HomeMy WebLinkAbout1967-06-20 - Orange Coast Daily Pilot-Newport BeachHISTORIC IALIOA INN FACES NEW FUTURE
This All Could Become Priv... School
Coedaea~•nal
Balboa Inn May Become
Privaw Prep School
Meter Money
For New Lots
'Just in Time'
Newport Beach city councilmen
next Monday are expected to give
routine approval to an ordinance
aimed at providing off-street parking
facilities for the city'• older buf.lnesa
districts.
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce Manager Jack Barnett says
the action llD't coming 1 moment too
soon.
"It will be a big forward atep.0 he
told chamber directors at their month-
ly meeting Monday. "Unless tbe old-
er 1reu get some ofi-ctreet parting,
they'll soon start dying on the vine.
With the new shopping centen going up all over, the established shopping
districts have to have more parking
in the next five yell'I or they'll be
in real trouble •••
Barnett said the need ls becomlng
especially critical at Udo Shops, Bal·
boa and West Newport business are-
as, which will directly bendlt from
the MW ordinance.
Coundlmen lalt week unanlm~
approved ftrst reading of the proposed measure, wblcb calls for the ear-
marking of SO percent of all baslneu
parking meter revenue for off-street
.parking purposes. . The anticipated contribution to the
special parking fund will be between
$35.«XX> and $40,«XX> yearly. Barnett re-
ported. 1 le pointed out that the ordinance
cstabllshing the f Wtd llmJts use of the
• )noney to those business areas that
flave parking meters. The council action, be explained.
resulted from merchants' objections
t6 a city proposal to double the base
meter rate from a nickel an hour to
(See PARKING, Page Z)
ln September, acc<>rding to real ettate
brok.er Cap Blackl!um.
EnvWooecl ll .:.:c: ldiool o( 100 ~~ .... ~:~:-=
waald lift IL
PERMIT NJl!EDED 'J1'e nntm'e !tQget Oft approval Of a uee peanit to allow the ecbool. New·
port Beach planning C'Ommiaalooen
will decide tibe ICbool'a fate July 6.
A tnmact1oe between the Weben
and t.cuna Fedenl savings and Loan
....., Cl( lie (OCoperty. la m escrow P-"nt outcome ol the UM p«mit
awBcadon.
Blackbum ea6aJed the lak price
ls in the neJ.abborbood of ball a mil·
lion don.rs.
In recent years, according to a BaJ.
boa busineu leader who uked to re-
main unidentified, the lan<bart Bal·
boa Inn ~· been conaidered aome·
thing of a white elephant.
Laguna Federal acquired the prop-
erty throug'1 a f«eclosure, the third
since tbe botel WU built. Its S'l l'OOIDI
art reputed to be •ldotn full.
PlaDJ tiled by Blacld>arn with the
dty plaml:tng depattmeDt abow the lfOUDd floor would be converted to
clusrooma and of!i~. 1be upper floors would be UHd u dormitories,
while a restaurant, now closect, would
be converted to an auditorium, and
the tttchen to 1 gymnasium.
Blackburn estimated alterati<>IM
wouJd C06t $50,000, with fixture, to
run another $100,000.
Only gifted dilldreo would be en·
rolled~ be aald. Ke noted tbiat it 11 an-
(Set SCHOOLS, Pap t
Producer's Boat
Stripped of Gear
Thieves stripped '2,m in boeting
equipment from a yacht owned by
Hollywood movie producer • d1rector
John Sturges, Newport Beach police
reported today.
Officers said the theft occurred at
LarM>n & Mellor Boatyard, 2703 W.
Coast Highway, where Sturges's ves-
sel ii tied up. The lncldent was re-
ported Monday.
Thleves apperently used wire cut-
ters to remove a cltinna' band ra·
dio, direction finder, depth aouhder
and radio telephone from the cabin,
police said.
Long Leg of Law
Chair Fwors Young Beer Drinker
Joseph C. Powers, 18, waa one chair
leg away from enjo)'lni bis can of
beer ln peace.
Police said because a chair young
Power• was sitting in Monday after-
noon bad three legs on private.prop-
erty and the remaining leg on the
public sidewalk be was subject to ar·
reat.
"ff 'I minor la In possession ( al· .
cobol on private property," an om-
cer e~lained, "be can't be arrested.
But U be'a on public property, be can
be.''
Powers, aportint a mudache 1 11 d
dark aun glasses. was cited by 1 pa-
trolling officer who spotted him perch·
ed on the chair In tront of 1007 E.
Balboa Blvd.
Bail was $S6.
" y
-Today's Closing
TUESDAY, JUNE 20, '1967
men ·Killers
..
' (Prem WIN 8'rfteit) . \.l.!.i.
ANZA, Calif. -FBI ..... -~ma~t~~·= to-wall rattleaukes" b' ~.f killers of two U.S. border •
Found equatung oa the loar ti
mountain cabin, arms baJKl.ea84d •
gether around a =:-~
were the bodJea of • N ...
Jr., 25, ud °C:llfe Azrack, A Ma
ol Fallbrook, •
Botb ba4 beetl shot throultl the Mid on the Bailey Ranch DUI' tbe ._
fire station, about 20 miJel IOalt , •
of the Rlvenide County ~ _..
munlty of Hemet.
Tbe ll'Bl, other federal••* llid 1t.tff'1 olfica of IUYenldl ...... Dleso coaatiea put ..,.., ......
man OD the trackinl Job cl a Mllr
or killen who poaiblJ ban a 41-boar
lead on tbeir pursuers.
Discovery ol tbe cabia WU ma
Monday by ''jail a hlcty cbuce," ao-
cording to off-duty La. Angela ftre-
man Roy Davidson. 25.
He was one of 12 members of the
Hemet Jeep Club participatiq in tbe
search for the patrolmen. The pair
had failed to report in u scheduled
at 4 a.m. Saturday flOm a border
patrol checkpoU!t they aet up on CaJi,
forn.ia 79 west ol Warner Springs.
Davidson foo.nd their government
&edan covered with brush near the
cabin, and aa.id there wu no evidence
that another' car bad left the scene.
He said the search WU the first
in Which his dub p81'tidpatlld.
"We have no evidence DO'# tbat
•·ould indicate what tbea_e boya rn·
··Ea~h Rome a Fort
Schmitz Says You Need an Arsenal
SACRAMENTO (UPl)--A_ ltate senator says law abiding citizens
must be permitted to own:-..d use if necessary-machine guns and
other heavy wupom for protiection against rioters.
Sen. John G. Schmib ~Tmtin) Monday called for the d.eieat of
three Allembly-puaed llilll placing lougb, new controls on heavy
weapona and private ......ia.
Schmitz, a member of tlae John Birch Society, said the bills in·
fringe the riibt ol eelf~
1be memurea, by Aaemblyman W. Craig Biddle (R-Riverside)
were approved lut week by the Senate Judiciary Committee and are
awaiting action by the FinaDcie Committee.
Schmit.I said machine am "are nol ordinarily thought of as
needed for sell defense IDd Mme defense.
"MOit people's thlnlrlnc on this subject is still shaped by the
mental~ of a lin&le mareuder who can be dealt with by a rifle or
a~," ._ Ai4J ""-! ~ -" .... Nffill ioentaJ lldlal'e i. out.~= thl(Al~1¥.e w Uvad.through tfe ·~ ~ ,.-w. · "-1u two yjars aio, ·er lbe Nllldedta of
Tanlpl, na., a8d Cladmafl, Ohio, \\rilo blvt been IWinf into tlte
boill.i.I enter ff a buma• YOk•no for the past week," he said.
U.S. Rejects SoviRts'
Condemnation of Israel
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. fAP
The United States ~ rejected So-
viet demands for pun.i.abment of ls·
rael for-the Middle E11t war and
propoeed 1 five-point program for
* *' *
Kosygin Pians
Quick Return;
Summit Unlikely
NEW YORK (UPI) -8"iet PTP·
mier Alex• N. K01Jllin aaid today ht
plana to leaw New York ''wry soon "
and does not know whether bf> wi II
see Plwident Jotm.oa before he goes.
The Soviet premier, questioned by
nenmen u be left the Unltl'd Na·
ti om Gmeral All8ftlb1y, ll6d ••so far.
It ii not known" whether be ril meet
Johuoa..
When uted when be pWmed to
leave b' Moecow he replied "vr:ry
aoonl Very IOCl91'•
Euten European 10Urces said Ko-
1ygln'1 "very IOOll" could mean his
depm1ure "ln a CGOple of days."
KotJllD'• e:qll'ellion ol uncertain·
ty and dllclol1ln of bia impending
~ came u tbe White House
acknowledeed that the President's in·
vitatioa to ttMI Soviet Jellder to come
to Wubington f,Pr 1 meeting wa!i
ltilt ~-llll atatementa came se~rat hour~
after Secretary of Stlte Dean Rusk
met with Soviet ForeJgn Minister An·
drel Gromyko In a U. N. lounge.
peace based on Arab-ISl'aeli negotia-
liOOI with "appropriate third ~
asaiatance."
In a measured response lo Soviet
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin's attack
on all U.S. foreign policies. Ambassa-
dor Arthur J. Goldberg adopted an
oveNll moderate tone in laying down
a proposal besed on President Jobn-
IOll'I policy speech in Washington
Monday.
Kolygin errived at the auembly
ball late for resumptioo of the special
aeulon debate on the Middle E • s t
ortlla. He took his seat after Gold·
berg flnilbed tpeak:ing.
Goldberg rejected the Soviet pro-
posal that larael be condemned as an
aggressor and forced to give up ter-
ritory and captured material imme·
diately. lie told the 122-mem~r Iii·
sembly th.at "the bomb of hostility"
must be defused and that the explo-
sive it.elf would have to be removed
if a durable peace w~ to be achieved.
Syrian President Noureddin Atassi
folJowed Goldberg to the rostrum, ae-
Cu.ed IJrael of having made a "sneak
aetack" and of a long history of "ag-
greulon" against the Ara~. As he
spob, Ju.ell Foreign Minjster Abba
Ebu liltmed iDWitly and made notes. Eban Monday had dissected
piece b1 piece the Soviet attack on
bll CCM!Dtry in an hour-long reply.
SNCK MARKETS
NEW YORK CAP ) -The stock
market presented a mixed p}cture
late thl.s afternoon. with gainers out-
numbering losers but with the indu~·
trial Herage easing. Trading was ac·
live. (See quotations. Pages 8-9. I
Selected issues werr strong but rails
were lower.
Other Are.. Free
countered," said James R. Ewaltney.
an assistant chief petrol wpector.
"But by the nature of their duties
one can expect to encounter any type
of. person includJng smugglers of ali-
ens and narcotics."
The ·two otncers radioed their last
word early Saturday that they bad
et-up a roadblock. That was Azrack's
34.th day iD the Border Patrol.
Newton was top man iD his Border
Patrol graduating class at Port Isa-
bel. Tex., last August. He was a na-
tive of Concord, N.C. Hi.a widow ud
two children live in Fallbrook, Calif.
Azrack, who earned a cnnlnology
degree in 1966 at Florida State Univer-
sity. would bave been 22 year1 old
Juae SO. HJa father is a detention
guard for the U.S. lmmlgration ud
(See IDU.ERS, Paie !)
A. J. McFadden
Quits as Member
Of Irvine Board
Arthur J. McFadden of Santa Ana,
former president of the Irvine Co. and
a member of its board of directors
since 1947, has retired from his di-
rectorship, it was announced by com·
pany officials today.
McFadden, a graduate of Pomona
College in 1901 and Harvard Law
School in 190t, has carved out a ca-
reer that spans M years in Orange
County.
ffis retirement was dieclosed to Ir-
vine Co. shareholders at their annu.-
al meeting Mond~y al Irvine Co.
headquarters on the Irvine Ranch.
Appointed to the va<:ancy created
by his departure was John V. New-
man, a prominent Ventura County
citrus grower. who is also manager
and treasurer of the Utt Development
Co. ·Ltd.; presi~nt of the Seaboard
Somis Lemon Association, and presi·
dent of the Ventura County Citrus
Growers Committee.
McFadden only two months ago
was honored with the Distinguished
Service Award oC tbe California
Farm Bureau Federation. The award
cited bis contribution to agriculture
over a span of 60 years and was pre-
sented at the ~h annual convention
of the Farm Bure.au.
He was a Ufelong friend and as·
soci ate of the late James Irvine.
and has served as a trustee of the
James Irvine Foundation since Its
foundation in 1937. He is currently
vice president oC the charitable
organization
McFadden became Interim presi·
(See McFADDEN, Page !)
Sharks Only Off ;Newp~rt
There la 10mething about Newport
Beach -it'a attracting scores of Cat·
&11na blue shtrks, while none have
been sighted at other Orange Coast
beaches.
Tb.l's the report 1oday from Ufr·
guard agencies from Huntiniton
Beach through Laguna Beach.
Newport Lifeguard Chief Robert
Reed uld he ~nd bis men "are wait·
ing it out" as schools of sharks con-
tinue prowling waters about a half-
mfle out. He repeated Monday's warn·
ing agalnst any long distance swim·
min1. advislng bathers l9 stay wilh·
in $() feet or the breakerllne.
ln Laguna Beach. lifeguard rapt
Rod Riehl 11id : "We've had no sight·
inJS at all. But we've told t>verybody 'f k~p their eyt>r. open, just in case
there is a problem."
Huntington Beach City Lifeguard
Chier Vince Moorhouse sald he is
aware or Newport's problem. "but we
haven't seen any sharks in this area "
Mnorhouse suggested that Newport
is txpcrienclng the shark Invasion
while other lx'Rches aren't becaust
"tht' waterli close in al Newport
arr dlper than In mo!!t areas."
TEN CENTS
ought
SLAJN IORDll PATIOlMIN
Newton Azrldt
Horse Racing
Track Planned
By Countians
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of .... DellY ,..... .....
Newport Beach attorney Max A.
Sturges was in Sacramento today to
me articles of incorporation for the
Orange County Turf Club.
Investors ln the corporation propose
lo build a Q> million thoroughbred
horse racing track near the Harl>or
Area.
The D~Y. ~11.oT brok.e the •ory
• _.l>llm fot the ne'tlt track la.st Dec. 1.
Coostruotion of the race track ii d~
Plibdent upon pu.uge ol the ao-call-
ed "nlgbt bone racing" bill pendtng
in the state legislature, according to
Sturges.
FAVORABLE ACTION
He saJd ·he is filing for incorpora-
tion because be anticipates favorable
action on the bill. He said Orange
County Turf Club hopes to begin
operation within a year.
The track would be located nur •
the Santa Ana Marin.e Corps Air Fa·
cillty on a *-acre site bounded by
the Santa Ana Freeway on the north
and the Santa Fe Railway tine on the
south, Starges said.
A deluxe hotel would be built in
conjunction with the track.
The pending legislation is authored
by Assemblyman Robert Moretti
([)..Van Nuys). An aide to Moretti said
the bill has cleared the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee with a
"do pasa" recom.m<.udalion.
The Senate Governmental Efficien-
cy Committee baa not yet voted on
the measure.
EXTEND SEASON
Besides providing for nJght hone
racing, the bill would extend the
number of racing days at existing
race track$.
Another provisioo to allow almuJ-
taneous race meetings in Northern
and Southern California would open
the door for new race tracks. At
present, all available racing dates
are booked up by the six track:a !IOW
operating.
Sturges 1.ald a federal anti-trust suit
(See TRACK, Pace %)
Weather
If you want to see the sun
when you gel up Wednesday, '
then sleep till noon. Th064! coast.
al low clouds'll hang around uni ..
ti1 then, says forecaster Emil
Kurtz. Meanwhile. the mercu·
ry's still stuck in the upper 6()'s.
INSIDE TOD~ Y
A re they just a passing fad or
the forerunners of a new wav of
life. No one knows for sure but
the hipp~s are a majO'T factor m San Franci.sco and elsewhere.
Story and pictures, Page 5.
l lrttls , --' CelllW"l.I ' M11tlNI I'-t CIHsltlM 1'·1• Nelleul 11... >4
C9"'1a U o.i .... .-I c,. .. _.. • <>nJtM c-1y 1
DIYertta 1 l'la1 llttY... U 1111 0...... 1' hMe l"Hfft I
l•llwlll P'a• It SMlel -U IO l ntert1l1t-1 11 S•-1a.11
''-u a.• ''"* --. •• ''" C:e... I T .. nk•" IS Mont lltlC"'' II Tllutor> 6 °'"" l.eniet'• IS WUllltr I
Marrlf.. l.ICOllHt 7 Wtrli """ .... Mfftlftti 7
DAILY PILOT T~, Ju11t 20, 1967
r.lental Co....,..·
iACRAMENTO CUPJ) -The Al·
Mi1..., osaw' ;IE'sllJ ,_.. ~ dtltlded to Tttcn Cdf.r.
1'1 "arcbaic and barbaric" ayatem
treattng tbe mentally ill
l'be bill. authored by :~ssemblyman
·ank Lanterman (R·La Canada) was
at to the Senate on a vote ol Tl·l
ter LanW1nan told the lawmakers
1 meuur• provides for the first time
iat the mentally ill "be treated as ill
CdM's Brandt
Named Riverside
Alumnus of Year
Corona del Mar artist Rex Brandt
Friday was honored as Riverside City
College Alumnua of the Year at cere-
monies held during its annual awards
assembly. . The award was presented m ab-
sentia. Brandt· and his artist wile,
Joan Irving Brandt, ~ Goldenrod,
were away on a four-day holiday.
Born in San Diego, Brandt spent
his earlv years In corona and Riv-
erside. He atteoded the City College
during 1932-34.
Rated a1 an out.at.anding water col·
:irist Brandt has received a nwn·
ber 'of awards and prizes including
Newcastle Award of the American
Watercolor Society. the Adolpb Clara
Obrig Prise of National Academy of
Deaign and Jam~ D. Phelan Award
ol the de Young Museum or San
Francisco.
Special exhibits of Brandt's work
have been shown at the Art lnstnute
of Chic.ago, National Gallery of Art
in Washington, D.C.. and Metropol·
itan Museum of Art in New York.
Brandt and bis wife conduct their
own summer art tcbool in Corona
del Mar. He has aao taught at the
University of Vermont, USC. Scripps
College and San Diego Fioe Arts
Gallery.
From PAfe J
TRACK e ••
alleging a race track monopoly exists
witbin the state haa been tak.en oU
the court calendar, because "passage
of the bill would make It moot."
The suit named as ,,defendanta the
californJa Racing Board, Gov. Ed-
mund G. Brown. Atty. Gen. Thomas
Lynch, former attorney general Stan·
ley Most, and the Sanlll Anita, Holly·
wood Park, Del Mar, Golden Gate,
Bay Mead-Ows, and .Tanforan race
tracks.
BOARD OF DffiECl'ORS
Sturges said Directors of the new
corporation include Newport Beach
resjden~ Marshall DuICield, Walter
Mellott, and Maurice "Bud" McCray,
and Richard Emison of Costa Mesa.
Duffield and McCray. college chums
of Sturges, sald they have not yet
put any money into the venture.
Other directors are retired movie
producers William Thomas and Carl
Le!!serman, retired land developer
Aubrey Reynolds , retired bank vice
president J . E. Fishburn. and former
Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce
President Oscar Trippet, an attorney.
Thomai., formerly of Corona del
Mar and now of Palm Springs, is be·
19'ved to be the chief investor at thi,
pe>int.
: Celebrities. including Bob JI o p r.
J~bnny Mercer of Lldo Isle. and Phil
F<egan. also are interestl'<I in the pro-
j~ Sturgeg uid.
Tighter Sign
Rules Vowed
For Center
There will be no sign escalation at
Newport C-ei>t«.
Reacting to a recent 1tlr over the
new Broadway department store 1lgn1
Don Rypineki, graphics dealgner for
the Irvine Company, said today that
tighter sign Controls will be lmpOled
on new tenants.
He said reltricUve llgn criteria will
be applied to all tutun Newport Ceo·
ter developments surrounding t h •
Faahioo Island shopping center.
Rypinlki expl.ained wbat be meant ' when be told Newport Bead1 piaMlnl
comm!ulooen lat 'nlundl1 tblt the
ranch compell1 manapment ''no
areta" rome of tbe aidnl alps.
He aald the Ilse ol the a1gDI la not
unreasonable became they are scaled
to the slze of the buildings. Rather,
be noted, it is the degree of illumina-
tion that la objectionable.
The Broadway, and to a le&ser de-
gree Buffums, alp.a can be read at
night virtually from any point where
the stores are visible. The Broadway
signs have been likened by planning
commiasiooen to a beacoo.
"We don't regret the agreements
with the stores u tbey now stand,"
Rypinskl emphasized. "But we're ge>-
ing to attempt to learn from them."
Navy Borrows
Civil War Ideas
TQ Blast Reds
SAIGON (UPI) -Tbe U. S. Navy
using gunboat tactics borrowed from
American civil war strategy teamed
with U. S. lnlantrymen to kill 164
Q>mmunlsts Monday in a river battle
only 17 miles south of Saigon, mill·
tary spokesmen reported today.
The battle wu one of five that rag-
ed from the Mekong Delta to the
fringes or the demilitarized zone
CDMZ ). The Communists lost Ml
dead in the five battlea and Ameri-
can soldiers and marines counted 49
dead and 211 wounded.
Tbe air war flared with new inten·
r;ity and U. S. planes bombed the
. Bae Giang fuel burning plant 'rl
miles north o( Hanoi for the ninth
time Monday in a "highly succeuful"
raid. Other planes hit the Bal Duong
road and rail bridge linking Hanoi and
Haiphong and rail yards 39 miles
northeast of Hanoi.
Communist MIGs took to the air but
did not attack the American raldtrs
and no U. S. losses were reported.
Navy Lt. AuguaU.ne Mara.no, 11, of
Clearfield, Pa., wbo dllclosed the
use of the civil war techniques. said
the gunboats used were called "Mon-
itors" after the union "cheeaebox on
a raft" that sank the Confederate
Merrimac in the world's first battle
or armored warships.
Gale Winds Slow
Annapolis Race
NEWPORT, R.1. (AP) -Officials
connected with the Annapolis·to-New·
port yacht race said a l).knot gale
has slowed the field of boats in the
race to such an extent that it was
doubtful any of them would reach
the finish line before late Tuesday or
early Wednesday.
A race committee spokesman said
no sightings on th• yachta have been
possible for the last 12 hours because
or very poor vislblllty. At last report,
Thomas Watson's Palawan, a 58·foot-
cutter, was leading the field.
The Coast Guard reports that at
least seven of the yachts which left
Annapolis Saturday In the biennial
race have been dismasted as a re·
~ult or gale winds and rough seH .
Mother of l' oung Slaye1e
HE'S A SEA KING
Phll Jonf1n
Basketball Stars
Plan Trans{ er ·
To UIM High
Corona del Mar High School an-
nounced Mooday that Pbll Jordan,
all·lrvine League basketball star from
Estancia High, will enroll at Q>rona
del Mar in the fall.
The 6-3, 190-pound star who averag-
ed 18.4 points per game at Eatancla
last season, gives Corona de1 Mar
a chance for Orange Oounty'1 first
CIF bubtball cbampionJh.lp in 30
years.
Q>ron.a del Mar principal Leon ' Meeks also announced that two other
area cage stars have said they'll en-
roll at Corona del Mar -~
Thompson ot Estancia and Bob Blacl
of Newport Harbor.
John Yule1 a g.7 center, tranaferred
from Newport to C.Orona during tile
last Cbristmaa vacation and will be
on band again next a_eason wt.en
coach Bill Bloom's Sea Kings launch
their bid for an Irvine League title
and a poasible CIF crown.
CSee today's sports section for more
details.)
€ofC May Have
Lost Next Chief
Philco-Ford executive Don Flamm,
wbo res!gned Monday a1 firat vice
president of the Newport Harbor
Chamber Of Commerce, may b a v e
been in line for the chamber's top
post next year, (])amber President
John Macnab hinted Monday.
Jn announcing Flamm's decision to
quit because of increased business re·
spooaibllities, Macnab told chamber
directors:
"He will be vtty, very dillicult to
replace. I hlld secretly hoped that
Don would succeed me as president
ln 1988," ~
Macnab 1alC the chamber's execu·
live board will decide on a successor
to Flamm and report back to directors
at their next monthly meeting.
CHART Plans
Citywide Poll
The Citizens Harbor Area Research
Team (CHART) Is readying plans for
a community.wide poll of Newport
Beach residents to determine what
they want their town to be like in
the future, CHART general chairman
Charles Hart said Monday.
Hart, former Newport mayor. said
city planning director Ernest Mayer
Jr. had suggested the poll at a re-
cent meeting with CHART's board of
governors.
"We have a committee working on
it now," Hart told directors of th e
Newport . Harbor ChambeJ or Com·
merce, which established the 50·mem.
ber resear.ch group in 1965.
Divorce for Mrs. Krueger
Mrs. Edna E. Kruegtr has receiv.
ed an interlocutory decree or divorce
from Richard .H. Krueger, an lndus·
triaJ1st and form er Orange County
Planning Com mii;s1oner
.,. r df'fault divorce "-35 i;rantrd
. 1nJ,! a hl•arinJ: Fridav t>cforC'
"ur><'rior Judge Lrstc r Van Tatc11hov1>.
l\l 111•i:rr "ho rrl"rntly resi~n·
"'' from ttM> <'OUnl) planninJ? comm1'i•
'""· ha• hf-Ni 1n PQOr ht'alt~ lit
did not attend the hearing.
The Kruegers' 18-year-old son Paul
is serving a l.iJe sentence in Texas for
kiUlng tl\ree Texas fishermen.
The San Clemente youth pleaded
Ruilty to the three murders and was
'cnten<:ed in May of 1966.
flls mother filed suit for divorce 1n
November, 1966. and llle husband filed
a ('ross complaint about two wteks ti.
lcr Each charged gnevou~ snPntal
<1uffering. ',,..
Krueger, 65, and hls wife, 52, mar.
ried .July 22, 1933, in Detroit. Mich.,
and were separated Nov. 1, 1966.
ln her ~vorce suit Mrs. Krueger
sought $960 a month expenses which
included costs for monthly trips to
Texas to visit her Imprisoned ~nn
A proptrty scttlemi>nt .11:1111•mcnt
was approvf'd in thf' divo1n pro·
ceedlngs. and both sides \\err order·
ed by the court to comply with It~
provisions. f
throueb matchblc fwm under t b •
~JI~.,-·. ,.ould,., ........ ..
tbroUP reven11e1 from Medicare ud
tl>8 ..-11 tuW, _.. . .. ca d
would pl)' the other 2S ~ te op.
erate the local tree.tmeat emten.
La.otmnao said tbe meuure wouJd
not rellilt in any IDcreaHa bl colts
for counUea. It would' become f/l.
fective July l, 198&. •
Older Folks
Gettfug ilip
To Hippies
They call themaelva tbe A w a r •
Generation. ·
• But the onet who art ruDy btcom-
ag awart Ml Jt-older 'leDU'd• -
aotabl,y the one1 who lit on court
benchea, wield 1be IM10f'• 1•"1 at
council meeti.Df1 or weer a pollct-
man '1 badle.
Qne aware Judie In SU FrlDdlco
Municipal Court Monday told 19 hip-
pies, arre1ted for trapualnt w b • n
they were found aleeplng in tbe ~
way ol a boarding hCJUtt, to "to back
to Orange County."
He cl.aimed tile ll boys and o a •
girl came from Soothea ~
particularly <>ranc-Cocmty, a8d •
clered them to niCm1l bome a pmt ti
their MD'4Dce.
(For tbe story ol Sa P11ameo•1
Hai~AJhburJ dbtrtct. W'Ol'ld --tal of hippledom, see the apeclal re-
port today on Page 5.)
Meanwhile, back here in Oraqe
County :
-A platoon of 70 re.identl Of Seal
Beach, "aware" of plaM for a love-
in on the sand 1ehedu.led for nut
weekend, asked the City Council to
adopt an ordinance to control be.acb
gatherings.
Mayor Lloyd Gummere, apparent·
ly aware of hll rerponaihil1ty to an-
swer the protest, said the council was
not happy with the planned love-in,
but wu powerless to stop it.
-A Huntinatoo Beach woman told
the City Council bipplea aboaJd be
made "aware" they aren't wanted in
the Oil City. Send them to San Fran-
cisco -or Newport Beach, 1be IUI·
ge,,ted.
-Newport Beach police have said
they would just u soon the fiower
children move on down the coast to
Laguna Beed\ where the Art Colony
reportedly is braced for a summer \n-
.. slon of hippies.
-Laguna authorities, aw11e their
community is in danger ol becoming
a heppy hippie hunting groand, have
expressed hope the Awace Generation
will become aware they aren't wanted
here and will go to San Francisco.
It's a wary world which surrounds
the ~ware Generation.
OOL ...
led the school would draw from
ver the n1tion.
said the Weber•, principals In
Inc. (for (CO)llege (pre) p,
experienced in running private
sell ls. Mrs. Weber bas a doctorate
Weber is s!rong in administration,
burn remarked.
I tructors would be required to
hol at least a master's degree. Claas
siz~ would be limited to IS pupilJ.
The Balboa Inn 11 a three-story
landmark str'Uctlln with Spuiab tile
roof and an observation tower.
M overhead walkway crosses the
ocean front aldewalk to a private
swimming pool in a palm tree setting
oot far from Balboa Pier.
The hotel waa popular in the 1930's
with persom rentlna charter flahioi
boat.I. It bu been ~modeled twice
since, but none of the 1ubMquent own-
ers have made a go ot it.
Front P .. e l
PARKING ...
a dime. Counclbnen finally agreed to
uae the additional income to help
solve merchant.a• lone-range parking
needl.
The chamber, Barnett added, wtll
lead the campaign for establbbment
of o.ff ·atreet parking lots. Tbe project
wlll preaumably include formation of
parking district.a u the meclwllnn
for park.inc lot financing and develop.
ment.
Front P .. e J
KILLERS. e.
Natural.lzaUon Service at Miami. Yla.
More than 40 FBI aeent.s and about
100 other law enforcement oUlcers
were involved in the manhunt a n d
were beine aided by U.S. Marine heli·
copters.
The FBI sealed off a wide area
where the search was centered and
ordered new• heUcopte.n to atay oul
Th• FBJ took charge of the aearch
earl,y Sunday, setting op a command
post Jn the U.S. Forest Service office
in Oak Grove. More than 250 persons
joined the search over the weekend,
combing the rugged country around
Oak Grove ~nd extendlng as far ea~t
as the Arizona l>Oundary and north
Into adjoining counties.
• HAPPY IUICT -1pJl 11amda«i, 8, 11 rejected but not deiectecl.' u abe apla.lu an. PoiDta of "AJnlwn Uneoln and Mn. Geor1• ·
WllhlqtQn,,. one of h• cartoona on display in a recent oo~man : . mo.. ~-:
". .
She Won't · Cry
...
Girl, 6, Rejected, Not Dejeded
By Blau.RD NALL .................
'lbia Js anoCber stcry about an ~
11t rejected from the Featival cit Arts
in Laguna Beach. But, it bas a twist
-something lib a bre.ath of fresh
air.
The artist has no hard words for
the Festival despite the fact that she
bas five one-man shows to her artistic
credil She isn't even unhappy about
being denied an exhibitor space.
She plans to go to the beach a lot
dW'ing \be Festival, which begins July
8. And sbe swims very well for a g.
year--0ld.
Precocious Lynn Manning bas been
called "Tbe Fastest Draw in the
West" by one metropolitan paper. Be-
cause, explained her mother, Mn. Guy
Manning, Q Goff St., "Lynn can
whip out 3> to SO cartoons a night.·•
Lynn demonstrated her ability on
the Art Linkletter abow more than a
year ago and topped ber gifted per·
formance afterward by doing "Tiger
Secretary" for Linkletta'1 secretary.
It now bangs beside an «igiDaJ Pea·
nuts.
Mrs. Manning said that she aet aside
cartoon.a that were not to be sold but
_Lynn outfoad her ad IOld '1A Hortf;
Dreamlni of Five Carrots and Three
Radlihe1" for '2. ·
"We bad been offered ~ in San
Francisco and turned it ciown. She sofd
it when my back wu turned and w1s
so pleased.'" said the mother. ·
Lynn does her own captions such a&
"Two Cati With One Mouse in Ila
Mouth" and "The Beaver Nun" wbicb
shows a beaver in a nun's habit. Mrs.
Manning isn't quite sure what Inspired
th.at one. ·
'SPACE CATS'
When the Russians floated in spact.
she did "Space Cata'' which sbowed
two cat.a fioating in space suits. Rep.
John V. Tunney, Riverside Democrat.
has one of Lynn's cartoons in bis
Washington office. It is a donkey look·
ing at the capitol building.
Tunney said the donkey -Lron
calls it a burro -look! as bewUder-
ed as did the fttshman congressmat(
when he first saw thw,Capitol bulldinJ:
Lynn, who didn't 1*e crayong, t.Ook
her mother's pens 'at age 3lf.a and
launched ber c,.reer in a.rt:·
.·
...
'SEALS PLAYING KEEPAWAY'
A F..ttvaa.nifcted Lynn Mannint Original
Newport Beach Facing
Suit on Party Arrests
A SopUior Court awnmons today
formally advised the city of NewPOrt
Beach that it is a co-defendant in a
'350,000 lawsuit filed by Jeremy C.
Hill ol Corona del Mar.
The action stems from the arrest
of Hill and several other Joca.l men
at a bachelor party at HW'a home
last Sept. rT.
HID aaaerta cit)' authorities and
United Pren ID1mlational Ubeled
b1m bJ allegedly repartlnf ·th• rekl
involved narcotics charge..
Hill was found guilty ol fambllng
and keeping a residence where gam-
bling occurred. No narcotics charges
were brought in the bial.
He 11 seeking '150,000 general dam·
ages, $100,000 for the "loss of buliness
opportunitiea" and $100.000 general
damagea from the cit7 IDd UPI.
Municipal authortUea today diree·
ted the city's luarance carriert to
From P .. e J
McFADDEN. • •
dent of the Irvine Co. upon the death
of Irvine's son, Myford, in 1959. Mc·
Fadden guided the company through·
out the period of establi1hlng the UCI
campus with a arant of 1,000 acres
of Irvine land.
McFadden'• father. Robut. wu
largely responsible for the economJc
development of Newport Beach by
engaging in the lumber trade ln 1874
wtth hi• brother, Ja~•· Thty built
the first Newport pier In 1888 to han
die lumber trade between Newport
and San Francisco vta 1choonen and
~camshJps.
respond to the swnmon1. Hill'• suit
waa filed in Orange County Soperior
Clurt.
DAILY PILOT
.....,.... ..... c .....
lt•!Mtt N. WaM
l"ubll"-
Thomas ic .... 11
'""' n.,H. A. M11r,hl11e
A.\INllne Id!"'
Jerome F. Collins
.._, IMdl CllY litlllw
J•c~ It. C11rley '•"I Nln•11 ,.,.,,_ Menew Acl""''""' 01~ Otht,. Office•
Cosle ~: llt Wftl ler Sl-1
Luuna htdl: "' F-.t •-HIMll!lt!011 9Mcl\: :IOf ..... ,,.,
....,... ..... Offlee
n 11 We,+ •• ,., .. ""'' M•lli"t ,,. .... , .. " ,,0, ••• I 17i t2'U:
·'
.
Pl.OT ELI
"The Ar.
permitted
ence only
ita eUmiDa
\o-.face wi
'>'PW come
~··· "It is 0
tioos proc
This one r
force from was dlsal' fu make fti>m norf
sudden di
lly balanc
tional m1
almost Cf
"It was
and Jo:rd'
the wholt
terstate r
decade st
been 1bat
not be r
tecfinolog
the moon
egg .• .' . And in
vlet Unic
:"Your rt.1inulati
paralysil
the enc<
Arlb Wt
coocenlil
constant
of critic .._. thJ
~o
minel y
"You
as a ju
rather 1
t.ernatiol
have pl
which h
point of
Sm
"'"" JuN J
Mlllt
Hit "' ·-. mom!•
: •tltml
. Y.W
were
Wei.<
IOU
WM¥
eM I
-'· ·-; LOI
: Low
' flour•
, "net '
• Ml l
. II
• (01
lild ...
•lltf I
' . ~
µ.N. :Weighs
: . .. .
tamest Plea ~ . r ' ,
~
t)f Israeli
<""-Wire Sea"'*> UNJTED NATIONS-Dlp&omltl to-ll ..... to ..,, • emDMt • Ja-
ill ll*Ch, ...... ~ bt ~~~ . .,... tbt GwraJ ~
llrMM 1"Gnlp MtnW.er Ma . .
*ClllCb criticlled the UalWd .. for mnonac .... ,..,
~ along 1be Sinai border. Be ...
' "'What ii Che 1198 ol a in bft.
,.. wtUch Wli.llbel trom the -
.: IOOD U the fint mnoire and ~
~ appear?'' (See edltGrtal to-t; ).
:P>en allo auerted bit " qaefo !ill ol who started U. wv ·~ =toady lmlnat'' ... t it. ~ (bf NUMr) to tose t11e snit o1 'nrln m llnel'• Ille.'' ,.,
*"OF WAR ·ae aald the blockade wu bJ deftnl..
lon an act ol war, "lmpoeed and en·
'orced 1hroulb armed violence .••
lbere b no dlffereace in clvll law i. :ween murderiDC a man by .,_
&tranculatlon or. kiWnl him by a lbot
.n the ~ad."
The prlndpti theme ol tbe Iaraeli
diplomet'I add:ree. WU eent.red OD reJectanc outrl&M the da1ml ol Jw.. sia and Anl> comdriel tblt IINt1
....... eilor. a. liMd 1111 ec '*>'• w '*811-up£e' ........ ..,. ~ .-.-~ l; reermmMDt. ·11en .,. b~ ol .. apeecb:
'''Ibe Soviet bu detcl1bed
. ..
our n.istmce u aggretlion and
~to have it condemned.. We re-iect thia aocuutioa with all our mighl
lfere wu armed force employed in
a just and rlatrteool cause; • rl.gbt... eous u the defenden at Valley
:Yori'!; as ju.It u the expulsion ol
Hitler'• bombel'1 from the Brililb
i~ ...
Pentago~ Probes Israel
Attack on U.S. Vessel
PMYI' ELIMINA'l10N
'--rbe Arab 1tlltel can no longer be
permitted to recotn1ze Israel'•~
eoce only for the purpoH ol plottinC
iw ellmlDatioo. TbeJ hal'e come face to.. I ace with U1 in conflict. Let them
J)qW come faee to face with us in
~e ...
''It is often said that United Na-
tioDs procedures are painfully aiow.
This one (removal ol tJN emergency
force from Slnal border), in our view,
w.'s dlsutrooaly srit. Ita effect wu
t.O. make sm.i safe for beIUaereocY !tom north and IOOtb; to create a
sudden dllrupU. of tbe local secur-ity balanct; imd to leave an lDterlla-
tional maritime lDterelt upoeed to
almost cert:aln threat ...
W ASBINGTON (UPI) -The De-
ftm1e Department is bending f!VfJl'Y
effort to make public this week a full
report on the Israeli air and torpedo
boat attack that killed 34 crewmen
aboard the U. S. communicatio111 ship
Liberty June 8.
Pentagon officials feel that, with
various rumon circulating on the
Jackie's Sister
Makes Theater
Debut Tonight
"It was not hrael, but Syria, Egypt
and JOTdao, who violently shattered
the whole fabric -1 tenure of in-
terstate matlona whkb emtled for a
decade since 1957. Thlt situation bas~ CHIOAGO (UPI) -Mra. Lee Rad-
been shattered to rmthreens. It CU:. ziwill. lilts of Mrs. John F. Kennedy,
not . be recaptured. It ~ a fact of makes her theatrical debut tonight in teclinology that It II eesier to tly to , the moon than to ~truc:t a lroken a theater on Chicago s North Side.
egg . • . " Mn. Radziwill, who bas decided to
·And in direct challenge to the So-use her maiden name, Lee Bouvier, viet Union Eb8D said: on the marquee during the six-week
·"Your g0vemmeat'1 record 1n the run of "The Philadelphia Story," wu
~on of the anna race 1n the bard at work Monday night -avoid·
pata)ysil ol the, Securtty Coundl, in 1ng the news media and putting the
the ~t 1broughout the final touches on ber characterization
Arab world ol unfom>ded wsplcion ol Triacy Lord, a role made famous
concerning Imael'• tntdons, your by Katharine Hepburn.
constant iefulal to MY a single ,.,.-d ~"She's a little nervous," said her
of criticism at any time of declalil-man in the play, veteran ac-
~ threatening the violent over-Jo Ericson, formerly of the tel· thiaw ol IsrMl . • • eravely under-evilion aeries ''Honey West." "She's
mines your clab:na to objectivity. never been before an audience before.
"You oome here in OID' eyes not But 1 think she'll do okay."
u a judge or u a prosecutor, but Mn. Radziwill'a party included her
rather u a legitimate object of tn-h""band, Stanislaus, an exiled Polish
ternatiooal uitic:bm for the part you prince turned London buainessman ;
have played ill the somber events Hollywood makeup artist and h a t r
wbicft have brought our region to a styli.at George Masters; and author
point of aplOlive tenlion.0 TnunaD capote.
reason .for the ahlp's preaenc. In the
war r.one and on the drcum.ltancel
of the attack, an official statemaat of
the facts should be made u SOOD u
pouible.
Arab newspapers added ureeneJ to
the matter Monday with chars-th•
Liberty aided Israel by jamming Egy-
ptian radar at the start of tile Mid-
dle Eut war.
They said this wu the reaaon Ia-
rael'1 aircraft caagbt the Arab air
force on the ground.
Other allegations orlglnating bJ the
Arab would accuaed the U n i t t d
States of using the Liberty as a "sry"
ship intercepting and t:ranalating
messages t:ran.sm.ltted by both sides
during the fighting.
The scanty factual content of first
accounts ol the lsraeli attack on the
Liberty also gave rise to divene O?in-
ions on what cauaed it
llrael apologized for the au.ct md
explalned tbJlt it wu a .ml.RUe.
The Defeue Department rep:ied
that "The U. S. govern.meat bas ac·
cepted the Isr~eli explan&Uons md
apologies."
Pentagon offkialJ subsequently gJd
privately they were aatisifeid the in-
cident was indeed a tragic milt.alu of
warfare, but in still later pahlic state-
ments the department dilmlaed some
suggested theories on bow tbe mis-
take miaht have happened.
It dlJJnilsed u unlikely the proJlo-
sltion that the Liberty's American nae might have been hanging limp
and unrecognizable tn the light alr
the day of the attack, and added that
"im~~tions tbat the identification mar s were in any way inadequate
are both unreallstic and i.naccurate.''
Sultry Texas Heat Rises
Doum:pours HoW Hickory in Clammy Embrace
s-, ·-llt Tld•
WnttnoAY
"'"' loW • • ........... 11• ....... ,,,
Finl lllOll ... "....... 1tllf •"'• J.I
s_..i loW • ........... t•• ""'· 2.2
SecOnd """ • .. .. • .... ''" ""'· "'
S• at .. J:4 1.m. ..... t :ll6 '·"'·
M-.... 4:• e.1'11. • .... l ;lJ '·"'·
"-" Lett •• ..... ,., ••
Julll rt JI/Ill 1' Ju., 1 Jvtr W
0raace «Aan
MolffY lllM _.... ... ~
• lftO _...., lt .. ,. """' "' lflw-• ,_ ..._., end W__... Nlgtll _.
mom11111 llw c*'" Mlt "*""' -:.,~
y~ ~ ....,~
.... ,. • """ " ,,, tlld • llw " ..
We• ""'tllf'...,,_ -&
CaWerala
IOVTHlllN U.lll'OltNIA -~ _....,. w.. .... , but1119111
•lld "'°"""" lllW ci.uet -t11t cwtt. ......, --... ........
l0$ ANOllH ANO VICIPOTY-
l ow Clo\ldl lllfhl alld N rlV niornlllO
l\c\lrt o!Mrw'-het'I' ..,,..,,IM llldlY
• •rid ~. Wl<'l'Mf h)deY. Hloh
• ~ Low tclftlOlll •· Hlth w.c1"""a1
' II
lltlMW --ladlv. Hltlla 1' to M.
........ "'"'9llt • .. .. """' w.d!IN-..., ,. ....
INTlltMIDIATI VAllEY~IV
-... .,. IN W9dlllldl.,, IOOMIV
_.,,. ._..,. Hlllll ... '9 .._ lows
....,., ..... """' WMriMde., "
.. N.
11.8. S•--•ry
lllufW •ma ~ IO l'\Hl'ltMI
• ..,. • Qlld fr""' .... ., IJTe!dllflO
fl'orn Mlcflltln le KatlWI.
f!lw_.. • Pa"-'V '""" •IOllG
IM bollndarv al Nori" •I'd Saulfl
C:11'941M °'"""''" M<l\IY ,., ... "' "'' vlc;tnll'V al Hkkory, H.C. """''' -•v
._ •nd ~It ·-.. ~ Ill • ti•· '*" ..-led _.., foM!ly
"'9 Peclllc Coest from S4lll ""nchco
to WM/llflOIOll.
W1rm. IWl!lld -llltr ccnllnued
tfotll TeXM Md "'9 Glltf lltlel to IN cero11..... n.. ,...1o11•1 hlDlllS1 .....,..
1111 MOftCl1v •• 1DS rteorded 11 boll! Pruldl& Ind ClllldreM, Tu. II Witt
101 at P1lm .... l"lt. C.111. ~r -11\tf domlnelold Ille Ptclflc "'°"'"-'· "'-~n tie• al ll•ltt Ind H9w El'IOlend. 'Ille Nllolt'a low
11111 lnQfnlllQ .. , n 11 o,...,,v1111. Mt.
louthtrn Cll~ wta f\/MV and
wenn 11'1tf rnotnlf'O low cklueh cltlfW from coemt ,, ....
Temperatures
""" i..w Pl'tC. f<lblrw 7' 53
lklftalo
~
Clncl111111l1
Cllwl-9
0-°"~ Oetrott
E"'11U
Fal"**t Fort Wor111 ,.,._
HeltN
Honolvlu
Hautton
'"°*-POii• J~'illle
J-
I(-CllY
I.At v ....
Lot """'" LAIUIWllle Memfllllt Miami
Mliw.ut" Ml~lt
lfew0t1MM !MW Yonc
Ollkllfld
Oklellome Ctlv
OrNfla
Paio "..,._ Phlladlllltlle P'-"• P llt1btlt Ill POf'll-. ,,,...
~ltftd. Otce •
lttt!id CllY "*' lltuff .. _
IU<lllnOlld '-<'ramtfl+t
11. l oul• s.11 .....
$ell l Ma Cltv "°" Ditto f< lbu<lvo "''" 7) 1' .U S..n Fr•llC:IKn ""d1oreo• 1n l\
Atltllf• tO 70 , ........ r1.1e1 ,, ., "'"""'<* 11 D ""'"' u u
°' S..ntt llarlltl•• SHttw
' SpchM
T-Twmel
11 J6 1' '5 .ll ... " n '3 n J5
1:1 '° .lJ
'' SS 17 S1 ., Al
u 7'
t4 ...
1' Sol 17 ,, ,,, ,,
1.5 66 ,, 71
7S S1 .. "' • 63
7l 60
ll " ., 1S
IS 1' ,. ...
" .II " n 61 51 .Jr
ti S1
ts n
IO " 1.5 Sol
70 '° ·'' ., 10
" 61 )'O 56
t1 SI n 56
to ...
ll 45
.. 63
11 Sol
" 14 ~ S3 ~ S1 " ~· ti ff \1 ,, \)
17 S\ . ~
II IA ~
10!! ,.
Governor's
Tax Bill
Defeated
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. &no
ald Reagan and bi.I legt.lbUve fol-
lowers today tried to revive the ad-
ministration'• '1 bl.Woo tu bl.I wtJich
suffered a stinging -but probebly
not pel'JJUlllellt -defeat Ill tbe S...
ate Revenue and Tautioll O.,mltt.e,
The sponsor ol the fcM111at'• bOI.
Sen. George DeukmejUo (Jl..L • • i
Beach), said be wa (1!1161Mt die
mea!ure e~ 'Mdd wtn eom-
mittee approval, pollibiy • -v u
Wednesday.
Chairman Walt.er W. ~ (D-Ba-
kersfield), abo pndieted tbe com-
mittee would approve the bill but lie
said it may be amended Abltatial-
Jy first.
The 12-member panel, eqUllJJ divid-
ed among RepablicanJ and Demo-
crat!, rejected tbe adm1nlllltratic
proposal Monday foDowing a tfne.
hour bearing.
On a strict party-line vote, the com-
mittee defeated a Repobijcan motion
~ send the bQl along to lta next atop
m the legislative ~ocea, the finance
committee. The vote..,., W with one
J?emocrat abeent. But 1mder legiala-
tive rules, 1even votel -a m.jority
of the entire committee -it Deedecl
for approval.
Pespite the ..ui.ct. u. lllellUre
c,aa be call~:!,.!« anotbm' \"at. U.J
time the ad""'Wlatloa tblnb tt bu
the support Dllded for pllAle.
Deukmejian uld be would dilCU.ll
possible amendments with Democra-
tic committee memben in an effort
to round up tbe seventh vote.
The bm is needed to balance the
r~rd $5 billioo state budget. U a rnaJor tax boost ia not passed by the
first day ol the next fiacal year, July
1, the state will begin to go $10 mil-
lion a week into debt. That gives the
lawmakers less than two weeb to
act.
Israelis Capture
5 Soviet Off ice rs
At Syrian Post
NE W YORK (UPI) -F'ive Soviet
mili&ar'Y omcera Wetl! captured last
wee\ when llraeli troops overran an
artillery post in Syria, the C.Olumbia
Broadcasting Sy*m reported Mon-
day.
OBS news correspondeat Daniel
Schorr reported that the captured ol-
ficen, including one woman, "were
turned over to the Soviet embauy in
Tel Aviv just before the break in rela-
tiona and the whole trung was bushed
up in an effort to avoid further fric-
tion with Moecow."
Earlier report, of captured Ruasian
officers were denied by the Israeli
gav9'1UMnl
Schorr, reporting from New Yort,
said tbe artruery battery had ~
fi.riog on Israeli villages and that le>-
cal rt1ideots had described the fire
as "extremely accurate." He 1 a t d
the Israelis had monitored tiring com-
mands in Russian and "were not sur-
prbed when ~y overran the posi-
tiooa and found the Russiam;."
Schorr reported the woman was
wounded and taken to an aid station,
but became so abusive the doctor
there refused to treat her.
He said the Israelis have piclures of
the Soviet officers and affidavits from
the men who captured them.
A[[
Lte~W
~00 if@1r ~ua
CARPET
CLEANING
DAILY PJlOT 3
. ' Over 1,000 Police·
Strike in Detroit
more policemen callfJd tn lick today.
12 on the midnight lhlft and 84 more
on tM 8 a.m. shift. 1be strike was
musbrooming despite Panell's plea,
a court order bamtlng tbe walkout,
Cavanagb'a tttr.t to Jaa olfender•
end a Michigan law banning ltrikes
by public emnloves.
'!be new ,fJiDeues,, puabed total
abeenteehm and ~ duty listings to
1,068, the spotesman said. nie figure
included 998 lilted u sick, 103 Oii
light duty, 83 disabled, 8 on emerg·
ency leave and 198 suapended for
feigning iDness.
Detroit bas 4,700 policemen but the
abeentees form nearly half of tbe men
aaalgned to paCrol the city from tta
pollce precinct statioos.
Rebel General Seizes
Arsenal in Red China
HONG KONG (UPI) -A Hong
Kong ~ today reported •
rebel Oiinese Comnumill gwral
aeiJed a major nuclear anenal in a
battle Ital tmed or wounded 15,000
per80111 ad threatened to de8troy an-
~ • Pekinc'• 'Went atomic ceo-......
Tbe ~SW, a riOt
............ said Ge. ... , b-
JmO, conun...,. ot tbe rtlDCICie Sin.
tiang regica, WU in caatrol ol tbe
anenaJ Ind testing groundl where
c.ommu.n.iat Oiina's first hydrogen
bomb was exploded Saturday.
hf reports that iateUigence eoorca
here said were dllbious, the news-
paper said its inlormation from Com·
mum.t Oli.na said Wang captured the
Kaimoa.e Aneoal compla before the
test. Tbe arsenal was Communilt par-
ty dJainnan Mao 'l'le-bmg's last
ltn>ngbold in the province, it said.
The Star said the 15,lm fell during
the storming of the arsenal. It said
Wang now tbreateoe. to level the ar-
senal u n 1 e s s Mao makes policy
changes Cavorable to the rebel gen-
eral.
The Star said Wang p1a.nn«1 bis ac-
tion with Ulanfu, the Inner Mongoli·
an C.Ommunist leader said to have
been ousted by ~e>-M.ao fm:et In the
chairman's national power purge.
'Ibere was no word on what changes
In policy Wang and Ulanfu wanted
Mao to make. The indlcatlon wu
that they opposed Mao as lead«.
NBC Blasts DA Garrison
In Assassination Probe
NEW YORK (UPO -New Orleans
Dist Alty. Jim Ganilon'a investig•
tion into the Kennedy uaasaimtion
waa described on nationwide televi-
sion Monday night. u a case found-
ed upon lies, threats, fear, suspicion,
inducemeau and exploitation ol the
public. (See review of pro g r a m,
Page 15).
Shortly before the NBC news docu-
mentary went on the air, Garrison
issued a statement charact.eriztng the
program as "the big lie."
Tbe New Orleans prosecutor add-
ed: "All the screaming and holler-
ing now being heard is evidence that
we have caught a very large fish.,.
Garrison has charged that Clay L.
Shaw, a New Orleans businessman toot part ill a conspiracy to assaa.-
sinate President. John F. Kennedy. He
said Lee Harvey Oswald, Jack Ruby,
the Late David W. Ferrie and un-
named Cubans participated in the al-
leged plot Shaw bas been indicted
for conspiracy.
The NBC program, "'!be JFK Con-
spiracy: The CUe of Jim Garrison,"
presented the following conclusions:
l. "The case he (Ga.rTison) has
built again.!t Clay Shaw ii based on
testimony that did not pass a lie de-tector Ganison ordered -and Gar-
rison knew il One prospective wit.-
ness admitted he was going to lie.
2. "Members of Garrison's staff, in
trying to strengthen the case against
Shaw, have threatened and offered in-
ducements to potential witnesses.
3. "The results of bis four months
of public investigation have been to
damage reputations, to spread fear
and suspicion and, worst of all, to
exploit the nation's sorrow ana doubts
about President Kennedy's death."
In his statement. Garrison said the
NBC report bad been "presented with
a great deal of pomposity in order
to try and make it more digestible."
"It is obvious that there are ele-
ments today in Washington, D.C.,
which are desperate because we are
in the process of uncovering their
hoax," he added.
After the program, Garrison said
he would ask NBC for equal time to
reply to the network's statements.
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Wl'll ,.OUD WHIM wrll DOMI ... TOU'U II ,.OUD WHIM fl'S DUNN C04'$T•l V•llEY~Metltf MJM•
'°Ocl•Y ~ WedNtdlY but le 19 nlol1f
•""' -II' mer11'"9 flll • lfw ctoudt
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II 64 .01 ._ _____________________________________ _,. .. \.1
Tuadly, June ao, 1~7
Baelal Trouhle
Pol~~ Break Up
Atlanta Flareup
Ualted Preu latendoul
Sniptl'I .bot at pollc:e and
IO'YIDC b9Ddl of Necroet
toned ~ and boW11 tn
racial ~ Mon· dV ni&M in Au.ta a n d
police ink• up an cqanls-
ed demoaltratioa at Moat-
ColDf!lY. Ala. Six penoOI ,,... IDJl.nd
ancl nine S:IODI were .,..
reeted In s.r.up tn th•
DIDI lWlJ llCUon ol At·
l.llD ta.t developed alter
Bleck Power a d v o c a te
SClote1y Olr'mlcbeel took '1'f·
er a nel&N>oztlood pvwe
teltion that hid been cd·
ed lollowiDC the lbooUDS of
• Negro ~ by a Necro_
policeman.
gia listory who bad 1D'ged
the rally to peCiUon fw re-dr-.
~ Dixie Bllll .,.. .II a
Nesro boulint project in
welt Atlanta, HVfftl milel ftomSummervillewhereN~
groea rioted last Septem·
bet'.
A group of tourtns for· e\aD journeliata .TMtcbed
tbe oonlrontltion between
demcmtraton and Nes;roe1 tn Montgomery. 'nle N~
llS'C*. about 300 strong,
broke ranka and ran scream· ·m1 ~.a croup of poUce
reiutorcementa lt*'cbed
1Dw'll"d 1bem.
In other racial develop-
meata, demobumtion ol
1,000 National Guardamen
WM completed Mooday in
Clndrwwti and tbe dty'I
900-man police force turned
in riot equipment..
The guardmien were seot
into the Ohio dty laAt week
Carmlcbael flgund indl·
redly in 1be ~ at
Mcmtgomery. T h.e Rev.
Richard Boooe Md the ctemomtration in the Ala-
bama dty was called to
proteet ''militarllm'' aria·
ing from incidena in Pratt-
ville, Ala., early th1I month
when CAnnichael was ar-
rested there.
to curb ncial disturbences. •:1oo.)'!;ll~Oiil
Cln:nM::Mel told tbe Nll1 In Mlam. that •• ,.. need
to be belllial beedl'' and ridiculed .... SID. IArOJ
Jabnlcla. lat flht Necro --rl 2
• • modlnl a.
In Waehmgton, U.S. Ap.
peals Qiurt Judge J. Skel·
ly Wright ord«'ed the school
board to provide buses f« Neer<> pupi.lJ who ask to be
~ from tlMii' OV•
eruowded tchooll to under· ~~
Army's General Order~
Streamlined to Just 3
2. "I will obey my ape-
clal Cll'den and perform all
my dutl• In a military
IDllJller. ''
Mortar crew p~ares to return enemy ftn cluring weebnd ft&htiDI In W•
Zone D, about 35 miles northMSt of Phuc vmh in South Vit!Wm. In ftghting
Mooday, American infantrymen trapped a brge Viet Cong unit in Mekong
netta, killing 1s9 guenillal 1n ax-hoar bett1e.
Legislature in Action
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Lota of t:binp military are
beinl a t r • a mJined tbeH
days -evea the tim•hoo·
ored Army a.Deral Orden
wb.ldl -*Hen f« 1 • a r a
had to melDlllriu before eo-
lng OD Nlltry duty.
3. "I will report viola-tllon.a of my IPtdal Cll'den, ...................................... 1111::1Sila. ........... ..
The cblqe eoold strike
a note of DOltalda for mil·
liool ol Army veter.DI but
the dlange sbouJd be wel-
come to toda.y'a aoldies-1.
Starting Aug. 1, the Army
will drop 1be 11 Genenl
Orders IDd IUhltitute tbeM
three:
1. "I will guard ntrJ·
thing within t b e limit.a of
my post and qolt my post
on ly when p r op e r 1 y re-
lleved. ..
emergendea, and anything
not covered Jn my lnstruc-
t.lona, to the commander of
the relief."
The Geoenl Orders ~ve
been part ot Army life at
least since 1882. A soldier
then bad to mem<Jriz.e 22
sepal'de requirement.. By
1893, the number ol orders
was reduced to 12. There
was little change then for
at least ~ yean, until the
11 orden wbich are now
paaing into blatory became
ltlndm'd.
I Y Tl41 AUOCIATIID ... U I
The o.mocr.tlc chelrm.., Of Ille
StMIW It-llnd Texatloft Com-
mlltM Mid !Odey !Ml R9'MJbllcan Gov. ltN119ft't SI .• blllloft tu lncrMM wlll Mve 19 bl revlMd blfor9 H 11eg1,..
,,_1119 -Ill Ill "" leglslalllre.
THI! 90VIHNOa
11111 s .....
,........, -Rel» lo Hol llWClaflf
Hr ..-th tlla mexlmum ""-' • pttmlvm flNMl!ll agency ,,,., Cllarga
on -Ill 'rlnc:lpal balano Of •rtV io.n up to l1t01 U 529, lurnt. 0-
F rallO.
aalMf -ltaqulra btllol ~
to OW1t.l11 '"l&llllv• CDUflMl'a "141n' of •ti laws Wllldl becclrne -•llW
-a cwtlMl9MI .........,_,. ll
•llP'V'ted .,., l*lllaJ .... .. """"· D-Loa .......... C-.... -""""°"1os ..ivc.11oMI 1;,,ld lrltl• la Caneda for llloh eclleaf t!Udtntu .All 2'5, Clla1>11I•. •-<:oo1.
................................................................................. 1
I
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SUMMER SPECIAL
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Mrvera and side tables.
Suppose your phone gets out
of whack on a Saturday night
-if it's an emergency to you,
it's an emergency to us.
Whether your phone needs repairing after-
hours or on weekends, we'll do everything we
can to help. If there's trouble on the line. we
may be able to fix it without a repairman com-
ing out. But if necessary, he'll be out to get
your phone wori<ing again. OPEN EVENINGS MONDAYS
~ttYbe someone in the family ls ill. Maybe
you're expecting an important call.
Call us at Repair Service and let us know
what's wrong. You'll find the number listed in
the front pages of the phone book.
If immediate repairs are not required, we'll
fix the phone on the next regular workday.
And there's never any extra charge.
@Pacific T1l1phon1
POMONAJ HOLT, EAST Of GAREY l'ASADENA; COLORADO AT El MOLINO
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Tutsday, June 20, 1967 DAILY PILOT 5
Is It Passing Fad~ Soeial newolution?
• •
::: Hippies Experiment 'f ith New Way of Living
BJ ROBERT STRAND
SAN FRANCISCO (UPD -On c ~ m,bt three month.I aco. a alen-Jkr Orl nood for the ftnt time on
~ P'rectlco'a Hai&bl Sfreet and ~-
t .... trangen .amlled bact. and that is ~ • ce!M. In her mldweltem
~· people don't. ~.·Sendra, a b~ed brunette, knew :Dere to go. She had ~ the ad-.are.a kl .an underp-ound newaipaper.
-
0Altbougb '100 was tucked tn her
pocket, lhe preferred to doze off on
the floor ol an apartment crammed
.ritb three dozen others.
FROM THERE, it was an eesy
l.t'anaition to a thinl story railroad
flat where the bathroom door WU
never closed. The Bat was home for
seven boys, fOW' gkU md a baby
who lived cunmmaUy. sharing all
ttegs.
It WM a haven for pot (martjoana)
smotlng, add dropping (Im>), and
record ptayine (folk rock) wbe-e
boob ~e aeldo111 reed and angry
voices almost never heard.
Here Sandra thought she was <Us·
covering a wisdom not found at the
11r1e university where she won ad-
mirable gradea for two yean and
were a covNd IOl'Orlty pln -bow
to live in ez:dttne peace ad warm
love.
81Ddra'1 cadributioll to tbe com·
mme Wll oeeuAGDll cookln1, pro-
c:Mdl from tbe .. ol bMct neck·
llcel lbe m.ede. and IJDAl1 ebecb
that ClllDI in andDal )ettera from
her motber. ..
BUT SHE KNEW mctber wesn't too
tenibly upeet. Tbe mother, she said,
woald forget the day after each let-
ter because "that's bow abe copes."
One day, crawling oo all fours, s.lra pretended to be an elepblnt,
mimicking the mammal's awkqrd·
ness and grace. Everybody laughed.
Wlth that, Sandra dlanged her
J4entitY, and became known to all as
Daodng Elephant.
The name wu not aitrange in the
Halgbt-A.lllbury, headquart«I for the
hippie movement whoee tentacl• ere
shooting t.rom pad 1o pad acroa the
nation. Nor would Dandng Elephant be out
of p1aoe tn ~e communleies de-
velopinC in Bostm, New York, Pbila·
delpbia, Detroit, ClevelaDd, Chicago,
Clothes Make
The Hlppw-
Of Bo~h Se xes .,
Amcng the hippies, the hottest
fublon ttemJ differ aomewhat from
nfth Avenue's and the sexes ol gar-
menta are confuaed, Wardrobes in-
clude:
Nedlacea ol lilver and colored
beads, far men.
Hairbanda, to keep shoulder length
treuet out of the eyes, for men.
Knee blgb leather boots, mosUy for
wpmen.
·Bells, for wrista and ankles, men
aM women.
.:surplus Army field jackets, men
and women.
Hunting boots, for men.
. Small bore pipes, for marijuana,
everybody.
; Indian sarla for women.
r.;.Buffalo Bill style rawhide jackets
'for men. '! Band uniforms, clrca 1910, men.
·.:Anything American Indian, every·
body.
Loag flowing robes, for aspiring
religious teachers, men with beards.
Benjamin Franklin round rimmed
glasses, for persons with ~~ vision,
everybody.
Bead.string earrings, for women
with pierced ears only.
Boulder. ONo; Auatln, Tex.; to. AJt.
,.iet and S-ttle, to name a fW.
AND DANCING ELEPBAN1' t. DO
looger a shock to IOIDe nispeded
thinkers who 1eri0Ully SUUelt the
hippies' rapid growth may be nreep-
ing enough 1o become ooe ol the
20th Century'• m o r e important
events.
Others, like San Francl9co Ex-
aminer columnist, ~ Nolana, •Y• •
"the hip world la the aJob 1"ll'ld!'
"Society's sad .:ks, traipsing
around in H.aUowe'en coetumea, re-
citing slogans ae meaningleaa .. their
barren Jives," be writes. "'Ibey are
pitiful."
Whatever they are, the hippies' tn-
nueoce is reaching not just illto the
suburban ranch boule with a nrlm-mine pool of the Dandng Elepbmt's
father, a bully and successful pedia-
trician.
To bis nelgtlbon' houses, their mes-
sage II betng spread by Pl)'Cbedelic
advriaing, peycbedetic polttra re-
produced in mass magazinea and psy-
chedelic spol'U 8hirts and peyd)e.
del:ic jewelry.
More importantly, the psydtedelic
rock music speaks In '8aguage, un-
fathomable 1o mothers, ol atnqe
new thou.gbta perfectly undentood by
the nation'• yocMh.
.IJ'llE BAIGBT-ASllBlJBY iJ a lO
block .-ea ol. palt-Vidarlan llata a.
blibited by • wriety of r8Cll ad
eoooomic clMlea.
Mal.nly I tta remts ... *'· ud this ia what hM been lmiDC J'OUDI peo-
ple in1o tbe district tor several years.
As the youths went blppie, "Get
Out of Vietnam" signs appeered in
Ule windows. '!be spacious bolldinga
proved eesily adaptable to the hip-
~~·comm~~-•
And the dl!trict'a great advan4age
tamed out to be its border OD tbe
1,014 acres of San Franclaco'• de-
llgbtful Golden Gate Park. Since lta
acquisition tn 1868, Ule part policy
hu always been, "don't keep oU the
graas."
Here the hippies now sit blowing
their flutes, dropping their edd,
strumming their guitars and Jetting
their children run.
'1be city should have gotten its
fiI'lt wwning that aomething bizarre
WU happening in 1986 when 10,000
people paned In &lid out ol Long-
1baremen' 1 ball for a tripe feetivaJ
orpnized by novelist Ken Kesey.
The eivent'a name refened to pey-
chedelic tripe. The eotertainment WU
~It-yourself.
Everything went oa at once. Elec-
tronic -tia.nds aboutedL!_~c and seu.i Jlgbt paUieml JUlDPeD up and
down the walls, weirdly Ollltwned
tpeetaton danced and gr"Oapl clus-
tered around atroboecopic light. whole
effecta were supposed to ban one OD.
BY THE TIME Sandra arrived, the
Halgbt-Aabbury WU teethint with ex-
citement. A human be-in in the park
Jan. 14 bad attracted ~.ooo people.
"Wow, if we can do that, we can
tum on the world," the hippies ex-
ulted.
Later in the spring, the be-ins oc-
cUrTed every Saturday and Sunday
afternoon. Loog forgotten ballrooms,
the Avalon and the Fillmore convert-
ed early tn 1966 for rock bands, dmr
thousands each weekend nigbl
The ballroom scenes were limi1ar
to that of the tripe festival, and one
of their striking upects was the total
lack of alcohol drunkenness. Another,
not quite ao obvious, was that large
tunbiers wa-e high on pot and acid,
and a few sobbed in dark e«nera
from bed trips.
None of the vlclo111 fighting, com-
mon these days after high lcbool and
other ctances in auburbia, OCCUJTed
imide or outalde the ballrooms. Vio-
lence was udleard of.
The mUllc was the bard rock with
lengthy tunes and the blua Influence
which baa become nationally knowa
es Seo Francisco.
AND WJ'nt THE music some of
Ul'ITt....,.._
IT'S A 'HAPPE NING' -Hippies rrowd panhandle of Golden Gate
Park for weekend be-In at Which time troupe performs as part of
a ''happening."
San~. ...... 2,0ll9 rock
baodl b-1ed *"'-d fame.
Molt benlded were tbe Jeff.-
Airplane, the Gnteful Dead, Qlliek·
snV. Meeeeoge:r Service. Supdb
Camel, Moby Gnpe. Coantlf Joe ad
the Fish. md the Iwnediate Fmnil1·
Their wonk raembled .. of •
er youtbful mulloal groap1 ....S
the oouotry -oppomng the ... c.-
de~ the draft. CGmplainba& "' man'• isolation from bis fellon ad
sometimes praiaing dope.
"Alcapulco Gold" ... hMW1 with-
drawn from some radk> waws wbm
di9c jockeys disconnd the tide re-
ferred to a special kind of ~
''White Rabbit'' talked .. ~
pill tbat ll1.8kel you feel ••• feet
tall,•• and the s.tles wen ..td to
be aging the belt acid ~11 .uancS.
THE MUSIC WAS a re6edlml ol
what WU ~in the Balgbl·
AJJbbury, and m oihen 1*11 of W
Fnmcilco aa well.
s.ndra. tbe DandJli ~has been bilb on pot 1IDo mJl1 to
count Four timel llbe Im tam tbe
fight-hour loag LSD trip, bat abe re-
gards 8Cid with cautiGD.
And with good l'MIGll. One ol her
experiments was a Nd trip JD •tich
ahe sat shaking with panic md bad
to be talked don by m 1llldlntand·
iDg fellow ldpple.
H1ppies are better plQolidam in
sudl aitmaoaa, lbe aq1, ~use
they ol1er love lDlt.l 0( the told·
nea of • emerceneJ' twiptMI
1be LSD a--Senice, a v•lun·
teer group wlme telel"NM aanber (~) II ~ pablisled.
deals with anottler 20 or • a veek
in the immediate ina ol the city.
Tbe racue service estimlta ~000
people here bave ta.km IS>.
At San FnnciJCO GeDer.t llolptal.
paychiatriltl .,., treat about ftft bid
trippers dilly. About ODe'oul al five
t. kept overnight, and about ooe out
of a dowl la commited fer extended
psychlatric care.
OP mOSE COMMJ'M"ED, hospi tal
spoke.men say they were persons
ol borderline mental Health in whom
I.SD triggered neurotic or pgycbic
epbodes.
The ldppies are warned by psy·
ch1atriata that the Joo«-term conse-
quences ol takblg Im> limply are
not lmown. and there'• evi&!nce to
suggeat it may have physical, psy·
chlc and genetic damage which is
pennmemt
A good trip la aald to awaken the
1en1e1 to their environment Tbe
walla, the floor, the ceiling and the
furni1ure all are supposed to vibrate
in harmony.
''[ saw god," la the flowtt clttl-
den'a refrain, and tbtir fnqoent dis.
covert la, ''all is cme."
TRIS PANTHEISTIC view has con·
trlbuted to ptycbedellc art, allo de-
rived from the tunH>l-tbe century po«en ol Toulouse Lautrec.
In the paycbedellc poM.era, usually
advertialng dlmcea, the acrtpt curves
into a vibnCing and ambiguous de-
sign of riotous color.
To ma1lle out the words. the viewer
must loot dolely, but the words are
not important. The point la to turn
the~ on.
The "all la one" vision ol LSD
also accounts in part for tbe hippies'
great fascination with oriental relig-
ions.
But lronlcally, while Im> led some
45 hipplea to the Haight-Ashbury's
Radha Krishna temple, they now have
sworn off the drug.
Their Swami, A. C. Bbaktivedanta.
teaches total abstinence from drugs
as well aa meat, tobecco, alcohol and
illicit sex.
The Krishna IOClety is one of sev·
eral eastern rellgjous groups in the
Haight-AJhbury and one 0( several
dozen hippie 01ganlzatsOll8.
TllE RAlGBT-ASBBURY'S "New
Community" inti•acles a tbellter grvap
to give free playa in the park. a job
CG-Op. a boaliQg agency, a group
renovating -wndoned theater, .ev-
eraJ DeWiP4NS11 at Jeall 25 basi-
nesses, and bappnring bollle, which
plans lectures and diacmaioD gJ'Ollpl.
Most typical se the Diggers -pat-
terned afta a group of 17th Cmblry
English f.armen who )jWJd collective-
ly. t:llled waste Janda and gave away
their surplus.
The Digg«l'I, who have the oo.tel
where s.an.n spent her first nigbt,
ser"ie hot meala dail:J in tbe part for
fm. The food ii tlCTOCIDged in the
p~ martet and from mercbaDta.
They abo operate two Lanna out-
side the ~ and a store called.
"Trip Without a nctet," which ii full
ol clothiag free for mybody to take.
!\obody tltiia mare than be needa,
and eada leafts behind aDJ pt menta
•1ridl bec9me tirelome.
.\U TBW AC'l'IYl'llES bne
turned Jlaigbt Stnet. once a lecond
rate rwigbhorbood bnci1ww artsy.
-tbe place toamU ... to 9ee first. enm before toplela night clubs
or Filberman's Wharf.
Auto tnftic oft.en is at a atandltill.
Long baArecl youths sit in circles OD
the lidewalb. On every block hip-
pies stand in the street waving the
Oracle, their foremost newspaper.
1be IMt iatJe BOid 100,000 copies.
Overtooting it all, a theater mar-
quee ii emblazoned with the single
word. "Love."
But tn the older stores, the mer-
c:batl are fWl ol hate and anger.
1beir cutomen can't park. are ac·
costed by penbandlers and must step
over reclining bodies to enter the ......
ID aftemoona, amplified eledrooic
llUllic from the part smaabel through
wllDI of apartments ol the elderly
blocb aW'ay.
llEALTB AurBORITIES report
vaaereel dilNle in the district bas
nwWplied ah times in three ym ..
Hlll'COtics arncts. numbering 148 in
tta. aow are ronning at the rate
ol 1,000 a year.
And woica in the Communist par-
ty heft compbined the flower ddl-
drell are ''pulling kid.a from the left
to tbe apathetic middle." They were
denounced as ••a selfish. petty, bour-
geaia, racl.t movement"
The latter remark referred to the
lack of many Negroes among the
hippies and to the fact that virtually
all flower dlildren are from middle
claa f.amOiee. Par.ta, ever seeing outlandbh
dr-. proclaiming a rejection ol their
ctmUbed notions. tear for their dill-
dra. Not for their aafety t bot for
their Idea..
Bal a San Fraoci.lco Cbrooicle col-uadst. C..Jes McCabe, wrote, "ft
are buged became they are living
euctl,J the kind ol Ille we would
lib to lead if we weren't mi:ndleu
COii in the system. '"l'beJ are living the life oC Riley,
wbida In con&emp«ary ternu, means
br*9 and boys and pot and add. ..
A TaOOBLE HERE la just who are
·'tbey?" Nobody appean to have de-nned the tenn. hippie. with precision
and clari(y.
It ls dlflicult to define a pbenomen·
on that bepe changing. a movement
wbldl includes many kinds ol peo-
pJe. Tbere are b.ippies, capttalists,
!Jrielta. IOdal worten. artisanl, do-
~-oothinga and some who
work 40-bour weeks.
And there are wbat Police Capt.
Daniel W. Kiely calls "pseudo hip-
pies," the thrill seekets who don a
costume and "come looking for some
of that mie love."
The flower children them selveJ de-
nne themaelves variously as "setk·
rrt" oC spiritual wisdom. as being
··self awve" and as those responsive
to "the vibrations of Jove."
\
Something blpples .,, not, is beat·
1lik. And the notion they are filthy
is buecl moce OD hair lendla than fxt. attbougb bare feet do get grimy.
will take over the establllbment ltben
law students now smoking pot be-
come the district attorneys and when
"we outlive the atralgbt.s."
But even the hippies are already
BESIDF.S ADVOCATING use ot perceiving that plenty ls goine against
druga, San Francisco's "New Com-them.
DlUllity" has aome common ~ ln the communal flats, the warm-
IOpbical concepts. est of love can be cbllled by a sink
Its members regard world leaders perpetually full of somebody else's
u ~ in.sane and l:leir capac-dirty dishes. And some hippies, too, itJ foe 10lving any of the obvious conclude they would prefer some Um·
problems ol aociety as hopeless. it on the sharing of their favorite
But at present they find protest of girl with others.
the establi.dlment as futile, and An unexpected result of the leisure-
cboole .. to live our protA!st" by ere-ly and loving life can be boredom,
ating a new way of life rather than and boredom's cure for many is work
by stagjng demonstrations. and competition.
'Ibey believe their parents' devo-In the long run, the hippie aub-
tioo to the acquiring Of material culture will need a more efficient
things bas made them unhappy and way of feeding itself. Even in Amer-
balf-bumac, and that in our affluent ica's affluence, only so many people
society there should be plenty foe can be fed with remittances from
elPer)body. I ever-loving parenb and reject vege-
Tbey argue automation is making tables from the produce market.
labor leas and less necessary, and The San Francisco Examiner bas
that their generation must individual-regarded the hippies editorially as
ty learn to derive joy from leisure "a fad" which will pass just u the
time. s:ity's beatniks did.
They conceive of love as sharing,
and ofter love as the supreme value.
Not unexpectedly, the flower chil-
dren have adopted the city's patron
aaint, St. Francia of Aa!isi, as their
o0wn St. Francis rejected bis rich
flllber'1 way ol life to become a
JIM!lcticm!t
AND THE BEGGING ON Halgbt
Slreet ii a dramatizing of the belief a.t lbartn& meas giving, and giv-m, means sharing.
THE FAMED BRITISH blsiorian,
Arnold TOJDbee, tramped the Haigbt-
Aabbury' then wrote :
·~ leeden of Ile establishment
will be making tbe mistake ol their
1ivea if they diacount and ignore the
revolt of the hippies -and of many
of the non-hippies' contemporaries -
oo the ground these are either dis·
gracef:al wastrels or traitors .•. wbo
will be certain to rejoin the establish-
ment when, after graduating, they
..e <ifered tome brilliant prospect in
the service ol ooe of the tip-top cor-porationa. ,,
Toynbee saw the hippies aa a re-
V'Olt against conformism which be
aaya bas characterized American so-
dety since 1716.
"The question is wbetber the hip-
pies are going to transfigure, like
St. Francia, a defiant voluntary pov-
~ into aometh.i:ng positive, creative
md redeeming, Only thus could they
begin to "2X>Old the ~can way ol
lilie,,, be said.
AMONG THE HIPPIES themselves,
a few think their trip will end in
"cooceutiation camps.''
These pessimists foresee their own
forceful repression because of their
attack on all of the nation's institu-
tions. And they predict that resistance
to the Vietnam war may take the
form ol widespread sabotage requir-
ing tbousands or arrests.
But most hippies are bubbling with
hope. Tbere'a talk of moving into the
vut open spaces of Nevada and
quickly outnumbering the state's 183,-
86.1 registered voters. •
Presumably, tbe hippies would abol·
I.sh the cuinos, set up free drug dis-
pensaries, ban alcoholic beverages,
establish marijuana farms and sub-
stitute group marriages for the quick-
ie marriage and divorce business.
1be dominant hippie personalities
are confident that be-ins this summer
in many cities will start vibrations
leading to formation of thousands of
new hippie groups.
Underlying the confidence is the
knowledge that the young are becom-
ing a bigger and bigger proportion
ol the voters.
In C&llfornia, for example, persons
now~ or under are expected to com·
prise only a liWe less than a major-
ity of the electorate by 1980.
TRIS TREND LEADS Chet Helms,
a dance promoter, to predict hippies
The beatniks attracted tourists in
the 1950s to their North Beach Haven.
The tourists inspired gift shops and
honky tooks which In turn brought
high rents. The beatniks then moved.
ALONG HAIGHT street the proo-
en bas begun, and big money is
quietly acquiring store fronta where
"love burgers" and psychedelic bdct
knacks can be hawked. A bar bas
Introduced the topless.
>.. thrill seekers, explolt.n, Jab'
Hell'a Angels, and tougba maequer-
adlng aa flower cblldren invade the
changing scene, the number of vio-
lent incidents is l'islng sharply.
Some of the most "beautiful" peo-
ple already have split, mostly for
rural colonies, close to nature in
Mexico, the Sierra, New Mexico ' and
on tbe California coast.
Sandra, by the way, left with Eleo-
tric Oct.opus. a camera enthusiaat
who has been her constant male com-
panion of late.
They needed money, and the young
man was taking a job with a movie
crew. She said she wanted to stay
with Electric Oct.opus "maybe for-ever."
Hippies' ~~g
Not Everyone's
Dish of Tea
A few key words in the rtrange, ela-
borate laoguage of the hippies:
ACID-LSD
BAG - A person's favorite exper-
ience or interest, as in "that's your
bag, man."
BAD TRIP -Unpleasant reaction
to drugs, any kind of unpleasant ex·
perience.
BE-IN -A large gathering ol hip-
pies.
CRASH - ( 1) To come down from a
drug episode; (2) To sleep.
FAR OUT -New, ahead, there-
fore good. The superlative is "out of
sight."
FREAK -Somebody's Bag which
he grossly overemphasizes. "To freak
out" is to loose all cont.act with real·
ity.
GAME-A conventional attitude or
kind of behavior which is habitual aad
unnecessary.
GRASS, POT, TEA -Marijuana.
HAPPENING -An unplanned
meaningful event; also, a planned
gathering at which people enbrtain
themselves, producing meaningful
events.
TURN ON -To take drugs, to be
aware ol senses.
UP TIGHT -To be tense, ri-d.
VIBRATIONS -Noo·verbal mes-
sages, as in "I ~e bis vibratiom."
,
•• Ul'I To..,.. SEXLESS IN SARIS -Hippie women , fascinatt>d by Oriental rell·
gions. wrap themselves in saris and study abstinence oC alcohol,
tobacco <rnd sex.
' '
•
TUlldlJ, June 20, 1967
Tight Security Set~~~~~~
Enroll
Now·
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• 4 '
• Teaching the 4 R's
with phonics
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Servite
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School Care
. • Reasooable·Tuition
For Johnson V~it
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
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faced With a poeal>le turn-out .,, up • IO,OOO utHlar
deiUCIDtGMof• dudnc ~
Scllools
1'1835 8tookhllrst • FouN111 Valley
C.S11l1111J loaitM ... Mt .... F_,_ ••• ~ blDcll fl'all 1k1111 M
tlf'llllllL
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Dfht.11 .... Home Of tht fllllOUI
24-W PAM ,AM RtstMlllt. Enter·
tainment 11iptly I• tllt distincti~.
le1ent Lounaw. froia $10 sltlllt
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BELLBVlJE
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F (Jr Work, Bill Orders
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Conducted by RONNIE REIF
director of golf. Appearing wiU be
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The .w ntlJ w_,. ...S
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towtc aAlltp.-1' • • bate, featmtllc u 7 n ..
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emblyman P'nnk Lmter·
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absent Democrat· bid to be
found to get the reqairecl 18
votes.
,,.,...
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TYlnlMl ... I
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"CAPER OF THE
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JACQUES-PAUL BER~O f>ttdm = .... ~":..·
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Starts Wednesday June 21
RESll~D PERFORMANCE POLICY
Every Ticket Holder Gu1r1ntffd A SHt To
The Performance Of Your Cholcef
Dally Monday thru Friday 2 and 1:30 P.M .
Saturday and Sunday 12:45-4:30 and 1:30 P.M. .
SPECIAL SELECTIVE ENGAGEMENT
THE MOST POPULAR PICTURE OF OUR TtME! ...........................••..... ' ......... .
COLOll
"D« ""''
mMT w1:;t: 1ii•:"A""110111;t:11s 1 o;c:A11 HAMME11sn:i~ 11I&N·~,1.£HMAl'l · .......................................
For your connnlenc• and to 1vold wilting, pur•
ch11• your tickets NOWI Tickets 1V1ll1ble 1t Cln·
em1, Co1t1 Me11 , Huntington Cinem1, Huntington
Beach, Cinema WHt, Westminster.
..
I S ' -
'1'ta
Com ma eel I • eel 11 ...
feDM
Tb
ee, . Br1d
he in
wJ Jam
Woo
()I
aoti• .,..
Mr. I
'°"' .,..
Mr, I .... Mt, I
Ala.
l'fC f~ 90t Mrl-"""· ....
• tf M .... Mr. I Ct tlf,
SPI
•nd Cellf. l"fc Mn.
P'tc
•nd Callf.
Slit .....
Coto. ....
bend "*'" ...
Nllf °"· l'fC Nit Hiit, ... Mr.
,3 ..... ..
""' Mn. Ill.
2rlC "'~ . SI'
Ao\1$,
Ind. ,.,,
•nd tow• "' Mrs. Sp Mr.
Le. ,.,.
Curt
SQ'
Mrs. Sp
•nd bu,,;
Pf EdW Pf'
Amt SO' -· viii• s. Mr.
lllfl'M "" Mr. Alht
5tl Mn ....
St: beno
Vlllt ... •nd ....
Pt
0 1
Wll
.o\vt
wlh
Kii'
be
Col
IN
Mr
De ,,,. ..
E,
Th ...
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Siio
bv .... ...
11'1
let • co ·-• I
Cor-
Co1
.UC
PEl
'1801
w
(2'7
\
. 2 ·e ountians fJie in War
~ DlllJ\et o( t"'O Oran,e
County men were Included
In a cuulty llat of f7 Unit·
ed states .-vtcemu kill-
ed lD dGD 1D ~. re-
leeled Monday by bl De-
feDM Depertmenl They an:
-Pfc. Berry J. Bridg-
•. 10D of Mn. Bessie A.
Brldees, 429 Valley, Ana-
heim.
-Pie. Herbert A. Warn·
er Jr., eon GI Mr. and Mn.
Jam .. D. Smith, l20S West
Woodcre.t. Fullerton.
Other aervlcemen tilled in
action were:
AaMY
le*. 4 "°""" I.. M-.c. Mii el Mr. w Mn. Mitrey H.,,._ lrt#·
'"" Ale. le*. 4 ~ A. Hllrd, '°" of Ml. Oclt lfllN, ,,..._viii., Al•~.
lflC. ' llendy M. MJMr, -" Ml, e!'d MrL 11.iedle Mlflor, Ciani-.
A~ 'l«Wd H. au ... u Jr,. 11111 Of Mr.
l'MW H. llw.11 Ir .. Al'ICflOnlt, Alel.
let. Wllllem D. 9""'"'911. '°" ti Mn. Mery A. IMOln. ..........
c.llf. "9C. I YellMloll T ..... ..,.....,., ff Mr9. Ulwtltt T. 0 ...... II Mlllte.
a,et. 4 T""'"" It, G«tell. 1111 fil
Mr. -Mn. lrvlll H. Get-. .,........
Mn. Mlrl6ft '· McCut*""' c11tt.-. LC.
'ft. HtrWt Wlel•M Jr., 11111 ftl Mr.
end Mn. HtlWt Wlefell, Clltrleellfl
Heltfl ... ac.
.... ' 0.¥14 L.. ..._ -ti ""· Md Mn. JeM A. .,_ MllW, LO.
ll'fc. °"'" M. O'~ -ti Mrs. lfttyft A. O'Oeftrltll. Mfmfflll. T-.
Stile. 4 ..... A. Oerd•· -.. Mrs. C.ri. A.• Oerde. New ~ ........ Ta.
5-ac. 4 Midi .. T, Ul"MNY• -Of Ml. and Mtt. Tanvnle It. Ul'tfrvy, GeneMI, Tell.
Spec. 4 Jwry M. JtnltlM. -ftl Mr. •lld Mn. o.c.r M. J lllklM, w1 ... .....ttr. V•. MAlllNI COltf'S
Col. H9flry L;. Llftlt, '°" f/11 /llr. 1n4 Mn. Will Lllfll.. TU1CllOole, Ala.
2M LL 9YAfl M. SMat, -ol Mra. Bwba,. M • .._,, Sell Maf1Nt Cetlf.
Cpl, Monie A. ....._, hvabtllilll ftl
Mn. Monie A. Noble, sa11 ,......,
C.111.
Cpl. ,,..nc._ L. Sem-k .. -.. ,,.,.., ,rllld-5-Saft ,,_
chco.
ll'IC. Jol>a C. Sl\emel, toll f1' Mr.
Mid Mn. c:Mt• I'. SflMMI, Ti-lld OM.I, C.llf,
Lel'IQ Cpl. J«fY F«tNncl, NII ol Mr. IM Mrs. Cl~ Forellelld. Of•
11•. flt.
Lllncie c.t. JONI It. Ven Ntom\en
Ill, -Of Jehfl It. VIII Nonnae Jr., lredentOll. l'le.
Sgt. Wiii.. Davit Jr.. IMMncl ti Mrs. Wlln. Oavlt Jr., Clllc.ttlt. Ill. Lino Ctl. J«ry I'. MetcaW, .-ti IN. 9M Mra. Wlllllm I . Mlte.11f,
OelevM. Ill.
f'tc. CllaNI I'. Gnde¥llle. -ti
C~ff. .. ............................................ .. s.ec. ' ""9rl• It. Me9t1r -.. Mr. .... Mn. u. It. ,,,_,., ... ""-
Callf. l'fc. Ttrry L. C......,, blMbMd fl Mn. ledltll I . Clftlfy, Seer_...
l'fc. 'ortlrlo I!. Eilts. Mii et Mr. •lld Mn. P'Otflrlo I.. l!n-. ce11an,
CalH. Sot. Alv• N, Myrick II, -of Mr. end Mn. Alva H. MYric:k Sr .. Llttteloll.
For the Record
Colo. • ........................................... _ ... ,, Stl. lllbert I!. Tllom-. hwo
NllCI flf Ml't, ·~ L ""°""*"' Hew-tMrM, , ....
..... .... Tllam• A. lll'-9. ..,.. Mfl4 ff Mn. 1,.w lltwn, Go1um11u1.
Ge. '1c. cw-w. belA k -..... ~tfMl'I. ... J ....... """"" Hiii, .., ......... , ....... .....,.
Mr.· ~ ........ Clllcll9lo ...
.. •Ql CMrtll ....... -" •• "" .... c.... w ....... ... ...........
PfC. ........ L ~ldl. -ti Mrs. ... llt A. l(c1l1*"9dl, oi-...
Ill. JM Lt ........ ltWlll, ~ ef Mre. OINle 1t9u111, HelftMOftd. IM. Sol. lOMlt M. Holmu. IMbeM ef Mn. Ht n<Y J, Holmes, SOUttl 111\'L
llld.
l>tc. Lyi. I'. llollt._., ,.. ef #Jt,
and Mre. l'rvlll A. llolllflen. l!ldwe. ·-·· ~. lfuoena S.ltw, -Of ""· Mii Mn. Oel>nla S.tw. Fall llq. Ky.
Spec. ' J-II. 0.rdl, .on ot
Mr. Md Mn. ,,_,,, Gerde "• Mlellft. ..... ,fc. Cllr111 J. Hermtllt -of lb. Curtla C. Ht tmaf\. h"""°"' Md. $0t. ~ Mlldwll, ~ ti Mrs. MIMla Mltc:Mll, ,....-, ,,._
~ A JeM A. SlclrlA '°" Of Ml. •IMI Mrs. DoNlf G. SlclrJ-. Lalfll. 11111'9. Mlcl't.
Pfc. lllcllenl L. J-. -of Ml. l'd•Hrd F. Jenner, 51. 1..oul&. Ml.
l>fC. Cl\1n.s I!. Vleldl. -ef Mn. Amffka Vk lc:ll, H-Vert. N. V.
Sgt 1/C 94n D. ~ lluamM flf Mn. Betty G. SllOW'dtll. ... .,.,,..
vllle, N.C.
S,C. ' Kt,,,_ T, It--ti Mr. tlld Mn. ''" C. It ...... C+ klml>le. N. C.
ll'fc. WllllMI W. YOU<ll Jr., Mii ftl
Mr. ffld Mn. win...,. w. Y4Mlt< AWVllle, N.C.
S.t. O.vlf '· ()pll119V, IMMnd ef Mre. ShwOll 9, Optl,,._, An.._
Pe.
Spec. ' Wllll1 M. lullllleft Jr., IM-
Nnd of Mn. /!AMY Soltllven, Y""*" Yllle, Pt .
l"fc. JOl>ll I . CemlM. -., Mr.
•nd Mn. J_,ii Cely!• ·~ I'•. ~ ,.._.
l>fc. J,IH I . ft:tf~ ,
OBJTIJABIES
LIDDY
Loube W. l.MIW, 11. f/11 !WY. Oft¥x. .... 1.-..~.,, .......
"~ J, ., Ille """'' ....... i.-IM L, Neff, f1' ...,,_ Oab1 -.
J -.fl C. ftl Mell.I ' lf'aMdllldnll.
lteciultfn MNI Wed. 12 -et Our Ledy. a.-., A,,.el1 C.ltlelk Clwrc:ll.
N-1 BMcll ... ltl MtltrttHtr/, Core>-ne del Mer, directors.
MYNDERSE Births
llOAO Ml.-OlllAL HOS"TAL ,_,
Mr. a. Mrs. Can II.alder, 2Ht $ettll'll
S\ln Drive. ~ cMI Mer. llo'I Mr. 111d Mra. Donald Jacdll. 11'2
D«Mt L-. c.I• Meu, boV Mr. elld Ml'L IE4wWd w.tt Jr., 1009 0-Vla. 14.tft. 10, Hll!ltl1111ton llHc:ll. Glrl Mr. ttld Mrs. f'IM OI-GAi E. c .. tl Hlgliwey, C.-dfl Mer,
oln Mr. etl4 Mrs. Wllllem Aasup. 711 W.
I lttl SI., Sefttl AM, Girl Mr. encl Mn. WllllMI bwtt. 112' w. eolu, S-AM, Gitt Mr. Ind Mn. ,....,_ "-• 7"1
IOll\ St., wetmll!lt•. Gitt
Mr. Ind Mre. J-• ...,.. 21114
So. Padfk Aveu SWiii A111, 90Y
Mr. lr>d Mrs. ~IVlll Harriet. 21111
C1l•lp1 St.. ~ Btlldl. Olrl Mr. Ind Mra. Glor.. Miiiet, AM
Stlldy. Orlve, Coste MeM, Boy J-,.
Mr. Ind M"· AIMl1 ~. 111 1!111 l •Y• '-Pt. 0 . C•t• Mftl, .... Mr. lftd Mrs. 11.-q A,..111, m Al-
lelMllY, C•" Meae, Gin Mr. W Mre. Wllllall'I It-.
W. 9o1N, Stntil AM, Girt
Mr. Ind #ft, Mldllfl J 14.-.
N> 11111, Huntington llefdl, Glrl
Mr . .elld Mn. eenwnt Kt-. 2791 , • ...,._ W1y, Cos!1 Meal, Olrl
Mr. lftd Mn. JoM A. Hulbert, 1S1S
E. Ocelll IMI .. ~ eetch,
Girl Mr. elld Mre. Jim l1r11. 24't Norin,
C01t1 t.\9H. eov Mr. end Mn . Cllffenl H..,_,, tll Hertford, Hun1t11111o<\ 9"Ch. llt'I Mr. 1nd Mra. Wiiiiam £. Nice, 1,. Sltrlu SI., Com M-. Glrl ,_ 11
Mr. llld M". lluuell G. ,...,._, 211161 lvl'llt Ln., Hunllllfton lteell. Glrl
Mr. end Mrs. J-aa11ein-r. 17523 J~. Hunll119lon BMdl, Girt Mr. IM Mrs. Mlc:llM1 DI P'lerro.
>0211 S.rvce St .• S.11!1 AM Hellltlll.
M~nd Mrs. G-ve Medtlcwla. 219
Cebrlll• St.. Cosle Mae, Gin
Mr. Ind Mre. JOllll Quintin, Jllnl S.11-tleto DI., N-1 9NCll, IO'I'
Mr. •"" Mrs. JCIM "· Lertllra, 1• Corfendlr or.. Ca.I• M.,., l oY
"~" ....
..
NEW
Improved Performance
Engineered to gil'e you 10% more
miletJle and grrater safety
at hither speeds than the
former Sa/Pl)' Champion.
NEW
Improved Ride
New prtcuion wrap-around tread
provice1 better traction,
ecuie· handling, and a
•moo1her, quieter ride.
NEW
Sculptured Styll~g
Handsome Rtttlptured sidewall
enhances thr heauty of y our
car. Af oc{crn narrow white
•tripe or i;olid black.
· High An alysis 20-10-6
87
Limit 2
COSTA MESA
NEWPORT BEACH
Tuadl1. J11nt 20, l~/ OAU.Y PILOT • t :,
6t~ ·Gra(ler s Given DIAl-A-PUYIR
6"-0639 Fireworks Treat
2
RRESTONE
STORES
TO SERVE
YOU BETIER!
at any Harbor Area Cham-
ber ol Commerce. Children
under $ will be admitted
free .
Best in West
Cov ers Boating
The DAILY PI LOT
A popular priced tire
with FULL 4-PLY
NYLON CORD BODY!
AVAILABLE NOW 1 e • PRICIS START AT ••• ·
t .Ml-13
TubeleN
Blackwall
Plua $1.80 Fed. u ciM lax, -.Jes
tu, and tnde-in off your car.
. ,...... ,...... .... llU llMtwalll ftllftllll lulllfu
6.50-13 $16.95 $22.90 $1.80
7.75-H (7.50-H ) 22.35 2UO 2.21
8.25·1• (8.00-14) 25.80 28.6$ 2.38
8.55-U (8.50·14) 211.0S 31 .05 2.56
7.75-15 (6.70·151 22.35 25.40 2.23
8.15-15 (7.10-16) 25.60 18.65 2.3.1
S..5-15 (7.60-15) 28.05 31.0S 2.63
AU pricer pill.I tue. and trade-in tire off your CU'
(.Ui lilt~ ol.to n plaet11iu 1hown ilt panntlinil).
NO
MONEY DOWN
take months to pay!
Jack Nicklaus Autograph Model __ _
3 FOR
·1 !;~p«
customer at
this price.
Additional bills $1.00 each
475 E. 17th ST. 646-2444
HUNTINGTON BEACH
WESTMINSTER
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16171 BEACH BLVD. 847-6081
8 a.m.-9 p.m.-SAT. 8 a.m.-5 p.m . . A: I 8 a.m.~9 p.m.-SAT. 8 a .. m.-5 p.m . .... ----~--------------------------------~ . ... ' \
--I
' • •• •• • •• • •• • ... •' • ..~ •• •• •• •"' •• •• ... ,.. •"' •• ~ ,~ ,..,, ;ti .... .... ... > t-'
T~ • .JuM 20, 1967
v .. r Monet'• Wortla
-. .
Postal Savings: Last of Cookie Jars
By SYLVIA PORTER
U you are among the
600,000 AmeriO&N who still
havt an e&timated $90,000,
000 depOllted in U.S. Postal
Savin&a e«tl.flcates through·
out the nation, Friday, June
'30 la your deadl.lne for C&$b·
ing in these cert:illcates at
your post office.
Aft« that date, all Un·
claimed funds will be sent
U> the U.S. Treasury U> be
held 1n trust. and whlle you
still will be able to redeem
· postal savings certificates,
the process easily could in-
. volve annoying red tape for
your posbnaster and delays
for you before you get the
mooey you have deposited:
Moreover, if you are
mnong those who still have
mooey stashed away in poi·
tat savings aceow>ta, re·
member that tbe&e funds
have been earning no IJ'l·
terest whatever since April
28, when abolitJon of the
system went into effect.
WHY HAS UUJ once enor-
moualy popular savings in·
stituUon. thrOugh which mil-
lions of Amerlc&n1 have
aaved blllloos of dollars,
been abolished!
Becawe it bas become an
anachronism.
The system wa.a set up
nearly two generations ago,
in 1911. Ita vitally import·
ant original purpose was to
attract cam savings out of
cootie jars and mattresses
the naUon over -and pump
Wins Keds Kev
Karl Adamson, winner of new Volkswagen van with
wainut-paoeled interior and stereophonic tape player
-the Keds Surf-Wagon -receives key from Bob
Hampton, branch manager of UniroyalJ~!nc., as Dick
Marowitz, owner of Westcliff Shoes, west.cliff Pla·
za, watches transaction. Adamson, who entered all·
Southland conle6l at Westcliff store, is the son of
Dr. aod Mrs. B. M. Adamson of Newport Beach.
Air California Taps
Two for Promotion
Richard A. Dick has been
elected executive vice pres-
ident of Air California, it
was announced by J. Ken-
neth Hull, president of the
airline.
Dick joined Air California
ln August 1966, six months
prior to the airline's begin·
ning operations between Or-
ange County Airport a n d
San Francisco. He has been
serving as vice president of
traffic and sales. Moving
up to the job of vice presi·
dent is Alan H. Kenison who
has been assistaat. vice pres·
ident.
Dick, a pilot, is a resi-
dent of Carmel Valley and
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI 0, INTINTION ro INGAOI
IN THI SALi OP' ALCOHOLIC 1111·
EUGIS J•ne I. 1'41
10 wr.om II May C011Cun·
Sublt<1 l'O i.w.nco o1 tt.t llCMIM •P-pl~ tor, notice ~ h4rrby glvtn 11111 1114
unOerilgMCI P"''''"" lo "" alcohoflc ~veregas al "'• ortml1as. ducrlb<>cl e.
l'OllOwl'
1S50 Superior Ave .• Co•l• "''sa Purwan1 lo well lnlenl'°", lllt undtr
1'9nad I• •PPM"ll 10 lh4 oep.r1men1 of
AlcoN>tlc Btvtra~ Control fO< luuen~
by transfer ol en •klohollc bcvoran I~
<MM lor llcenonl lor tM» p"'1'1f\H •• "iollo..,,
ON SALE BEEll ~ WINI! !BONA
FIDE PUBLIC EATING PLACE!
Anyone dHlrlnv to t»t019lt tilt tuua..cr
of well llcenHhl moy Ille • \ltrtlled prolasl wllll any office ol IM Otpart,,,.nr
of AlcOll041c Bever-Control, '"'"''" lO dt'(I of lllt c!Alte lllt P~ prtmltal
-·• flr11 potted, 1tellnv tr011ncb f0< de-11lal as pro¥ide<I by lfw n .. «tmllob
..... -ti~ I« Ille .... of Jlcohollc btW'90H. The form of wrlllc.llO'I may
b4I o0t1lllf<I from 111y otflc. I'll Ille t'~
1Nrtrnen1. lAMOODIO GRATSFEL T
ENTERPRISES, INC ,ut>llllled Or•nflf Co.if Deity r 1101,
J11na ,a, 1H7 '1~'7
LEGAL NOTICE
.... TICI Ofl INTINTIOH TO INGAOI
IN TMI SALi 0 ' ALCOHOLIC llV• ......
Jijllf II, "•7
To WhOrft ti May Concorii'
Mf«1 It l"'°an« of 1~1 li<Mtt •P ''ltd f«, nollu i. her~ 111.,11 111•1 lfW
ulldtnltMCI P'°llOMI ro "" fleohollc .,..,.,.avf' •I lh• ortml"' Ot<rrlt>ed Al '°''°'"': U15 Etll C-1 HIOhwty Coro11• Of l
M1ttNIWllOFf 9ffCh
"ur.111111 IO auCll lni.ntlon 111• ""'"' al;ned 11 a1>9IYllll lo lllt O•ofnm•11t o•
Atcdlo41c a---C011trot ,., l\\UUICt
by 1ra111'9r of .,, ttclllo4k ~.,_, " c..-(Ot I~) lor ~ D••m1r,. A•
follows: OH.SALi! OENEltAL (Bt')N.l FIDE
PUBLIC EATING ,LACE!
MY-dttlrlr>Q IO "'9te.tl ·~· \lt•ln(• ti/ sucll 11q<1ulll may 'II• • •tr•ll•d
protest wltll any Office of I' ' l'l•oMI
men! of Al«lf>ollc Bevtrtoe C11n11a" " tn
Ill lO ffvt Of lt\e Cllllt 11\t ptOj)OC•O 111r<,_ l .. i _,. ftnt ,,.,.,., ft••'nv • n'
tor d•lllal f\ prov~ llY law. r • '"'"'
i.n art """" 11~111Md tor Ille "" "' "' cono11c brvttr1ee• the fo,..,,,, Oi '"'•'1'"
tlftll may be ob<ttlM<I trOO"I '"' r11. ' ''
Ill• OtlNrfmMI I Jt)IWI C Mttlall ~
Leltcw w, $'1'11111
,ut>llollrd Otfnte t oe•! O•l•y " "•
J11nr 20, ltU t • 7 U
'
Scat 'old
LOS ~GELES -The
i;ale of a membership .in the
I •ac1fic Coast Stock Ex·
change has l>een negotiated
at $40.000 to Hallgarten &
C'o nr Nl'W York City,
./:inw!. I. Mr Jlhail. r xchanste
'1c·r prrwlC'nl membrr
ltr111" announced
Tht• prn·c was u11<·h~1n~<'d
from the prcv1011.s seat sail'
them into the U.S. econ·
omy. Ita original uaefulno11
to tbe huge waves ol im·
migrants arriving tn t h e
U.S. was to extend the Eu·
ropean tradition of uviq
at the local poet office.
B&DXI were arae11 cott-
fined in those dAys to the
naUoo's big cities. Tbtough-
out the U.S., and upecially
in rural areas, the post of-
fice, open slx days a week.
wes the ooty conveolent
place to deposit savings.
And It waa just about the
only place where an Amer-
1oan working away from
h<nne could conveniently
deposit tiavings.
BUT OVER and beyond
these factors, the most im-
portant lure of tne Postal
Advertising
Club Plans·
Installation
Orange County Adv~
ing Club's officers for 1967·
68 will be installed Thurs-
day at tte annual dinner
dance at the Balboa Bay
Club.
John Keeler, Keeler Ad-
vertiaing Spedlttiee, wU1
~ the pl't95deat'a gavtl
fJ'CD MlrJ .... oatco-
lns 1tlM1 preUdeat. OtMr
oftlcers lnclDde-Dr. C. Dor-
Sf!'/ Forrest, California Stllte
College at Fullerton, first
vict. president; Don Allred,
United Outdoor Advertising,
second vioe president; War·
ren laham, Marketing Coo·
cept&, treasurer, and Toni
Harding, Leisure W or 1 d
News, secretary.
Directors are Jeanne Van·
derburg, Barnes · Champ:
Julie Shaw, executive sec-
cdtary U> Assem bl,yman
John Briggs; Art Aldrich,
Carter Industries. I n c.;
Richard Ingle, Marketing
Associates, & n d outgoing
president Mary Bennett,
Bennett Advertising.
Marketing
Executives
To Install
N. Y STOCK EXCHANGE
1', •11c;T~IAl INOf X
I
<her The Counter
N.ASD Lllti.ftll for~. June lt, 1967
I
Mutu&I
Fuitds
'I
• -A-
IWv~f.Jt"~"""~llt. ..
*l lMW.c•&':.
-A-
Tutsday, June 20. 1~7 DAJL y PILOT I
'Tuesday's ~osing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List ...
aosing
Ma. TENNIS -Balbae. Blf <» pnl -n ' ..... am at • ..
out for~ .... ...., ............ -........ °'*'"'' roallill of tM ,.. o.t 7 5 wM I Olp,.... rt II the Newport Bed,._. a..
BBC Pre f"iu Rele
What's Stewart's Line?
It's Tennis, Obviously
u it 11 indeed poaible to catelllr'-
ize athletes simply by their loob.
then Hugh Stewart baa fomd 11is
niche.
Stewart, from my vantace poillt ll
JeMt, loob foe all the 1"1114 liJr.e a
tennis playel', which, not too IUl')lris-
ingly, is esactly what be is.
He ii tall and
tanned, boyiablY
h a n d 1 o m e, re-
markably yoathful
for his 39 )'earl
and possesses a
gregarious pertoo-
ality which tndi-
c ate6 he's readJ
at any instant to
give you the al-
paca sweater off
his broad sboul· uu. -
ders. ___... He's the kind of CUY JOU ~
to come bouncing DD the room.
waving a racket and sbouti1lC. "Arl-
one for tennil?"
By compariaon, Rod Laver. 9ie
current world champion from CArmla
del Mar, 1ooU more~• ball boJ.
As an amate\D' tourillC Elnpe.
· Stewart was an im"""'4l IQCICIW. Be
: kept his fingernaih ~ ~ 9fl.
:_dom. if eYer. let his vic:b,.,.ae rm
-down his chin. . Four yean be toured the Olli tin illll
picking up more <:UPI than a Braril-
• U an coffee tater.
Gta....,..ulife
It Wal, te M Vfi!CJ .-e,. a ......
oroaa life ... stewllt ...,_ 11111
.· ri>le very well. la die-."'"'"·
-be simply set ~ ..... ~
talJ parties ... .....6&-c • I
payoffs. ret.nlac te die .W lie
at bome.
Quite a swt~ ,,... 1'lllle ~
lo Pandeu -~ P• fzm, 8&
that-bat S&ew'M WM reaifJ llr It. He wat tedal-wlllrW _. _,
didn't care If lte f!ter .am1ef ..
other ballrM• .....
One tblaC tie WaA't reaiiJ ..
give up, IMwner. WM ......_ Oil.
he tried fw a wtlk, W ll .,.'t
work.
All ., tUt w• lt JUI" ....
Ntw Ba&' II well d tldrnl •
net pr.tesaleuJ 8& die ..._ .. Y
CJ•b. 19 New)Mrl Bad.
Peptdar Pre
He is. withoot a solitary doubt.. U..
m<Mlt popular pro they've ever b8d at
'the plush BBC and dames wt.
thought the court wu a pboe ~
you Obtained a divorce bee-...,.
ing \lP for tmnia leuom in soda ia-
creaaing n u m b e r 1, Stewart was
forced to form a clln.ic.
Everything wu c o i n I aic.a
smoothly for Stewart rmtil Laver cn-
ually inquired one day if he'd lib fiD
compete in the Loi Ange)el ~
slonal TournM'Tlent.
Hugh bad his doubts and dedded
to counsel his wife Virginia in the
matter.
"SUH, go ahead, hooey." cbe re-
plied, "you'll win the champiombip,
of. course."
"Of coune," m4"\b~ Stewart.
who was well awar~ ol how good dw
touring pr<MI performed and how
much the 10 years absence from ~
ular tournament play had ~
from him.
' ff •PPll Blr••fl•1
S4t It WAI H ~IJ t4. ,_,~lw ,.,,v nl"hl bt Curotd Jt--Sefw-m . & •
.......... ...., ._..,., me.,....., ..........
A••• ,._.. ~1 It M 111
ftllllla' _._ ,. . .._ ........ _ ..... .............. _ __..
~ .. tta ....... , .. , ., ....
dlelt flllt _. .. a a, ' ,_.
... ._ ......... ft& ..
~~ ...... ........ --. ........
BILL DONER
__, •" i II.
A& ........... ..., ...
........... M I~ ..... .. , ......... , .....
ddi& ......... -,,, ....... __ ..
..,...._ .. llVS ........... ..,
I ., • .. .... 1 A te.11.. ..
Tllil 1INek ... m rt' :Ai"C to ............. ] ...... ..
fint -ill .. Padfie c..t .... .
peft I Olp 0 2 2 • ..
Newpat Bwll T_. Cl*.
b ...... , .......... ,.,. ...
a;...t nm. • • ti « ,.. fint nm ., ._ ..-&ue.., eftlll.
Sin. lkuat Wllllt lile tt will,
............ ..w .. alim-----ni..e .,_ are ra1J ...._" lie afllils. .... fr..rdJ ..... rellHlt. If
1 .... ... .. ,.,. -twe • '· r• fl D Uy ... .-. ....._~...., ..... ._. ...
it's tit•..._ r• lmft tt lie ..rw lldJ ....... n.mes."
~ ... , ...... ia ill bette-.. ,_.tile Nitwpat C..., tlln
, .. tile -1111 LA.
Plets.~
................... (Ka) ................ ..,
................ 3'
..,..,_llelll'll, WS _, t*J*81 c M '.,. ••• , a ... I '-4 ..... ~ .. ..:.., .• ~ .... Wiiy •• _...._ .. wr·w ..._ae....._ .. ._.,...., .....
""Ne ....._, F• ... fkldillC W.
.. ... ... ... .. A8er .. ...... ~ .............. .
fadlle ....... -~ .... ..,., ....... ........ ... .. .... .... , , ..
SORIY
Rim Cwty
~.
American
Cnppers
Shut Up
GUAYAQUIL. Eeoadar. (AP)
"1nlm you lole, yoa '*It y our
...... abut.'' aaid u. s. Dmt Cap
Qipta GeOl'&e ~. IDd bia
--.... lit8e to Ill)' after 'hi? bo-
•Qi!tiJC dlieat at the bmll ol leas
• midget F.cmdor'.
"Ecmdar bMt Ill fair ad IQUare. ••
.. d Oiff Ricbey coaJll .., after
-. soaaa AJDf'.ricw toot • iDlur-
..-1111e J.1 lead Mondaf.
Artlmr Albe, the No. 1 player in
0. U11it.ed Stata, said nobllg, mak-
ime ..._.,unavailable hr comment
.,._ llil leCICmd straight emben au-
illll lam wbicb left bi.a country on the
llllllllide ~ iB for h lixt.b time
ill --,.,. in the preliminary ,_.._
A*, ol Richmond, Va., on )eave
,,_ tbe Army. Jolt to unberaJded rt.a.co Gcmw, «Mi, ...... 6-2, 0-3,
~ Monday, etiJnineting the United
Sbta • the American 1.one final.
£cwador' tbe beaVJ underdog wtllcb
has .ner liefor'e reecbed the quar-
t«.fiull in tldl struggle for world
am*ar temit llJllftlDaC1, thus mov-
ed mo the illtenlDDe semifinals. It
wll meet the winner of the European
1.-A final lM:tween Spain and R~ .. RicheJ, of San Angelo, Tex .. who
beat Guzmu ill the first singles Sat-
arday. will comPete the best.-Of-5 ..
rie8 today Jftrr bis now meaningless
lllMdl agai.Dlt Miguel Olvera was sus-
pmdell lfondq. Richey W a I leading
5-7, M. 7-6.
EYm tbe United States' ~2 Ion to
Brazil in Ile intenooe 9eDlifinals Jut
year na a minor upeet oompared to
Mondlly'a abocter.
U.S. Defeat
Stuns Hopman
MELBOURNE (AP) • Austratian
Da'ris Olp capt.aim Harry Hopm a n
said today be found it hard to believe
F.cudor' bas beat.ea the United States
.. the American Zone tennis final.
Hopman said, "From what I have
Ml ol Otwra and Guzman, I would
mt bave expected either to turn ln
pll'f annanca good enough to WOlf"1
t • e wwld claaa U.S. players. TbeJ
are mediocre players with u.nim~
JliYe records on the European circuit
"We haft bMrd litt1e of GUZJD a n
-1 Olvera this year as they b.aVe
beell playing mainly on the Caribbean circuit"
Hopman said the Ecuador <1>urU
are ol realy porous material on wbJcb
Americans contest many of 1 h e l r
dlampionabips.
"So I don't think the Americans
can blame~ courts for their i hock· inC defeat," be added.
11WatddnC him JN1 M'lr, 1t'1 hard to belle'ft be Mver woe a major am·
at.eur tour.J$1mat."
Laver, tbe world'• No. ~ raked
player, eaten tbe ~t u tbe
tour's INdiDg maney • Winner• '° far
-'31,000. Flrat prise tn tilt ~
Classic will. be WW1h about ... ~
"All ol tbe ~ are adted ~
this Newport touraattient because the
purse ls one of the blaest on tbe
tour." Laver commented.
Tickets cootlnue t. move t.ut for
the evenl Saturday'• and Sunday's
sessions, beghmln:s at 2 p.m., a r e
near-aellouts. Good IMtl remain,
boWt••, fGr Wedlllday, 1bUndaJ ~ Priday lldioe, .. ol 1'11idl ltlrta at I p.m.
Molt ol tbe Pf01 .,... oo ~ at
Mae Tenail Qub teday wbea a tree
youth cllnic WU ltlNd at a._ p.1(1.
One of tbe 1our'• ,..W.. won't lie
around, however -Nnct» ~. 11Pancbo doesn't M1 bt'I quitting
the tQUi' Jlut be doel have I lot or oth· . er commltmenta," Llvtr uJd Mon-
day.
"Ue'a 38, you know -no aprlnl
cblcten." ·
LM!n-eaten ~·~ tourney -aeeded numbw two, bebmd '(ellow
What! .ONLY . . a Split
. .
New Angel ,
Fae~ T~ts
In Final~'
DETROIT CAP) -The California
Angels are the mo,\ utoo1ablng auc-
ceu ln the Ainerican • Iµrae at the
m o m • n t, but they're not 1etttn1
greedy.
Tbe ucmtfl .. All(ela .... forced
to MUie for • spilt ,,. Detrott bl
M.onday nlCbt'• doub'sb?ld«, win-
ning the opener 2-0, tbea l01tnl the
nightcap, 5-1.
The split left the Angela seventh in
the league, just one.-balf game behind
Baltimore, two games out of third and
eighth out of first.
Tonight. the Californians will pitch
right-hander Jack Hamilton (CM>), re-
cently acquired from the New York
Mets, a g a In 1 t Detroit left.hander
Johnny Podres (1-0) in the third and
deciding game of the series .
Manager Bill Rigney could only
A .. el Sa.t.e
J,_ ~ "'· C>emllt. 6 '·"'·• ICMPC <ntl. J-Jl-An914a w. ClewlM4. •:• l'.tn. ICMl'C 1111). J-»-AMell "'-C~ 4:Jf ,.m.. ICM~
11111.
praise his two young left -handed
pitchers -Clyde Wright and Ken
·Turner -in his post-mortmu Mon-
day.
"Botb did everythlng you co u J d
. " Wd Rigney of the pair recall·
from Seattle recently. "Turner def-
ly wasn't dllappointlng. For his
start be wu aometbing."
right held the Tigers to five hlU
213 l:f ln the opener, giving
to Rojas when Detroit
tenecl in the eighth. But Rojas
out the fire, allowed one hit in
ninth and retired the side for a
hit shutout.
right (2-0) WU backed by R 1 c It
ardt's t w o-nm homer In t b e
th off Detroit starter and loser
ey Lollcb (5-9). Relchardt's ho-
-his eighth -followed a single
Paul Schaal.
r went six innings plus giving
~ f0ta hits, but the Tigers made them
~ oH for three runs, though only
t1fO were earned.
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Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE
" L Pd. GBL " L Pd. GIL
St. Louis tr 22 .err = 36 28 .810 •
Cincinnati 40 28 .m ~ 34 28 .Ml Jl4
Pitta burgh 3.1 '¥1 .550 4lh ~ 32 31 -' San Francisco 34 28 .548 4.J,2 Ceveland 32 31 .. ' Cbica,go 3'l 28 .5.\1 ~ BoltDn 31 31 -~
AUaata SJ. Sl JOO m Baltimore 30 ·312 AM ~
==~ 21 • ,., ~ AHGEU • • .IJI • • • . at ~ X-aty SJ. .. .m • lloaltoD • • •• 1~ New Yen • • .. • Nw York • • -~ W•biqtaa • • •• -MOllDAY'I ..... ,.. MOllDA"aM.~ oooe.u >. Mina t AllMU t-1. D*.it N St. 1...wll 4. ......... J <11 INlllllll ~ •i. ic-City ,., P"1ltlurlfl 4 a.-a ..,,.....u. .......... Safi FnftdlciD f, C--... a ......... v--.......-.,.. ()Ny ..,_ ICMdllllld ()Illy-----TODAY'S IMWDU&J TOOAY'I SCllEIUU An.ta l'--tllr• 1-1) ..._ D009Cll I~•
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Tongue-lashing Did Job
On Dodgers' Don Sutton
-LOS ANGELES (AP) -Most ma-
jor 1eaguen wouldn't dilCUll • tongU&.
lubing by their manager, but D o n
Sutt.on is gratelul for the ooe be re-
ceived recently from tbe Los Angelea
Dodgers' Walter Alston.
It happened last week when Sutton,
a 12-game winner u a rookie in 1986,
~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,_
~ ~ ~ ... ~ ~ SPORTS ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ i CLIPPED ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I SHORT I
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ s
HOUSTON -A white jury of six
men aod lix women awaited the first
testimony fr«D goVemment witness-
es today in the federal trial of world
heavyweight champion Cusius Qay
on · criminal cherges of relUllng In-
duction into tile Armed Forcec.
Selection ol the ...,el from a pool
ol M prospective JunJR COOIUDled the
lint dmy ol. a WW Chat lawyers for
bolh 9idel bad promised would be
swift.
SttUles Bettelte4
ALBUQUERQUE -Duke Snider,
former BrookJ,n and Loe Angeles
feace-buJter w h o now manages Al·
buquerqiie Jn tbe au. AA Texas
l..eatue, II llttin& out bk first IUJ·
penei.on in 24 ~ of profealooal
bueball
Hugh Finnerty, president ol the
Texas League, ordered Snider 1u1-
pended through Wednesday and fined
both Snider and umpire Frank Walsh
for a sboving betUe Sunday night.
Snider contend.I be was 1P&t upon.
but tbe umpire denies thit.
suffered his eighth loss in 11 dedsiou
th.ii aeuoo.
''Walt gave me a verbal tick In U..
seat of the pants, and I deserved lt, •
Sutton said Monday nigbt afta' be
hurled a seven-hit, 3-2 victory onr
Atlanta.
It gave ~ Dodgers their third ft).
tory in a row and fifth iD Iii games.
The Dodgers will try for a neep of
the two-game series tonight wbm Bill
Singer (1-3) pitches agaiDlt the ._ of
the Atlanta staff, left.bander Denny
Lemuter (7-1). The game will start
at 7 p.m., an hour earlier thlD UIUaL
"Walt talked to me lite a father
and what be said made seue," uid
Sutton. who had biJ band railed ia
victory after Diet Scbo&ld liDded home a tie-breaking nm in tile aiatb
Inning.
The paternal advice from Al*-
came lut week when Sutton wu de-
moted to tbe bullpen. '!be 21-J8llr"Gld
rlgbt-hander wouldn't e1abclnde •
what the manager said. bat two c1Qs
afterward, Sutton pitched f'oar' lbalDut
1:oDlnp of relief to save a victory .,..
the Chicago Cobs.
SUtton wu to have renudned fa Ille
bullpen but started Monday nlgbt be-
cause veteran Jim Brewer •• 1lm'l-
ing a tender elbow.
Responding to the opportunJty, lat.-
ton ltruct out eight Braves and weath-
ered a two-run double by CJet.e lloJer
in the mth hmlng.
AT\ANTA LOS .,..._ ..,.... ., ....
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f:•rt9 Sorry it Bapeened
Aaron Will Fight Agaln if Necessary
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Atlaflta
Brave.a' star Hank Aaron says his
fipt with teammate Rico Cartv "•P
regrettable. but if anybod~ c~ll• me
\hat nam~ again. then··:1 hr another
fighl"
Carty says only lhCll hr. ~orry it
happened
And Bravr .. Mana.i:<'r 1:, , Hitch·
rod says he'i; J?Olng lo 11;i 1 <i couple
ol dayi; beforr mal.inc ,, r1eds.lon
about d1sc1pUnary act ion
"Jt was one of ttlOl'le things that
happen on a ball club," Hitclrcock
said Monday night.
"It Isn't the first time two players
have !Mt their tempers and probably
won't be the last."
The brief scume between lhe two
Braves took place 3.5,000 fe<'t over the
Midwesl Sunday in the rPAT or the
team's chartered jet.
Neither player was hurl m 1hr rra·
cus. broken up by teammates r a t.
J arvis, Tony Clonln1er, Bob Uecker
and Clay Carroll.
Aaron told an AUanta Journal sports
writer. Wilt Browning, that Carty
"called me a name and that did it.
It was a matter of principle and A
matter of pride. I don't think hP
should have called me what he did."
arowning ()Uoled Hitchcock as say.
in~ .. WP think Wf' have this thinJ?
under control now. and we hope we
can keep It under control."
WHAT'S IN NAME?
Hink Aeron
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CIF CITY -Pbil Jordan, shown here .sl3D\Q'>iog the
ball through t.be hoop on a ltuff shot, will aUend
Corona de1 Mar 8igb School next season, Corona
pdncipll Leoa Jleeb announced KOllday. He'll
tnmter mm n1 a High.
Hard Luck
Quartet
By GLENtf WHITE
Prep 5poffs Editor Glenn White ia on vacation.
He hM ..ud 9"9t'•t sports figures to write gu"t c:oe ...... in his .a.enc.. T oday'1 cotumn is written by
Jina ~ whose UCLA track t..m competed in the
NCAA championships ewer the wHkend.
By JIM BUSH
I feel I have been mOlt fortunate to have bad t.he op-
portunity to mach on every level available to a track
coach. Tbil ii~ al the faurts of many young coaches
today-they m looting for the ''short eut" or easy way
to get on ~ in their chosen profession.
There 11 oo "short cut'' or ea6Y way! To do a thor-
oudl job in any profeaion you must start at the bo~tom
anit do the very best job while also learning all the time.
When a person feels be bas no more challenges and feels
confident, that is the time to take on tougher challenges.
I ~! ... .,. .,..,.. • 1 Mad co.ch •t Fullerton
Union High Sdtool. Aftw MWn YMrt I felt t had
..._ the best I ClDUW MCI w•nted new challenges.
Ho•ent, I wa plenty tcarM •nd not quite au,.. of
wMt to expect on the funior c:olfete tevel.
M.ny people think 1 cofl-ee coech gets •II the p.y, ,.....,. and satttf Ktion in his profetsJon.
TNs t. ""Y far fnm the truth. You can get the Nm•
...Waction from being a high school coech.
S•tbf sdlea of SNcce••
The sati8f.adion reward or whatever one wants to
call it, is in leelng a' young man you have ita.rted out in
some event succeed. This young man does oot have to be
a dwnp to ftlalize um satisfaction. 11his is where too
many coecbes as far u I'm concerned miss the boat.
~lie another person's success -no mattel' on what~ Not everyone can be a champ and succesa cannot and should not be rneasured only by the top man. A~ example is what UCLA's track team did to USC -ft toot ten fm;t puces, but we took 14 out of 15 serond
places. . __ ,, bo b . t . I have always recogm~ a y w o is rymg no
matter bow far down the ladder he m,.y be. llut I will
not recognbe or give credit ro anyone I know who is,
not lh'fng 100 percent! • . It's a gieat feeling to see a yOUf'lg mans happ1·
IMlll "er hi& suecess in a given event.
Tlle9 Abe c ... trlfJNtell
Some al my most •tisfying moments were watching
90IDe al my "C" and "B" ~ack attlJetes beamin.g over
some accomplishment they Just bad -or a vamty boy
getttq that third place in an· evoot that maybe contrib-
uted the needed point to achieve a team victory.
Tbil attitude can be used in their adult life and can
lead to -~ in businea or whatever they chose as their
pnJlwlon.
The point I'm trying to malce is that you do not
h.ve f9 be the "top" to be • champf
Junior college coaching is the tough~ level on
which to coa.ch. You are usually dealing with young men
who are mo trying to figure of what they want n> do in
life. .
Also. if your athlete is a great one. every college is
trying to recruit him. It takes at least a year for a coach
and athlete to get to know each other !IO if ~u happen t<>
Jose him that second year you ca·nnot really accomplish
much.
l•preN..etet 011 IC Le"f!I
1be tnJe satisfaction in juniQr college coaching is
geeing )100.J' boys improve. Coaching on the four year
conege level is very rewarding ~ the sense .tha~ th~ boys
are better adjusted. to what their pUTpose m life 1s and
are uually wilting to wort hard.
I've a..n fortvn.ete enough to have. teams set
state Mffonal ind wortd records, but the real thrill
I ..f now a • university CNch ia watching my
~ men grow up, becomt leaders on the 1thletlc
held tnct beeome outstandlnt citlzen1.
Once a record i11 ~t it becomes hlstory -but watcll·
ing a young man progress keeps going on, and this is the
greatest reward a person ran have
To sum it up, a <'Oach can get the ~aroo amount of
11ati8(ad.ion on any lever lf his goals are in the right per·
gped.lva
T~. JUM 20, 1%7 DAIL 'I PILOT J J
Jordan, 2 Others Shift to CdM
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of .. Dellr .. ,... • ....
'lbe long·rumored trans·
fer ol basketball 1lar Phil
Jordan from Estancia High
School to Corona del Mar
High became reality Mon·
day.
Corona del Mar principal
Leon Meeks a.nnou..oced that
Jordan, a 6-3, 190-pound all·
trvm. Le8'\le ael6Ction ast
teUOD u an Eatancla jun-
ior wW eoroll at Corona in
the fall.
Meekl also disclosed two
ottier basketball ttars, Cllris
Tbompgon, fr(llJl Estancia,
and Bob Black, from New·
port Hari>or .fli&b, have al·
IO said they plan to attend
Corona for the 1961_. school
year.
That trio, combined with
a loUd nucleus of veterans
r«mnlDg from lut aeuon'•
second place Sea King team
makes ~ BW Bloom's
outfit a solid bet to capture
a CllF ohampionship next
year.
An Orange County achool
hasn't bagged a ClF ttown
since Tustin turned the trick
in 1937.
'Iba move by Jordan was
not unnpected.
Star
Coaches
He had attend«l CdM for
lW freshman year and bad
lived in Corona CS.I Mar tor
13 years betore anoYiDC to
Costa Mesa in 1965. H.ia par·
ent.s moved ba.ck to Corona
del Mar several months ago.
This came on the bull
ti. 6-7 John Yule's transfer
from Newport RM'bor Higti
to CorODA del Mar over tbe
last Ctriltm• vacation.
Yule will be a senior at
Co.rona next season.
Blld, a aharp-ahooter
cuard at Newport all last
season, told new Sallnr
coach Al Hackney in early
May he would attend Co-
rona del Mar ia 1961-68.
'What Am I Supposed to Do-Cry?'
But it's the addition of
Jordan that makel Corona
fans practically squeal with
delight when contemplating
the next basketball eeuon.
Already actively pursued
by a hali-dozen colleges.
Jordan comes to Colona del
Mar with an 18.4 scoring
average. He scored 479
points in 26 games as a
center. He'll play forward
at Corona del Mar, with
St.eve Leech.
The announcement Mon·
day that Phil Jordan bad
transferred from Estancia
High School to Corona. clel
Mar bas ~y bad • Pl'°"
found effect OD the ~
Coaat &r6a lpOl1a teene.
Here'• a samp1ioe ti. tbt
reaction:
BILL WETZEL, Eetancia
coach -What am I ·~ posed to do, cry?
I don't tt11nt Bm Bloom «
Leon Meek.I bad uythlllC
to do with Pbll'1 tNDlf•
but somebody did. He tokl
me last week he'd be at Et·
tmcia next rear -in '9ct,
he signed a letter of ~
aaying he'd be beck.
Next yeer? We'll just have
to do the beet we po11.lbly
can, that's all.
PHIL JORDAN -It's
been ~ the b8Ck-~ my
mind to pl..,. for OlrCID9
I
del Mar for JO.me time. I
dl'<·ided Friday.
There will be people who
will say I waa influenced
unduly to come to Corona
hut it's not true. I saw my
~ance to play for a er-eat
team aod that wu the IOI•
basis for my decislon.
I think transferring to C.0-
rc>na del Mar gives JM a
better college abtlet.ic fu.
lure.
RILL BLOOM, Corooa del
Mar coach -We'll definite-
ly be a prime contender
for the ClF cbampiombjp
with Phil He waa one of
the best bigb IChool play-
ers I saw all last lta.&On.
There was absolutely no
recruiting involved. I never
talked to Phil about it and
neither did any of my play-
ers. The deci.llon was all his ·1 own.
LEON MEEKS, Corona
Hollypark
'Cap
By LLOYD GRIFFIN
def Mar prindpaJ -I bav.
forbidden 001 Bloom to ever
talk to plaf«'S or their par·
enta of other 1Cbo0ls. I
have to be aure my coach
has never influenced play·
en to cbange 9Choo1s and
I am.
lam trying in every way
to prevent boys from com-ln.B here who were asked to
come. Phil Jordan's mother
ltDt me a letter in which
abe said tbat oo one bad
ever cW!cu.'leed the 1ituation
with Phil and that ttie de·
cilion was bis own.
Fl.()YD HARRYMAN. Es·
tand.a principal -We bate
to lote Phil. but It's his de-
cision. We att 1.atisfied that
there has been no skull-
duggery involved. We wish
Phil well.
It'a hard on our coach
but ttlat'a the way It goes.
I do m>tidpate lbat there
will be &11 intense athletic
rivalry between Corona del
Mar and Estancia next year.
KEN FAGANS, ClF Com-
missioner -H the boy's
pweots have made a bona·
fide move into Corona del
Mar's atteuda.nce district
tben be'a eligible.
The omy other ttaaoo for
wbidl' the boy would be de-
clared 1.nellgi~ would be
If it were proved lt\at Co-
rona del Mar uaed lnflu.
ence to get the boy in
achoo I.
Su<:h proof would have to
be br~ght out in an inves·
ligation by the I r v l n •
League or 1he CIF -wblch-
ever body the protest is filed
with.
I'd say the favorites for
the CIF title for next year
would have to be Comp-
ton, Monrovia, Corona del
Mar and North TOfT'aDC'e.
There is no question u to
his eligibility to play for Co-
rona de! M•. He is a booa~
tide reslde.nt of the school
district.
Corooa wu 12·2, placing
second to Huntington Beach
last season in the Irvine
Le~. Estaoda was 7-7.
The Sea King.a will be in
a revMnped Irvine League
next year. Corona remain•
in the loop with Costa Mesa,
Estancia and Fountain Val·
ley. New members are Val·
enda, Brea, Magnolia ad
Loara.
Sfazling Bernal Keeps Lead
In West .Coast Keg Tourney
Argue 111111111111111111i1111111111111111111u1111111111111-11111111t The West C.OUt M • t c h
Game Eliminations passed
the 1.0-game mart In the
qualifying round Mood a y
night at K o n a Lenes, as
the big crowd was treated
to five 900 rour-g~ blocks
with 4,389. H a ck er has
4,365.
a 9~. Pomooa'1 Dick Guy·
mon registered a 915, Dick
Bonnot of Hawthorne belted
a 906 and La Habra'a Fred
Rkcilli rifled a 901 to ta.Ice
the major leaps to move
well into contention.
Combs, Oates
Can't Agree
Not only do north coach
Bill Oates and South men-
tor Elmer Combs disagree
as to who'll win Saturday
night's county all·star bas-
ketball game -they can't
even agree on the naine of
the game.
Sa.id Oates at Monday'•
county sportswriters-lunch-
eon: "Elmer bas said the
name of the game is height
-I say it's quietness."
Actually, b o t h coaches
have been ribbing each oth-
er. Oat.ea, wbo bas four
players M or higher, 111.s
an edge in beigbt while
most observers g l v e tbe
shooting edge to Combs'
Sootb juggernaut for Satur·
dly night's joust at Orange
Coast Colleie.
"If y o u take 6-7 V a n
Bye out of our lineup, the
height fact.or is just about
even. Of course, I have no
intention of taking him out.
He's a tremendous college prospect .••
oatea aald Chril lmith, 6-o performer from Fuller·
too, baa emerted u the
~&Dl leader.
"I'd have to aa.y Smith la
our leader on the t 1 o or.
He's re a 11 y been a sur-
prise."
Despite the height ad·
vantage, Oates AYI the
North doesn't have an edge
in rebounding.
"Our reboundini in prac-.
tice bu been spotty and m-
con.Ustent. The boys who
should be doing our re-
bQunding are getting poor
position.''
7 All ~tar
Ducat Sites
T I c k e t s for Saturday
night's N<>rth-SOUth Orange
County all-star basketball
game are on sale at seven
locations. according to game
director Bob Wlgmore.
Th e looationa: Hart's
Sporting Goods, C o I t a
Mesa; Neal's Spor t l n g
Goods In Fullerton. Santa
Ana, Corona del Mar and
Costa Mesa: 1rv N<>ren's
Sporting Goods. Santa Ana,
and t!le Harbor Area Boys'
Club.
Game time Saturday la 8
p.m. at Orange Coast Col·
lege.
The charity event, pitting
the county's best graduat-
ing high school cagers, will
benefit the Boys' and Gil'ls'
Clubs of AmericA and will
provtde for 1 scholArship to
MOLL YWOOO f'Aate IPITalH ,.., Wlf '),'--II, UU
(lier & ,. ... ., .......... 1141 l'.M.
l'llUT llACL 6 IW.... 4 .,._
oldt ..., UP. c .. 1m1111. Punt WIOO. c .. 1m1ne prla MOOO. o-.
l'•lrf•ll <W KMmittJ 111 10-1
Rio Coreo (E MMIJMI 11• 1• 1 Brec:Mt II (M ValtnWelel 1U 1·1
Clletlafl T-(A Pl .... ) II> 1•1
Mutk Credit (W Mahonlrr) 116 •1-
Blg Hol..,, (0 H1IU na .,
taold C.llQl'•I (W Bluml 111 ._,
Finl Tudor (II. Cffl'IP9ll 11) ... ,
H......, Sc.ere<n CJ l•m_,) IU 10-1
Gold Slyer (0 Ross) 11> lC>-1
Peut A. (W Hertecltl lU ._,
Mlle& City (I' Alv.,11) 111 7·1
ltG HOl.IDAY bed ludt In IMI • • ,
aOLD CORl'OllAL best ClOUld ,_. II
• , , MUSIC CREDIT mu.r lie .......
Langlhal-4tl0 CORIO.
llCOlllD llACE. 4 tunoneo. 1 y .. r
olch. Clelmlng, Pur• MOOO. C .. lmlng
prlet f70llC>-$6500. 0-.
Prine• FteY (2 W Her18Clt l 114 IS.I
Olp1orN1i. (W M-nevl 117 10.l
lud<v Shi (R MtMll) 11' t·I
Pa-·a Jll'I (H H...,._) 101 •I
811 OI ~ (W Hannalll lU I I
T.n.ra (0 Heal 112 11).1
CGnlt (It C..rnf18l) lU I I
81.ck Mood (D ROM) HJ M
I.AO ~ (I W Blum) 117 S-1
llldl Ll<M (J Tnifll1o) 111• •I
Hel O'Wlno• (F Roti.ntonl 111 M
Tulaorec:o (W Freemen! •HM lO.I
tLACIC MOOD ~ lo lllM t •••
HAL O'WING5 dcm Ill 1Mt • • LEO
M••te r.n •lrwl tiettw. 1.MelhOI -LUCl(Y IT\I.
THIRD RACI. M fvr'°"Oa. 1'11ldtn
2 """ old CD41$ lo geld~. Cl.,mll'O. Pvne MOOO. Ci.tm1,. prlc:f 11;.000.
()#1
GeQll ... Clo II I V.itftlllele) llf >I
llldlan St1Y 11' 10.1
~ linY Ill 10.I 811~ (W llu'l\l lie ' 1
llttt. CrlpsY IW Ha""4ttl) 111 10.I
WhlJll~Go (J l 1mbef1I 111 B I
A Lt Ouinl1 Kine l"'""'-l XIII 0-I
Ht<by ti ID Plen;e) '" 7·1 Poona Kh6n (W tluml 116 .. ,
TrKk Plurnt>er CW H.,meh.l 116 S-1 p,_, RMPKf IW ~) lit M
A f W. J_, fflllnod """'·
l'OONA KHAN beltef d\MIC;e ,,_ ..
••. HRN aootc wi..._ et .......
U OUINTA ICING may _. • ,_.
L""9!hol-NAHAU RULa ..
flOHTM JUICE. 6 furlongs. l"llllft
' ,,.,., .... -· olds -... c .... ll<'d •llowenctt. Purs-Ill.GOO. 5outll
81y Plt<lrrN<»Utlul AlllccWtlan. 0-.
Hi H•"~ (M Valeru:uel•l 117 '-1
,...,, (C Burri 111 1•1
P1o<n°"' IW Hartnafrl l U •1 ~~I flalr ID H1H) 114 J.I
P"OQV l IA Pinedel 114 11~1
St~• •~•I (W BIUml IU H Torn Trut Blue (J L1.,,'*1l 111 1•1
f,,•I Marr1-IW ~MYI 11' 1·1
H 1Cld•n Soec:n!t (A -) 114 '-1
"""""' ....,_ (D Plwctl 11' '-1 "~" C. (H H•Wllen-l •I" J.I
STAR ICHAL edOe In flohl ran ... ,,.n MARRIA91£ bt on -....
•OMAN H .... ss tries bl"*•n.
l.ot111lflot-AROEU C.
NINTM aACIE. I l/16 mllN, 4 v-r
olds lfld up, ci.1m1,.. Purte .-.
Cl•ifN .. pra ~Sl5DO. ~
11'9CINI II IH He""'enlOftl •107 ._,
Loa Orl.nt.i.. U Lam~! 1'0 6-1
Frwldta> Oumlm CTnilPlol x107 t•t
Mien 'NeA Yo.i IE IM<llNI 1U •I
Blutr Night llt c:.bellerol 11' t•I
El Adem (A Pl~l 170 .Sol
Honn! 811'1 IW Hermeltl lU 0-1 c,_, llodl (W f<reemenl xl.. l•l
11.wn ~ytllm (I' Alv.-.11 109 ._,
Coolftl O>lnll• IR MeMUI 114 J.l
Spenl ... C.veller II V1ien~tl 11' ~1
COYet' WrNe (W Bluml 11' l•l
•L AOU" """''"' in sll"rp form . . . L°' o•••NTALH cafl blJttlr
1.,1 ••• COUNT CHINITA com"'9 te
9ood .... l ......,,...._.,llAN(IKO OUNHAM.
Using a N>-block as his
weapon, Jack B r a n c b of
Anaheim landed in the top
16 with a flurry, racing
from 28th to 10th. Arnett
had the second high block,
and a wboleule abuffle in =======::::==,-------------
the standings.
With ooly eight-games on
tap before the field is sliced
to the leading eo .k.eglers in
the i.ummer-long tourna-
ment. Fred Bernal, the Co
rona del Mar cyclone , re-
Sears
m aim oo top of ttie he a P• __ _
Celebrating the
Opening of the New
Sears Orange Store
Tobacco Department with a huge 4,m t«al, oot i
despite his 223-average, his
position is akin to sitting on
a powder keg.
While early leader Jerry
Hacker of El Monte slipped
again, dropping to fourth,
new attackers closed in on
Bemal. Just 42-pins back is
Jack Arnett of G a rd en
Grove, with 4.,m , as be
bounced from 4th place,
while Roy Wilson of Costa
Mesa held his third &lot
Tobacco Dept. Specials
FREE Pack
~~.t:.~~.: (~~~,.;;:,) l I ,!: MAN TO BEAT Turf CrulM!r CA -l lit t~l • • •
of Sean Y orbblre
Cigarettes with
Each Carton Purtllaseii
Regular 213 Send 1e1o1 t 1 o H1lll na • • Rio hldlo (A PlllMe) na 5.1
1>9nlt A Mena<it IE MHlnel 111 l~I
aUMl'ER rNY hold tdgt M" •• •
IAND IDOL -... ftctt • • • TmTON mrt lllte tlll• ""8no
l.cirtOllM:ll-LITl\.I Clltl'Y.
l'OU•TH JtACI. l 1/1' ml.... Mold"
en > v.er -. Pune MDOO. Ofd•
A-l.llnft Uc! (M V•lenlvelel 1'0 S-1
A.Llaa.n LAd CM Vtltfmlllal 110 .. 1 ~ 111.tv IJ Cuff1tll 1't 10.1
lte¥al TetMVH" CJ c~ll no 10.1
A..o.ulllllnY CW 91um) Ut •·I
5elldtle!' I A MHt<! I 120 I I
Ov,. Thtr Counter (J Tn.1111101 x 11) 1~
Hill Sell (1 0 Plen:rl 110 1~ 1
Rlwl (J L81'nbertl 1:10 ' 1 ~·-rR i.wnelll no "' o-llQhl (A v 11tnzuela I 1'G ~ 1 ~nd A Prlnot (llober1sonl 110 i..1
lellobe I A Pllwde l no .. 1
~IVET lodcld OOod In rnlto , , •
IAleDaAR .,._ tloelng pu'ICI! • • •
toee>IA can betfw l .. t.
1.or'O-...CRESCINT aAY.
l'll'TH RACI . I 1/1' mli.t. FiMlr-• ~ ~. 4 YH • old• end up. Clolm-
11'(1, Purse S60CIO Clelmlflo prla! S6SOOo woet. .-.r-ce Wive• Club c4 P~lo<
Vtr'CIH, O<ld•
MY San (J Tn.tflllol xHll 10.I
A-Meme>rlble Miid (0 Hall! 116 I· 1
Adieus Cpr-IHawllen-l x117 >I
l'IMI Wwnlng ID Pleretl 116 •1 8e11t Fo.irche (J lAmbtnl 11' 10.1
A•• The Cloucb CC..IMlllffol "' 10. I c..1,_ Host.. (J Cutt.,11 113 J. l
A·ldle ~ ID Halli 11' I I
111 Sm«1 IA l'INcMl 119 7 ' Nore I.HI (A "'-I 116 10.1
,._...., C. Mdlrlcle lr•llll!d fft!N .
l'INAL WARNING nint In ~ 1tm<ll
• . 1n SMAltT ~ to tekt II.
ADt•us CORN•• btllt -ny <A ,.,,...
Longtl!Ol-A•OY• TMI CLOUOS
"XTM R.ACI. 6 furlOnO> J Ye-tr old
lllllet.. Clelml.... PurM UOOO Clolm·
1,. price 110.00..-lmwltl CM!>
lltr Ctty di H-. O<ldt
Colle 0-' Thl119 (R C11n111" 115 10 1
SfwuNla PIMlllf't (I V11t<111111lel llJ f.I
A·R-fer IJ L.mbet1l 1IS ~I
RIOlll Ch.IMll ID R.-l 117 HH
Tr1p Alonv (W tlum) 117 J.I
$Ilk 'N' Set (H Hewltensonl ~110 i..1
SU-Slllp (A Pl!oedel 117 10 1
8"11flM Ml• (D Plotrotl llS 10.I
D•lntv ~ IW H...,ICI!) llS 7-1
Dtvll'a Rule 1W H1r1nall) 117 10. I
Abbtv'1 Fltwlt IR Cebellerol 11' e.1 a lHUNY Jheuld lrlp 111-
ROSAl"liR "'8Y lutY< ~nouoh , ,
SILK 'N' sn bnt could ••~* It. Lonoahot-Tltll' ALONG. .
HVINTH ltACE, • fllf'°"O' 4 YHf
old• •nd UP Cl1l,,,lng, Pun• S7SOO
Cl•lmlng prlee S12,SOO.SIO.OOO. Par•·
tabl'M. OH•
NUMu llul« (J McCul .. rl 116 10.1
Aokll IOOk (A l'lftl!CIAI lit ~1
l'IYlflo lrllhman CA M .. sel 11' ••
(From Paie II)
Laver, 28, has been play-
ing the tame slnce he Wal
nine.
"Tennis in Auatralia ii
similar to the little league
bueNll programs in A.mer·
ica," the Corona de! M • r
resident said.
"There are a lot ol inex-
pensive faciLih~s in Austra-
lia where children can get
g ood instruction. It's em-
phasized in the schools
much more than here. Com·
petitlve action isn't stressed
as much as sound instruc·
lion."
~ most fans are ex-
pecting a Rosewall-Laver
oattle for the singles a-own,
Ralston, ln his first pro sea-
son, can't exa<:tly be called
a dark horse.
The ex-USC sensation who
was called by Pancho Gon-
1 ales "The next king of ten-
ni s," has banked $22.000 on
the tour, second .to Laver,
and handed the latter his
J1 rat defeat oC the tour -in
Klngatn
London. FDter
Rahton has one of the Menthol da.
most brilliant records in pin &u
the history of amateur ten-Smoke FREE pack ol. Ywbldre
nis. He was lbe first since clcarettet . . . ti net s•tl1ffed, •:!!
Doo Budge to earn the No. rebln anopened urton for fall
1 amateur ranJcing t b r e e refund.
straight years. He was a
Davis Cupper aix cQnsecu·
tive years.
Andres Gimeno of Spaln
i!l sf'.e(led third, behind
Rosell"all and Laver, and
Ralston fourth.
Colorful Pancho Segura
will be a crowd favorite, u
will Hugh Stewart. who'B
represent the Balboa B a y
Club. Stolle. off his recent
win over Laver. will bear
watching as will Alex 01·
mcdo and Barry MacKay.
Michael Davies, Pierre
Barthes, Earl Buchholz and
Mal Anderson round oat the
field.
Doubles pairings, announ-
er
ced Monday. pit Liver and Lighten
Stolle against Buchholz and
Davies. Anderson and Stew-Recotar 690 art draw a first round ~. ..,
as do Rosewall and Ralston . 9k
Sean 0.. S A B
Faetory S•oken
Perfecto shape. mild ple•·
aant unoke. Buy now!
ZSAZSA GABOR MYS -
Makes H ideal ,m! Buy
1everaJ at thl1 price!
SAVE MONEY at AAMCO
iluaumr AUTOMATIC TUNSMISSIOI
8PEClALJSTSl
~www••..,. ... '23 ... _ .... ·-................ _ .. ................... ....,..""'._ UtUm llUll1ll ......... ..., .... _
--rt•llllt ., ........ .. .... _... ..... ,._ ,... __ _. ....... _.
:.·~-:.a:-:.:: """ ............... . --., ..... .. ~
Sean
Speelal Pipes
Reiutar 99~ $Ut
Carboo~d bowls, lmport·
td brlan .•. Ill uaorted
atyles 111d shapes.
SetWs Ora119e-Tu.stl11 at /tfe.U-
Phone 837-%100
Se•r• Costa Me•-Brbtol •t SunflotDer
In th(t South Coat Plcua-540-3333
Sears Bu~a Park-La Palmo at Sta11ton
PhottP T 1\ 84400, 521··1530
UC Irvine. lilljjillilllllii~~liMAiiMMi.tl
COSTA MW
llllfll HOYl
IMTl llA ... (Not at S~ar• Santo Ana)
-· ,.
J ! DAJL Y PILOT Tue:sdQ, JuM zo, 1967
Me•• Pla111otue
Actors Show How
To Handle Harvey
By JOANNE SHAW
Of -n.11r ,.... lteft f
The Cost.a Mesa Civic
Playhouse's opening night
1lfoduction of Mary Chase's
''Harvey" Friday night dem-
onstr~ the group's capa·
bllities in the field of com-
edy.
In order to do a play such
as "Harvey" well. the ac-
tors muat creat.e cl)arac-
ters who make the audience
see Harvey. Otbel"Yiiae the
point of the play 111 lost and
the audience is left with a
farcical story about a hal-
lucinating fool.
The story involves Elwood
P. Dowd and his friend
flarvey who happens to be
a 6-foot 11h-incb white rab-
bit who can foretell events.
Elwood's sister, Veta Lou-
ise, wants to put Elwood in·
to a sanitarium so she and
her daughter can Uve a
"normal life". After show-
ing the effect of Harvey on
various characters' lives.
the problem of Elwood a.nd
• Harvey is resolved.
Tbll play can be difficult
to produce while keeping
the supposedly "crary" El·
wood sanely i.nJane, and the
rest of the characters em-
pbatlcally "normal". In the cue ol the Costa Mesa play-
ers. especially Bob Engman
u Elwood P . Dowd, and
Patty Neederman u hil 1is-
ter Veta Louise ~immons,
the characters that were
presented to the audience
were porirayed with consid-
erable skill and understand-
ing.
Elwood with Harvey, for
the two are difficult to sep-
arate, u Engman played
them rate special applause.
He manages to keep El-
wood nicely characteri2ed
without overplaying the part
as is the case occasionally
with Linda McDole's Myr·
tie Mae, Mary Macy'• Bet-
ty Chumley, and especially
with John Pridonoff as Wil-
son.
Miss Neederman's Veta
was a delightful little lady
who only wanted to intro-
duce her daughter into town
society without her brother
Elwood and Harvey around.
In the end she makes th•
decision, consistent with her
character that endJ t h •
play.
PSYCHIATRIST
Fred StahliNn
The t,anitarlum staff, Pat
Harp u Roth Kelly, Ben
Jen.sen as Dr. Sanderson,
and Fred Stablman'• Dr.
Chumley, at tima tend to
let tbetr scenes drag, but
once Dr. Cbumley bu met Harvey, they manage to
keep the tempo up to par.
Directed by Pati Tam-
bellini, "Harvey" i.a 'a de-
lightful production. which
definitely is worth a visit
to the civic playhouse in
Costa Mesa's Community
Recreation Center in t h e
Orange County Fairground.I.
Two more performances
will be given Friday and
Saturday evenings.
'NA•vn" A ~ b'( MIJ,N 0... ..._.,
ed llNI ....,_ 1W PMI Tamlmlllftl..
•llt99 INMltf Jey aari.. t.c:llftlcal di~ Olc:k Ev-. ,,._. by
IM Coat1 Mela Civic Pl~ 11
Ille Communl!Y Recl'Mtloft Ceflter,
w.tl gete al 11)1 Orlnge CountY
Fltl"raundl. Codll -· Friden ...ct S.1urde'fS llln!Ullh JUf'le U.
'MUI CAST Elwood P. Dowd 1.-E"O"*'
Vetl I.OU'-S"'-.. Party N..-,_
Mvrtlt Mae MmmoM
Lit* McOol9
Or. S...,.._ ....... -~ au111 Kelly . • • • • • . . .. PM HarJ Or. Chumley .. .. .. l'M StlfllmM
Wllsoft ............ Jo/111 ~
Juelge O.tl'flow • . • • . ~ .,_
a.tty OIUrrlMY • • • • . • ,,.., Mecl'
Ehl c--..r ...... I.tty 1v-
E. J, LOfllrttl ........ T-TIM
Melodyland Presents
'Roberta' for 1 Week
J erome Kern's operetta ·role created by Bob Hope;
"Roberta," which made Carolyn Maye, a veteran of
stars of Bob Hope George Broadway musicals who
Murphy and Fred MacMlir-~as featured~ ~n in
ray when first presented on The Student Prin~ at the
Broadway, will open a one-Los Angeles MUSJc Center,
week engagement at Mel· and Don Stewart, most re-
odyland tonight as t h e cenUy seen at Mel~~~d
fourth in a series or five as the Red Shadow m The
American operettas. Desert Song."
In addition to the Kern Other members of the
melodies "Lovely to Look repertory company featur-
At," "Smoke Gets in Your ed in the ~ge cast will in-
Eyes," "The Touch of Your elude William Chapman,
Hand" and "You're Devas· She~la Doyle, Kathleen De
tatiog" the show includes Spam, Alan Arie, Jack Rit-
an el~borate fashion show schel, Jack Goode, Aime
for which motion picture de. Machamer and Kaye El-
signer Helen Rose bas ere-hardt, plus a . group of pro-
ated a showing of highstyle fessional fashion models.
clothes. "Robe~" will be pre-
Heading the cast of this sented .nigbUy ~ough Sun·
newest offering will be Sam day wtth matinees sched-
Riddle. radio and television uled for 3 p.m. on Saturday
comedian who will play the and Sunday.
~~~~~~~~~~
Oose Races
For Colleges
LONG BEACH (UPI) -1~=======~1 Collegiate crews Crom the lfl'S BE fRIDIDLY Pacific coast and the New ut
England districts battled it out today to deci~ the team If you have new neighbors
championship in competition or know of anyone moving
for ttie Wood Trophy, the to our area, please tell us
first event in the five-day so that we may extend a
North American intercolle· fri endly welcome and help
giate sailing championships. them to become acquainted
Jn the first day or sailing in their new surroundings. Monday the four·man Paci-
fic Coast and New England Huntington Beach teams each won two races
in competition in which six Vt'st'for districts took part on Ala-
mitos Bay.
The Paciifc coast team 536-4146
was made up of USC's Hen· Costa Mesa V1's1'tor ry Sprague and Scott Alla n
of Newport Beach. Henry
Scofield, Long Beach State 545-1 593
~~~goM~~te~cLaugtilin. s~n So. Coast Visitor
oo FALSE TEETH
Rocle, Slide or Slip 7
494-0579
Harbor Visitor
642-3535 FA.8Tsrl'H. an Im.Prone! powdlor
t('I be spnnlll~ oo upper or lo•er 1"-•-------.. 11 pl•te9. bolda fa!H tttlb more !lrmlf -----
In plaoe. Do not 1llde, •llP or r()('k.
f'IO rumtnf. S-J. pu1t7 l.Mtt or fttl • tnc FA8TD!TH IA &Jk1lln" -doea
nor 1nur. Checb "denture broth" Ofnrurtt. tbat ftt aNl eMfntl•I to
h••llh 8N your d•nll1t t?lfUlerl•.
0~1 P'AllTaTU at all drUC' rount4!ra
The DAILY PILOT
Covers Boatin g
Best in West
Dam Park
Land Eyed
FULLERTON -Orantt
County mpervilorl ha\te ta-
ken t~ e first ltep toward
buylii1 ·mare lan4 tor Full·
erton Dam regioDaf pll'k,
but fi~ tbey want to tno•
the exact price.
Kenneth Sampaon, direc-
tor of county beaches, bar·
bor1 and parka, uid 33-•c-
rei now owned by the Ana-~elm Uruon Water Co.
lhould be valued at '825,000.
Putchaae of water com-
pany land will expand the
park site to 125 ~s. Much
of the c o s t of developing tne part will be borne by
the fecjeral and state IOV•
e{~ta.
NEW YORK (UPJ)-'l'he
yacht Intrepid wW • be able to arrive at Newport.
R.I. to ~ for the
Atnerk• • Clip tNla blfort
Wed.neadly 6ecawft ~ a
brokel mut. ". IPMennan for MDmetord'I SbipJardl
sakf.
The aluminum m a s t
broke during :al11nc on Lone ltland ~ Satvct.y and ... ~ Monday,
1a.lcl the lf>Oketmto for the
boatyard on City hland in
the Brou. ·There ••rt no
injwia.
1be Intrepid bad b e e n
scbeduled to arriff s New-
port Sunday.
~1rael Hilly Dae in Mesa
t .....,, • , .... It TapM
Sbll'ee, t17 w. HaoaU. It.,
eo.MMe&
.Spllbl: wfD lMi Dr. otto
Sddrm, Jectunr Oil ......
and .. Mlddll ICMt. Thi
pubic la ....
Leeeer ..,__Jlet.t.r 8~
AU MAJCBS 6 JIO•BU
CALL l'OR RATIS: 64N421
AL "G,11111 -Mtln
410 W. COAST HIGHWAY -NIWPORT llAcH
430 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY PHONE: 642-3630
(2 BWCKS EAST OF THE BALBOA BAY CLUB) .. T ·E
·TS!!
FIGURE CO ROL SALONS WILL!
PROOF? JUST K THESE WOMEN ••. OR ANY
OTIIER OF OUR THO SA.~S OF SATISFIED CUSTOMERS
COSMIJICIAN
s'Facu You Should Know BEFORE
You Call a Gloria Marshall Salon
1. Oul' hichl1 1uccu11.ful f~• beauty plan 11 bated on tb1 aM
of very 1pec11l machines, Kientilically d11irned to b&nleh •Tel'J
correct.hie fiarure fault.
2. On your first viait (for which thm ii absolutely NO CHARGE 0.R OBLIGATION) your ficure will ~ lnal~ed, and you will be
11ven a aample treatment.
3. lniti1l11, the more OVertVtig bt you art \he faatA!r you will IOM; a1~r the initial tn.•tment period, moat patron• eet their own in· dlY1du1l pace at which they lose inchu and poonch .•. BUT ALL
SEE NOTICEABLE IMPROVEMEl'\T RIGHT AWAY!
4,. Your Cott: The atandard price for treatment. ia Slli-00. You •~
clearly told the number and frequtnry of treatment1 requind to
keep you r each your predetermined ~al Thia way you know ex·
adly what your aelf·improvement pro~am fa rolnr to coat you
• .. there are no extras or hidden ch11rrei what.aoever.
!;. The moat pll'RAanl w11y to lo~t ~"ti: ht 1 No more dieter'" irrita. bili~y. o.ur machines invigor11t~. YPl TPl111' yau. y Oil luve the 1alon
feehnr hke a nl!w woman.
NO DI ROBING NECESSARY ..• Jf'E A.RE NOT .4. Gl'M
FREE! •Child Care for \l11thera with Younc Chlldnn
•Individual M11kr-up t,euon• Ueins Excla-
1ive Gloria M~r~hall Coanetlca.
lmllD SCHOOL TIACHll
~uaranttt
You Can Be Your Perfect Dress Size Next Montll
TODAY IS JUNE 20
SIZE 14?... .. . . . . . . .. BE A PERFECT SIZE 10 BY JULY 11
SIZE 16?. .. • . . . .. • .. . BE A PERFECT SIZE 12 BY JULY 17
SIZE 18? .............. BE A PERFECT SIZE 16 BY JULY 17
SIZE 20? .............. BE A PERFECT SfZE 18 BY JULY 24
SIZE 22?. . . . . . . . . . . . . BE A PERFECT SIZE 20 BY JULY 24
OUR GIFT TO YOU
This &rtlffcate Worth
520.00
TOWAll YOUI LOnLY
NIW Fl•UH
Offw lqMT ..... Jue27
Bow Caa We
Guarantee Besalt.s
pe"onellratl pro9rHt chart It Pf'•peretl,
to fliat H eh time you vltlt the 1alo11, •
ral111fl co1111Hlor ce11 911ide yo11 toward
"" ow11 specific 9oel1. We kHp a
on1tant check en your pr119re11 tow.rd
Jo.,elier fi911re. 111 t+iit wey, yell reach
our ilesireil 9oel in the 1hom.t ti1111
, • arwl far t+t1 IHtt expt111t.
CALL NOW FOR COMPUMENTARY TREATMEI\ T AND FIGURE ANALYSIS
Nt;WPORT BEACH-430 PACIFIC COAST BIGBWAl' PHONE: &42·3830 • SANTA ANA DOWNEY GLENDALE NO. HOLLYWOOD TORRANCE
'hone 543-9457 Phone 169·1511 ,hone 246-116' ,hono HS.otOO Phone J20-6510
1140 W. 17th St. 10403 Lakewood l lvcl. 237 N. Central 6450 lolll"lhom 2007 W. C.non St.
I t /ech W • .I H•H r ,,., .. J llecb H. el SI--' C•"'"' A.,.. 1,_ S.." Vtll•1 '1ere ~ (.,.,_, ,_ , ... ,.,. ~ .,_,
COVINA TAIZANA LONG BEACH IEVEILY Hilb WHmlER
'hone 966-3546 ,hono j44451• 'hone 435.7427 "'°"• 6SS·23JO J 10 l . Rowland Ave. 18400 Vofttura llvcl. • J 11 f . Oeoan llvtl. U41 Wllahlre llvcl ,hono ""'°'°'
J tloclr1 WHf el C;/1v1 I l lod f8f/ el i.-h ~. ft .. '•'*"'-Aero• Street ' Ilk. w. •' .. ft v ..... 14126 Whittler llvcl. ''•Mt J frH ,ork!ftt
'
• -• -·--.... -• • • ---• .... • .. .. • • • • • • • f ................... ,.,,. ......... ,.\ ... .,,., ..
.
Youngsters, Art ·.l mtro·duced '
J ~ Summer promilel to be exdting for eo·
thusiutic young-art.Lrta, for Newport Harbor
Service League again is pre1e11ting a Chil·
dren's Art Worbbop offering youngsters the
opportunity to be inwlved in creative art ex·
periences by encouraging them to uplore and
experimeot in varied materials.
Guided and directed by prOOutonany
trained teachers in a free and Informal at·
mospbere, the workshop empbasiuc tech·
Diques suited to · ttie child's individual expres-
liop and development.
The six-week summer se95ion will be con-
ducted in 12 lessona at 611 Femleaf Av~:J ·
Corona del Mar from June 26 to Aug. 4. All
classes will be in the morning and will nm
one aod ooe-balf hours with the exception
of the Clay ~ which will be a tb:ree:hour
session.
Offered in the work.shop will be a Begiq-
ning Art ClMS tor preschoolers, ages 4 to 6,
which will be an j.ntroduction to the balic art
materiaJa; a Beginning Painting Claa tor r.
mary students;· ages 5 to 8, offering a wnety
of activities Including painting, crafts and in-
dividual pPression.
A new class on w, Drawing for young. sten, a~e 9 to 14, ls being lntroduoed. Stu·
dents will learn about line and form, shape
and space with emphasis on figures, aaimals
and plants.
The Clay Class for the same age group
will include instruction in the tue of a potter's
wheel and kiln aod a field trip to a ceramics
factory.
Although this annual cultunl p1oject ol
the league is primarily geared for children,
adults are not beiag otrerlooted. They are fn.
vited m partidpate in a claes on buic art techniques of silt ecreen, wood cuts and colo-
grapbs.
Teachers engaged for these sessions are
Mrs .. Leah Vasquez. who bas won three schol-
arships from the Otis Art Institute for her
work in graphics, and Jack Taylor, mvnec of
the Golden Kiln aod a former manage!' of and
demonstrator at the Pottery Shack.
Both teachers are from Laguna Beach and
will be assisted by league members and in-
terested volunteers .
. A limited number of scholarships will be
given. Further information about scholarships
and volunteer registration is available by call-
iog Mrs. Warren Smith at 548-5352. Class reg-
istnttion information may be secured by call-
ing Mrs. Merle Amundson, 646-7068.
Works from the spring session now are
being exhibited at the league's Coffee Gar-
den Gallery, 2625 E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar. Mrs. Ralph Bernard, workshop chair-
man, announces the display will continue for
public viewlDg unW July 15.
ALL WORK AND A LITILE PLAY -Displaying how easy it is to create
a IDQSterpiece are two young M1dw1"1gelos Oeft to right), Stacy Skelly
and Page Ewing. The1 ~present members of the Children's Art W.bhop,
a project lpODIOl'ed DJ Newport Barbor Service League. Taking Ume ou1
from their arty tdwdnle are Katie llulroJ and Jamie Bemanl w'i: ::'ich
Mrs. Ralph Benmd. wubbUp ~ feed their real live model. The
pabllc is lmtted to tbe children'• sbibit in tbe league's Coffee Garden
Gallery, Onna del Mar. •
BUDDING YOUNG ARTISTS -Hard at work
creating is Eric Keys with bis audience of one,
Jamie Bernard. Both young men are beginning
members in the Paint4ng Class. Amy Small·
wood bru&M8 off another origiml while Katie
Mulroy (background) eameetiy watches an-
other enthustastic artist.
TILE TASKS -Learning bow to paint on tile a.re
Gregg Neville and Heather Burns, wtm receive in-
struction from Jack Taylor or Laguna Beach, Clay
Class teacher. 'lbele sessions al.lo ofter hours ol work
at the~· wheel and kiln. and will include a
field trip to a ceramics f.adory.
Swinger Has a New Line: Girls Must Sign or He'll Decline
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have been
thinking about that girl's suggestion -
the one who said if a boyfrAend wants
to get Intimate, she should Mk him to
sign a paper stating that they went
to bed on such and Sl,ICb a night, ao
there will be no question about pa-
ternity if 101Dething ~velopc.
I think It's a good idea, Ann, but I
have another idea which is equally
good. I hope you will be fair and print
tl -
l am a young man who keeps get-
ting invited to girl's apartments. I
am not rlcb or handsome or a great
talker, ao don't get the Idea I am
bragging. My popularity Is just prool
that there are a lot of girls In Wash-
ington, D. C. who are hard up.
My plan is as follows : When a girl
ANN LANDERS [fl
propositions a guy, he should ask
HER to atgn a paper saying It waa
her Idea and that she will not hold
him responsible if something devel-
ops. What do you think of
it? -CAREFUL ALVIN
DEAR ALVIN: I think It's a flne
Idea. And alnce ~o aeem to be In
sucb heavy demand, I 1aggest that you
have rorma printed. It will aave a tot
of valuable time.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: For the
past 15 years I have been a busy ex·
ecuUve. I do not agree with your
stand that the person who telephones
ts obUgated to give tbe secretary his
name. I find tt most annoying when
I am asked "Who ia calling?" I have
mad~ lt a rule never to give my name.
Only one question la more irritat·
ing and I have learned how to get
past It in a hurry. When a secretary
asks, "What is it you wish to speak to
Mr. Doe about?" 1 reply, "I'd like
to Mc>w what his huntions are In r~
g-anl to my wife."
I juet t:liought you'd like to know
how we leu timid souls handle these
self-Important secretaries. -SACRA-
MENTO
DEAR SAC : Thanks for the clu~ln.
Tbe tr.able with those cute anawen
Is tht Ytu can only u1e them once.
What do you do for u encore, MJ1·
terT
DEAR ANN LANDERS: P 1 e a s e
print your answer because both my
mother and father read your column
and quote Crom it all the time.
There are seven kids In OUT family.
I am a boy 13 and I have five sis-
ters, all younger than 1 am. My lit-
Ue brother Is 3.
The lifls (from S lo 11) gel away
with murder. 'Ibey CID come up to
me at any time and bit me for no ru-
son. U I tell my plftllta they say.
"Forget il You are the oldest." Will
you please tell me why being the old-
est gives my sisters the right to hit
me? I have some friends who have
the same problem. Please answer for
all of us. -BLACK AND BLUE
DEAR BLACK AND BLUE: I pt
dozeu of leUtts fnm 'WI .._ Id
me llteir ~ ..e dlterl ~
up and ldt diem "fer • re-."
There la always a reaML 11.aJ'e 8llt
a very good .-, IMd It's a ~
nevertJteleu. ne ....._ II .. llaft
such a frteadly rdatieMJdp wttil ,..r
1l11ten Uuat they wW Mt wut ta ldt
you.
Ap~reaUy Jottr mem ud Pd are
'
nllhl& ,.. .. t.w Uiai lleJ• are
mt 14; ••e• ta ldt Clrll ud dley .,.
ta lte amplima&ed ,_ IL U JMr W..
Ile lil&en get nerl:y peaty ud ~
adTutage of y•r gede~
-.ewer, , .... parata ahoald step la
......... lite ..
H you have trouble getting along
with your parents ... if you can't
get them to let you live y0U1 own life,
send for Ann Landers' booklet, ''Bug•
ged by Parents? How to Get More
Freedom." Send 50 cents in coin with
your requett and a Jorig, stamped, self.
addr~ envelope.
Ann Landen will be glad to help
you with your problems. ~nd them
lo her in care of the DAILY PILOT
enclosing a stamped, self·addrened
e.nve.lope.
. . . . -. . , .. . . · . . . . . . ·~ . , . . ... . . . . . .; . -
..
, .. MIL AND .S.-1. M. MARI
,, : iW• la. Q,c•~d•
Mesons Honored
'l'tae .... .. .......
EJ-. DIWIMll._. J_...__ am
ed ....... ..., fer
tbe eoapll Ill .. ........
tGD Bait.oar II-. t( tbe
60th Anniversary Feted Party Nigh~
Due Shrine A liDlple ce6ebntiml wUb
cab IDd lee cnem nwbd
~ a znOeetone )elladl:J
for a COl&a )(-.. Clq)le.
Jane u 1NI the at wed-
dinC annlwnary ol Mr.
and Mn. I. M. Mleee. He
ii • and abe ii IZ. JcminC lD .. ceWntion
wen olMI' reakleats al the nunt:uc bame where tbe
M111911 .....0:, mo v • d.
Tbl Ice c:n9ID and Olte
wen M'ftd by the~
caaple'a Diecel, Mlal Ber-*-Mcatlry ol i. P1Mllte
IDd Mn. a-i. Rood ol
VIDCOU'+W, w-.
Mill Mc<nry and Mn.
Rood and her buimnd have
been tdinC cme al the
M•I• 11 the pMt ,_
JDDllb at the ~ for-
m« bcime OD MICDOl1a
Street.
1W bOUM, the old Van
l>ytN! pt.ace, WU purdmed
by the couple when they
arrived lD a.ta Mela in
19'S. BoCb en nativel of the
Mldnlt (be ..... born in
Mlnrwoea, md lbe lD Wil.-
comin) bl& have lived in
tla Wed .ii their mmried
I.Ve.
'Ibey mmied in Portland,
Ore., and OD the Colden •eddlnc amt._) trav-
eled north to viatt their
brideKnald IDd beat manr
-· was • mlJDte.aDCle man I.ft a f otettry buOdtnt
Red Carpet Unrolled
For Mrs. ·Edna Dayton
at tbe 1D iew end a.rt
World Flllr In ~ He
allo opcwtecl .a meat mar-
ket lD lcllbo ~ comint
to Olllfonl.a.
Until receaUy ~ kept
active d o i n g boulewotk.
cooklnC. ~ and
some ~. Hill rie
w11 1eriau1ly lnjtred m a
lMO Milo acddent which
left ber an-lnvalld.
Workshops
Continue
Or-. County ~
cal Society will continue iU
workahops through the
summer.
1be group will --Sa-turday, July 1, lD the Mor·
riton Adult Reference IJ. Women Invite Guest to Talk
brary, fr 0 m lO a.m. to 4 GU Owens, secretary of cUIMI Wortint at H'ead-p.mE~rien--.. ..-sons in the Oran1• CoWrty Central quutm'I. -r-"~ r-~ Committee will a d d r e • 1 Repub=·omen. are Jn. atteodiance frill aid becln-members ol the Costa M-vited tO ··
Mn. Una Steams Day-Alpha Omicron Pi alumnae nen, according to Harry D. Federated Republican Wo------..----
ton. book and drama re· will host a tea. Roberta, 'vice president and ' CJ The DAILY PILOT viewer, will present a pro-co-ebainnan. Extensive re-mens ub Thursday. JUlle
gram to Leisure World Pan-Fw1ber lnlonna"on may aearch material will be 22• at lO a.m. hel.leruc members meeting be obtained by calling Mrs. available including the first Tbe Oolta Meu home ol Covers Boating
in Clubhouse 2, L e i s u r e Harold Henry. 837--0818 or United Stat.es Census of Mn. DonU1 Smith will .,_ tbe 1ettt-wbe Ow "".... Best in West World at 1 p.m. tomcrrow. Mn. Platt, 83'7-3509. 1790. ..-. n ens ~ Prior to the meeting, Mrs.1.-------------------~1------------------
Dayton will be feted by Chi
Omega Alumnae from La-
guna Hill&, Mission Viejo
and El Toro durlog an 11:30
a..m. luncheon in the Mia·
sion Viejo home ol Mrs.
Douglas H. Platt.
Mn. Dlyton is an alum-
na ol Chi Omega sorority
wbidJ sbe joined as a stu-
dent at Stanford UnJver-
sitf.
Alt10 to be honored at the
luncheon will be panhellen-
1c officers the Mmes. Har-
I See By Today's
Want Ads
• 1lien?' 11 11 vacation 8!nJ>
off~ -U you have •
~ In the Newport
Besch are9-4l pc1y ... w
lnlde for 1 or 2 weeb
their Mammoth Lakes
chalet
J. C. fiump/uie6 Jewelr~
have o/~reJ quaAl'I
lo ti..~ /,_ar/,or area /or·
• ry MacFadden, pre.aJdent;
Griffith B. Matac!lb, vice
president; L. C. Nordeen,
lea'etary, and st.pben
<ZosbJ, treasurer.
• Where you can rent a
very nice ottlce wt.th cv-
~111 Md drapes for $:!().
• When! to find an exp:ri.
enced retail ~·
e Where a. IUl'fer can pl.ck
up a '60 VW Bui. deluxe
with .woof. a az-t way
to tote ttae boardl mt
friendl.
• over 21 ~ar6 •••
• D"1mond$
• Watchts e Jf\Dtl'll made to orchr
•Sterling e l'iM Jewcl111
Following the
• Wbtt'I aomeone ii ~
U. a reward fOf' • lolt
chomlat. point SiameJlfl
mal~ e11t.
J. C. Humphries
Jet.Dflnl
1823 Newpori Bfvcf.
Cost• Mesi
S48-3"401
l·P·l·C·l·A··L
OPENING llATll c
Enrol ,...,_ ilt· ~OSTA ~ES.A
· and le a Cim ler Mentller
"Courae1 Aoerage LESS THA.N' l5c Per Yisit"
MOW 3 mG ~--~ llaYIYOU * Cal 'Ille cllb N~--Y-. Or Drap IJ Today
1. COSTA MESA • 2.: .... ~.:4ctr.• 549-3366
2. ANAHEIM • = = :t;..~ • 826-0381
3. ORANGE • ==Ctr .. 639-2441
THI SPA UfYDllO..SWlll. POOLl Alb: IXCLUSIVE ., . . Direct from
Europe and Palm Sprtn11-lllDJa tpedal leltl wldle Bot Whirtlnc 11.iDenJ
Water aplode. aa-inlt yoa to ghie JOU tbe ftlY ftlM!lt in llodern H~
thenpy. Stimulates fllltire "llllCDlw ad drcalatary .,.tem. Offen relief
from arthritis, rbewnatilm. ~ adles and palm.
MOMIN 1T1AM MTHI ........ "-LllNoDel llll:m a• ... ._ ....... _,.....~....... _,...... ............ ,..
ilm _F_1e_11_111es_••_Mll_ ..... 1 r;;;;~ '
FEATURING * ROMAN STIAM ROOMS I , .... ,..., ..,_,........ ............... * DESERT DRY HEAT ROOMS
I~ QaWlle. • ...._ T.-. * PLOIUOA SUN TAN ROOMS WMr A ......... .,_. T• Tiie Y-Ar..e * HOT WHIRLPOOL BATHS a..b • ..., Ao.. ....... s... -.... * ELECTRONIC MASSAGE ............ n. .......... -~ DWlllfl ut
OUMGE COUN1'Y"S
UL TIA MODERN
HIALTH CLUU
..................... CllJ&ll •'-..._ ......................... ...._ . . ...., ....... ., .............. ........ ............................. ...............
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TUI
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E
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TUMIUWEEib
MUTT AND Jfl'F
"TIE MUTTS lltREWME
CISTJLlliT ~I
.orTE TOO MUCH AND Ne\IER. MID /WY
l!OAAD/
MISS PEACH
I 5TILL 'TMINI< """~ ~ WR111!R
1y c•.i. ...-s<t 'i
Ra A U41E r COllQBLEIW 'g.lfJI~~·
{lllNf. "11 IX> 1114T_
ly Mell
CQJt.D 61\'E HIS JOI! A LITTlE llCllE 'IKlUllHT... rm<,,,_
acAY, ""'"' J..ETf 6ET H-51tlE: Rllt 1..1.M:M.Je, ~
NA l 1'M.ICIN51D XU g. I'
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a "' .. ' ....w: ct> (2 m. 1s "'111) Ali1t11 YI.~ II: DltNll.
o sa"""*-.,,._ !Iii ~ (CM!ldy) "5! -,_
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fll U·sttr TIMllrt
ror ... "' .....
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fl'! Lits u...t '\.ltlnltM."' ··-'"' l!l l!t m-. "' ,., • Buuti111ilillfttrtll .i..ota Dr. Manll
TrlCJ wllilt trlctiilc 1 ftdem -
1•d ltndiftl tM 1JeUlld. • "'
~ twlrt tM ..... nl ii tndJllc
lllt11' Dori• Dewllnc ..... ~
O ~@ lifl r-IMl.f:. ta 160 P11i11 ) ''The Cltlco11b llld·Ooi·
m1 Allaif." April IM Mart llMriy
beaHM JI~ l'MfWi Iii I aJb.
!lffl~t.lft "°°' wllffl they ~
1 )llllt lo plulMltr 1M Vlticln ~
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Pflrr lhrbs 1l9o r...t. ornmm-."" «> 160 ~II" ol tbt Nit ,.,.
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ptr!G1111:. his rtlMlb!Jlt ... It I - -s:ierd ol (20 mDlu1IMI I Mill. a:> llf: Mklllll l.lu..a.
D Milli91 S 111111: (Q -rllt ...... 11:00 B DM1 l'a.dl .._ CQ CJD
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W ED NESDAY
P!YTillE llCMES
a._ nw. 1t> (30 111111.1 am. ....
... ,.,.. (Q (2 Mon}
111-
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fidtti!Q 'M-W"lllllM lvl'HlltM . .,...: 'Aftorio Gan~11. G..,rie Gt1hl""
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ON A PINHEAD
I! ;..,•t "IVH• tlrtt '"'" thin9 •• ln1cribin9 th• C•nffitvli•n •11
th• "••4 •f • ,;11, btit 414 v•w •• ., ,,,n, t••" tfl• "F•• r11.
Rt <ff4" fettvrt l• Hr.t DAILY l'll0T1 Ytv'4 bt 1vr,•iotd 11-
"'Ycll hlftHn•tle11 w• ct11 , •• ~ lnft • • ..,~II '''c•.
-· ~
KENNEDY AT HOME -l;p!er -ls In the
life of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy will be -tonight
at 10 oo "Robert F. Kennedy." a color opedal oo
Channel 2. In thls ,.,... Kennedy ezplainl the fine
pointa: of a game I 1 bis __, Christopher (left). and
Alaltbew lluwell Taylor at their Virginia home.
TELEVl.SION 'nEWS
JFK Death
Quiz Viewed
tly RICK DU BROW
HO!LYWOOD (lJl'f) -NBC-'l'V llcmday nip!
offend an boar namWtjcw of tbe .ia"lfiptioe bJ
N-Ort-llilt. Alty. Tim G-into tllo
mwlnatioa of PreDWiit llenoedJ.
And I ~ that mu! be -la why tllo
network, after conducting ita: own inqujry on IDCh
an important subjed, aw 61 to spring a wry late
announcement of the program -just bit Friday -
which meant many viewen were probably not eftll.
~ware of il It obriously missed nwnerowi teleril-
ton broadcast listings. and there ware little opportu~
ity to call attention to il
ONE POSSIBLE reason that comes lo mind ii
<hat NBC-TV may ha .. ....,«cl <o keep a tight lock
on ita unoovered ladl until air time •• near, for
presumable prol«tioft and tben!f°"' adnntoge fw
its program. Thia though~ --· ia atlD not too conviocing in view of the fact that there were three
days remaining (or a posstl>le lapse between lbt an-
nouncement and the program. In addition. CBS-TV
bu for 90me time planned a multi-part en.min•
tion of the Warren Commiasion report on the
assassination, and bas made no .ec:ret of it
Thia l..t lad.. of coune. leads <o another poo.
sible reuon: thal the well-po.blicbed.. . four-part.
four-hour series of CBS-1'V broadcaeU begins th.ii
corning Sunday. and thal HBC-TV •anted to under-
cut it for c:ompe:titiYe purposes. One doesn't lite lo
th.int that sud! c:onsidentiom: enter into such an
important national matter.
WHATEVER THE CAUSE. <he la<e !Chedulinf
of Monday nigh<'• program. "The JFK Conspiracy:
The Cue of Tun Garri.'°'1." did it a diltinct c&-
service. for it WM a wholly fascinating, exceptionally'
provocative loot at the 1R1bject, with an incredibly
bizan-e cast of dianc:ten.
The broadcast bad promiJed (D offer "cnmid-
erable new material" and to present erideoce that
wou1d "show discrepancies in the statements made
by the two key •iltriSW in Garrilon's cue." The
Mondav promm. explorin~ Gurison'" investiption
of an alleged conspiracy in the assassination. focus-
ed on the testimony of key witnesses and method1
alle11:edly used to obtain evidence. And the footate
of the broadout WU. to put it mildly. hardly likely
to aid the case being put togethet" in New Orleans.
WITNESSES DISPUTED evidence which led
to the indictment of New Orleans businessman Clay
Shaw as a conspirator. Wrtnemes al9o told of in-
ducemeob. And seYenl experts. one from YaJe
and another from New Vort Univenity, cast their
doubts on ttrtain material
To undenbod the (Dial efled of the program.
however, one had to sit through the conversations
with 1eVeral of. the more bizarre oermns inteniew-
ed. lnaedi~te still seems a mild word fw <he
atmosphere created. and of c:oune the r.ct that ail
this distastefulness is somehow. in the public mind.
now part of the story of the death of a pre!!ident,
is immeasurably depresstn,. But the prom11m
l'lhould have been seen, and it Ui a pity that NBC-
TV. reyardlesc of il< reasoM. did not got out of it1
way to make this clear.
•
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'#al.? OKAY F I TAl<C A 5RXJllR.I. C6 la QIMM2" . . . -
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Cl\erleftt It. 0•"'''' Nolery 1'11blk • Colltomia
"•l11<l11et Office t"
Lo. A"ltln Cou"IY
My Commlnlcll h~lrtt
Ja11<1arv I. "" Mii.TO.. WICNllll. ,atty. "* Yffta llnft '--......... C.lif ..... -oc ••w """'.-Ot•flt' ,,.,, O••ly 1111111
._., JulW a.. ll. 10. f7, 19'7 nt 41
STAR GAZEE~~ ....,;;;.:;;:;..:..:;.:...:...._ ___ Br CU.Y l. POllAN·---------t
••
}'( r-Deily AdMly CoNd. }'(
Y Acce,.Ji111 I• tlte Stera. Y
To develop meuoge for Wtdnesdcry,
read words corresponding to runbe~
of your Zodiac birth sign.
WAii
TO
UP
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YOll
oun
f Am
f illl
ACTICll
Wl
DAIY
PIOT
CWS·
IFIED
DEPT.
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A
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6
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2
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s .. ••••-..,,_ .. ,.,.., ····= ....
Aallqutm6rnalld~
...... -ell .. ddce
_... d • model bomt.
BW•iat ~ ....
Alias room, Juaa1ow cm'-
,.. .... ., •' Pt-. "*ll1 ........ ...... ~ ........ pado
COWi'· A. tnitr ' ...... i.ime, «*-to mulakBU·
tioe dollar ...... cmtlr.
11fA c:r GI ~ at sa•
.. 5 c Oii 56911 .
llW
UDO ISLE
Sfl.400
N..,,,. H1l-1s a .... .
,.... rflflit -........ ..
• a ...... awlitiaa ......, ........ ....
--~ ..... -........_.Onl;y ...... ...,.
WALICDt • LEE MO Westdiff Dr, -.nu o,. s...
COLLEGE PARK
o.e-.,..... .... _.,ladl
wt11l33 ....
EAal DIM
R.-..tredeta ... _.
WALDJt A LIZ
-.. 'IW Dr. Qlfc• el J ~ o,ea E\.'es. ::-.-........... -: •saw..,.. lpirt&tfmc clee S 111trm. w1 ID llMIMll • Sf'4w
tmnn, room ID Oilllla ~ Olrml' --..... 04*••U74 -., .... ~ .. red
Put on a larp earner • bM ...-.. tD .a!
wtt!I tree. pkft. ~ Far -1 2
.. ...,
............... -Cal Jolla Del
•...i. .... .. .,.. ..... ~ ....... ....,,.,.
F.-...... 19$1\-llr .-_ •«II I lldedto-.... ~ . ._ .. ,. ............. ................. JllM. ..... IClll a Fl la~.._
.... '-17 • --o.tr
-. ......... ..... :.-::fy _. S 2 he wla:
.. • ... _. -Pi. .. ,. ........ .. ~ ... --tllt c-t Rate ... 19m MDr. IOW
~
.. : '•' .-
' ; -l . . . '
I.a .., Chi""
4 t.qe bednw.. 2 Jumri..
CUI badlt, Elepnt1y dee-
cn:ted. IOYetl' ~ pa·
tio (!ft ~ Lari-e family
reotn. ldeeJ for IUllUMr en-
~· Model Mine con-
clltian. lAllll ~ IMll-
~ .............
tiecic corner Joct.doo F.H.A.
• V.A. terTne at onlY m.500. Call tor an appdilt-
rnent.
W A.1JQlt A LEE
Bl H&rtlor'
~ Opai tll t P.M.
COUITIY UV116
s t.drooma. 21,1 ti.it., ......
UM brick fireplace ID es·
llDded ~ roam. (by.
er'f!d patio. Concrete drift,
wor1cMop elf oL a 2 car
..... Mtb ~ bath. Santa
Ana H"8btJ Area. $24,500.
OPDl EVES.
Colesworllly & Co.
642-7777
Nut to SDact Shop Jr.
Yacc111t
4 BmftOOM, 2 ti.th. Clll"-
peta, ..... Cbmplfte
bullt·in kitchen, nctudilll
~. COYwed patio,
many IDllft e:xtru. No
down c.1. or 10% CJOnYeD.
tional. $24 .JOO.
LA BORDE REAL EST ATE
-642.SXZ
YA Repossession
6°/o
G. D. IUCCOLA
lnYettment Co.
642.ol62
DOVER Sbottt Randa ~
View Home. 4 BR. J ba. 3UiO
911-ft_ IMMENSE back yard
.. 100x12o· $65,000. Owner.
MM31».
1M4W .... Aw.
Qutthndinc llalk:dt J IUl
VA ao-..«6r-m.. 2917 CltMuu ._.
4 BR f'lw ...... -
u:y ... , ...... .
Dt:ipalltt!
19771 Estwry lAM
4 BR.. Se.aMvm lritla *
3S' ~ ..... Hmr
Adams • a...er,. SB.&
Yoar ~
(XllJ.fX:E ll&U.TT
~
l50D A-.. -BuW (Ntar a.a. 1'lelilrel
ENCHANIMDIT
FOi SALE
4 lee BR.I. 2 ...... Mesa
Verde. F1oor to mfillll b-
pengtve st00p fl1llc. w/w
c:rpta ' drps.. ll*tliac
ldtcb.. bU-iu. Only ...
-1lO dn eo Veta or mA
linendnc-Harry!
-111119' Drtl9 • .... _,.. ....... ia ....
IAlB OAICls
-· lllCllb DAI.TY OOllPAMY
•t DDMrDr ... Slllle 101
C714t 60«DS
MilNJ R>a .. ~....,c..
-------
••t~ ..... ....... ...... ~ ..... ~ mr......_ .. _....
• a u 5 a l1U6ll FRA ......
-~ ...... 1111 ............. CJI.
S.mt J'.lNs. ....._
SPECTACULAR --OCEAN _. IAY
CHANNEL REEF-APARTMENTS
louted-On CMnnel Nur Ncmpert ......,. ..,, ....
2525 e>ce... ltvd .• Cor.na .. --UlferMe
4 Level Gar• Ahe Gw.t ,.,...
loat Sips Avalclble to a.Ideals
Here ruldenta enjoy their water front view and tbe eua; ' • of ~
lnl their boat at the front doer. Also tbe distbld ..., ..... el c:aac,.
leiture lM.111 by elln:linatfni the burdenlolDe ta' MJlliHWltw fl ... ' ' s a tare• home.
Many other advantages, too numerous to state here, cw anilllllt tll .._.
llil discrimtnaUnc wte.
A. 1elect number ot two Bedrm., two ba1h Apartme:ata.,. a..U..1119 ..S
we invite you to Inspect the two lu:xurioor; fumisbed modela at 1t1f1r C09-
venience.
ltlM $375 Monthly and Up-8uy $45,000 Mllll Up
Phone 67'517tl for f\lrt"-r Inf .. -~ fw t..,mao T,.,., .....
_.,..n-
o... ... ..... MOW!
l:ldla .... .._ nL. 2
Bra ----BR dlll lbl.,
"' ..... Qalet Eut mtDI ..,.. IDc:atile. Cd •
---AVOCADO.
am DOJH. """'
NEWPOaT-HEGHTS
• l Br.-1'% Ba. ... cpU.
·~teatmmdJWCI.
• Room .. Pool .. ao.t!
Nr.-Hwpt Sd9oels. 123.SOO.
OWNEll * ... 1643
HIGH BIAM-2 St.ry
...... lBR.J&.
Hr. a..ct.. SS.-
CAYWOOD REAL1T
.. "· Olwt lfwJ. s.g.1290
IOW'S THE
TIME FOi
QUICK CASH
THIOUGH A
IAILY PILOT
WANT AD
llAL
142-5171
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HOUlll llOa IALI U FOi SAL.I
!!'!'.!' b 100I c-. ... 1100 ,,..... .,.....,
T TRAC
CLOSEO UT .... ANIWA.IA YAUll s 2-JBROOM
to . $16,300
75 S18,5
AITll
SIS II.& n. .... ... .....
! 1'lll quar-
' BR
HOUIU pea I.ALI
"""""""" .... 1400
V1e1lll-Sol Vlsl1
~ed W' bad to
1-w !Illa ...utW 4 BR
--..a..a.~· ~~.A.Ml nr tataroom. &Sr acn.U·
tlaned • 1D1DJ more CUI•
tom llabrel. * --~ ""'· Ste ttll9 tioday. P1ul JtMI ltNlty
MT-1115 ""· m-1m HUOlf llAU"tiFULI
VACANTI
N.wport Weat home
(dmt to tbe tie.lb) 2
•ta'W blah db all thr emu me~ 2:1) Voit
" .rt ... Part ol the
fUMfln ti illlclulled at
$31.,l!O
ltex L. llM... IMlty t47-B25
llNTALS
Hw FumlthM
Vacation ltental1 2900
Huntlftlf• He .....
WATllFRONT
COMPlZl'J:LY nJRN; +
boat .Up, UM Of pool, ten.
n11 COllrt. Walldnc diltance
to oc.n. S BA • l100 mo.
3 BR • S850 mo. <2 rnonttll
m!IWollm)· AC n t. call
Jaclde 8Nla 841431.
FRQ; VACATION: WE"lL
our MaJllmOtb lAbll, HJcb
Sierra cbaJet for 1-2 W..U
in your Balboa, Newpor1
~. July n.t to Aus·
18th. 21.W87-4il690
CABIN tor ft'nt. furn., u-
~ for beddlna • ~
1H! Sleep1 T. -WK., ~ Wkeod, m;. to s un. noon)
Nr. An'owbeed It~ •
536-'223
* BALBOA lBLAND * e XLNT Summer Renta.la. llPOSSESSIOll • Ava& Now! Allo: Wat.er v.-. tor -e or Yearb Nlll'fttianl. ~
t nu . cw.
btata
Mell Ver• 1110
2 HOU SES
o« oM m
area.
bm rm
opgl&,.
to. tot
~ bllCk ...,.
~VA no
e eod.ctnc
per mo.
. Mytre
Ellat9
IR. a \la, ....
.. iSldS ....... •On-
ER
lot.~ ! $25.
• 251T
:~;r ~./ -· • -. ·-.:. • ' ' I '
1200
ILT •••
Y 5 Br · 4
.~
3-leV-
!~
de Sac.
oaly.
541.mT
ve by 22!1 can:
olfer. 3
• rm.
• blt-tna.
Ill' llChDola
2m9 Cte·
2 BR. Oii
pJAns
down.
• 6U..s!k39
cu.tom
Xlnt condl
g.py.
+ AP'r.
!
A&t..
SAatll'ICE aw tmmed. .u.. lelbol c.wt 1215
1~ .,.... OWns Jiavtnc .,.. 2
Hoama. ..... Del Mar; 2 ta 8clnM.
blfwd. tin., .. roal, ~ Pvt beldl, pla • 00.t.
ner lot; 3 BR. .2 be., bit-~ owner asT-69
inl. fMnilY nn, fr'Pl., .a..,..rt Sho drapea. ~. pr • tnd. ::.:.:.;;.c;;;; .... 1220
Larse "A" patio. Hore fenced )'d. w/ WALK to beech.
bclllt entnnDe. DIM by: on comer. 2 atDry 3 BR. 2
2831 Franc1I J..ee. bethl, ' ,...... old • $30,B .
--New loan. low dn. M2..s5CT.
POOL home. l Ice· BR., S WATER.m<>NT
be.., f.ud]y ftD., hooded br s ba. sis
frpl., btt·lns A tlJtrnlher. $11,ooo IJA" ln.
2~· •• E:&tlt
Dnifel, qlla., &Wied pr. M2-mS. Appt.
far p&ay ar rec. rm. aw. i--1===== tio, l5X30 heated pool. Walk • _ _.. .._ 1o So. c.o.t Pkza. nos ____ -_..., __ 1240
PRIVACY Trtnity Dr. CHARM SPACE OWfm ~ Putty An., 1SXJ1 llvinl
dl:niDc rm. NCJIN VAC.ANr-Offo« will room w/f.rplc,
cCJdlider ~ reaaon.bM 3 BR., % • Al!. s:n. ~· Gcrpoul 3 BR 2 only. 5t6-GST,
btt.b home on quiet tree ;;:::::::::::::==::::::
llJO, Pdnc
8J3.6«)'f
r li6fSI street. Immaculate Coron• •I Ml
t'Oiidition. doable railed .. -----
hearth f~. all built· BEAUTIFUL .
1250 .. .....
in«. service porch. w/w ••••• EX CLUSIVE
l
Hiiis
carpets, family room It u· IROADMOO
cellent lanc»eaping. Term• Harbor Vl9w
tk Award to ftt ~· lutf&et, One Gt the Drama
pa.yinent.I $195 month Sn-Winnlnl Broedmoor
dudes taxes. CALL ~USl bu eome bedc on
homel the~
plan Jffrit.ap Real Eltate et, 'nd1 most popular
• Cathedral . S.. and SAVEi baa 4 bedrooms Open Beem ceUinp . Cra·
All electric
ultitude of
enta.
low price
! 1"'ta1·
4 Bdrml, 2 t.., fannal din-doUI eourtyard,
lfte, .et> fam. rm., ~ tbru-kitchen It a M
out, drpl, ~e CCIV patio. Luxm1oul Appolntm
Nr dlle. 311M Lincoln WIJ, ne mnart<ably
CM 54&-8224 d '45,950, tncludel
acapinr. 3 BR l'ii baths, w/w car-led Frantcl--ndt
pet.I, prbaa'e diapoaal, P · OPFl'J 1 to ~ DAIL
.._gie, ODTered patio near S'lS-3920 or 54
llCboola • tboppiq. SlT.'156-lroeclmoor Homet
SlD> dn ar will consider (Otf McArthur
Y or call:
MOO
Inc.
at Crown
citlc Cout 'J'l)s. Owner/Bia'. 642-4422 Or1ve, near P&
2 BR. l'i'
Lovely + 2 Bon·
rpa, bltfN.
* EARN $9M tor T.J..C. * Htgbway).
Back Bay~ lot w..,,Jaybse. Homt1 & Income
$13.9!!0 LESS $950 or: &. s.>artdkle cond.
'1KA Ir Owner will paint. yd. + Apt. 2 BR
3 Br. bwd On/ pluter wall• us nN· Opts, d
Duat:y R.bodes/Rltr MI 6-30 $49.SOO, lOM dn. Owner * WESTSIDE * Finance. 673-Slo.1 3 BR Furn-3 BR. ~n ~. fenced. 408 Jasmine R-2
Nr 8Chooh. ltwlc· "'1Anee iahed. Ocee.n side of hlah-
ER.
64.6-9206 • avail. Shown by ICll>t· qy. S2T, 750 OWN na,aoo 8*980'J. • ~ or
Buy equltJ .-ume CI Loe.n.
4 Mnna, 2 bathl, 1 yr old, Lido Isle 1351
Ho,,,.
am -2
-!lllMY
tDry pol tfl·
zu Udn -
dote to ldt11 .l 1hp'1. 988 Let's luy a
J>aalarlno. 54Ml.22. ~tor·a dre
I BY OWNER 3 Br • 2 Ba. Bdnn 2 bsths
I Elccellent condition &c patio ' -2nd s
I Location. * 548-~0 I.isl. Stt :U2 P\8
t/ NEWLY OEC! 3 Br·2 Ba. ind call U.•· . Rllltnr nn 1 !l3on e Cpts .. Drp~ .• S900 • dn YhA R C GREER e Sl!l 'n1 nwnr-WI.AA?~ :\1111> Vin f 'l'f"
$23,500 OWNER. * 613-1503
• BR 2 badl, ~ t\ 2 BR Modin fllm TraJJier .
~·...,J~t-en~ River. Rent
ed • cleaned. $!!llklO und• by day, week or mondl.
VA IPlftllal· Vacant. Qlnta.ct Dixie: ~
altASHIAlt ltlAL TY Luftly OCEANFRONT home MT«m Eves. •nTB So. LquD.a. Privalll .,..,..
le.ch loy'1 larplnl Avail ftJr ..aan. •me
~ $1S,9"JO for 2 BR. cot· RENTALS tllp 2 blocb to beMlh. HoUMS Unfurnllhed H.. new ftoct' turn.ce,
MW ........ be&ller'. wm CieMNI IOOO JMt. f".u:fileot IUIDID~
rmtai.. LOOKING FOR PACIFIC SHOUS
llALTY A RINTAL1
53S-8IM Ev'el. -.n look no fmtbet1 For just
HOMI with INCOME a little more than ~ ftrlt
Ltve In aae 1111.s. -rent ' last montbl rent yoa
h oCMr. 4 3 BR 6 a 1 can OWN thit ' BR 1 beth ea. CS1*fdrpa • ~ Jiome, bullt·iaa, w/w CU'"
Elm. 1'llQIS Ot Cl 80 petin,(, lamll1 l'OCllD• Ott-........ ., -•. ..,. ....,,...
R.D.llltellMfty tins· DaD'Ollllaa -eell
llT·Jll9 aw dltaJls. A&t-MMtci
$22.SOO C.l.Y. ee.te MIN UOD
SOL VISTA Spedlll 4 Bdrma. 2 badll. 1 yr old. 11.ardwood noon. •Jee. ldt. all blbll, cpb, drpt. l*do. 3 BR 2 taa.. c:pta/drpe. partially ~ clOle to Pat R...,_n Rlty.
ldlla ' lhPC. $225 mo.
147"55' * 19M152 Avail Jtme 29. Drive by
OWN1lt MU9l Sell 3 BR 1 % 96S Pa= CM tbell baths, '1'twrnllouae. $1000 you phone · for llPt·
1lllY eec:row • ~ pym-CLEAN! A1TRACI 3 br-2 nts. Below M~t price. ba. Lovely tie yard! Nr· llTMC13 Mesa Verd• CIC. Avail
IMM.AC 3 mt Twnba. Fully July 1. $225•mo. * 56S1S5
malnt. PoolJ • recrea. New QUIFI' 1'• 1 BR. older pee>-
'"' cpta. dr111. all appl + pie, FA beat yard care, no
wtr condo $11,125. -db. child/pet $15 mo. Ml-4901 962-2242 /2-BR UNFURN. I TWNBSE/2 Br.-1~ J!a. I HOUSE. * $125 ' AllQm9 51.4 Joe. Cpta, ./CALL ~UOt Drps. B1tns. $13,850. Mama • A vailaSle, tbe lit Brooldlunt/Owmr m..• 3 BR. carpeta, fmoed
yard. $JJ5. &C-21&3 Weatmlnat.r 1612 3 BR, 2 ba, blC b9ck 1U'd
BY o.n.. 4 Bit, 2 bathl, fend, $1SO mo. 100. W'llca
Bltm. frplc, cpta. fncd patio flll-901.9
and ya.rd a)J In. 241 Pl'· Morini Eut-Mut mell. tao Newport IMch noo ~nr .. s.n.-s BA YFRONT • B&.lboe O>$.
s. Ana Htts. 1630 3 BR, 2 .ba. dock -s-ce ltW
1ma.ll boe.t. Avail J ul>' L * J Hiii Oii %-ac. $4440 Will fumiat.-$.150 yrty lie,
annual Inc. X1nt Invest W\fum. Re&. ~
S.A· H,ta. $39,500. ~THI CorMa del Mir nso ...... ~ 1705 I 3 BR, 2 BA, carpets, ~
urn.E DOUGH place • ...,.... DOI)..
tm'1 0 HOOSE ~
It.EAL Sl'EAL fllr Veteran 3S51 w/C.J. elldlWty. SpedOlll Lido 1"9
3 Bit 2 bl. w/w carpets, CLEAN I: SH.UP! S Br, 2 mod/kltcb, $Z,9"JO -No Dn
i:mit $151 mo pmt. ba. Near ~. aouth pa&.
M.lalon Rlty 494..ml Lee.le $2'1S. m-soi 7
e MONARCH BAY e Huntington IMch 3400 • Perfect for 2 tamlUea. e Pvt-Beach! Avail by w\t. 5 BR. 3 be.. lam rm. -1m-
• JUNE 19th to JULY 15th mini pool. $300 mo. IMM· e CAIL (713) DU ~ 9G.a588 after I p.m.
LAGUNA BEACH
Beautiful view boiJdintt lit• S.nta Ana 3610
at Lacuna Beech 16,000 $295 MO. Beu CUltom 3 BR. eMll. Call for appt. ~11 am, fun rm. Lee ysrd. m N. er ewa, alter 6. 64& '1ri65 Baker, SA. or fwya I:. 7407
HIU.TOP/PANORAMIC VU!
~I 3 br • 2 ba. Den, Condomfnlum 3950
~.Deck.~. 3 BDRM ~ wfttl re-$33,!iOO * Owner. 496-7413 frtc .• ,,..._. dryer. 2 pools NEW 4 Br, 2 ba MCllWdl ' (llanrouod. Brookhurat Bl,y 11> _... white water near Adams. aoee to ocean.
vi_ew. $11,000. -~ $140 mo. Call 54&-3711
APARTMENTS Duplex• Unfum. 3'75 FOi SALE 1980
2 ·BR DUPLEXIBLTN'S 15 APTS. $14U03.22 ~ prage.. Older ~
Needs S!'i0.000 cub. pie pref. $115 mo. 54N93T
57' Hamilton, CM., ~ ~ENTALS RENTALS Aph. Fumlshed HOUMI Fumflhed
Co.ti Melt 2100 Costa M.11 4100
$25 Wk. 2·BR/Plf'tly tum $100 .
%..c yanl. 1%-mi to Beach! e Studio Ir &ch apta.
2210 PACIFIC Cf:ront). e Incl Utlla .tr Phone ~.
60-4676 or 642-9877 • Maid Service • TV avail.
2 BR Gar. Patio. Tropical • New Cale I: Bar
aetttni for adlts. l bllc 1bops. 2376 Newport Blvd. ~
ALL UTIL PD. * STUDIO $140-646-2267 furn. Lawn, Trees. Adult.
Newport IMch 2200 ~mo. * 2335 ELDEN
NASSAU Palma. 1 i 2 Br,
I/I turn I: unf. Sllli • $140. Htd
pool. 117 E 22nd St. 642-8645
We Have 2 or 3 S45 SML trailer utll pd. 1 Choice Bayfront & m8n. no pell!. Nn r Bay
WaMrfront Rtntala 54.'i-J.Ml • 529-3107 7 PM.
both Summer Ir Yearly
FURN & UNF'URNTSHED Newport Be1eh 4200
lay & Btach
RNlty Inc. DELUXE New Watefront.
2025 W. B&lboa Blvd., ~B Wk or mo dur!J\i July &
673-9200 IAJ. • 3 wk11 of Sept. Pvt-pier
& float. Slps 8. 67U&43 or
2 BR HOUie Fum. <213) CR 4-0686
Bl.k to ocean. Sl.25 yrly. DELUX F'um Duplex Bay.
fl7S..4688 front. llt2 8R.'1. July. Acg,
• s.pt. 2lT Ediewster. NB
Ltauna a.tch 2705 21.3 : 447.o294
./ S80 INCl,U'I'IL! * SUMMER • 4 BR, 2 BA. ./ UPPER FURN APT 1" blk. to Victoria. area t Nr-The Arche.. 642-6583 view! Owner ... 4lM·221S
N'l«f t1 Gn~11tan1le~ Thr uut<'ker you C"l\11 F'lnll fl tvHh I WMI 1d1
'°"'~ ,, . .,,,~f'\t vntt _,,
S10 1 R jft. w/w cpll
4rpt. ..... Jld· 918 ~ ....... ~l.29T
100
C/i/I ::Dr.
LAGUNA IEACH
LlmS7 JWa/Unfurn
B&dlielor • l It 2 BR
8tepe to 8bal'9 ' Sbopl
Lldel"9 5351
UAL UTATI ....... ., r..-,, .... 20, i.,.1 DAILY Jin.or 17
* * * * * *
~ Went? --~· Gert SPICIAL CLASSIPICATION roa
NATURAL IOIN SWAPPllS s,.dal ....
5 llnt1-SthMl-5 Web •uua -~ *'" 1"Cl..UO. ~ ... -................ c. .......... t-vou• ..... _,,,. .._ ._. ., ......._
.......,,,., ... "°9 IAU -l'IU.011 4*L YI . PHONI 642-.5671
Te , ... YfNlf Tr ..... 1 Parada.. Ad
TRADE up 2 • 4 pleaet $!!011> £QUIT'l In '-Br. ~ fM Bch ~a. s.Ba. Beadl Hot11e., S..,,. mow equlfy In 11-Z U'nits oewl Now rented for sm-
• 4 plexes. Sale I tmlta. mo. yrly. TR.ADE tor
Furn. G.C. 7 x Crea Boat. Camper, OR T T t
Aaent SC-3497 a.1'DO.
rt n. O>uter Set.eel• -N-Ew--Dt-,-BR.--2-Ba._P'._un._1
1 s • wrs tor $15.000! with sio.ooo equity. wm
R-1, SOXllO emcta. Fnu.ntam TRADE for Tl>'a cr 8ea.cb
Valley oa 4tti, Nr . Talbert. ~· 0iet Sa!tlbry,
SSNC!OUS I N!MLY ~ JUb' Co. 181 E. lTtb St. ~Rltr_. -~-,--~,...--..-~ 2-A. * &C4l1 Immaculate 't5 Barracuda
rm., pool! Tnlda $13,000
eqalt1 for Jp. new cimnpfJ'
er motor home. $16..900 rut Ille. M&-1131 MMSll5
eve.
Dre! Plymouth 10.<nl miles. e Mir. Stlllty, ).k ~ ~ 6200 Tr.de for Ferd or Qey. e nr,.. npi. ~ I: __ ...______ P.U. ~ bl or u.me with
Sbalis! rm leue. M l-1'50'l 5 ~. 111bdivided, sn, Overcab camper. f'15.4'I05
TRADE tor trailer, 2 Bed-
n>ClCD b:Juae, larle rwDpJI
room, ccmer lot. Room to
bulJd Oil back. Fencld.
VER VALLEY, ''Land o1
]Abe." SUDO/acre, 20" WATER SOP'TENEll (0111-Huatfbf!" 8.-h S400 a Wl-4640 after 1 p.m. ipnl) Auto. Omll 6 metal
Oceanview hot every A.pt. --------* Call 536-.T798 *
Leue !rem Sl50 mo.
" • -• -~ -"'-or week erldl Brim tamm. nm.. Adap. -~ -" • -. ...-. ......-ter unit. l'OR U~ Mn Ital. 1111 Guftlld. -STitl--WB-ERR-Y--LAND--!-
Meath to_Mo. Avail.able
Ibo CLI1'F Dlt. 494-2449
H.B. pyt It. 1 Ba N aa 1J.Ac. SHAJU1; or OASH! in« OR! * ~
f AlllllllJ VtllA Cu&Jd, can tum. 9S2-89M CALL m LA 2-4758 TRADE M' l1BERGl.A
.. W. DD.UX 2 BIL epea, drp&. =======;;; St..OOP ~ 4, Inboard H A V E : $1l5M equity
Prime Apt O>mpla. N9
WANI': Oear .._ er dlQlla
u ~ da « dear ccam'L APARTMINTS
111122 ..... Ana""· a Ba .,.. 8*alta ool:y
Od ... .,.,.
llMIC1 -
blll patio, Wtna. $112. Mauftt. a ~ 6210 Aux. BEAU coadl 1'0R J6. Hf.-:2 CIOme prop OD~
------. ----5 AaES. ~ SU, l\'inc -· mm. ..... 1. 2 • S Bil .. Low rmt! VER v A1.1..EY •'JADd o1
HC:i a ·•• ,.., Alt• LUia'° a-j ..... 6 m WE
'Ir lli'·'m * dn. acr.-afla-I p.m. .,..._ V-.. __,_ ---1'nde .......
Raalliar -.um
' 8DftX ~ l'ii ... Cll' _,,,,,. ......... Clll: Dee CanbJ c.ta Mele 5100 llltna. pcd. dll6 *-.nt.. BEAU fmnlahed Sandpiper Mf..UIM w ~TClC
--------11154 lldclllp 1A 9cm Apt. at Palm ne.ert.. 2 BR --------
40NJ!S~bl--· ..a IM.500 tQaltr. WAHi'
4tDIBaboaleNBlmtlar
.,... Alt OkMDltti
f13..7G> m.f]J'I.
HlllOR 2 -$18.ooo 6*-061• aft 6. ~~~~
l.entlll W_.... 59'0 Exchangea, I. E. 6230 Dieto O>. r...cb or srape
*AlMlmn~AJ
Ex:emtM lBM tn--
writen. TRADE for
icD:lud boet mob' a IEE NS 1 BR -' apt or U:.. flllr ~. Ceo. WUJ1amaon
mature womu In OIM or BROKER I Owner' will ex-Rlty. 6'13-alO. ·~* "°"' $100
MaD:l.08. FURN ' UNFOftN cutta lllcluded>
N'B r .. _. y...., •-~ s.10.D equity tn _W_Gll_: _Jnclewoud ___ or_So_Bay_
or ..-.-· 'v .-. f I o ~ Fciler1on home on Rm. m.a;r .._ Area, TD'a IDe or Ef«oe,
...... -=n. best Samy RUh Havt; 85,0IJlt aq fl M-1
VETERAN Bach atudent locadoa, for belich -· ----"· '-1 BR ,._..... ,.......,... It 'frilllex, CM. All or •-=-~urn or DOM;IJ I)' oc clear boe.l Pennsyl·
TRADE >6' IUIQtGU
SLOOP Slil8 4, lltlcmd
Aux. BEAU ccncl! rat In-
come prop on Ona:we o.t
PrU>c onl)'. m.m4 e99o Apt. Under $100. Nr 00:.. "'9a farm boUle t. 3000 (>Mi. R. & Wa.Ha Tl'H!n'O
1 ts 2 8k Fum/Unlum W<d ni&bta· ~ aq ft. 4 BR 3 baths. wori(.. *
l Ill ~ WILL Talat good care diop.. C&ll (114> 337·1l18 * * * * * ----~-----------d J'Ullr e.oeta Mtm 3 BR. IUSINESS •M HeaU!d Pools. CU1d Care bolne; -.. Pr..-F1ua.-1aL Oen•. Adj. tlO Sboppinc -M5.!m; pt. Pb°· ._._ ~
ANHOUNCIMINTS
and NOTICIS
SIRVICE DlltlCTOttY
Chlkl Care 6610 nm Petawia Wa.y, at lilr-o -ISP--EM--7£!-.-N-eed--..,..,.--... Opportunlti• 6300 Leif MU
bor 6 Adlunl. Com Mesa. b aterqt up to $10 mo. SOMETHING SPEX:W. tar
Ml-8S'IG Ht( Bcb ar s.I Bdl. CaD WTD! Rrl'An..ERS, SUB-KrlTEN/ CAUro COLOR. 1 child. LoYtnc care by IU'f, m: aM191. WHOLESAL.i2S It omrn.. June 5tb. Vic: G-bloc:k ~ • wW. ~.
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
The Hamor Heilllts,
WANT 1-Blt A.Pl, with ... M~ I: Women/FUil or Part Mapolill/Ql. * 5'8-31M ---------• ~ Wl9t ol Bm1>or, time. Xlnt oppor tor you.to SMALL ma Calk. Mllhoc
CID WU-. 56:ait MID money. Complete line m loc'. ADI to '1\dor'. CdM _C_ow_1t_r_.C_t ... _1 ___ 66_2_0_1
<ti Liquid Cmcentra~. Very area. R.ewud. ~. fl).
'"1>! GARAGE ar Clar • • • autictantial Co. Oppor to in--========-"*" far amall ear. Nr-11'-..-..anau or ~. ii de-p .. I. JIAS Speci1I Off tit
ftie 1'frrlce. mllm llftd. CALL 546J559 · 9"°"' ...., IMellion Wants ~TE adept at C"JUP -~-.. -C.--Stfl--
Rooms for R .. t 5995 IP""kirw, iw:rvltinc • ma-aep.nr
I will balid .. 4 BR. ! ba
home (UG aq fl) f« 1be
low price of -.. cm J"IUJ'
lot. ALSO Rsnodftbw A
Room Addfticm. Don
537-0380-
Youfl! S BLKS cc) badl! 11aJ11 ~ line above aver. fncome. __ ...., 1 p
S m a 11 lnyesf. ..... For ·--.. • or .tee. O>k>r TV. $10 wt qa. ·~., FREE COURSE IN
New 2 & 3 BR 2 Ba Apt1 421 8th st., Runllnfton Bch. app't 521-21'65 v. "· Audet lcnic Se•w•lllp
~ ~· Mn· Olrillmaer UJtGE bedroom for 1 • 2 K&\'IS. * ESl'-1 years. •.117 Cl New --. LEAVING for <Pvwtt or SctU o.dbcted • r nnamon ladies. Kit. prt•. PIUV. BA. BAWAiiREAs! * Call: by Balboa Power SQDadron Renoelenua • • • • • • • • •
ROClDI A&flttc9 • • • • • ~ .....•• r.. 59-JOIC m-tm ...,6611l'l __ . -·----.,.-..,,..----KR. NORJUS. U 8-3632 d United St.ates ~
I SEPARATE l·ROOM TASTEE P'REEZ, Oranp ~ Newport Bir-l'nllk J. ~
Uc. Bads· a.ts ... ~~ Llt.ltM, ...
-~-;.-_
• ap.doli• 3 Bl". .. 2 Ba e Swtm Pool • Put/peen e Fll!l · Indiv/lnd'7 fac'la e Adults & FamilY areu
1M5 Anaheim Ave·, C.M.
640-5769
Only $112
Luxurious Townhevte
2 &!rooms. 1 ~ bdl9
Elec kitchen. Beautlfld btc
pooL Near shoppin(.
HARBOR TOWNHOUSE
2217 Harbor Blvd. C.M.
<Entrance alsO on~1t'Dlml)
lennuda VUlate
/ B.A<JtELCm PAD $»mo. QQ. Grcm 10ll sirb 25M. bor Yadrt Oub. T P.M.
' 60416 • 6C.$IT1 lCK cln. Prime loc. p .0. 00 JOU .... ID1lllle lar dano.
REAL ESTATE Bes m&. om Mea. ~ ~~in u;;
0.neral = = ~.~ !"!: C4Ulllly Club ~. can -Addl--Uona---.--Jtemodti-------
lneome Property 6000 RudJ. 213699 5m Fred H. Genrick • Lie.
Falt CM. Owner. 645-115.1 um; wellht 11.faly with ITWOO * S..Zlft
lnftltment Back-2 yn CO.IN LAUNDRY 1%-yn old. Dex-a.diet tableta Only 91c: NEW CONSTR •• Additkm
Recent c~ I by a S/ Goad B-. Hunt·Bea.cb ~•· at TURNER DRUGS. Remodelinc -IJc, Coatr.
L Wllllts to unlolld d!is ltyi· Will dea.J. Owner, ~ Newport BeM!b * 548-11S3 DON HAWE 60-lM
Wt 4-1Jlex. 0ve-$4ln> an-UN'tON Oll Service Station, PYT tanstiptloo 6 Under-REMODEL* ADDmON
ma1 jp'm&. Eircel term! ()D. lremrndou1 loc. I« leue. coYft' won done.1. A. Hey. CONCRETE T. Erlcboll
ly 1°" dn to bit TD JO yTa. 35119 Rartior Bl., OI mana, 1T41 W. L1ncoin, Ana-Uc-Olotr Dy/Eve 6C-4C3B
ludreye Investment beim. 63.S-58M ROOM ADDITIONS
176-$30 838-751.18 eves. Money to LNn 6320 ALOOHOLICS Anaaymoaa E. c. FRANKEN 6'&&31
13,500 sq. ft., C·2 WE represent several hun-Harbor Area. ~ m.m4 =======
• Lot with building dJ'f'd &end!n who att com-24 Boan. Carpet CINnlng 6625 e Eut 17th Street. petitiw in rats and tenna * A L 0 N E1 Meet liDcle e Com Meas for ail types o1 loam S.SO.-adults. C>raJai9 County. Box WALL TO WALL CARPET
•Price '65.<0> ooo and up. Cail Mr. 3247 FnllertDa. TT&-.m cteanlnr· 30"' DISalUNTI
Spec 2 & 3 Br. l'li b&. R.ea.lonornlcs. O>rp. S46-S040 hYue, 4M-9'724 SERVICE DIRECTORY e u Mm e
Cpts. Orps. 2 pooll. 7 UNITS • NEW
Nr sbopn'i • abla. Industrial SIP $7'2.500 Morft11-. T .D.'1 6345 AMWtri!?f Service 6505 C1rpet Laylnt a
rnoM S99.5C WEBB REALTY * 6.11-44.10 --------bpalr 6626
Mnif'. 221.f College QC #2 SELL or LSE!By OWNER. JO" DISCOUNT Oii ~ Answwlnt S.rvtce
BR. 11Plil lrvPI, lend pe;.. • Store 50x32' /Rear prk'g. hi TD due 3 1ftl"I at 7..2 ICtep • • • 2
&. front • rtM ent. fu1lY • 2112 Harbor/CM • .JE ~7561 interest, a ccel. clauae. ~ TAI ed ......a quest for notice. Traitor 12 Ill
<.i>t'd, drp'd. hrat .,..... R-4 7.0NEI> for 88 UNITS. year Oty emp4oree. Call on VftUr phette l~ ba, xtn nice! sm. Adj. -o.c.c. NEW S~t. Qarlie Street 6*181.1 ,--
The <111.ldrer!. Sl'.r.l Incl ow.. 131.i lM.IMul RJtr 5CU1'61 ====:::==:::::==... 24 Hour S.rvtce "'° 1978 Maple. 64'2-12'14. CALL Ml 6-8000
6060 Money WantM 6SSO =:;::;:===== EXPERIENCED JAPAN.
RIPP1E PAD! :I-rooms sriO-lualne1a Rental
mo. * Fix as l' lllte! 00 --------WANT to borrow S'l'iOO 11 labyslttlnt 6550
~"E. GARDENER Compl.
prdeJrlQC aervict. Free
WHAT U WANT'. sc.trl'6 Rttalt Store or Offlce leCOlld trU1t cle.!d. &46-&1 --------estimates. * ~1332 EXPDl JAPAN&V: Gwden-or 642-98T7 Prominent location BaJ.. oc 173-7413 Reliable Babyal~. et· Oimplete yard Semce.
Free estimates. * 5'8-'1"1151 LARGE Deluxe ~ BR. 2 ba. boa lllaod. '10 sq, It. ANNOUNCEMENTS 't:Sc an bour. Available
elec. bltn.s. cpts. drpa, kar w.w. carpet. SlOO per end NOTICES Anytime. 644.ol87
pra.,e Adults Furn or mo. Bkr. 548-8636. LOVING CARE/MY ROME. HAtn.INC, aen1 yard clea-
unf. 240 16th Pl· MM432 C-2 1,000 SQ. FT. Found CfrM Ads) 6400 Inf.anti, to 3-yn. * Btwn: up. Trees, ahrube, lvJ ahap-
(
5200
Deluxe Apta.
W/Priv. 801t Slips
2 & 3 BR -2 8a
from S2Jll mo. e CARPETS e DRAPE-'
e SOUND Pl\OOr e HTD SWJ~I POOL e INDOOR PARKING
310 Fernando. Bal. Ptnn
on th~ Bay·'..! bl from rerry)
BAY FRONT APT.
Lux. 2 BR, 2 BA,
No children. mi peta.
$'295 mo.
10 to Ii druly :.-18-150l
'ii Btk. Harbor I< Newpol't MAN'S WRISTWATCH on Baker It Fairview. 500040 ed or remoftd. Bed wwed-
Bl .,""' M t.na or lprayina'. Rototillinl. v .• ..., o. Huntington Beach. IdenWy. BABYSlTTING in my Home. rock work. ~
543-34-01, 548-3270 Eve. ~ 1/20 Harbor It Baker, CM area. -----,-,--,,,--,,--
CM ~ 7922 Dave's Lewn Servfee Store 45xlS'. 696 wil ~· • ......: FOUND: Stingray bike. Vic. Exper. Free ewtlmatea
adjoins 270 W1l Y .., 1"''' Springdale • Heil, Hunt. BABYSITTJNG In my home· 96'2-1152
bldg. "°" under colllt. mo Belldl. Identify. 847-9779 Oll!ta Mea Are1. mo. Genco Rlty. &U-4422 .,u. .-. GARDENER, experlenced POODLE I Black Female. .....,.~ HARBOR AREA STORE 17x40 -$160 Vic: O\d F'arm. in f'ounl81n
B H ......,. IN r1 Bl C _..... I 6590 Reliable * ~ usy lhuur ~po v. Vall~y. ~ alter 4-ptn a.,..... ... r "I intenect 75.000 Daily tr:1f· --------_......._______ EXP Japanetie. G~
[k count. ~. SltEPHER.D PUPPY Mate, REPATRS +ALTERATIONS Ma.lntenance. Reu. Rates.
S60 . SMALL STORE BLDG. i11 Harbor Shop·i Center CABINETS. Any al.ze job. Clean-up. 192-sDi
2136 NEWPORT BLVD. ~ 23 yrs exper. 54W71J EXPER JAP~
Colla Mesa. * 54S-S22'1 PAP.AKEET. Watl!Oll Aven~ * FtRST·RATE CU'pentry LAl'lDSC".APE .. CLEANUP
tireii CM. ~. Alteratl.ons • rep&.in1 • b/inl. Maintenance. Mack 847~
6070 ======== Formica. ReH· 646-9583.
La.t 640l NO JOB 100 SMALL! AU ~~~~: ~~
Larr: Rrward! Male choco-~· Add, remodel. pa-LANDSCAPING. e 531·'1m4 0"1CE450 MONTH!
New Q>ta It Drps. Private
Restroom. VERY NlCE!
Call Mr. ~M. 64U94.1
late paint Siamese, tq U1 tios. Real!Ot'lable. 96l-83i1 JAPANESE GARDENER
Wutring1on. Pacific s. n d I EXPER/ Rellable matnt.
area. 5-16-245.'l Cement. Concrete 6600 Reas! Mo. rates. a.ms.
SMAIL GRAY FEMALE CEMENT work, &II types. No EUROPEAN GARDENE:ft
Newport Hgts. $210
1000 SQ-FT. Luxury of~.
Cpta, Dt111. 2 rurrm•. $250
111(). * ALL or PART.
1770 Orange I CM. 543-6713
CAT. Vic Wl'ittler Ave. CM job too amall. Fee eatim. e LANDSCAPING e
FllT' missing rrom rlrht i;ide H. STU'1..ICK 548-8615 VERY reu! 5484U7 evf!S.
2 of body. 548-2648 Patios. Drtv~ys. Wal~. C.alllomia Lawns & GIU"des
flw DAil Y PD.llT l'tt . Low iu 30c/1q-ft Servi~ .......... CINnupa.
<"l•Hiflplf rrrl' F,11tlmat~ 54.'l-2Tl!l Nt>W lllwn!t 642-1939
BR, Carpets, 2ar11i:t, l>atso. 2 ROOMS It rit.rar" Cos~
Adults. Yt'11rly 100[; H11.,...,, MllM. flOO· in<'l util J11rnh-
Pl11rr l4~-.\:W. 11r n 642~. M2·!!044'
l
·~lal
lMDa Labcntories bu •
jalt oppwtumty tor • man
~ In med'ian1ctl
..... -Electranlc m. .. .._.~·To
qmltf)t ~. h 0. tel
have at \tut 1 years of
propeeiinly re.poolibJe
~ta tn El.ectro.
Nec:Mnlcal cleaJaii prefer-
-In commerdal pro-doct deTetopment.
CALL W.lu.4
.
'
Colli11
la~io Co.
197GO .............. .... ,.,. ....
m.4600
All ............ l'ftkwed
OD 0Mrtt wiCla m 1llM
toward Race. Color.
Qeed llf' Sa.
A1C011ti1g
Assist11ts
With • •·1
••• d .... ,_.. NClllt ...
llillllW ........
ow.a a.-... ---............... .,,. .....
HUGHES
500 Syperter ....
........ lwft, Calif.
POll'nCHJ
AnllabAe tmu .... tef7
Good bmet1b. TOP
aJaria APIQ ID ~ c..t.Meea
Conna..c.nt Ho.pit•I
861 CENTER tfl'.
cm'l'A M1!SA
WOMEN-GllLS
M •Pest tlllle
Mor-.-Eftl.
WI&
•
West Coasf ·
T ..... & lull. Sett•• 2111 S. 11a1a St., S.A. • e;t 545-71'6 •.
Ull2'7 Ge. Gr. BL, G.O. It,~
537-71 11 .·
..._... 8-ctt. Cam. .
SM•S
121 1'. I.-p,d)
776-29m ..................
LOOK AHEAD ~·:
To Y9lr,........ ....
!few O _J_ •.
'JIDf~ -~
l lBll~
'1401 6 3liO
' Sea etarid-Type /PBX~
lt.T.I. Sdlooll ~ THE
~ ICbool9 In ()r.
use OJuntJ aatt.orized to
tram by the mne mee.om
med by IBM ~ ,
TRAIN HOW PAY LA~
DAY OR EVE. a.ASSD . M.T.I. .
BUSINESS SCHOOLS
%100 No. Main :.
Suta Am Kl 1-a72
lMiltCHANOtSI POR MIRCHANDISI FOR
Tuesd.tJ. ~ 20, 1967 OAJlY-PltOT" D
PITS & LIVISTOC1C TIANSPORTATION TRAHSPOITATIOH TltANS ltTATION TRANSPORTATION !!;,I AND TRADE SALE AND TltADI
fumll_.. IOOO Tele¥1tion l205
MIRCHANDISI POR.
SALi AND Tit.ADIE
FREE TO YOU
.-... aao faalantt 9010 ~! f52t """oort...rt A1ffo9 9600 u..t Cen 9900 UMd Cers 9900
Riil llW
MUST Dllpcm of 2~ MU • "· ftlrPa sloop, .. I FT. "' c:Q.. sa.. ... PORSCHE CADILLAC FORD --------ruue.. Ttx. en ft.II Ind Mii.! lk' 'z llteel riulas. .._ •IO"lfll!A. ... ice ----------------
Color TV's
$6 MO.
~ £!• Jdabort • lllha~ tun 1111tcn of dlit WHa U It :':':P. deep 4. ~ dleill. dnma ._ demi. Pmt90n: C1111rio1iet 1980. 1960 CADILLAC cctNERT. -· ...... tten, ~ ~ 1tra1n and wm .,. -.. .,. = 1 .._ EwUip Wltl• ~ .....,,. • l. Excd eamd. SIJOO. Eva. sum Full power and alt
Im. Need.a IJ)ecla1 home . aratal~ u u a pa.lr. PJ'ad _. call \JWNS· ~ "'-*. 141.-.. Ks25T7 aondltlonlni. Excellent ND-
Aa. othen. S46-0415 be-npt for quJdl'iale-5J2.S OIUril9.... 2mG Acacu. SA UCW-. {. ning ear. S25 Del. lo.a.c.)
be '· G/2'J ~m1an ~. 6 mos. JO' c::maGml Yawl. For twn MMm Dr. 6 Ordlanl) RENAULT 8 · J. OffiYSLER nee to ll*lal aood home, Slit • tu. All lboU. dmttt' ....... of 6125, IMPORT DMSION
No Depo91t • ~ SerYb llwahle ~ black and A.KC $150. m.«m ENa, VJ. 7/t, t/11. 711:3, 7/30. m.a .... ~ ... RENAULT DAUPHINE s':!m Harbor Blvd. c. M.,
ALL RDrr ... lft)' YorkJ tnlxAld tie~ TRANSPOITATtON Call.... s.~.a·n I .... ExttUmt 'l'nlnlporta.---------• • • can apply to purdiul. low.-dllldrea, Sood watda ~ B * '6.5 a. ~~ tian tar tbal ~ faraQJ '65 CAD Sedan ~ vtUe, Full
R..,t from the llG ONI doc· 541.ma, MIO Boats&. Y•h 9000 • lllM Witmer Gold.S 1 Wee.....,_.. ...... ! car. 1i1aa1 ocber Aow priced powu, l.mmacu.late cond. Call llOW CUTE _ _. ...--.,_ Will -......... ilr ~ ~! 12$ dd. (o.a.c.) $3195. HZ-9532 • • • ' rur0> ~ • • ......_ ol ae4.,_,.,1l&Oll. r-"' B. J . ODlYSLER ' Muix£ lfAnU. ' 521•7555 DpotwMJDll • Terrier ....... .-.. IDM _. m-mo :--~~ c!.~ ~ IMPORT DJVISION
_...,. Wffka ~1159 Cl'JJJ IO.&T ,. .. ~a~M 20' .!hart; ----u~ 81•-"' C ~ .• .,.. • Tl/ LAND W I p.m. " ~' _.., at M5«1D -.....,._,,, ,,..., · -·· CHEVROLET
'65 FORD FAIRLANE
• Station Wagon • Blue
• Power Strerlng
• Automatic Transmission
• Power Brakes
• Radlo & Heater e New Wblte Wall tires
• 38.lnl miles and in ex·
eel.lent condition. Sl495 00 e h at
t>All.Y PILOT
l!Jrnploye parking lot.
D> West Bay Street
Colta Mesa BOX SPR!NOS Rellt a ...._., IARGAINS tnllitr, ...., ~r. bst.inc ========='! 9-4493 FREE n..,... FOR Speclal home. Beau abJs...... .._..a 1 rw •--------• COLOR TV or STIRIO tortoble lbell ldtten Coppel'o My wife ~ 1 mWlt .n .-.-a. 113-5%12 AUS11N ~· SUNIEAM
,, with llJove purcbue • $10 MONTH f!)'ed female 8 wkl. &GC171 5 of my bot.ta •caw .. ,... * v dlADfATOR *
or Call 642-4321 and * Air Conditioned aak for
"Space" Vehicle Buainess Manager's Ot6Ct'.
• • • • • • • • Opt. to buy. ~ lodoor. A*·r~ eame. C/21 don't baY'e room. tor tbea*' si• ~" ownenbip. 1B AUSTIN RFALEY Sim Ul5 ·-nGER'' RD9TR 1281
.-..19 PURNrTUll ~ d~'t.~No obi~·~· GOOD Home for lbc mcJatlll 14' SKI BOAT 35 HP Mere m.JIZI' .._ 6 pm. ~ fida• R~ 'lb.! bot one from Olryalierl ~ "'""" "' ._....... 1d female ... _. come. Im Sid's • '!'railer • aw. .,, -~--• _, · -..a POW'ft1'd by a Fon VS. nid :Newport Blvd., CM. 52W51 o -· • Colt Nft $1895. NOW -11' -'' 1 -~""· •I 111!11 ~well.~ In -nnilh with bid Int. lo.
OR 532-1151 • eblJdrtD. Jlll s. FaJJ.. 9'6., GLASpAR DINGY tnOer. -Anchor. ect. see tta cne ud JUG will m: oewr nklfd. ~~V=~ COLORLANDTV-Open7dya ;:~~grey Paddedpnnels -~eye. <;:°4~:::=. ~)to blo'. '10D del. -~~
$S5. D> & put Pwtla k1ttem, Need Bee• CCJDd ........... $lJ5. B J autYSLDt l'GllDd 2 lea•ea Sporting Goods 8500 .-.a .. 1 .......___ 11&9 Donet 5¥l .... EVINRUD,. E lT ~ • Rhodes 19 niPoRT DIV1SDf m? Harbor Bktd., C. M.,
19th, CM. ~ -5tR634 l'ISHERMAN JW, ft-' 81111 C.O., &!boa Im Har1IGr Bl'Yd.. c.w.., S4IM4!ll
UKE newt 2 matcbinc SlJRFBORO, "SUrfalde," t' Lane, CJI, . Stud -Cover· Beau! * ilijiiiiBi: mos NEW! ~ .. --RJN-BEAll-----=-.ll.l'INZ--.....=:-.--
cbrl. wht, Dupont "61lkon" 1". ~· ,!00.,!., practlc:al.ly MIXED mt.p. Lonble. 1 yr. $195. 111.JST m.L 'nils WEEK. , _ _. ....... ......, _,,,. Burgwxty with black hdtp,
nauc. COit $250 .. Sell Both new .•• ., ...,....,...... male tlO llome •/fenced yd. LIDO H , RE6lf ** m.JUf; um AU., ..... ~· -~ wheels. lll1mlY Sur>
U:,.'85-962-219'2 No "'1 llDID ddktren. NEW CONDmON• ,_.,,__ .. 1' • ...._ RDSJ'll. $1& lleams .in llladt, new 6 meet
•• 8' SOFA Ml1eelt1neous l600 498-2511 (Clpo, Beach> Nly FOGDd. New ~ a,-;-..;"' ... b No. tr!· Wire,......, owsdrive-. et· $25 del (o.a.c.)
GOOD COND -t'YV'VW'D.--. I •--t.. S I I .. .,_...._ eem.4 ' ' ) • cdlml Cllllldlffan, brt&tit red B J a!RYSLER. • ..... Golng out of Buslne. ~· --. • ._....., pee a ~. UU ..., • .-, 67>3Cri9 wie.blllc*Jamtar.lloehen · ·
56-0133 Must v.c•te.offic._ ffllllrb. Xlnt w/~n. Board. Rudder. ~ a * ... CiiiiliJiG SLOOP • ID doc* to daome fram.. IMPORT DlVISJ~
--------IBM elec typewriter, $1.25. MT-1017 S/22 timeL .............. 11119-F-'! Allltr ...... Top ca:id: B. J. amDLER 2IJl Hartlor BMl., C M.
Ga S.le 9022 Mi. n ua l typewriter, SSO. 2 ~ leniers, male METCALF ~ • mz. 61.>)!i;} JllPmT DIVJSION t:S40-4493======== i--'•..--.-----Elec lett~. $25. Met· 4j illn*, 1 yr. old. to good GOOD RACING RECORD aa H11t11r Bhd.. c W., lllU .. H *.GARAGE SALE * al lhel•ing, deakl. flllils home. ltNB38 6122 GOLD ANODIDD • n.aer ...._ ~ 9020 5*.tm ~ bracelet, conl cablne~; .... typewrttc.· tera dll'S. ADCBABLE ~ ~o IOC}d ~"' 1~!.!: .. :t ~ _.18 --~..nz.,..,,....,=...,,RDSJR~=-:$1:::-~=. =•-.-TR--l-.-Edr9--SHA.RP!--. neC:tlace, <mtwne ~lry. tables, .._ts, e home. Tim Ir wtlite, 2 N Gel a.t. All Wand 2r ·~·w· cabiD 8dtilla ndlls P'IB WWI Priced right! * ~ to
'64 CHEV V-8 BEL-AIR ~A-'61 FORD Country Sedan;
TION WAGON. Factory air V o •. -o, auto.; pwr. ateer. .. CIDDCL, pwr. i.teer., pwr. 1'. ..._ .. _ Good oondiU •• .,.,
window, R/H, aecret 19 cu ~~ on. re.w
ft locking compartment u/ • =,,.,,,..~,....,....._,..,..,,.---=-rear deck, etc. All Alaak.a FORD 'SB 2 Dr. Hdtop. Clean,
white w/lmmac. Li m e xlnt l'Cnd. S300 or beat of.
Grttn inter. U.S. No. 1 fer. 147-1.565
choice! BUY A "KNOWN
VALUE!"
ONLY $1885
2 'fr OK guar/GMAC terms
Tommy Ayrn Chevrolet
946 S. Coast Hwy,
LAGUNA BEACH
0pen ·w !l 494-i744 * "Buy • Kown V•fue" 1965 Olevrolet V-8 BeJ.Alr
Sedan. P/G pwr. steer,
R/1i etc. Sparkllna orig
MUSTANG
'66 MAROON M~tang. VS,
blk upbol, bucket aeats, pwr
brakes le lleerlllg. Used
only as 2nd car. Lo mileage.
S25115. 536-t193, ~
MUST sell llOW. '65 :l:>n•.
Sharp. wsw, R/H, pg, auto.
Make olfer. 544-1060
OLDSMOBILE
Mountain G1ttn! Xlnt cond. --------
tbruout! TOP DOLLAR
For woinen't &ood clotbel (lb-813 E. Balboa Blvd. mmdle old. IG-9386 6/22 1D ":__,ect CObd. . $.W cr*er. ..... 2. Head, IDdl mt. .S tap. Vf!rl lo. APPR.£CIATE! 9&U1'90
ee.9-16), linenl, aooeeneck Balboa m.11n>, 6'15-4M7 4 KJ'IT!MIB1ack a White, $SOd~. M~~ta. C.U.,, Af11ao Radio-tel. ml. .. ....,...,,. aiad. 11111ll========;;;. 2 Yr OK·iUar/GMAC term1 &or lamp, peperl>eck blm., Howlebn>bn 7-weeka old. 0 A C. .._. 1 • Grey-~ w. $UIO dd (o.u.) YOLISW ACiEN Tommy Astts Chevrolet
ONLY $1595 Late Model Uaed Can
at
~ ref.ria. defroster, B-B-Auction 7:30 p.m. 5'5-952f ' 6122 · · tine • ~. fishq B. 1· amnLER 946 S. Coast Hwy. ~. lge. ottximan, silver eerv· EVERY FRIDAY NITE . Prt~ ~ dialr. J'talltic bait tank. IMPORT DIVlllON Wll LAGUNA BEACH Jn& d!Alhet. worted kitchen· Hip quauty fmntllUnp ~ ~ ldttma. blade a SJCCl:IJ.Dft'" cle2n. At llD u.tior Bl9d... c 11.. lly Open 'til
9
4!M-i7
44 ware. Wl'OQlbt tron stand, -to the bigbest bidder! wht. 1 lll&iJtly croaa-eyed. a~ ~Saud im Newtalt' Barbor Y. ~ ~th bed mattress, tire Arco Furniture 6'2-6068 6/l2 Marty ·lodmey •..-. .., 9botts. -.liD-A....,.111=rDN.,..,.-=ffee---:-~-Spt':'.""""":lilt:-roar Volbw1C11U • Pwwtar 'SJ CIMVrolet
UNIVERSITY
OlDSMOBILE
2S5" Harber Bl.. C'Olta Meu
546-5550 with wheel, monkey pod M2-4Zil 2 Kl'M'Dl free to cood m.UM • 50tS11 * C,.._ ... 11167 *" o.r. Oeer $'iii. pm, Pb'· • PllJ' 8op dlllan. Paid b 2 •oa Wlldt1e, ~ lampt wittl Ml W. 19tb St. bomt• Lons baJr. ~ • mt. all C-ltoaDdl. I'
Jllflebinl plcturs. lmlc> (Vi:da &bop'& Qltr) CM. T-...OZ ' 30 SEA' scour • • • .... Mal ,, I ca 90U .~11 Aft Cab owr. N~ ~ •• spd. 59 OLDS ' DR Poftt atec:.-IOiict. lroJUc cedd)t. Call l!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!l!~I!!!!-, • • •BOAT W.E! DATSUN '.,. TII trammwm .nth 2 speed mg, power brakn. $200. l!l
&3111 er 91U239. POOL TAIL& s.9 a.brJit;yy....:.... ~ ~ T USll> BOATS.* Aa 11. YMJll' .. , , Ii repair *BEIGE "5 vw ale, &OCJd rut>beT, 161 tno-• E. 18th, C.M. 1J M390
NEW Ir usm ~ .. ;.-6120 Wbere1a.Sma11Powerllm .,_~Baill ormech, lSDAmnU•.HdlpSlll RlrH. Good eoad-ll«iO tor heut.inc bed· I '63 OLDS 9S-2 DJt. '1~";3~:f= 1967 BRUNSWICK Inbot.rd•OUt.SmaDPvwer mu.~ Sllftr .... finilllwitabiack msr7 $195 Good tire!, Approx·$1495.
a.cmm;, nmN: MISC. $275 VALUE ~~.2 r::: ,:s ~-See 1WIE. ............... ~IDft ,, '63 vw. Sanrool, Good n.aunt1•y BUICK LIKE NEW 545-4422
NOW $239 w/chldnl. 547.ctl, 541-9352 ~-:fA 00~ HWY/NB. MerfM....... 9035 ... ...erwcl Jo. DlL lllmt ., ........ Must sell! Pri-AIUDUll PLYMOUTH ;~~ATo~t 2 GREY female kittena I I ME 17th fbna 15th .. &VIM' "8P Outbd. Cal-~ ~ ~~ n~ ~· * S47-8892 2100 Harl>or Blvd. Applf•nees 1100
RENT aln Orange ~1992 wlm old •ery cote It sweet Sale c1aeet Juoe 2Sth, 3 PM. JO. Adapllr. Trike. Bike OIPOllT DJVISION t/ IO MICRO BUS Cotta Mesa 646·90'2'.l
l23 S. M ' ' 536-9167 On])t REASONABLE Of'. 'l'rtr, Fatm.r' tiprndtt. 21113 Hmt1or-Blvd., C M., * XI.NT COND! * TV'•·· Refrir • w a. b. r a Mechanics Tools, Acetylene FREE ldtteba. 3 black 2 FERS UJllllllktered. s..:tm 5IMm S1ilJO * ean m.23.'Zl '64 OtEVROLET Impala
Dr)'en , Oiahwuben. Op. Outfttl, Elecbical Tool.I, y ,._ 5ti1 '&r> VW BUG * . WW's. SS Maroon It Silver. 3 Or.
1k1n .to ba:J. Free Semce. A.Ir Compreuora. _ lnJ· '10T Carter ~.. Cotti Oii ~ lolt llp, Mooring 9036 Radio, V~. Bl~ Coral Bucket seat.a, Aulomalic · H--..1---n's LCYI'S or~ -CREAPt M ... u M219 llecWu .. RAT c-.i-i. ri-., m.em trans. Power ateerini 327 ~ S S S H .,.........,. n-......... , ... ..__. ... DUE lo Mfttiana1 e;qJE>----------1_..,..,._....:.._...,..,,...-=~=:---=-::=--:---cu in engine, New tirea le 18T.' ~. CM. 50-0155
F..un'ASI'tC BARGAIN! " ~ * Late model Auto. Wuber (YelJCM) ~
• • • OUM "~ D"llUUIW IUUOllO .., ~ ~ • ,.., ·-
Di() Charle, C.M. 6464ilJ eood hom ... 548-1226 eves. FREE CXJl1BSE JN aian. daaD yacht mpa F• I Cit * 't4 VW -$1095 * battery. 32.lnl mi Ex cond.
M6-3616 or !WM216 1/20 Basic Secsw ... lp DOW v.::!1: ~ ~oot. II y .:.."'If~!~-_ean __ att_e_PM_._64_2_·7968 __ * AUCTION * 2 % SIAMESE Kl~ tuny <Power or Sail) a.ducted 135.14 Bell Wq, Marina del fills ' AJUrtlls ./ '62 VW-SlWROOF, ~ 2 ·!g.~ ~~ If 1'0ll will tell or bcq weaned Is lulebrken 673-«m by Ballloa Power Sqmdran Jl.eJ, A* IDr Lois, m-4611 I BADfO, WW'&. ST95 wbeela, new carburetor,
Antlqu. 1110 ctve Winctf a try anytime. of United Stata Po.rer Olde9t FllllDdiwd J'wU: ~ 67J..2m0, 546-5676 ews. fuel pump. sm. 548-0039
---------Aoctiom Frida.J T p.m. APRICOT POODLE/ Fe-Squadrons. Newport U..~ liNts ........ 9050 ~ Dealer tn C>rur.e After 6 P.M.
A.nn'IYe" .. ry '·le Windy's Auction Barn male, to JoQely adult with bor Yadrt Cub. 7 P.M. ~ -~""'. ea.a;,. ''° vw sus..,.. ~COND&m: -CHEV--.-,-65-....,..Ca_p_nce-. ~o-R1-G-. I.. .HI ~ • -good home. 60s2SM 6/22 HUD6D'<l BA y PACKET .._, ....,.,~ •·m 1001' n.udic O..A.C roaf, $1Gl. .IW'.. • 20'15>,i Newport .... ......,_ • o.a,. .OS. Can7 On~ ().A.C. ~--... * &M-IO«I INAL owner. Low mileage.
•• AT BehlDd ToaY• Bids· Mat'll 7 WK.°"'~ cocm u Sa1l1Dc mode!. BeM. B A: Olll ~7 COSTA CAI co '62 V<LVO 544 Sport.. ML F'adar)' air. power, new 'Ger• S.le Price.I RCA Sttteo AMI.FM 2 cal>-All bllodr and white.~ W Ladlrop. ~ o.au. brake& " battery· v~
l'uMbaw Sale -C'4 Cea !nets ortc COit over Slim. C/22 incl. C.S... niD <:0¥«, .Prt· AJf'Cr11ft 9100 • idnt <UM!.~ tins. Siil>. tires. $1995. 962.3090
.__... In Bot6el -er... Xlnt tone ' qual. $200 firm. GERMAN SHPPHERD ~ perty, 6T3-4m, 56«1M.,. 19 llmW a.ii. IC-C4l-'66M. ________ '57 OtEVY new 301, full race,
etc. Ortnce naur cmtom bltn pies to .,ad home. IC-24211 .,, Jr aou.s Craft Oade. I 'II. acssNA no m In-°'81 l :ll 1D » Dlilb'
9700
dual quada. d oted J 1pd. "JM ....,,., a..lao" aimertlble couc:b. oric c09l 112:1 fuJl1 ~ Dal ...... 2 !l*l ti.me. Dual ~ • Auf9e W..... ood '-Au M
1• & J'l'lh St. OJlla Iii-. t80t Rll S59. ~~«1*a CUT JllCIPSe9 to pd home. Mad.Int cbiUra, Air . ....._ SlO.ZO. 64Ul5.12 "' JACMIAI ~9438"' aey ext~•·
Into table) f7S, 982-9921 ._ 6123 WiD 11oCri1b for ~!! WE PAY • • ·
S.WI"' Mlchlw 1120 FABULOUS DEAL CONCR!n: tnclnerator 734-.3181 * 123.-3231 M919rcycles ,_ --.,-5-J-1.&-~--.Al--1 CASH ·ir; CHEVY n 2. dr. Stick, ..-> ~..v Rlt.H, WSW. XI.NT COND! LATE MODEL S-er .-. Full kit at c.u'tUme ~lry: (amall) 548-43(1 5/2l 26' RICHARn90N cum '15 BSA. Xlnt cond. aP:lo 3.t $ 4 .... ....... 673-'18llO afttt 4-PM.
1Dc mach1be In modern waJ. aeD all ar pert ReUOllablt! 4 beau ldttem Qi.daer, OldJe bat Goodiel c.n dYS 892-3096. Aft I can £4qipped wtaa nilo. tar..ilr, 56 BEt,AIR vs Spt Cpe
ut camole No au.chm ti Exquislte aelectioa; ideal 546-0S 1/22 Appr . U«JO. Sale priee -m..2115 aafnmatic ponr *8iac far wd can• lnldl:a just ~ Runa good $1115 ':o ~ to~ make :i, for bullneu plt wbo lib 541-7l91 I 'M GJLERA l'r.icc lltred and tactary * ..-ilitiaainc. call • tar ,,_ ftltim«tl> 673-7(13 or 646-4563 :toabo..;., 09ftCUt. dam, ftriet)r. 536-'1362. ~crus~ ~ 16' "GLEN L" <ndau .... ped $'.B). a.-wtft .... . &a01H CllYIOlE1 '64 Chev Impe1a ltJpa' .,rt,
dtslp ete. 5 ye., puU ~'-~ ~_:_.~ ~ ... ~ ~ ~ sn-8369 $3695 R It H, PB, PS, Xlnt CODd. :::U!f;~•c!t.~ :;-'"~·N;,~ PITS&LIVISTOCK M7•~~,.~ s~u~: = SIAIUlllY IUKI .wt~s:::'::""' 98U7'5.
· tanm of SS per IDClath. JW reoanl 11et, metal lnminc Oop 1125 18' r .nwr IApstnle • 11p -. * Call S.JIZ2 BaatfnPID 8Ncb ·~ home demonstra~, =uportable tJ•11t1wrtttt. SILu,,_ TOrv POODLES Gf'l1 di· New cover 6 .. Matchless S00cc Dirt 2W ~ ea.do Kl t-3331
.... m.at&. ' . ' ·Y&<n 'J: CUlldom. Good ct*ICI. $1'100 --A U-COlta Mesa M6-9022t========---------RUMMAGE * OPI'IMIST CHAMP 1todc/ AKCR.EG. "'~1124 Billie. Ex. cvnu. .._ a-9900 I '60 COMET WAG. with
COMET
M~cal Inst. 1125 a.us. ~ PRI~! • 8-wks/MALE . FEMALE. ~ . b:u. sz,o. ~-1965 XKE f.2 CPE $39!18 llMd Can " '62 MOTOR. * S295.
--------t/ FRI SAT 8 ·AM 'til! • 962-8520 att.r 5:30 p.m,, 21 EXPREIM CR, ULSER. SCRAMBLER. '6'5 CAlmpk!tt-FUll)' pqa!Pllftl like brand CARRY OWN ./ GOOD cond! * ~U939
KAY Ml.Ilic amplifier, 3 m. 19'20 NEWPORT Bid/CM. wkdayt. All day SAT/SUN O.U S, Xlnt ~· Gli50_or tJ Medi rebuilt. Malt lell! :: •. ~· •.!:t; CONTRACTS ~t out.put. lS amps. a .. .....,_ o..-• AKC ,,._ ___ BEW OITER. * can: Alt KiO· 4!»-29i7 BURBY! BASSET~· AKC Cham-~"''" ... ..,,. ........... 64M?JT evee or wtenda with red IMttirr. ~ TrmspHt•tioft Cer·s CONTINENTAL ~ Dectr1c ruitar CRar· PION Sock. Tti colors It pion Stoet. Tti colors • red --9500 pslllllified! 'ST• 1'bnl -&l'a ltlck llhifU --------~ Strato too> linl1e red a: white, mal• a fe-•white· males A temalel. * IOAT AUCTIONI Trvcb s J . oatYSLER L SldlalDa.tk:ll. spor11 can, 62 CONTINENTAL 4 dr, full ~-up with CMI ~. GuJ. __ ,_ IUL,DJ 56-Dll nnms. June 22nd, ll·AM· N-1967 ~T onn.w,_ lnldl:a • .. .....,... can. . so""" mil ~ cue $5. AD fer $40. .....-, ~ U.S MllnblD will Aacdan .,,.. ..-rvn ~ _..,... ..::::_~....:_ poMr, atr. •""" es.
1l89 Denet Lane, C.M. UPHOISl'ERlNG 2 119.SO. 2 POODLESY AKC $35 ea. V~l ml.ER. 21' cum SD l:la1'or anv... c. II.. M9r7 to .,......_ UVQJ. Gold exterior, black leat"er
:5M-363f pc. CEurope&n craftsmen) Ma.let. 2 r. blne 1oJ. 1 >'I'· enmer. * Dock P-l99 GMC 1/J·T• 5e+m lOK l'lliadrc a...n. cm interior. High rubber. Pre.
Free Mt. del. pickup, 215 lllver min. St>OCs KI a.nm. LIDO YAarr ANCHORAGE Haadi·Y• "1 MK u ,.,_ lllfo u wtl1 tams o.A.C. ~ t<r a trip. Will aac-9' VIOLIN, bow and CMe. Main, HB "Bemy" 53Ma LI 1-1121 CALL~ Sedm are, w/lA nth. <Dft'A CAR CO. ri1ic.e $1875.
;Very fine lnatrument worth AKC REG Min Sdma ..,.,.,_ .l'allY tadarY .,....... iatl!r. Cardulb' ctm. 6 19119 Bmilar, QI. MZ-4874 NEWPORTER MOTORS
much more. $2S~Dor· :~;m~~ Jl'Qll. 4 Weeks.· 2llSS 0:: 2i.i Cl~_ .. o:;:..a~ER $2599 mainf•Dwd. .ztnt CDld. ""' ()pm 1:30 to 10 DllD1 2036 Harbor c.M. 54U5ll
met Liue, C. M. * U to 6 pm dally * Pl., C.M. ~ t -~ SJAllSBUIY IJICI mils. Saperi> car tor riPt '64 CONT'L/LOW-MI.
ACXX)IU)ION, ScandeW.. 5 lM Nyes PL. Laeuna Bch. POODLE pupa, amall mm. ~~:-Clift .. owuer •l $1325 b qilklE Air. Full power! Major tune, ~ 13> baa. wlttl cue. USED carpe~. 115 yd.a, 6 wks, black oa silftt'. Tbar-onia•ii'5.m, -· or .a. Pvt pty, N~ Neiw Batt Blue Coral. Spot·
"T":"'" •.P.Ji. 546-Sno bet-nykm, good cond. $115 ougbb~. m.1529 23!..!·.1~~ St. JAGUAR .. XKE ,......., &es.! $2995. 6™iO'l3 •------,,.,,--~,,,......,,--22' Centm7 Raftn. 171 HP ~· ,._ ..._ ... ~ ~ ..._ Plew & °'Wins 11*> 648-9719. * QUAUTY e Greymartne Vl..Hl9d ud 2 548-77'5 wbewbr~ ,.,.. ... ...,.._ •~.,,..--------MEDICAL Oxygm bumidifl. GOLDDI RETRIEVERS bunks. Consider tnde. Ask· .::.tape==· :::MIJD=:::.m...fl9==== '~ · lec)iftnerl er It regulator. USED ONCE 80-3516 inc $2,B . KaU Ofter, 2244 TRUCKS
· ONMlll C'-· $40. 846-3338 * WEIMARANER * Pacific CtJut Hlw.y.
-.. -· ...._ '61 PORT TV. PAY BAL-1% ,rt, Spayed Female DESIRE to' nmt JS' 8AII,-
Join the tun or lea'ntng to ANCE DUE. 962.t• AKC $25. ~ BOAT tbra A.Qr. Pmer
play the HAMMOND Oft.. PROF'ESSIONAL Frf'nch e AFGRAN PUPP~ e boat kept In New-
g AJ"! Tues.. June 20th, Roulette Wheel, $6(). • 6 • wka. AKC/REG. port. * Call coUect:
1962 CHEVY PICK-UP
Stick Shilt • f amilJ perfjct
OlllY $12'9. 'f:30 p.m., 6 week coune. c.n 6G-m1 aft 6 pm. e 983.(815 .,_ ·12-eoon. (213) 98'1:1.m aft t :IJ p.m.
TuRtoa St + $4 for material * Gl!:RM4N SHEPERD 25' NAVY bWJ w/cabln.. IEACH CITY
Onc:lude9 tMtruction book MJsc. W1nted 1610 WIDTE FDIALE u.mo.. Need.I work. No ~· DODGl-&114 a p6eces of DIUlic). m * can &G4521 Muat eell! ...-......._ -·~ HAIOlOND DESPERATE! Need p.rqe . -16S55 Beach Blvd., a.a. lo. CX>RONA DEL MAR tor 1tDrqe up to UO mo. * FR.ENCH POODLES Very cheap! Ill~ C. Or· St0-2660 ~.!!. Coast Hwy. 173-8990 Ht( Bcb er Seal Bcb. Call AKC * REG. le. CM. -------,---CALL &tMT40 SLIP WAH'J'm DOOGE '&I Van. henJ dill:J, eALDWIN PIANOS 213: '3f.41.91 . for 22• boat. cau .a. 1 cyt.. a111o .• top <Did. u.
IALOWIN ORGANS I WANT USED DEACON POODLE ?UPPIES 6 PM or Ill..__ Silt-San. di!!' 4.000 ml E-Z lift bier
·-,New-Uled-Deroc»-OR SETn.E BENCHES. FOR GRADUATION e -= e bltda. 541411 A117t1J1M .n-t n-..__ * 536-&140 Silver * M7•7633 _._
11-.u """.......... • O>q& 't2 CHEVY I • .... VI
'Beat deall ln tba West! WANTED: rabbit hutdl HAPPINESS ta a Buenjl Vent ~ ~ m. HEATER. r BED.
WA.RD'S BALDWIN S'ruDIO In eood oondltlon. Pup. All ~. ready to ~ dd;y sprinp. BEST
Hot Newport Blvd., C.M. 546-07• k>ve • .Dial U> ~. EnaiDe repa]r. tt&«i50 olfs-. 6G..sJ7 after Sc•
'G KER:CSDES Dt SE S.
... s..roaf. AJl/111.. ck
tna.s. PR1CE> TO mL
1'lllS WEEK! 116 lndlJI..
trial ws:1. cac. ~ * W MB-250 SE O'E.. AlltD.
PIS. AM • FM. Ldr..mt.
m.aat new. Luxury Modet
ST411D. '1) 5%>a2J
'115 KB 19H>IESll...
CORVAIR
'60 CORVAIR. stick shift.
excel mech. cond. worth
$G). Will take $2$ fOI'
quiclc cash sale 6Th-2587
./ '65 MONZ.A • Sharp! Must
se.U now! R & JI, WSW, AU·
to. Sl270. ':-544· 1060
CORVETTE
Corvette '63 Stingray
(ll rel.N!Dd. IUd w/black
Interior. American m~
ttereo tape recorder, S2350.
Phone alter 4 p.m. 543-4070
'66 CORVETTE 327
Blue. Llke new. 642-5411
FORD
'65 Plymouth Fury Ill
• Four-door Sedan, Bhle
• Power Steering
•Automatic Tranamlssion
• Power Brakes
• Alr Coodltioofnc
•Rad.lo • Heater
• 36,<m milets and in
abowroom coodidoa
throughout. $19915. •See at D1ily Pilot
Employe parkinc lot.
330 West Bay Street
Costa Men
or Call &tz..4321 and
aalt for
Business Manager'a ottice. * Red Valiant
'63 PLY. 6 V ALI.ANT .$IC·
NET 2 • dr HDTP 'SPI'.
CPE. Std. ahUI, R/H, w/w.
Glistening Royal Red wl·
plush red vinyl aeat inter •
l in 10,000!
INVESTIGATE
ONLY $995
2 Yr OK iuar/GMAC term&
Tommy ~ Chevi'i:ilef
946 S. Coast Hwy.
LAGUNA BEACH
Open 'tll 9 49f. 7'T44
'65 Plymouth Fury I
• Four door Station Wagon,
Buff w/brown Vinyl In·
terior
• Automatic Transmission
• Radio & Healer
• S1595
• See at
Dilly Pilot
Employe partcing lot
330 West Bay Street
Colla Mesa
or Call 642...mt and
uk f~
Buaine11 Manager's oUlce
COSTA MESA
CHRYSLER/
PLYMOUTH
Coata Mea
546-1934
"For the finelt aelectSoe
of both New & Ultd C.."
PONTIAC
ROY CARVER
PONTIAC
2925 Harbor Bl., Costa Mea
Kl6-4444
Orange CountT• Exc:lwdw
Dealer tor Rolla· Royce Ind
Bently.
PONTIAC '65 Convert .. V-8
Tempest. Pwr.: Perfect.
$154S. Orig. owner. Mr. Han.
sen 496-2181 Wkdays.
494-5437 Eve.
'65 PONTIAC Catalina Convt.
Full pw •. Sharp. wlll finance
544-7276 S4~ * '66 PONT CONV-V8. AU·
TO. * UNDER 500> • ml. • ~ • 1'' ca..p., JillratbDa 15 • '63 FORD ',-ton VI P/U.
1ROMAS Model H2, 2-mM· M•chlMry, Etc. 8700 Hor'Mt tao ~ traillr A Clal'm' •· RAH, Owmitr ~.
'uai, 13 ball w/.ep type 113-2116 aft, 5.. -2. IMMAC' 6'1lam DOU.CULATE! PYT-'57 FORD 2-dr. Wagon. A-l CONO! * 962-8200
CA •-..i-.-.. catJi FORKLJFI' * 4,008 lba. lO YEAR old mare with ~ =:::;::;::;::=::;:;::==== ....,. ,_..,....... •• .,.., .• Excellent condition $950 Arab colt at -ide--Colt bu s.11...... 9010
net, bmc:b, orp.n m\lltc. 639-2691 or 897·243.1 lob of color and ll'llns C.mpen '520
Aa1nl UQO. 54M682. muc:h Anib. AIJo, a year· UDO 14
PNVATE PARTY WANTS FREE TO YOU llni. Palamino fill)-that will with all doll.Y. $850 TO BUY PIANO FOR grow to probabb 15.2 bands 6'7U145
· CASH. SU·9335 GrvE a loving home to one !W6-030'7 after 4:00 KITE, rucb' to nce1 like
• GR.AND PIANOS • of 4 dlU'llnr c.Uc:o kittie1. HORSES BOARDED new. L l t t 1 e DtJde tnner.
Pl.ANO • ORGAN CENTER 548-4595 6/22 wtdt A outlide Paddockt, aa.11. OO'ffl'. IC-tl44.
l>4S N. Main, SA 5'?.()681 10 KnTENS. All colon. RI.Di It IUdJnl tr.US. S.ck 31' SLOOP/AUX ·DIC.
Te'lwl8'fft 1205 U7-117'1 bey. Call 54().9525. BDn' OFn:R over
1WO ldtt.ens, ~. 6-..,U. 6 BEAU part Arabian 3-ft' old $500! * ~ ~
Mother cat. S36-0330. colL Bay wtth ' wb.I~ stock· RHODES 3( X)Dt CGDd., New ROY' BULLA -
CAAtPERS
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST SF.LOC'nON
FACTORY Dlltt:CT
OPEN ROAD DEJJ..ER
* HOUSE CARS * OIAS-
JS MOUNTS * SLIDE-INS * VAN CO'NVERlmNI
+MOTOR HOMD 3 Female Kitt.DI l.np, alAo 8 >"' Qtr t1Pe JemJ; with bath. OwMr. ~ an. 5 Geldlni. 5.15-19'6 ~27ll ~ ALL MAKES & MOOUB
,...,...,,. -·• t bby ._.._ SMAU.. SHE'l1.AND PONY COlaUMBtA l6 * lllSOO. 1967 TRUCK~ "u •"' .. _e 1 ""''"... w/saddle. SIOO or beet Genoa I Spl--.. -ll.Jfe''-673-0418 A/22 ,....._. ..,..
offer. *** 499-U95 ri,. Fulty equipt. * 49Ml19
1953 Newport. CM. 518-34~ JOfN the l'Winpra lft the! 3\' .. YR Matt, $200. 7·yr buck-~· RACE/ Crulae sloop.
SeJVlce on AU. makes. DAILY PD.OT WANT ADSI akin gelding S35(). Both well Bf<•ut/ f'OOmy/ tut. Ganr-
OOLOR SPECIALISTS &42·5678 cralne<J. ~ way 15/389 L. 8 . .Martna
8EAC11 CITY
CAMPERL.A:-JD
16$5 Be11ch Blvd., h,B.
540-26fil
PARTY * m..at4
&CMUO WEEKDAYS.
ae.n. N111 wt'tl PS. PB. ..,.,,63~TEMPEST=-==--v....,a,..--,co=-NV--.
Town A entry radio. SAC 36,<m mi. ~eal dean! fllOO
fl'7S. 6.(2.t(Jl. .,..,..,.,. o(J <.Ar IOOU' ·~MERCEDES l.IO. f door. J9 INVlCT.A C()NV. Pwr.S. --------or o"""' er. """...,.,.,...
FINE CONDm~! $52S. Pwr.·S. NEW Top It 'nl'es! 156 f'ORD. J.tOOd c:ond. int
548-nlt "'.,.... eond! • 545-t&3J good. new tirl's, ml or best ~· offe1. 847-9529
PEUGEOT. CADIUAC '65 GALA.X IE 500
CONVERTIBLE • moo
PEUCEX>T SALE Lido Moton Private Party, 494.393.5
We have 2 ol I.bi> bait nm-UltlJDat.e lD OJm.. '57 FORD STA·WAGON.
RAMBLER
RAMBLER '60 Station wag·
on C'\Jsl. V-8, fact air, Au·
to., pwr. st~r. Good cnnd.
$425. 962 ... ~
nlng Peqeat 404 lifd. ill alJtn U. AUTO. * RUNS C YID!
town. Cadillac o1 aw 1m-plet.e su.. • Sen1ot s:ioo Call S46-0714 T ·BIRD
porta lo aa -! CADILLAC · CON'nNENTAL ----------------e. J. CHR~ ~ '66 FAIR.LANE soo WAG. vs. 67 T·BIRD 4 dr Landau full
IMPORT D 1DJ W. Cout Hlgtiwa.,y P/~, Local low·mi. XLNT power & ~Ir. Dark gr11)''•ilh
2Sll Hartlor BlvcL Beach 642-6762 ani. 54J.UJ7 gray landau upholstery 5,
S«Me3 '64 SPRINT Conv. V8. Air. 000 mtlt-11 with full Ford Mo-
BUSlEST tnarkrtplace In -4 apd. n~ llrt'S. low ml. tor Co. ituaranlec 24,tro
Le; YOUR AD IN CLASSI· town The DAR.\' Pfl.OT Like new• Sl375. ~l-0919 mill' Rrt11ils nwr $6.000 Will
FUD! SomcoM "''IJ be Oaullled llf'Ction. Save FORD '66 F1ml11n!': 2 dr. snc1 litre S47ni ~ for O. Dial 64?·"1673 money, t.tme It t ffort. Look M'dan. Or1rn, ito..d l'nnd NEWPORTER MOTORS
lot quick, eUk:iml relllllts. now" 1 S16!1i. ~\11 :!0.11> 'larbnr C M. M~.l.
-·
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P~GE
Ehan's Great S[p eech
All Americam who wen fortunate enough to bear
and aee the retpeetive performances of Soviet Premier
Alexei N. Koaygln and llraeli Forei_p Mlnilter Abba
fl)an on televiaion from the United Nationl Monday
moalng witneseed a historic confrontation -and a
vivid cootrut.
Kosygin'• bruen efforta to cover up bis govern-
ment's perftdy were almOlt laughable (if their cons&
quenca could not be so serious) to anyone who lw fol·
lowed the news from the Middle F.aat over the last sev·
eral moatba, and esj)!cially since mid-May. To watch a
bmd of Rite, erpedlJl1 of a great power, resort to out-
right fai.hood in an effort to shift blame to the inner
Cll!lllt IJl.ltiel in the Arab-Jerael war wu not a pretty sighl
ban, on other band, delivered u great a speech u
anyone la likely to bear in a long lifetime. He marshalc:<i
flltU precllely and, without bombast, deliftf'ed them in
a lriPphl£ oonTinclng way. -Wbeie Kosygin ended negatively with demands for
condemmtloo of lisrael u the aggreesor and a return
to pnMnr positions, l.'ball ended positively with a call for
band-In-band Arab-Israel cooperation for peaceful co-
uiltenee and mutual economic and cultural benefit.
The So'fieta aoagbt a propaganda field day; Eban
C'Ollftirted lt into an eloquent, thoroughly documented
stlory of the bravery of b.1a little nation in the face of
hostile armies on all lides.
Eben quoted the Ruaiam' own definition of "ag-
JO'tlllion." It clearly branded Gamal Abdel Nmer's
61ocbde of the Gulf of Aqaba as an act of war. "Under
civil law." Eban said, "it is jun u much a crime to mur-
der by strangulation u by a bullet in the head."
military hardware euppllect to the Arabs by the Scmet
Union.
Eban recounted Ruasla'a repeated mlsuse of ill
U.N. veto power to prevent ~mnation of Arab na-
tions guilty o1 terroristic ...iti oa Israeli civilians on
their own soil. 'Ibis wu bat one of many high points 1n
a speech luting more than Ill hour.
It wu hardly a surprbe, OODISdering Eban't eUec·
tiveness, that Kosygin and Soviet Foreign Mlnllter
Andrei A Gromyko atalted out of the assembly ball
before he had fin.i!bed bla speech. To millions ot TV
onlookers they mun have loobd lite two spoiled boys
caught in an enormous lie. Which la about what they
were.
Appraiser Reform Blocked
Efforts to take politics out of inheritance tax ap-
praising in Calif ornla have flUed for this session. The
Senate Governmental Efficiency Committee yielded to
pres.rures and re.fused an Allembly.passed bill which
would have ta.ken from the state contfqller the p<>ft.r to
appoint inheritance tu appra.leers.. , • ,
Controller Houston l Flournoy made this reform
a main issue in b.1a crocceatul campaign against Demo-
cratic Controller Alan eran.ton. Floumoy calls the ap-
pointment system "no system at all" and "a sore on the
body politic." He adch that there's no ~arantee of com-
petence or performance ~auae there are no leJtal
qualifications !or the officeholden, some of whom make
as much as $50,000 to $60,000 a year in fees collected
from heirs.
---..
_....r.Clrr~
~~~
His U11masking of Russia's role in etarting the Middle
Ellt arms race, in fomenting Arab attacks by falsely re-
porting build-up of lsnell troops on the nation's bord· en. ~ in 1Upplying billlons of dollars worth of arms
Wiii a tboroogb job. He even ticked off the en.¢ num·
ben of tab, planes, guns of various sizes and other
F1oornoy is righl The Qltem cries out tor reform
Renewed e1f orts should be made in the next aeaioo to
bring it ibout. ''Al-t-H/ T~IS IS" MORE L\KE lT I'' •
TV Newsmen
Mostly Are
Overpaid
. ~ ,.,.~
• !
' .. ~~~4
Darint the AF1'RA strike t h I s
llJring, when tbe network performers
waited out in support of the news·
cutera. I watd>ed the substitute
lleWICal1«s, and could hardly tell
the diHertnce.
Speaking as a newspaperman for
almost 30 years, I feel no hesitancy
in saying that news reporting on tele-
viaion would have to improve enor·
mously just to be mediocre.
The newscasters were striking for
mo.re pay, but they are not worth half
of wbat they are getting now for wtiat
they are doing. JI, on the other band,
they were really doing a good job,
they would deserve twice LS much as
they are getting.
WITH A FEW singular exceptions,
most newscasters look and sound like
dummies. They pronounce the wordJ
carefully, but seem to have little
comprehension ol what they are say-
ing -and most of what they are aay-
ing is just a warmed-up rehash of the
press service ticker.
The few stars of network newscast·
ing receive tremendous salaries
(which they are not worth, in my
opinion) for banal and superfidal
comments that scarcely reach the
level of a decent college newspaper.
They are more an ann of show busi-
nets than of information; and nobody
who retied oo them for knowledge of
the world would lmow enough to make
any intelligent decisions oo public af·
fairs.
AS FOR THE non·slars, the ordi-
nary bread·and-butter newscasters
who were asking for more money -
I can't see why any reasonably alert
l2·year.qJd boy couldn't do as well as
they do. In fact, I happen lo know a
J.2.year-old boy -Jmow him very
~ I
'We'll trade you Ky fo r Dayan,
and toss in a do1en B-525-1'
well -wbo could do even better.
Most of the fault for the incredibly
shallow and vapid news reporting on
t&evi.sion must be laid at the door of
the network.a, which are rich, greedy
and dumb beyond all b&Uef. 1' h e y
make miWoDJ on the most ulnlne
programs, and are too fat, lazy and
short-lighted to ipend an adequate
lllDount ol their profiU on publk 1erv·
lee of any kind.
THE AMERICAN public needs in·
formation and education today a1 nev·
er before: and television could be,
and should be. the most direct and
effective means of Informing \he pub-
lic about the most important issues of
the day. That this gre.at tool should
be used mainly to swell the coffers of
a few networks is a shocking indict-
ment of our system.
Television news should be reported,
discussed and analyzed by men ol
stature, training and background; by
varted teams of professioDals in pub-
lic service and foreign affairs; by in·
tellectuals, academics, and research-
ers in the social and behavioral sci·
ences. By meo, in short, who know
how to thlnk, and have something to
say. These men would be worth a m11-
Uon. Their pallid im.JtatioDJ today
aren't worth a dime.
Dying Art of Thumbing
Jumping to conclusions:
Butchers -or at least their thumbs
-are getting more honest. A gener-
ation ago it was commonplace for
butchers to thumb the scales while
weighing meat in order to add to their
profit margin; today this kind or com-
mercial chicanery is a dying art
form. Most young butchers don't
even know how to do it.
A woman rarely feels more ner·
vous than when she ls wearing a bor·
rowed wig to a wedding.
An author may be a literary lion to
the public. but to his publisher he
more often seems an ungrateful train·
ed bear wiU1 bad manners.
WISE l't1EN THROUGH the ages
have preached the advanU!ges of mod·
eration in Jiving and the dlsadvan·
tages of excess. But until a fellow
has had a really rough hangover
B11 George ---
Dear George:
I've heard the word "Carib-
bean'' pronounced two dilferent
ways and we have a bet down
here at .Joe's.
Whtit 1s the pro1~r way to say
"Caribhran'"
PUZZLED
Dear ruzzlPd .
Tht> question mark inside the
quotes Is silent
himself the virtuM of sobriety are
only hearsay.
Unless he is a schoolte.acher or a
copy edit.or, any guy who has to call
attention to himself by using a ball
point pen with red ink Is lo pretty pitl·
Cul shape. U he wants to show off, he
could do much better by learning how
to balance a paper clip upright on
the tip or his nose.
Many an office worker is unafraid
or automation because he does so lit·
tie that the boss knows it wouldn't
pay to put ln an expensive machine to
take his place.
NOTHING MAKES a middle·aged
city dweller sigh for his lost youth
more than the sight of two pigeons
courting on a sidewalk.
The most famous hostes11 in Amer!·
ca is the Statue of Liberty. But not
one out of five persons in the New
York City area has taken the trouble
to ride out across the harbor and visit
her home base.
You always have a feeling that evo-
lution has gone astray when you see
a knock·kneed girl in a miniskirt
walking atonj? with a b:wty.fegged
guy in summer shorts.
Anybody who askl! whnl it costs to
feed a Grt'al Da~ can't really afford
to own one.
lr011• et Semet Alnue, Negleet
The U.N.--Will It Live or Die?
What Ls the future of the United
Nations?
ls the Middle Eut«n cr1J.11 the be-
ginning of a renaissanceJ Or ii the
U. N. sun setting? Russia bu been
making much use of the United Na-
tions' Security Council.
It was a somewhat abraalve and
critical Nikolai Fedomlko who de-
manded a hurried, Immediate "emer-
gency" session ol the councll oa that
fateful Wedneeday, June 7, wbla the
Israeli SUCC~etl in the SJna1 deurt
and against Jordan were Conftrmed.
Yet, thiJI was the •arne Mr. Fedor-
enko who on Monday before that Wed-
nesday brusquely bad retmed the
American recommendation thlt a cease-fire be JOUgbl
Again, on Tburtday, June ~ th• Se-
curity Council wu summoned b9ck.
Once more the pleasant·lookinc, bow.
tie wearing, pipe-smoting Fedoren-
ko, used ttie session to condemn the
United States, and to demand the Is·
raells return all they had 1alned in
war.
IT WAS Pos.5WLE, 1ittlnl there in.
>
~ .
the presa section o( the council cba.m·
ber, to feel the almost tangible irony,
ttie cynical brazenness of tht sltua,
tion.
It is c.biefly the Soviets, though not
entirely ao, who have not paid their
financial allotments due the U. N. It
is largely their financial neglect, fol·
lowed by others in their bloc, that has
kept the U. N. close to the abyss of
bankruptcy and substantially reduced
Ile orgamutioo'1 prestige and poten-
tial for action. That the Soviela should
have eo vigorously IOOgbt to use the
U. N. -onJy when. and after, the
Arab alllet bad made thett WW throat
and been defeated -1e:rves merely
to etch deeper the irony o( that ne-
glect.
With the U. N. prestige and pote.n-
tl.al thus mimnmed, the international
arena was, of necessity, reduced to
power operations.
THE MIDDLE EAST buildup was
opeo. 'Ibere was no secret about It.
NasMr mobilized his troops. Nuser
demanded that United Nations secur-
ity troope be withdrawn from the Ga-
za strip. Tbe alacrity with which
Secy. Gen. U Thant complied ha1
damaged him and the U. N. The II·
raella are ~ortably rlgbt In
charging that lJ. N. acllons had Ml·
couraged the Arabs to war.
There was undenied escalation of
raids into Israel by Sbukeiry's "Pal·
estlne Legion" and by the Al Assifa
(the Storm) guerrlllas of Syria. It la
members o( these groups who have
maintained sniping since the ~
tance of Ule cuae-fire.
RUSSIA BOLDS the eolution to the
future of the Middle East. the So-
viets can proceed to rearm the Arabs
with WW, Mig a!rcraft and weap-
ons. Tbey can, io aod out of the U. N.,
promote discord rather than a settle-
mmt the Arabs can reluctanUy ac-
cept. 'lbe lmlelia will not want to
keep b Sinai. They have a right to
hold the high gl'ound along ttie bor·
den o( Syria from wbich came the
mortar and shell fire against valley
and villages -and, of course, against
the guerrilla raid& ol. Al A.aaifa. The
Gulf of Aqaba must be open to all
shipping. Tbe U. N. -and the So-
viet.a -were silent when Egypt block·
aded Aqaba as a part of the pre-war
~ationa by Na.ner.
' JERUSALEM MIGHT be intlfrna·
tiooallud -if the U. N. is made
viable by Soviet support and coopera-
tion.
Soviet "interest" in Africa remains
higher-than commitment to the U. N.
Nasser bad Soviet aid ln Aden, at the
entrance to the Red Sea. The Somal-
ia hid Soviet help acro11 from Aden
at the Red Sea entrance. Algeria ta
the latest "interut" in Africa -and
the M1ddle Eut.
1be ouUook ls compiex and, at belt,
bidden by intrigues, feod.I, angers and
ambitions. Tbe United Natknl could
be entering a new phase of uaefulneal.
Or, it could be undertolng cynical
"u1e" for non-peaceful objec:Uves. If
so, the U. N. n.y be, God forbid. on
its wa:y out.
Rooney Finds Valachi Laid an Egg
The JusUce Department's most
highly publicized stoolpigeon has laid
a costly egg.
For more Utan three years, Cosa
Nostra defector Joseph Valachi has
talked a lot but said very little.
Alttlough the government has lav-
ishly spent more then i100,ooo for his
security aod comfort, the convicted
hoodlum bu furnished federal prose-
cutors no information about the crime
syndicate not already known to the
FBI.
In fact, not a single prosecution has
resulted from Valachi's three years
of "talking" despite those published
reports ol bis "sensational revela-
tions" on the hidden, operations of or-
ganized crime.
THESE ARE THE highly critical
findings of Rep. John J . Rooney, O-
N. Y., chairman or a House Apiro-
prlations subcommittee which hu
been studying the Justice 06'
partment's velvet-glove handling fll
Valachi.
In a report prepared for Congreu.
Rooney also reveals that even J ustice
Department officials have finally be-
come disenchanted with Valachi and
the information he has been giving
them.
After coddling the convicted crim·
inal with TV and other special priv·
ileges in a private cell at the Dia-
trlct of Columbla jail, Rooney reports,
the Justice Department has quieUJ
returned Valachi to federal prison In
Milan, Mich.
This silent treatment was in sharp
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus:
Why doesn 't someone comr up
with a good signal to let another
driver know that he has ror~ot·
ten to turn orr his fla8h1_gg turn
sil{Tlal ~ -A P.Q
rftlt lfthi,.. ~Kit rnftrt' Ylfwt Mf -Dtrfl~ lhH el , ... MW\POfl. \tflf
ffW •*' -•• '• Cl"°'"~ o.,, D•llt ,.llet.
contrast to the big publicity build-up
arr&nled for Valac:bl when then Atty.
Gel. Robert Ke:rmedy brought him
here iat.e in 1983 to ten his st«y.
AT THE TIME, Kennedy pushed Va·
lacbi klto tbe 1potligbt for the specific
purpo1e of creating an atmosphere
favorable to congrealional pusage ol
hi.I request for wiretap legislation -
a pcopou.l he hu since abandoned.
ln revealing the end of tbe Justice
Department'• "VIP'' treatment of Val-
acbl, Rooney reported:
"I am happy to advise tbat Mr. VaJ.
achi, that stoolplgeon who did not,
with all the talk and publicity engn-
dered by offlc1ala, assist in the suc-
cessful prosecution of one criminal, iJ
no looger in the D. C. Jail Mr. Vala-
chi ia back as a member of the popa-
lattoo ol the federal prison in Milan, Mioo.
"Nothing developed from that non-
sense, and they had him down here in
the Dbtrlct jail with extra guard.a fer
more than three years. The additional
cost to the government was $30,000 a
year.
"THE JUSTICE Department is now
oppo1iDg hi.s lawsuit to puWBh a boot
which includes a lot ol names which
have already been mentioned aod
which beloog to one particular race
that bu been maligned too often by
too maay people."
In testimony before a closed door
secsioo of Roooey's subcommittee,
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover bas
coocurftd in theae fi.Ddlngs OD Vala-
cbi's uselessness to federal a uthori·
ties.
Uodel' questioning by Rooney, Hoo-
ver confirmed that tbe FBI obtained
no DflW evidence tram Valachi, but the
FBI dlief cautioned that the ~
Nostra danger should be not under-
estiJnated. •
Robert S. ADe. and Paa.I Scott
.The Lawful Way ls the Only Way
By J. EDGAR HOOVER
Dtreder
Fedenl Bueaa
of lavesU1aUon
Crimes of violence, such 8$ forcible
' rape, m u r d e r , aggravated assault,
etc., which increase sharply during
the Jong, hot mooths, are no longer
the only major crime problem of
many communities each s u m m e r.
Some areaa •e haunted by an equal·
ly grave danger -riots and anar-
chlc demoMtrationa which leave dev.
utatioo and ruin In their wake.
Th1I dancer places a tremendous
burden on law enforcement. Already
blmpered by under-manned Jt,affa, po-
lice authorities are forced to marshal
tbelr itrength In expected tr o u b I e
spotl and ·1eave other neighborhoods
without proper police protection.
NEVERTHELESS, responsible po·
Uce officials r~ognlze, as do all right-
Wnldog Americans, that alt citiiens
blvt an undeniable right to petition
IDd demonstrate !or causes they sup-
port. Jn fact, enforcement officers
epend much of their time protecting
and guarding marehers and petition·
era.
However. police officials. as well as
the general public, are becoming wea·
ry or person~ who. for self·aggran·
dlzement and monetary gain, exrtoit
noble causes and agitate peaceful
groups into rioting mobs Som<' so-
callcd leaden seem to "blow hot. and
• f (., . . .
cold with the 1&11\e breaM\." Their
preachment.a ~beginning to have a
hollow ring. They claim to support
nonvioleoce, but do they? For in·
stance, to publicly pinpoint certain
cities where riots and violence may
occur seema to be inconsistent with
the doctrine of nonviolence. Raet>er,
It la more 11.ke m open invitation to
bot.beads and rabble rooJefl 1n ~
areas to move Into action on cue.
It puts them o.n notice that they .w-e
expected to riot. Where are the rea·
aon and Judgment in thi.s type of lead·
ership?
IN mE PAST, law enforcement.
with rare exception, has met Its re-
sponsibilities during rlota and dlsor·
den lo an exemplary manner. Some
police officers have been killed and
many have been assaulted, abused,
and maligned fOI' no greater sin than
enforcing the law. However, I am sure
that the public, every man, woman,
and child regardlMI of hls station In
life, can rely upon responsible law en.
rorcement to discharge Its dutie11 of
prote<:ting the lives, llbe.rty, and prop-
erty of all citizens.
LOCAL, COUNTY and city author·
ltles should 11peak out and let every·
ooe know thst law and order wtU pre·
vail They mu.st support the entorce-
msit ol Jaw and make it abundanUy
dear that mobs, riots, and eea1eless
destrud:foo will not be tolttated. ADd
too, all Americana must remember
that under OW' system ~government
tilere can be no true J:lberty for oae
unleu there ii liberty tor all.
Lincoln once a~d. "1'bere 11 no
grievance that ia a fit subject ol re-
drets by mob law." 'l'hll It ID aeeteu
maxim. The '8wful way la the only
way to secure equal rigtits lbert:y
and Justice for aB dtlsens. ' '
Tuesday, June 20, 1967
The editorial PGU• o/ tile DaU11
Pilot actkt to inform and 1tfm.
ul4U nadni b11 prcaenttno Ulu
nnirpoper'• opinion. and com-
mtntatV on Copkt of fnf.fren.
and donificonu. b11 providing a
forum for UL. t%prt1mn o/ our rea~1· opfnfona. anrl bu
prtununr Che divcrii Ntt>-rotnu o fnfOT'?Md ob1ttWn
and •i>Ok~sme'll on tor>fCf of th1 rl.ay. .
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
' J
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