-ns1 - ~· 1969 MERCURY MARQUIS 1969 irHE MOST DISTINCTIVELY STYLED AUTOMOBILE SINCE THE LINCOLN CONTINENTAL- AND A PRICE YOU WILL LIKE .• ·• MERCURY PRICES START AT • • • $3322 MECURY COUGAR NEW & snu:: UNTAMED ••• THE COMPLETE LUXURY SPORTS CAR. 1969 MERCURY MONTEGO • Immediate Delivery • Large Selection : • Volume Prices THIS INTeRMEDIATE PRICED MER.CUR:( WAS THE SUCCESS. CAR OF 1968 AND NOW EVEN MORE SO IN '69. MONTEGO PRICES BEGIN AT $2665 ASK ABOUT OUR FREE MAINTENANCE AUTO-LEASE PLAN M ERCURY ---- - LI NCOLN 900 WEST COAST HIGHWAY NfWPORT BEACH 642-0981 Orange County's Ole/est Authorized Lincoln-Mercury Dealer • ' l I DAll.Y PILOT WEDNE~DAY ... "' ... -(<) (!O) Jony Dun,a.,. a KRAFT MUSIC HALL * Johnny C1r50n friar1' Roast led by Alan Kine !-.. ...., _, (C) (lO) .... AHti11 aw. (CJ (90) Rock \Id• tld Jim 8fftll ahow filrn 1 di,. d ttllir lltnt lldloll pld.ure, "Ice St.l&.t lllbra.. ~ 8 THE 6 O'CLOCK MOVIE * "SEPTEMBER AFFAIR" JOSEPH COTTEN AND JOAN FONTAINE! T ! .. U R ~ 0 A 'r DAYfillE MOVIES hire) '40 -Louis MtJW1 rt. JHn ltnllttt. '-rt Slndtt&. ll:IO CJ CQ ........... """" ..,,.. (lflulk:el) 'M--«telt .,_.It, Mlf· .;. [Plld!IL ll:I0.111 -.... (dHok) .. -c,.,, ,.... mc:Atr• ... htrl, -· ~ ... ft lhf" (tlM· °""' ...... Wit) ~Ywioltnt DI Ctrlo, l'tlllp t:00 • ....,... RtlWlf' (M9tftU) ''*' '(i6-a.11116t ltlM, til0r11 Holttll.. l:J08 (C) .,.. " ,...,. (otll'I ...... ti ..... CrW (..._ tidy) 'U--lob Hope, Jew lutlell Complete Prin.ting Service Top Quality -Fast Service ''''111111!11 642-4321 .................. 1 DR. KILDARE CHIPPER! Wtl'f ... AS A ·1 MAT TER OF ~TL HE ... WILL, Hf:'5 SOMEWl1ERl! IN THe .c J N~IGHSOfQ!HOOC'-~OTHIHG TO =t Gel 5Tf.A.Ml!D UP AIOUT, l LOOK, DOC -Hf:'S MY l<IP! l. DON'T HA't'f. 10 EXPLAIN 10 YOU OR AN'f90Df El5f •• THOUGH ••• 'ltlU KWOW KIOS. ! GORDO JUDGE PARKER MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS TI!ATS ME. LADS~ »:lGARTll HEMP, KING-OF 1HE JIBBET oJIXKEVSI_ ' J '. ii If ii • l'OST-MOIU'EM PUPPE I EEK OF THE FIRST MAGNITlJDE! ONE OiHE l'OP w.cHEA-TWEAKERS OF All TIMEI WHY, l'VE ll\IPPED NilRE TRAPS llWl A NEAR-stGHTEI> MUSKRAT!-MEN, I STAGE SOME O'THE FINESr MIP. · AIR O«lREOGAAPHV IN THE EST! J WHY, Rlll<S ROCK rn>M jl!l 1 MILES AWAY T'SEE ME li PERFORM!-AN' IN MY NlT, I USE ONLY THE TOP '<ICTl-ER •. CO-S'TARS! Mun AND JEf' MISS PEACH • -....-----·-.-----· ly Ken Bald AT Ht8 AUNT HAHNAH '~! TMAT'S WHERE H~'5 (i07 lO st! Wf'U. ~I: t1et A RI~ ... Lf:T Ml: SEf ••• wttf.T'S HI!'{ PHOHf NUMl!Jllll .•• ? By Harold Le Dow ))1 ....,"''""'nl" /.;.r<[ll?l ........ , .... .. ,• " ,,. . ~'..·@.:--:.• ly Tom K. Ryan lllEY TAK£ ll!E ™-1.S AN 'IOU TAl\E THE llCWS,EllY By Al Smith ly Men SPeCIAL -Three Indian Girls near Nez Perc9 National Park are visite.;l on "America's Wondft'- Jands -The Natlooal Parks" loaigb< at 7:30 on Channel 2. This iJ the tint of f<>\11' National Geo- graphic specials on various loplcs planned for tbiJ .......... TELEVISION VIEWS ' SF, Ironsides Have Problems SAN FRANCISCO -"It's a disaster," said "ll'O!lllde" prodµcer Cy Chermak, staring into a wine glass, darkly. "Look I've been filming on location for 2.5 yean and it's ALWAYS a disaster," i<lid Raymond Burr with a snarl "But I'll tell you what's ,MOi:tE disastrous th~ going on location -and that s gomg from the studio to the back lot." "Let's take jwt one disaster at a time," 30.id Cy. ••rugbt now, it's the weather ... " "Sorry, Cy, but that's not t!he only one," said the production manager. "The paddy wagon's tra~ mission i:s out and won't be reedy for tomorrow'• &hots." "You've GOT to be kidding!" said Cy. "I\'s re-- built and supposed to be simple to operate." "Well, jll!t gu get the simple people who said It was simple and put THEM in tile car," said Burr. "Every day I see hundreds of. heavy trucks go Voom! -right up the hills, but we haven't enough power to get across an intersection." THE SETT'ING FOR this disastrous conversa· tion was San Francisco's Blue Fox Restaurant across the street from what was once the old Hall ol Justice -now, alas, an empty lot. {The "Ironside'' set still features its han.dsome, rounded·top win- dows.) Time: 11 p.m. Weather: a tyj>ical night in the city -foggy. HJf it's socked~ tomorrow, the company stays Inside and Ray goes back to Hollywood," said Cy. "Look -give me just two blocks visibility in <he fog and a hand held camera and do you know what I 'll get you? I'll get you San Francisco!" said Richard Colla, the spirited young man who is di· reeling seven °lronsides" episodes this season. .. , DON'T APPROVE of the company rolling a.round town looking for picturesque little intersec- tions. I'd rather have one shot of Burr's face than all the scenery in San Francisco," said Cy. "I talked to Universal this afternoon ," some- one said, brtghUy, "And they told me it'll be clear tomorrow !" ''HAI " GRUNTED BURR. 11I've stood ln the pouring rain and talked to the studio weather d .. partment with the water running off my nose and bad them tell me the sun was shining. Why .. k the studio about it? All it takes is an idiot t.o lift the window here tomorrow morning, look up at th• goddamn Ed sky, and pull his head back in the win- dow . '' THE NEXT MORNING I raised my own win- dow, put my head out, and looked up at <he sky. It was love1y weather -just as it always is this time or year -Ml of dense mist, circling seagulls and the sound of fog horns. I remembered lo pull my heed back in. The time wa1 7 a.m. Already Colla and his cam- era crew were out at some picturesque lltle inter .. section photographing the atmosphere; the produo- tion manager was in the garage nursing his ttaJl5.. mission: Burr was asleep at the Marl< Hopkins ; Cy was airborne with bis wife and --In-law; and I went back to bed. Dennis the Memree ~··w I0 -13 -· -·~ -....---. -----·. . . DAILY PILOT Wedntsday October 23 1968 liiliiiiiililiilillmii ........ iiiii'liiiiiillii'iiiiil. ................. ~1111111111 ........................................................................ (\ Everyone Has You C.n S.I It, Something Th•I Find It, T Nd• It Someone El•• W•nfs-w.,u. 1 Want Ad THE 81GGES'J' SINGLE /llAllKE'J'PL4CE ON 'l'BE ORANGE COAS'l'-PBONE DIRECI' 142-587a m HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi Goner•I 1000 Gonerol 1000 Newport llNch 1200 Huntington Buch 1400 Huntington a..ch 1400 i ON~~~:!s H~!~s!v2~~LE SWBIBIGAIT BeautHul Home OPEN ~~ ~~~ B•9 F•mlly ~ a~e~~~s~ ';!':i..~· ;..*.'~ RANCHO LA CUESTA, in Huntington Beach, has RlJS11( ·bi Jovel)' 1rv1ne ~ Mr. Rokot. 5rm~~m'l.dze mt~ T~ :ho tove the.::.~ I =-=1612=::°';:._;;;:== th best al in 3BR,2BAh !nth tir wllhctrcwrdrlv.wa,y Thun.&Sun.1·5 MARIW:llt Oa1hollc-.... $.'e,,.. IU<omtakoloa&w"""ln FountalnV•lloy 1410 e v ues a ome e en e A prioeletm look wtth • b.ld;et • muu Owner uxioul u cifu • the -.n4 or alt quletly at the area. price tag 1.ufte mry Uvinl == BROADMOOR try 10% down. ocee.n'1 edge to watch the WESTMONT Home, 3 BR, ~I The quality oonstniction includes all kitchen built-room witb. l!l(l8cloul' wtndowa. Sav1'nas nd lo n Orange CDut ~ sun come up Ol' &tip into the ba + bonut room. Sall.' ins, fireplace, fully carpeted, shake roof, concrete ,,_. ond -air ' ~ ~ed HARIQR VIEW I a :132 M-mto. CdM """"' -" .. en tide. You'll love $26,300 "' ""' $210/m<> driveway, large lol.i. Walking distance to Public beat. Lorge m.-bedroom with 1,~-Tri·IAvel Model tbl• -ul brand """ """'81 Beach. with genf!r'OUI cloeet and new~"' M2..COOO 3 BR Back Bay home 2418 4 bedroom, 2 bl.th "House ========- . mh wardrobe spe.o!'. Every gour. $43 500 Executive 4 Bedroom Siem Vbta, priced to aell and Home'' Mapllne award Laguna 1 .. ch 170!i (Located at Hamilton & B ard) met wt.! love this exci~ Call Kent ~ B d w· at $32,500. Call Paul Nordin winner. Its charming and BY OWNER. ' BR l BA. I $25,050 kitc:beri with it• elepnt cu. ~· 54().8812 Truly • 3300 sq. ~. U CJtf' lie 882.s&U or 382-5493 ior ap. you can walk to tlW' betlcb lara deck bl! . FHA· VA· Convention1I inet&, built·tn ~. oven &..1•••o._ California Villa Nice East M&&nolla St. b!a· po1ntment to see from here. There'• an all e • aut. 'fltw CeM ffl..lm _.._, ~ 10 • ' and d.lshwaaher. Larp pi& ~ , n. lion. Well-blt older home oo 3 BR, Condominium, The &1au kitchen with GE built· :" a-:StacaW~~· I ..,....,..,. .... ...,...,..,..,.., Jfw.ped and 1&Jdcaped en-2500 Wevecrest Drive wide lot. 3 8dnn.s .k large Bluffs. Near CdM HJ ldw:lol. in~. cozy fireplace BIG 5 MESA DEL MAR , ... llsled, thb """'""' 500 Plan often 5 big bedrooms, 3 be.tbs, all the extra cmvenienceia like dishv.uher, l'!-tc. Oversized cowred J>ll.· tio. double 1&ocet11 ror BOAT or 1RAil..ER storage. Acres cd g:re.S&- ed ~ area. Ea!!Y to buy with NO DOWN FHA or VA financing. lloa!ly ....,,,, Qoll to .... ~COATS ~ WAL'°LACE REALTORS -..... ~ ..... 141- IOpon Eveningol POOL HOME • $21,750 Here la your dlanoe to take adVBnblge cl an oft«UQn prioe on a large ttlree bed· room, 2 be.lhll, POClL home. CkJse to shopPing, llChools and pe.rlts. $138 per month includes principle And in· '"""'· 203 WESI'OLlFF DRIVE 64&-7711 Open Eves. Has Individuality This 3 BR channe:!' is a must see! Solidly OOilt & beeutiful- ly kept. used brick ~la.ee, gleaming ~-ood noon. good doeet spe.oe. Lovely e1ec1rlc built-m kitchen, car- pet!! & drapes, 3)' covered patio A fenced yard. Ea.st· ,;de --Only $27.~ )ri:C I' \U.-1111111 ~t:.\11 \ Ill\\ H ~ A l T' c 11 1003 Baker, C.M. $22,000 COSTA MESA 4 BEDR.OCThfS • IZ full be.the:, newly palnled inside. MaJn.. tenanee free exterior. gar- age. Wil.L TRY G.l. or FHA. PROUDLY clooed bod< ,,.ro • a ..,.. Coron• dol Mor dtnJng nn, """ $18,000. Be Pri patio. $25,900. 6'H1801 · ta enjoy winter -and L•guno leech 170~ I We offer this sparlding 3 Bed-dise for the dilldten. 'Ib1s AJR.()l{rn;S Wll.O)ME) an Mrl,y bird· call now. eves, ~16ll ext 2UT days. wall to wall carpeting, terae-'°""'''*bath,,. 1.,1,...,.. otu.. ....,._ "'""° ••• DAVE GAMBILL Graham Realty 2 BR, ""'· 11,,_ liv. rm. A «I,...,.'"""-""'" ond H1ndymon Spocl•l1 Der lot with room for 00.t plastl!ftd home In the UP-644-0020 Near N.B. Post Ofc. 646-2414 din. rm,, fpl., elee. ldtch. land.captnr. A l"e8l 6e&ch Income Units ar trailer .• New carpetibi PER BAY 1* inde!d a ft-l'.::::::=~=====l'.~~~~==~~~I Can build anothtt unJ.t.. buy at ;fuat $25,235. No down Loe. on OcMnS!deotHwy, 15~ • All this plus l2x16 worit· matbtff value at On l y $23,SOO. <>.mer 00-4441 to Vets, er nIA and Qm.. yds trom Beach. 4 tp Apt , ahop .• Just $21,0XI. $1.3XI: $28,:m! Submit FHA or VA Coste Mas• 1100 BLUFFS area; 3 BR. 2 ventlonal terma. nf.540-Z7S1 units. nttds paint "' ~ down FHA. T•'~"""~· •!1!1~•11t l 3 EH·MAC·U·LIT """'' "°"'0" """ 00 ""'' -=":::"':.:.·--,==~--~co~~~ r' Duplex $21,000 By ....... w .... ,.$-0055 ON TOP PRESTIGE Bullders/Develop'rs o..,, •own c1e .... ""'"""· 2 Dandy ""'" ., Nowport ======= $31,995. 1 BR'""""· >hlngle uo.ooo ANNUALLY. Prtcc and pride ot C>Ylnel'Ship can You'll.be impressed with thls Heights district. Partly fur.. Newport Hgtt. 121.0 ~pl~ ~~~.a=-:: :sS~oN REALTY ~l be yours 1n this cboiCe Mf!!lll Go to Noc1hwe&t comer Fair-3 BR with separate 1amij.y nished. Could be converted :.:.:;;.!;::;..:..:,;,,;.=c_c_= 985 So 0.st la Verde location. 4 large bed· view Road A &mftower 11% room. 1%. be.th OOme. Spark· lo 4 Bedroom, 2 be.th heme 2 $ty. Cana Cod w/w carpetl, pad + drape11, 1----·--·-~"""'-- rooma, 3 baths. • Formal acre L"Of1lel' (752' Fairview Una: built-In kitchen, larp and add amth« unlt -r-alOOJp atone frplc, blt • in RENTALS I dining rocm .• Used bride 22DL11ti. MM55i Road & 4fl9' SunfloweT). aiz.ed bedrooms, like -new 646-7171 546-2313 Giant 2 st)' manalon on~ elect. t'8l1i'9 & oven, dish-Houses Fumlshld """"'-Doll 646-ll&:l $ 1 00 S ~ high pti. """'" manl=ed com.,, 3 lg. bedma • o.n ......,., pool-oixed yanl wtth --------firf!p!Jloe Is width of largt! • q. · dl.ooDdra lawn with aprink-+ family room. Imnacula.te laz"P Victory gerden, block Gener el 2000 1 ::;:.::.,;,~,;.":: Your friends Will Coll hnmedlo .. lyl 1...,,w.-,.,.,.,.&....,... --mmoveln.Pric:ed Wlllt.,.,.,dlll • ..,.....v. •ONWATER* edia ·Newport eN.tor tncluded !n low price for Im.mediate ale -Now no down • $1258/mo. lnduding mLAR .. G-E FA ... MIL' Y? Wonder ., $>4~,900 • VA O< FHA temw. ·-------mly·.138,000. "lllNC" =---=: .=...! 1-=Fumllhed="'=C4=.M=. =~n .. '!"=) =~=USE=n=I i:.:;:.,. "'°;,;:!,,th• H;':'=.,~~ Vlc!orl1 S-=. 8.:.~·~2~~ 1-':\SPRING $><9_....,,_, Rontolo to Shiro 2005 ..... "'Mesa Vml<. 5,,,:;. • """"°"'·'""....,,Pace-646-8811 -----w.nr .. Bl'""' Sd>ooL $0 ...... REALTY DIVORCEE -ta """'I _ 3 ......... _ ,.n ___ ,_ ..... setter. 1 ....... --Md 1iboY.-J t<m Baker, C.M. &tS-5440 Down GI or low down to all. W '"AN'YTI:M!:" home w/ume 1n t'XChana:e ........... UU.U"->--...... -,: '""""" "">" ... _...., 1 ,,..,.~~"!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I 962-4-tn (opei eve11.) 546-8103 far -lnn c:b1ld ... _ I family room All . led like a model. Near Dl!NI car-1~ • "lUNG" .... -~ . & ""'"""".d. -16~ pool :"andandout. ~= 3 FOR 1 , ... \SPRING a:::::::~~~:; 3 FAMILY GROWING! Seo ~~Bet. >-I , =~~!:1~~ =~ by the transferftd OYmer to Homecc::'d Income Contemporary home 11!ady to , e.:'a.• ~,!!:!¥ ~~· 1p~ifil~~~ ~~ean !:m'~ ~~ ~ Cost• Meu 2100 tenance landscaping.. $42,500 a(veeyle low rl$3hl.~,. ( ~~~--~~ AREAPWS move into. 'I\vo king ai1.t! •• ,,,..,.., ~~ Famil;y room, 1crmal dining 2 BR Rm boU99 Ii: pr- o SWo Y 0 ~• ·-~· BR, 2 ho, dre"lng rm. U I k room, oloctronlo °""' (bal<-'"" """°" & "'-· $135• 2~~--tllunltand $38900 -·10~ d '629u·~BI d CM nversity Par 1237 "" 646-7171 546-2313 • .....uiu.-11 ren .a ' -••:1 -,o own. ~........ v ., . . • oake 1n 3 minutrel). 3 C8t' month + '50. deaning dt-======~ 642 7777 SOxl20 lot fur further income CORBIN-MARTIN IMMAC -Llk• """ 3 BR. 2 TOWN HOUSES K"'i'· Hu"' 113 •=· pn> pooit. iw.....,,, """"""· ~""" ._T_......___:. potentiality. BE ~ YOUR REALTORS ba in beautiful Monticello e I BR-Den .h.o..... fessimally 1~....1-......a adults ooly. 646-5631 THE~EAL ESTATER S john macnab .......,.. ~Blvd., C.M. WAY ro SECUR.rI'Y. , . oo-..t', cm -_..,com· =========I ~ EvM. 3036 E. Coe1t Hwy, CdM ~.F~~!:u Rf~w:, prem Jot. Lg liv room plete~~~ lot on 00-de-Mel• Del Mir 2105 $500 DREAM COTT AGE 675-1662 Anytime S23,500 .. c. ~~ "'°""" · WW Dn. !or thill most •----· _ wlfurn. • 3 BR-Atrium Xtra lg, cem •crlfice for $49,500. CLEAN I Br. hua:e closet &: ••••~ ANXIOUS -patio. Fut -. $27,,.. OPEN SUN 12"4 •-<---o. d latehmnenestl«lonHUGE ORANGE COUNTY'S NO BROKERS Comm! e4 BR2%BAiFPLotaol Oct 27th ,...,._e. --~· yar • wr "" .... ·end otroet LARGEST 2 BR HOME Adult.. $135. Month . RIANCH SlZED U'1ng room 293 E Wood Doors. patio, double Owner -Sale. CI e an Xtras. Faat poss. $28,900 or call REE'VES REALTY 67J...l!E3 afte'r 5. "'"' ,,,.,..., -·me . 17th St. 646-4494 • .,..... Righi"' town. East.Ide 3 Br. P'u• !am. 1~ DOUG JOY, AGENT 536-81117 or...._,.,,.,.,. flS 850 ha.. Nr IC'hb. Good tine'& Newport Beech 2200 BAYFRONT HOMES BIG KITCHEN wtth built-PARK UDO ~ • avail ,,.._1331 833-05()4 BAYFRONT IDfl'E-wtlh ::..,"""...: .~ ~ DUPLEX EASTSIDE • ,.,,,,.. 3 .,.1-======== OWNER'S SURPLUS! •:,,R. '* ... :" ,'td. pool; Pier A:~ trom $86.!iO:I • . 2 BR each side, hardwood plua family rm., 1% bath, Coron• del Mer 1250 Skip to the bnd!. trom tb1t ·pr.; Cell •• am. area. 5BEDROOM-7Ift Ba: his NEW CARPETS On!! at~ most deluxe tri· ftoort, double garqe, good Bri ck 1rplc. W/W -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; unwanted, clean 4 BR Ii; m..ssu daya; 646-1002 or oa ~ 'I'HROtx;.H'roUT.NODOWN level Condominiwru 1n thia ..,._.......:.,• locati-. $~.ooo t' J t 11 t d. • ~ •. ,,~~t t ...... u.n ........._ 213: 434-3$4.Eves. troot, Pier and Slip. ~~ V!:l'S Ii: $21,$() F Ut.L N.B. developme'it IH-turing .,,_......, vu "" cari>e mg. us a e Want The Best? _, . ..,. a _.,,.-,. vuo:n ==~--~-~ Ba,ygide. mplit·level. i-tio -ffiICE. 3 BR, den &: built-in bar. A with tl!m'la. FHA tenm. Agent 644.ffi32 new carpeting,~. de-OCEAN View, 4 Br., dplx. on1y $119,liOO. decorator's delight Wells-McCerdlt, Rltr1. NEW Duplex, 2 br,, bltrui, ,...~~ Present • . . aired built-1.!:w l.nctudini dilb-~ter or )Tb'. Ioa; par. Call for '""'*•liuent. ~ . 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. etc. Garages. Orange Aw. , ... uruua del. Mar'a loveliest 'Ml!he1. y212"'. ~~ turnEv,.· 548-7729 Eves. 644-0084-at Knox, C.~f. OWNER 3 BR booi.e + Income Apt, Pacific 9XJr"!ll Realty I :===w=·~====ol 881 il),!l ~!~s!~ 101 ~-i-t-1hl mR BACK BAY. =~ast Side, FHA.CI, 3 :.~ 1:-~ n: : 5.16-88!K Eves. 5J6.T327 Bey1horu 2225 Mk'C.'O Real.Qr Co. Bldg.. 56-9mrroo Harbor Bl.~met? c%MPNl¢ ~ ~CRE $3j br, 2 be, tmy rm, frpl., bit· $74·~ by A " BR. 2 be.th. AV&ll now thru Newport Bee.ch ' ()pm till 9 PM * 642.1771 Anytime* Prestige Bade ~Y :!.! in!!, crpts, drps, huge bck Delan7; Re1l~~t1te 3 BR Jt11e 15. Pvt beech, mnall L /P 1 Homo "'· •''' ''" 12"500 · "828E Condominium boetollt>. 1275·....,..,2861 111.,.111111.._"~--.--..... HM 00 Spacious bedrooms, 2 batha. 646-0033 • O:laat Hwy., CdM BayshQre Dr., NB • CHOICE MESA VERDE New Custom Listinn Heer living room overlook! 67Jmo VACANT. OWner 986'1. l-=::'::=======I f NEIGHBORHOOD. Only $235 Fabulous big home :ear the gorgeous eroorxfs. 2 !ire-2 -I BR Houa" & 5 ga.ni.gea, ~!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!! "Make any deal." $19,J'JO B•lbol 2300 IM14 Vista Del Oro _ .. ""' 2 hdroorns monthly for neat large 4 & Mes Verde' Country Clm pltweS • one in a delightlW room for I more tmlt. East Lido l1le 2ncludes ~.drapes, re- lam.ily room with fUll,y equip.. with pool CABANA BBQ&: den. FomW dining room. Side C.M. By owner. $20,800 I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;;3;;51 frigerator, wuber, dryer Ii: OOPLEX, comp. renovated. 2 ped pool. VaCM t . q\lick pos.. BAR • ~ great 1~ enter-Room tor pool. 54Q.17ro 54&--S'l24 I• cluN!OUM & awimming prlv-BR. Abeolutely clwi. Ad. "''''""" & ,,.,,.,. wtll .... talnlng ... "' .. _Hu TARBELL, VALUM!LE R-2"""" 2..... layfront Duplex "'"'" ulto, "" pell. 673-7l!il optloo to buy. Allking $29,500. the d,,_.,.,_. Nie ~......;-,_7!2j95ij;5:MH"-AjiR;'jB~Oi;R-'y-I !w~/!~"':._'_!'c,~l~g•~tocd~';lo~l.~SELL-3 BR 2 Ba Rex IL. Hodges Rlty 841·25Z KfNTAL~ ~~.,._,,. ....., -...,._-~ NOW $17,500. 962-5935 • upper, 2 BR, 1 Ba H U f ~ 5'6·5810 ""' ...... w. can *"'de-OPEN DAILY """"· 2 F'll>lo. fenced. bey-KllH)•Slzecl Yard outeo n urnllhecl fC.~14!~atRHE"""",~~ ~t.ail.1! scg.53110 219 Jasmine, CdM Mesa Del Mar 1 IDS ::;!. ~;:::; ~.: =: 3 ~t,2 =~e::.1-Ge-••_•_1_1 ____ 3000 __ 1 ~-•o.v,.-Cne1rcinem1• .......... 1 Prime beac~ loc. No new f1· $27,250 • 3 BR. Welker Reelty 3 BR 2 bathl, w / w Ptrlect: tar one or hllo adulb!:. """"~ Thill excitingly crMted tone 3336 ce.rptU l <h.pes, all larse Maximum prtvacy end Jovp,l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""I LLEGE REALTY nandng neeeuary. 3 BR :i features luah tropical gar-Vta Udo 615-5200 rooma. The best buy kt town carpettng, dr8pes. ntn. 1Y VkY/. Custom extras. Dbl 4 BIDROOM _ $23,'l!JO 1500 AdMJIS 11 H1rtlor,CM. baths + family, bit-Ina, fire-dens, SUlTOWlded by 8Pedal tod~ at only $21,500. Gl ot a harp , I m m e d I• t e gar w/elec door opener, ''PRIVATE ORCHARD" pla~. 3 car gar. o.w.c. 2nd UNIQUE BAYFRONT FHA tema. poueuion. Prime area. $225 V •-~-~ 900 Mela Verde 4 Br $24 000 TD or trade for income. patio decking. Home newly 91' Ncrth Bayfront, 3 Bd, p I Jo R I mmit!i. Alt. SM-4141 ORANGE COUNTY'S eey euy .............. 'fi, _,, d.. fruit tl'e'e& PaI1r; like yard. . . , Rl ~39'l8 Thoe 644-painted, w/xl.nt carpeting, 3 ha Pi eu nes ea ty LARGEST 644-1133 EvH: 644-2626 2 ha""'-Ev..y room on In-Rmt-lilc• ""'"""" *"·LACHENM. YE""'R kltdo. blln>, "1>tc. Can be a.'.. t" & o~: eoo,,.ou. IM1-1'116 Ev... 536-mt $110: 2 BR., lenc:ed yd., ... I~~~~~ vitation to ap8Ce and corn· Lovely neatly maintained txrdwed .ua;, ett. urmitlM. pvt 3 rq:e; Move, avibble nowt 293 E. 17th St, 646-4494 1: fort. Formal dining room land9Caplng, mature plants, home in t!.:.' ~ 1: garden. 1 · atDr)'. Dt.5,00) UN I JS Broker 53M1980 LEISURE LIVING c..,,....i • ....., '"""" .,,: "11y"" & ~ 2 ""~:_!am· F•mily Plonned , .c•e;;.lopm=cc"';;.'..;642-.;;..;5496...;,;.. __ ,.,:·~ ~ ""'si."9000 $166: 3 BR. 2 ho. I-Pia. $15,950 tn this Pool he.me with ~ tru. 540-1721 room. ••:1 no UllWn GI 4 BR & 2 baths. large ash 1 • Net better than 12% ft'tUrn Bltna, w/w, encl. Iara&•· rna.intmance ·--i and~i..t.t TARBELL, ~"11~cbvn to non·vets. panelled Wnib' room with Me11 V.,.de 1110 H I Pi,750. Better ~l May <l1UdrenOK.Bkr.534«BJ ;,cuu .._ oJ'N" ,.., 1c.c...;_.;.c..;.;.. __ .;..:..;..: unt ngton Be1ch 1400 tnd lighting. 3 &rooms. Den 2955 HARBOR TARBELL, 2955 Harbor ~ brick fir@place, beau. 3 BR, Iind&caped, all new e. $135; 2 m clzplex. Fenced Comlortablfl A: rozy 2 BR Eastside home. 1 + bath- r00!1UI. service porch. new carpeting &: drapes, large: kitchen in Immaculate ron· dltion. Ideal tor retired ~ le. call MO-ll51 (opl'l'I eves) Hertiage Reel Estate "' 4th Bedroom, 211 Betha, STORAGE I! 'RAGE litul Y""' w;th 32' -kitdo•n cab•. bit-in• & tloN SOL VISTA SLATE.S REALTT yd., ..,...., W/w, olnopec, ~d""'e 'a"' .... ~.:;,~'~. . U'A DAVIDSON Realtu $53,500 • covering. New upgraded f BR, 2 ba.th!I, cpts/df'Pll &IT~l.9 Dire&. 962-73891;;red=""'=·;;--=·,.,-,,...,::-==-I ., ·--~ .. , Pele Barrell Riiy. """'t In ,.,m. liv rm. hdwd ..... AM/FM thruoot. REPOS-YACANT $135: 'BR .. !mc.di<f.Sfov•, $31,"'l. $20 MONTH FOR $38,500 mMtor be<frm, p'" •II• d ~·---~ Onl _total "''*" •«Vke pordJ. r--vw11e1· tran .... erTer • take OV• Y .,_. down l'JO 2nd B-~ .,, -JEAN SMITH, 400 North Newport Blvd. NB \..ll\Uitry living at it's best. ltm Westcllff Dr. 642-5.200 den, child'd rm comp) er th1a good FHA loan at 4 BR&. In very deatra~ =,__,...,·~='=--=-,"~~! REALTOR ~~-Hoee ~tal! .. .'.,...,,, ~1:i~~withaviewl.!!!!R~E.."!A~L~!!!!ES~T"!A"!TE~""' fo~~1ni'ac~.~9t~ $IM/mo.' area. ':~;3 ~~ ~t~ ~~ ~ ru ArJzo La !1;2"'692 BRASHEAR REAL TY HAFFOAL REAL TY 400 E . 17th, C.M. 646-3256 i:.A.etr~ ...... 2750 Harbor lB. CM SALESMEN na . 847-8531 Eves. 5'11·2442 "Homes to Match Income" <11.lldl'l!tl CIC. Bkr. ~ fn.,500 • No Dn GI 3 bedrooms, 2 b&.thll, seperate dining room. lovell)' tiled " Paneled ltitcben ......... pi•" ord'!f. 54().lraJ TARBELL, 2955 Harbor Dover Shores' Now"! Eastside, C.M. -~ Ev• • ....,.., Nowport BHch 1200 37«1-W._ 812-441! otl• MiQ 3100 ....,.. .. teway, pool o:oort N"" 0 ,.,,c1,., 3 Bedrooms TRY OFFER Plenty at ,_ time, good 1-~------1 3 PWS POOi. yard. Completel.Y 1'll!"N de-1~ batha, S2t 500 ' 3 BR Beach house nr. Bay cornm!Mion l!IPlit. , + bonua BESI' Vlew tn The Blutfa! tU~'t 1r ~e;;; ~'. 2 BR. l'iii Ba. :i mr pr. Lra l!'lgn. 4 BR 3 bath. ~ Georg Willi · ' Rltr Spacious lge Uving rm, fue. plan. All inquiries confident· Overlooking Bay. 3 br, 3 ba. HIW ftocn, FIA heait, bit-Im. drapH:; tleestOM p at lo fDd yrd. B6Ck s.r,r area. No home by Ivan Well.!I. Will be 67J...4350 e ~·613-1564 place, Lee lot. $39,500. 121.l. _$4.l-'-.ooo __ Own_._6#-017 __ 8 __ 1 $39.50 to vebi or 5ow down w1B8Q plt. p:ioo Down pm m; mo. 548«i23 ~ted in early I>ecem-· 81lboe Real Estate Co. Ernie Clev1l1nd, Rltr PCX>L tor O\ristma11: tpl., 2 to anycme. Unbelievable only tncl. all cloalna c 0 at a . ~J"""BR"°'"l"""'h<"lh..---q,<1,..,.-/"°"""-I Dial &42-5618 far RESULTS ~· J. Ward C.o. &t6-lfM White ~! 700 E. ~RI~~~ Balboa ~: B":"~ c~19 :·. ;i:;, p;:. 's':.~ J23~ anytime ~ = baL ol $11,900. =}-:: ~~~ ~ l. 10000.neral 1000General tOOOGeneral 10006-ner•I 1000Gener1I IOOOG ... ral 1000 ~-N_o_w_1_s_T_H_E_T_IM_E.....,.TP...,...B_u_v __ ~~ HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE 842-4455 OPl"OSITa 0 I I 7682 ldlfttff' MUNTIN•ttlft c•NTI• pel t'tfl 119' WILLING TO DO SOMI HOMIWOlK7 Thi.I 3 bedroom. 2 bath home la in need of paint and • few amall repair1 but well worth the price of $13,750. J...arge kitchen. double prage for Dad, Fenced yard for Kid!!. C:OZT 2 IEDlOOM C:O"AGI on large R·3 lot Just 3 bl ockt from OO!&n Md near downtown Huntington Stach. Priced for quick u.le at 518,000. Better H\lrTYI WARM POOL 18x36 HNttid and fllw.4. Hua:• )ant. Te:t'TUJc for Jtiaur. Uv1J21. We'll throw the HOUie in Freel $6'5 DOWN ,.,,,,...,,.,. ....... -....... "'"' -brlclt ~ -....... """"-Ill end oul Quiet tre:.1tnf!d t1net. Cc. to lbopplnc ind new pu-k tor kidL DO YOU NDD l00M7 We have the boml tor you.1 ~ ~-. 2 bathl,, double ftreplace, 2,600 ICl\W"'t feet 75JC170 ft. )oL Derp pU. c:&r1'fb alld ~-throuahout. FIXH·Url'll • Dtng-Bat tor .omeont wtlh taleit. lmqlnation, rood credit, who want• the •te(l.l ot. a Utetlme. ,,_....ope.er~ Oil & lalp CCJrMt lot with 3 btdroorm, family room. oove.N'd iatlo ~th S-B-Q. Priced undu market. : k'~ :, A NEW RICORD • NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE--646-7711 2043 We1tcllff Dr. et Irvine $7500 llDUC:TION Optn Evaningt Illness forcet1 •Ille of tbil luxurlou11 Ba)'Cl'f'sl home. Four 1pecioua bedroom8, :J Qufffl 111.::ed blltha magnlfl:cent swlmmlng pool. Wu $62,000, NOW ONLY $45,COO! C&ll for appointment Today. Sumblt your 11maller home ln tradt. CORONA DR MAl -DANDY DUPUX Walk to beach and •hops. Coiy rront home newly decora~ with beamed ceil- lnp and f.ireplace. Large: 2 bedrom a.pa.rtment &lao haa beamed ttllinp and com· plete::ly carpeted. Plua -nice gue1t room and bath. Doublfl prqe -each unit ii complttely furnished -owner leavln1 area. Mtat sell! IA Y¢UST ARIA ' B«trooma, 3 Baths In&m ~ built for a d1.c:r1mmatln2 encuUve and hit ckttn1na famlly. Dt!JabUUl decor. J..arre Hvln( room, huae (amlly room, 2 fire- pl&cn and w.t l.r. Located on atreet ol. expenalve homes. U you can afford the SM,000 Price Rance:. yuu'd bettu see thil to41,y. Submit your amalltr home on our 1uent1tff trade plaD. WATllFRONT MANSION Owner trand'm"'td! Luxurlou. ' bedroom. with ldnplze muttr 1ultt. 3 b&tht. all buUt-ln a~ for MQ' living and V1tttt.alnln1. Abtolutely Unmaculate. Submit. )'OW' am&ll~ homt: on our cuara.nW. aa.la plan. Onb' $49,950. COST A MESA OFFICE 545-9491 2790 HAUOl;;,,;;l;;;;LY;.::D~. -----...::::~~= $500 DlliM CO"AGI for this moet immaculate home nntied on HUGE LOT on dead end 1tred. RANCH SIZED livina room WI.th mualve tl~Iace. BtG. BIG KITCHEN :with bullt. Ina and 3 over1lzed bedroom1 and 2 betha. tinrurlout NEW CARPETS nfROUGH· OUT. NO DOWN VETS I $21,900 FULL PRICE. FIX'l UP You handy pe<>pll'l that want the Buy of the Seuoa! LARGE COJtNER LOT. I BEDROOMS, FAMD..Y ROOM, COVERED PAnO • B..B.Q. All thil with IOC)d credit for ONLY $17,900 TOTAL PRICE. . $100 DOWN if you qu.1uty tor thb CHOICE C.O.t& J491. EAST Sll>E LOCATroN. Bil' ~ rooma + 2 bathl: wttb built in Jdtcben 'Witb LOADS 01' CUPBOARDS. Cbdaua .... ,.,... with 1up co~ PAno t.r no1 ColllllUlla tMnt. OWNl:ll iu:. TIRING A .ANIIOt.fSlll u.c:K llAY ausnc b8vy ah&ke root beauty. aD um 6 ~ 3 bis"~ wttb PRlVAft snJDY. Tremmdoul GAlU>EN VIEW 1n aeduded a.rte. of o.ta MN&.. ~ESPER­ .A.TE ~r ANXIOUS TO SELL AT A RIDJCUt.OUS ~900 wltb Ttr'flDc Ttmw. VACANT!ll .. •• Walker & Lee Sold 154 Resale Homes In One Weeki -- • \' I ---~ ---------~ ~ .. ~--·~--~--- ---·-----'""-------------~------'·-'-----'----"'-"--''-''-".0....:-'--'-~~~~...:JC. Don't iust sir ·. there! Grab hold of the BIG action today! Dial Direct: 642-5678 Just say: "CHARGE IT!'' · fNerth Ce1111ty, 540.1uo. toll free! j IT'S EASY TO · PINCH PENNIES-EVEN DOLLARS PENNY · PINC HER ·wANT ADS NEW-LOW-RATE 3 LINES ~ ·l TIMES $2.00 ~ IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! Pumllvro IOOO ,.._ & 0.,.... lllO Olllw Pumlturo I010 lltd1e dlO Olllw ·~-I I011 Tolovtsi... aGI St.re lqul,_nt I012 H~I & ·-ft10 Colo, --8014 _ hr lqul,....nt IOU T ... ....._ l2IO H1•1hold Oooc11 . 8020 c.m.re1 & lt1ulpment llOO Awl•-1100 Hollby ........ -Antlq-1110 Sporilnt GOMo llOO lowtnt Mlchl-1120 11-11rw, ._ NIO Mutlul •-1125 MINOll•-MOO e EACH ITEM MUST Bl! PRICED e e NO ITIM OVlll SS0 e NO COMMlllCIAL PlllMI e e NO COl'Y CHANG IS e NO AlllllVIA T10NI e Let PILOT PENNY PINCHER Want Ads Work for YOUI ' " I Daily Pilof Clauifieil CLASSIFIED INDEX Houtt-Regulation1-Deacllin•1 EftNORl1 Advertl•rw 1hould fltleok Ul9'r a.• ••111 and Nport lnuntdlately .,,..,.. or ml1Clu11floiitl1n1. THI DAILV PILOT aNUM .. ll1blltty for'"""' 1nty to tn• 11rt1nt ef putll11hlnt th• alfvt'rt*m1nt MM'Mtly f"' time. DEAD LI NI FOR COPY AND Kll.l.ll 1:90 P.M . "'' dQ' MfoN publloatlan, dlM!pt fet W11ll1nd Edition 1nd Mand•)' ..Uons whan oloel"I itme 11 l :IO P.M. l'rlday. VDU MUIT HAV• KILL NUM8!1'tl When kllllng an Id Moau .. et' 11ulck NIUltt, be 1ur1 to m1k1 1 r.oord of the klll number 9lvtin you b)' your ell takll' 11 varlflci.tlon of )"tur .. 11. • Every effort II made M klll •r corNCt 1 new 1d th1t hQ been •"'•1'9d, but w. oan· not guar1nt" to do .. until the ad h11 IPPlll'ff In the,.,.,.. DIME-A-LIN• Ada,,.. .trlotly ca1h In adv•noe by rn1ll er at any one of 1ur otflota. NO phone Ordl,._ The DAILV PILOT ,.. .. l'V .. thli right t• •l••lfy, edit. HftMf' ., """" ... ,. ., .... ,.. ttaement. and to ohlinge lb ,...._ •nd reoutatlone without pri.r notlo.. AdvertlMre m•y plaH their ade by telephon .. DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 Huntington Bach 5-40-1220 Loguno Bach 494-9466 Phones Are Open 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m. 9 to Noon S•turdey-Clos.d Sundey CLAlllll'llE.D COUNTIEftl .,.. laeatod •• follow.1 2211 Wht ..... htlkua4, N_,_. ...._ J!t WW a., 5'Net, C... ..... Jot ,JM StNet, H•11th1wr-1 IMcll. 222 ,..... A.,._., Leta11e IMcll. l :IGol:JO bupt. llt. I S.. Mall Addre•: •ox 1171. Newport •ea.oh, Callf. HOUSES FOR SALE Gl:N•IU.L 1 ... COSTA M•SA llM MllA DEL M.t.a 111111 MllA VlltDI 1111 COLLl!Cll l"AltK lllf NIWl"OllT alA.CH IHI NIWl"ORT HllGHTS lfll IALIOA COVIS ins NEWl"OltT SHOltll 11:11 IAYClllST Im IAYSHOltlf lnl DOVElt SHOllD 1D7 '#ISTCLll"" t1tt NAltlOlt HIOHLANOI IUI UNIVl"ltSIT'I' l'Altl 1W IRVIHI! lDI IAClt IA.Y 1t41 IASTILU:<I' nu IRVINI TlltltACI U4S CORONA OIL MAit UM IALIOA l"ININSULJi 1 .. Ill.CON IAY Ulll l .. Y ISL.ANOS l:IJ41 LIDO ISLI 1:111 IALIOA ISLAJolD l:W HUNTINGTON llACN 1• HUNTINGTON H .. AIOUll 1*" ,.OUNTAIN VALUY 1•11 Sl.U. alACH 14N SUNSIT llACH 14" OAllOl!N OltOVI 1411 LOHO IUCH 1* LAKIWOOD l»t ORANGI COUNTY Ult OUT DI" COUNTY 1611 OUT 01' STATI 1• STANTON 1611 WESTMINSTIJI 1•1t MIDWAY CITY 1'14 SANTA ANA 1a21 SANTA ANA HOTS, lt.M ORANGI lUI TUSTIN 1441 NORTH TUSTIN 1'41 ANAHEIM lUI SILVERI.DO CAINON 16111 LAGUNA HILU 17111 LAGUNA ll!ACH ,,.. LAGUNA NIGUIL •'I'll' SAH CLl!Ml!NTI! 1nt SAA JUAH CA"lfTIU.HD lnl CAl"tSTllANO IUCN 17111 DANA l"OINT 1711 l.\ILSIAO IHI DCEANllDI Ull $AIOI DIEGO 1111 ~IVIERSIOI! COUN'T'T 1- HOUSl!S TO 11 MOVID 1• '°ONOOMIHIUM 1tM '"'"'PL!!:J(ES POii SALi ff?I "PARTMENTS 1"01 IAll 1tll '!-NTALS Houses Furnished ~-l"NF.RAL RENTALS TO SHAii COSTA MllA MESA Dl!L MAI MESA Vl!ltOI COLLECll! PAllK NEWPORT llACN Nl!WPORT HCIT1. HEWl"OllT SHOllll IAYSHOltlS DOVER SHORll WESTCLl"P UNIVERSITY l'ARJC IRVINll: llACK BAY . EMT ILUl'fl ' IJIVIN E Tll:JtllAC• COJIOHA Dl!L MAI ll"LIOA llAT JSLANDS LIDO ISLE I.I.LIDA 1SLJilUJ HUNTINGTON ll!ACH FOUNTAIM VALUY SEAL ll!ACH LOMG ll!ACH DUNG• COUN'T'T I MTA ANA 1¥1!1TMIHITIR MIDWAV CITY SANTA AMA Hll•HTI COASTAL LAGUNA l•ACH LAGUNA NIGU•L SAM CLl!Ml!HTI Sill JUAN CAPllTIAMO CAl"llTIANO llACM DANA '01MT JllVl!RSIO• COUNTY VACATION Jll!MTAU CONOOMIN1UM OUl"LEJtlS flURN. RENTALS --,,. ,, .. 2111 211' -'"' "" "" ..., -..., ... .,. "" ,,., "" ... .... ,., "" '"' 1411 .... ... ... "" "" .... "" -"" "" '"' "" "" .,. --"" .,, Hous•s Unfurnished Gl!HEJIAL -COSTA Ml!IA llM Ml!IA DliL MAI llU MEIA VllOI! lllt COLLl!GI! l"AJIJC 1111 Nl!WPOllT ll!ACN net NEWPORT HOT.. tn• Nll:W,OltT IHOll•I UM •ATSHORl!S ms DOVElt IHOltU IZl1 Wl!STCLll'I" alt UNIVl!ISITY ....... :nu lllV1NI! tm llACK IAY tMI 1!".ST •LUPI" tMJ lltV IHI! Tl!•RACI :1141 CORONA DBL MAI tnl IALIOA Slit IAV ISLANDS JllM LIOO ISLll: tll1 :ALIOA ISLAHO lllS H::WPO•T WIST :1111 INGTON •l!ACM .Mii IUNTllOIOTON MAllOll• ,,_ '1:11 VALLIY ~1' ;J:AL llACH Mt QAROl!N •1tOV• Ml'I ~ONG lt:AC:lt »M 0 1! .. .NOI COUMTI »It SAIOITA ANA MM Wl!STM INSTIR MH MIOWAY CITY M1• SANTA .tiMA Hll:l•HTS Mlf COUTAL mt 1.AOUNA aaACM -LAGUNA MIOUll:l lfll' IAN CL9M• .. Tit irt• :APISTftAMO 1111 ·1o.-1STlt,,HO ll»"M snit l 'NA iO'OINT tNI CONt'OMINIUM .. OUPLl!Jtll UN,UltN. "" .. 'ITALS NIWPORT llACH HaWPORT HalGHTI IOIBWl"OltT utn••• WBSTCLtl'I" UNIVl!ltSITY l"ARk IACK IA"T IAIT ILUl'I' C:OltONA D•L MAI •ALaOA SAY IJUJIDI LIDO llLI! llALIOA llLAMD HUHTIN•TON IU.CM lfOUNTAIM VAU.l'I' llAL IUCH LONG IU.CN OR.lNCll! COUNTY •AllDl!N •Rov• Wl!STMINSTl!lt M1DW•Y cm SANTA AMA SANTA.AHA Hll•KTI TUSTIN COAST.-.&. LAGUNA ll!ACH U.OUHA NICIUIL SAN CLIMl!NT• DANA POINT TllPLIX. It¢. CONDOMINIUM ReNTALS Apts. Unfumished -"" "" ... "" ... "" --"" .... ... -..,, ... --... .. ,, "" ... ... .... .... .... '"' "" a• -- GINaRAL ... COSTA Ml!U. lttl M•U. VIRDI 1111 NIWPOJIT Ill.CH Dlf Nl!Wl"OltT HBtGHTS Stll Nl!Wl"OlltT INOllll rm WllTCLIPI' nM UNIV.JISIT'I' l"AllK Jtl7 IACIC IA 'I' Sttl IAST ILUl'fl no CORONA OIL MAI nH IALIOA . JM IAY 111...lMDI UM LIDO ISLI! SU1 HUNTINGTON IBAC"' 1411 POUNTAIN VALUY Mlt IM.IOA ISLAND USS SUL IU.CM MM LOMO •UCH 5111 OIU.NO• COUNTY SMI OAllDIN fJIOVll Ult WllTMUISTI:• NU MIDWAY CITY Nl' SMTA ANA -SANTA AMA Hll•Kn 1'31 T\ISTllf .._ COASTAL l7tf LAOUlfA l•ACN SHI LAOUlfA !ltroun 1717 SM C:LIMaNTI! ml SAM JUAN CAl'llTRANO 1121 DAMA POINT 1141 REAL ESTATE, Gener•t Tllll"LIX. l'IL "" CONDOMINIUM fM 1t•NTAU WAlllTeD lffl ltOOMS l'Olt RBNT '"5 ltOOM a ICIARD lfH MOTIU. TRAILi• COURTS '"1 OUIST HOMU ,,,. MISC. •aNTAU "" IMCOMI l"ltOPP:TY .... IUSIM•SS l"ltGPlltTY .... lltAILllt l'ARICS .... IUSIN•SS ••NTAL ... Ol'FIC• 11•NTAL 617' INDUSTlllAL l'ROPl!RTY .... COMMlllC\AL - INDUITlllAL •INTAL "" LOn •1W JIANCHll 6UI CITltUS OltOVll •1n AClllA•• '2M LMtl IUIHOlll '* 1t•SORT l"ltOl"lltTY 4* OltAMlil• CO. ,l:Ol'BltT'I' '"' OUT 01" STATI l"ltOf". '* MOUNTAIN 6 DISIRT Ult SUIDfVISION LAND 1111 1t•AL •ITATI SBltVICI! 4t1S It.I!. BXCHANOa 'Sii JI. I . WANT•D Gii BUSINESS ond FINANCIAL •USllflP OPHIT\llUTllS - IUllN•P WANTID tMI INVBSTMINT 0•~111'Mlt!M lllllt INVISTM•NT WAlfTl!O cru MON•Y TO lOM Qtl l"lltlONAL LOANS 4ltl J•WILllY LOANS "*' COLLATIRAL LOANS j)U llaAL llTAT• LOAMI 6Mt MOllTGAOBS, Tnnt IMlfl •141 MONIY WANTID 6NI ANNOUNCEMENTS ond NOTICES l'OUND (l'rM Ml> .... LOST 6MI ... ltSONAU 6* AMNOUNC•M•Nn •t1t lllTNI .. 11 l'UNl!RAU .. It PAID otrTUARY .. 11 l'UN•ltAL OlltKTORJ '414 l'L01tlm t-nl CAllD 01" TNANKI "1• IN MIMOltlAM '4'11 CIMll:TlltT LOTI Mii Cl!Ml!TIRT CR'l'P"TS '41t (ltlMATOt:llS _.,. Ml!MOlllAL PARO '411 AUCTIOMS at• AVIATION llltVKI! 4W Tit.I.VIL 60I AIR TltAMIPORT .. TION .... AUTO TllAIOlll"ORTATIOtl .... LIOAL NOTICBI "4M OIRMAN a TllTORUte ... SERVICE DIRECTORY ACC:OUNTIN• -AMlftlllN• IBRVICI! 4111 APPLl .. HCI ltlPAll: .. l'I,,_ Ult Al"l"RAlllNO ... I AlflHALT, Oh Ult AUTO lll"Alltl 811 Atrl'O. ........ , ..... It&,. ... •AIYlmtNO ... IOAT MAINTINA.WCI dU IRtC ... MASOfrCa"T. g .... IUllNBP •••vtcu dO IUILOlllS 4171 CATl:•IN9 t.m CAllNl"TMAltltl• dlt CAR ... NTll:IMO "" CBMIMT, c:.oo.tll ... CNILO CARI, u-.1 "11 COMTU<TOU "" Apts. Furnlahtd ~ENIUL COIT.I. Mau. l'lllIIJI ,.i1110• ... i;M:HT C:Ll!ANnNI ... -4MI CAltl"IT LAYIN• & Rll".f.11' Util flHOUN•t• MJI DaMOLITtON MU OltAPTINO SlltVtcl! ~J l!LICTlllCAL '641 IOUl,Ml!NT aBNTAU UM l"INCIH• "" f'LOOU ..U PUllNACI 11,.AIRS. ll'L 6'11 u.aOIHIMO l&W fl•N•IU.L llaVtell "*I eRAOINO. OISC:IN• 6'M fll.llS "" GRiii! TMVMa mt OUN SltOI" 17H HU.LTH CUlll '"' MAULIN• •nt NOUS•CLUNIN9 '111 INTlltlOI Ol!COllATIM• '1U INCOMI! TAX "ti lltON, On11IMlflt. -""' IJIOtONO ml INIULATIN• '"' INSUllAMCI .nt INV•STl•ATUtO, D9fKlt¥I 4711 JAHITOlllAL .'191 l•WILRY ltl!l"All.. ltc. '91 U.NDSCAl"IN9 "11 LOCkSMITM 6IM MASONltY, lltfCIC '*Ill MOVINO & ITORA•I "41 l"AllOITINe. P•""-1111 .... PAINTIN.. .... ..a PATIOS tMI PHOToeltAPMY tl1'I l"LAITIRIM .. l'lkll. ... Ir UW l"LUMllNe "'' l'OODLI 911DOMINe '"' POOL SIRVICI Mll l"OWl!lt IW•IPINO •'11 l"UMP 11•v1c• "" a.OOl'INfl ffH RADIO, 111111,. Ile. ff:til Rl!MODILING & ltlPAIR 4H4I ltlMOOILtN9, KITCHINI "41 Sctuon ,...,._ '9U Sl!WIHI •NI llWINI MACNIMI Rll"AIRI ff'I SIPTIC THIKS. .._.. .... 4HI TAILORINe .,,. TlllMITI CONTaO\. "'1 TILL Clnnllc "14 TILL U..... 6 MarMI ff1S Tlt•I SllVtCI fflf TILIVlllotl. It'""" l!IL fft!I Ul"NOUTllllY ..,. Wa\.DJNO fftt JOBS & EMPLOYMENT .IOI WANTIO, -1ltl JOI WANTID, ._.. 1l2f JOI WHITID, MIN & WOMIN JIM DOM•STIC HILi' JI» AOINCIIS, MMI 11W KILi" WANT•D, M-. 12tl AOl!NCllS. W-1Jtl KILi' WANTll:O, Wlllftlll 1 .... JOll-Mlll & W-• JJM AGINCl•I. M-. a W--nH SCNOOLS & INITitVCTIOM Htl '01 l"l.PARATIOM 1• TMIATl/CAL 1'111 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE l"ltllNrTUltl .. O,.l"ICI "URNrTUltl "11 OPPIC9 IOUll"Ml!NT till STOltl BGUll"MINT tt"ll CAl'I.. ltlSTAUllNfT 1114 IAJI •GUll'MINT tlU HOUll!HOLD OOODI lll2t GARAGB IALI IHI l"URMITUJll AUCTl<IPI WU APPLIANCll 11111 MTIOU•S 1111 SIWllOlfl MACNIN•S llH MUllCAL ll'UTRUMl!NT ins PIANOS a OROAHI 11:11 U.010 atO T•u,.i111CM1 -HH'I 6 ST•lllO 11111 TAl'I 1t•COIDllll IHt CAM•RAS & l!GUIPMll:N1 IMf HOllY IUl'flLlll .... Sl"ORTIN• llOODt - llNOCUL.lRI, ICOfll~ llH MllCILL.AHIOUI ... MISC. WANTBD IUI MACNINaaY, ltll. .,.. LUMllll IHI STORA•I tm IUILOIN9 MATl!RIAU 11ff ...... "" PETS ond UVESTDCK l"ITS. ••Nl!llAL ... CATI lltl .... "" NOllSll llJt LIVllTOClll 1141 CALIFORNIA Ll~ING NURIBltl•I atll SWIMMING l"OOLI IHI PATIOS lflJ AWNINGS lfH V...CATIONI lfJf TRANSPORTATION BOATS & YACKTS ,_ SAILIO.ATI "11 J>OWlll CllUlllU fl1f ll'laD-llCI IOATI ... IOAT TilAILllll ~ ~T MA!NTINMICI tal IOAT LAUNCNINI "M MMllfl! IOUll". ... IOAT SLll", MOOlllNO MM IOAT l•llVICll tll1 IOAl ll!NTALI ,._ BOAT C:MAllTlll tt• l'llHIN• IOAn 9M OOAT MOVtN• l'MI IOAT ITOllAOI Mq 10 .. Tl WAlfTID ... AIRCR.ll""T , ntc l"L YINO LEISONI nM MOlllLa MOMl:I ..,... MOTQll HOMll ml llCYtLll f1U ILICTlllC CARI '1Jf MIMI llKIS n7' MOTOl:CYCLll ... MOTORSCOOTlltl f2'I AUTO SIRVICIS & l'ARTJ t• AUTO TOOLS & l!OUIP. ttlt TRA!Lllt. TitAVIL MU 1"9.Al\.BllS. vtlllh' , .. CAMPI as fS>I nt.UCKI fMf ,..... tlll DUl'll! •UO•••• ms IMPOITIO •UTOI .... Sl"OllT CARS .. It ANTIQUBS. C:LASS ICI ffll JIACB C.&.ltl, 1001 ffJt AUTO SVINTS tral AllTOI WANTIO '191 Nl!W CAllS Mt AUTO LIASI,.. Nit USN CAIU ,_ HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR THE . HIDDEN DOLLARS ·1N YOUR HOME LATElY? ---------------------------' --------------- " ' " I'm The Kind Of Woman Who Gets What She Wants I ' ....._._ ....... . . . Because I'm The Kind Of Woman Who's Smart Enough To Use DAILY PILOT Classified Advertising 11.rievt me, tlier1'1 nothing around our home 1nymore th1t isn't being used -bH1u.. the rninute I discover something is no longor ...dod, I soft it, while it riiU hos morlmum voluo, through on lnorponsivo DAILY PllOT Clo11ifiod Ad. Thot way, ins!Hd of • cluttor of things Wt don't ust, I h.1v1 +ht trlr1 c11h that t.h me hive tht newer things ••• the "•rlrt11 things my whole family 1njoy1. Here's what I Plttn. Tho cash I got f0< tho good cloth11 ond try1 the childron had outgrown bought mt +ht decorttor lamp rd been w1ntin9. The musittl irtrlrument rto ont played paid for t big part of our port1bl• stereo unit, The pow•r tools redec:orttecl our d1u9ht1r's room. And, just for th• fun of it, tho good choir that juat didn't mo!ch onything 1nymor• took my husband and mt out for 1 fabulous /.nnw 1t the fanciest rastaurant in town. Go through your homo. Mako • liat of on tho .,·orthwhio things you find that 1r1n't being used. !You'll bt surprised 1t the number you turn up the first timt .) Then, dial 1.42-5678 ony limo beiwHn 8 o.m. ond 5 p.m. ond 9ive your ffst to 1 friendly, e1perienced Ad Writer. That's •• there is to it. It's inttptnsive tool It ctn cost you IS nttte ., PENNIES A DA YI Wtft, now that you know my secret -isn't it t1m• you qot st1rttd toward bttttr, e1sitr, htppitr ffvln9 with DAILY PILOT 0111if.od Ad17 Stir! bein9 !ht kind of womtn who gth whet sht w1nh tod1yl (;ALL NOW 642-5678 --._ ___________ _ __ .,, _____ __ Wolnudly, Octobe< 23, 1'168 OAILV "UIT RENTALS SAYE tASH! Read DAILY PILOT c L A 5 5 I ,. I E D The ORANGE COAST'S H.._ Unlvmlolltd c .. ,.-~100 Laguna ll•ch 3705 LOVll.Y 1 Br. !"tm den MOHAROI BAr AREA Duplex Rmtc. StDY•. Drpt. LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. S nlll· Lrr Yri W•ter A: BR A den, 2 BA, cot1. DrfB. ...,i-. pd. $ISO. 714, frpl, pool. S300 mo. Allo 5'1-4354 C6 213: DU 3-r.162 ••ail. 2 BR. 2 be. $2!IO mo. for appt. adults all43 betw JN Pll'l 2 8R nn, new Cllll>tt, drpl, M~M --~ -~ adul 1 ~·. ....-~ ...... --Small ~ ok ta o a Y , b'table: 1 Br., aurdeek, ..,__ . No pell. 2515 Oh pr., brick trpl., 9llO A .-i1ta Ana Av•. $130. Bluetlk'd ~ Dr. IJ.1'5 M011th 838--0312 Mo. yeerly. ~ e 3 BDRM 2 hi.th blt-inl l--~~------1 $1'6 mo. I••"· -· RENTALS ..._..,. alt 6 pm Aph. Fumlshed E-Skle 2 Br., "'1. ~cell: General 4000 tncd yd., pt.tio. Adltl:. No ptl. $138 Yriy 673-7629 EX'mA ,..., -; ' .... 1~ bMba. Hu everythini! Ht water pd. Sl.15. S6-8152 4 BR rm 2 ba, aYlilable Oct 25th. $210. 2iO'J Willow I.Mi., -- RENT I Rooms Furniture $26 Month FULL OPTIOO TO BUY No~to.a.c. H.F.R.C. Fumlture R1nt1lt Neweort Inch 3200 517 w. 19th, c.M. 5'S-3t81 BAYCR.Ul' • O.tom 4 BR, ~ W. U>cln , Anhm T74-ml 4 ti., fem rm, formal IDLIDAY PLAZA din/nn, H/F pooi, yrs lease. DELUXE. Spacious 1-Bdrm. lncl/prdener & pooi ma.int. FUm. apt. ~ P1U1 utiJ. "C" Tboma1, Realtor He9,ted pool. Ample parkiaa 224 W. O>ut Hwy. 548-552'1 No children-No petl NEWPORT Isll.nd duplex; 1965 Pomom, CM 642-5858 · ~r 2 Bl'., aurideck; priv. $lffi: "2 BR., fenced yd, llll"·, beach l park; no pets <r frplc, Olildren O.K. Pbol. children; mature coople. Broker 534..aJ $145 Mo., yearly. 675--0US I ::::::::::::::::====I arorCE Newport Island lot. 3 Br. Prl patio. $185 yrly. 673-""6 NICE, The BluU11. 3 Br., cttn, 2 ba. Pool, tennis db. No pet1. 6'15-3CJ, 644-0449 BAYSIDE Village No. 81 $1.75. 2 br, 2 ba, pool, elub hie. s1ip, 0vmer LA 291-s:;fil _Nowport Holghh 3210 3 BR., 1% 1-., carp. &: .i....,; """'· '"""' yd. CIOIMJ to aehoola. $2!l'i, Gardener incl. 548--59'26 eves We1tcliff 3230 3 BR. 2 BA +Fam. rm., new crpU, fenced yard. UiO mo. 1 Yr leeu. &e.8839 Balboa Island 3355 LOVll.. Y new 3 BR 2 bath duplex elecrtlc bu 11 t-1 n kitchen, draperlea 6: fully carpeted. Steps to Sou1b Bay front. Jm yearly Jeue. 67>-<900 Huntington Btach 3400 3 BR 1 % bath, elect. bit-ins, cptl/dJtl. $170/mo. lease. - Brubear Rlty. 847-8531 Evet. 541-2442 FOR rent PacWc Sanda 4 bd mi 2 ba, covered patio l ~-Sl.115. 8!M-61tl2 NOW'S THE Cost• Mna 4100 2220 ELDEN Comet Virginia New 1 BR F\im. Adults ool,y All Electric Occuptux:y Nav. 1st USO mmtb • Rent $22.50 Wk. Up • Studio I: Bach apta. e Incl Uttll Ir Pbcme _.,., e Maid Sftv1ee -TV e•d. • New Cafe I: Bar 2376 Newport mvd. 541-97'5 CHATEAU Lo POINTE Lovely turn. 2 BR aptl. 00- s t re e t parking, c:arportJ. Htd. pool. Adults, no peta 1941 POMONA AVE., C.M. DELUXE 2 bd nn apr.. Furn &: untum. CJl)l, pool a: carport. 1 dlild OK. $130. a: up. Call 646-0ll6 f'1m 1 BR apt., Sl<ti. Fum .radio, $95. Elden East Apt., 2131 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa l &: 2 BR., redecor., util. paid. No childrea or petl Area fairgrounds. 548-2104 LARGE 1 BR duplex priVRcy, garage, S121J. 1$8 Ea.st Wilson, C.M. 56-7"1 Nassau Palms 1 " 2 BR. Pool, $130 to $lSO 177 E. 22nd St. 642..:tMri uu:; Ba.cbekJr Apt. &: pr. Nicttly furn $ll5. Dli)-I 64Z-Zi50; eves 546-6716 $85. 1 BDRM partly :tum. 2531 Elden, Apt E. Inquire 2641. Elden, Apt B VERY I.ce. 2 Br., 2 Ba., pool; adulta. $145, Util. pd. We have otherw 548-2407. Newport Beach 4200 IF YOU HAVE an mrented BMdl it~::::::.::~ 2901 Newport Blvd., N. 675,..630 ev•a. 642-22 BA YCUFF Motel -wUrter rates effective; $27.50 qi. Maid aetvke, 'IV. pool. TIME FOR QUICK CASH leading THROUGH A IQ N. Newport, NB 64S-3:2a5 NEAR ~ 1 BR. 1or alng11. employed adult, $135 Mo., yrly. No &aft!Ce. 67l-700S Marketplace DAIL y PILOT for WANT AD Automobiles 642-5678 /, • 6210 OCEAN'FRONT • ' BR., 2 Bo. 2nd ._ $'250 Mo. Cail: 213: 596-11(8 Yrly 1 Bii $110 mo, """· electrid.ty. 673-70J West cliff 4230 " WESTCLIFF RIVIERA ~BR,_~, patio, ~ta, drapes, adults. Hee.t.ed Pool 1800 Wetrtclift Dr., NB 842-3618 4300 CLEAN lk_. A .... All utU incl m up 315 E. Bllboa Blvd. BALBOA 873-M * BAY FROOT * 1 Br winter. S125 • month. 926 Ea8t B!Uboa Blvd. 673-9749 I' • ' • .. . ' ' I , OAJLV PILOT .L:,,. IAL$ '' . w ......... Octobt< 2', 1968 RENTALS KkNTALS Apta. unr..rnl-Apt>. Unfurnlohocl Apt1. Unfutnlahed Huntt...-llMd\ S400 Huntington Boid> $400 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY JUST COMPLETED • ONE BEDROOM • 2 BEDROOMS FROM $135 MONTH UNFURNISHED -FURNISHED A.DULTS-NO PETS e CA1'Pm e POOL e R.ECltEATION AAEA e DR.APES e PRIVATE PATIO e HOTPOINT APPLIANCE$ HUNTINGTON SEVILLE 16112 Sher Lane 8-47.7461 Huntington leach I 1st Signal Wast of B•ach off Edin9., ______ ·~•'.l_ro~ Broa~aL_C•!_!•r.!.._ ___ _ ~-w~- RENTALS COiie MMI 5100 Apll. Fumlshod Huntlneton Booch 4400 3 BR 2% BA. .iJ tiec: built· tm. Pabcnrnlc view QV!'f-tooktag All8Ct Beach. Mature 18th 6 Santa Ana, C.Jd • -Call llln. --~only, no $220 1m Santa Ana. Apt 113, C.M. $200 MONTH, from No't'. bt 1 - to F .... lst; '°"""'"'' ~ HARBOR beaut. fum, 2 Br., 1% ba; o·=.c!'"":...:" TOWNHOUSE CHEAPEST view Bach. apt., hits ever)dling! Will ren1 this week. 41M-4811; 64&6626 CHARMliNG 1 BR, private balcony, ca8ll & mountain 221'1 Harbor near Wllilon • 2 BR, $l10 to 11.10 e Hoatod pool -Adulla oob e No pets· Adj to shopping l-=""""=;.$165,,..,,m,...•_._.,_,_sm-'---I NEWLY DECORATED RENTALli 2 BR. w/prag' • di!tJosal Aph. Unfurnished • water paid. • 219t-B Piaoentia Ave, • $11'.6 Gener1I 5000 15n-B Orange Ave • $110 VEN DOME Make reservations NOW Newly Redecorated Cl-to Shapplr19, Pork ·~3 Br'1, 2Ba e SWim. Pool, PuVgreen • Frpl, Tndivlln<ky fec'b 1845 Anaheim Ave. COSI'A MESA 642-2824 • 636-4120. S@\\~lA-.!£t-~s· Sol••• Sim pl• Scnimbl•d Word Puzzle for• Chuck!• --·=~....::.:: ~ ~. low "' form four limplt wont.. r\) IFETCED I <. ~ _1r ·111_.;., ,~ l ISYDAN I _' I I I I t. .. .................. SCUM·LlTS ANSWER IN CLASSIRCATION 9000 I I ' . . - RIAL ESTATI General - RIAL ESTATE Gentral Gue1t Homes Sffl Cltn11 Groves $6.rm. Laguna Beach ocean view Jot tor :retirement, l~erage investmerit er 2d. Mme. Sl,001. dn. S91 mo. (n 4l 499-3&44 ft.2 Lot. Near nrw PT. JIARBOR . .. 49S-!m3 * DANA 6150 ----~·----------- BUSINESS 1nd FINANCIAL 6175 Rul Estatt Loans 6340 * * * * ' ·-.1 4 BP * * S!RVICE DIRECTORY 6810 .. _~-~.r'P'-~_.., .... ~.~-""'~...,.,"' ..... """"""""' ...... ~ ............................................................................ ""'~ .... ,,.. ............... ~...,.~~·...., .... ~.~ .... ~ .......... ~ I ·- Wodnttdi1, Ocl*r 2J, 1968 DAILY "LOT _,,. •.oas ' EMPLOYMENT ~oas ' EMPLOYMINT .IOIS ' EMPLOYMiNT JOBS ' EfolPLOYMENT JOllS ' EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDl$1 FOR MERCHANDISE ,Ol MEfiCHANOISE FOR MERCHANOISI l'OI • 1--------SAL! AND TRADll SALE AND TRAD! SALE AND TRADI SALi AND TRADI Do"'"tlc Help 7035 DOMESTIC HELP Uv-e In or Uw out HoUHkN,.rs ~-al So.-· LA !IJl1S (nll 6llO<ll<! CILI) Ul-173:1 UVE INS Employer ~ fees """"'' Byland -106 B E. 16th S.A. 5n-0395 OUnese llTe-illl. (beerful Pmnanont. E><perleocod. FtJ' East A&mq 64U1m Help Wanted, Men 7200 J. c. PfNllY co. Newport Beech Ha, openinp tar • Janitorial Maintenance & Buffen Recent IUCCHBful ~ ence in all pha8e »n*l'- red. Competitive ~ outstandln& benefits in- cluding profit •wing. J. c. llBllEY co. . 24 Fashion Island Anequol-ty -.. MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS J. C. Carter Co. 671 W. 17th St. Cost• Mesa 548-3421 Orange Coast Jr. Coll199 District NEEDS Bookstore Clerk Order 111.appHes, checks, ohlpmoota, --· procesae 1nvok.w etc. Sal· ary $4511.•$566. Night Custodians HOW"B 10 pm to 6 am, Mon. thru Thurs., -3-midnigbt Fri. & Sat. $+17-$543. APPLY ORANGE COAST JR. COLLEGE DIST. e MEN WANTED e Hou,. 11 to 2 11.75 ... hr. pl111 mooJs, pklll vacation. Part time only. McDonald's 3141 Harbor Blvd. c..ta M- APPRENTICE Mach In fl operator· previool shop exp. ttience on lath, mill1 .t. drlll pres. ... Set up exper. helpAtl but not nK'Hl'!ary. Apply US E. 16th St., CM betwHn II A •• SALESMAN WANTED Undl!!' ~. Exp preferred, but not necnmry, We will tralrl )'OU. Apply in pttlDn, .. far Tom. Gnlnt'a lbPUi-1750 Newport BlYd., C.M'. e EXPERIENCED e BOAT CARPENTERS ' Help WMted, Mon 7200 CITY OP ~ NIWl'ORT lUCH ENGINE LATHE MACHINISTS DRILL PRESS OPEIATORS DAY 9lilFI' '5hrmln"""1cweek, --· """'- J. C. C1rler Co. 671 W. 17th St. Cost1Moao 541-3421 CAREER OPPORTUNITY! J o1n todays t.utest crowlnl profeu:lon-Mutual Fupd sala No experience necea:aat,y. We traln: ·full or pvt t1ma Mutual Fund Advl..,., Inc. Np! B. 180! W8tcl!ll NU122 S.A.WN.B- ISCT.ml *FRY COOK* DINNER SHIFT 18 OR OVEr! CALL 675-4160 (ASK FOR RUDY ) e BOAT ASSEMBL.DU) e PAJNTERS e EXP. CARPDITERS eMOU>ERS ·-"""'-pdbmel!ta INWICTOR Cilwmln-------• J. C. C1rter Co. 671 W. 17th St. Coot1Mou 541-3421 lob'• ... loy 1Sf. E. l7tll 6L Q>lla - Well Known Product Temponry aMilflJilentl FNl'N VAUEY., O'.lSTA MESA. WESTM!NsrER • ALL AREAS Olf ORANGE OOUNl'YI Women! 7400 Giff & Mall .. .._. __ ---------· = ,.. .. --· ------· .... -- Old World Mediterranean Spanuh Furniture At Barbor Blvd. I JOBS I EMPLOYMENT ;;.G.;;.••c;•.:::Uo;;....;;S.:c•l.;;.• __ ..;I022=;i Schools-Instruction 7600 GIGANTICRum.mapSalellt --------St. Jotm.'1 Epa900p8i O>tm newporl school of business :IXW Omli• (at ~) Cot- ta -........... Clc1I> ... """ond .. _ . ._ her 26th trom 9:Jl tll 4:30, F\lmiture, Clothlrc. dim; es. Mldi M1ft $ OUr ~ will please )'OU! Pltnot la Org1n1 11ao OYER STOCKED 167 PIANOS & OR6AllS Must mak9 mom tor Chrftt. mas lb:Jdt', Lut dlnnce b' lowest prk:a! Rent Cll' tKQ' ... ...-........ Opell Mm • Fri C1W11 'tG I $undoyl2to5 Gould Mualc Company a>'5 ... Main, $.A. 541.Qlll OUR 58th YE.\R I 1 = 7 ·s o ,t 7 TI ORO·'· 2 a m • . -! ' 58 DAIL V PILOT Wedntlday, Ocioo.r 2J, 1'168 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION-TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION tRANSPORTATION TRANS~~ATION_ 1~1m~po~rti;;od~A~u!Oti;i;i~m;i9600;i;ii~l~m~poii;irt~odiii;~A~"';iii°'im;m;i9600;i;i;i;;;·jj-jj•jjr~:ediiiiii"ii'~"°~'ii;;;;;;~~-ii;;1jjmiieriiiii';;'"iii;;;A~u~lot;i;ijjjjjjj9~600;i;ijl~m~po~rtjj~~-~·-.A.u,;t°'liiiiiii..9600;.;. • .;..· ...... ~'°'ii;;j;;;;~9~600;i;i;l~m~""~"jj•~";;;iA~•1~:o~•ii;;;;;i'~600~~1~m~p~o~"~lld~ii .. ~'~;;°'~iiii~9~600;i;i;iiiiiiiiiiiilmported Aut~__. 9600 ' I & Is Introducing two ' great .new economy cars: IMPORTS SEDAN-WAGON W Invite You···· e b th• lint llonault B & Z Imports i• proud and ple;ed A~,° No: I q0q Modols of d ler in this area to show yobu ~is is the Renault 'fOU hev• A TRULY BIG RENAULT • 95 Miles~. t~ fabulous B 1 ig RE.NA~~! ~.; for which Renaultltblu:lt.11• "~~~ ·r or . • • d f Renau u , :~;"f:v~~g eiclusivel~ for ~ == ~:::~~ will Go Great with • 5 Doors g1eot in other c~un\'.1e:h: United States. Se• It Now! foreign car fanc iers 1n k cavic, • 70 Horsepower Bran o 8 & Z Imports in Huntington Beach ash you to "see the beautiful new 'Renaults. Re·mem.ber-when you buy a new RenauK 10 or 16 you drive 12,000 miles or one full year without paying • penny for maintenance. Absolutely all service is free from spark plugs to flat tires !oil changos, lubrication, oil filters t oo!) Can you think of a better deal? ''Renault 10 is the ideal back-to-school car. You can count on it to give you 35 miles or more per gallon of gasol ine. "We are getting many fine used cars in trade on new Renaults. If you •re in the market for a good used car see us." COMPLETE FOREIGN CAR SERVICE • Front Wheel Drive • Drum Disc Brakes A BIG HIT IN EUROPE and for sure A BIG HIT IN THE USA The New Renault 16 has been tested millions of miles in the past 3 years. 536-4292 427 MAIN ST.. HUNTINGTON BEACH CORNER OF FIFTH ST. Open 8 to 8 P.M. Everyday MERC HANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR FREE TO YOU MERCHANDISE FOR 9000 Mlrine Equip. 9035 Mini Bikes 927S SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE _:S::A-"L:.:E:..;.A:.N:.:D:....:T.:.RA=D:cE_1SCRAM LETS DlESll. Engines, 36 hp, 5 HP B 4 s engine. New Pianot &. Organs 1130 Teltvlslon 1205 Miscallaneous 8600 Miscellaneous 8600 ~~ANIC Fertilizer, ogod Misc. W•nttd 1610 ' • frHh water cooled, wire-flywheel ~ clutch. Bonanza un.v <bction. 673-9321, evea. frame with jack llhaft & e PIANO ~Alf e ALL SPINETS, CONSOLES end GRAND Slashed for Immediate Sale! Reconditioned Grand Pianna that look and acalDd like ne\o\·! Save now on th.ii fab. ulous new !clect:ion of fine Grands ... all with our mm- ous warranty. Select naw from Steinway, Knabe, M.ton & H1mlin, Chickering, Kimball, Sohmer & Mlny others I • No Payment 'Til January • Bank Terms • Free Delivery • Trade-ins Two Location• To Serve You: COAST MUSIC 1839 Newport Blvd., CM 646-0271 11 4 S. El Camino Real San Clemente 492-4642 HAMMOND SPINET SALE F-100 .................. $395. '.\1-2 ..•..•..••••••. " •.. $650. l\1-101 ................ $11195. Baldwin T-lorseshoe, ti rl'IO!I old, Save! .................. $600. uaea crarm, c.on90le8. 59m. ets, & Studio. Steinway, Soh- mer, Weber, Fischer & Bald· ~in. ()pen Monday & Frid;i..v t\l!'S, Sunday 12 lo 4:l'l HAMMOND tn C'ORONA DEL MAR 2854 E. Cout Hwy 673-89l:'l -Clean Oul Sale 111 StdDnY Grand, Artht Mod- el; Wurl.ltttt Ba.by Grand "81i: S!dnway Prol...ionat Modol 1915: Tiny Sp!M! pi- ano S3t5: Gulbr&nttn Spin. et 1395: '""'"" """" $195. Tbm! and m&IO' mc:n al ... WARD'S BAIDWIN STUDIO U01 Newport, C.M .. 6C2.Mst Open &mda,y ahem<>Cfll ORGAH KJmti.11 Player. W&lmat. L I k 11 new! BHot. ctt"''*Jn•• c11t. wm aacritlct! 8"7-11l64 RENT or Buy New Color TV $9 PER MO. RENTAL CAN APPLY TO PURCHASE ORDER BY PHONE Newporter TV Westinghouse Hdqtrs. C.M. 548-8511 9 AM to 9 PM 7 Dal'& OLYMPIC Color TV-St!'!'eO combination. Modem walnut cabinet. QXI or otter. -""""" RENT TV $10 No l>e(iosit • Free deliveory Optn. 1n oo,.. mmio * AUCTION * FRIDAY-OCT. 25 7:30 P.M. $25,IXXI CONSJGNr.fEl"IT NE\V FURNITURE -Spanish & Modern, Bedroom aets. nm~ room 91!'1::11, divans, chairs, buffets, curio cebi· nets, credt517AS, commodes, cocktail tables, ottomans, lamps, chain lampe, mat- tresses, dinettes, o t f i c e desks, TV's, Stereos, refrig- erators, sl:l'.M!fl, "WUhers & dryen & MUCJI MORE! CLEANING OlIT TI-IE GARAGE! Complete set of cllb!, all woods & irons, deep feyer, television, lawn mower, llCreetl door, WB.!1 only up B few months, apPle green long evening gown stze 10, hooks games, camera • Polaroid Swinger. Phone 536-84U HtSttington Beach. SWIMMING POOL IS Ft Pool, Filter, Surface Skimmer, Maintenanc. Kit. FREE Ground Pad. $149.88 SECARD POOL 323 S. Main, On.ng• 532-1992 ~~e w:~vU:~~~ w. A N T E D ANSWERS 54&ffiJ7 =~ S:~44 ~ ~· muJch. 833-5332 between 8 & Boat Slip Mooring 90361~=========1 5 or 546-4931 after 5 10/31 WE n··• quali-loo Junk Defa=t -Sandy -Fudge -Mot It 9300 ._. "' Brunet -STUFF WANT slip for 35' SaiI.1:::::.:::0:.'::'Y<:'::::1:_ __ .:..:::.;: SI.AHE:iE Cats, male & fe-please) • Furniture, color rnak>, Strictly indooni, TV's, stereos, appliances. News note: "He Is a tuJ. Suitable for liveaboard. BRAND NEW fn:irt claws removed. Al-tools & office equipment. dermis!, so they ~·1 let TV~Nll'.u~ AllNB:a. ;4~9 f~ -al•. 0" 0"" aftor 5, him nm for office. The voters 1a ....,.,....., .o, · · · =-• "" ~ TOP CASH IN 30 Minutes 536-6185 YAMAHAS 833-"4'5 "' '°' '""'· 53\.1212 * 8'>-0555 w~• al.-ak! ho woWd Sl'UFF • * * 10/25 the ballot boxes." WANTED: Slip for 28' Boat. NEID Gd. hm.lf•""' yd • WANTED • SOUTHCOASl'-18 G.., ma-Call 67'-0253 ""· °' • '50 • for l.cwabl.e gol.d!bUt. fC1TI. rine 4-75. Oean, tight huU, _•_7'-'630 ___ da~"'-----1 ,D G. Shep. 6 mos, loves Furniture--Appli1nces good canva.99 $1375. (213) 801t Stor•ge 9048 chil4. 637·1033 10/25 Color TV._Pi1noa l.»4ffi4 'WtP.J; Ha.ired Terrier, male, ETC. 18' INBOARD LAUNCH • BOAT S'IURAGE -% bl. to 1 Id ~-• tl C h I l'f: H •.. 1 ~"· u Ba:Y. fenced lot. Reasonable, 'Y'· o · .,, ....... .,. ceriae. as n 2 our !:"';... ~ ... ~. ~"":'.J. · se F. Walker. 64&-7414 Vet') af1ectima.te 549-00.0 S41-4531 """"''"' u-~ ..........,_,., 10/2; 22' Centurr Raveri-188 hp, Aircr1ft 9100 9625 Go1rden Grove Blvd . ADOR:ABLE KitteM, 10 PETS ind LIVESTOCK compl equipped for f!l:hing. 1-----------1--77-=c-oco--c---1 weeks old. M1lle &: female. $4450. 213:83U832 PARDO ENTERPRISES e HONDA e F.astbluff, N.B. 644-1006 Pets, Gene~ll 8800 MOONEY SALE.5 REP. 10/25 DOG Problem• CmTocl"' •I Sallbo1t1 9010 FLIGHT TRAINING MINI BIKES OVER COST HERB FRJEDLANDER WINDY'S Alll'Tlftll SPANISH sota and kweseat.1----------U\l•Un Also gold colored sofa, oc-FREE To good home with your home. Barking, refuoi-l9' S' ~-P--~-_,._ --d.-nal Orange Coun~A,;.-11.-port HI.Fl & Stereo 8210 fenced yard. 6 mo. old i"" to come, loo~ jumping, UJV '-''Wiie Ill.go ~9:-~ or ......... 610 casional chairs, oval rug, '""' t•a,·1 n .,, ...... , l,.ll ,.,..,,,,r -1969 '90' OR '65' 2005-\4 Newport. Blvd . refrigerator, clarinet Many I em a 1 e Cock a Po o. chasing. Pvt. trainer, John, ~;-"''"'"'~ " '"F\v' CHEROKEE 14()..4. 340 TI, 2 STER.ill 1!168 Solid State Behind Tony'.11 Bldg. Mat'ls. other items including tires 642-2079 10/24 4!12-1491 5.,,,.tom•, ~lgh··""'. ·h-d. · 2 M_K.-12, VOA-5, UD-2, J. COl"W>le model. Like new! c I •1 °'° -~-' 3 be •· I ~========oo " ~ •• Li ou ~" 06 a "esa * ~ & Gei,e:er counter. 2546 CUNNING • "f+'les. C11 -8825 tiertbs. Verv clean. Must sell te. ........-£V't'O Take over small pymnts or OP-• DAU.Y 9 ll 2 h" /bl "· d 7 Don• ., c.i• lo 4 Greenbrier Lane (Co ege & w ite w a...-. otli, -:r se.ll at once! A.skin" a c L $TI.63 cash. Credit Dept. ·~~~:::::"":;:~~i'll _l'.~!_<O~~~""_--~ h ·~ H 9200 11750 EA HI VD. HW.19 5~7289 Anaheim Park) CM . 549-«>30 ~·ks, to """" om e · GREAT Dane pups. AKC, 10 $1500. 6'n-3570 •'llotule OllMl 12 Bloc.k• So. G. Gro"• Fwy.I . * $239 * HERB FRIEDLANDER Christmas Gifts? 494-2457 10124 wks. Blk, ~~-lon stock. ~=..,:.:=::.:.,.~--~1----------1-:.:.:=::.:::.:::..::=:.:.:=1 KNITTED FABRICS "'_. . .., STAR No. ~ Eichenlaub. • Skyline '69 $4299 HONDA ":Jl)" '67 street cy-Sporling Goods 8500 For those friendo! and rela-PUPPIES 7 weeks, hall M .l F. R.eo&sonable {213) New mut I: fittincs. 2 aults New 12• wide 1 bedroom de: 275 Mi., ipratically new, tives so hard to pleese mY Hungarian Sheep, ha 1 f 691-0131 good Pili!. Top con d . center kitchen.Palm Spring~ special red paint, wind-~tOD. 12 Winchesttt 12 gau. a gift from ..,.FOR SALE F.liglish Sheep. GenUe 1 • 0J~ -LAB=-=RAOOR==-Mal~,-.-,-.,.-. Trailer. 644-0003 custom fully furnished in-shieki. elec. start. $7$ New, l2 In. hill choke. nkkei steel TREASURES OF Remnants, samples le Mill tell.igent. &l6-3704 Eves. AKC, a11 shot.I. S~ xlnt HOURLY RENTALS chiding' l..ll kik:h. appliances, price $4$. c&M. 842-3231 =~ ~ rebuilt. SlSO-ALI BABA ends Sat. Only 8 a.m. to 2 CALICO Kitten, 6 mo, fem .. field dog. 497-1583 * Rhodes 19'1 * carpet!!, drapes. 20% dawn. SACRIFICE $425 3419 Via Oporto, N.8. p.m. 929 Baker, Costa ~fesa. shots: to lovi~ lam. w/ -'-'-'--"AccKc=--.. -.,~,.-.,.-.,,~--Fun Zone Boat Co. Ba.Ibo& cash, trade or equity. SS9 '67 Suzuki, ZiO CCX~ Scram- Miscellaneous 8600 Open daily incl. Sundays FOR Sale: Like new deluxe [ lg. be.ck yd. CaJI e.., e. TOY POODL~ $75 COLUMBIA 5.S meter -rep per month 0 .A.C. bler. Excellent condition. 6U ll am-5:30 pm, Closed Moo. all electric hospilal bed by i 83'7-3067 l0/25 5~2168 after 5 PM cood. Must sell~ Bargain! I Rick 81ldino'1 Kings Pl., Newport Heights. MAG NAVOXCons olt' Simmons, includes inner COCK-A-P(X), blk .. 4 yrs. e TOYPOOOLEPUPSAKC 792-4341 or (2131 799-0'Z28 Mobile World 646-4032 A.\f/F"-1 radio combination. Put yourst>lf In our Place spring mattress & side rails. old, lemale, lovllA>lr l'CTII· nia!e 8 wks. $65. :::=:::=::::::::::::::: 19432 Be:u~h Bl., H.B. 962-1377 '66 H-0oo:C,,D-A~3ffi-, mlLSI 9ee to Bal $137.00 or s ma 11 Harbor Blvd D-I Theatre Call oves from 6:30 p.m. pa.nion for older person. ._._,..ril.•-'· Coll o•o ,,23 p C I 9020 '36 S H bo Bl SA 5.11-~--..... ............, ower ru sers · . ar r .. .,,,." apprec.; 'fi6 Suzuki 150, S17S payments. Credit Dept KE 3700 1"frFaddcn, S.A. 9 p.m. 671-4i07 675-ll!81. 6-6 p.m. 10/25 UNUSUAL b·I .. , & bl-"· G•. best ofI c.•o 5-7'l!l0, Anaheim SWAP MEET .. ..._,. , -- -19-\4 x 45 rt. Double Wide or er .,...,....14n F1RE\VOOD. Eucalpytus and AL!\fOST AJI white, gentle Dane pups, Oiampion line. ABSOLUTELY PERF Roadllner set up in adult •67 YAM.AHA 180 KIRBY Vacuum Cleaner t.. 0 ran ge . 6 3 7 -6 8 4 3. yng. male cat, apayed, nds. Terms. 897_11if16 alter 6 p.m. 1007 22 '.I Olrys., gLau twin park, Ready to move in. good. $450. °" best~;;,ris attachmffitll. Take over $8. E\'cry Sat. & Sun. DELIVERED. gd. home. 546-9174 f!!Ye . DOBERMAN PUPPIES. Volvo, m le out. Many ac-Indudes refriiented air 673-l882. rm J'lymnts or $43.80 cash, 5~1-1272 aft 7 MALE SILKY TERRIER ==----.:.".:.1 7 25, I AKC. M .. ,1 S•ll•. CffS, Le8s lhan "' new boal c 0 n dltfon;,.., dlshwuber lc1;i968..-'"-yiiA°"MAH==-o~~-1 Credit dop(, 535-7280 lO Id p n:tiJ•'FY-Stri......1 6 mo old " ~ p · tS3?50 i213)m.JC63 ~... A 100 Tra!I AnahPim 1$6 ORG Aus!in J.1£'aley. niOI'!. 0 · ape~ 1'''" e 9!12-853.5• rice R · · landscapln1, ~a~rt, patio Master. Less th&n 400 mllei. Elec ovmlrive Tonnrou & Sl50. 842-5746 male kitty. Very lovable. I=========== 26' STEEL HuU Ctiry Sea V. awnings , ak1rtiJl&, new $400. 673-6763 • VACUUMS • soft tops. $500 c11 sh. 1967 NE\V r.-1an'5 sutt, never wom Rsbrkn. 646-?006 eves. l0/2S Hor'" 1830 Xlnt Cond.' $500) or trade carpet. lined drapK. Serial l"'=~=------1 $10 up. Repairs & J>AfU. \Vur!itzrr elc>C1nc Oril'an. size +I. SJ.') 100$! 1125). 12 CATS & klllenl'I need I--''-'--------R.E. or car? 1213) FA l-2356 No. s-6n3. Full price $8500. HONDA 'GR • :nl &Tambler Jk-A50nablr. Coast Vacuum modrl 4300. Early American 494-1238 a:lter 5 speciRl Plomes. AU sizrs. Horses for Christm11 =========I Call Dual Wide Sales of Xlnt cond. ~fust 1,. 11 111 E, J7th, c .r.-1 .. 642-l560 12;11 !l&l-1314 540-6183 before ~ P;\f 10/24 Ii . Tho J • A!'.<PY • Hor.;es Speed-Ski Bolts 9030 Oiapman Mobil• l n c. $5()0/offer 129-Zlth St. NB. CUSl'Q)I reatherrd flnwer 0s"m"os""'o~>'' "'r"°A'°'RA=n"1s"E,,---Misc. W1nted 8610 EIGHT Young bunnies also 43 llt'ad -m>m $l'r.>. 20086 -· ---531-85n. '67 HONDA Trail Bik-r--:-"like attangrmenls . ldral for 2 BEAUTIF1.JL PLANTS TN ~n rabbil5, 892-4200 Laguna C:anyon, Laguna FLYING V 1========='1 new, 62 mi. $Zl0. 675--4576 Christmas l{lfts. Tak i ng A 5 GAL. CAN 0.'ILY $.'i oo * WANTED * 10/25 Beach. 67 Gl&s9p&r, 17' 120 hp Mere MOTOR HOMES 9215 day!, f9.U39), CTP orderg now. !">t8-11665 after 5 P .M. and all day Good Used " Antique tum. LOV-~-AB=LE~-oo~w~.~~-,.,~--' CUSTOM western saddle. ~ .l roa~.?"11tt· $2550. '00 SUZUKI -150 P_.._, e. Hlway Used FunUturt. 7401 '"~r &12~ c.11 auer 5 "''C\,.' UPHOLSTERTNG -179.50. 2 .... t. ilr Sun. 1212 So. RDM St., dog mixPd. 7 wk1, beaut. Best oiler. C&ll ao,ytime ' condttiorl $775. 673--0357 pc. (European cnftsmen) '_s.n_1,•,',".-'.,..,=;--Weatminster, Westminster -.1 ...... ~ ... 64&--0398 10/24 837.9682 I • 893-J683 • """"'"'5 Free ..t, del, pickup, 115 2 MAGS $40 BEAtrr. Blue long ba~ Main, RB "Berny"~. For 283 or 327 WANT: Small dinette Et. Peraie.n female, s moa. Had TRANSPORTATION FIBERGLAS boats POOL TABLE.5, Tennis This., Plus &II ~11gnum white, Antique or .,'r'Ollght lhoU. 968--2470 10/2.4 --~ -. (ninaQ)ata) Hardware • ~ ~~ "'-I 3;g Iron. Alao aood fill .cove. Bolts & Yachts 9000 M --1~ ·~ 1-.....f!I' This, t x e r c i s i n g ...... ""'' "ic met. Sz 7 • ~ MOMMA Siamese, 2 babte. ercury • •va-ON '-' ... ~ Equip, at dtscount prices. l-:---;Cal=l,,-545-J690==-"=' "'= HIGH ~-ldl _. &: teenager. Call la ldltf:na. .68 OONZt, 18• 2+3, 50 mph, HP> Tr1m. GI a 11 In lild _Call~_w_.i_,_,_"_· _>_38--03 __ 11 __ 1 e GOOD 1.J:SED CARPE1'-r .,.., n want~; any G42--00T'l 10124 rough wateor 00.t, Mira ~ m a t e r I a I 1 , In b o 1 r ~~ENS!" " bo ING condition; to buy or rent. . . 1 tra.nsmiaion, Control•, .,..,c.Ar vc. ir; .. ts, me . SA<JIU"f1CE 7Sc: PER lAOORABLE klttma4wttki dltlon. $-GOO. ftrm tDC .. ,bl,., wlo~'l•td•. ·--'", d · I YARD ""'" 673-3323 Aft . 6 P~f I ll 645-~ ·• 6 PM .. ._. ~ ......... ecor. nnn-essentra 1. ! .,......1251 old. N·~ ~ horn•. c, 11 Ml er. -..... er 1 ='-' l(VUU (8Wl.•el) and lbhlnir bo ti. Tht Pirete'• Chert GARAGE SALE: t w Jn box FREE TO YOU after 3 p.m .. 5-18-&U 10/23 17' Boston Whaler. 1966. nuta, lltftWI, 1 1,, r 1n 1 551 W. 19th. Dt" 548-1!1.f springs, doubl, maUN'll A AFFECTIONATE male pup. 105 Chryaler engine. S2885 uae-mbUeL Will Sell lo Marine Equip. 903S NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT * POOl TABLElrr--"'~'-;""'~·=-m~™"=·~540-0Z\6"'="---ISANDY loam top aoU, ~ py frtt ta tood hom11. Me&1 Mar1ne. 642-.5800 lfirbHt Bid:t'7' b' thll Dl· FOR SALE • 531-e'I'«> n!ARGE IT! -""-"'-----'---'---'-"-'-',_8111_-W> ______ ,_orn ____ Whl='..:•..:El:.;_::... __ , __ ,_TDIE __ wr __ . _5'9-<ll30 ____ ·----====-1---------1 WANT AD I I I ·' ' "€ 'F s w -·--··---.. ~~-----. ---,.. ..-----~---~------..----.._ -....----.....-·--... -------_.. -----. -.... -------...... -... -... ----- WedM<d.,, °"*' 23, 1'168 DAILY l'll.01' TRANSPORTATION Auto Jtrvl .. TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION tRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI~ _!T~R~A:!:!N~SPO~R.!:TA~T~IO~N~_!:TRA~N~S~PO~R~T~A!_!T~IO!!:~T~RA~NS~~R~TA~l~NLJ!~~!°!~!!i:::r 9600 Imported Autoe 9600 Auto1 Wentod Imported Autoe HOO Imported Autoo --------9700 ",.,,. -VOLKSWAGEN FIAT TRIUMPH 2MAGS $40 WE PAY ••• Plu1 .. n Mognum '"' FIAT, "'° a...,. <ntb -1Ue T, SI& !$,GOO ml. a.an. SI&· C&ll -aft ' .... 548-1122 aft ' l'M DUNE.._l!IJ!ld<n. ~·vw --.1m1L JAGUAR Xlnt....t. No----,.,...6_2_X_K_E __ lluit ..U! 185. 5'3-'IU! 1"5:====~==111eaut11u1 -"°"' · o•l> Auto Tool1 & Equip 9410 06,iilo miles. Phoae m."'73 HEAVY duty VlC'toe' Pl weld1al: aet; m1'c. tool• a: ~to part&. 6f2..918T After 6 PM Wk:days, all ~ Sat a: -· . '82 INTERNATIONAL Scout. !'our wheel dtlV9 · -travel top, DeW' tirf!ll ~ cub will --·~ CASH ............. _,.., call UI b fr'M erthnate. GROTH CHEVROl.fT Aile tor Sale• Manapr lB2ll Jleaob BL, l{unl:i.'lllon Bt•cb Kl>= ',,.,., Cars CADILLAC '68 CADILLAC . ELDORADO Full and -....... , In- -fadory air oaDdl- .... """ 21"' """"1 -' moothB citL \Vjl •crilb: 'II IN'l"L ' Wbl. &We, new an.; beater; -.ct. B-36:13: --· J1rtlljJOrl 31inµorts 9600 ~ And Ori .. Tod1yl =~==;.;;....;.;=I BIG SAVINGS ON '681 tor -WU! ....... flo. _Coll ......... . 1967 RED MGB, wire wheela, redio. Law mllear•· 6'13-1642 PORSCHE '66 Poncho 912 5 Speed, red with bladt•lnt, AM/FM radio. 1.1,00J nillet. Dunt Buggl.. 9525 '66 Porsche 911 5 Speed, white with bl.ack tnt., DUNE Buggy, custom, one Chrome wheel.a, new ttre.. of a kind, .m~ d. 3 tmed m.ll.!t 9)"Btem. maguino ''"""" attld•o; BAYSIDE MOTORS ltreet legali& all extra& U:OW.c.oo..tllighw'ay Must see to ·appreciate! ~ Beadl * 9li-6005 Flberglasa bodY, all lee.tbtt -•-~ tt.. inter., --.!,._642·-5174 · -.;.<.,-........ ·-~-Balboa .., '"' EvH. -:::=':i::-:-iC::::~~--1 DUNE,,_,., !lbor11 .. PORSCHE 911S body, new trans.. ft'blt. 2 to cbooe from eJI&'., $1,IXXI. 548-4461 ~-* 100 miles MEYERS Monx w/lll HP. T & M MOTORS .... ""'""" ....... $1,lSI 673-ml dlcyg; 646-3410 eve, Garden Gl'OV'e Blvd. at 8eub lmporhd Autot 9600 (l) 89Uf6l er SU.2'284 '68 PORSa!E, white with BAYSIDE MOTORS black mterloc, AM I FM e SALES & SERVICE • stem> tape, chrome wh1a lo ONE OF 'VHE LARGE.ST mllH:. $4800. 615-1211 SfJLl!X:rICl'<S OF IMPORT-1 ::::======= ED AND DOMESTIC CARS IN MANGE OOUNTY. ].1lX) w. Coat Hlghwa;f' Newport Beach -646-5Cfii Oirectly Aero. from the .._..,Club e Spot Cuh for Importii: We Pl.J' more 'for any tmport regardlet1 of year, mike or condition. Try U1 before YtJU ltll. ELMORE Mcnt>RS, 15300 Be•ch Blvd. Westnrlnster. 894-3322. '67 DATSUN WAGON ..wtorrui.tic, IVH. Red walls. Low mi* Vwy dMn. $1700 o...r....-... TOYOTA NICEST CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY '1i6 TOY OT A SPORT SEDAN. 00 h.p. plu,, XI mile per gal- lon economy. Room for-the «Jtire Woily. 'l'h1I 11 thl winner everyone'• t:alldng about Oloice al f'OU:r. From $1396 ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Pb.""""' I;======= l!l.lOO hob Blvd., w- DATSUN '89 'til'I '89 NEW 'Sil '69 '69 '69 DATSUN Looklll 50,000 ml. auar. $186.86 Down $53.86 for 36 mo. OAC + TU I: Uc, ---998 So. Cout Hwy., L.B. .... .,.,. - FERRARI ·~ FERJWU • 3.lO GT 2+2, 1Uver, red leather int. win wboell, AM·nL lmmoc. $8950 (n..m) - FIAT 8111 MAXEY lTIOIY(O!T!AI Eary to R••ch at G1rfMold and lo,ch 11181 .. och Blvd. Huntington ~ch Ph. 847°8555 I Ml. N•rth af Paciff• Cao11t Hwy. 011 leach llvd. NICIST CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY 'Ill TOtol'A piqt ·UP. The -.. ¥ 80,b.p. IQ mlleo P«~ ... fn~~~ wnu:tm• • ~flnd ...... om, .•• nm ELMORE ' ' }IOlal.S ' .TOYOTA. I'll--1D'm Blada B!'fd,, W11lnwwtr .. . .. OP'll.. Stab Wagon sm; 1967 AUSTIN HEALEY roadster, law miles $2795 1967 nAT 850 Coupe, the pop.tlar one ••..•••.. $1475 964 JEEP Station Wagon.1 4 wheel drive, WUTen ubc ••••••••••• .••. $11'6 FORD COR11NA GT, with bqcket sea.ta .. $1475 7 PORSCHE Cpe, It will tum )'OU on .......... $1 '795 MGB :Roe.dster, must lite thla one ........ $11195 JAG XKE O>ope, AM/FM, 6,(k)J miles $5595 MGB Rot.dstel', ready to go ......... ' ...... $1995 mruMPH Jtoadatet-, --. ••••••••• Sl'lll6 JAG XKE Roadtter, new top, chrome wbeeh:. 1>1!15 19&t MGB !toadst:er, hard· tap Gld .u .......... $1'85 BILL BARRY PONTIAC "' tail lfmiA IMPORTS I DX> E. 1st St., S.A. 541-2681 TOYOTA-YOLYO 1---------1 1986 Harb:lr, C.M. 646.-9303 * New Volvos * GET A BETTER DEAL Herb Friedlander 13150 Bea.eh Blvd. <Hwy 39) 2 Nka: So. G.G. Fwy. 893-7566 537-6824 Autos Wanted 9700 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR q.R BLUE CHIP AUTO SALES 2145 Harbor B!Yd. Costa Me91l 642-9700 Will Buy . Year Volltswqen or Pcnche I: PQ' top dollan. Paid for or not Call Ralpb 673-1190 IMPORTS WANTED ~ Countt .. TOP S BUYER. B1LL MAXEY roYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 1963 CHEVY II, 2 Dr. Sdn. 4 cyl, 3 IPd. In good" condltkln. Private party. 96'2-1579 over Th • "1968" Previously owned * Oadlllaew * All colon, models, tull pwr, air condlt1ooinr. Save up to SlSOO! ALLEN Oldsmobile-Cadillac 1150 So. Cout Hlway Laguna Be1ch 494-lOOi '57 CAD Ope De Ville driven lesa than· 6000 miles ra- year. Air cood. fUll power, • beauty. Private part;y. Dick Wovel 613-3996 '66 CAD CONV, all black, stereo tape deck, Xlnt eond. $4,00l. ·4%-9358, Mr, Wood. CA MARO NICEST CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY '61 Camaro -Sunburst: gold with CQfltras:ting blade inter· lor. Automatic trans., VS, power steering, loaded with extras, Positively beautt.tul. Only $21!1! ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Ph. 894-3320 15.'llO Ba\ch Blvd., Wstmnstr lmponed A-96001mported Auto1 a~a~a~ ELMORE MOTORS Choose your TOYOTA from the largest deeler with the largest 1el1dion ••• 137'1 MO. OR ''1770 AMlllCAN CARS WANRD IN TU.DI CORONA SPORT SEDAN "ROOM" FOO ALL FINANCIN• AYAILAILI ON APftOVID CllDIT Wt ltld ~ fltw Toyot•• 111 flit 111011tli1 of Ju11e, July, A111v1t, 111d Septtfflbtr tlie11 111y other Toyof• De•ler 111 the U111tt4 Stet.ii TlioN !Mlt ff • ,.. •• .,. • • • 11d there 11, l•f-)'ff ill")' tf flew Ot 1ued ft)'of~, "' 11¥itt yow to ''''" 111 011d ••• r 11-l!'lo4tr11 ••rvlto ftcfll. 11, offtrf119 yt• tht fifltri ef· Solo Sff'l'lct ytu wtll find. '"WI CA•r at ELMORE MOTORS. lUOO llACH ILVD. WESTMINSTER 894-3322 9900lhod Ctrt 196 CLOSE-OUTS CROWN 4 DOOR HARDTOP ·:~ $728770 Solo Price-$51t50.70 $AVE $1437 4 DOOR SIDAN ~·:;z: $6993 30 Solo Price -$5628.30 $AVE $1365 . . . B,uy·from a new ca~ dealer. You· know he wi/( be here tomorrow to· bac/t. up the sale he makes today. '65 RAMBLER '65 ' DODGE "770" Automatic, power 1t11ring1 power b't-akis, pow•r windowi, r•d- io, h••t•r. INGS4881 Pol1r1 1 • d an. Automatic, power sf••ring: ali conditioning, radio, hutor. I RTI 1661 $1295 '63 CHRYSLER Conv•rtibl•. Autom1tic, radio, heat. •r, power 1t••rln9, air condition ing . IOKN8721 $995 '67 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury. Equipp•d with autom•· tic, pow•r st••ring end elr condi- tioning. ITGN 2631 $2395 '67 CHRYSLER Town & Country wagoft. Automatic, power 1teering, pow•r brak11, r1dlo, h••t•r, air conditioning. IXSP271 I $3495 '64 CHRYSLER ")00" Automatic,, pow•r 1t•1rin9, powar brt1k•1, radio, haaf•r, air con• ditioning. I PUX279 J $1495 '65 DODGE Coronet 600 2 Door Hardtop. Auto. matic, powar 1t••rin9, radio, h•at•r, air conditioning. (PAJl86l $1695 '1695 '68 PONTIAC leM1n1 Coupe. R1dio, he1fer1 1uto. me+ic, pow•r 1te•rin9. IW8AOl9) '2695 '66 PLYMOUTH Aufom1tic tren1mi11ion, power steerin9, r1dio & he1t•r. ISYS844l '1695 '66 Continental 2 door herdtop, Full power with alr. conditionln9 and all th1 1xfr11. Gor· 91ou1 Ice Blue finish. ISLK 496) '2995 '66 CHRYSLER N•wport 2 Door hardtop. Auto- matic, power 1f1erln9, pow•r ~rli:t.1 R&H, 1ir cond. IRSN0541 '2295 All ,,._ ..... th •llf ,.. .. Prial ......................... ># n.tllty. Od. .. I 'I • I • I I ' ... -•• --.l -.... ---....... -.. __ ;:_-.-.-----------=-==-·-Jw. -~-~--• ..... •L·~-~·---·-·•-·-·-·4&-~--------------.......... __ ..... _.;....;;;._ ___ ~~..:..-...:...:-'1 ---1969 CADILLACS------ CRJIF'l-:sMEN ON DISPLAY AND READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY! 1968 COUPE DE VILLE 1967 ELDORADO Thia C•dillac motorcar i1 fini1hed in Gracian whita $ with Roy11! blu• p1dd•d tor. •nd the int•rior is in el•· g•nt blu• d•cor cloth •nd ••th•r. Fully •quipped with all of C•dill•c'1 fin•st f••tur•s, including power 1tear· $ An 1b1olutely gorgaous 11utomohil•. Fini1h•'d 1n Embar Firemist with black l•ather interior, h111 •II of the Cadillac power fe11tur•1 •nd C1dill•c f11c· tory 11ir conditioning. This fine car was loc11lly own•d. 9, 1ura to t•1t driv• .this ba•uty, jod•Y.• in9, pow•r br•k•1, pow•r s••t1, pow•r windows, 1ing11I 1•akin9 Nldio, end of ~ours•, Ceclill11c'1 automatic 11ir conditioning. ---OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM--- 164 VOLKSWAGEN Deluxe 2 Door model ftnlshed ln tan belge with matchln& Interior. Equipped just like moat of the others with radio and heater, white aide wall tittl and 4 speed transmis- sion. Thia ll the economy klnl:, 10 start SAY· 1na: when you buy thia car at only SALi $I 077 PRICED '67 CONTINENTAL 4 Door. n.utlful Turquolaa -with malchln& turquot&e interior. Lmury features includin& power atffring, pmnr bnket, pow· trr wbidO'm, power seat, factory air condition· ms. Th1' beautiful automobll• will not be here: lonL IO bUl'I)'. WI $3888 PllCI '67 CADILLAC C.oupe Cle Vlll~ Beautltul Monterey Green fln. 1.rib with Black vinyl root. and full lHther In-t.mar. 1'ull Cadlllac power Including power vent w1ndowl and ot eoune, tactoey: air con- dlttonln&. SALi $4444 PllCI '64 CADILLAC eaupe lit vm.. :Alpine white with black cloth and leather trhn. 1'ull7 equipped wtt.h power •teerlne. power braki!!1 ~ natl, power windCl"n and air ieonmtSonftlr, An uqu1aite .... SALE PRICED '65 CADILLAC Sedan de Ville. Cl.dillac'• finest and fully power equipped for luxury drtvina:. Of COUl'R this includes factory air conditioning, power windows, 6 way power seat, tilt s~r:ing wheel, and finished in 1leamlng TurquolH with harmonlzinc leather and cloth interior. SALE $2555 PRICl '65 PONTIAC Grand Prlx. Automatic transmission, power 1teerlng, power brakes, radio and beater, buc- ket aeats, ~nter console, tachometer, white lide wall tires. A SAU $1333 PRICE '1f' '66 CONTINENTAL Coupe. A vibrant yellow with black vinyl top and matching black leather trim. Full power plw air condlUoninc. Absolutely flawless! SALE PRICED '66 CADILLAC Coupe de Ville. Solid &'.Teen finish with green leather and nylon lnter1or. Full cadillac pow- er equipment plua factory air conditioning, tilt-t1teerlna: wheel, power door locks. 6 way seat and many other of the extru ottered by Cadillac. (Stock No. 687) ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST SELECTION OF PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLACS • COOPE de VILLES • SEDAN de VILLES • CONVERTIBLES • ELDORA DOS • LEATHER TRIMS • OKOR CLOTH TRIMS • '67 OLDSMOBILE Cu!tom Delta ' Door hardtop. Factory air conditioned with power ateerinc and power brakes, automatic transmission, radio and heater, white aide wall tires, absolutely beau· tiful. Satin r;;ilver exterior with harmonizing interior. SALE $2888 PRICE '66 SEO. DE VILLE Exquisite Topaz Gold with Sandalwood padded top and gold and nylon leather interior. Full power including ta c t or y a.Lr conditioning, stereo AM./FM, door locks. Truly an out· ata.ndini buy! (ROR 843). SALE $3777 PRICE '62 DE VILLE Popular 2 door Kashmir Ivory with white full leather interior. Factory air conditioning. FuJI power including ell!Ctric windows and seat. See to appreciate. {LYV225) SALE $999 PRICE '66 RIVIERA Finished in deep Jama.clan Blue with extra clean white vinyl interior. Hal power 1teer· lng, power brakes, power windows, power seat, tilt steering wheel, white aide wall tires, factory air conditioning. Beautiful COLOR SELECTIONS • SAU $3777 PRICE SALE PRICED '63 CADILLAC 4 Door hardtop. A •tunnl.n& 1Uver aqua u:- terlor with ma.tching: interior. Fully C&dillac equipped with power steering, power brakea, power seat and window•, automatic tran&mi&- sion. The finest in comfort and value. SALE $1222 PRICE '64 FORD '11!.e most popUlar 500 XL model. Sunburst yellow with white convertible top and black vinyl interior. Automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, white aide wall tires, factory air conditioning, white sidt wall tires and much more. SALE $999 PRICED '62 CADILLAC Sedan DeVUle. A shimmering Satin 1llver ex- terior with cloth and le&ther interior. Power slttring-brakes-windows-seat and factory air conditioning ot course. Lovely well cared tor "'· SALE $999 PRICED '64 CHEVROLET Station wagon, 9 passenger Impala with only 29,000 miles!! Normandy blue with blue &11· vinyl trim. Automatic, power steering, power brakes. A one-ln·a-thousand cream putt. SALE PRICED -------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA NICEST CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY '62 CHL'V. IMPALA SUPER SP'T. Silvt!' metallic blue with cootrutinc interior. Loaded with emu. Atw> lutely Immaculate. sm; ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Pb. 89<"3211 NAB ·ERS 2600 Harbor Blvd. Cost& Mesa 540-9100 + GET A DOOR MAN '64 MONZA. Real nice~ Must * WAGON BUYERS 1967 MERC Colony Park Sta ·sAl..UTE FOR $11951 WI -host oUer. Call OPPORTUNITY! w,.. Ai<"'°"· ndial "'"· Pre<J'llll)e(i 1962 CONTlNEli-846-2629 .tier 6 Jchwon &: Soos Linc. Mm=. l7'¥T 1trg, pwr disc brake., TAL luxury Sedan. SParlding --,1'°'ge;=-oam="vAIR='"'M=oo"ZA"'"'-I Dlrs.. used car dept. at l9ll compl. deluxl!! int, auto &or 4 door sedan, gUll metal wttb emtine white with bee.utiful Outstanding coad. S9'1§ Harbor Blvd., OlSta MNa locks. Call. any Hme wkends 'black interior, power steer- Tahitian hlrqoiM nat\nl or Best Offer. 646-0159 is liquidating 1heir stock ol or after 6 wkdaya. Pri Ing, power bni.kK, air condi- lea~ interior. Factory AIR =========-1 seven choioe popular STA· owner. 644-2846 tionlng, automatic transmls- ca1lDITIOOED of course. A COUGAR ·nON WAGONS tllia week at ---------I sion. radio, heater; U c. no. ~ intrinsic vUJe "1'fUSI" GO'' wtntertime TRK 492, Xl,CXXI mi Kelcy for -""°"""quality. "'7 COOGAR XR 7 .,,-to "" publl<. (Pay MUSTANG Blue Boo!< -$2!06, ht car lot on Harbor Rvd. Beautiful dark m e t 1 11 l c you to invegtjgate!) 947-'ltliO Wholesale, s:lS. Excell mt JOHNSON & SON "'"' with blaol< vinyC top 1'"5 FORD Con•-GIJaxy NICEST CARS <on<lition, ""' """' $21!6!! Lincoln-Merrury and black interlol'. Power soo. Power SAB, fad. alr, IN ORANGE COUNTY May be aeftl at DAILY PI· Co«ta Me!lll Branch steering, power di9C brakes. 30,000 milts. Xlnt cond! call '67 MwlfArll Sport Q:lnve.rti· lDl' p&ridng lot, 9 am to 5 1967 VIP Plymouth NICEST CARS NICEST CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY IN ORANGE COUNTY '66 PONTIAC GTO Hardtop '61 RAMBLER 4 OR. srA· Cpe. Silver green with black TION WAGON. Tua little landau top. 4 on the floor. feller ts in abdutdy fantu. Imme.culate and ahowroom tic condltiorl. Auto., pwr. tre"1. str., air cond., lugg. nick, $2295 head l't!lt&, it'• loaded and ELMORE "-"'": MC1l'ORS TOYOTA Ph. """"" 15300 Beach Bl•d., Wstmnatr ELMORE 15300 Beach Blvd., \Vrtmnm 'fa CHEV, Impala, 2 dr. SZ,O. Stt days, 211 E. Ola.st Hwy, Newport Be&di, 673-n.t auto. trarui.. AM radio, 9GZ..9"784 ble, llPBritlinc powder blue pm. 330 W. ~ St., Costa Jcfn!on & ScN Linc. Mere. 1!141 liarbor Blvd. 642-7lli0 ht'!!er. 13.roJ mt Priee 1-~-------1 with IOOW white top, 6 cyl. Mesa, or oell 642.(371, ext Dlra. used Clll' dept. •t 1941 '67 CONVERTIBLE. 77,000 S2MO. Phone M2-5745 after 6 '58 FOR.I> Wl.g(lfl, Intf'rceplOT automatic, loaded with ex· 2tl, 9 am to 5 pm. Evenlni1 Harbor Blvd., O:ista. Me!'ll. ml, air/cood, run ......... ::=======::;I -...i...t-. relial:de. $'145. Call tra~. Peri~ '-•'---1 call 644-1742. fl liquid&ti"" their liodt of y-• "''6"' '='-'• •U< "'"" ..... l!'Ve9 $4:m. Ownpr 644-1361 DODGE 675-4257 col.lea:e bound. Only MUl'OHS TOYOTA Ph. fe4..33XI 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmn«tr '58 AMBASS. Dix Sedan R .l H, air cond. good tires, 1 owner $475. ~2042 l:::::;--,==:-,,--,---,--l le'\"el cOO\ce popJhJ' STA· <i'--;;;;;;;=;;C,;-""'--191!15 CHEV ll Cuntno. Auto TICl'J WAGOOS thill week at '64 CONTINENTAL, very ---------! 11896 .,..._ R/H. Oril """"'· "MUST GO" """""""' """ It"°. """""· ""'· '68 Dodge Charger MERCURY ELMORE Sl.195. M2-2241 or M2~ prices tio tht J!Uhlk. (Plly lngs S.36-7265 Immac. dlr, V-8, automati.c,1---------1 ffes. yoo to 1n.\181ipte!l 642.ml -, radio 1t beater, lo&da!~ Ex· * WAGON BUYERS MOTORS '62 OORVAIJI Moo,. A-1 ,63 Novi Super Sport CORVETIE <eUont <ondilion. Fttn<:h OPPORTUNITY! TOYOTA o::ind. tbnlOUl S a c r If I c e pearl l1'lY black landau John!Oll &: Smia Llnc. Mere. Ph. 8!M-3.1XI JG5. 541--1344 ~ml condition! 6 Cyl. * "FL y ME TO leather top,' S285 OUh deli. Dirs. used cec dept. at l!Nl ls:Dl Bted:I Blvd., Wstmnstr '!9 QIEYY O:Jm>trtl:U. whttie au~:,es-~~ Absol THE MOON"! make pe,ymtt1t1. f94.9773 or Harbor mvd., a:.ta Metia ,67 MUSTANG GT 300 V1. ·t ~ c· ::.1,,J:;. tNdtet .all. $E Outi de-RAY'~~~= ~ ~~ ~~~ b&fftl. 4 aped, w;dc on.ls. ~ ~. _ ,. ~ U..... """""'" s:ll.86 "'°' HARDTOP C5 thrilUno FALCON TION WAGOOS .... .-at ,,..., clutd>. FM, $2400. ROY CARVER PONTIAC T-BIRD ""MUST SELLI 'S2 T·Blrd. F\ill ;iower. Stereo tape set-up. ~ or otter. 644-liOi, 833-0173 ... __..... ·-~ .. _...,,,,,~=="'=-=~~-:-I hoawepowr, W'Or\ds tiMSt 4 "MUST GO" -...tntl!l'tinw:: ;;"';--ISU;;;;;:-"'v."'o'-t.""'n-;:;;;;;;;:I _!I!!!!'!'!!!!'!!~~!'!!~~ ,.. Locilll w. nn out? '55 rnEVROLEr M Air 1 '67 rr v.. full -·"" • aat.r m .. o.ta x.. '62 T-BDW, 1ooc1 2nd cv: ... -..._ --. .• AM.FM re<lo, '61 FALCON. g cyt, aut~ """'" to the ,,.-. Ci'I> H ~-•-Kl 6·44" eolllr:a under low ...,._ IPOl't ~. RMlo. hetlter, f!'tc. Sp&ric"q or\glmt atnto clHn. $300. 6T3-4493 afttt ' yoo to 1nvetitipte!) &Q.TlliO Fad. Warr. Ukt IM!W.1 ~ ""' 5tG439I Mier 4 30 PM '9 aa:v. Van; reblt. tnC· mint condition. ~T1'64 blue metallic wtlh imrnew-pm 1965 MERCURY Q:mmuter _.,_._m..... ___ ...._ ____ l -S-T-A~T-l-O-N-w-a-1-0-n-, """t Onnrl9 Olutt'• ~ : Gd. tlNI. c:t.n. Azle $250. "5 Q,eyy-NOMAD, 327 F.l-lat1 ~vinyl interior. For I ;;========I Stat.ion w~. 1 JIUI w/ pa&set"Cer, '62 Pont I a c Deals fDr ltoDa • KOJ'IDt and TORONADO oo-:":.. ~ boa-.~ 4·" ""' ::::.... ""':' .::;-wl» ... FORD ""· Xtni rond. 1!7M. CIU 10 OLDSMOBILE C&t&llna. d,.n, -""'-""' _"!11~· -:--,,--.,,.--,-,--!--------~ .....-ll'CI SlGO. -..... let 8 am • 5 pm 54s-22ll , Call 5t6-37'IO &ft 4 PM '67 Pontiac Sprint '61 'IORNAOO. LJ mils, IJr -tlM1'l CHRYSLER 1.t car lot ;:;'ia-Blvd. '62 ram r...iw. all pwr., alt s pm 548-4196 1963 F-a5 Oltlea, deluxe, 1986 P'(NI'IAC COnvert. v.a LOADEU! Lllce new thni-out. cond. "111 power. A beauty! 1 -----~-------- J ak-cond., xlnl conct., aood '66 MERCURY ParkJant. 2 RIK. wto trans. 0eao. 1 1700) or1J' ml b1 l.ty dliv-ThlJ Olt bu hid LOVING Slfl(Q, f'1H230 OHNSON & SON ..... $400. 536-1624 °'· IIT. ruu vwr. ·~· ™· 1'=".....,="" .,,w.""===== _,"'=·-io-,-..,,-=:-=::::-1 CARE. $1SO C1oh deh, dlt DON'T ruin WUlll '"'-.. Llneoln-Mtrau)' DlAL diftct ~ cbuJ:e Landau t.op. 32,IXO ml. Xlnt M1BI' Sell! 61 Olda Conftrt. '60 Pondac:", eood C!'Ol14moa or lake older trade. Ta.kt thma to fumlah )'OUt home Co.ta Me. Drvdl your 84, then lit be.tic W cond. mutt lt\ll Funl1lhed De. tht'ouchout-111t $300. f325 or But Ol!tr laW payments. Aflfr 11, • • • · rind (l"Nt beyt ti to-- Dtl Hari>or BlYd. &g.'ntJO U.t!D to tbt phone rlzial (l), cv. Prl pty. g..oxi M&.81 at 1765 Monnwia __ ...;•:....:-==-'·'----; 494-.mn ntr S45.0534 dq'• Oumfted A&. ' • • FORD SUPER Center IMPORT CENTER DIUCT FIOM • ENGLAND 100 MPH e BUCKET SEATS 32 MPG e DISC BRAKES ~ SPD. OR AUTO TRANS • • ~cl=~~ 'tP ' . ·CORTINA JQo Flil.sTS IN ftltCIS ~ND RAL~°rl"llll 25 COUNTRIU ·-.. .,. . -*188300 PLUS TAX I L)CINll DELUXE 2 ~ llDAN 2 DRS. -4 DRS. -WAGONS HIGH PERFORMANCE CAR CENTER Orange County's on1y 1uthori ted S1le1-Servic1 for Shelby-Amari,lft Cobras. All models r••iY fer Im· med iate delivery. CLEARANCE DISCOUllTS Oii AU '61s FORD TRUCK CENTER . F-100 plelc\lpl to h••"Y 411f¥, C1111pl•t. •Utherh.td t•_rvlu in.I 111rt1. CAMPER. MOTOR HOME CENTER,. fruclc-C1mp•r un1h , c1mp1n for your fruclc. Stlf con• t1inod ll'IOtor hom11. Salo1, 1tt'l!tt 1nlll ,.n+al by cloy, wo1lc or month. FLEET CENTER Flett oxp•.rh 1p1c11li10 In l1r91 er 1m1ll ltlllflllt' 1114 truck fl1et 11111 and 1orvi,1. FORD DIAGNOSTIC CENTER Your ctr 9th ov1r IJO .,jf1I ft1h 1t onchorod 1p1td1 up to 70 M.,.H, $9.95 compl•t•, SERVICE CENTER 74 11lfr• modern b•y1 m•nned by f•ctory fre ln•d f•ch111· cl•n1. Compl•t• body ind p1 int 1hop1. FORD PARTS CENTER 10,000 u1u•r• f11t with ev•r 1100,000 lnve..tory tf 1•11· uin• F•MI ••m. FINANCE. INSURANCE CENTERS Treln1d co11nHlori elwty1 rtedy t1 htlp yo11 with fin•nc• Int tntl lnturenc1. "T ROLLEY" TOUR kltl• one of 011r 1l1ctric "froll1y1" for •nioy1bl1 1hop· plRt fliro119h OYlr 5 1cre1 of new tl'ld 1111d ••rtl COURTESY BUS SERVICE O.r ll'tCMl•l"I\ buHt t1k1 y11 to tl'ld froP!I hori11, work, " 1keppl111 white yo•r 11r 11 Ml111 ••niccad. ·---·-----------... -·-----.. ---·---,-- ·NEW HARDTOP 1969 MUSTANG NEW 1969 THUNDERBIRD 2·Dr. Hardtop FULL 'llCI ORDER TODA YI ~LUS TAX I LICENSI ORDIR TODAYI NIW 1968 . llORDI •MUSTANGS FAIRLAND· T·BIRDI CASH OR TRADE DOWN NOW AT ACTUAL • You Pick tho Terms. 24, 36 or 48 Mont'1s. PLUS TAx AND LICINSI ON APl'IOVID CllDIT. Factory lnvQic;e NO ADD-ONSI YOU PAY OUlt . . ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICI NIT! NEW 1969 TON CAMPER PACKAGE PlUS TAX I LICIHH $339500 F-25~0~KUP AND CAMPll PLUS TAX 1 ·LICENSI OFF SEASON . SCOTSMAN CAMPiR COMPLETELY FUR· ISHID WITH ICE 10)(, STO'lli~ ETC. SLEEPS 6. !'.HO PICICUP MAS 100 IN•., AMP & OIL GUAGES, IHO LI. llAI ~PllN•I Ill 1.00)(16.s I-PLY TUBE· LISS _Tiii$,. DILUXI MIATil AND DEFROSTER, ETC. CAMPER SALE! SAVI ON 62 TO CHOOs1· FROM! GOLDUNE e ELDORADO e SCOTSMAN 1 o te Che••• ,, .... · • Thi• Price! ''5 c'"" 'S'' . sl 895 '64 Dodge Pickup s39 5 ~II 'Tfi'~ 11, '"'"'' Yl11YI VI. D·IOO. {57664AJ. 20% d•w11 er Ntf. l l 617) 11« dowfl or tr1d1 $11 per mo., 24 ri1011th1. tr1d1 SIJ per fl!'lo, JO P!IO. '65 Ford XL VB $1395 Air cond. Conri. F/pwr., 111w tip '64 Chevrolet Super Sport $895 I p1i11t. No . 7915A. 30% dn. or VI, 111fo1'11tlc, fully •q11lpp•d. tr1d1 $4t por "''· JO rno. IOTVl64 ) 20% down or f1'1d1 $11 '64 Ford Cust.4-Dr. $495 per ri10. 24 rno. V-1, 111!0. tren1. !NOV7041. 20% down or tr1d1 $25 per rno., 24 mo1. '62 Ford G1loxlo M.T. s595 '64 Thundwblrd HT $1295 VI, power, 111t1"'eMc. INlYI 111 20% •ow11 or tr1d1 121'''1111., Fl.illy oq11ipp1d. l l1ck tip. , .... tWOll IJ I, 20% dow. er tr1d1 Ill • 111 Ii "'0· 'M C111th11111tl · 52995 ''°,IN l'tc~uo . s495 Lh111I" (Dr. H.T, •1tt. '''' ,_Ill " Till "•hide Ml 1166. 20 % iltw" tr fHtl• S2J per ,..o., 24 ri1onflit. f::1" •l,.ifltl. IWTH411 I llcon11 dow11 or +rtd1 '62 Corv1lr Mon11 s395 S9f per rno. ]6 rno. lvc••t 1e1h, 111to., r•dlo, h•1t1r. 20% down or ff'1d1 $11 per ri10., '62 Chrysler Npt. s595 24 mo11th1. 2 Dr. H.T. Power 1q11lpp1d. llERJOO) 20% tloW11 or h'1d1 Transportation Specials .$25 per fl'IO. 24 me. Now 1v1r19!~ II c1r1 per w11k thet c111 b• rot1I od 1t wholo1tl1 to fl11 '63 R1mbl1r 660 s595 public. l11t fllo •1111ri 011 th110 older 4 Dr. R1dlo, h••ler, 111fo. Cll'I, lltlW4l4 ) 20% dow11 or +r1d1 SAVEii $25 per 1'10. 24 rno. HOLIDAY e FOUR WINDS MUSTANG SALi 20 fo choo11 from. "6" I "I" cyllnd1r1, 4 1p11d1, 1vtom1tlc1, Sorn• with p-•r 1to1tln1 I 1ir conditio11in9, 1965 thrv tt67 rnod1lt, conv1rtibl11, coup11, end 2+2 f11tb1ck1, EXAMPLE: '65 MUSTANG Co11p1. F11lly 1q11ipp1d , 111!0., R&H, PS. IATA- Ill) 20 % dow11 or tr1d1. $895~~. $33 i:::HI '67 FORD CUSTOM 4 Door. VI, •11to, fr1n•. Ne. P77l 7. 20% dowll or frtd1. $1395 ~~~. $42 """ MONT HI . '65 FORD PICKUP '·100 Yi ton 10111 bed f111tild1. 1Pl11611 20% down or ff'1d1 . $895 ~.'i. $32 Niii MONTHS '67 MUSTANG V-8 H.T. Cpo. Auto., PS, RIH. IVCL711 I 20% dow11 or +r1d1. $1895 ~1't1 $52 "1 " MONTHS '64 CHEYELLE Con .. rtlble. v.1, 4 •pHd,. IQZI'· 4371. 20 ?'. clown or tracl•. '995~~. '42 Pll24 MONTHS '67 VOLKSWAGEN 8lu1 lini1h with vinyl int1rior. White w•ll tir1s. (UU9071 '1295:.~ '49=.:.. '64 RAMBlER WGNS. Stick and ar..+om•ti~ 660 1erl". Equ;pped. I UJB.9741, ·1 OZC.1221, 20 Y. clown or tr eel•. $99· 5 PULi. '39 Pll 24. PllCI MONTHS '65 MUSTANG YI Hardto'p. Pow1r 1+e•rin9, powlf. br1k•1, 4 1p•1cl, raclle encl h•1ter. tNDW-1461 'I 095 :=, '38 =..;:.. USED CAR SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HOURS· ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT. ~ SALES DEPARTMENT HOURS PARTS & SERVICE HOURS PARTS ONLY & A~~ ICl 9 PM MO NDAY S:SllDAY e SATUPOAYl3 AM 106PM 7 /\f.~ i()? PM MON[>AY e 7 hM 10 I, l'M llJfC,OAY FRl[il\'I' 1! ti ,A lO • rM \llTlJi;:t:t1l CL0~£0 SUNOA YS f ) .. " I .-• "" ---,.,, • ____ .....__...._ ____ -~-A~~._ .. -.. • ----~---~--~-----~--~~--..._ ... -• ' I I I • _ OAILV PILOT HERE ARE THE CARS THAT ARE. CREATING OUR BIGGEST .~ALES BOOM! ROY CARvtR PONTIAC IS SITTING NEW SALES RECORDS WITH GREATEST PONTIAC YET! • ••• AND HERE ARE BUT A FEW OF THE PREMIUM TRADE-I.NS ,AttRACTED BY . THE FABULOUS '69s! Exira Specie.I• '67 Chrysler . $2977 New Yorker 4 Or. H.T. Eq_uipped with auto., radio, P.S., P.8., P.W., f1c+ory air conditioning. '64 Mercury · $1277 Marauder 2 Or. H.T. VS, auto., P.S., R&H, factory air conditioning. '65 Pontiac · $1577 C1talina 4 Dr. H.T. va, auto., P.S., R&H, factory air. i '67 Pontiac . $2077 le Mans Sp'ort Coup•. V8 , Hydrematic., P:S., 1 R & H, white wall t if'es. '66 Oldsmobt1e $1477 . . Cutl1ss 2 Dr .. H.T. Va, 4 speed, rad.io end haat;r. '66 Pontiac $2311 '68 Le Mans SAVE GTO 2 Dr. H.T. vs;, P.S., •uto., R & H, red lin•s. 17,442 mUH. ISAA7l9J. C.rt•r C.r• Car. 2 Dr. H.T. V8, hydro., P.S., P.8., RIH, w/w, factory air, factory warranty. Car- ver Care Car. '68 le Mans $AVE '68 Catalina SAVE '4 Dr. H.T. V8, auto., P.S., R&H, WSW, factory air, N.C. warranty. (VVU790). -Carver Care Car. "4-Dr. 9 pass. wa9. Hydra., P.S., P.B., R&H, w/w, fee . air, lug. rack, fac. war- ra nty. Carver Care Car. '66 Pontiac $2377 '68 Pontiac SAVE GTO 2 Dr. H.T. VS , auto., P.S., R&H, w/w, vinyl top. IRVM671 I. Carver C•re Car. Exec, 4 Dr. 9 pass. w•9on. Hydro ., P.S., P.B., P.W., fee, air, w/w, fie. war- ranty. Carver Care Car. '65 CalaUna $2177 '68 Firebird SAVE 2 Dr. Hydra., P.S., R&H, W/W, f1ctory a ir, !NZBr 1171. Carver Care Car. Overdrive cam 6, P.S., R&H, w/w tires. Cal'\'er Cara Car: '64 Pontiac $1817 '68 Pontiac SAVE GTO Sport Coupe. V8, auto., P.S ., R&H, wsw, fac- tory air. Carver Care C.r. GTO 2 Dr. ·H.T. VS, Hy· dra., P.S., R&H , w/w, fe e. war. Carver C1r1 Car. '65 MusflilO $877 '65 Pontiac $1977 '68 Firebird SAVE GTO 2 Dr. H.T .. Va, auto.,. P.S., R&H, w/w. IREBSlll Carver. Cira Car. . b cyl., P.S., 4 •pd., .R&H, 2 Door. H-Parfomenc.a; 4· •pHd. INOM5071 • j · n•w ar warr1nty .. 011'\'er Care C•r. • I • . 1969 GRAND PRIX HARDl'OP CO!JPE THE NEWEST ••• GRAND PRIX: OUR uLTIMATE ••• Here's the automobile that th• oth1rs are ,.still dreaming about. And they will b. for a long: time. Only Pontiac. can build Grand Prix. With 1t1nd1rds like 400-cubic inch V.a, hidden radio antenna, Carpathi•n Elm Burl ·Grain paneling end the newest, end most luxurious driver's compartment ever. S•• ,for your- self why '69. Grind Prix is the ultim•t• Break Away cir. Th•n, why not Bree Ir: Away I 1969 LE MANS SPORTS COUPE TllE Q,UIC~T . • . . . , I .,. ·~: Leave Hun:i Drum Driving Behind! 1969 FIBEBIRD 400 CONVERTIBLE THE SPORTIEST • • • The Breakaway Sports Car of the Year! 1969 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE HA!Ul'l'OP COUPE . THE -MOST LUXURIOUS . . • . BONNEVILLE! The ' 1969 Bonneville is luxurious in every respect. ·The st~nderd.'encjin+ fhis year -a 428 cubic-inch, +BBL VB. With a new 125-inch wheelbese, it's .the~~ngest of iA Pontiacs. And all this _makes Bonneville the most luxurious Pontiac, with all. the perform1nce and handling of a 9rHt Wid.-Tracker. -. ' . . • - lj . . ·- • • .. "I -.. . . . • • ,.. ,.. I " . . • • THURSDAY •· FllDAY • SAluRDAY WOULD YOU IEllEYE? ••• YOU . . WA~I( LESS ••• SAYE MORE FIND MORI YARITIIS I IN DOW~TOWN COSTA · MESA \' • ,. .. [ . . . . I • I I , \I . . r ~ 1. I • "We've been ·buaaed too many Umet," esptabll &belt A. Ntlaon, ~ ol the , Tl'an.sportallon'a amce "' • 1 high-speed ll'ouod trauporta- tlon. He IA)'I the government based au llmttable on m. duatry promlael that h • clafma haven't held up. Offldals now are aaylns, however, that the otl:aer Nit ti the project -a run betwe. Boet.oll and New 'Yen - lbouJd Main aoon, perbapl io November. They report that many ol the touahat technical and buatneu problems have been overeome. ..... ..,. ......... for MUer-IMerettJ nDned _...., eombi.oed with recent air trafl1c delays. bu put ~ ..-cY under the publlc ... Ba& be malntaJna &hat lldt kW ol lntereat la healthy too, Md needed for ~ ol the JnJed. Sen. Gordon Allott, (Jl.. Oolo. ), a member ti die Trauportatfon ApPnp1aUom lllbeommlttet, 9etl I& .... IDOther way. Clalmlng that ltdoul .... blelm remain fn th• Wuhlngton·New York na( lie 1171 that three yean after tbl · eftcl"t beaan, "1'• II a Y • natblng to show but a flee& ti can that won't nm and a nod: of potential pasaengers who no Janctz' take the. project .toully." Tbe Waahington-New York ,., to be operated by the P8la Central Rallreed, bu eDCOUntered electrkal pro.· blilu. And the maker ol the ·Linda Isle Elects Board '11111 Unda laJe Community A9oalatloa -elected .. 1il'llt otftcen. Serving on the boa.rd are &get Alllon, president; J. B. Shamel, vice-president; Paul Salata, treasurer;· Dr. Martin , Hansen, rules committee, and William Grundy, secretary. Ten . f amllies are 1 n resldetice on · the ~ Wand, with 11nother 20 homes currently under coostrudicln. Gniody ncKed. Ht blames part of the slowness on Congress, which has made available only W million of the $90 miWaa it baa authorized since the govern- ment first got Into the hlth- speed ground travel business tbree yean ago. . . 1be most talked4bout hope for I breUthroucil to higher UPROACll PRESENT LlMITI Tnllll Oil tbe Nartbeut cor- rid'or ,.. will ~ the pleld Bmlta of .,... ancl ~­ flclwJ lir tmdaf lypea of eqWpment The Wasblngton-New York 'tndaa; powered electrically abrwcb ov•bead lines, w111 necla kip pecla of 12.0 mll• .. ._..~and avera1e 71 -~ .. tbe 22&-mlle run. Tiff ._ •1' be cut by It. ........ tine hour• flat.· . . ' ~ .n. ..._New Yo.rk tral.nl, poweHd by ~ turbine enginet, will reacll ~ apeeda of 110 and Hetage IJO for tbe Dmile trip. 'J1)ey wHl ndllct &.be na bJ .. Illar, So ~..... . Tbil mates the traklf •• little futer than •lttilc tnlm and cooaidtnba;, .._ Chan. the famed Tota.Wt JJae tn Japan, which n~ WI .. , ... e W• IUlNT TCIOU AHO IQUtl"WUfT FOR WOltl(, f'V.Y, ANO P'AATY tNVALIO, llc:IC 9'•NTAL ltOOM, HEAi.TH O•NT& .. • Ne EDS LEE GARBERT lltt NIWPOIT ~YP.• . .,.,? Coste Mesa 714-M2.l 180 speeds wtthout hure COltl II,.._ ______ _ r a.ava .. a.a .;,:Jll~ISl1~4!'-~Y-SATURDAY DUNLOP FoilT IACDTI Strung ~~ .NYI•~ :tic. SAu 17 .95 -. Fort. Fra111es ....'-.... $ALI ·l~.95, ~tennis aa11 ....... -~~~~ 3(l~~· , $feel :"'--ck~~ ",.,:. ___ SAu ., 2~ Te-11 lalli ~. •..... · 3/ I •41·'.. ::clf-~~~-T-c ~ . :.~~~-· ... · 95«-~ n... . OY~N µ_e• · 1P1c1AL': . ~ ___ _.. . .. .. ...... . •. ......... ce Goll<'hll•~_!:.____________ 1..-. ... . ~ -' .. . . .. "' . OM. ....... :cou= CWIS I AT COIT r4 ~•"9 O..fy ••• 60LF SHOES .. . AT COIT \ -· 1 iennl• $hlrtS ·.._:,,._ .. __ _wa ·~0o ~AU.flDPIUY at c I TINNIS GLOtHI•-·--·· ---. OS S .at Shi... -u.... ........... .,.,. lie W WI• l ... 'J.ll ____ " ..,.. •E HIADUTIS .... '·" ... w.i _______ 9Sc •E TUIES ALL SIDS ________ I .SO BIKE 11115 2.60-2.88-3.25 HAtlT IOOK IACiS " · ~.,... O'Sc ... VOIT LFt FOOTBALLS -1 ... 6.H ••• ~.IAL A.95 _, VOIT 1(120 IASKmAU.S • ... 6.~. ~ • SPICIAL . 4. 95 CV4 VOWYIALL .... 10.H ••• SPECIAL 7..95 YOIT JI. & INTllMIDIATI ·: i .... FOOTBALLS , 6.~45 ':1PECIAL' ::._ _____ _ .... • - ---~~~~~----------------------------------------------~ 0 twL Y PILOT-Dl•en. WM.. o.t.-11, 1Nl-1 --.-- • f •I' I · 11NUMEllCUD • a. • ,. r IAHElf •AllE ~ · .., JA •• lll:TANT -.Jll~DIT ... ... VY.DUTY COMPLITl-4 PllCI lllM .$ETS · DIURSDAY e FRIDAY ·· .:i .... : ··sATURl>A¥e .. SUNDAl I I . ·~,,., .. · -· ·'llO .. l . NN Pull Wlt"f'anty · ....... : .. ·.SUD · . · AMPLIFIERS • -'560 I SPINETS ..... CONSOLES . . . . . . \)\. r : • FloOr · Sainplei .. -.-; ~ PllCES SLASHED .FOi , , .l•ElllTE SAlE! I, ' ~-................. ... t • tdf•SpHl•M•••••• .. ~-...... ,. ........... . . ) ~ --------- , • ,,r,: . ·~ IAl ,.~-1r4,1 . ~9!o '2545 . . "N"Ll\M . ·. . ~ • \ . l,! ,..,... . ' !'.9Un'AR:1· .; . ' • • • • r ....... llL1 .·,: ... ·: IECOIDS : ..... : QUI. ~P,NN. U '~NC . ~pr lffSTRUMENTS ITltlNGS . ' , ··: , . ,,, •••••••• ·Al; ...... . Fl·~·· · .. . I.I. '1 I • . DIUOINfi:'. ' ·• •\.' HUGE SAVINGS ON . ALL ' ~ · • t ~ ' .. ,,-.~ • I • ·:· .... Pim ,iW19 RI MBiAi w ' . .. . . . . · · · ' R~dn(I~ Grencl P" .. nosl Nev... have ~. off11ed IUCh .a . f1bulcM . . +tion of fine ·~nclt at ~~ low prices. ~ sbea from a.,by &rind . , to.~. and d with our famous wuranty. ~t ~ bm • • • · ~ : •·STEINWAY *MAD & HAMLIN * OOCKERING *KNABE · *ESTEY * wmEt * SOHMER * BRAMBAOf * KIMBAU COSlt MESA •'c';-ZSi-:.it: e SAN ClfMENTE ':: !i.!'~':' .!:' ..... ... loi. ,,, I .......... I 1 1 ' 1 .--.-. ..... ~--....---------.......... --.._ ..................... ~ ....... --...._._ ........... ......., ...... _______ ...... _··->.#1 •••..-•i-•.- 4 -DAILY PtLOT-'Downtown, Wtd., Oct. 21, 1td . Ru~k .CoricernedJbOUt ·N~-RW"PoCt*ine ; ... .... . . , -. r • :· . .. , . ~ WASIUNGTON (UPI) -top1cl or "soclaUst Intern&-lo use th1I -~ to ~ ,..e for YWI'~~ ~ .. ' U.8. otilciall '.it this stage . aplnatton Jn hit 'ppvate ! A new doctrine the Soviet tlonallsm." Ht has servtcl u tervene • daJ in the aoc!W baa tolcr_ate4 a re;tme ~ rJmplt .n uMUre-of tbe 1m-meetlnl Oct. • ~wttb So\rlet Union might invoke u Jus-a respo~le figw'e ln the 1st regime of Algeria? · it bu denounced with In-pllcatioal «··*be tnll fntea. -Fonf&R ·N'n'ettr Mdrti A. : tillcatlon few future lnterven-section on "agitation a n d no. tbla, doctrtDe now •P-creulna vigor tor 1ta left. Uon ot lbe Pravda ~. · Grom.Yb In NtW' Yd, but tlon In European coipmunls\ propaganda . ., l;::::p}J=-:to-.:;Co;:;;mpi=::;;\udst:;:;:;;;;;;;C;;;;;;h;:l:;;;n ;:a,;:;";;;wtng:;;;;;;;;;=uceaes:;;;;;;;;;='==· :;;:;;::;;;;;;;=ltu=;;;;:k =reportedly;::;;:;iiiiij;;:;;IC)Qght;:;;;:· iiiiiiiii:u;;;::::,=·iot;;;JIO'ffll;;:;;:;;;nert;::;::;; • .-;:::irmm;:=;; 1 ·eountrtes Is giving deep con-KoYalev'• article seema to · thro,,,. doubt on the coacept '.cem to Secretary of State of national 10verelontv and ·:oean Ruak and bis edyllen. lndependeDct, ancl -~ Ruak called a t t e n t 1 o n lri .a tey paasage: .. Bew.itchirig Buys from Martir~ furniture · to the 'doctrine In his address "'lbe people of the loclal· to ~ United Nations Gen-Jat co'untriel and the Com· eral Assembly Oct. 2. He al· munlat parties undoubtedly IO rabed Ha lmpllcations In have and muat have freedom nwnerou meetings he had for de~ ~e path of r~ntly In New York and 'develOpnlent i.a their on Washln~ with foreign min-countries. However, none of lsters o( European countries. their declUool should dam- . In fact, the ·new Soviet line lie either soclallsm iii tMlr seems to 'have become some-C1Wll country or the vital in- thlng of a .stumbling block to ~ of the other aoc1allat ·the opening of U.S.-Sovlet coontrles or the whole world arms talks to limit the cost-workers' movement which 13 and defensive missile a}'lo leading tilt ttrugle for .0. tema -talks the United clalllm." ·. . States only a few months ago What bothers u .S.' omctils '° ardently wanted. II the amblguou.r nature· of What Is Oda Russian pol. tbe article. It does not make Icy and Its" implicatiom, and clear whether these words why ls It aettbJg In the way are hl&ended u justlflcatlon of new arms limitation talks? after tbe fact for the move 1bt doctrloe to which Rusk against Prague, or whether refers actually Is an irticle the Kremlin Is erecting a published 1n the Communist new "auperlaw'' which mJght newspaper Pravda Sept., 21, allow U to move Into other outll$g justification for the Commun1st countries. Soviet-bloc Invasion of Czech. Fa, example, dOes this ar· oslovakla. tlcle directly threaten mav- It was done . by Dr. Sergei erict Romania, or lndepend- M. Kovalev, a Soviet histori· ent"IJllnded Yuaoslavla? an who frequently writeS on Would the Kremlin 1eek . ' PICK-A-PAIR COLONIAL SPECIAL FROM OUR MAPlE &ALLERY ... Swivel ROOker This ama1tng "M~'' ~vel base rocker looks like a cha.tr. Rocq and ndveb and al- ways returns tQ con-ect poallfon. _ Perfect mate. for reluhli or T.V. \'lewlng. Hand-rubbed maple finish with. aphlatered 1eat1Bdltact. F.-· , s1oaoo the P.Cr V '·;- ·Costa Meia's Oldest Home-Owned . ~ ~ture Store I 1865 HARBOR. BLVD. Downtown Costo Meta Ph. u 8-5131 r To A•• .. re Deli~ Lav·A·Wag Nftl' ,,.,.·c11..ui ..... ' eLAZY-BOY-e BERIWNE RECLINER e LEATHER CHAIRS e LOUNGE CHAIRS e SWWEL CHAIRS OCTOBER SPOOK SALE THURSDAY . FfllDAY SATURDAY . Dresses & Suits Ladies Blouses Daunt of '•m ''Mottly Cotto111" 30°/o to50°/o 1.-Ctf•• U.S. Keels Mens Sportshlrts Aili Casual Shoes Lon9 & Short SIHv .. 3.99 from ••• 2.99 . . ........... DltHll, Colon I C1rcl. & Pullovir . front ••• 5.49 Nyleil..,....... ~ lliorty Gowns ., trom ••• 3.99 K·ILIPI ·-:-~ 2.69 .... --.... ··-·-~; 2.99 .,.,. Jcickets . lblt4'10 7.49u~ IWEA1!RS 4.79to6 •. 99 ,,c:,.. ••• 3.99 Mens . Pants . 2.99,3.99· DON'T MISS OUR SPOOK SALEI-MANY MORE BARGAINS NOT MENTIONED HERE OPEN FRIDAY · EVININGI .. TIL NINI BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARG& CART& BLANCH! DINER'$ Cl\JB REINERT'S CHARGE ... EVEN CASH In Colt• Meta tt't DaPAftTMBNT •Taft.a 1 I 1 6 N l ,W P 0 l T IL Y,D, ' . ' .. , •• Nl'WPOIT I HAllOI IOULIYAIDS CONVENIENT PARKIN<:; AT REAR ENTRANCE t ~ i • I ' --------------------------------- . , - Ailtorilattc-diY Controls ... at low-cost! Bight care for all yo1ir dryables indu~ Pe.rmanent Press , •• l»etter wear, las ironinc! -Blab Speed 'AutomaUc Dryer • 3.autcmatic-dry cycles. • Aut.omat.ic Pertnanent . Prem CYde With "Cooldown." · • 3HeatSel~ · • End.of-cycle signal; • Fluff setting.· · • Porcelain enam8t top · and drum. · . 14988 " 11 DAILY PILOT -Downtown, Wtcl., Oct. 23, 1961-S -.. . . 3-BIG ·:DAYS -- • THURSDA·Y • .. FRIDAY .• .. •SATURDAY · · Wijj)es :UpJo .16 lbs.I ' ., ', ~~-P.eedsf 3 ~ycies! ~ l Filter Flo•· ~ Washer ~~::::::::--r---1 • Filter-Flo wash system-= ends lint-fuzz! . .. . • 8 wash, 2 rinse temperatures. • Permanent Presa cycle . -with ·"cooldown." • Cold water wash and rinse. · • Extra Wash Selection. • 8 water-level eelections. 17988 ·- ' .. .. ~-------....._ ______________ J.L..·......_ .. ....._.., _______________ _. Tower, Power Bbower All JOU• dlabet l!p&Wdln• clealll '• me eapaefty, .,., lotMUDc. swmr· dow'a door, llideo out rack• • • <>Jclee D&)\7 ~Nueai.4 ~ Prlca Start at 129" NO MONEY DOWN 3 YEARS TO PAYI .18988 A AS CONTEMPO~Y . W . AS STEREO ITSELF I ' ~ 1 l r • l -· .::1=~...::;. ~:r: .. -: >-111 •·--tM YqMlltt will .... ~ ... -. ..--... ~,.,,,,,.,... mldeJI*, wouW befoelllt Ill .m _.. Cllll wm net a.. .. ... ... 11• .... .... .... ... vte....tyle --m.. .... ·-..._ .6 ~ •• -·· ,.,,,,.................... --·--,,_... .. --~ Ill ,._ ....... -.. 6e ldnd .. ...,.. la ~ ...... 1..--..'.L. ' "'tcldteid .... ,.., llldlat'Wt. ._... .,.. ... tbey proWic1......... . •• UIWll CIDI I .,,. ., BANNS ~ Jelll ulMler T •r kl alt tc-blftre Ill btolltm of BELGARDB, YQollavia cvpetton. -"~-~ ~ ~· (AP) -~ mdll .... 11i1t NEW CAT~ WAil more~"" U'l1 ~~wt llwaslon al c.c:ti c d1t.ada tt "Tbt , YulOlhw blrden art to betrq not only onwlf, · II evident thllt MOICDW bu J>MCeful today," Niel Mika the ~ tb1 )IAllllt and ·tbt Ill& prestlp bl !: a at• r n TrJpilo. a nOoaal llA'tJ Mure," Malcldonl.a wrtw lAnpe. lllCl'dai'y 1n Crt4Jia, ··~ ~ · CllUlt wrote l n '1'il. COIT...... afW wM cm'W ta.a ~ f.-ce, 1'••mM, ·lie· ~ i'r t 7' ~ flom ..,.... tM ... tram J:ut...... .. \Mi'te'eal .-tf. llnt wen. ol tM ..... ... tbl ~ ..... "' • .. OMdalf' ~ any ~ ._. wit.cl Romuala, ~ war-·•f .u-~M tba. pmty ._ary, Bu 1,. r I a _. albllaUca'• ....., ~about a ~lavia. hpu1lr rapenM to ..ia We lo¥let llnuion to BTeO 1n the cOMllbtea Neel tqJI talk tmpnued 0... ....-t ol tba leacllr*lp ., orthodox Ctrnrmam• there mu.at oMct• part J c1llt C. z ' l nDb. . .-m to be ......... acn&-.... iblf .,,!'attom .. ~ that the fntln1.-wUI c:n..a. Pnll&lml tblt ....... Mn a lasting impld. MlnJ M bMwl!J Ila tbt pelt. -11 ,.P. found the m-.. Ir· 1bac11M W'e1t, «11111' Nt ·Nllln, ind tome .,_. It trom'ndmdaes. a~ p'lrleDcel Wtth tblm." . . .. the went blow wer *alt dilcGnMot, fac9ld aw11. Pear tW tbt loYSet' · ~ tM lnternatkml Odmunl-t D.w.DI PIND JttiDDS ~ mlpt ~ ~ armed actiam: .Wement. • · . acaimt )l(Danla •-'Mt4_.. A Yugoslu editor lllCI! PrtDdl a4 Italian Com-after both ~ .-..c.~ 0 1 know, tbe same Wiii· aaW m.mst plrQ · dailla,' wfdcb cease-fire In ~,,,..,, =~~~~-= ...., found buyers In the ~· armlst1Q1 ,.,.et _... .• , put. now .U well In Sorta dr -u _..,.. ... L . ....... ._ Merent. There ""9 ~ kl1 't' of-tbelr· entl-1nvasltn ama c .. --. m ,... -: reel ~ 0 f COUD-... ..!-Ji . . . depeNlent-mlndl4 All.Ill ~1 . . , ., tll'revoluttoa. ,,_.. w 0 r • .--i ruled Ba1bn · ~ PKW ..._.., .. -, ... 4 ~ In Hungary, the part7 coes .. with anU·Molcow p't 0 t ... 1 • I • : .,,~.. out ot its •• , In .stattnc that raUiel: .......... ··--·· 'lhett •11 .e ,_.-1C11D1 aJding with the S<wtet.-Jid . reports about eui1t:b.X: ... • .i • \S -' jutiflcaUon for. lntervenbtg. o r t h o d Q x Ir o u p l n brave stmtct .,,... tbt . .,_ .AN'n-OOMMUNIST MOVE? Czechoslovakia · does n o t vaders and mt1ltir) mutCit- "Tbls time, MOICO'lr mntd berald u end to a liberalized fleling ~"'·''-domestic line. · · le an undisguised, -~,. 1m-Crill tnsw. the There has beeq a ,JM ol * .IMenty -of ·ftee perking i.n Down- town Coste Mete. Specious lots . ··' ·-~ia-c;nt to moat busine~~flrm• , ;an_.d ·-"J¥n~ ~t,uain.•11 . buildings · on . Newport and Harbor Boule- perialist manner. In effect. lt •• d thcs -uApartyf -;; spec\)lation 1r h y Pnl1Mt w • • an anti-Ommwibt an ere were ...... • ew, Nlcolae CeaUleletl · palled ll move." aald one infonnabt -could bis bornl. Not everYme agr911 Jill this does not necessarily express thelr dissent and iet with the ·oft.dted view that It mean the U.S. 11Mft bu con-away with lt. They were just was the -1& et ~-''* r ., llderably p1ned ia Eastern barreclfrom ventloc ttadr feel-" Soviet ~~ •. ~ --Yiird" •• " .. -.. Europe. MD1 peq>i• teem lnp in JIU~· - . "Why ahoW4 ... be' convinced &hat the . t" 0 . fien non-C-O~unlsU coo-Czech than tbe ClleCb?." --~iw· ~ • ..._ •perpowen bav• secreUy Cede that Hungary's party a~ ~-"W A..Z .,UAL f • ~ ~ POWER STBUGGU acreect·to respect each o&her'a clUef .1U01-ltadar tried Wd bate ...,.,. been~-tlot N.wpott Blvd. 642-1 lk .. IHt-'N.wpert IW. Ma.t744 lfhert of lnfhaence. to mecUl&e ... a Prapt-Mescow ..._ .....,,.. •e ...,. I & M Ol'JllCI '9UIP~•ft. . ·.. illl•SSON"S APPLWICIS "No denlal from WasbiDlloa aetuemeat ... aft!UBi am In-....a .:;;-w ,_.t. "'we 111 ·• Ml c.nter Str .. t 646-7._.J ~: 1177H*"'11¥4. 141-nM ··· can shake this belief.!' ooe · Tulon. IJ'he -lut cl mulUple not dnlaW fr9,m lt llDct." IU~"ICMI IAIA11 SlUDIO .. ~ C:.• ~ ..llWW IOph\sticated Rom an I an prJvate and offlclal coo~· . ~ • · · · 119' Herbor llvd. 641-2t01 1n1 ~.w,ort 11¥4. Mf:t4ol observed. "It ls fertile ground wu· a aeeret mee~ wMti ~ ·~ ic CAL 'I CAf!ll'*-tf'1C. .-.Y"IQl.t 1IBs ltrChill¥flproJ>&landa." ~lcwakll'1 Aluaodlr ~ lw abandaDld JIO N. _ _..It cl ....._HU •\ •• 1762'~,..+ ltv4. 646:-5019 An ofticlai ln tbt Y\ltOllav DGbcet in tbe Slovak iowa ol ..._....._ '-..rlMw±-"-... •-. I •r-· v • uoo" 'a"~'BI · P.-eign MinlstrJ commented: KOIDlll'llO Aue· 17, 72 boun --.ies-.. .-. .--. CITY ..... COMPANY _....... __ "It is daneeroos U these two befon tba Soviet tanks ... both party membm ad IOD-t 11 E. ln• .. •Y 641-6791 tn6 N.wpert ltnl. Mt-4014 couotrles fetl they caa takt on tbe1r way Ccmmunbb C.. HHll Ml COllf lfAIT &AMI 0-LAWS · tbe fate of the world Into their · pined • ~'1 tW ii I IOI N.w,.tt, !Nvd. 642-4242 t t22 Newport lfv4. Ml.MIO wa hands." DUBCEJt NOO' IMP~ beUeftd without ......... ,_ COAD MUSIC · ·· MAITllf IJINllUll .•. ~ ~ :- "Dubcek ·was not lmprmed a Communist leader l n I Ht HewfOrt' ltv4'. 646-0171 1 IH HerMI ltvd. 141-1t11 when Kadar recalled the Romania. COllltAMS CAMllA POmT Oii CoLOI · ' -~ There la talk. with~ coo-Hungarian experitnca." w R(IJGR T8ID 404DT_ 110 W..t ltth St. "'-llH 1-1•.W. lfttl StrHt '4'-"U flrm.UOO. about a pwlblt we114.nformect Huaprlan said. COSTA MBA flLOlllT° struute for powc ta the .. He Ulaughl ,,. wen juR Roup timel are stUI HkelJ I t 1 E. Ir.Mway M'-'07 I I A • ..,......,.. Kr..nl1n. • ...,. ... t. .-..&..-i-A s:.._ w.._,_ to bl ahea4. Moecow ID&1 well COSTA MISA aw&.IY a LOAN tMt,~ ..... llvL MJ-67U .... ,._. wuugu.YQS' 111a -mUe new elfwta to ban the IAllWS ........... · · Ne IMlter what Moiai:cMir'a llbera1l:ut:Son procram. Be Mtion ~ ltt ~ IHI New,.,t llvd. 64 ... 7741 ""lllll'IJ""' moUves ln ~in -o... ... , Just would not lllten." .. _ la "'-'-~ DIS. CIAYt901D, DALI & NILSON .. ,,_,.......,. 11¥4. 141:-eat1 Y ..... \lia °;dfto.n,;,;;-;. ••we Jmow bow to handle tb11 ._ ._:--r ,_., Opt.iftett11t1 IULM ·cM-l"'CAIPns ·~ tdflc few cbwtl. ~--·" aplalQed 1 eom. ecGDCllDU. 17H Ne~ llvd. 141-IHf '2trl1t1lhr'IW. ~121 The Y\acGllaYI wbt ~ mm1st latellecbaal. "We BuJiarla, a model dAl ~ CIAWllOIDI PHAIMACY lllmrl 9'r ..,,... awat from tbt ao.set-JM alwap mab IUJ"t •'"-an D11t tbt 8o'fWo.lld family, P-. 90 ll04. N=.llvd. W-225J • ••¥9Ua ... • -""~ • .. _ -1 1Ucb problema for tbt DU...... . NCIS 1116New;enlfv4. 141-1211 -,_.. qo, u.vt amapabed Won we move. Knmlln. But ua IDAll1 well-...,_.. M1Mi8IUJI NINITUll blccme a prime tarcet ol at· 1bus we have aotten fut!Mr bebaftd t.u. lt Mem.t aat to 1111 Newport ltvd. 541-7711 1711 Newport llYd. MMlll t1Cb la tlM y._ pn:a. tMn the Czechs w l t b -. • zoM MUSIC STUDIOS CWern b11 mounttd amonc •liberalization.' " feel happy abaut ltt role. ' I 7M How,..+ Blvd. 6·U~0606 SHAW'S NUTllTION IAllll Y..,.ian tbat tllieJ could be Tbt -.-'-h H BWcartan nlatlom w l t b IXPllUMI WAU DICOIS 116 I H•bor llvtl. MJ-6424 ..-.............. ,~ ,J ~;! ... ., ,.._ "1 uniary 'D_.._.A ·-~· ·-..._ 1 su~:u1 llWI .......... c--.-co _... _. ...,. ._ • ~=--agreed to leMI troope lnto &WIOm¥A -· '-VUI. IMN _, ltt t Newport I vd. M6-9HI _.._ "• """ r-.. • ...... the ._.._ mlab* UM ClecbolloYUSa drawa l • 11 an stratned wttb Y~ POSlll'S PHAIMACY I 17t Hlrbor llvcl. M6-t742 to fao'(lt beet~~-rud1 aDl'ftl'I.. wblcb acc\1111 Sona of bmac I I' w. 19th Strett H.6-l '5 I U.S. NAnotW. IANI ~ ~ --"NQbe"" ought to ha" tmttorlal uplratlolll. RANrS SUIPLUS 1145 New~ llvd. 646-12'1 tW 11111.WGUW not be UIJ. It refuled." wu a rehlCtam rep-"Ont Ba1prlu moctilct7 17IO tffwport Blvd. ... ..... ,. UNIYllSnY OPPICI 19UNINT ardend. partial mobOtuU.. lJ. "But It IDIJ .... well told IDI that Solla'• nWlom MlllTUll L19UtDATOU ttlJ H1rbof llYcl. 646-71" ~practice.up ~~-alerts.of mean& tun ocapetloe for witb TurbJ and Gnect. bot11 1117 Now= llvd. M6-02tl WAUIM'S MAWYOX CIN1ll ~ w-Ml.lg Rn-Jmteacl o1 ...... , ..... memben ol NATO, ri&M _, H--MLSlll ~ Fad-Direct _ • .: ..... 111 ... __ .... unt•· A_,I __ , ..... -~-.................... --__.... ~ ~~ f: =~=.!.!."'"~ 1 .... ':,.= Scwllt. dlftda wt i..ve * .. · teem u.\M:I' ..-. -_. • tlOl ... ew~ llvd. 646-tUI 1714 Newert IW. 646-4411 ...----v "' ~-INvu ha CamlilJDbt ........ ~ IPOITIN• e.OODS , WIUHU MllAL IAY. A LOAN pttpartq tbe couatrJ for a .. .._ __ " 1ur9M ... ~ ~ ..... £.~~_:.•-:-.• ... -~~--·...._·--!l.-•.~--"-stnet .... -.... ~-." .. '.'---.... -• .. •.n.N•ew-,.rt--•-tv.t1._M_2_._,_•.• ... .-.L .•.•. ""'* 11.u..,eoplt'••nma.«ar.'' . ~a• .... a.Clldll .....,_... .... ----. _ .... ~H- --------- .. ·. "~.. ..,, ·""'" ;r ~~~ . ::; ~· -~·, • : f ! ,,, . . . ... :~ .. " .. '!f. ' • l' ~.-4 ~ ,.., ...... ,.,; .. ~ ... • , :-(. ~ ~ ~ l,;t': .• &; • "' • ' • - .. ~. "" .... /I(.. 1 ' ... BIG __ ,J ....... IE~;'DAY SA1LE.-..Tf1URS.~FRl.~SA0T~ ·~ ~ "' \ , " ·... ... . ... 1 .: ·" \. ' .... I'. ... • ' '- I .. ,,. I ADMIRAL· 29s··sq. 1n. . I , . , ~~l:()R TV 1 :;-co Lit.._._ ... .,...,..,.,.~ \VASHER··DRY~S ... ... PHILCO TY .. . . WAS $ffl.OO ·--no" s795.oo MAYTAG Automatic Washer WAS ::,::_~-.zs~ ¥3'-.:~· :1 · · ··:. · s1~eo ,_ J :;;.;:.:·;·.;;; ksni.-:oo PORTA .COLOR . .~ -. . . I ... r WHIRLPOOL Gas Drver .· i.-......... .7;~--~· ·, ~ : ·,_ PACKARD ·L· .,·; · .. ~ I ~~ ..... ,t"MHllt,,...•'"'•ftlerQr ..... ,~·.s.,1,, WAI fJH.oo·: __ R9~':$~M .. 1 · :~~ .. -............. no.-$5~9-· •4'='211 ... -... -llOW $208.00: ADMl~t.lfS .. S&t:I~~:~ " . c. . ADMllAl STEIEO·. ·'·~" .. .;~:· 1 · ~· -MOt?OINT CMI Dryer · ............................ -~Lewee,.• ' • ........... f""'I CW, ,, •. .. . I Cy.le. • , WAI $HUI ---· now . $550.00 :"Al ..... ___ ... $29t~Oo~ ~ .. ''" ... ----~ ~·· $150.00 ·ZENITH~ztS Sq. In. ...... ICA YtcTOI STlllO· .. = · • Hotpel•t Waslitr & Dryer ................ ...... ..... ....... ..... ..._...I Oals C••...... . M•ttl I Mr. le.I. WAS $llllM -···-· ..... $49L88 WAI.'*" ..t.::.••W: .$495.00. .~ ...... -······--·-= .,,LOO PORTAILE ~OLQR TV .. ··.ro11TAIU JY.S ....... :: 'MAYTAG Halo of-He•I ~~ tr ............. ,u•uswii._. ....... $2C.-58TY. 00 ·~iiiAi.iPit'ic:ui'~'lllt•. . .' : . . . : '.' ·$~111.00 . WAI $Hf.II _ • · . · . . .. ZENITH PORTABLE I . . . ... . · 11 DISHWASHER'S ·1 · °"" ~ ........ -., ...... -Rl;Fl.IG~TOR . . . '. . . I . "-_. -· --now $~.oo . . . . . . HO'IPOINT l(ITCHENMAID Dilllwalhft R~A VICTOR COLOR TV . '·'•/fl· .............. .....,. .' ..... -~II. 1 ....... .... ...... . ll Jtl............ ........... $277.00 ... Mii $258 ·00 WAS $U~ ...... _ n~W $487.00 w~~;.':~efrigerator ;;iM··· WE U. DAYs .YI . PHILCO COLOR TY .... " .... ,... ..... ,., ..._ ........... .................... WAS P1t ... _ROW $276.00 wAS ~·-··-now $~9.00 PACKARD BELL COLOR TY Phlco Refrigerator , . ltl 1.11. ....._ Tiie .... ef tM ....,,,._._. •• MM 16-. •· ,., ........... witti A ........ ...................... ... ....... . wAI $iit ........... now $4M.OO . . '. ~' . RCA VICTOR COLOR TY · =~ now $288.00 :ltl .................... c...... ......... . .. I.,... 1f ..... AJI ...... wAS s110.oo ···--no" $468t!95 RCA Y.l~TOR COLOR TV .................. w........ : .. ow $378AO wAS suo.~ --·-now $487 .00 PHILCO COLOR TV . Holpolllt Reflgerator ltl ... ll. .. 111• ............. WW.l•tll1 l..._T., ........ ...._ "' ..... ,. ...... ~ :V:.'k11.o1 _·now $595.00 rau~ cHOICI __ $I M.00 .. ,.,.... .. 1177 HARBOR BLVD. ·t~PJr~~i811888·: ::: fC1 • ~ , , 4 1 ' 1 , 1 ' ' .1 4 , , • • • • I .. 4 I j , . . ··-DAIL y PH.OT ~ Downtown, Wu., Oct. ii, 1961 ::biamonJd .. Jen~ -QofJ Jewelr'J • • • • • •• •• • 1..ftll e.,.t '"' .•••• • • · · · · • 'uv \ /\0 . .. .. .. .. . . ............... \1C.00 \IC. .......... .. • I-;, tO ';1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • • ''is \/ A ..... " • .. •..... . .......... •. '"'t"-o• .. .. ,.,.v \ /l . ······ ....... ·~ .................. '17500 \ /l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ; . . . . . . . . . . . $4'3000 14' •••• ~ l ~ ..... ....... . ................ '18500 . ~1· . .. .. .. .. . . 00 I~; .. e tt t ft ······t i····· , .. ~ftl c. .. .• tt"JV •/-;, .. .. .. .. .. .. . ....... -00 .. . . . .. . . .. .. . '\ \ Ct •••'" I . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . Ct ········· l . ...... ~ trorn tn• pu d\ monds d\f,Ct 1~re er• We bu'f our h ~ d\rec;t\'f to yo~ OU 9et ~I \\c and s•' t, • 4 enV sort. -~.Jd\erne" 0 . no fn'V · -• savin9s\ . . 7 DAY SALE WE WILL TRADE At.MOST ANYTHING • YOU MAY HAYE . FOR . THE . DIAMOND • RING OP YOUR CHOICE! . MON. & FRI ......... 9 TO 9 WEEKDAYS • • • • • .. 9 TO 1 SATURDAY ......... 9 TO 6 SUNDAY . . . • • • • • • 10 TO 5 . RING MOllNTl·N·~~. Wesat 0 · "• CAST Mou NL y GENUINE HIGHEST ou:/~GS OF THe ladles AVERAG! PR::~lABlE. Tiu 4 Pron, fTllty 12 !i~~ 6. Prong .SQ 'lffTlltV-1 •rid·• 6.so s.,. Brid., S.ta 25.00 w /Stn111 Diamond 4S OO Genta • Sol1t11,.. ~nta Solitaire 30~0011 W1Sinel1 Dletnonct, 65.0o . .. ,, , • PHONE 646-77 41 American E)r,,..... . . .. .