HomeMy WebLinkAbout1967-06-26 - Orange Coast Daily Pilot-Newport Beach• r . ...
Harbor Today's Closing
EDITION · .. ,
VOL ·60, NO. f52, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1967 TEN CENTS
School Bond
Hearing Set
I\
Thursday
Newport.Mesa Unified School Die·
trict oftidllla today invited the pub-
lic to sound o6 on ~sals for an
$18 rn1DJ.on tio $23 million bond elec-
tion this fall.
A Public forum on the subject will
be held Thunclay at 7:30 p.m. In the coata Mesa High School Lyceum.
Oitltrict trustees have 1ndicated that
citizen reaction at the session mey
largely detennine the toope ol the
upcoming proposed bond issue.
Eight different bond proposab are
being studied by board members.
Their hope is that feedback Tburlday
nlgbt will accur«ely t'eOect commu-
nity opinion '° tbe1 can ~ whlch plan 1tand1 the beet cMnce of
pusini.
Bond electiOll date. tn late October
or early November are being eyed
by trustees.
Whicbevei-plan is adopted, it will
be divided intx> seven or eight dif·
ferent ballot measures. Voren will
thus be able to Indicate preference
if they don't approve of the entire
package.
The nucleus for the Thursday night
meeting will be 145 prominent citi·
zem who have received persooal invi·
tatiooa from the boM'd' to attend.
These include bot!l backe.rs ol and
detractors from previous school bond
elebtlom who offered their advice
durlng breakfast sessions with board
members in the spring.
A trial nm meeting will be held at
the same hour and place Wednesday
night. Participants will be officers of
the district's various PTA's a1ld
PFO'a. ,
1'he sessiOfl with this group was
sclH!duled at the urging of school
board member~ltd Sellin "Bud''
Franklin, who argued 1bese are tile
persons to whom will fall the burden
of pnsial tbe ~' · Tbtee key questitMll are UI be re-
solved:
-Should the proposal cover build-
ing needs for three or five years?
-SboU1 ~ eoronment at high
schools rerhaiit 2.400 or be lncreased to 3,000 to focestall building of new
high scbools'!
-Should tbe Intermediate grade
school cover grades seven and ei~t.,
u it does now, gradea seven, etgbt
and nine. or grades six, seven and
eight?
Decisions on these variables :-wrn
largely determine Which of the eight
plans will appear on the ballot, al·
though some refinemeot will be made
tn the basic plan chosen.
Equipment Worth
$5, 781 Stolen
From Salesman
Electronics equipment valued at
nearly '6.000 was stx>len from a New·
port Beach man's parked auto over
the weekend, police reported today.
Ross A. Shade, a salesman for
Beckman Instruments of Fullerton,
said he discovered the theft SUnday
morning.
His car. parked in front of hia
home at 319 Montero Ave., had been
broken into overnight. The vehicle
was locked, he said.
Missing items Included a '3.000 dy·
nograph recorder, a $1,960 solid-state
counter and an '815 voltage conver-
ter.
liurglars also pocketed the car'5
cigarette lighter and door lock knobs.
police said. Total loss was estimated
at $5,781.
Poet Parker Will
Names Rev. King
NEW YORK <AP ) -Poet-satirist
Dorothy Parker left the bulk of her
ei-tate to the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr. and the Nati0'1al Assocla-
t1011 for the Advancement of Colored
Prople, it wai1 disclosed today.
Miss Parker's will filed in Surro-
gate's Court today named King as the
beneficiary of cash, negotiable secur·
ities, and the income Crom a trust
fund derived from copyrights, royal·
ties and contract rights on her writ·
tngs.
King is to get the Income from ttil'
trust fund in semiannual payments
during his lifetime.
Upon bli; death, the principal of thr
trust will go outrigtit to the NAACP.
Miss Parker. noted for her light .
ecidly humorous verse, also wai; a
11hort story writer and critic. She died
Junt 7 al the age of 73.
. Su mmit Said 'Plot'
Albania Claims Anti-Arab Treachery
• UN ITED NATIONS (UPI) -Com·
munist Albania today denounced the
Glassboro summit meetings between
President John,on ana Soviet Premier
Alexei N. Kosygin as an anti-Arab
plot. a show of t r e a c b e r y and a
scheme to dominate the world.
''Down with the Johnson •. Kosygin
• plot!" Albanian 1'' o r e i g n Minister
Nesti Nase thundered from the ros-
trum of the United Nations general.
* * * Kosygin Flies
To Confer
With Castro
NEVrYORK (UPI) -Soviet Pre·
mier Alexei N. Kosygin departed for
Havana and an expected conference
with Cu ban Premier Fidel Castro lo·
day after a hectic lo.day visit to the
United States in which he refused to
budge from his hardline policies on
the Mideast and Vietnam.
Kosygin took off from Kennedy In·
temational airport in a Soviet llyu-
sbin 18 turboprop shorUy before noon
for the four-hour anti 20-minute flight
to Havana."
Holding bard-won trophies and obviously pleased about the whole
thing are Marcia Kull, and John McKenzie, both 9, named Newport.
Hat"bor Commllllity Youth Center's "Athletes of the Year." More than
150 children entered competition, trophie6 for which were donated
by Balboa Bay Lions Club. -
Outside the Soviet mission and again
at the airport, Kosygin beld friendly
chats wl!h newsmen and confirmed
that he was heading for Cuba.
The Soviet leader thanked newsmen
for thrir "objective reporting" of his
visit. This is au revoir and fare-
weU." hP said through bis interpreter.
"We will be seeing you again.''
.1J11••~ .. i·~-.rave
~skrd 1! he planned lo fly w Ha-
v;.1na. thP preinier replied, "Da." and ,,:,,,, r:.'>: "r_r do you know?" New~
men r~ed they had had .. reports''
ot his p'-'9. Boy;s Kidnap Plot Trial But Kosygin displayed no relaxation
from the rigid diplomatic stand he
maintained both at the United Nations
and in 10 hours of summit talks with
President J ohnson.
Starts; 2 Others Held The Soviet leader said he hoped
the U.N. General Assembly would
take "an objective stand on the Mid-
dle East debate to condemn and cen·
sor the aggressor." Kosygin has con·
sislenUy labeled Israel the guilty
party in the recent Arab-lsareli war.
Trial procedures opened today for
an Anaheim youth accused with two
Costa Mesa friends of conspiring to
kidnap, murder and bury a restau·
rant manager in a crude grave near
Upper Newport Bay.
Defendant Randolph McDonald. 19.
appeared this morning before Super-
ior Judge Raymond F. Vincent rep-
resented by attorney Rsymond Kitz·
row.
McDonald is accused in a grand
jury· indictment ol kidnaping Duane
VeDel, 49, of Fullerton on Feb. ?JI as
the reetaurateur was making a night
deposit in a bank.
The kidnaped man was placed in
the trunk of a car but managed to es-
cape unharmed as his abductors glid·
ed into Mexico at the San Ysidro
border.
Also awaiting trial in the episode
Aldrich WilJ Speak
Before UCI Friends
UCI Chancellor Daniel Aldrich .Jr.
will speak on the ''State of the Cam·
pus" for the third aMual meeting of
the Friends oC UCI Wednesday at 4
p.m. in the campus science lecture
hall.
The Friends, who boast more than
300 members, will be discussing
achievement! of the past year. hear-
ing the result of elections and signinJ?
up for campus committees, according
to Brad Atwood of the UC! informa·
tion office.
STOCK MARKETS
NEWYORK (AP) -The stock
market weakened late thii. afternoon
as ind ustrials took a loi1s although
gajns and losses remained about evrn
on the overall stock list. TradinJ? was
active. (See quotations. Pages 10-11.l
are Donovan L. Veal. 19, of 1152 Paul-
arino Ave .. and William J . Peel. Jr.,
18 of 961 W. Wilson Ave., both of
Costa Mesa.
Peet's trial date is set for Aug. 7.
Veal is scheduled lo stand trial July
17. The trio has remained in Orange
County jail since their Feb. 28 ar·
rests in Ueu of $11,000 bail eaC'h.
Annual Summer
Visit Starts
For Goldwaters
Former senator and 1964 presidenli·
al candidate Barry Goldwater w a s
busy today tossing fishing lines into
the Pacific Ocean instead of hats into
the political arena.
Goldwater and his wife have ar-
rived for their traditional summer
stay in an apartment at the Balboa
Ray Club. The couple last year be-
came one oC the first tenants in the
Newport Beach cl{lb's five-story addi·
ti on.
Mrs. Goldwater has been back and
forth from Newport to Van Nuys to
see their new grandson. 4·week old
Darian, son of their daughter and h€'r
husband. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Holt.
OariC)n brings the number of grand-
children to six for the Goldwaters.
The other children expected to vis-
it their parents this summer include
sons. Mike of Mill Valley : Barry .Jr.
of Los Angeles and daughter and hl'r
husband. Dr. and Mrs. Tlmmas Ro~s
of Phoenix.
Goldwater has bt'en an occasional
\ tsitor aboard thP Sundance. but tn.
clay was fishing from the deck of h1~
own 35·fool boat.·
Meanwhile in Washington, the White
House said toda y Soviet Premier Ko· s~·J!in's bard line at a United Nations
news conference ran about the same
as in his two days of private sum:
mil talks with President Johnson.
Press Secretary George Christian
told newmen that Johnson watched
the televised showing of Kosygin's
meeting with reporters Sunday night
and "generally." his (Kosygin's) com·
rnents were similar to his expres-
sions in the private conversatioos."
Christian was ~ked at the White
House if there bad lJe•n any change
in the atmosphere of Sunday's sum-
mit session compared to the first
.lohnson-Kosygin get-together Friday
at Glassboro, N.J .
' I don't know of any marked dif·
ference in the discussions over the
two days," Christian replied.
\s for any possible future meetings
nf the two, Christian remarked only
that they "agreed that there should
hr continuation of direct contacts.''
(JCC Teacher
~et for Games
Orange Coast College history in·
.;trucwr Ed Burke today was named
along with five other American ath-
h•tcs to compete in the fifth World
c;:1mes at Helsinki , Finland, Wednes·
d:iv and Thursday.
Hurke, a Newport Beach resident.
hroke the U. S. hammer throw record
<1t the 1967 Amateur Athletic Union
c·ha mpionships in Bakersfield last
Thursday.
I le was named to thr l ' S. tram h1·
tllr AAtr '!'rack CommitlPP, mf'ctinJ!
111 New York.
Hippies O utnun1hered
CotUt Love-in Prove.s Big Tourist. Attraction
By LEONARO ASH
Of ~ Deity ,.I ... Siii!
Some were bearded. Some had Ion~
hair. Some were drinking winr . Somr
were smoking pot (marijuana I.
They gathered In Seal Bearh Sun·
day for a love·in. It wa R a bust. ThP. touriRt~ outmrmherl'd thf' flowr r
chi ldren about 7 to I, much to thr
chagrin of police -kept busy un •ponsoreci by a soon·to-be-evided psy-
snarling wall-to.wall traffic -ancl f'11edelir set shop.
city fathers. who weren't actuall~ hip Polle!', beefed up an 1tnt1cipation or
lo lhr hupprnin~ rrom lhe start 1r11ubll' Crom the much-advNlisNI
Thr only onl'l> who 1nade oul wrrr t'\ rnt. stood in the wings all da y. ,'\I
lhr hN1rhfront concrs::-1onnairrs !1 15 p.m. they advised thr rrowd, ti'
Somr :u100 hippies J:afhcrrd nr;ir ll11s lime mostly composed of r~e11<ln·
lhr stl'a m plant 10 the beach com · .f p~ychcdt>l ici;, lo go homr.
mun1t y for the c11y·s fir~t lovt·tn {Sfoe HIPPIF.S. P11~t 2)
assembly.
Albania is Red Chlna·s only ally in
Europe and the speech echoed the
line broadcast previously by Peking
radio.
King Hussein of Jordan announced
mean-Rhile through a spokesman he
would appear before the assembly
this afternoon tu plead Jordan's case
against Israeli "aggression" and to
seek a return of bis lands lost during
SUES FOR CRASH INJURIES
Be•uty QuHn Gigi O.h\
Gigi Dahl Suing
For $18,000 in
Auto Accident
Costa Mesa beauty queen Gigi Dahl,
seriously injured last February in an
auto accident. has sued the other driv-
er in the mishap for $18,000.
Miss Dahl. 2.0. who held the title o{
Miss Los Angeles until last month.
named William Irvine Loitz of Corona
del Mar as defenCclJlt in her personal
injury suit file<! Friday in Superior
Court.
The dark-haired beauty was a pas-
senger in a car driven by Charles D.
Bren, also of Cost.a Mesa. on Feb. 17
when the auto was involved in a col·
lision with Loitz's e:ar al the intersec-
tion of Campus Drive and Palisades
Road in county territory. _
Miss Dahl alleges sne suffered frac-
tured ribs and multiple bruises in the
accident. Her suit claims that Loitz's
"reckless, careless and negligent"
driving led to the collision.
The suit was filed by Morris Dahl
of Tustin, father of the French-Danish
beauty who has more than 20 city,
county and state titles to her credit,
as well as a national crown, Miss
France o{ America for 1966.
Biggest Crowds
Of Year Enjoy
Sun at Newport
Summer's first weekend saw the
biggest crowds of the year flock to
Newport's beaches. city lifeguards
reported today.
An estimated total of 155,000 per-
~ons spread themselves on the sands
during the two days. Biggest crowd
was Sunday. when 90,000 sun·worship-
rrs were counted. Saturday'i; crowd
wa s estimated at about 65,000.
Only four rescues were logged Sat-
urday: and three on Su nday All werP
de~cr1bed as routine
Water temperature was 62 degref'i;
and the surf softly lapped the shore·
line as the air temperature hove red
in the tow 70s.
No sharks were sighted. lifeguards
added.
. Under ground Te~t
Detonated hy U.S.
NEVADA TEST SITE I urn
Scienlisls triggered a lo\\ ·yield n11·
rlcar devit'I' today beneath the dt'srrt
floor at thl' Nrvada tc~t s1 tr.
1'ht' 1\ton11c Enrr~y Commission
~nid lht> nurlear tt>st was <'onducted
ln ~ tunnl'I at 11 ctrpth o{ 1.2.15 reel.
the six·day war.
The diplomatic spotlight shifted to
the 31·year-old king as Kosygin held
last m i n u t e conferences with aides
and an Arab leader before flying to
Havana to meet with Cuban Premier
Fidel Castro. He was leaving without
seeing Hussein.
Kosygin remained tbt: star of the
assembly, now starting the second
(See ALBANIA, Page !)
U.S. Units Kill
2,000 Reds
Since April
SAIGON <UPI)-U. S. Army troops
moved north in Mid-April to strength·
en Marines just below the. demilitar.
ized zone have killed more tnan 2.000
Communists so far, military spokes·
men reported today. U.S. losses were
described as light.
Most of the casualties were in scat-
tered small fights as elements of Task
Force Oregon pushed through heavily
jungled mountains on the coast about
325 mi1es northeast of Saigon. Jn a
typical action Sunday the Americans
killed 17 Communists and Jost one
American killed and n.ioe wounded.
A spokesman said allied troops kill·
ed 158 more Communists in anti-guer·
rilla sweeps along the coast. South
Vietnamese paratroopers in a strike
led by armored personnel carriers
caught and killed 107 Viet Cong on
the outskirts of the ancient imperial
city of Hue. South Koreans killed 4.1
more without suffering a casualty and
U.S. Marines killed 8.
The U.S. Marine action came at
the start of a huge sweep called Op-
eration Calhoun launch"d Utis week·
end and involving a multi-battalion
Marine force. It was being carried
out 36.5 miles northeast of Saigon.
The 2,000 casualties were racked up
by a division size task force hastily
assembled from three army units -
the lOlst Airborne, the U.S. 25th Di·
vision and the 196th Light Infantry
Brigade.
The victories followed one of the
bloodiest American incidents of the
war -the Communist destruction of
two U.S. Army 173Td Airborne bri-
gade platoons caught in a river of
machinegun fire and "banzai'' al·
tacks near the Cambodian border in
the Central Highlands.
tr * *
R ed China Downs
'Straying' U.S. Jet
W ASH!NGTON (UPI) -A U.S. Air
Force Phantom jet was shot down by
Red Chinese planes early today when
it strayed into Communist airspace
near llainan island, the Pentagon an·
noun ced. The two ptrots aboard were
re:.cued from the China Sea.
A brief Defense Department an·
nouncement said the plane. an F4C on
a flight from Clark field near Manila to Da Nang, in South Vietnam, inad·
vertently "crossed into Red Chine~e
airspace."
The announcement said the plane
"apparently experienced a failure of
its navigational and communications
gear."
Orange Coast
Weather
Suddenly. it's summer, likP
for real. beaml' foreca1>ter .Jack
Frazee as ht• calls for sunnier·
skies after the usual mornin~
haze. U)()k for tempcraturei1 up
to tour dej?rccs abovP normal.
INSIDE TODAY
Newport Harbor collegi.ate
sailors bring Morss Trophy to
West Cnast for first time . See
Booting, Page 19 .
'°""n• .. Mutual """" ,,
Callletnl• ' Nallonal ..... ,...
C11u 111.,. !Ml Obllu••I•• • Co"'lu I Or•n .. CHlllY ' Crou-.·ord 10 Petter"' " 11111 00"'' I! SO<tll C1l•ft'4tr ,.
Ed1tor111I , ... 1' Socia! "•"" 11-1' "n•nu 10 II S•orlt 11 , .. ,.
Horst 11 ...... 10 Sim Markoh 1•11
JIHI• l•ltt.• !•II TtltYl"t" • A"" l •ndtr\ II Tl'\ltftr-\ lt
M"llnu • Wtallltt J
Mttvtn " WO<ld NI Wt ...
,
•
'. ' .. •
2 DAILY PILOT •
Drag Races. Come to Scree~hirig Halt
The teen.age grapevine today ts clr-
cula~ word that one or Orange
COUnl1 I IDOll poptllor 111"'1 drai ractng s.lte1 ls a real bust.
Santa Ana police 1wooped ln Satur-
day night to arre1t ~ hot rodding
youths and impound 22 elaborat.ely-
equipped cars.
Scene ot the massive gathering was
West Alton Street between Greenvillf'!
and Br~tol, in I 1parsely populated
ne.ighborhood surrounded by bean
By
JEROME
COLLINS
Along
Our Coast
Oh forget the Summit Conler·
ence,' t~ Mideut Crlai9, Vietnam
and all those race riots. Let's get
to the REALI. Y burning question ~
the day:
Will Corona del Mar ever get a
car wash~
Several day1 ago, as you may re-
call Horace Benjamin said '"la" -3.nd on his property at Iris Ave-
nue and Eut Coast Highway.
But 732 Cor"'1a dll Mor petition-
sigflers said "N'O."
So did seven city councilmen.
Roger Miller once wrote a song
about that kind of situation. He
titk!d It, "You Can't Roilerskate in
a Buffalo Herd."
Would-be car wash mogul Ben-
jamin, 1n sum, w~ trampled.
But personally, I still think it's
po3!ible for Corona del Mlar to get
a car wash . It all depend! on how
you go about it.
What you don't do i!I start right
out larking about washing cars. You
talk about beautifying the neigh·
borhood.
This approach. I think, would pay
off:
"What I have in mind," the de-
veloper tells city councilmen, "is to
plant 15 new trees on this big lot
1 have in downlown Corona del Mar.
Shallow-rooted trees, or course."
"Now, wait a minute, young fell·
er." 63.)11 one of. the more lrasct~le
councilmen. "What's behind this?
Why do you want to plant trees?"
"I like trtts, sir. Don't you like
trees?"
"No further questions," says the
councilman.
The developer then hands the
mayor a petition. "This petition,"
he explains, "is signed by 732 Co-
rona del Mar residents who say
they like treeE:. Eight o1 the signers
are UCI professors.''
"That's pretty imp'Tessive." says
the mayor. "Who circulated the
petition?"
"Isabel Pease."
''I'm for it, I'm for It," the ootire
council choruses.
"Gee, thanks," says the develop-
er. "But just one thing more. I have
this little problem. The trees, which
will be shipped down from Carmel
-lovely town. Carmel -will need
a great deal of watering. So, if you
don't mind, l'm planning on put·
ting if1 a water-generating sblion
on the property,"
''.A water.generating station!"
"Yes, Mr. Mayer," says the de-
veloper. "But it's going to be even
more than that. ln addition to pr~
vidinJ?: water for those 15 new trees.
it will also serve as a facility for
removing u05ightly grime and dirt
fn:im cars. Dirty cars can really
give a neighborhood a run-down ap·
pearance, you know "
"Sounds like a car wash t.o me."
says the i;ame old irascible council·
man.
"Car wash? I'm shocked at the
suggestion." cries the:i developer.
"It wilT be nothing of the kind.
What J have in mind is an aut<>-
motive beautification center."
The rouncil ponders.
"All the overllow water rrom the
automotive beautification center
will go toward !he waterini:: (7f !hose
lovely new trees." the developer
emphasizes . "And because we ex·
peel to beautify al lea.~I 400 cars
a dav. there \Vil! be quite a bi! nf
overflow water. The trees \\'ill h<'
verv happy."
1'11e cou ncil continues lo rnnc1rr
"Gentlemen," asks I.he develnp"r.
'\1o vou wanl thmr trees l o die7"
Still no resf)'Oflse from the council
''l should add." says the develop-
er, "that inMmuch as I will be op-
erating a water-oriented facilitv. I
would fuUy expect to pay substan·
tial tidelands use fees."
"Gimme the pen." sa ys the ira·
scible councilman. "I'll sign."
S<> does everyone else.
And that. fricnrl s. i.~ how <:Ornn11
<tel Mar can even1uallv i;:et 11 c;ar
"'a~h a!': nice :is <1n.vthin,2' C'oslil
Mf!fill ever thrr"'· up
' •
fie Ida. " Tb& drq raoa came to a IC{eecb-
la balt at 11 ~m. after an laform-
aot noWlld tbal opeed daoll
were -.. ••1 betw .. JGUtbl from
Oru;t ud JU...tdt oavntW °"" -laid lllllt bo anl.od just in time to &ee two late-model
autos emit loud roan and accderate
to more Ulan 15 mph in a quarter
mile on Use two-way 1treel
Police s&.id that bamdrOOs of young
"' 'SCHOOLMARM' -In photo set up lo capture the 1 pmi S W..
marm" llld pupil rela-.itip, the !ale Mn. Clan N. McNall.J ii
shown with her grand.ton, James Orr, 10D of Mn. VcNall,y'adlugbter,
Mn. Jean Zumwalt
Pioneer Mesa Teacher.
Clnra N. McNally Dies ,
Clara N. M&ally of New po r l
Buch, who began teaching ICbool ill
Costa Mesa in 1924, died Sunday.
Mrs. McNally. a resident Of 415 E.
'2nd St., WU &1. She bad been ill
DIES IN EUROPE
Stu .. rt A. Coult•r
S. A. Coulter
Rites Slated
For Thursday
J\1emorial services will be conduct·
ed at 2 p. m. Thursday in lloly Trinity
Church, Covina. ror Stuart A. Coulter.
retired rancher. business and civic
leader and a resident of Balboa for
!hf' past seven yrars.
J\1r . Cou lter, RI. di~ l"r1<lay 1"
\'irnn.1. Austria, while on a F.uro~an
holiday.
lie had served a~ president of San
Dimas and Charter Oak chambers of
commerce and United A v o c a cl o
Growers Association. lie was a for·
mer president o( Uic Rotary Club.
Covina. and governor of Rotary Dis·
tr1ct 5.12.
Survivors include his wife , Wini·
fred. of the fa mily home, :r:n E. Bay
l'ront , Balboa: two sons, FrOO of Co-
vina and \Villiam of Newport Beach.
a brolhcr .. Jam~. or Oakland: sis·
1rr, t\1rs. T. C. llough, of P;isadcna.
11 n<1 t"''" J?ranclchildrl"n Arr;ing('menl~ Arf' unll('r !hr il1r"1"
I inn nf C11.~rrr . Chri~lians('n Mnrh1ar},
fn\Hlri
•
for a tong time.
She began her teaching career in
19'Z4 when Coat.a Mes.a was a !arm
commOnity, and retired 2l yean lat«
in l!KS when stricken with arthritiJ.
Born in Kanaas, she moved to Bal-
boa in 1912 and could recall her tint
home on Balboa Island •hen rui-
dents rowed to their hOU$es before
the bridge was bl.JU .
/\ graduate of Occidental CoUege
and the University 0( California at
Berkeley, she majored In l..atin and
Greek.
Mc.~aUy School at Newport Boule-
v ard and 19th Street in Costa Me.a
ill named in bet-honor. She was both
a l.eacher and principal in the ICbool
district. ·
Survivors include her h u s b a n d,
James B., of tbt family home; a aoa,
Carl B. McNally, and daughter Mn.
Jean Zumwalt, both of N e w p o r t
Beach. and one grandchild.
Services will be conducted Tues·
day at II a.m. at Bell Broadway
Olapel. 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa.
with tlle Rev. flerbert Johnson of the
F'i.rst MethOdist Olurch of C 0 s t a
Mesa, officiating. Interment will fol·
iow at Pacific Vff?w Memorial Park.·
Random Bullet
Shatters Glass
Someone fired a shot into the air
Sunday. and Richard Nelson, 2001 Al-
tura Drive. Corona del Mar. know•
where it landed -on his sliding gla.JS
door.
Nelson told officers he heard the
glass crack at about 12:Xl p.m. The
door faces onto his rear yard. which
i5 surrounded by a seven·loot fence.
~o one was in lhf' yard
PoUce said thf' door ilp~arccl lo
~a\le been slruck by a spent .2:2-ca1-
1lK'r bullet . They thenrilN! 11 may
havf' been hrl"d rrnrn a nearby shop·
riniz arf'a
S6.5(HI Fire Sweeps
llon1e In Cypress
The Cypress Volunlttr F'ire De-
partment today reported a '6.500
blale swept through n modest wood
rrame hQuse Sunday t'\'c>nlng. There
were no injuries ...
Firt'!men said the~' managed 10
l!.a\le 12.00'l W()rlh O( t'Onfcn!~. bul tf:·
(lflrlt'd thr firr heavily rlamai:ecl the
hntJSt' n"'·ned by Hrit\'{') F:l~worth.
Au. Allaholm, OranlO Uc! Garden
Groft P0n.e l&Jd DO Oran.. Cout
fouUll ... aar ' l • -J •
'l1lil JOUDCJlen: wen releued to tllllr'~ll and nporU will be -
ed °"" to the Oran1e County Proba· tiOl'I Dtpartmeot
AIM arrested were 'n adlllb Crom
18 to 23 years old. 'Ibey were booted
into °''""' Counl> jail _,,. ball and court 8.J'Tajgnme:nts.
Na:vy Denies
Foam Plastic
Balls Theirs
Navy 1pokelmtn today atout11 de-
nied that lbe white Ude of loam plu-
Uc ball.I Nported wasb.iDc up on
beacbel from Oraae County to
SID Francilco bu anJ1hln1 to do
with tbe Navy.
Rumen circulated over the weet·
end that the plutic balla, whlch are
white on the outside and a dirty Dr"'
ange lnalde, wen dropped by N191
planea ad that tbeJ are apklllve
when broba open and apoeed to
weter.
Tbe Navy deDled botb rumon, -..... to alvile be-. 'how-
..... ""' to aporlmat -tho bolll.
It ... -tho -art dlf. --tho--111-wblcll bit lllo Orep Cout Ill mld-
'YOU'ii COOL, IA.IV' -Sil•er·belted hippie with homemade ~
spendl Sundoy an.er-11 Sell Belch lov .. in <OOiDI -DO!biDP to hll ID&ke aad "_.inc'' with nature. • ' ,...... .. ""-Mee.-
Aprll Oae cl -· opporenu1 fill-ed with metallic sodium, exploded
when tM contenta were ttpOled to
water.
Fro.., r.,e 1
An Anaheim youth, Louis Duen·
weg, 17, wu WnporarilJ blinded by
the flub exploaion at Hwrti.ngton
Beach.
HIPPIES HAPPEN •••
The new llotaam wubJng up on
beaches bu been lmted by the N•vy
and found non-aploclve.
Naval ordnance men lelted three
of tbe white plastic balls found ln
Safi Franciaoo'• Golden Gate Park
and claimed they wouldn't burn or
explode when thrown into water or
even when tbey were hit.
An Army oranance man at the Pre-
sidio ln San Francl.lco, however, said
the balli: -about the We: ot tennis
ball! -should be considered "ex·
tremely dangerous.''
One observer of Southern California
beaches said the balll are frequent
visitors to the 1ands of Orange and
San Diego counties.
Prison Parolees
Held jn Shooting
At NB Policeman
Uoable to make $25.000 ball, t w o
state pri9on paroleea 9Pe0t the weet-
emd in Newport Beach city jail
pending arraignment today on chaTges
or attempted murder.
Terry Lyal Smith, 29, and Steven
Ernest Aries, 23, both of 414 Tustin
Ave .. Newport, art accused of firing
two ,lhota ;;t Police Lt. William Blue after ,~ allegedly caught them trying
to ~,into l\is . private auto early
Friday morning. Blue was not hurt.
'lbe pair were arrested a few hours
Later in Huntington Beach, w b e r e
police the~ accused them Of prepar-
ing a service station holdup. Thev
assert.edly were found biding in weedS
near the: service station. Police found
a .22<aliber pistol and a handkerchief
mask nearby, o(ficers said.
Smith and Aries matched the de-
scription o( smpects involved in the
earlier Newport shooting, o(ftcer• said.
They went home.
Only three people were taken lnto
cu1tody during the day -a runaway
girl, • drunken Marine and a youth
with psychiatric probJem1.
An estimated 20,000 tour11t1· Oocked
to the beach to wa~ tbe i...tn.
They were entertalnid \.by"' bltlnl·
clad bunniea danclng m the rb)'lltm
of "drumbeats" on opside-dOwn oU
drums, • young man in blue jeans
f',...m Page l
ALBANIA ...
week of its emergency debate on the
Middle East. , ,
Koaygin'• hard-line anti·l 1rae11
declaratfoo. df::Jjvere<t in cordial tones
to an exceptional news conference
Sunday D..lght. left delegates with Little
hope of an Arab-Israeli settlement as
a result of the Glassboro summit con·
ference with Johnson.
Albania accused Kosygin and hi.s
Moscow government ol betraying the
Arab wwld.
Nase told the General Assembly the
Soviet Union not only gave no support
to the Arabs in their six.day war with
Israel but actually was In collusion
with the United States.
As expected the speech foll owed
the thinking of Peking which already
has accused tCosygin of being a traitor
because of h.is talks with Johnson.
"The hypocritical attitude of I h e
Kosygin government revealed treach-
ery against the Arab peoples," Nase
said. 'The KOllygin government be·
trayec:. the Arabs. Si.nee the war start-
ed, the Soviet Union gave no 11upport
to the Arabs and there has been col-
lusion with the United St.ates.
"The double game of the Kosygin
government was to help American
imperialism and put the problems of
the Middle East within the general
concept of American·Soviet bargain·
ing."
Leaders' Summit Views
Summarized at Glance
By United Pr•• lnt•m•tional
Here is a capsule comparison of President Johnson's and So-
viet Premier Alexei Kosygin's remarks on their summit talks:
VIETNAM
Johnson: "I was able to make il very clear. with no third party
between us, that we will match and outmatch every step to peace
that others may be ready to take."
. Kosygin: The Unjted States ''is continuing Its aggression against
the Vietnamese people." This bitter struggle will never end "unless
lhe aggressor le.aves Vietnamese soil."
MIDDLE EAST
Jo.hnson: "I must report Lhat no agreement )ti readily in sight
on the Mtddl~ Easter~ crisis." We ai::reed in principle lhal ... "F,vcry
st.a te has a right l.o hve. that there s hould be an end to l,h(' "'ar in
the Middle East -and that in lhe right r irC'11mstances thert s hould
be withdrawal of troops."
Kosygin: The most important objective is "rondenmin,i:: of 1hc
a~gres.c;~r <Israel. in t~e Russian view)," and bringing aboul an imme-
diate withdrawal of hts forces behind the armistice lines.
NUCLEAR NON-PROLIFERATION
Johnson: "We have agreed this afternoon that Pt1r. Rusk fsec·
ret.ary of slate) and Mr . Gromyko (Soviet foreign minister) will pursu('
this subject, focussing on the ur,1tenl need for prompt agreement on a
non-proliferation tre1ty."
Kosygin: There was basic a~reemc nl with President .Johnson
for ~ treaty on non-dmemination or nuclear weitpons and on qur~·
lionA of mutual cooperation between the l Jnltcd States a nd the Sov1t>I
Union "which both sides believe are useful.''
and silver belt whispering to 1 snake
wrapped around his neck. "Baby
you're cool"; small groups playing
stringed instruments and sing.Ing,
boys and girls constructing mystic
pictures on the sand with flower pet~
ala and chants of "L. . .0 . • ·.v.
E "
Higb above the beach a bird-styled
kite floated with the message, "Send
Poems to Bob."
Ocf:anfront hamburger merchant.
were swamped b:,i the hungry hip-
pies. leading one concessionnaire to
comment:
"Next year, l 'U sponsor this thing."
Councilmen Dean Gemmill ud
John Hamilton visited lbe happening.
Gemmill, In perhaps U..e understate.
noenl of the year, 1ald, "The only
comment I can make ill tilat everyone
&ecms to be having a good lime."
Kathy Shepherd, a 21).year-old Cali·
fornia State College, Loni Beach, stu·
dent. didn't agere.
"There are tao many tourist!," she
S.3:id. "Jt's just oot a beautiful tbint
with everybody grooving together."
Although '.)lainclothes policemen
mixed with the crowd, the odor of
burning marijuana drilled across the
beach.
The dress was something out of a
Ray Bradbury movie. Costumes rang-i.
ed from medieval ouUits of velvet to
Army i.urplus garb. Western gear,
greasy motorcycle jackeU. Camaby
Street mod clothes and "peace paint''
on bare skin.
Only a few hopeful hippies 5tUck Jt
out to the end .
. They ended the happening by sing·
1ng the "Battle liymn of the Repub-
lic.''
Swift Air Granted
Airport Facilities
Swift Air has won approval of a
lease for terminal facilities al Or·
ange County Airport lo operate an
air charter service to Las Vegas and
Catalina Island.
DAILY PILOT
Rob•tt N. Wttcl
Pub!b.N<
• Jho,,,•1t K•e•il Edl1'ar
Tllom11 A. M11rphl"• ..,..,_Inf Edl11ar
JtrOm• f , CoU;.,,
N_.! 8<!Kll City Edllat"
Jtclr R. C11tley Ptul Ni'''" Bu•~· -.... , .t.cr~I,, ... Dir~
Otht,. Off:ct• ""''~ _,., llll Wn l Bt• St.-t L~"""" 8"'1<~ lU ~ ....... ·-
H.,n!o,..t"" ll~K" lOf ,,~ "'"'
Newpen IMcti <>Mei,
Z2 I I W11t ltlbot ll•cl.
Mtili"9 Adclrtn: P.O. Soi 1175 •2•6J
•
DA1l,. PILOI "'"h *~'<" ,, ,.......,,_
"" ljl'Wl·Pr+u. '" oul!fl•hto 6tlh-u<91 """""~ ... _ • .,. Nillolr>o .... _,......
lktQ\. COltt -..., L•-8udl, Ol .....
1..,.i..., llu<.11. ~-ltlfl ..,., ... --
m•nsll!r. ....... *'N~ • ,........, 11111...._ f'<lri<t"8 Dlt"h el ~II Wett llallllle 11"4-N-pOo'I .. ..,,, .... DI Wftl .. ,. S-. , .... ,,.,.,...
TelepHM 11141 M2-4J21
Cl..m..I ~-. Mt-5671
COPV1'!...,t. , .. , o'""" cont PllW!Mt •~11 C°"'l>t"Y .. o ..,_ flOl'lh. ltl1•ll••
•Ion .. tdilorl., .... n., "' •lfv1111Wrne"'1
"'"""" "'"" N •tt>roellloo wn"""t _ ...
""'"'It•'°" o! COPY•l ... 1 -ll•A~ll. (All0o•ft!O StJbK .. PllOll 9¥ ( ..
•I"' t l II """'"'I" 1w "'"" II """"'""'' "°<(lllfl COtOI _.... Hiii •I .. _
"'ITll•'-O•oll""ll......_ 11 '' ....,..tllly
N(]
By L'
SACRAMEI
Jllly l when
yells, "Hey,
car?" better
For as ol
Of' woman it
years old to
in the state .
ceptioru:.
Tbe e.s:cept
encourage te
operate a v
a.nee ol expt
oase, doesn't
It means d
clus and ht
So
M~
WASHING'
Democratic I
day aummec
mil meeting
ttits, DO err<
1be Monti
Mer
BATESVll
James Mere
fear" throug
side. hobble.
toe today , s
sneering wh.i
Meredith ;
companions
toward the l
Pope, Enid i
<taY of the n
Meredith 1
for my feel.
leather boot
mareh Satur
Hernando. ,..
from ambus
But the bo
little toe of
began walki
shoes witb
aides, but a
beside the r+
the boots.
Givt
ToJ
VATLCAN
VJ in a sire
proclaimed :
ing four A
then in a s
Jerusalem b
peace and J
international
The new ,
four Americ
Indonesia ar.
munist Pola
carmnals to
It also rail>·
countries re
Among Uw
noWied of t:
San, Mt
~lr>I ~loll • Fl,..., ._ ,..
Sec-"~" *'"'-·
hR fltl•I
-M't>11
Orang
l'eb• ~..-i. ...... "'"'"°"~ """"' 10 lo 11
dtv .->el '"'' t"CI ...... ..i .. , . ,._,_,
_,r11 co•ut 1 ,.,..tHd•v'•
..., •• hlQh
w ..... "'"'Pl'"
Call
SOUlliEllOI
C1oud1 -ID "loM ond M ..,..,,1"" ......,,.
... .......... "''"' .. .. "" ... -· -·-t•f C<N>l"9 clt>uc
-·~ <tr-h Tundi
""'' tht"9t. LOS "NGEI
l-clouclt Ltr
• .. ""'"" i...:1 "-"•"O• ..... T...e-ollt~ H"~
-0 4 lj!tir; W< ...... ·~ co•sr•L 11 """ ........ ~ """"!"' .._ .
'
DAJL Y PILOT 3
No Driver's Training? W ait'll You're 18, So;n
By LYLE W. PRICE 1,
SACRAMENTO (AP) -StartiJfg
July 1 when Junior comes in and
yells, "Hey, Dad, can 1 borrow the
car?" betteT check his ID.
For as of Saturday, a young man
or woman in CaWornla must be 18
rean old to obtain a driver's license
m the state -with a number of ex.
ceptiona.
The exceptions all ate designed to
encourage teen..agers to learn bow to
operate a vehi~ uoder the guid·
ance ol experts -and that, in this
case, doesn't meen dad.
It means driver education, both in
class and behind the wheel. U a
youngster qualifies under olficlal in-
struction, he'll still be eligible for a
driver's license at age 16.
The basics are 30 hour~ of class-
room instruction, m hours behind the
wheel and a bit of red tape paper-
work between school authorities and
~ Department of Motor Vehicles.
The new law's effective date arrives
two yeacs after passage by the 1965
legislature, which wanted both to en·
courage driver education and discour-
age more time-honored -but dan-
gerous -ways of learning.
Time-honored? Well, in the oot-too-
disbmt past a young per90D could con-
sider himself lucky to have gotten
lirst hand instruction at the wbeel ol
his dad's new -or even old-car.
Dr. John Eales, coosuJtaot in sec-
ondary educatioo for the State De-
partment of Education and driver ed-
ucation specialist, says it was usually
much more informal.
"Most young people just learned by
watching,'' Eales declared. "Maybe
they got a chance to drive an old
pickup truck or something to start.
But the training wasn't very formal."
ll also, he adds, wasn't very good.
The legislature, the Department of
Motor Vehicles, insurance companies
and the schools believe -as Eales
puts it -"the time has gone when
Solons Say 'No Errors'
Made at Summit Meet
WASHING TON <UPI) -S e n a t e
Democratic leader Mike Mansfield to-
day summed up the GlaS6boro sum-
mit meeting this way: "No runs, no-
hits, no errors."
The Montana Democrat t o 1 d the
Senate that while there was "no open
conciliation of differences" between
President Johnson and Soviet Pre·
mier Alexei Kosygin, there was a
"better understanding of the position
Meredith Trudges On
With Blistered Toe
BATESVILLE. Miss. <UPI)
James Meredith, marching "against
fear" through the Mississippi country·
side. hobbled along with a blistered
toe today, signing autographs Co r
sneering white youths.
Meredith and his little band of
companions set off from Batesville
toward the little towns of Courtland.
Pope, Enid and Qakland on the third
ctay of the march.
Meredith said he feU fine "except
for my feet." He was wearing high
leather boots when he began t h e
march Saturday from the point near
Hernando. Miss., where he was shot
from ambush last year.
But the boots wore a blister on the
little toe of his right fool. When be
began wallcing today. he wore I o w
shoes witb lengthwise slits in t b e
sides. but a hour later he sat down
beside the road and changed back to
the boots.
A total or six white youths ap-
proached him today for autographs,
which he readily signed.. One youth.
15-year-old Bobby Baker. said •·I just
want his autograph for kicks.•·
A 15-year-old girl said "I want it to
tear it up."
The day was overcast and cool, and
Meredith wore a rain hat.
Meredith spent the night in Sardis
at the home of Cora Lee Stewart, cele-
brating his 34t.h birthday. Mrs. Stew-
art, he said, presented him with a
big yellow birthd,ay cake.
Meredith, calling his hike a "march
against fear," found a heavy dose of
fear Sunday. As he passed through
Sardis, he called to an 8-year-o I d
Negro boy, saying "If you were 16.
you could walk with me."
"N~h. not me," replied the boy. "I
don't want to risk it. The.re's people
in the bushes around here and they'll
kill you."
Give International Status
To Jerusal em,;Says Pop e
VATlCAN CITY (UPI) -Pope Paul
VI in a streamlined ceremony today
proclaimed 'J:1 new cardinals, includ-
ing four Americans. He appealed
then in a speech that the city of
Jerusalem be made a "free oasis of
peace aod prayer" with guaranteed
international status.
The new cardinals. including the
four Americans, a first cardinal for
Indonesia and a second one for Com-
munist Poland. raised the college of
cardinals to an all-time high of 1J8.
It also rai!>ed to 44 the number of
countries represented.
Among the new cardinals form<lllY
notified of their election in a centur-
ies old custom were Archbishops Pat-
rick Louis O'Boyle of Washington,
D.C . John P. Cody of Chicago and
John Joseph Krol of Philadelprua.
and Msgr. Francis J . Brennan of
Shenandoah. Pa.
Today's ceremonies were secret:
there will be a public consi!>tory Wed·
nesday in which each cardinal will
reci!ive his square. N!d cardinal's hat.
In his major address the PontUf
reviewed world problems. He appeal-
ec for peace in Vietnam and the Mid-
dle East and deplored lack of religious
freedom in Communist and other
countries.
of both countries."
He also told newsmen that he thinks
the summit meeting would strengthen
Johnson's hand in dealing with Con·
gress on foreign policy issues. Mans-
field stressed that the President bad
kept leaders of both parties closely
posted on developments.
In brief remarks on the Senate Door,
Mansfield said, "the important thing
now is the followup 1n Moscow and
Wash.ington. and it is my belief and
hope that on the basis of the Glass-
boro foundation. it may well be pos:
sib~ to build a more secure structure
in the months and years ahead."
He said Johnson showed ·•m o r e
resiliency" in his approa<:h to world
problems compared to Kosygin's "un-
deviating" position.
Mansfield and other key legislators
shared a cautious optimism that the
"Spirit of Hollybush" may ultimately
lead to better Soviet-U.S. relations.
l'he majority sentiment on Capitol
Hill appeared to be that Presid e n t
Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin have had a chance to
size each other up and substantive
agreements now await future meet-
ings.
Senate RepublJcan leader Everett
M. Dirksen said he was pleased that Johnso~ "had the gu~" to Jet Kosygin
know JUst where the United States
stands on ltle important world issues.
MansCleld said he felt "the ground-
work for changes in the future on
substantive issues has been laid."
Sen . George D. Aileen (Vt.) second-rankin~ Republican on th~ Senate
Foreign Relations committee said he
felt the decision of the twd leaders
to keep in touch "should be very as-
suring to the whole world."
And Sen: J . William Fulbright m-
Ark.), cbauman or the Foriegn Rela·
tions committee, said he was "very
pleased" that the summit talks were
held.
"What I do know about the talks 1s
very good," the Arkansas Democrat
~id. "But how moch they agreed to
I don't kllow " ·
Dirksen said he was ·'of the opin-
ion that they reached no reaJ accord ··
but added that he was glad Johns~n
and Kosygin had spent the 10 hours
together.
"I have an idea from what ha'\
ben said that there was no yielding on
Kosygin's part," Dirksen said. "I
thought perhaps he had co01e here
to feel out the President and see pre-
cisely how he would stand up on these
various issues."
Clear Skies Prevailing
R ain Hides South of Moson-Dixon Line
San. Moon. Tide~
TUUOAY
Finl ~1911 . .•. 12:'9 e.m H
Flnf iow t:oa • m. o 1 ~ high ••••••••. J.lt pm. 40
s.cc..d tow t 70 Pm, 1 I
5" Ill-S·..S am
-s.n11rna m
5-h •. ., p m.
~·" o. Na• ht 0 . ""'' June ,. July 1 Julv 14 Jul'f 21
Orange Coast
Llgh1 v.,~ •Incl' night •r>if
mo<Fllnti lloun btcomlng \C>Uftl-1 10
_,1 10 lo It knoh In afl•r!ICICIM ~
d .... .,,., TwscS..... L-CIOUd\ n'9M
encl ,,_nlnos becoming mC>Ctlv wnnv
111 afl•rnoons bvl ...,rllv cloudv 1lono
1<"11h '°"" r .... .oev 1l1erl'CIOll V~•tl'rd~v·• HtwPDrl teml'f'AIU"'
...... • high of &I •rod • '°"' ol "· W•••r t~m1111r11ur. we• A7,
California
SOUTHERN CALIFOllNI• -Low
cloud• •'1d tool fog coastal 1e<llon1
nlghl •rid toorlv morning llOu" 11<--
oomlnv WMY ltlls •lltrnoon •nd mo\I
IV tu""Y wltll vari.bll! ctoudlne» '""' MY •""noon. S«ne • ltenlOon cloud•
IOcMY rnounl1IM •ncl dtW'f• trd In
<'"sing clouds Witll cMncc ol ""'"' ~· IOll!hern .._nlalna ....S
_,, Tundo Not m\l(fl f9mPert
""' change. LOS ANGELES ANO VICINITY-
L-cloud• late nlohl encl e<irlY mor,,.
•nQ lloun becoming "*""' WMY !Al•
IY,.YTHnQI end atfe<llOOlll lod.IY 4'nd
TUHdev Hl•h ~ ... '° low IO"IQM AO A hlllf' wl•mff T~IY wllh hlOh ... , ...
COA~TAl VAll£YS L-cloud•
'"" klc:el tno 1•1• n!Qhl •nd ta•lv ,,,..,.,1,. ltour• i.cvm1,. wrww ""'
•ll~rn()M And mosllv •11nn11 wilh •••·
l•b~ 'k>ud' Tueodu •llernooo Nll!
much ltmi-r.rure cl\ango. H'9M to-
dev •O to U. L-• totllohf S) lo '°
HloM Tueldev t2 lo 90.
U.S. Summa r y
~I ol IN nellon enlovod clur
Milt'\ today, •ltllouo~ • i.roe cao1 '" -... centered over -n lndlent
conllnved to dOmlnete lho WHI,,.,.
from 1114t llocklu to 1M Allaftfk
COM!
A o•"""•I return lo ""' norn..I
,.,,_,11\lf'et •n upedt<i In l~t
•lloci.d .,.. i.lff loOaY •I'd Tutt·
dtv Ttw NllOrl's iow.11 re~lno lh••
mnrnlng ••• 40 degrtti 11 S.ult Sit
Mitrif'. MICh .• .,.., llulle, MO<tl
Al-1rw tdOe of ttw cool 11r ma><
tt•11Hf'CI lllu~""-" trtl from
Tt•.. to Ille CarOllNI •1111 hHVV
<!OWf\DOO" •• •om• ••Ola"' nl Ole 11·
llOINI tn<f ffMU ~•nrl•llf 1n ,.
coro.ci 3"'1 •ncht• 01 •tin In • t i\· Mur -lod o rlY IC)lllY
SVMY Ill~• •nd werm ... MIW'I pr ...
•tllf'd trom lllt Rocklu 10 tht WP\'
(,..JI T... n•llo<I'• w••-sl •PH•"!:
Sunti.v we• 11111 al lluckeye. Arll. II
w .. 101 al N....ilM. C11il
~lherft Colllortll• w•1 worm and
$U,,.,,, IOCllV
Tempera Cures
.,lblnv .. 11111 __
All1nl1
thk•••l ... ld
"'""'''~ k•V
!l~IM
llullalo
Hit~ L ... ,,,..
17 ii u
" l\ 1111 ... .. /)
" 'IJ °" ~· ., 0 .. , Ill
to )A
C~i<-oo
Cinco'"'" Cl•Yf'lencl
0fftYtr
OH Mol~s
Ol'lroit
EUf'eka
F al rtle nits
For! w ... lh
FrHllO
~ION
Honolulu
Houston
I ncllar•ti•<ll"
JKk-Yill•
Ju~ .. u
Lu Vf!OU
IC•nws Citv
LM Angt"'9
Lu II~••
lOUl!Ylll<>
M•ml)lils
Ml4ml
Mllw•uk~
Ml,,,,eapoll•
NfJ'W Or~An\
"law Ynrk
Oft~IA'ld
O~lfthom• CHY
O"'<ln"
P•llO Rob"'•
l'hllWllJl>le ,,_,, ..
l'lll\t1urgh
Porll<lnd. Mo.
Por11•rld. Or~
lbold CllY
RP<! &lull R-11 lch"'CINI
*'•~le SI Loult
~tt uh Cltv
San 0'"<1
San Frtnc•tee>
Sant• ....
S1nl1 llorbo••
)t<lttw
~"""•nr h mpo r .... ,,,,.1
W•lllllngloll
8.5 ~ n s1
11 " 7' . .so
7' S6
70 M
Sci n
•l
101 ,.
'8 ..
IS
fO
ft
'°' 14
10
1().1
IA ..
u
14
/) •• tn A5
"" ~5
17
•I
IOI
"' 71
51
5A n
~· H
1l n
51
15 ..
14
5•
~I ,.
;7
•\
" 5A
16 n •• l.\ 6,
SS
51
AO ,,
l'I
AO u
41
"' 4.!
11
,.
01
11
13 u
tl
'3 ,. t.l , 06
S6
&] .. •• 56
5)
~
~,
n
1'I • s•
... \1
!ill SJ ,, "
tO " 11111 11
•) •I
Tr
Tr
you can just learn by watch.ing or
osmosis "
Under the Dew regulation, student
behind · the • wheel training can start
at age 15'h, or sophomore standing.
Some 14-y.ear-olds -with birthdays
late in the year -would be eligible
as sophomores.
There 1s no stipulation at what age
classroom driver education may be of-
fered, but Eales said two thirds of
the schools offering .driver training do
so in the loth grade.
The classroom driver training aJ.
ready has been a requirement of
graduation for California high school
seniors but not lhe behind-the-
wheel instruction.
Wt.at about high school dropouts.,
Or schools withoUt driver training
courses :
In both cases the youth may take
such training outside of a school from
a qualified adult over 25 years ol age
whose own driver's license is in good
standing.
From a licensed private driving
school or an independent licensed in·
structor.
All must meet department rules.
Nigh( school could also qualify.
Learning permits may be obt.ained
-as formerly -at the age of 15~ -
but now the student must have com-
Ul'IT.._..
PATRICK l YNOON -This is the first picture of Patrick Lytl'don
l\'ugent. F.andson of President Johnson. Taken by a White House
phot()Rra r, it was released today by his parenlci Luci and Pat
Nugent e 1s being held by unidentified nurse.
First P hoto R eleased
Of LBJ Grandso n 'Lyn'
Al;STIN, Tex IL'Pl) -Luci and
Pat Nugent releas('d today the first
pictures of their newborn son. wh o
look~ like all fat babies
Th('y said he vawned at the picture·
takin~
The Nugents planned to leavP the
ho~r11 a1 today.
A !!lossy S·by-10 black-and-w h 1 I e
photograph of Patrick Lyndon Nugent
wrapped in a while blanket and held
bv an unidenllfted nurse was shown
a'roun d at S<>ton Hospital this mor-
nmc
Th(' picture was taken by Bob
Km1tlsen. a White llouse staff photog-
raphrr, last Friday at 6 pm .. when
··1., n" Nu gent was nearly :i days
olct
Thr Nugents said their boy 1s photo-
genie and did not cry during the p1c·
ture·taking However', he did yawn.
they said.
The photo shows him lookin~ alert.
with his little hand!: close to h 1 s
round racr Hr looks much likP hts
father. Pat
Knudsen 1s used to taking baby
pictures. lie ha!: four children of his
o.,.,n in Annandale. Va
Knudsen said he had three separate
photo session!': wit.ti Luci's baby be-
fore the picture was released. Neither
Ludi nor Pat was present at the pic-
ture-taking in a room adjoining Luci's
room
SomP pictures were In color. he
said
Luci and Pat personally picked the
first picture to be released.
pleted 30 hours of classroom imtruo-
lion without the six hours behind tb9
wheel.
Young persons not ~aining tcbool
or approved instruction may obtain a
learner's permit at 171h. 1bole ta and
17-year-olds who already ba-,e a
driver's license are exempt from the
new law's provisions.
The Department of Motor Vebide$
is issuing olfida1 certificates ol
course completion which must b9
signed by school authorities for JOC111i
persons to obtain the liOl!lllllS tllie1
need to drive dad's car.
Or their own.
Photos Back
Oswald As
)Fl{ Killer
WASHTNGTON IUPJ) -A mem -
ber of the Warren Commission aid
today a new analysis of pbot.ograpbs
"helps to verify" the panel's findinC
that Lee Harvey Oswald a11ManaUd
President Kennedy.
House Republican Lnder Gaut R.
Ford, • member of the pn!lidmtl.aJ
comm.tsaion beaded by <Jtief Jamee
Earl Warren. told UPI be was ''very
much impressed with this new an·
alysis."
A qew took at t.he lilm of tile •·
sassmatioo takeo by amateur pbotog·
rapber Abraham Zapruder teods to
reaffirm the Warren Commisaion·s
!.tringle-bullet'' theory tnat the lint
buUet which hit Kennedy also aeri·
ously wounded Texas Gov. John Coo·
nally.
Fll.M ANALYSIS
The Columbia Broadcasting System,
in the first of four-hour Jong broad-
casts on the controversy over the u-
sassi nalion. presented an anaJysis of
the Zapruder film Sunday night.
Basically, ttie scientific laboratory
analysis conducted by CBS suggests
that blurs in 7..apruder's film were
caused by his startled reaction to the
sound or gunfire.
The analysis sbowed that three
blurred frames on the film were ~
pare-ntly caused by a subtle move-
ment of Zapruder's body.
Two or the blurred frames occurred
afler frames showing Kennedy being
hit by bullets -about the time the
sound would reach the photographer
and cause him to jump.
BLL'RREO FRAME
An initial blurred frame indicated
that a first shot was fired at a spot
earlier than had been detennined by
the Warren Commission.
According to the CBS study. the
first shot was fired as Kennedy's car
passed beneath a tree. Oswald had a
brief target between tree branches.
"We had discussed the possibility
of Oswald firing the first shot through
the tree, but we didn't think it \Ilte-
ly .' · Ford said today.
Bolh Ford and CBS said this initial
shot missed.
But with the first shot coming sec-
onds earLier lhan previously believed.
Ford said it would support Connal-
lv's views.
· The Texas governor has been one
of the most influential critics of the
single-bullet theory.
Connally has argued that he heard
the first shot and was struck by a
second bullet. Most contend that tile
rommission 's findings showed the first
bullet hit Kennedy in tile neck and
then passed through to seriously
wound Connally.
0
·OMEGA
Your 01Mga
SC1Us Ir Seroiu
Agency
YOUR WATCH'~:
• Cleaned • Oiied
• Adfutttd
$5!!LETE
Rings Cluntd
While You Wall
PEARLS
RE·STRUNG
RINGS
SIZED, lrom
Mtsslnq Diamondi
R'placed. from
0--Y
nun••r ,,... Fnuv
ftlltt 'Ill '
FREE
$1 .49
$1.79
$3.99
I r ~
!
'
Jewelry Designing
A Speci1ltyl
Now 2 Great Stores To Serve. You
HAUOl SHO,,IN5 HUNTINC.TON CINTll
CINTU HACH Ir lDINCHI
UOO HAllOI ILVD. HUNTINC.TON IUCH
COSTA MUA • 545-9415 ltJ-5501 I
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. Tll 9 p.m.
Ol~lll
St ... •u~
~tlcl
ftOlll $11S, ~ • wjtl! bfautftl
frOlll $UO.
... Othet~li-
ft .. $!S ..
-ia
TllMI
TO
FfT
YOUI
IUDGIT
' \
4 DAIL V l'ILOT
Summit Ladie• Relax
3 Doctors
Criticize
AMA Chief
CHICAGO (UPI) -Th t
heads ol three national
medical orga.nizatimu &a.id
Sunday the new president of
the American Meclc:al Asso-
ciati01J indicates in opposing
Medicare he is more con-
cerned witfl buaineu than
wib the hippocraUc oath.
"Such an organization I the
AMA) ought to advocate the
principles ol care Hf: forth
in the Hfppocratic oath."
s.aid a statement iasued by
the ttlrtt medical leaders.
11ie :llatemeot was rl'·
leased by Dr. Quentin [).
Young, chairman of lhl'
Medical Committee ror llu-
man Rights; Dr. John L.S.
Holloman Jr., presldent ol
the Natiooal Medical Asso-
ciation and Dr. Lytt I.
Gardner, c:bairmu of the Phy--· "It it now •Pl*Ut th e
Helen Keller
Notes 87th
Birthday
EASTON, Conn. (APl
Helen Keller -who went on
lo world renown aJthough
she is deaf. blind and mute
-celebrates her 87th birth-
day Tuesday.
There will be a birthday
cake, vl$its from fr iends,
and her brother. Philip
Brooks Keller ol Dallas,
Tei: .. and llis wife also will
be on hand.
"The advancing years
Posing for photographers u:e (lel't to right) Hrs. Richard Hughes. wife of gov-
ernor or New Jersey; Mrs. U..dmila Gvishiani, daughter of Soviet Premier Kosy-
gin; Af_rs. Lyndon Johnson and dau~ Lynda Bird. The fbur ladies were at the
seaside resort ol the Hughes' to hold their own summit meeting.
AMA pl.ma to coatinue its
futile oppolitioD to w h a t
clearly ... been mandated
by the ,._ pubtic -
federal support for medical
reseucb. ·medical educa-
tion. hospital&. medical in-
surance fer the elderly.
prognims lot tbe medically
indigent and planninc f o r
com.munity health care,"
thetbnoe-Wd.
have taken their toll." said
her companion. Winifred
Corbally, "but she is up and
about every day."
Miss Keller was born a
normal child 1n Tuscumbia,
Ala. She was sricken at 19
months with an illness that
left her deal, blind and
mute. Did Dodd
Censure
Aid Powell?
Governors Swinging
To 'Reagan, Rocky
Or. Mi1f«d 0. ROUie Mid
in bit U..praJ. ~ ..
Pl-cl .. AKA tbal
mdi:iae ii (Kell with in-
ae•ed ~ coo-
-priee lllld -llsioc. fl'IJlb9il -• GObphlfit .. ~
proacb to mectidne and -kiss
free cboice.
But lhe went on to gradu-
ah!: cum 1aude from Rad-
cilffe College. ahe wrote
boob, starnd in a Ii.lent
movie. toured t h e vau<fe.
ville circuit. and traveled
throughout the world bring-
ing encouragement to handi-
capped persons.
WASHINGTON <UPI) -
Some Houu members think
the Senate's ceru u re o(
Thomas J . Dodd mmewh.at
imp ro ves Adam Clayton
Powell's chances or regain·
ing his seal in the House.
Most members, however.
argue that the cases ol the
Connecticut &enator and the
ex-congressman from Har--
Jem ar-e in no way related.
The consemw i1 that in
any event, Powell'• pro&·
pects 1ti1 1 areu't very
promising.
Powell. through h:iJ law.
yen:. hag contended in cowt
he was treated m'1ft t.lnih-
ly than Dodd because be i1
a Negro.
Lawyer1 for the HouM
deny this. and tome mem-
ber.I claim the ll-tenn vet-
eran would have got tD1
comeuppance 1ooner except
for reluctance to ad
against him beoa.U&e ol his
race.
Dodd was cenrured b7" hit
peers fm" using ca~
funda to pay personal bills.
POYt·eU was berftd from
his seat tn the Hoose for
r.ayroll and travel abulel.
Powell's seat was de-
clared vacant and he wag
~utsequently re-elected. but
he has not presented him-
self for admission pending
outcome of a c o u rt cha.I·
l~nge to his original exclu-
SlC"n .
A U.S. district court has
ruled against him and the
t'ase is now before the U.S.
Court or Appeals, wh.idl is
not expected to hand down
a decision before AugusL
· Rta• security b •"""""
OwrHt 8roww will be ~
on tM comic M9f ol """
tMD AILYPILOT ~ ..
"""' day ...
BJ JACK BELL
Ar p.ntleaJ Writer
WEST YELLOWSTONE.
Moot. IAP)--An mdicated
drift amooc Wert«n Repm.-
lican gov«Dllll a...,. from
the hvo curnnt ~ cootend·
ers pointed in ~ diredion
today of a wide-open scram·
ble for the 19151 GOP presi-
dential nomination.
By all al. the: recognizable:
but not ahrays dependable:
signs. Gov. George Romney
of Michigan and former
Vice Pr'Hident Richard M.
N'n:on, !be l!lllO nominee.
are losing ground to t w o
mm who say ttle)' are DOt
canllidates.
The flight ol party conser·
vatives from Nix.on toward
Gnv. Ronald Re<tp. ol
califomia. stw:nm at I a I t
week'• meeting of t be
Young Republicans in Oma·
ha. was acknowledged by
Gov. David M. Cargo of
New Mexico as a phenome-
l'IOll that is becoming wide-
spread.
IL08E FRIEND
Cargo, a k"ichigan native
and clo.w friend at. Romney,
has ~ery reason for pro-
moting Romney's candida-
cy. He had bee.n expeded to
come up with a statement
at a Jackson. Wyo., meeting
lat.er this week seeking to
put a majority of the GOP
governors behind Romney.
Instead, Cargo ts talking
in terms of heading an un -
committed New Mexico del-
egation to n e x l year's
nominating convention. He
was expansive in his praise
of Gov. Nelson A. Rocke-
feller of New York. I
Alter a survey, Cargo
s.aid 16 ol the ZS Republican
state e::re.cutives privately
think Rockefeller ii the best
qualified and most-litely-to-
sooceed candidate against
PresKlenl Jobnlon.
U this repretenU senti-
POINTER:
We' rt irticklerr
for detail •••
I.a keep you from getting stuck.
}ou con trost
expert
ESCROW SERVICE
l c-n .. flt loc:atial'tt to ..,.... JOU.
WtSl r lll' AT DQVt 11 .. , ••• ~'"""' \,,, ......... ~ ..... ••I ,,.,,,,,,.
-AV~•OC Af J • ... 110 11[1 .. ·'" ·~· ,., ..... , ,. """''"'1 .. r 11.u ..... ,., __ 4
C•..,"'11~ •T "''•~• .. u• .,,..,, ,_.., ••,nr A""""'"-•••'
open untu 5 pm ••lly-6 pm on frfd1y1
'
•• '111 I •• , 1.•: _.,.I)·'! 1;
ment among the GOP u ·
ecutives. aod if Romeny
abould fa~r in the prima·
ries. Rockefeller might rep-
rese11t a replacement de-
spite his protestations that
he will newr seek. the nom-
inatiOIJ agiain.
CALCULATIONS
These prim.ariea are loom-
ing larger in the calcula·
tion1 of the governors. They
are wary of going out
on any poi.iti~I limb for a
candidate who mlgbt fa.ii to
make a creditable showing
with the voters.
"ft woukl appear that Or.
Rouse is more concerned
with the eutleprmeurial
pririJedges of the private:
medical praetitioner than
with the •ellatt ol the pa-
tient populiltion," n:id the
statement iuued Sunday.
"He objects to the federal
government's iDvatigaUon
of ... -industry and of phyaidan fimncl•I interest
wttblo the induib7, ~by
con1bNing to plaoe the pub-
lic at lbe mercy of a coor-
di..aed cart.el of health ser-
vice induttriel," the doctors .....
Hospital Rest
LOS ANGELES (Af) -
State Atty. Gen. Thomas C.
Lynch. although troubled by
a recurring ''bladder con-
dition ," is Usted in good con·
dition at Cedars ol. Lebanon
Hospital.
Lynch, who attended
the Pre!idential banquet last
Friday night, &aid he would
~lay in the hospital for a few
days red and observation.
LAST 5 DAYS!
FURTHER PRICE REDUCTIONS
NOTHING HELD IACK •.• THIS IS A PARTIAL LISTING
ONLY ••. SEE ALL THE NEW FURNITURE VALUES. HURRY!
4 Piece Antique
lleclroom Sllite
AS IS 5140
3 P'-ce W•lnut
lleclroom Suite
w. cc:..-• .. •· "--· win. .... $135
Antique
w:.ite Dedi
AS IS $45
Tl"'
Walnut Dresser .........
578
Pillow lack
Clllb Chair
$74.50
S Piece Dinette
Table & Chairs
.. " $45
Canftmpaniry
l..troom .,. . .....,,. ..
"-"•'-....... D..W. 0-, I ........... .,.,..,_
5298
French Provinci•I
Kin9 Chair
Back Headboard .........
585
100"
Spmiish Sofa
& Matclii119 Chai;
5235
Transitianal Safa
& Love Seat
5225
Oenith Modern Wood
Ann Safa & Chairs ................
589
,,.,_.. ,,,.., ....
&tensian Table
4 Chan
5130
4 PiKe Childs
lledroamSuite
c...,., .... 2 s.-.. ......... .,._. _. .. ._,_
5135
Solid Birch
ledraam Suite
I ....... 2 e, .. .,,,~11, Tn,a.
~ ............ _
5375
Club Chair
& Ottoman
$98
High B•ck
Wi119 Chair
$57.50
OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY
Er19l•nder
Box Sprin9s
& Mattress
IOTH
ONLT 539.95
T•ble & Ch•in
LAMPS
SAYE
1/2
AND MOii
41" Round T •ble
Pedestal Table , ......
5125
Solid Birch
Maiple Finish
Cocktail &
2 End Tables
589
Spanish
Bedroom Suite
IM,Dl'ftMf,
M'"'9r ..,4 Ce"'"'°'"
5135
ltali•n Provinc:ial Ant.
White
Bedroom Suite .........
5169
French Provinci•I
Bedroom Suite
C""1' """' •"" 114. 72" ~.Ill~ -4 2 St""ft.
$375
THOMAS FURNITURE CO.
1532 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA 642 -5209
Debt Limit Rike ..
Treasury Awaiting Cash
WASHINGTON {AP) -
Like the biU-ladeo hUJband
waking for the nrwmce com-
pany to give him a k>ao, the
1'reaMry waits this week
for the Senate to aray It ls
okay to nm the national
debt higher.
The Senate feces a mJd·
ni@:ht Friday . deadline f'Or
action i1 jt Is to keep the
debt from soddenly being
far higher than allowed by
.law. Favorable action witb
time to spare is expected, ............
Secretary ot the Treaai.ry
llenry H. Fowler said he
would be forced to put an
"Out of Busine'SS" sign on
the Treasury door il the bill
isn'~ approved.
The temporery debt ceil-
ing now is $336 billion. The
permanent ceiling ol $285
billion will 6':l back. into ef-
fect at 12:01 a .m. Saturday,
which is the start ol a new
fiscal year, unless action
oom ...
The HOIJllle earlier tbis
mootb DUTowly approved a
SMOOTH ACTIOll
SHOCKS
hike kt the permanent ~il
in.g to '358 hilUon, witil an-
other '1 billion available
alter.July I, 19S8.
The Sen.ate Fiaance Com·
mittee ii u;peoted to ap-
prove lhe plan and send it
oo for final Senate action
and preeideatial signature.
The 6en•te. ready fw leg-
islative bUl:ineu a r t e r
spending nine days on tbe
CflD!ll.re ol Seo. 'lbomu J.
Dodd, (D-Oxln.), planned
to meet two boors earlier
than usual so it could work
toward a 16-dily Fourtll of
.luh1 recess to begin Thurs·
day.
Prime business in the
House i:s action on a com·
promise authoritation ror
the Natiooel Te• ch er a
Corp&-the program which
sends special teams tA
teachers to work. with un·
• derprivUeged p u p i I s in
dum areas.
The bill would authoriU
$135 million for die corps
over IDe next three ye.an--
90 percent ol the program's
financing. But kloOlll achool
offJcials. with •late 11Chnol
.gency approval, would re-
cruit. select and em-oil the
CCX'1lll members. 1be fed·
«al IOYemment now doe.
tru...
If the u.borhatlon is not
craoted by Friday. $.1.1 mil·
lion in funds appropriated
for the rurTent year will be
le.I.
Senate leadecs plan qWck:
action if the HOUH ap-
prowe the bill, worked oot
in committee.
Crash Vi ctims
Services Set
JACKSONVILLE, N. C.
f AP J -Memorial services
were planned today in the
ctl:apel at the nearby N~w
River Marine air' facility for
22 Marines killed. Friday in
the crash tA two helicopten.
Thirteen other Marines
were injured in the collision
500 feet over the hue. The
helicopters were on trainin#'
miuloos.
~~~
HOLD IT!
Don't make
a move!
Wgnneit'ood
SANTAANA
4-PLY NYLON
CORD
, ..... ,,, 1'--111
ILJllFl•I 1.1001 11.! .. Hl
1'-l'toU\ L••l' 0 .-111
f.11/L••ll
,_ ·-.a.JI ..
a &
FORD-CHEVY-PLYMOUTH
CHIClf YOUI sm
a. .. u, ,_,.u, 1.-u
'-"'~•" l'-tt.11... .. 14)
l.JSd• 11.-1'1
r.n.i4 11.-u1
l_./1..a11 IUf/, .... 111
15 9k ..,_ ,.. _ _._ ...
·~
FRONT END ALIGNMENT
FREE WITH THE PUR· $"95
CHA.SE OF 2 TIRES I V•luei
~rl'OIEUANT UFFlERS
5 95
lllr CAii
FlfSTAllATlff
-'
·399u. •tST C&IS
n1Sl&Ll l1111
AYlllAll( ~·---f••'"-....,, .......... J'llll' ... ·
Al ... Ar.&llAtt( :=:.~-~ 'f'..N;.~ ... ,.. .. """9'11 ..... :... ............... . ~· ... -. .... .... .... _ ..... _
• ............. t...f, ......... .
O••llty ll11htf' -.....,.... " .n , ..................... ....,." ........
lell•h •NI _.. ....... fhW .. _...,
•114 ,... tnt ., .. , c•, An tflk • -...., .......
SPECIAL BUY
FOR
SUMMER FUN
JUNIOR JET
SURF N' SWIM BOARD
$199 WITH ANY
PURCHASE
REG. $4.95
S•nt• An• Store Open Mon. thru Fri. I •.m. to 9 p.m.; S•t. I e.m. to ' p.m.
Other Stores Open Mon. thru S•t. I •.m. te 6 p.m.
COSTA MESA SANTA ANA
I ... HAlttO• l lVD. 1--............. , n1 A IO, M.11111 tl,
S-40-01 70 547-4751
ANAHEIM
,.., W. 1.lltcOUI
IC• . .._.wtlfJ
774-1416
..... -............ ··---·-· ...... ~ ......... ·-···· ......... _ ............ _ ....... ··--
-·
Slee
Glnubo1
GLA8SBORO,
-Thia sleePJ c
tn the heart of --gllq bock ....
daJ, bat tbiap I
will be qwle lb
"Hol.b'b&ulb,.. t
the mertlag-pla
two wmid 1eadi!
more juat tbe h
p re1i dent o
SW. Colle,..
Bu~ the 11
...... -may someday hi
tiooal hiltoric •
QUIET ROLE
The town it.st
to once again
role of a quid c
mwtity.
But. M 16-ye
bara Mar 1b1
"People wan •t
Glauboto IJ an
AOantcloom
... laaocbed •
day to remove
per cupg, soda
a....ud tru!J
3.000 opectaton
ed around "Holt
day for a glimp
dent Johnson a·
Aleui N. Xosy1
Within minutr
two world I e I
changed!arewel
pus WU virtual
Seven lta1e tn
Old &
Newspii
Sets M1
B0.5TON IUP:
10-year-old Dosi
is coming to th!
nNld.
The pabticatio
noon daily new
the pad. 122 ye;.
merged with its
paper. the moo
Herald. to lonn
log H.rald-Trs
Ing July II. 'lbr
last editim will
eel July 8.
ln a stateme
blbhtt G..,.g
:. atti-:ibuted ti
tion ol the two
of lbe Herald-Tn
.. rising l""d•
udother-
Tbe death of I
ieaves Bolton • ...-.......
Evening Globe a
ord • American.
tin Scienoe Mo
tional Dn'llp9pe
publisher each
The ..........
newspapers will
ttre:e, the new 1-
eler. Mw: Evenin;
the Advertiaer. i
Ucation ol the &
ican.
Art Clast
For Chilo
Joy in aw areo
ative e::rpreuion
theme of the '
of Summer" aJ
children beginni
the Laguna Bea
Art and Design
Mrs. Leah Vo
known Southen
artist and teach
instruction in
collage, mural,
c:IM!. cloth palnU
making.
..9n11il
c
"IJe __
BE IN the ev
ing gm
find th
lhey h
wantin:
ing ii
shop c
fied '
each d;
BE IN !he DAI
with yoo
BE IN the mo
your ac
things
longer 1
Dial Direct, 642
charge your E
Counly. 54().-12
DAILY PILOT
Will Wnrk J
f
§leepy Again _....a_uEEM_E ___ ,_v Ph_n_'"-'•"-a",....dt
Gltwboro Back to Normal
~RO. N.J. (UPI)
-Tbla lleepJ coDep ton
In the heart ol the Soutb
Jeney farmlaDd .... struc-
gting a.ct to norm.dcJ to-
day, bat tbiDO D8ftt again
will be quite the aime.
''Bollybuab," for 10 boun
the~ ol the
two world leaden, la once
more jut the home ol the
p r e a i d e nt ol Gluaboro
State c.ollege.
Bu. th e ui.y e a r-old
brown fieldstone mansion
may someday become a na·
tional biJtoric lh:rine.
QUD:I' KOLE
1be tan ibelf is ready
to once again pick up its
role of a quiet college com·
man.ity.
Bot. • 16-,eAr-old Bar-
bara II a ra b a 11 pot it:
upeop1e woo't aak where
Glauboro ia my more."
stationed in "Hollybush"
~ the nigtit to guard
~t souvenir hunters,
and workmen today began
eooverting the mans i o o
back into a home for col·
lege president and M r s.
Tbomu E. Robinson.
The Robinsons, who have
been 11 v I r. g in a men's
dormitory while Johns o n
and Kosygin made history
in their home, voiced hopes
aome of the modern con·
veniences installeu for the
sum mit would be left
behind.
The White House installed
17 new air conditioners in
the old mansion and a J s o
put in a complete kitchen
with all the latest conven·
ieooes.
Most ol the air cood,ition·
ers were coming out, but a
1 p o k e sman said several ._ ___ E>._-'?._.b.._,,,:o~r.:: .. :.';.:;"";,;.;:'*;;;;;';;;;;;;;.;;•iiiii·loi'"•'•· ... _ ... _ ....... __ ™...._'_.
would probably be left be-"Hu ..nybody ever told you you h&ve ftl'Y poor
bind for the Robinsons. beautiful eyes!'"
REMOVE FENCE
Workmen were also busi-
Atom Bombs for Ar abs?
DAIL y PILOT s I
Ladles Day
Automatic Dishwmher Enchanting
ISLAND BE AC H, N.J. b ave the Nm e temper-Gviaiani had invited ~
(UPI) -An a u t o m aUc atu.rea." and Mn. Johnson to visit
dishw a s b e r eclipsed di· Mn. Hughes wu taken Rnsala and. the governor's
plomacy for the leading with the visitor. "She is a wife said. 'Tm going ... I a d i e s in the Hollyb u 1 b warm lovely girl. She's
summit. They abaodooed it just lovely. At the house, the ladies
for a seaside summit of "I bope I could one d a y bad a luncheon -~pared
their own that Included a have a daughter who would by t b r e e neighbors and
tour o! a governor's kitchen condl1ct herself so beauti· Mrs. Hughes' mother -of
fully in a foreign country," chicken. wild rice. tossed <See Photos, Page 4). said Mrs. Hughes, mother aa1ad and frah strawber·
Mr Lyndo B Joh of 10 children. ries
kitchen for a look at the
appliances and, according
to those wbo were there,
Mrs. Gviabiani found the
disbwaaber particularly in-
tttesting.
s. n . nson, Mr H.,...,_,. ....:_ _,.....___ to the her daughter Lynda Bird s. "'6~ sa.id Mrs. &~, _,.,... ~
arnitbewileofNewJersey1:;iiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; Gov. Richard J. Hughes
1be group bad a walk on
the beach before leavi n g,
pulling oU their shoe& when
they filled with sand. T he
Hughes home is just 75
yards away from a private
beach on the Atlantic.
spent three hours Sunday
with Mrs. Lyudmila Gvlsh·
iani while President John·
son and Soviet Premier
A I e x e i Kosygin met in
Glassboro. 5.5 miles away.
"We bad sucb a pleasant
time," the 38-year-old Rus·
sian visitor said of her heli-
copter tour of New Je£sey
and l~ hour visit and lun·
cheon at the Hughes sum·
m er residence at I 1 J a n d
Beach State Park.
S h e said the Jersey see·
coast ''combined the north
and south of our country.
In the north (the Baltic) we
h a v e the .s a m e kind of
! FORCED TO QUIT!
FOR REASON OF ILL HEAL TH WE MUST LIQUIDATE OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF
IMPORTED GIFT & DECORATOR ITEMS AND CLOSE OUR STORE AT ONCEI
DRAS11C REDUCTIONS ON EVOY mM
-MANY AT ACTUAL COST -
SILK SCREENS
CHESTS
VENETIAN GLASS
WOOD CARVINGS
PLACQUES
AND
SCROLLS
TABLES
WROUGHT IRON LAMPS
IVORY
ELECTRIC WALL SCONCES
PAINTINGS
A giant cJeaDur e ff o r t
wu lauocbed at dawn to-
day to rt!IDOYe t.cm ol pa.
per cups, soda bottle.I and
assorted trash left by the
3,000 spectaton wbo crowd·
ed around "Hollybuah" Sun-
day for a glimpse of Pr~·
dent Johnson and ~m1er
Alexei N. Kosygin.
ly taking down hundreds of
feet of wooden snow fence
erected Saturday after the
secret service dedded to
tighten security arrange-
ments for Sundays' session.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -of Michigan's Center of Chi· ;:::::s=ao=d=. =an=d=in=th=e=s=ou=th=w=e;JI
A Chinese scholar believes nese Studies, said Sunday in
that Red China may be will· a copyrighted interview in
ing to arm the Arab world u.s. News & World Report.
MANY OTHER EXOTIC TREASURES FROM EUROPE AND TH E FAR EAST
Decorators & Dealers Welcome
Wrthin minuU!s alter the
two world I e a d e r s ex·
changed farewellJ, the cam·
pus was virtually deserted.
Seven state troopen were
PENETRATION
"th \""'• ..,_pon• for Murly •••"'one re.ach •h• wt nuc """' .. ,,... " that "it Is qw"te posst"ble ·' · I I DA ILY PILOT, hometow1111e~· use against srae · the Cbine$e would even sell p•p•r for th• Febuloua Or•nt•
THE HOUSE of MEI LING
3519 E. COAST HWY .. CORONA DEL MAR
(NEXT TO SE E'S CANDIES)
New Jersey Bell Tele-
phone Co. began disman·
tling a l:J&..foot tower erec·
ted to carry television sig.
nala to Philadelphia for re-
lay to the rest m the rtatfoD.
Old Boston The tower huW.y put UP.
Saturdll1 after the televi·
lion uetMlr b complained
By supplying the Arabs or give Egypt a small stock· Cout.
wihaucb weapons, s&d Dr. -~pil~e~o~f~a~tomi~~-c~bo~m~bs~·~"~=.J~~==============~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Chuy·)'UID Cheng, "Com-
muni.st China will have reap-
ed the friendship ol t h e
Arabs, presti19, and 1 new
reputation in that part Of
the w o r I d as a t r u e
about poor pkture quality N eWRnaper 1n bro a dcuting Fnday'1 · · -r smnmit sessloo.
Se•~ Merger Though their n o • er s ·"' were trampled and their
lawns used as shortcuts.
BOSTON (UPI) -The the people of Glassboro
friend."
Cheng, o! the University
142-year-old Bolton Traveler were on the whole mighty
is coming to the end of the pleased to have been able Cancer Gr ant
road. to host the two leaders. The Orange County branch
1be publication, an after· ''I dont' think we'll ever of the American Can~r So.
noon daily newspaper for forget it," said Mrs. Bonnie ciety has presented the Vis·
the pall 122 years. will be D'Amico. "I hope some iting Nurse Association with
merged with ill adter news-good will come oot o{ this a grant of $2,500 for wie in
paper. tbe morning Boston meeting, and I believe it assisting cancer patients in
Herald. to form the morn-bas." the eounty.
:ing BenJd.Trav~er ~1--------------------------------------
ing July It. The Traveler'• .----------.----------.. last edition will be publiab-
ed July I.
In a statement Sunday,
publisher George E. Aker·
son attributed the combina-
tion of the two poblicatiooa
of the lh!nlJd. Travelel' Corp.
to riling JrOdudicm cosb
and other' fadon.
The dee&b of the Trave
leaves Boltoe with two aft·
en9CJil W Wapepa'I. 1be
Evening Globe and the Rec·
ord -American. 1be Ctri&-
ti.ao Scimce MoaHor. a oe-
tioeaal newspeper, aho is a
publilber each afternoon.
The D~ ~ Sunday
.newspapers will remain at
ttree, the new Herald-Trav-
el« Ile Evening Globe and
the Actvertiaef', a sister pub-
lication of the Reoon! Amer·
ican.
Art Class Set
For Children
Joy in awareness and ere·
ative expreuion will be the
theme of the "Celebration
of Summer" art class for
children beginning July 1 at
the Laguna Beach School of
Art and Design.
Mrs. Leah Vasquez, we.ll
known Southern California
artist and teacher, will gjve
instruction in dimensions,
collage, mural, papier ~a
che. cloth painting and pnnt
making.
You Are
Co,Jia ff,
!JnuileJ
5o 5~e
"l? () " V:Je-J n
I
BE IN the ever·increas-
1 ing group who
find the bargains
they have been
wanting by mak·
ing it a habit l!l
shop our classJ·
fled c o I u m n s
each day!
IBE IN the DAILY PILOT
I with your want ad!
BE IN the money when
I your ad sells the
things you no
longer need!
IDiat Direct. 642·5678. and
charge your ad. (North 1county. 540-1220)
~DAI LY PILOT Want A<k
~ Will Work For You
FINGERTIP CONTROL
Sears TRU-EAR vii
Hearing Aid
NEW!
•Full Pow•
Gi"" )"OUme.lf the prioeJe.911 gift oi greater ooo-
fidenoe, sreater convenience with a new,
llm.ller, Tnt·Ear VII bearing aid. It'1 the
more comfortable, inconspicuous way to weer
a hearini aid. You adjust the volume with
just the touch ol a finger. Qimplete with
let ol aix long-wearing batteries.
NO MONEY DOWN
en s..n ~~tftma
. . . . . . ,,.
PuoHZ Sun·r.
Your TRU·lill Vil
:S..~AM
. . . ...
• •
C-ill • Nil for a ftt« H-rinc Aid C-altaU..
"' .... s-... "---4,.., 8•M• M ... te. • .,,. v"'"" ... l ·
SEARS, JtOFBllCK AND CO.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNI A STORES
.
For extra fun
take more
tha one
OFF ·take an~extra
carton of Coke. On The Purchase
OF TWO
King Size Cartons
~ .,_ ·~---------~ ....._._..~ ··--..--$ --··.
~ed Wider it. outhority of The Coco-Colo Compony by: Coco-Colo Bottrtng COfll'PO"Y cl Los A~
~!~----------------------------------------------
\
f DAILY I'll.OT Monda:f, June 26, 1967
Watts Riot Report
Raps News Media
coverace wltb lhe state's
llw enforcement acencJea.
At a new conference,
Lynell said:
.. Some cl the mus med-
iii 'ftftt OYerbolrd in these
aJOi1Mkw. It Wll a quution.
of OvinC tome ol the agjta-
ton a forum. II
Tbe coudl'• report .aid "No speclfic facb: were pre-
sented to the committee to
inclkwt.e any witneu had
pec60Dlll lmowledce of ex-
OMl:ive fOrce or dilcourtesy
.. the part of tbe Loo An·
gel,. Polk:e Department."
It ltid -· tbougb, that ''The recordlnl ot occur·
rences by television camer-
•mea tended to lncreale
the riot attvtty."
Beyond thU, the report
oalled• fOr mor• meetings,
.-... reporb and colJec.
t:l.ve ectionll. Some 40 meet-:.e. wen held by the com-
I See By Today's
Want Ads
; ew•ere • (kl \ JL ---
Now PouibleTo Shrink
Painful Hemorrhoids
~~ Sloi>The ltchinr. Rrl ue aiB1au.tc...
Coons Hits
Colleges'
PhD Plan
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Artbur G. Coons, president
of California'a Coordinating
Council for Higher Educa.
tion, says he opposes cur·
rent efforts to change the
status of the 1tate colleg'9
1y1tem. Coons was critical Sun-
day of efforts to nname th•
state college system "Cali-
fornia State University" and
to allow the state collegu
to confer doctoral degrees.
Many of tile 18 slate col-
leges, Coons said, are
"rather small and relative-
ly weak academically."
Only a few of the college•
would be capable ot mount-
~t. evien mediocre Ph.D.
programs and these would
bo enar-11 ...u,. bo
said In aD bdetview.
A '!Mk ap, state C0Uego
<Jwicellor Glenn S. Dumke
suggested that the state col-
leges were eligible to con-
·fer doctorates under the
terms of Califomia's Mas-
ter Plan for Higher Educa·
ti.on .
But O>oos, Olli of tbl doc-
mnent's .autbon, 1a1 d
l>umDbmbtaken.
Coom laid bt WU op-
posed to a bill belon the
Legislature which w o u I d
cbangti the college 111tem'1• name.
"Whether you dirt with
tile change In misdon and
then chance the name, or
change the name then hope
you can change the mission,
the rnult.s are tht Mme,"
he said.
Money Measure
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Jol-nson has sign-
ed kgi1lation ending r•
demption ol paper moniy
for ailver beginning a )'Mr
fn>m """·
Kenmore
rerrHle Bay At
Tith Lew Prleel
• Haod1a both 9U'ligh1 •heh"
.nd dttttatiTt zig-raj •irchtt
•Mend\ darm, ovucuu ind
m1broidrn with nM
• .xw. cm burrOQI aM ma
prof~iooal.Jikr bottonhol.fl
• Hanchoml cooDt obiM in·
cludtd 1r dii1 IO'I' prier r·-----...,,.
Machine
Comole C..bi.ntt
A1J wood COOIUUC·
tion, w11nur finish.
!lean Lew Prlee
NO MONEY DOWN
On Se•ra Easy P•ymtnl Plan
SHOP 6 l''ilGHTS 1 ML ROAD.~ rse=i .cnt'THEH/i
: U.4D TO ~ (.,41,rrnR.\'l .4 $TIJR1:."'i
\.
t rHA Ill, TO •iJI r.JI .
• • • • • • • '"' • aAU, 1IODUCJl AHD 0), ., • ., -., .. ., • ., ., ., ., ,. ., '"' L___c.c__....:.:..-'----'
\.
Budget Nearly Comp.le~ .-w
1¥ M ... W.Y Pl.On _,..,, .... -. .. ..... .... m9._. ......... -...
Dlll-A.fUYll ,.,lot •
But Tax Hike Unresolved ·
.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
~ 1 0 D I pl'OCIU of put·
tine -....... ol
M!r'Vice• for Callfonli. •• 19
~--eel com}ietloa todaJ, with la•·
mak.en conBdent cl ILaoding
Gov. Reopn a Ill'/ .. budi·
et by ibe mldnlPt Friday
deadline.
No major obstacles ap·
peared In lbe poUi of I he
.. billiOll·pW. budfet .. the s. .. t.·Aaaaml>IJ -.nee
comm!Uee resumed Mptia·
Uooa for a Ona! compro-
mise Beure acceptUle to
both -and lbe gove« nor.
Tbe ,law. •711 be musl
sign a budpt bill for lbe
fil<ol yeor NrtinC July l
.by midnllh~ J-30.
Once apin, linrmUen
toot unW the 1ut -poo-Mble 'fPOltinc • tbt, in.ea·
ture. For the Piil two ~an
former ~ Gov.
EdmuodG. l!t<>wnbadtO
wait untll the late n1gbt
houn ol J-30 to alp the
budget.
It appeaHd RM&lll -have wwwnewb.iit men ti.me.
The conference • compU:t-
tee members talked of .. mn:'ne thlb-dlial ded&lOll
by mldweet, ad 11 both
....... -aJoac wttm the compromile as ii custom-
ary, the llnl·lonn Ropul>
Hean CoYl!l"DOr' would bAft a
da.1 er two ll:Jr a detalled
loot at -... made la bb
._. .. -by leCl>-Llton.
Howne:r, IUD to be r.
solved w a 1 tbe fate ol the
llbllllcmtulnc:naaa .....
gram asked by the ginoernor
to nuance state spendi.ng for
the comlDC lbcal year and
avoid tbe need far new tu-
e1 to pay for tbe next bud.g-
ot to be -la lbe 1lltll el.ctlon yeor.
Semte Demoaata 1a1
Did Coed's Murderer
Hide in Cubbylww? '
PARIS (AP) -Police in-with a Mri• of tMrgl.uies. _tiptl.,..., 11111 sloyln( Wbon po11ce cot ldo tha
of 11-. ...J...11 11--..a-t'!-roam, Fouraat wu nowhere
,._...._ -.-.. u.r to be .... a.I tbe MP'1'ip-
W ... fl DnlO, <:alll., oalol U.. ... -.bo !led oat a
toda7 lllo -4<d --........ the ..... •lllJIOdad .... --ti lml!dtnp In lbe.,... ..
enlly had -la a c:ul>by trlcl. hole In the bolel room where But ,_ lnv01tigatlon
she was alain. over the weekend iDcllcsated
Miu Qowam WU found that Fourcat, Oft bearing ~
dead Saturday mornibl. Sbe lice at bis door, duckltd into
bed .-rived tit tbe boliel with a ..-vice cubby bole near
blr par-. l'riday and .... ... -of lbe bed. They flwn a roam where a man fouod a number of cigarette
---.. """'" butts In ... -bole, ll'tD'Cllt, a, Md been living. which was a sort of ·com-
P<ib bad cone to the billed ventilation shaft and
room Mrli• Friday to ques-pas113:ge way for plumbin&
ti.on Foureat bl connection ~·
( Fourcat appare:1tly bid
there through Friday, while
Clay Saves police sear•hed lhe roof• for ...-· him. 'Iben the room was
' rented to Ml.s1 Gowana and
she mired. Police tbeorized Newsmen that d-g the n1g1i1. Fourcat decided to Gee and
the noise ol his departure From Crowd ... uenec1 Mill -..... In the cubby bole po-
lice found 11Vetal portable
t.elevWon 1et&. transistors
and other barglary tool
SAN J>lEGO !AP) -For-
mv hea~ basing
champion CudUI Clly act·
ed 11 peacemakw, police
said Somday. 1t.ppln1 In lo
pr .... t poulhl• iDJ"'1 to
two televil.,11 JWW amen
--by a er""" of about lMIO N"'° )'oalhl. cia,, accompanlod by
Arc:ble Moore, the G•ll&bt
beatJ•efebt champ, ml'f'·
eel In Illa N"'° -ti Lopn Hqlill, alllcen Ald,
.. 1111 ,..... ~ In
strike tbl new1men, Blrold
K ... and Corl GlllUI ol
KFMB-TV ln San Ill ....
Keen Ald be and Gflmoa
were 1n the aru to tntlr-
vlew Qay -· the mn;d
forced -bock to -car and bopn hlllill( the
newsmen with ftstl.
"Clay put hJt arm aroand
ua and fold ttie younpten
to control themsefftl,"
K e • n a.lid. "He said we
were not there to do any
harm tiut jutt to intervin
him ."
Clay, convicted receaUy
of evading the draft, and
Moore helped the rrewldMD
t.ck" to their car, Keen aald.
Cancer Fund
Qu~ned
&AN FRANCISCO (AP) -n. Oallfornia division m
tbl American Cancer ~ c1etJ bu accumulated '8.6
mDlaa, ad the state regls-
tNr ol charitable trusts
wmtl to bow wby.
. Rarclltu' Frederic Au·
forth said in a letter that a
cub NHrVe of $3 million
teemed lllfficient, it w a 1 -Sanday.
'Jbe Olllfornia division iJ
the bigelt contributor to
tbe American Cancer So-
ciety.
A. Kolb, division execu-
tiw aecretary, replied that
It appean die division ii
acc:um,uJ.ating capital, b u t
lbat a large amount o( the
JDODl1 b obligated.
....,. will bold .... 11111 In the ,,_ °""----.. alpod ..
badaOt ad lbeY -a-
adl.Y -.... mulberalledlt-11.
T be ~a forcel 'lndJ-
--1 WWf1 tbem, .. it ll UQder..
·-by ~ that the i:..p. lature will :nova the tu bill
1IOOC .c> It OM1 take effect
by Aug. }. They bad hoped r... July 1, bal -..
-lhwuted that plall. Fl-i ...............
undul;J ccmcermd wben
--will t._., Ila
budcet ii'"'.,._. by the
deodllno, bat the tu .....
...... to poy lo< ll sllll Is
beliicdeboled.
State govenunent won't
ce8M! to ftmctioa, they n-
plalned. 11 slmp\y will liq•
to opel"Me fOI' a wblle on a rate of Income below what
wtll .....a.Ily be -they add.
(])C Accuses
LA Police
Of Bmtality
lAH JlIEGO (AP) -Jll.
-"' 1111 C&lllGnla D-e:IA ODmcll •a••
..... & Ill I"" .a.
... lllo Loo ~ pallca
ot. bratllltJ JD c 1 e a r i n •
thouaands " -from near a hotel President
Johnlon YWted F t l d a y
nlgbl Tbe-Sunday at the dittcton' 111-
QO LA-. CANYON ROAD 1-• o I LAGUNA llEACH -1520 I
DWI Do I Pl«. FlltMf
Qis'rA .HiiSI n> OCMISlflE?
I JVST 0'4.L 'i'" ~I.US
~-N ... ~ J
IWT'~IM-
BllUA fARIC 111 Co11Am• y..,
DIAL ~ PU6' AllEA C6l'E ~zn•
flllS ... --8£fl
r }
momhly meeting, ai.o,~~.....,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 struck at Lot Angele111
Mol'or Samuel W. Yorty lo< 71/!tr's RJ6HT; AND ~
''nlUlal ropeotod publ I c )!IV 601 JJIHEN y(J(I~ NtSr SllliE r:•':° :.i:~:~ fltN/ 7"D ~.Mr LaJI< /N ~
jU1Uficatioa Io r polke ~ FRolff H16CS OF Ya!R ~~ in;:v:;· CDC d I r e c ton /
said they .... pallca -.. -"
cesslve for"' aplnst the r r: ---CDC P t e Ddent Gerald
Rill of San P'rand9CO Mid
eight of the m<ft than 450
clubt haYe witbdiawn siDcl
plans wen announced for •
speclaJ conwntion Sept 30
in Loni Be-acb to QetenniDe
whether to lend a pe.ce
delegation to the Democrat-
ic National Convention..
* * * King Scores
Police Too
LOt5 ANGELES (UPI) -
Dr. Marlin Lather King said
SUnday that police w er e
··~y rigid and
brutal" to peaal -stralon in u,. wild mQee
that -out duriai Preo-ident Jobmon'1 visit Friday
night.
Notins that bo -hiJ observations on 1eco114-
h a n d information, K i n g
said, ''Police repreaented a
kind o( vindidivenes1 that
WU totally UDC • 11 e d tor.
0
@hciflc Tll 1•111
From what I see from afar, 1.----------------....J the police were unnecessar-
ily rigid and hnrtaL ..
SERVICE STORE
mlll&a IUI llEADI RYD., 1111116TOl llUCH
!ACROSS 'ROM HUNTINGTON IHDPl'INO CDITlll) -M2-4495
Enroll
Now
Fall
Semester ..,,,, " ~ ,,. .c 'it """ ~ ~ . I.Re Joli
..w 11>\>f.D ~ • Oii CUage All-DAY Cl.ASSES
llilllerprtn
lllnl ltll Grade
•Teaching the 4 R's
with phonics
• Door-to-Door Bus
Service
• Before and After
School Care
• Reasonable Tuition
Hawthorne
Chrilti111
Schoob
16835 Brookhu1sl
F1111nUin VAUr y
1714) %2 -3312
t1.aJ.& ~ • lrille
OUR LIDS Adjuslmelf Price-· .... .. ,..._
• Beiri1g REG s1215
VALUE
~ P1tk
Salely Check
TO IETTEI SEIVICE YOU
PLEASE CALL FOi APPOINTMENT
PHONE l42""4t95
STORE HOURS: MON & Fil. 9 to 9 •
TUE$. • WED. • THURS. 9 to 7 • SAT. l:lO to 5
DON'T WAIT -COME IN NOW!
DAILY 11
-
, , •
Mond1.r, Junt 26, 1967 OAJLY PILOT 7
DAILY 10.9, SAT. & SUN. 10.7 -2200 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA, MESA -PRICES EFFICTIVE MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY,
WHILE QUANTI
Ladies Shorts
97¢ With
Coupon
Our re9. 1.38. Auortnient of solids,
prints in cotton shorts, sizes 8-18.
l.dits Wear
Jergens Lotion
With
Coupon 58¢
Our reg. 98c Colon iii W 11ve dis-
pen,.r ls refilleble. 9 on.
SO Pc. Flatware
With
c~ 7.77
WHILE QUANT ITIES LAST-JUNE 26-27-:il
Jr. Boys Jeans
With
Coupon 92¢
Compare at 1.57. "No-Iron" jeans
of cotton denim, asstd. colors, siies
3-7. Limit -2 per customer.
Men & Boys W11r
WHILE QUA
M3 Flashbulbs
With
Coupon 1.09
Our rl.9• 1.29. Cello pac kof one
do10n M3 ~ash bulbs.
Camero Dept.
Screen Door
~~~" 7 ~88
Our reg. 9.96. ScrHn door Includes
9rill end Mrdwere, size 30 , 32, 36 x
80". .
WHILI QUAHTITIES LAST-JUNE 26-27·21
f' LIHlies Sport Tops
66¢ With
Coupon
Our Rag . 88c. Cotton knits in 1sst.
colon, shells, poor boys, si1es S-M-L.
Ladies Weir
ILICT•IC TOOTHBRUSH
RIPLACEMENT BRUSHES
With
Coupon 2/79¢
Our reg. 69c. Replac:ements for
Sunbe1m CT-4, CT-7 & CT-8. Hord
or reg. bristle. Appli1nce Dept.
16 Pc. Dinnerware
With
COllf'Oll . 2.78
Our, reg. 4.44 fint ceramic dinner-
Wt"9 in "~enc." or "Whisparin9
Rose" p1ttem. Also--open stock
av1ilable.
DELUXE
MEAT LOAF DINNER
Our R99. 6 7 ¢
73c
Ind. Whipp..! Potatoes & G•avy, ~l1w & T oe1ted Bun.
WHILI QUANTITIES LAST-JUNI 26-27-21
Slide Tray
With
Coupon 1.83
Choice Koclek Carousel or S1wyer
Roto ,!;de !T1y. J d1ys only.
<:.m•ra Dept.
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST-JUNI 26-27·21
Metal .Picture Frame
With
Coupon 58¢
Our reg . 87c. 8x I 0 9old metal frame
with glass for your favorite photos.
P1tio Dept.
WHILE QUANT I JES LAST-JUNE 26-27-21
Infant Dresses
2.00 With
Coupon
Values to 3.87. Cottons, nylons ,
dressy and ea1u1l, for sizes 12 mo .
to JX. Infants Wear
Sponge Rollers
48¢
-
With
Coupon
Our reg. b8c. Pack of 12 or 16 soft
fo1m roller in three si111.
•
FOAMBACK PLACE MATS
/ With
Coupon 12¢
Our re9. 16c. Wipe cJean plastic
placemets hive foam back, come in
many colors & petterns.
Sheaff er Set
With
Coupon 1.67
Our re9. 2.95. Sheaffer pencil end
fountain pen. Limit - 3 per customer.
Swinger Film
With
Coupon 1.44
Our re9. 1.5-4. Stock up for summer
lunl Roll t1k•1 8 1n1ps.
C.mere Dept.
WHILI QUANTITllS LAST-JUNE 26-27-21
Garage Light
With
Coupon 1.58
15' cord, on-off switch , outfet in
h•nd le. U.L. Approved.
Ha rdware Dept.
2200 HARBOR BLVD. Corner of Wilson and Harbor COST A MESA
' '
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '
,
'
' '
' '
..
\
4
--
•
······~············"·~ , . . _ .... ,,,..,
BULLET IN QUESTION -The bullet shown above
will be the subject or discusssion when the second
part of the "Warren Report" airs tonight at 10 on
Channel 2. nte final segments of the series, which
es.amines disaenting theories about President Ken-
nedy's a.ssassination, will be presented Tuesda)' and
Wednesday nights.
TELEVISION VIEWS
'Our World'
Shows Worth
ly RICK. DUIROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPO -·National F.ducational
T•-toot part Sunday In a two-hour global
aatellite broadcast which the \lltte commercial
American network! declined to join. There were no
advertisement!:. The program was live acl'06s the
board. It was an undeniablv historic event, and it
was, for the most partdllgh.ly satisfactory.
This landmark program which America's com·
mercial broadcasters did not think was worth their
time involved the participation of 14 nations which
contributed segmen1' fitting the theme or common
problems and hopes throughout the world-such as
food production. future living accommodations and
~irations in sports and the arl~.
THE VARIOUS segments were beamed to a huge
potential audience in 26 countrie.6, including the
United States, where NE:rs broadcast illustrated
powerfUlly the case for an iiiterconnected noncom-
mercial public television system-and why the com·
mertial networks !ear it as a postiible competitor.
fue continents were in on the program. with Ant-
arctica and South America unable lo take part be-
ause: of their Jack of ground stations to pick it up.
The withdrawal from the broadcast of Russia and
four East European govemmenl6 because of the
Middle East Crisis was noted frankly and regretfutly
by the American anchorman for NE'f. Paul Niven,
who was not hesitant to imply criticism of the pull·
out.
HE ALSO TOOK aim at the bovious irony that
the Red bloc program withdrawal over the Middle
East coincided with the hopeful meeting of Presi·
dent Johnson and Soviet Premier Kosygin al GI.ass·
boro, N. J .-wbich was picked up not only as a seg-
ment of the global broadcast, "Our World," but was
also shown by the commercial networks. The NET
program was emphatically nonpolitical.
It was. instead, a fanlat>tic technical dis play of
how small the entire world really is now-able lo be
interconnected immediately by a push of a television
mtch. But "Our World" did not rely only on tech-
nics. For example, the segments on the arts were
e:s:tremely well done, a wonderful e:ii:tract of enter-
Wnmenl6 in different places-Van Cliburn and
Leonard Bernstein working on a piano piece at a
rehearsal ln New York. Franco Zefferelli directing a
film of "Rome<> and Juliet" in Italy, the Beatles at
a recording session in England, a run-through of an
opera in German.
' l
'
BEST OF All, the program was not often a pic-
ture-postcard view of t.he participating nations. but.
rather, offered numerous humanizing segments of
specifJC persons. important and not so important in
tenns of fa me. as they went about their daily tasks.
The countries that contributed to the broadcast
were Japan. Mexico, Canada, Australia. France.
Spain. Britain. Italy, Sweden. West Germany, Tu·
nisia. Denmark and the United States.
* * * CSS.TV's loni?-av.·aited four-part. four-hour series
of broadcasls. "The Warren Report." examining
major questions raised by critics or the official po-
sition on the assassination of President. Kennedy,
be~an Sunda.,v night. lt will continue today, Tuesday
anrf Wednesday, an hour each day, starting at 10
p.m.
Dennis the ltfp11ace
0
l
' . •
/
'YOtfD 8£ SUQPl!ISEO K1N rAST PfOP!.t ~H
"'l'Mf tlXIA. WHEN lME'r' !>ef /tltE. c.QW~ '! •
,.
MO ND AY
,.,,.. ..
r • r ~ •. ·~
'*"' "*' .......... plllb. ·-• u f1l ...... """ l<l "' mfll.) "Tiil l'rtcllkn -... Md r.111
P'MI try It .... 11111 I Jt11111C oowboJ
ac.:111111 .. ~· -llft•b out ot )II •lid kidlllP' Mldp f'riOt.
Tony Bill fuetb. R11111t.
D lllHll "' ,.., ..... , "1
(lO 111ln.T '1tlller Wtttl I l ltdp. •
J!m'I 1!rtl1lelld. ClcNWi "'-". 1llon
h• c1lml11al •·hlllhlM! lit ,_ n
Mr brvther whlll he ...._ to 1111·
IU lltr. Widt Htrt. thM .... fi"''I
bid .. •nd fllll It kl! .. tld tMl!lf.
Dl1n1 Hy11M. hul C1n ""9l. l• ... ,
OJ NtllMf: (t) CJO M .) ·Au1-
m11111 s.1 11111 Snow.· 111--fl!J ll9tllf1I ..... ... .....
l.h: "tin w, Tnnt ~r !•
••• , ... ., !fie .......... in lht
Wutlfn 'lllw of h•men Mtuft •s 1
ltlln ........, tit dwtlizftioll ""' •~ Ulll'Uly 1r1inMI.
er-...••!lhl.a
t:JO B ,..., Mfr.r. fq CJO Min.) rrt!ICh 11 caHM ...,. ..,.ctedlJ
arid 1\11 brvttltr. M ..... u.... -•
I IUbstltvtt twllMn'• ..,.Ullftlll, JoM WIRllfM ,.a,. ....._
0 IHI CJJ ,_ -"1 /30 111ln.)bi1111f1tf ~ I phony ~
5111 to ,,.., llldlll; "1toll of1rr1
Sindy ll'IOMJ; Ill'. RCllll 1M RodMJ
11111rrtl.
O flt-.: {:JO lllin.) Allin Molt m o.t.c .,..... ca (lCI 111111.1 "l•kl l'owell."
di lllwlt: ...... """' .......... (•lltlf'll) 'U--lc* UriilptOll. mon-...,: M ~11111. n. Iola Wt Trio,... JG WM 1M
Mon!RJ F.... ,,._ Jira"" ,_
7:11 B Cll &Mlle--.:, IQ (IO lllill.) 9 Cl), .... 1191 'If.it• o.wtt. ! "'''' ., 'I ...... fC) .......... .;·!w... ...... (10 Ml11.) 11:11pi( ~
0 MtM .._ hr WIJ (SO Min.) ""'°' = ,.._. ., rritia fl
ID M Scllll (3CI min.) 1111 official report. ti f"hlkltnt .IDhn F. . K1nllldJ'a ... •llltloll. W1l1tr~ GJ McH1ll'1 ""' (30 "'1".l kilt Din Ratlllr 111d Eddie 81rbr
EE 1..t LMll/otlkil " .. rn.i. ~-""" a io Cil ._ "' ,_. LIM: (C) @ (j) MD: (Cl ....... .,. («1111· (60 rninT "Tht UJI S1flri.~ 1'1111
tdr) '63 -SOphi• lert11. Bry1n t..u. • rirt with 1 tlfmulll 9 ([)Tm.tit hM inntU !low to lift ill thl li111t sllt el D 1111....,. 1111 ltft. l....,. Anll W11Ttt1. lMlil
7:30 0 3 ([) Cilllf1•'1 hltN: It) min,)
0 'flit Mffl'-= (C) (30 min.) o rm HIPllPtl (q po 111in.l
D @ (]) lrw• Mtrw: (C) (60 min.
''Volcano W•Soft. •
DMllllM $ Mwlrt: ........,._...
Clr1m1) 'SS -MonllO!MfJ' Ctitt. m TIVG w ""*!-(C) (lO
min.) Bob Btlbr, ltolt.
m """ ·-(60 111in.) f» Stldl: llllllt.111/Ttdlllic:el CMMI'
fII C....t: C.CW Bniwn.
IE t.llk.. ' '-""'-
""1-..... llll*ll o ................. fCI (60
min.) G (ftl CIJ lllt lit ,...,.. (C) (60
1t1in.) "DIJ' of T1mir.• Vidoria 1M
Alldu btcomt tllt hollaps ol Annie
Morton, mttrl.udl fll 1n out11111 1118-
ily. Whtll -"Annie'•..,, 11 shot,
V"clllril \'Olvlltwn '° ,._ tll1 bul-
lol
D ... _, ...._ (C) (60 rni..1 e .U. ..._ ..._ (Q (60 min.)
Q) Cal Mr. I (30 111i-.)
fl} HT JMrut: ''Vi«M1' ~1t. ..
l!)Tllh ,,.._
1:tl8111Mlr: .,... ·~· .... <• 11'11) '57 -Yletoi Mdlrt-, ....
MK1ttdy.
0 ""' ~It-... 1-11 (C)
0 MIN: .._.,,, btt11 , ......
(dr11111) "S6 -LIN G1ye, llllidllll ""-mWlkW , ....
• WORTH MENTIONING •
10:00 m M[T )Hrqt; ''Villlltlll Dlb1lt.ft Amtriun 1nd C.111dilft ~
Hbl11 !ht •JI in Yit1111m on ltt• campus II ""' Yor\ Unr.,rsity, TlMI
J11111r1m ••1 llptd durin1 th1 tactn1 ·•t1n"-t W1ek,~ ind 11tlloultl
no lormal 1ldo!:1 Wllfl dr1..i durln1 tht d1b1tt. ttit result "" ttill lllt
American studtntt loolt 1n 1nll·1111r st1nd on th1 Vltln1m queld•
whllt th1 C111adl1n 1tudo!:nt1 1r1utd for U.S. lnwlv.m.m In Vtet u&
TUESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
H-11, TM" (dr1m1) '4().....CMIW
Bf'tlr.
U:JO m ~1111y OrttM 11 Yem• 1..-.iJ
"49-0olli Dir. "Dr. 1...W. ,..
u.r' (haffl)f) '42-J. Clmil .....
1:)1) m ., ... Cardin.r" \dr1ma) 'JI -
Erie Portm111, Junf Ou111n_
l :JO m "Srnmplltlll• {musot•~ '42 -)•JO r.a "I i l lld lk .t' C,. 11,klt Cooptr. I , -r•.• ' ..,, • •• mt~Ct) ~4--G1n1 lollobri~ Yl-
11:00 U "T~t 1111 lll" (d11111•) '52 -torlo Dt Siu .
P1ul H1n11!4. "Olllln Ctn(' (111l$f-t :lO 1J "1.111 llJlll fr1111 ltMlllf"' ( ...
ern) '49-0on Burt j 1t1tJ '52-Jon Hill. Ch1llti111 !.,,..,
11:)0 0 IM lti-a.. llltldtnf' (wUtrll) Q '1'lall 1nd li..ctK (d111M) 11-
'43-Htnry fond1. "Al Tlrll 1111 Rlch11d Todd. Glynls klhn1.
·-
ON A PINHEAD
It i111'! ~uth lh• ••M• t!.in9 •• i11octibi119 !~o Con•!o!ul•On ""
th• hood el t p111, t .. 11 did yo~ •••• ••tllv •••d !ho "~0, fht
~•<o'<f ' f•olu•t 111 th• DAILY PILOT1 You'il bo outpro ud h&w
"'U!h J11/11r ... 1ti111 WI Cl ll ~·(~ fnt1 t '"''II 1p ote.
PEANUTS .
DI. ~AIE
... """"" HA5 MEN
INTRIGOEO
lN A lAltl
""""'""" 5/1.YS .. 5
HAMEJ5
VAUGHH-lllUT
WHO 15 ntf.
IMAGE OF-A
ctASSMAtt
Kil~
HA~'T :5fflrC
IH YEARS-
GOIDO
>.. --,. ..... """'-
-l&lS -..........
RiiWWWIMi M01E .., """ """ ............ -........... ,
~
M0.9.l'M
IOC«MSAT
A~
OF~ --
MUTT AND 6ff.
WSS PEACH
HE1NS613-
HA'11ENT 5UFFlCleNl1. V
APPRECIATH) ,l'llE MOOE!..
t4E l!IUIL.T1Ml55 PEACH!
BALD?
IAA,
'JO.l'lfE A
TEl<l<IF/C
MODEL
l!Cltl.OeR .
ly K .. lald
TMAJ 'S WHAT 8IJGS ME . 1
Cl.ARK WEIR WAS A !
BRILLIANT .Srt.ltlEHT WliO J
.ru~T Sf'!:MW 10 Oec>P f
Ol.lT OF THE WORLD -A ~
COUPLE OF MOHTHS
8Erolre GRADUATlON. ...,,. >l"'1CAL .
:JOi(X)L. WHY~
ly Al Smith
liiHANKSTOALLOl.R ·-~~~ ~~TIE
"TYPE OF TOll'EE
JEFF SHCIJt.D WE.AR.I !T's IMl'OSSIBl..Eit>
~All. \<:llJR.
N<:E LEnERS BUT
WE WANT YOU TO KNOW WE GREATLY
APPRECIATE 'yt)t,JR,
IN'TER.EST.'IGl.ESS JEFF WlU. JUST H.trtJE TO GOOf'll 8EJNG BA1-0 -
6·t 6 ltL '6MM.f--
ly Mell
-Ya.rRE A
FAti.U~E AS A
HUMAN l!EING ,
l!UT YOU
BUILD A GREAT
MODEL .. ,
•-----
Vl"I Tt .........
TO REPRESENT CA.LIFORNIA -'Ibe new Miss
California 1967, Karen Purcell, 22, at.ands tn her
regal robes and crown after winning the beauty
crown. in Santa Cruz Saturdly in competition with
35 oth ... girl•
Fresno Beauty Wins
Miss America Berth
'
Morlday, June 26, 1%7 DAILY PILOT 8
Huntington Beaela~ Fountain Valley
For the Record Two Coast Cities Take Growth Honors
Meetings
MONOAY
Co•t• Mat1fro, C•lllot1'1• S1•l.,g1 •nd
L""n. Cot!• lo\C'il , 1:00 p.m. E~plOt*' kOUI$, ll•IKOCll Electrot1lc.,
EKpk>rer Pot1 ltt, 8•bcod: £lec-
trot1!"'i, 3J01 H1rtior 81•<1., C•t1
Mis.I, l:IS p,tn.
o .. nge Co.,, Mlne•1i ...:I L1p!d.or1
S<lc:i<'IY, C•!I Ma• wom ..... CluD.
ilO W. ll!h StrHI. Co1!1 ....._._,
l:lO p,m , (0011 IMY H•t.._V Loclot ,.0, )f, OOd Fel'-• 11<111 2Qi NewP<ltl l!IY~ .. C1>1t1 ,,..,.,., 1:00 1>.m. Sw«I Allellnes, Inc.. H1rt>orlll1•
c nopler. ColltOt P•rll: SchOOl, %JIO
Notrt O•mt. Coo•io Me ... 1:00 p.m.
TUISOAY
c ..... "'n ot Cllurdln, N"110fl H1r00t. meet• •I .,.,...,. dlu•a.eo, 01"1•d
II.•~· H. C••l1v, Ui-l:Ul, lJ ,_
(OI!• MtM E1o;11....,. Clu~. CCll'•I Reef
r1t .. ur1n1, ll>U Hlrtro!" Bl•d., C0111 __ 11-
lor!lllllmlll Cl\ID of Huntlf'lllll<\ -~.
F••ncoi.• rn11ur•nl. llHI &..-ell
81•0., 1•hmtl1>9""" Be•dl• ll """" Ntwl>O"T Hu'OCll' Active ~JI Club,
Vlllffl '""· 11' M•rlnt, 1!1-IO· land, 1~ ,_,
Coslt Mft• Roi•" ·Club, NCll'Jll • ......,,.
Vero. Country Cl11~. Cosi. """"' 11: IO p,m , (OtOM Ml ....... ll:lw•"il Club, V111t $-"· .u3'i E. c.,.., HIOftw•r, cor-ona 011 M•" 11:10 P·"'· ...,ntl1>9lllf'I 8eech l(lw•nl1 Ch1D, Hunt. lr\otoft !leach c ..... ntry CluD, rn 111"
51 .. Hunllf'lll<ln 8*cfo, U:U P.m. t.1 • .._1 H1rb0t Optimist CluD. VIII•
MM-ln1, IOU l!•v•lclf Drive, 11 .... -
pOr'I lffCh. 12;U p,m,
Visit Mental
Unit, Piersall
Asks Reagan
COllll Mou ICl••nlo C-. ....... riaill
L""1kln H&ll, ~ W, ltrl'I i«, ("'" M•w. 1):1, p,m,
t<untlng!O<I lleacn lio••"' Club. 1'1-torlfl, FtNr Winch lle•l•urenl, !M?I llal••
Clllcl A:o.o, Hunll ... IOft ll•Kfl. lt:!5
p.m.
Fire C:alb ---•:n p.m. S.turc11v, .... n, ... .,... r ..
flro. m Hltblolni:I Ori.,..
Nu.,....• -l :U ,.m. Soturcllv. 11••,.. fir• _,
to '11 C..lv "'""· 1:'4 1>.m .. t••u fl,., Cbk:""° ._....,.,,. .no LAii• sw .. 1.
•:O:S p.m., rnedlc•I •Id, !'2t'l ...,...tlYll
u~.
•:tl p,tn., .., ... le.I hd, l•IO Or .... ...
l :.t5 •.m. Su1""'v, n....Olul 1W, 111'1
Wes'-1 O.We.
lf:CIO •.tn .• l••fih 11 ... , Cl\~ ,t..v-
tnd l ... • S1t"Mt.
!;It p,m .. 0'''" 11,., Wt•,,... •-
. -G-d St••'· •:JO p.m~ Ir..., lire, 6U ,t..c.oclt ,.,,,.,
·,,_,. •-"'" Mond••· car llr1, GOldoll
Wnl ~lt'N'I -Tt-1 ·-· '°"I kMfll )O:ao 1,m. S.lurd•v, !Ire 1 .... stlv•llof\.
.,01 1""1"""0<! .........
1?;41 p,m. S\JflOto, t1I M 1i.rtn, ""'!"
S,,...el """ OcNn Aw .....
l :GO p.m., 1n<1<Hc•I •Id. Stlllefl -· •:O:S p.m .• """'ut •Id, &ow .... ........,.
•tlO W1'$1mlt11te< Street. '''~ p.m .. stTvctur'" l!rw, )'Ill st,...
•"" Oceon •-· Flllnl•lft \ltlln
The Orange Coast cities took places
of honor In the county's breath-taking
growth was demonstrated by other Or·
the C'OUnty planning department re·
ported today.
Huntington Beach attracted 9,689
new residents between April 1, 1966
and April 1, 1967, more Uran any other
city in the county. The poplation grew
12.l percent to an estimated 89,642,
Fountain Valley grew by 22.6 per-
cent to 20.175. That percentage growth
Is second only to La Palma, which
racked up a spectacular 126.8 percent
to 4,975.
Steady and aometimes impressive
grnwth wa demonstciated by other Or-
ange Coast cities in the quarterly
planning department progress re·
port handed to the Board of Super·
visors Tuesday.
An estimated 2,309 became Costa
Mesans during Ule year, bringing the
population to about 68,705.
Other C'Oast cities recorded the fol-
lowing growth : Laguna Beach added
738 to total 13,IXXl; Newport Beach,
1,293, to total 39,645: San Clemente
1,858 to total 15,958; San Juan Capis-
trano, 336 to total 2,544; Seal Beach,
11,150 to tolal 21,875; and Westmin-
ster, 2,500 to total 54,300.
Overall, the county grew by 5.7 per-
cent to an estimated population of
l.246,740.
While some of these newcomers
bought new and used homes during
the year, real est.ate sales were down
for the first quarter of 1967.
The sale of new homes, for exam-
ple. dropped by 25 percent for the
year.
"Sales, however , are expected to
improve in vie w of the diminishing
inventory of new unsold homes and
improving vacancy rates," the report
noted.
The statistics showed that taxable
sales made impressive gain.a during
the year. So did vehicle registration.
"Only San Diego Coaoty exceeded
Orange Cou.nty in the increase ol. re.
tail sales for the year," senior plan ..
ner Alire!! C. Bell noted in his pre-
sentation before the board.
Vehicle registratioo iDCrea.9ed by
8.4 percent. According to Bell, this ii
a greater percentage than would have
been expected of Orange County.
School enrollment statiatics indicate
an extremely young population, Bell
said. An e:;timated 376.590 people at~
tended public schools on April I, 1967.
Th is demonsb'ates an increase o(
2.1,944 over the same date a yMr earl-
ier~ a 6.8 per~nt increase.
HB Scout Buil,ding Said Fire Hazard
The lives of hundreds ef aaid this morning that the termite i n f e s t e d, has a think the building would
I :!' •.m. s.=~~~ ".., m.ay be in danger every building is not up to cit Y foundation below grade lev· fall down, but is coocerned
1:2' •.m. ~y, reKIH, tm ~
11"0 SI,
uu2 M.-.:rest 5'· Huntington Beach children codes and should either be el, has inad..,.uate ventila-by the .......,.,ibility ci( f i r e $:l9 p,m., ur fir~, G...,. 5.---. ,.--F•-•Y ~ -~ aou1evin1. time the Scout Hut at Lake brought up to code, used tion, a non-fireproof roof, and the lack of ventilation 10:,7 1,m , SltndaY, .....Sltll 11d, Ul1J Golden w.,.~. s1. Park is used if reports by fOT' storage or demolished. lacks a screen on the fire-in the old buildillg.
1.JJ p.m. Sund•y, Mlle .. "'"· "M the city Building Depart-The building was built of place and does not have He said bringing ttie fa-w~,,m1no1er Blvd. · d co111 Me.-ment reflect the condition d 0 n ate d telephone poles adequate win ows. cility up to city standards
''11 •·"'· S••ur"•'· '~"'u"' >m lr!o-of the building. about 19'l3 by a "~"P in-In addition, there is not would be costly.
IOI SI, ,,.--============. 11:n P·"'·· ...: ..... ?'*2 Dr•• ...... Vice Mayor Jack Green terested in scouting. The a ·fireproof wall between a.-
M F ,,~~.,:; ,-..,., ~ ,.11..,_. w.v. called the facility a "fire city at that time pairi $800 storage shed built next to
ANAHEI -0 r mer Apt. IM.. hazard t.o the kids using it," toward construction of the the building to house gaso-QUICK
California Angel baseball 7:0'.! p.m., ".. ~ • and suggested that tile old building at the city-owned line and gasoline-operated
player Jim Piersall today ,,~": =·v. 11i.oa1 ....,, un log cabin be used foc 1tor· Lake Park at 12th and Main maintenance equipmebt and
issued an appeal for Gov. a....-St. age only, 1treets. ttie Scout Hut assemtlly Reagan .. _ "accom .... "Y me J:JI p,m., ltl'lldvnJ nr.. ttll "'-
..., r--... •wo., """'· •· Director ot P a r t 1 and Worthy aaid the report! area. on a tour of at least one ,,,,. ""'" ·~ ..,., ,,. .._. Recr , N W tb b ba buildin Worth aid he d not
state mental hospital before -~"'"'~ii";·;·~-~· ~"~· ;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;~~·;••;;•~•;,;;•~r;m;;:.~or;;;Y;;;;';;;;;•;•;;;t~t;th;;;•;;;;:;·~g_:i~rj _ __::::::~Y_:•::::.._:::._::oe:::•_::'.:.!,==========' you make a final decision,
OI\ the state budget."
Piersall: who recently re-
tired as an active player to
]oin the Angel public rela-
tions office. is serving as
chairman of lhe Citizens'
COMPLETE FUNERALS CONVENIENTLY PRE-ARRANGED
CEMl:Tf;RY LOTS
Fron:i $ISO
SANTA CRUZ -Blonde. Joyce M:alte6, Miss Los Committee for Mental
Mi Fr Angdes County. Health. Piersall is himself t.&tmin.attr iiltmnrial Jark
your tree
uourmel
cook book
b I u e -eyed SS esno a former mental patient.
Cou nty, Karen Pursell, was In his wire to the gover-
selected to\ represent Cali-De H nor, Piersall said, "You owe
fomia in the Miss America IDS 0Il0f it to the thousands of men·
Mort.Rary-Ce..,tery
Two Sc'paratdy Oivncd Comp.nie5
Located Si.de·by·Sidc, Sharing a
Coounon Desire to~ You Better,
With Leu Cost, and Without the
loconvtnience of Functa.l
Procnsions Through Heary Tnffic
contest in Atlantic City in tally ill and retarded per-
Septembet when she topped Negro Solon sons now hospitalized a" d the thousands . who will all competition Saturday need help in the future.
night in the Miss California ANAHEIM _ The Orange "I am sure that a fir st-
pagent. County Democratic League hand view of the conse-
Tbe 22;.YCar-Old coed from will ..ftOnoY Assemblyman quences of your actions will
Fresno St.ate College who Willie L. Brown Jr. of San convince you that any budg-
measures 36-24-36 a n d Francisco at a no host par-et cuts in mental hygiene
!410! l 14801 RACH II.YD, WESTMINSTR
TWinoob ).2421 JlfftnOll l -1725
stands a statuesque 5 feet ty Thursday from 4:30 to ~w~o~"~ld~b~e~a~b-~a~g~ic~mt"'.!'·s~tak~e~.:.,~__:~'O"'""!'!!!!!":""'~~~"""'~""!'~~""""'""""'""...,""'""'!!!!""O'l!!!;""!'~~~"._-1 71.h inchetl, told newsmen 6 p.m., in the Pool.'iide Room i-
that she would "study and of Disneyland Hotel.
oo· her best to represent the Brown is ooe of the sis
state in September." r-.:egro members of the Lei·
Miss Orange C o u n t y, , i&lab.tte. There ls no ad nil•
Shannon Lee Hert of Viii.a. 1ion fee and the dress ff tn~
Park, placed as second nin-formal.
ner-up behind Alexa Laden The Democratic League
Clark, Mias Redlands. Aho will hold an election of offl.
placing were Melissa Rider cet"s at the conclusion of the
Miss Tulare, 3nd Donna event.
OBITUARIES
WILLIAMS
Tfl6d .... WIH!•ms. ~ n, "' iil:i E.
11th St.. S.,,.• ....... S...,.-vlwel tr.' Wllo!.
M•rv Lou: lw!) ..,.., f'•rk1 A,, Sell
lleKh. •nit Robtn E.. Se<> O~o;
1wo ililo.,, Mrt. ~t ,¥.tO.o!\1-'"
,.,. Mt•lcO. •nit M" <;.e""vO.vr
LYnch. Tr••o. •"" .,..,..., or•rodct>ll·
<lrr1', !>ei'~I~. Wot(lnKdll>. 1 P.M .. 11'
""' C,..po,ol •• f'•cJfl<: Vlr.,. Mem<ll'io!
Por'lc. '"'"'mf"'· PKllM: Vlrw Mt-morl•I P•rk. DifectN bv P•clflc: vi., ..
M~....,..1~1 P•rl< MorH,.rY.
HARBAUGH
"''"''" w. H••t>ouvh. 4D Maonoli•. Co•!• Me.,,,. ~ U ; o~ Ju,,. ll. Sur·
~IWCI O• w\ffo, LJIY 8.; O•IJ9h~. l ••
Her~1J9h ; '"'" flt"Dlh~" Hcw•rd.
I-•· •"<I W•ltf<', '"""'""' ~lstero.
M". Tiii& Har!me1', •-•· •tl<I Mr\,
P•ullne 0 1c1<"°". ICW•I mot-,1,,.1•""·
Mr1. M•r1i1' t.lt"'"""· S..rolr<'• were
,,,.Id 1-y, M"""'-•· 7 P,M.. S.11
8rcM"'"''Y """''"""" (h.oi»I, \10 Broe<!· "'"" c ... 10 Me••· .. 1111 Or•"9f' cou .. i. Mo'l(l1'1( 809rd offl<l•ll<19. 1.,1,,.men"
H~<l><>r r:i..,1 M...-1•1 Porli.
HA BERKA RN
11<'..:li< 11 , Ha~•rn. 9J.0 W. 11!11
s1 .. c ... + • ..,.....,, A~ I.I; o"'° J11,.
?J. !>urvl""" ~v will!, "'"""• NllW Je•-"'" _., &e..:!I• T, H1b&r~f'"·
!>&M• A1'•1 ""IJ9h!lf. Mn, E""!\ln
&eolwl-. New J.,.llfv; •h"''· Mro.
Dew• P ...... lv. SI. p...,1, Ml~f.
Set'11cH. l.,_,.v, 1 P.M . Chrif! Lu·
"'"'"" Chu•ch. Coll• ""'"'' with R•"·
L. v. Tor-o111<J1t1no;1. '"~"''"'" Ftlrhll...,, Memorlll! Par~. M<!morl•I
cllf\Tr!bull""' m•v bf -~ If "" Pr••,.. Cllat>tl Mem<>'l•l Furo:I <ti
Clld•I Lu""'"'n Church. All .,i.,.,,.1<19
wl!l !•Ii• PK• •I lht B•lt II•-••
M(!rl\HO ..... 110 ll•Dl<IW•V. (Mii .........,._
TIFF A NV
L ..... I .. l l llf•nY, , ... 0rl"9f'. Cost•
.......... A~ l!J d1N Ju"" 1~. Sur.,l•td
tw d-"!f<', It .... """"' WllH1m9'>f\, Cooto _, ...,..,. or•!ldd..,,Mert.
t<•lt-IM lv11,, Vel'Nro: Loulw It•·
•I•, loHlw vcn. •nd MMY L. wmi.m-
_... Coa1' -· So>rvkfl -e IM!\d ""'•"· M-•· 10:30 ........... 8-11 8,,_IY Mori.,...., CJ-I, 110 11,_.i.
w•v. Coal• -· wll•• II•"· Joh" o ..... •Id-otflclllllf'll. lnl..-tnef>t , O.ic· w...., C•"""""°• SvrKVM, New y,..11,
OBITUARIES
McCULLAH °""!\!• JNn M.cCull•~. 19131 Hu"t-lnet<wi St., H111'1tlnial"" lleaat. Survl•· ~bv "r..,i,, Mr. •nd Mr1. L•rrv J . ull•h; •lsi.r, T~eu ; or•""-•· , Mr. •nO M"1. Joa McCull•ll •"" ~ 9ftd Mn. W!llltn Voot. Serv\ce1, w.d""""•v• I 1>,l)"·• .. P""' F1mlly c ... .,l•I 1'11,,.r•I "°""'· ~
McNALL V ANDERSON
(!Ml M, M<'"•llV, ~U E. 7'11'\d ~I ' J ' S ANltl'ICn Me ~I of )~U Mq.rt
N-POft lleKh. ,t..oe &31 01"" Ju,. "· 1."i~ .-;,,,., L-· 11t .. c11.' s..rvl•tO ~v Surv!-..d bv hu.twtnd, Mr . J-II, ::;i!'..".,...,ic:~"";..,,""uJ~':,';·1.,~~1"~fi
McN•l""I ""'· Corl 81lit• MtN•1""' "' '"' home; rnotlltr. Mrs. Vert .. ..,.. 0•"9"""°' Mr.. JNn lumw•11• ,.....,. er-son. Mll!tt"' 1ervlc" will be """' _, IUd\, ..... -a""*"'"'· ~ "" W«lnnd•Y· l P.m .• Forosl LIW" lcet, y.,.-y, 11 A.M., llt!I ,.,,..,.. Cv....,.n, Cll•PO!I of Qvr 1'1.,,trt. WH,. w•• c11~. 110 ~rOIMl'#lv. C1191• _:'c""c.;:-=.;:::.~c·c'":::.-=·c'c'~='=~=·--1 Meu. w!ltl 1..,, Het"berl J.,,,,,_ ul·
llcl•ll"lll, 1-moni, !'Kl"C View Me-
morlolt '"""'·
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Cnroaa del Mar OR S.!M. 0
Costa Mt.II Ml I-MU
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway. Costa Mesa
LI 8-3433
PEER f' AMIL Y COLONIAL
FUNERAL ROME
1801 Bolla Ave., We1tmtn1Wr m.sus
SMITH'S MORTU>lRY
6?7 Main St.
PACIFIC
VIEW MfMOltl.ltL PAI(
Ctmrl~ll ' MarTil••)I
M""""'''w"' • c1o.,,1
f uMn•) St ,,,P(tl
c,,..,.,,,,~ 5t,,,I,~• Runtingron Beacb
LE us.19 1VESTCLl1'~f i\1C•RTUARY J-'«' r.n~c v;,,,. Driv•.
t27 E. 17th St., C<l~t• !\.felt N'"''"'r1 B•1ch.C11!f11ml• •JMJ
646-<383 I 11 •• "11",;'11'~-·.''1'1'11'•"•'"'•'•••
Flying Bonanza is like having
Grand Canyon in your backyard
Now Bonanza fiies you from nearby Orange County Airport right
to the Grand Canyon's spectacu lar south rim air terminal. Take
Bonanza's morning nonstop to Las Vegas and catch a c011nect·
ing nonstop to the Canyon. Spend the ent ire afternoon enjoying
the world 's greatest natura l wonder-then return to Las Vegas
for dinner and a night of fun in P1e world's greatest man-made
wonder. Two wonders in one day. Wonderful!
Only $27 each way plus tax, ro und trip only, 7 day return . Ask
about Bonanza's family fa res, youlh fares and packaged tours, too.
BONANZA
AIRLINES
The alr11ne of the Funjets
RESERVATIONS : 540·2060 or your tr11vel agent• AIRFREIGHT: 545 -5815 .
/i.-.....
• ~I ..........., : .. ;,.., t-.
•
• . , is al Mariners Savings.
Stop by and pick it up.
To celebrate the·Gourmet Festival, July
1 through July 10, Mariners is offering
a free gourmet cook book to all visitors.
let these attract~e bound gourmet cook
books instruct you in such diverse sub-
jects a s wine cookery, herb and spice
cookery, and the ABC's of canapes,:
cookies and salads. Find new ideas in ·
the preparation of culinary delights and
rediscover old ones. Come join in the
festive atmosphere am id the handsome
surroundings of the Mariners Bui lding.
Our friendly and courteous staff will
a ssist you with all your savings and
loan needs. And re member, at Mariners
your savings earn the highest prevailing
interest rate in complete safety.
<O
MARINERS SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATI0:-1 .
A ·'"-"'Yd C or••ol .O.il••n« ('.,,r<J,..r;,,,,
WfOSl(l ln· 11 no1·r.11.. ~f". f'(lll I ~· ,r H,C ~LI F. Y.'lt<!J . ('tU ) M: ... OOG ,.
~~]!!t~·
' ).
J(J DAULY PILOT MOlllQy, JuM 2b, 1%7
ulGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N-OTICE LEGAL NOTICE Forta:ne's List -A-
" . . ..
" -67 ll ""
jl fr
1111 16 .. " . ftO 17 ....
J •"-7~ 611,1, • • I 1.W. u ~ " .. (J ll14 . "' rllO 1111,1, ...
11 "'" ID Joi'% 101 '6\<i ' . .IO 1•'4
Ill 'IO'o u , ...
" "" 11'1 H'~ ' . l" •• ,,,
110 111 ' ,, . " 61 JI 1 11''> .. ,
1) 7J'1o 11.IO .,
ll 11·~ " "'" 7ll ''"' ~ ~:~
11 1&'" " 1 1·~ ..... S-l 7•111 11"5 06t. :n 11 .. I 17'' 17 IJ .. ~ ''" \! 1r.1
'
v Monday's Oosiog Prices-Complete New York --1111&1-.u.o.c..
-I a,. .. -W.X·Y-1.-.....
Jti.·
Mondo11, Jun' lb. 1%1
Stock Exchange Li st
~ ..
t-.1 Hl1ll> U. Liii c .... ,... ""' iMlo ! Ml ... l.. UOI .:..._
DA.l l V P\LOr J.l
l•i.,, 111•
!lliK.l """' i... Utt t;•f ,
Closing
--
·r
. JJ DAll.V PILOT MO!ld~, Junt 2&, 1%7
(
MISSES', CTJSTOM
SIZE DRESSES
Jloc. $:0-$4t
1599-19'"'
Tabrics include dacron* poly·
esters, 11.cetate knibi and arnelti
triaeetates. 8-18, 14-20, 1211-
22\1.
Wlndlor ll1aMI' • Womm'1 -.-..
FAMOUS LADY
SHIRTS .... .,..11
2"
Solids and prlnta 1n cotton. n~
iron dacron«I polyeater and cot~
ton. Sizet: 8 to 18. --··
CLUl'CH
SPECTAL
I"
Wide lelectlon \n manhma.llaw,
plastlc patent!;, leather, in bricht
IUJMlff colon.
Young Men'1 No
Iron Casual Slach
Rei· S1.Q
:r-41111
Trom your favorite maken, with
no-iron convenience. Many fab-
rics. model!, tolors. Men's stzeg,
boyt' lizel, ref. $6-$7 ·~ •••• Z.tt-i.lf
1(1. OFF
Ou-istmas Cards
Reg. 11-$8
5oe-aoo
Buy now and 1111.w on this Oi.rist·
mas l!xpense. Boxed 25 alikl'!.
ramou1 ma.ken.
~.11
6-PC. STAINLESS
Steak Knife Set
f.6 Vain•
349
P11kiuiv.'OO(! handles. "errated
blades make t.his R quality st'!!..
In h&ndsome wood holder.
'~ "°"""" lll"ff. •
•
SUIT
CLEARANCE
Orig. Pl-$100
'18, '28, '38
Knits. wool and "'ear every·
.. ·here lightweight fabrics. Stylee
perfect for office , travel. Mlssel' ·
•!us.
M'iMfll' Suits, t1
' ' I
JUNIOR
COTI'ON KNITS
Orig.$6-$U
Shorn, pants and tops in wash-
able cotton knit, specially styled
for the junior me.
Jnot~.ff
KMT PLA YWEAR
FOR GmLS
!aw 1;, on a:rt:ton knits to mbt
and natch, tttrlfle collection in
iJ"t'llt colo!"I and prinU. Ux.
7-14.
Men's No-Iron
Knit Golf Shirt
Short sleeve knit shirt with S
button placket. Da cron~ poly·
ester cotton in blue, yellow,
green, oran(Ct.
M ... , lptrtawur, Ill
Our Own Panther
BICYCLE
r-3281
fmported. Com~ completely as·
sembled and ready for 11 boy or
girl to ride. In wild colo!'l.
-"°""'· "
DURA PRESS®
WHITE SHEETS
a..,. $10.00 if (N'tfN:t.
51111
g;,,W? now on these famou!' mak·
er ~heets. 50% rotton. 50'f blur,
C.~ polyester. SEiected ~ronds
•ith undetectabil'! imperf~tlon1.
-··
\ ' . {
NO-ffiON
DRESSES
10"
Spedal purcha.e <I drip<lry
dr't'Slel that never need ironing .
Amei9 t.rlacetata, dacron«I per
lyester&j miun and half sizes.
--·"
CASUAL
ftLKER
IO"
Joyce'e: famous Easy Living ahoe
with sole in black or tan.
CRISP COTrON
SHIFl'S
Jlec. fl
4"
Cheery ro!on, bright little ruf.
neii or appliqued trlmJ.
""-"
Men '1 Tiet1 In
Silk or Polyet1ter
Her. n.-
1• 2/21'
A ha ndlome collection of fancy,
110lid tJi-striped neckwear in
luxUJ}' llik or wuhable polyes.
"''·
RCA VICTOR
COLOR TV
t 11& vz ao.oo
'458141
lt'1 a big 295 IQ. inch console.
Priced for amuner viewina:.
Limited quantity. .
TtlevisiOlll, 71
DISCONTINUED
BROADLOOM
""'· $6.91
511 • 1q, yd. ln~ed
t oo•; continuous filament ny.
l(ln pile tn hi lo loop over 40
oz. \\•afrte pad. In soUds. tweeds.
Carptt.in&, •
)
•
.
STARTS
JUNIOR
DRESSES
tr-10"
Special purdiase! Styt.o and
fabrics for our young career pl
Slus 7ID15.
SEAMLESS
STOCKINGS
... '1;1Jll
Br
well known brands, discontinued
styles and colon, including, de-
mi-toe, Cantrece9 nylon, re-ift..
forced heel and toe, non-nJM in
medium length only.
VAMTY FAIR
UNDERFASIDONS
Annual ..i. of populu ginlleo,
bras and pantie girdles. Whlu
and puteJ..
rCIUktatxm, "
Men's Underwear
By Arrow
• &.,i. Sl..%5-$1.50
99'
Crew MCI< t-ahirtl.. S lo XL.
Cotton knit brief~ 3().42. Ath-
letic shirts, S-M-.L-XL. Bost!I"
lhorb, 3().42. '
Save On HOOVER
UPRIGHT VACUUM
441s
It's I.ht! t.:onvertible cleaner. GeU
your floors clean fast. Lirruted
quantity IO hurry.
M11jor Appliances, ID
ROC LONIZED
DRAPERIES
"'«· 1%.00
48" :1 M .. -7• ,.. .
Self lined. Reg. to l2.00. Gives
you protection against sun fad-
ing, heat and light A value al
thi.r;; 1peci8.I ptice.
a..iom Draptriel, II
SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10:00 A.M .• 9:30 P.M.•-*ANAHEIM SHOP SATURDAY 10:00 A.M. -6:00 P.M
*ANAHEIM
444 "'•"" f~•l><I ...... "~"~.1 ...
A~"h'I"' '~"trl'l'"I C•~•••
r.1,,~.AO !lS·l l11 -141.,47,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
,,,, fd,A ......... 1-1~ ........... •••<h
fol..,,h•AO 11),ffS!
DOWNEY
Tf4) P\,.,_ 11..,j, • °"""""'
,,i.~ ,,,,,,,,
DEL AMO
MONDAY
DACRON KNIT
SEPARATES ... ~
719 13"'
From a famoua maker. Machine
washable and dryable s k Ir t,
lhlrt, lul<et. caprlo 1n ·~
po1-ff knit. 8 to 16.
..-·-··
UGm'ED
MIRROR .
.
Rialto make-up mirror ...tth reg-
ular and magnifying mirron and
Hve U&bt bulbs, cosmetic draw-or.
°""'4'tio, n
FWRAL PRINT
CO'ITON TENTS
....
Cotton po(Mn t8ru ln a.U tht
nl!Wl!Rt IW11.ller lfinU. colon.
""-"'·"
Men's 1 and 2
Trouser Suits
l60-l'75 Valltfll
49"-59"
A. great coUection of summer
and yar-round wolghlll In th•
most wanted models. GoOd lize .......
lfen'1 Oothina. t
TIME STEREO
ALBUMS
V AWE PRICED
,..... ..._ 99'
ChooEe from IUCh artists ••:
Carmen MacRae, Gorden Jen-
k1111 and motion plcturt tunes.
......... .,.,
•
WHITTIER
I J600 Wit"'-" 1,.,.. e Wllhti•
t.i.~,.. t41.n1 I
I
I
' r
t
.. . , ,, " . . . . .... , •I •. • ' '1 _. • .,. . ...,,,..,., .... , , . ..
Em p1re Debutantes Presented at Ball • \
PREBALL PUNCH BOWL PARTY -Prior to the thrill of their formaJ
debut 1967 Empire debutantes and their escorts were entertained with a
punch bowl party. Chatting over the excitement yet to come are (left
t.o right) Mark Hughes, Miss Susan Lynn Haley, Miss Pattllie Waydelich
1117 EMPIRE DEBUTANTF.S -Presented to society
Friday evening in Balboa Bey Club during the tnird
annual Empire Debutallte Ball are (left to right) the
Mi81e8 Mary Ellen Bradley, Kathleen Elizabeth Brame,
Susan Lynn Haley, Pat(il~ War.deUch. .Ciodace Adine • Marrs and Catharine Craft Ebsen. The ball, which opens
the summer social seeaoo, is sponsored by the Harbor
Auxiliary of South Coast Chi.Id Guidance Clinic and
benefits tbe clime.
and 'Dooald John Brim. After the ball, debut.antes, escorts and stags
were treated to a breakfast party in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Franklin Brame with Mr. and Mrs. James Chapman Waydelich co·
hosting.
~ Treasured memories of their formal pre6entation to society,
rnarking the final step through the portal of womanhood, will be shared
by six Harbor Area young women who made their bow last Friday dur·
ing the third annual Empire Debutante Ball.
The thrill of presenting a daughter to assembled families, friends
and patrons also will be cherished for a long time to come by the\r
fathers, who at this time received a special post Father's Day gift.
The elegant affair, which is the first major event of the summer
social calendar, climaxed a series of tea6, luncheons and parties honor-
ing the presentees.
Balboa Bay Club, setting for the ball which benefits South Coast
Child Guidance Clinic, was resplendent with traditional white and gold
decorations. Tall golden urns filled with yellow roses and trailing fern
graced the tables and massive arrangements of white gladioli. carna·
tions, pompon chrysanthemums and stock on Grecian columns placed
along the aisle transformed the main ballroom into a formal garden
setting.
Entering on the arm of her father, each debutante curtsied at
the center of the stage before a backdrop of midnight blue drapes and
waited there until all were presented. After bowing in unison, fathers
claimed their debutante daughters for the traditional father-daughter
waltz, and then relinquished them to their escorts tor more dancing.
CLASSIC BALL GOW NS
Wearing cl85Qc white ball gowns and carrying simple nosegays
of white carnations with fern tied with moss green velvet ribbons,
debutantes proudly wore their onJy jewelry -white ribbons bearing
gold medallions which were merited for their service and were present·
ed by their mothers at the traditional announcement tea.
To be selected as a debutante, each girl mwrt be a member of
Keynotes, a junior group of the ball sponsor, the Harbor Auxiliary of
the clinic. As a Keynote each must have fullilled a required number of
hours at the Treasures and Trinkets Thrift Shop. operated by the
auxiliary, and have contributed funds to the clinic through the annual
fund-raising project, Spring Fashion Show.
The clinic provides low cost care to emotionally disturbed cbil·
d.ren and their families who cannot afford psychiatric care.
DEBUTANTES
Debutantes, their parents and eeoorts are Miss Mary Ellen Brad·
ley, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gerard Bradley, Patrick William Hallahan;
Miss Kathleen Elizabeth Brame, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Franktin Brame,
Kent A. Rasmussen. and Miss Catharine Craft Ebsen. Mr. and Mrs.
Christian Ebsen, Steven Linder.
Others are Miss Susan Lynn Haley, Mr. and Mrs. Cbarles1
Gabriel HaJev. Mark Huehes: Miss Candace Adine Marrs. Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Flake Marrs, Tom Dean Skinner Jr., and Miss Pattilee Way-
delich, Mr. and Mrs. James Chapman WaydeJich, Donald John Brizzi.
Walter Burroughs, master of ceremonies, introduced Mrs. Robert
Bernard. auxiliary president, who extended a welcome and Harry Bab-
bitt, h05t, who introduced debutantes. Both Burroughs and Babbitt are
recipients of the Guardian Angel award which is presented each year to
a man selected as being the most outstanding in contributions to the
community.
Honored l'Uests were ball patrons and patronesses and clinic
directors and staff.
Mrs. John Elledge, ball chairman, was assisted by the Mmes.
John McKerren. Max Binswanger, Leon Fry. Garth Bergeson. Frank
Marshall. William Holmes, Christian Schindler. Richard Stott. Louis
Pratt. John Sparling, Charles Kelley, Stuart Wilson. M. A. Richley Jr.
and F.dward Parker.
PREBALL PARTIES
Prefacing the ball was a punch bowl party for debutantes.
escorts and their fathers and fellowing was an after-the-ball breakfa!\t
given in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Brame with Mr. and Mrs. Waydelirh
co-hosting. Here debutantes, their escorts and stags, John Hutchins,
Tum Tift. Jerrv Finster and Peter Camodell Gardett were given an op-
portunitv to relax after an excitinf! evening.
Cocktail parties preceding the ball included the one given for
ball patrons and patronesses. board members of the eponsoring or-
ganization, clinic directors and former directors and clinic staff in the
Lido Isle home of the Binswan~ers.
Mr. and Mrs. Waydelich entertained Mr. and Mr6. Hugh Carra-
dini of San Marino, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Waydelich, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
W. Bilger, Mrs. Marshall and Frank C. Marshall Jr.
The Charles Kelleys served cocktails to the Messl'6. and Mmes.
William Holmes, Herbert J . Puterbaugh, Orvel Howland, William Keel·
er, Sparling, J. O'Hara Smith. James Lee. Mrs. Oolleen Ward, Mrs. V.
Rollins Young and Paul Orrin.
Guests of the Haleys were Dr. and Mrs. Henry Riedel and the
Messrs. and Mmes. Harvey Pease, Eugene Black, Alex MacGillivray and
Ted Finster.
TRADITIONAL GATHERI NG -At Ute customary cocktail party for ball
sponsors, patrons and patronesses which prefaces the ball Mrs. John Elledge ,
ball chairman (left) goes over last minute details with Mrs. Robert Bernard,
Harbor Auxiliary president. wiUt Bernard looking on .
..
)4' DAJLV 'ILOr • Monday, Junt 26, 1%7
Rites Link Rush-Johnson " Nam-es
MRS. BENJAMIN C. RUSH
Exchanges Vows, Rings
~
i:•VZZG4DJttwW •W\ri:P&C ZWWWW::tPt
Wedding · Plans · Told
At Family Gathering
Joyce Marie Ca!Psle and
John A. Fitzgerald Jr. who
met while attending Oraage
Coast College became of-
ficially engaged last night
during a party hosted in the
--JOYCE CASSLE
FutUr• Bride
bride-elect'• parenta' home.
Hosta were Mr. and Mrs.
H. 0 . Oe&slt: Jr. of Coell
Me6a. Among special guesta
aod relatives attending the
buffet waa Mrs. Helen Car·
ley of Huntington Beach. the
bridegroom -elect's grand·
mother.
Miss CM!le was graduat-
ed from Newport Harbor
High School and OCC whe re
she WU 00 the i.nt«collegi·
-ale 1*1rninton f.Nm. Now
she is attending California
State Co llege at Fullerton
'aod majoring in pbystca.1 ed·
ucation.
Her fiance, soo of Mr. and
Mrs. John A. Fitzgerald of
Newport Beach, also is a
&f'lld.uate of Newport Har-
bor amt OCX::. He presently
i11 enrolled at Oatifomia
State College at Long Beach
and majoring in the radio
and flelevision field. He was
rttently discharged from
the U.S. Air Force W'Mre
he serVed in Japan.
The couple have set no
date fur tile wedding.
Mr. and Mrs . D.R. Fox
Make Home 1n Mesa
Making thelr home in Cos-
ta Men after a honeymoon
at Mammoth are David Roy
Fox and hls bride, the for·
mer Lila Lee Schneider.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George H. Sc tmeider of
Newport Beach.
The c 0 up I e exchanged
vows and nngs before the
n ev .. James Piercy in the
First Christian Church, Cos·
ta Mesa.
tar while white bows and
daisiea decorated the pews.
The bride's pareots' home
was the setting for the re-
ception. Approximately 150
guests honored the newly·
weds. Assisting at the guest
book was Mrs.Ro be rt s,
sister of the bridegroom:
and helping the hosts were
Mrs. Warren Cole and Mrs.
Thomas Hall .
The bride was graduated
from Newport Harbor Higtl
School and her husband ii
an alumnus of San Gabriel
High School and Easl. Loi
Angeles College.
Club Continues
Bridge, Golf
Wm.ring her grmdmotber'1 "9ddlnl watch for ber own ftddlnl
Satutd1y in Chrift's Prol..,_ Clii!rdi. Huntington Beach, •• Cbril
Beverly .l<>ltnlon, daugb!u of Kr. llDd KA. S.or C. Jobnloa ol l'ounlallt
Valley. . ,~,_.. -·or.'~=-The bride and ber --, lloojoalhi Chriatopber Ruob ~
M .... spoke tbeir YOWi and .. ~pd rilii!! hllng .. early -....
mony witneaed by 125 ~ •
Conducting lbe rites were lite: ..... Q. -.:~n Harvey of Sin Dl.qo. ,
a clOe• lriend of lhe newlyw<!Cb ~ tll_e a... Gilbert W. Allen, .polio< "'
the church. • ·
Esrorted to the altar bf. ber ~; llje brid.• "°"' a sbelth flOW1l
of pure silk peau de lJOie in a eaie of linitOrtecJ chantilly lace. The gown wu
fashioned with a jewel neckline, loDf tapered sleeves and a coui;t length
-of-. .b Her should« length veiling of pure lilk illusion was caught Y an
arnngemeot of net leaves studded . wttb pell'fa and iridescent crystal, and
her bouquet was formed of cmteniu IDd stnhanotla.
Precedint the bride to the altar were btr attendanta, all attired in
cage 91yle eJlleltlbles of while liUr: .._.. IJlrinkled with daisy deoiJ!DI.
MatchinJ!' daisies were arranged in tbeir coilfeurs, and they carried baskets
or the yellow flowers. . . .
Attending as maid of honor wu llW Carol W1bon. whlle brlde_s-
maids were Mrs. D. C. Von Alpe and the lf'uaes Theim• Pells ahd Glona
Gr .... balJ!h. ' George W. Coggin of Greemboro. N.C., was hiJ cousin s beet mau.,
and guest.c; were ushered to the DeWI ~ C.pt. PIUI Clart Jr. of Cl.ndor. N.C.,
Ca pt Richard Crawford of Pla}'I del Rey IDd Von AJpe of Huntin!l'lon
Beach . •
Serving u the ring bmrer ._ Darid Jones. IOl'l of Mr. and Mn.
Raymond Jones of Huntington Beltch. His tilter Terrv WU the flower frirl.
wearing a noor lenetb troct of dally lace accented b'.¥' 1 crown headdress
of yeUow da.Uies. She carried a bubt fl;lltd with vellow dalales.
FollowinJ!' the rites, tuelta ~ in the Captain's Inn. Long
Beach Marina to rete the newlywed&. 8JMidaJ ~tuests oreeent were the brlde-
Jm)Om 's relatives from North CUollna, incladinJ!' hill 1unt. Mn. George
Cog~n Sr. of Star. uncle, G. C. Bachanu. Sr .. and cousins Mr. lnd Mn.
George W. Coi?fin and Mr. and Mn. ,W. L Buchanan, all of Greeru:boro.
The new Mrs. Rulh Wiii cradmted from Marina HIPh Schoo1. Hunt-
ington Beach . .id olam to emon nat fan ll Ontnge cout Collefi[e. She Wll
Fountain Valley's lint Janlor 11111 In 11185.,
Her busbllnd, 1 -of 'It'....._, D.C., w11 &n<1u1ted lrom
North ~a stale UWtelity 11111 ,_,. blo, mulen del!lff lrom
George Wasbinctoo Uidtw dh In w-....., D.C. •
Botll Ill'. and Jin. -tn .. llJC II Doaila Alrcnft Compan,T
in Hdfttlng!Dn Bead!. -. ber I-II --Inc 1Uperlnt.endent
of the Mamed 0'1riW t.borllory DJ'OjOel.
They are hone.-tnr in Mulco City and Acapulco and •-their ·
return, will mate their home in Colla Kea. # ~ • ~
...
"' • I • ,
San Francisca Honeymoon
Vows Said • Wh~ttjer
lk>me· in Corona del Mar
followiDJ their San P'mJcis..
co honeymoon are Michael
Gnham Bell of Corona del
Mar aod his bride. the for·
mer Nan Perry of WbittieT.
The couple exchanged
vows and rinp before the
Rev. Albert E. Jenkina in
St. M at t bi a 1 Episcopal
Church, WbiWer 1Vbich was
a prorwiioo of white 1.toct
and mry,uthemums. Pow·
der blue daisies were tied
with white ribbon tD the
pews and were repeated at
the bMe oi altar candles.
The bride, dauefller ol.
t •. .
Mr. and Mn. ~ J. imdor oioirlald lrllb lace
Perry Jr. of Wblttlar, WU wlilcb ~Id the hem1
&1ven in mmiale by ber and al..,.., IDd bouquets
fat:be'. ol powder blue daisies were
She wore a gown ol white aelected for her entourage.
Swiss embroidered Dowers Mn. Dieter Bellman of
appliqued Oft Jl'rmcb tulle Hambur", Gecmany, the which flowed ,,... Ille lhoul-•
dss over a ailboDette Q[ tride'1 cousin, served as
peau de soie. A cap of lilies matron ol honor ; Mias Jill
ol lbe ·~ taqM her 11-j>erry, htt ·rllter. was maid I~ vetl ud 9be ~--of honor. and bridesmaids a bridal boiaquet ol white . . roses IDd stephanotis. were Miss Cynthia Bell. of
Empire gowns of white N"'port Beach . the brtde·
dotted Swiss with A • line groom 's sister. Miss Sandra
skirts, trimriled with bandl P e r r y of Whittier. the
of powder blue satin ribbon bride's cousin , and Miss Jan
Schwiefing, also of Whit·
tieT.
The bridegroom, son of
Mrs. Evelyn Bell of New-
pOrt Beach and the Late
George Graham Bell, ask-
ed his brother, Christopher
Bell of Costa Mesa to be his
'best man. Guetlts were .teet·
eel br Peter McGtalh and
Tom McKay of Glendale;
Geoqe Jobnaoo and Ber·
nard EIJIOlllo, ADl:belm,
and CMey Jooea ot Bal.bot. 1a1aac1; tbe bride'• couaio .
Arlbur PbeJp• WU the Of·
1..i.t.
Cin:ulatinc the c u es t
boot &o the 250 guests at·
lendin& the reception in tbe
ffaclenda Country Club WU .4Mn. Ouiltopber Bell.
'lbe bride la a graduate ol
Slemo Hip School. Whit-
lier and attended Chapmen
CoUeae where she was nam-
ed Homecoming Queen laat
'"'· Her hu sband, a third-gen·
eration Californian, is a
sraduate or Glendale H i g h
School and attended the
University of Southern Cali.
fornia .
Police Wivu
Given In marriage by her
father, the new Mrs. Fox
wore a gown of tulle em·
broidered with alencon lace
and veiled satin. Her tulle
veil was caught by a cap
of satin and pearls. She
carried a nosegay of white
rosea and carnations, and
a handkerchief used by her
mottler and grandmother at
their wedding1 .
The bride's aister, Miss
E loise Schneider was maid
of honor. She w•s dressed
in a straight line gown of
pastel yellow with a match·
ing petal he adpiece. Her
bouquet was made up of
white carnations and yellow
rosebuds. Dressed identical·
Jy was Mlsll Karen Marie
Fox, the bridegroom's sis·
ter. for her role as brides·
maid.
Riviera C\ub's e r t d g e MRS. MICHAEL GlAHAM IELL
and Golf Sections will re·-------C......-"--dol --~-
The l.ut Tuesday of every
month la the date aelected
by the Newport Beach w~
man's Police Auxiliary for
it.a meet.In& at 7::.1 p.m. in
members' homes. Mn. Arb
Campbell, MD-11111 , will fur·
nUh location Information.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy S, S. Fox of San Gab-
riel chose hi• brother·in·
Jaw from San Gabriel. Ver·
non Roberts to be best ma n
Dean Rosebrook of Costa
1.1esa was the usher
Two arrangements or
white gladioli and stock with
another floral piecr of yel·
low a:Jad.ioU 1doroed the al·
main active during the sum·
mer, Mrs. George Carpen-
ter and Mrs. J. Marie Ed·
wards, chairmen announc·
ed.
The Bridge Section, whi ch
ordinarily meeU the fir st
Tuesday of eadl month, will
postpone the July meeting
due to the July 4 holiday.
Playing, as usual in the
Stuft Shirt, member~ wiU
gather Thursday, July 6,
and everyone plaMing to
attend is asked to contact
Mrs . Carpenter. 494-7688, hy
Saturday. July I.
Riviera golftrs will meet
\Yednesday. July 5, and are
P:ncourage<i to l'O ntact Mrs
Edwards. 67:!·91.'lfi. as ~oon
as possible for reserval 1ons.
HOLD IT!
Don't make
a move!
Wgnnew>ood
SANTAANA
L
k -
,_
Judith Jenkins Wed • • • • • • • • • • • • Pitture: In Double Ri0 g. Rites :
a1 ,, .•. 11 LS Judith Jenkinl, daua:hter fort liie ,.,, terved u • •
ol Mr. ood Mra. Mor-blo)i rt 1 qi1W mu. TM •
L. Jeutna al H= ~l.l)i-., ~ ' • ~;..n;:::s=., __ . :i'r'.fislii ..i --, u11 a Is •P 1 • • • • I
I. A(eol« Ill.-~ rtn(' -..;·-....Jin"""',.... c.m0.p Jw-. Wed-
-~uct.il bJ her --' ' . ' ; _, .,. ~ --Could uacle, .Ille llov. DaYld· P. -A-,_.... loilo!r-bl calJoil i reel WI..-day"
":.tla Ille OOmmWillJ ed Ilia ---._... . ... -al local ll1m M Cliw:ft, lfWllln(-Jad<'J. J-.._ ... """'' -...
toe Beocb. . ... ~ IOf'.Ylol, .... -· •.
·Tbe bridl,'"' stveta --i inar.1 And•• bs ,... ~ fteakmlnc with a ~
ria(e by bfr.father, aeleet-.-ud Ii;"· . . . Ibis Wedneeday ed traidH:IDnal lvotj 'tafftll.•~L. JMkial Jr . .:.-.,_._ at l ·fdll.;,fte 8-1 P1l''es
and lace .,.,. her weddlql WU la cbarp '" ...... "'l! '1\111 '!!Ir! lfl! ~-· ex-
fOWD whlcb wu styled 'wltlri book. ~· "\..-....... •. 1 chijllft ~ run at
1 Dtted bodkt .,;ci full lrila, Mr. aod Mn:"~ .J. fto¥, ... ~IJ<IO ......... -
falllaC ,_ tbe wlf"1111e. --b)' Mn. l , C. ReD-wjD -. l&'t o•.-.., Wed-
Holdln( her m1111 .. veil WU fro, later -• lluflet. """"~l:Tt""· and Sun-
• cap of seed peer•, &Dd 'lbe bride~? ... of--~ . will be at 1:30
she carried a bouque't ol Mn. Emily ~ of I& u:cePUni:'.i &Jmdays and holi·
white ordd4I and cascadln& laca, ..S ttie • tar.. IACm . at f p.rn.
•tephaootia edled wt .. pile -I«. II 1 ......... al ', blue 181VQ. . . Mllaica · H i I b School Tbe· <JNnae County es.du.
Susan Overmyer her lerwd on tbe und..at1t liv•1 .... emeM of ne s.,.
maid of honor, were~ IOWD denioUtioll iwn wtMt ~ U. Pe•••e1 will be on a reserve
ol powder blue clillfon wit> s. N•V1· ·-. A(-a1ao -bull ooly. Seot .._. a mltcbin& bead piece of lttended tbt CS....,.. f' vatlODI may bl made al the
blue nettin1 and carried a The bride 11 a tbb1S ,... Lido theatre. Mall Mlf ad-
bouquet of blue dablea. . vatlcm enduata "-~ lhlted envelope with dtect
Wllllam Agenllr, who u -too Belcb lllJll 8dlool Mil .....,. order lo Lido The-
rlved with his wife trom attended Oran1e Oout CoJ. an, '461 Vil Lido, Newport
Milaca, Minn.. a week be· lq:e. Buell, ar Wepbane 17J.7Clll
............. i;i;:;;i:i;;;;:i;i;;;;;==:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;.-1*! -.~ you can
h.e your
perfect
dr~s·s
size
next
month!
today is June 26
SIZE 141 ........ _IE A PERFECT SIZE 10 IY JULY 14
SIZE 161..-....... IE A PERFECT SIZE 12 IY JULY 11
SIZE 111 ............ BE A PERFECT SIZE 16 BY JULY 17
SIZE 10? ............ IE A ,ERFECT SIZE 11 IY JULY 11
SIZE ll? ............ BE A PERFECT SIZE 20 IY JULY 21 I re#ult• gwanteed!
5 FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW BEFORE
YOU CAIL GLORIA MARSBAIL·
I. ~r hiJblr tuaftlf11J f~ beauty
plu If based °" die u. ol ""' •Plci•l l!Mdr.ion., Kimtific•llr deiined ta
haftUb "'ft? C:Om<tlbic fi,auft fualL
2. On fOW fint Yi1it (fOf •hicb ~
ll .t..o!ltkly NO OiAl.GE 01. OBU.
GATION) you.r fi.fllle •ill ht •411rred
Md fOU y [lj ht JiYm I 1&111ple tttl.t· _,
}. laitiallf, IM ITIOrl' O'l'eA"f'ilhl )'Oil UC,
1M fat!« ,Oil will 11»1!; 1f11er the initial
ununmt Pl'.riod, most PltronJ 1rt thtir
OYll iadit'idlll.] PICC 11 wh ich thef II*':
inches and 1>011ndi . . . BUT ALL SEE
NOTICEAl!LE IMPROVEMENT RIGHT
AWAYI
~. Yo11r Gnt: l M 111nd1rd priu I~ ll'fll·
ITlftlU it $1.00. You •rt cl"'rl, told tlw
numhtr •nd frtqotncy of trtatmen11 required
tn lwlo lOll rn ch your prt'ddumined ,111111.
Thii "'"' 'Oil know n an ly whit 10111 ~If.
impm¥e!l1tllt rroarom i1 .111i11.-tn c°'t rou
... tMn" au no ntru or hiddrt. du,.a wh1~n.
). TM rnOJt Pll'illnt "'If to low wtiJht!
Nn lllOn' diettt'• init1bil1tT. Our madii-
in•i,tOtate, yd ulu: 11111. YO\I ln .. t tM N.loe
fft:ljll.! likt a nt'Y WOfllall,.
How c:.n We Guanintee
Retu.Ita!
I+. PtflOtll.lntd orosrna chin is prtpend, io
that n ch 1imc you ~itit ~ Jo.Jon 1 tnined
co\llUdor on .-uick JOU towud JOllr own
Jt>«ific ,11111!1. w, kttt> a <on1t1.nt ch«lr on
l'Ollr pm.-rnt toward 1 IO'l'tl~ fi.lllu . In tftit
war. fO\I rnch ,our dniml pl in th!! 1/iort.
tst tirrw .. and for th!! ltttt ttPfftW'.
·-.. _.,
WI An let .. ,.
lrJ/llJ/11' • CMllll-.. ... -. - -..... .::;.w::;;. • ~----....... _ .. ~
/lkia'lltOl'.4W
';/"' FIGUR E CONTROL SALON S
,... ,_ ftt-.... ,. ................ Cell.
.,.., --·~ ........ w.. .,.. ' .... '771 • ... , , ........... ,.'"41 • ., ..... ....,. ' ...... ,. ..
NEWPORT IEACH
PHONE 642-3630
430 PACIFIC COAST HWY.
(l BLOCKS EAST OF THE BALBOA BAY CLUB)
S.l111t •IH lit ""-'ly Hlfh, c ... 1.., •IMMh, Nertlt
H111'fYM4, ........ T-... W.+£11t CrNt, L.llf
. '"4:•, D'"""'• S-.. A•, T-•. WtlfftMor.
__ .,, _ ud ---......... try, fte .a... Pt'l" la a
diltlngullbed -picture. WI-. el&bt Acodemy nom-inations for thla superb ac-
tion drama ad9ptH from the
belt·teller wrltkll by Rkft.
sci McKenna.
· Steve McQueeo (Academy nominee for "BM,._ .. ,
beads a &reel cast that ift.. C!udel Rlchlrd A~,_
ud Rk:blrd Cream. wllb •
poir of lovoly .... -and 0,..... owned by Candi<o
ller(tl1 ud _.,... Andri· ..... . Startin.& a new week at the
Neu The.tre wMb • Wedo
ne.sday Matinee will be tbe
ga!'gantuan gasper. Cui•
&yak, witfl ita tongue.in·
cheek exploitation 0( several
James Bonds, each of whom
la hotly pursued at one time
or another by no less than
200 international beauties.
Those who an J. Bonds,
his helpers and his advenar·
les are Peter Sellers. David
Niven , Ursula Andress, Woody
Allen, Joanna Pettet, Orson
Wellet and Daliah Lavi. O>-
ltan'ed. in this Panavisioa and
Techmcolor production, <>pelt-
ing at the Mesa Wednesday
afternoon. are Terence Coop.
e.-and Barbara BoucbeL
Guest stars appearing in
the pande or taleo< in Cul:M
&7• att Deborah Ken-,
William HokSen, a.r1m Boy-
er. J"81'.1 • Paul Belmoodo.
George Raft and Jtbl. Hu.-
toll. who directed the fabuJous
film.
And sucti an arTay ot fem·
inine beauty! Natch.
OAYIO MtV1M
MESA MATINEES are a
tr.dition in tbe Rmbor area.
Every WedQe9dly afternoon
local film tam may enjoy the
regular Mesa movie program
during a mid-week break-iD-
routlne. Starting promptly at
one o'clock wit.b free refresh--
ments the weekly Mesa Mat·
inees are a good habit foc
many.
FREE PASSES to the U do
or ltte Mesa tfleatres (not in.
eluding the exclu sive engage-men\ ol 11le Sood Pebblnl
will be ma.lled today to In·
grkl Miller. 3082 Trinity Dr.,
Coall Mesa, C. H. Burbage,
2001 Holiday Rd.. Newport
Beoch, D. T. T1<kaberry, 501
Orchid, Corona del Mar and
L. A, Gl.ovlnetd, 410-B E Ba.Y,
Balboe.
Wiah all of you could be
guesbi or '"Picture Peelui " for
a movie at the Udo or th e
Mesa. We ~lncerely hope that
your namf' will be li sted here
.__;... _________________ i the good movies, Lido or lone d11y real S()()f1 Stt you at
MON, ttlat ii,
•
M
MeSt
Li.
Ma
To
honeyn
bride, I
ler of I
port B<
Th
before
rantem
cbrysar
noon o
Mct:ne.
Th
brothel
an A-ti
feature
a bow.
caught
ed witl
n
bouque
and ba
At
sister.
mary I
rousiru
n
length
Swis6.
They c
pons•
TI
Miami.
asked
ton. to
their s
ll
weddir
Orches
recepti Ison
mothes
A
&et UD
and fh
gladio1 ,,
now i!
heim.1
Junior
Sfatr I
II
(he COi
. .. . . . , . . • • • -~ , r' p • , • • • •• . .
..
c-.. .......... .
MRS. LESLIE WAYNE ELLIOTT. o.••· ..... C..1mony
Mesa Setting
Linda Rqse Benny
Marries L. W. Elliott
Touring the west.em states on their
honeymoon are Leslie Wayne Elliott and hlJ
bride. the former Lincb Rose Benny, daugh-
ter of Mr. and llra. Lou.is R. Benny. of New-
port Buch.
The couple exdwlged vows and rings
before an altar adorned with large Ooral a.r-
ran~ts oC yellow and white gladioli,
chrysanthemums and stock. Performing the
noon ceremony Saturday was the Rev. Joseph
McEnemy in Sl Joachim's Church.
BRIDAL GOWN
The bride. given in marriage by her
brother. Louis II. Benny oC Newport, wore
an A-line gown of white alencon lace which
featured a waltau tnin of lace topped with
a bow. A full four-tiered silt illusion veil wu
caught to her headpiece of alencoo lace etch-
ed with seed pearls and crysW.
The new Mrs. EllioU carried a cascading
bouquet of white roses, liliea of the valley
and baby breath.
Attending as matron of honor was her
sister. Mrs. Robert Forenza, while Miss Ro&e-
mary Kater and Kiss Kathy Mannino, both
cousins of the bride, served u brideamaids.
ATTENDANTS
The attendanta were gowned in floor
length empire style dresses of yellow dotted
Swis&. and large picture hats with daisy trim.
They carried bouquets of yellow daisy pom-
pons with miniature roses.
The benecUd, son oC Mrs. Ollie -Elliott of
Miami. Okla. and the late Mr. Leslie Elliott
asked his brother. Larry Langston of Fuller-
ton. to stand as best man. UsberinJ? guests to
their seats were Gary Lamb and Forerua.
Mrs. Elma Proctor Wells provided the
wedding music while the Warren Barket'
Orchestra performed during the champagne
reception in the Newporter Inn. Among the
150 iuest.~ att.endine 1'111 Ute bride's grand-
mother. Mrs. ROR Kattt of Hollywood.
BRIDAL PARTY
A special table for the bridal party was
ael up with a gold cloth, crystal candelabra
and floral 1JTMtgements of yellow and white
gladioli. chrvsantbemoms and ltoct.
The bride attended Chapman College and
now is eoroned at a busine9e school in Ana-
heim. Her husband W1lll a student at Fullerton
Junior Co~e and will attend California
SfatP CoTietJe at Fullerton in the fall
Uoon f'f'f11rn;"t! from the w~rtine trip
the couple will make their home in Fullerton. """ . ,
Cheryl Jones Now Mrs. Dumler
Arrangements o{ spring blossoms adorned the
altar of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church for the
candlelight wedding ceremony Friday evening
linking Cheryl Lynn Jones and William Francis
Dumler.
The Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dierenfield performed
the double ring rites and appropriate selections
were sung by the Mitchell Choir Boys and played
on the organ by Robert Huestis.
Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Nathan
LeClair Jones of Newport Beach, and the bride-
groom is the son of Mrs. Mark Faulkes Jones Jr.
of San Marino and James Hart Dumler o~ti
more, Md.
Escorted by her father down the aisle lined
with miniature bouquets of spring blossoms, the
bride wore a full length gown of chantilly lace over
silk organza, styled with long, pointed sleeves, seal·
loped neckline and a bouffant hooped skirt.
Her cathedral train was caught at the waist
and holding her illusion veil was an angel wing
headpiece of illusion, trimmed with seed pearls.
Forming her cascade were lily of the valley, gar·
deniu, tiny pink bridal roses and chrysanthemums.'-··
HONOR ATTENDANT
Her sister, the former J anet Lee Jones who
married James Dale Lawrence just 12 days before,
attended as matron of honor.
Attending as bridesmaids were the Misses
Mary Kay Shaw, Newport Beach; Nancy Stark,
Los Angeles; Sherrie Jones. San Marino; Jennifer
Shibley. Fresno; Anne Nocerine, Los Angeles. and
SUan Frost. Newport Beach.
All wore floor length aqua chiffon and lace
gowns, fashioned in an empire line and matching
illusion chapel veils cau[:!ht by a circlet of fresh
miniature spider chrysanthemums. The honor at-
tendant's cascade featured white spider chrysan-
themums and lily of the valley, while bridesmaids
carried similar c a a c a d e a 'with aqua-colored
chrysantherwma .
Attending u best man wu David Perrin of
Cluemont, and the 650 guests were ushered to
their seats by Sandy Smith and Richard Percival,
.San Marino and Alan Plaia of Glendora, the bride-
j!room's Phi Delta Theta brothers, Gerald Strifi
of Palos Verdes, Mark Faulkes Jones III and Dale
L .. Jones, the bride's brother.
Irvine Coast Country Club was the setting for
the champagne reception. bullet dinner and dance
afterward, where Miss Teresa Robertson of La
Crescenta, the bride's cousin, circulated the guest
book.
. Centering the table was a six-tiered cake, iced
in white with pale aqu'-chrysanthemums. Sur-
rounding the confection were a circle of gardenias,
and topping it was an exact replica of the bride
and bridegroom.
RECEPTION
Faces on two 100-year-old 6-incb Bisque dolls
were sculptured by Wallace Parker, a teacher at
Estancia Hi~h School and painted by Laguna Beach
artist Fred Rash . Miniature wigs were created by
Miss Janet Rowell . a family friend, and the wed-
din,g ensembles were designed and made by the
bride's mother.
Sculptured ice with fresh chrysanthemums
frozen inside centered the punch bowl. Also fea-
tured on the table were tiny boxes engraved with
the bridal couple's name and wedding date and
fill ed with the groom's cake and tiny rice· sachets.
Special ·guest attending was the bride's grand-
mother. Mrs. Gilrnon LeClair Jones of Glendale.
Followin~ a San Diego honeymoon the newly-
weds will establish their first home in Alhambra.
Th e hride attended Anoakia Gi~ls School, was
j!raduated from Newport Harbor High School and
the l!niversitv of Southern California where she
earned her 8°.\ in English and secondary teaching
credentials. A Pi Beta Phi. the new Mrs. Dumler
teaches at Wilson Junior High School. Pasadena.
She also studied at the University of Hawaii.
Her husband, an alumnus of San Marino High
School. also is a graduate of USC where he re-
ceived a BA in political science which he plans
to study further. He iJ in the Navy Reserve.
Monday, June 26, 1967 DAIL V PILOT J $
MRS. WILLIAM FRANCIS DUMLER
To M.b Alhlmbra Home
Teacher Idaho Honeymoon
Marries
Redondo Beach will ~
the home of Martin Freder-
ick Oberacker and his bride,
the former Margo Ellen
Nagle , following their Ba·
waiian honeymoon.
The bride, a teacher at
Pomona School, Costa Mesa
for five years, is the daugh·
t.er of Mr. and Mrs. James
Jerome Nagle ol Long
Beach and was given in
marriage by her fr.tber.
The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Thom-
as Foley performed their
single ring ceremony in St.
Barnabas Catholic Church,
Loo.g Beach Saturday, and
providing appropriate wed-
ding selections was the Mit-
chell Boys Choir.
The new Mrs. Oberacker
spoke her vows in a candte-
light wed4i11g gown of im·
ported alencoo Lace appli·
qued on English net, styled
in a princess line cage with
an A-line skirt and a de-
tachable chapel length wat-
teau court train. Her shoul-
der length mantilla was
scaU~ and appliqued with
matching lace.
Powder blue chiffon cage
silhouettes with matching
pillbox hats were selected
for her matron of honor.
Mrs. Thomas Radke of Mc-
Ales.ter, Okla., and brides·
maids, Mrs . Hal Rasmussen
of Brigham City, Utah , the
bride's cousin, Mrs. Harley
Monian al Cbko, Mrs. Per
Johanson and Miss J o a n
Shea. both of Long Beach.
1be bridegroom, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Wil-
helm Oberacker of Sun City,
asked Robert Writer or Cos-
ta Mesa to be his best man.
Guests were seated by Gary
Victor, Long Beach; Ken-
MRS. MARTIN F. OBERACKER
Redondo Beach HOl'M
ooth Graham, Fullerton;
Jerry Niemeyer, West Co-
vina, and Ned Kuhns. Men·
lo Park.
Following the ceremony
a reception for ~ guests
was given in Virginia Coun-
try Club, Long Beach. As·
sisting were Mrs. Kent
Christopherson of Salt Lake
Citf and Miss Carolyn Price
of South Pasadena . Special
guest was the only living
grandparent. Mrs. Martin
Mayerhoffer ()( Pompano
Beach. Fla.. the bride-
groom's maternal grand·
mother.
The bride is a graduate
of St. Anthony's High School.
Long Beach and the Uni·
versity of Southern Callfor·
n1a w.llere she affiliated
with Kappa Delta. She is a
former president of the
Long Beach Bachelo-rettes,
is a member oi Anchor·
ettes. a volunteer group at
Long Beach Memorial Hos-
pital and was presented to
society during the 1962 As·
sistance League uebulante
Ball.
Iler husband Is an alum·
nus of Dorsey High School
and USC where he was a
member of Squires and
NROTC.
Lagunan Claims Bride
Claudia Sue New1on be·
came the bride ot Kenneth
Richard Wright 1n Commu·
nity Presbyterian Church,
Laguna Beach, Friday eve-
ning during a double ring
ceremony performed by the
Rev. Dr. Dallas R. Turner.
The bride is tile daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Mackie Newton of Semi-
nary, Miss., and her hus-
band is the son or Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert S. Wrigbt of
Lag:.ma Beach.
Given in marriage by her
grandfather, Heber Fow-
ler, 11\e was wearing a full
length gown fashioned with
a fitted bodice, train and
lace sleeves.
Com pleting her bridal en-
semble, she wore a veil of
illusion and pinned a brooch
on her bodice. both heir·
looms from her great-great·
grandmother.
Mrs. Donald G. HoUand,
the bride's sister. was ma·
tron of honor. She wore a
pale blue, full lengtti gown
styled with a fitted bodice,
and cap sleeves.
The bridegroom a s k e d
his brother, Fraser Wri ght,
to be h.is best man, and Mrs.
Freida Druchel was organ·
ist.
Miss Eileen ruptey circU·
lated the guest book during
the church reception fol·
lowing the ceremony.
The new Mrs. Wright, a
graduate of Riverview High
School in Sarasota. Fla. and
Orange Coas t CoUege, also
attended Manatee Junior
College, Bradenton, Fla.
MRS. KENNETH WRIGHT
WHrs Heirlooms
Her husband is an alum-
nus ot Laguna Beach High
School and OCC. He plans
to continue his education at
San Diego State College.
The newlyweds are taking
a three-week honeymoon
trip t.o Idaho and will make
their future home in San
Diego.
Joyce Sisters Say Vows in -Double Wedding
In a double wedding cere·
mony Saturday morning in
Blessed Sacrament Catholic
Church, Westminster, Mary
Anne Joyce married Joseph
E. Robinson and her sister.
Donnell Marie Joyce be·
came tile bride of Donald
Joseph Lewis.
Each bride was her sis·
~v ' K
trr's maid of honor during
the double ring ceremonies
performed by the Rev. Ray·
mond Hopp. Their parents
are Mr. and Mrs. Vincent
Clltre Amit !'Mio
MRS. J. E. ROBINSON, MRS. 0 . J. LEWIS
The Former Mary ind Donnell Joyce
D .. Joyce of Midway City.
Given in marriage by her
father. Mary wore a prin -
cess style gown of linen
faille featuring covered but-
tons down the fl ont panel.
A tortoise shell S p a n i s h
comb held her Spanish lace
mantilla. The bridal ensem-
ble was purchased in Spain.
She carried a cascade or
white and gold daisie6 cen·
tered with two gardenias.
TIENPANTS
Her sister selected a floor
length lace over taffeta
ftOWn which extended into a
chapel length train Se e d
pearls and sequins which
trimmed her frock were re·
pealed on the lace crown
whic h caught-her illusion
veil. Forminit her bouquet
wrre white roses and car·
nations centered with or·
ch1ds. . .,. •
Ggld crepe Spanish styled
fr ~s with white mantillas
were selected for Mary's
l>ric;l.esmaids . the M i s s e s
ToiPiette Machado, Holly-
wood: Diane Fernandes, On·
tario: Maureen Clark, Dow-
n<'' and Carol Feloney.
Burbank. Dress ed in a min·
1:iturr gown was K a re n
.IOVt'P. the brides' sister
and Mary·s flower izirl.
Bridesmaids !or Don nell
•
were Miss Margaret Wood,
Westminster. Mrs. Phyllis
Blanchard. Tustin. M i s s
Betsy Alexander. Santa Ana,
and Miss Anita Shouse. San-
ta Ana. They wore f I o o r
length aqua blue taffeta
gowns trimmed with white
bows. Sharon Rose J o y c e,
another sister of the bridu,
wore a pink nylon frock foc
her role as DonMU's flower
girl.
The so n of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Robin son of C o s t a
Mesa asked Thoma s Cotton
of Hawthorne to be his best
man. while ushers were J im
Farrell of Huntington Beach,
Chuck Martinez of Surfside
and .John Campbell of Ana·
,heim
Atlt.'ndin,:: as best man for
the son of Mrs. Irene Lewi!i
of Costa Mesa was Carl
Carlson of Costa Mesa, his
brother-in-law. ano usher du ·
ties were assumed b) Jan
Blanchard of Tustin. Philip
Bowers of Huntin gton Beach
and Patrick Birkett of South
Laguna.
SOLO IST
Soloist for both couples
as Mrs. Mary Jo Egan. ac-
companied at the orgao by
her daughter. Miss Jo Ann
Egan
RouquPls or itol<4 and tur
quoise glad1olt, carnations
and stock and arrangements
of aqua and gold chrysan-
themums. gladioli and car·
nations adorned the altar oi
the church and were used as
decorations at the recep-
tion in the church ball where
350 guests signed the guest
book. circuJated by Mary
Annette Irvine. The Hy·
1'ones quartet provided mu-
sic.
The newlywed Robimons
are honeymooning in Mexico
City. Acapulco and Guada-
lajara and will reside ill
Surfside upon their return.
Mrs. Robinson is a gradu·
ate ot Mater Dei Hi g h
School and attended Mount
St. Mary's College aoo Chap-
man CoUege's noating cam-
pus. Her husband, also an
alumnus or Mater Dei , re-
ceived his BA Crom St.
John's College and his
teaching credential f r o m
California State College at
Long Beach.
The new Mrs. Lewis is an·
other Mater Dei graduate,
while her husband is an al-
umnus of Loyola High School
and Loyola Uni versity where
he affiliated with Alpha Del·
ta Gamma. Costa Mesa will
be their home upon their re·
turn from a Carmel and
Monterry honeymoon.
...
·,;.
. lu.,,••W~, •Wtk. ~v, .1. ·~..,;I
Stop Being A Goose ~ G a·nrfy
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a
woman in my 70a but nobody would
guees It. 1 have been married for
over 40 years to a aolld citizen whole
int«est In sex went dMd about 10
years ago. HiJ impotence waa a re-
lief t.o me becauae that put of om-
marrtaae wu never very aatidac>
tary. We raiJed a nice family and
I did my duty but tbere waa vwy
little excitement.
.t nl Uel
Lut year· we had our home re-
modeled. f!. man 12 yeara my jlplior
worked here tor one week. nu. may
sound siUy to you but ~ fell madly
in love. We didn't do anything dis-
graceful but we did have a wonder-
ful ti.me together. We both knew it
was a losing baWe with partDerc and
age against us, and be went out ~
my life • suddenly as be bad come
,in.
I can't get this man out ~ my
mind. I wake up at night loning for
him while my poor husband is m«·
ing m tbe next room. Isn't it cruy
that I can't have peace in my old
ap? I keep wondering what my
gNndcbildren would •Y if they knew
about tbia.
Pleate tell me, Ami, am I the only
woman my age with these ideas? You
might call lt alck, but it's real and
it's something I have to live with.
Can you bring this subject into the
open for discum®? -YOUNG AT HEART .
DEAR HEART: Of coarse tbere
are other women :roar age wi.o are
stlJJ blterested la sex. Bat cloa't de-
lude yoaneJf Into ~C YM are
hi love -Mt la GM week, lad.J.
Be Clad yoa dlda't .. ..,....,
Lively Look Can't €rush
9267
SIZES
10-11
"" 1(f ""''Mt
I l
B r i g h t days are even
brighter wtlen you look u
lithe, lively. fasnlooable u
tnis ! Stovepipe neck, smooth
s e a m s, then flip { r o n t
pleats -in all, a great
shape
Printed Patter o 9267:
Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14. 16.
18. Size 14 takes 31/• yds.
35-in.
srxTV-FrvE CENTS in
coins for each pattern -
add 15 cents for each pat-
tern for tirst-class mailing
and special handling. Send
to Marian Martin, the DAI-
LY PI L 0 T, 442 Pattern
Dept .. 232 West 18ttl St.,
New Y<>rk, N. Y. 10011.
Print NAME, ADDRESS,
with ZIP, SIZE and STY LI!:
NUMBER.
EVERYTHING NEW -
115 most -wanted fashions.
fabrics, accessories in new
Spring -Summer Pattern
Catalog. All sizes! Clip cou-
pon in Catalog -choose
one pattern free. Send 50
cents now.
LB Women
Harmonize
Laguna Beach area worn ·
en with the urge to harmo-
nize in song are invited to
join the prospective Aliso
VaUey Chapter. Sweet Ade-
line~. Inc. which meets on
Wednesdays lo Mission Vie-
jo High School's c h o r a I
room at 7:30 p.m.
The abllJty to read music
is not required and the pur·
pose of the group is to teach
and train members in the
art oi singing four-part har-
mony, barbershop style.
further information may
be obtained by calling .\1 rs .
Willia m J Recht, presid'.'nl.
ll.17-m37 or Mr~ J e r r y
Vo~s. public relattonti , 8.17-
3098.
What's Doing
MARY DAY, 642..4321
Art Exhibit Features
Life Drawing Display
Portrait paintines a D d
life drawings executed by
Laguna Beacti artist Miss
Barbara IOark will go on
di~y Saturday, July l,
in Mariners Libracy, New-
port Beach.
Selected as the artist-ot-
the-mooth by the Newport
Beaoo Junior Ebell Club,
Miss Kl.ark describes her atm in painting is ·•to in-
spire and uplift tt>e spu-
itual side ol man's ooture."
Her life drawings otteo em-
phasize religion.
A native oi New Zealand,
Miss Klark studied at Nel-
son Art Sdlool tbel"e and at
Wellington Art School and
Sydney Art School in Aua-
tralia und« artists Joon
Olaen and ~ Sibley.
She alto studied teulpture
w Ith Australian sculptor
Robert Klippei.
In addition to m a n y
shows in New 1.ealand and
Al.lfltralia, MiN KJ•k has
exhibited works at the Art-
ists' Guild Gallery. Laguna
Beach and Bognar Gellery,
Los Angeles.
She was the intemaeiooal
guest arti9t for New Zea·
land aod Australia at Ile
1965 Laguna Beach Festi-
val of Arts and an honor·
able meotioo winner in 1he
19156 Lagtm1 Beadl Wl.ntel'
Art Festival.
% . · .. "~·s_.,,
~ beauty I abeer joy
t.o wear all year! Crecbe(,ln
ftOflty white, or vivid col-on.
Always p«fect! Itta i.c,,.
StDll't, UDC?'\llhable. Cl'ocbet
lbell doUed with motifa aim·
ilar wide edgings. PMtem
7334: mes ~ included.
'ftlrty.ftft centl (eibw)
for each ~ttern -8dd U
cents for eacti pattern fOr
firsklase mailing and ape-
ciei bandllng. Send to Allee
Broob1 the DAILY PILOT,
Needlecraft Dept., Box ta,
Old Chelsea Station, New
York, N. Y., 10011. Print
Name, Addrea, Zt,, Pa&-
&era NllDlbeT.
210 MOST BEAUTIFUL
NEEDLEC R A F T DE-
SIGNS in new 1967 Needle-
craft Catalog! 2 free i-t·
terns, knit, crochet felb.
loos, every1hing. 25 ceata. -
FREE
Neeenic..-.. .. dtedliit
_.....wWcli_l ... i..W.
W-efSJOO. rm1 HUNTINGTO. N-~ VALLEY BANK
FURNITURE CLEANING Problems?
If your uphholmry is of the type that heretofore coultt not be cle1ned ...
c•uM of shrinkage or flldlng.
YOUR PROBLEMS ARE SOLVED. Chemists have perfected a new Dry
Cleaner -Remarkably effective and GUARANTEED not to cause any
SHRINKAGE or FADING -The greotest advance in the cleanil'1g in-
dustry in many years.
UPHOLSTERY and CARPO TINTING & DYEING
Your colors m•y "ow b. redorecl a"cl feclad ar•u co .. recl by tirrti"9 or tl,e color ,ompl t ly
cha"9ed by DYllN5 with P•"•trati"9 secure clyH. • •
YOUR WALL TO WALL CARPET TINTED or DYED ON THE FLOOR
n. H-ef • C1 .. t1t1 a...i.t -4 ~ Sena
TWO RETAIL SHOWROOMS
AL'S CARPET AND RUG WORKS
Mel11 St--JU s.. Melli It~ 0,.... -n 1-u11 -so.Moo
HHtlf19Nt! '-c• -11511 Mele St. -142-'llt f5 '•lllts Stte,,1,.9 C...terl
0-JMFMY-AtllleS-~
•
;
.
I
Alumnae lnllal/alion
'
t:
.Fashions Lend flait to Rites
NOW IN COSTA · MESA
& RU.NTINGTON BEACH .
ANOTH~ FAIULOUS
·M .. E w · •
I I
SPll
IXCITINO MAGNIFICENT NEW HEAL TH FACILITllS WHIU
MIN AND WOMIN CAN GAIN, LOSE, 01
RE-ARRANGE WllGHT
OPENING RATES
HURRY ••• LIMlTED
, ' ~"
AINI le A CHA. ~MID
COME IY TODAY ~ A Fiii
TOUI AND PRIY A TE FITNESS OR FfGURE ANALYSIS
ABSOLUTELY NO OBLIGATION
* Cost1 M111 i):{ Anllael11 * Or1nge
549-3368 826-0381 639·2441
2300 Harbor Blvd. 510 S. BEACH 622 E. KA TELU
HARBOR (HWY. 3.9) ...... w ... ....,...
SHOPPING CENTER C......_.&0,....Aft. """· .....,. .... u.,, .. , Ctr. .... ....... Ctr.
JOIN TODA.Y
I
Our 1ffinated prestige clubs are
located throughout the U.S., Can-
ada, Latin Amerlc.a and Europe.
TMI IPA UfYllNWlll. POOL) AllA1 DCUllltl . . . Direct fro111 bro,. .....
hi"' s,ft1t91. llelH 111 1,.clel ... ts white Hot W11itlh19 Ml11eral Weter •11,IMI"
.,.111tt yM ta ,..,e yeu the "'Y f111ett ht Mo4ler11 HJ'retltere,.,. Stl111ulete1 Htlre
-•eeler ew cir&llletery 1y1te111. Offer1 relief frern erthritl1, rheumetl1rn, ltliraltl1,
achu ew ,ehu. ..
*NO
mlNUOUI
DtmN•
*NO .,,. ........ .......
OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK
Sat.
10 A.M. to
'P.M.
*NO
CLASSU TO
ATTINI
.. A,,... """ .. Seit YOUl c.... .....
-OftM -YOU Ulll"
Mon. thru
Fri.
10 A.M. to
10 PM.
Sun.
1 PM. te
6 P.M.
OUR EQUIPMENT IS the latest development In
physlul fltnfts ind figure contouring. ThH• NEW
MACHINES give you the molt rHults with the
le11t AMOUNT of EFFORT ind in the quickest poi·
slble tlmel
NEWI "SWISS" FACIAL CONTOURING MACHINE
• .. removH wrlnklM ind double chins. This 11
one pl1ee you un't w"r 1 glrdlt. Also 1bdomln1I
Boards to trim the tummy.
Ev
We'll IJ
Pia·
Atl
Any way you
Coast Internatic
tennis tow"name
Sunday at the fl
Club, has to be
cess.
It was. a«or
play.for-pay neU
of its type ever
best of the yeai
"We'll be ha.
head ol the pr
a1u DOllllla
• ''Aft.er the rec
here. certainly ,
tournament an
From a apedJ
equally outsta.nc
Overall, somf
the five-day ev1
higher than an)
try this yeaT •l-
one staged in N
Sunday's tun
stance, topped
Lo:i; Angeles.
'T m over
Dill. "We aU a1
The remarkal
tcndance was tJ
was televised I
and yet 2,116 cu
the tumstyles.
Jflere
"Next year,"
ty MH Belt
we'll ldnUe
compeUU.. It
tlw gate UJ."
"'111ll9ga Wei"
DUJ prahW. ·~
fw •e." Al&Jlo4lp tM
CeHld U JI
Oruge c:.atJ
roaring start.
,,...,, el am
all pnceeh. ,,,,
IC.-.
Rookie Fred ~
planning to mo
for the nirie-m
tour next yeaT.
Sunday when h
five minutes t
match with An
know why ever
Stolle. "I wasn'
Stolle. incid4
crowd. "very I
area is fantuti• soo of a Sydney
never seen thin
Tourney winn
ited a lot of rest
Durlflg his stay
logJ?ed betwttr
sle-ep nightly ·
fellow pro Ma
• , .. ,,, •• .. • • .. <-
Monday, Junt 26, 1%7 DAILY PILOT J 7
• ~verything Comes Up 'Roses' Ill NB
HARDLY AN EMPTY SEAT FOR FINALS OF NEWPORT TENNIS CLUB'S INTERNATtONAl CUP MATCHES SUNDAY
~II IJe BfN!k-DiU
Players, Fans Delighted
At 1st Newport Tourney
, way you slice it, the Pacific
t International Cup prof euional
s tournament wb.icb wound up
ay at the Newport Beach Tennis
has to be label.a a huge suc-
was, according to may of the
for-pay netters, the fineA tolrney
~ type ever st.aged and umy the
of the year.
'e'll be back,'' said Wally Dill.
of the pro tennis aaociation.
u. ooet••
BILL
DONER
flllllllllllllllllllA
~r the reception we've gotten
, certainly we'd like to make this
aament an annual one."
1>m a spectator standpoint, it was
Uy outstanding.
erall, some 10,149 fans watched
'ive.day event and that figure is
~r than any tourney in t.be com>-
his year with the es.ceptioa of the
rt.aged in New York City.
nday's turnout of 3,067. for in-~e. topped any two-day coont in
Angeles.
'm over whelmed," confessed
"We all are."
e remarkable thing about t.be at-
ance was that Saturday's session
televised 1ocally on KTI'V ( 11)
yet 2.116 customers came through
tumstyles.
ft.,.e Terem.iell
Next year,"~· ...-.y ,.Wiri-
rnaa Belt Perrymu, "I tldu
II televise tile last t1n U,.. •
apetitlotl. It 4Mn't tee• te art
gate uy."
niags were N weU •Cubei."
I pra&M. '1t wu like a v.adle9
me."
Jtbotlgla Ute f'fftipU UYa't Ma
ate«I as yd. J...... Teall ef
111ge c.u&y k lldbaltdy elf te a
ring start. nat•s Ute dlriy
•P. ef Cllllf'M.t sbW te reatYe
~· ""' ~ ""' ··---,.u .... IOkie Fred Stolle, the Auaie who's
ning to move to Newport Beach
the nine-month North American
next year. had everyone worried
lay when he didn't show up unb1
minutes belore bis third-place
~b with Andres Gimeoo. "I don't
' why everyone wu upset," said
.e. "J wasn'L" ~lle. incidentally. termed t b e
rd. "very knowledgeable:' ''This
1 is fantastic to me~" explained the
of a Sydney railroad worker. 'Tve
'T seen things like UliJ."
•urney winner Jten Rosewa-0 cred-
;;, tot of rest with aiding hu cause.
lng his stay in Newport. Rosewall
ed between 12 and 14 hours or
p nightly. "It mml help," joked
1w pro Mat Anderson. "bee.a~
Ken didn't miss a bloody shot a It
week."
• Jack Kramer, who'd like lo get his
mms back into pro tennis, met with
the players prior to the start of com-
petition Wednesday. KrameT made
.ome interuting proposals to the pros,
but sadly be doesn't figure to get to
first base. For the most part, the play-
ers simply don't like the guy.
LA Flopped
T-. C.ll!Wy t. Los Angeles a
m..0. back ended ap losing $20,000.
Tiie players were so unhappy, In
fad, tltey are refusing to perform
agabi for tbe same group. Several
ergubatiou are now aegot1ating a. take ever.
Next year's Newport tourney wUI
prebaM.y be staged In August rather
_... Joe. "We'd really like to take
lltlh'..tace of the warm weather."
..W DID, "se we could play more at·-·· Uke everyUrbag else, seedings for
die t.aney tuned oat perfect.
RelewaD was •amber one. Laver .... e.n twe and "~ Matador"
Gimme umber Uiree. Laver and
sa.lle were ranked on top In the
... blea.
Mike Davies called from Los An-
geles •• Friday to report bis back
was alling and be wouldn't be able
te play against Roel Laver that eve-
lllq. T..ner orflclah Informed Da-
via 1te•• better at least makt an
a,,aruce uless he wanted the
,..,_ lteW .,. Davies made a rc-
marbbly recevery and almost up-
set werld champion Laver.
Laver'1 game should show a markf'd
hnpnvemHt -If that'• posslble-
llftt year. One of Rod's biggest
pnbkma hi ltflng In Cnrona del Mar w beew ftllcllng practice partner,..
S&eDe will be just what thf' doctor
enlered.
DID felt the home crowd had a lot
... With Laver-rs defeat by Ro11e-
waD S.aay. "Rod didn't look like
Cite ume gay. He was tense and I
dlblt pla,tnc before the local fans •ad a tot to do wtth It··
Noi So-Laue..-
Laver promptly discounted the thrn
ry. "I wasn't nervous:· he ~aid . · l
just played like I was usin~ my nghl
(See DONER, Page lli)
..
DAILY PILOT _.,.. .., LY1t .......
GOOD COMPANY -Ken Rosewall flashes a $3,100
victory smile after beating Rod Laver t right) for the
singles title at the Newport Beach Tennis Club's
Pacific Coast International Cup Matches Sunday
afiternoon. John Wayne and Cbarlton Heston
(shades) congratulate the liUle Aussie.
A Long Wait for Heston
Rosewall Makes Actor Quit Shaving
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of TM D•llv Piie! St•fl
Charlton Heston was at courtside to
present the $3,000 wlimer's check \o
Ken Rosewall late Sunday afternoon.
The hcir protected the back of his
neck and the beard showed promise of
becoming Lincolnesque. With the sun·
glasses. he looked like a hip Dr.
Strangelove.
He took the mike.
"My hair isn't this way for a part."
the actor explained.
"I promised myseU quite some time
ago that I wouldn't shave until 1 had
a backhand like Ken Rosewall."
And so it was.
Rosewall. playing like few men. if
an ). have ever played the game of
tennis, beat Rod Laver. 6-3. 6-3, to win
the singles championship of the first
annual Newport Beach International
C11r Tennis Matches.
Mal Anderson is as keen an observor
of the ga'me <lS he is a player.
· When you play a tennis match with
a man who never hits the ball out of
hounds you are in great danger." he
said.
"Rosewall played extremely well to-
day. The wind was a little tricky out
there and Kenny handles it a little
better than Rod d<>es.
··Rod relies on the big game and he
was off today."
··r m sorry I couldn't have played
better and made 1t a better match," . ..,..
'Twas Gloriou.s Sund.a,y
CAlll'O.NIA ICAN5AS CITY s•N l'ltANCISCO LOS ANGt!lES
•• r h rlH n r h rbl •b r h rlH •b , h .....
CM<l#n•I, cl ' 0 0 0 C1moanerl•. u ' 1 l 0 (llfl,.. If ' 0 1 0 Parktr. tb 1 0 0
ScllHI, lb 0 0 0 Wt bsltr. lb J 0 1 ' ._.i'll_.r c ' 1 0 0 Hun1. lb 0 0 ' Fr.vo•l. " I , 0 Hershberger, rt 2 0 0 l M,.'t/, cf 0 I I w .011vls, (f 1 7 r
Mlno:PWr, lb 1 0 0 Goseer. rl 1 0 0 0 Mr(('l'll"V, lb 0 7 0 ltltlbvr~. lb 0 1 1
H1ll1 rl 1 1 0 C•ter, lb , 0 0 0 HMf Jb 0 0 0 Ftrr•r~, " l 0 1 l
Rtlcllftrd!, II I I ' Mondev, cf 0 0 0 Bro~n, rf • 0 1 0 G•brltl\On. rll 1 0 1 1
JohM1Gne, cf 0 0 0 Dunan. c 0 0 0 01wrni>0rt. .. l 0 1 0 F81rlv, rf ' 0 I 0 Satr1ano, ( 0 0 0 Jeck>on. If 0 0 0 StMOf'der, ?b 1 0 0 0 TC>l'borq, ( I 0 0 0
Rod!ll',., c 0 0 0 Donal-. 2)1 l 1 n F \J4'f'lll$, 1b 1 0 0 n l ,Jo/IMon. 11h 0 0 " 0 1(-. 7b 0 1 0 Odom. p ~ 0 0 S1,.ti..-rn. ph I 0 0 0 Rcseboro. c 1 0 0 r
Brun•!. P 0 0 0 NOSHk, p~ 0 0 0 LAt'"tlP'f lb 0 0 0 0 Sdlofltld . " I 0 0 r
Rolu. " 0 0 0 Seoul, p 0 0 0 S6dr<kl. " , 0 0 0 Orvsdele. P 0 0 l
Harrelson. P1I 1 1 1 1 6C'l(1n p 1 0 1 0 Aker. " 0 0 0 0 (,rr ... ' Ph 1 0 0 0 Tot1I• " ' l • TOI.tis 31 J ' 3 Tflf.itJi ll 1 7 l Tolel• lO 2 ' 1 Cellfornl• «>Cl 000 000 -j Two ou• -..Mn wtnnlnq run scorrd
Kansai City ICIO 000 020 -3 S•n Fr1nclsco too 000 000 -1 DP -IC.tl\W• CllY 1. LOii -C1l!fo<'nl1 s '0-AnO<OlllS 100 000 001 -,
Ken.a& City • 78 -C1mo1Mrl1, Frtoosl. Oonald f -SodM:~I OP -Sin Fral>C•ICO t LOB •on HR -Rtlcll1rd1 19). Sii -C.m1>1111lrl•, Web SAn tr•ncisco I. Los AnoelM 1l 79 -MAY"' ~trr SF -HtrihbrftrQtr-OAV""oort S -Scl>o'ltld, Ol••nPO't SF -I \olr
II' H • Ill .. so t ,.,,
!lrunf'I rw .. 111 , rJ l 3 1 1 I 11' M • (ti 18 so
llol•• l J 1 6 n ~ j ..... ~(kl I l I
Odnm IL,, 11 5 j ! "'""" 1 } 0 ~·-.J 0 0 L1r'llY (l,,l-1) , 1 ' ' 1 n 0 n , Orv•d1I, (W.I II • I I 1
Tt,,.. -1 10 Alltncs.n" -10,6 ... flM,111 -,.,, 4111'1\cMnef -16.IO~
Laver said. quickly changing uni-
forms to get ready for the champion-
ship doubles match.
"I had to have a good game to bezt
him and 1 didn't have it. You can't go
out there expecting Kenny to have a
poor game because he never does -
he always plays well.
"My service has been hurting me. I
know there's a lot better tennis than
this in me. I bad my share of good
tennis earlier on the tour this year
and now perhaps my luck is changing
a little bit.
"When I'm playing poorly. I have a
tendency to rush my shots and that's
what gets me into trouble."
Rosewall has won four of the last
Cive pro tournaments.
"Oh sure. I've played this well be-
fore. But I've never played this well
over a span of fi ve straight tourna-
menL4'. This is as consistent as I've
ever ~n." the sawed-ort Aussie said.
"You know. it's nice to win the first
tournament. We pros think a lot of the
tournaments in New York. Paris and
London. Someday. the Newport Beach
tournament will probably be held in
that same regard and I'll be able to
say: 'I won the first one .· "
Rosewall summed up the match
neatly.
"I didn't make many mistkes to-
day. that's why I won. Rod made more
mistakes. I played with a fair
amount of confidence."
Laver achieved some measure of
"llonement After changing clothes. he
walked out on the court with Fred
Stolle and that pair trimmed Rosewall
and Dennis Ralston for an 8-6. 6-4 dou·
hlrs crown
Rosewall
Captures
Net Crown
By BILL DONER
Sperta FAit.r
Tennis bas known IOIDe great stars
down through the years.
Bill Tildeo, Jack Kramer md Pan-
cho Gcm:ales were all oomidered au-
pennen while they reigned.
Not to mention the current world
champion, Rod Laver, who may be
better than them all.
But Sunday at the Newport Beach
Tennis Club. 32-year-old Ken Rose-
wall of New South Wales. Australia.
concluded what bas got to be the
most fantastic week in the history of
the net sport as he swept to the cham-
pionship of the $25,000 Pacific C.OUt
Jntemational Cup Tournament with-
out even losing a single set.
Rosewall wrapped up the tourney
title by blitzing Cornoa del Mar's
Laver. &J, IN, before 3,067 sunbaked
fans Sunday afternoon.
It was Rosewall's fourth tourney
victory in the last five weeb and
placed him only four wins bebiDd
three time king Laver in the baUJe for
pro court supremacy wtaicb concluda
August 13.
Tb~ fact Rocsewall defeated Lav«
on Rod's home court wasn't u sor·
prising as the manner in which be
did it
The S foot 7 package of dynamite
was in command throughout and even
when ''The Rocket" broke hia serve
in the second game of the second set.
Rosewall failed to rattle and powered
right back to win going away.
During two of the last three games,
Laver didn't even score a point, as
his attempts to rush the net were
thwarted by Rosewall's brilliant pass-
ing and lob shots.
It was. to be very sure, an agonizing
defeat for Laver, who wanted so badly
to emerge triumphant in fro11t of his
faithful followers.
Rod, a countryman of R.osewall's
until be moved to CdM a year ago.
:simply coukln't pull it off. spending
more time hitting t.be net than a
rookie fireman during drills.
Two questionable calls by the lines-
man in the final game of the first set
did hurt Laver's c a u s e. but not
enough to turn the tide.
He did gain a measure of revenge.
bmvever, by combining with Fred
Stone to oulduel RosewaD and Dennis
Ralston. U , 6-4. for the doubles title.
That win allowed Laver lo almost
match RosewaD in earnings for the
tourney. The singles victory w a a
worth $3,100 to Rosewall while Rod
received fl.700 for being ruMer-up.
In doubles, Laver bagged $1 ,000 to
Rosewall's $700.
Thus the overall money breakdown
found Rosewall with $3,800 and Laver
with $3,700.
Andres Gimeno received ,1,425 for
defeating Stolle. U , 6-4, in the third
place bout
Gimeno w a s bested IN, 6--3, in ~
semifinals SatuTday and Stolle was
no match for the sizzling Rosewall,
6-1 , 6-3 .
• .
Major
League
Standings
l'\ATIONAL LEAGUE
St. Louis
Cincinnati
Chicago
Pittsburgh
W L Pet. GBL
42 24 .636
42 29 .592 2'h
38 28 .576 4
35 JO .538 61h
36 33 .522 71r.s
:16 34 .514 8 :n 35 .470 n
%9 39 .4%1 14
26 45 .366 181,.i
23 41 .359 18
San Francisco
Atlanta
Philadelphia
DODGERS
Houston
New York
W•DA'r'S aUULTS
~Ill. J. S... Fr.tM:IKo I
Pltt!buftfl .s. c1 .. c1 .... 11 • l'flil.tdtri-.i. .. It. Sf. Louis 4-4
Alla .. !• 4 ... y °"' , a.i<e9o ..... Houiton , ...
TODAY'S SCMl[DULI[
DODOtilH (()stf!efl. f.7) .ti Clncl,...H 10.-...
IHI, ICFI, ICWICW. J am.
Sen Fr...cisal IPerrY. ..7) •I St. Lou• IC-
"""'· .. ,. ..i.111 "'~ tllt.ss.. )..7) ........ 'V-,._ ,,...,
H I. ,.;gM
""'._.,,.,.. IF•rrefl ... n et Ollaw n•-· ~jl °""' ~ ~
AMER ICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet GBL
Chicago :\9 26 .600
Detroit 36 31 .537 •
Boston 35 32 .522 s
Minnesota :W 33 .5ffl 6
Cleveland 34 34 .500 61,2
ANGELS l5 Tl .4111 7'-:a
Baltimore 32 34 .485 7"i
New York 31 35 .470 81,,
Kansas City 32 38 .457 9&,,
Washington 31 39 .443 10"2
SUNDAY'S alSULTS ..... u c. ic.-City l
-Yort l. Detroit )
-· '.i. CblGHO I II.a~ I, WH1'"'810ft J eo....... 6. C•wl....S l
TOOAY°S SCHl!DULE
W•"'ifttl°" tMocw,, :H) ~ *"GELS tM1mll-
tM. N I. An-rm SIAdh"". ICMPC. I p m
llolton (lOtlborll. f.2) •I Ml_...i1 (t(HI •·ti, ., ......
N"°' Y~ t lol.,,,.. J JI ol ICo""'' (•II< 'l •"<f•
fi)lld, 4. t \ l'UQhf
Cll<•oo 1o·roo1r . ._, "' ,_,., l 11 •I &Mil• ....,., I II lc:tw'r1 4 II n ..... t
()ftly N""°' KMd\11H
18 DAILY PlLOT Monctu. June 26. 14J67
Christensen, Gergen Pace South's Smasher
By LLOYD GRCFFlN
Of llM O.llr f'llllf ,,.,.
Tbe South bas r i 1 e n
again.
This t i m e it w a s the
Orange County South All
S t a r s who emerged with
an impressive 114-9'l tri-
umph over t be North All
Stars in their annual prep
basketball duel at Orange
Coast College Saturdiay.
For the South, it was its
third consecutive victory in
as many tries and the most
lopsided ooe yet. It was al-
so the highest .coring game
in the history of the series.
The much publicized su-
perior heipt of the Y anb
failed in any waJ to dis·
courage the leaping, run-
ning Rebels. Tim Gergen
from Rancho Alamitos and
Read Christensen of N e w-
port H a r b o r combined to
lead the moat devastating
offensive a t t a c k In the
game's annals.
The North "couldn't fence
Angels Hmne Tonight
'Let's Take it All,'
Rigney Tells Halos
ANAHEIM -An elated
·Manager Bill Rigney stood
before bis victorious Cali-
fornia Angels in the club-
house. saying:
·"Things have fallen into
place. The pennant is wait-
ing there for a n y b o d y.
There's no reason we can't
win it all."
The manager was feeling
good Sunday. The Angels
had. beaten the Kansas City
Athletics. 4-3, with a grand
slam by Rick Reichardt In
the first I n n i n g, had ad~
vanced their winning$ to 15
or 20 games, and u p p e d
their won-lost pe.rcentage lo
.486.
"We've licked our r o a d
problems," R I g n e y said.
"Now let's take care of the
Washington problem."
Newcomer Jack Hamil-
ton will seek his first Amer-
ican League win tonjght
when he opens a three-
game set against Washing-
ton at Anaheim against Sen-
ator hurler Barry Moore.
Hamilton was 2-0 with the
New York Mets before be-
lng acquiTed for Nick Will-
hite. Moore is 1-0 lifetime
against California,
Reichardt's ~-loaded
round-tripper was an in·
side-the-park blast tbat ric·
ocheted off the right field
fence.
"I had no idea I could go
all the way. I juat kept run-
ning," Reichardt said.
The Athletics collected
one run in the first inning
and two in the eighth.
The win was credited to
~el leftrbander George
Brunet (4-11), who was ••· sisted by l't'Jiever Minnie
Rojas when Athletics tie.
gan hitting in the eighth
frame.
A double by John Donald-
son with one out started the
Athletics' nilly. He was
singled home by pinch bit·
ter Ken Harrelson, wtio
was advanced to second on
a single by Campy Cam·
peneris.
Then came Rojas. Minnie
fanned Jim Gosger and
Danny Cater tO end the in·
ning with the tying run
stranded at third and the
winning run at second.
"Chicago lost. We're 71,2
out. right? Why can't we
win it all?" asked Jim Fre-
gosi. No one answered.
Drysdale Assured
Of All Star Berth
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Don Drysdale of the L o 11
Angeles Dodgers has an un-
impressive 7-7 .record in thP
National League this season,
but the veteran right-hander
is virtually certain of being
selected for the All-Star
tgame July 11 at Anaheim
Stadium.
Drysdale lowered h i 1
earned run average to 2.08
Sunday when he hurled a
seven-hit, 2-1 victory over
San Francisco.
It is the second lowest
ERA among all National
League starting pitchers.
"F:arned run averages are
what count." !iaid Dodger
manager Walter Alston,
"and Drysdale deserves to
be picked for the AU-Star
game.'·
Alston will manage the
National League AH Stars
and wm pick the pitchers
who will faC'f' the American
League.
•· 1 haven't picked th e m
vet ·· said Alston. ··but t'rl
ha\.e to say Drysdale will
be on the staff ··
Drysdale said he h a s
pitched consistently better
this year than at any time
!iince 1962, when he had a
25-9 record and won the Cy
Young Award.
"1 was J.>3 at the All-Star
break that year." he re-
called, "but I didn't pit.ch
loo well in some of t b e
games I won t!ult seaaon.
We scored more runs in
those days than we do now."
The Dodgen have scored
only six runs in the seven
games Drysdale has lost
this season.
The big right-hander lost a
shutout in the first inninj(
Sunday after Ty Cline sin-
gled and was forced out by
Tnm Haller. Halter scored
on a double by Winie Mays .
Two walks, a single by
Willie Davis, and a sacri-
fice ny by Jim Lefebvre
gave the Dodgers the ty.
ing run in the first inning.
Los Angeles won the j(ame
in the ninth after Davi~
drew a one-out walk off re-
liever Frank Linzy. Davis
advanced on an infield out
and scored on a pinch sing-
le by Len Gabrielson.
MORE SPORTS
PAGE 20
G e r g e n away Crom the
boards and the little cager
with springs in bJs tees de·
moralized his I o e 1 with
graceful ttp.in1 and clutch
rebounds.
Christensen proved u ef-
fective as be was in the
South's two scrimmages.
Combs pitted the S o u t h
against Orange Coast Col-
lege and a R e d 1 a n d s
U n i v e raity -Huntington
Beach Hlgh alumni outfit
and Christensen displayed a
soft shooting touch that
e a r n e d him a starter's
berth Satw'Uy nllbt.
Thoae two brou&ht t h e
South back from Q open·
Ing 7-1 deficit to a fat fH~
first quarter 1-and a 55-:rr halftime advantage.. It
was '19-.e6 after three quar-
ters.
Si¥ ol Combt' All.Stars
hit double ftiuNi.
The South tbreatened to
make it even a bltctr run-
away in the third quarter
when It pulled to a 20 point
lead, but some fancy shOot-
ing by the &am•'• leadinl scorer, Gent Bodlni of Va-
lencia, gave the R e b e l s
some uneasy morMnt.s.
Sodini hlt on ftve COQMC·
utlve fteld ioill and a pair
of free throws whlle te~m
mate Bob Terrio hit one to
bring the North "1th.in aev-
en polnta of the 8'uth.
·Bod.tni, who wound up the
evening with 28 p o l n t 11 tired after hla brie( 01*
man show and the Rebels
started their offensive· flre-
worb anew as G e r I e JI
found the range with 2:20
remaini.Dg tn the quarter
and bit on three field 1oala
and two free tbrpwa.
The Nodb wat never to
threaten In the remain! n c quarter ol the contest u the
South pull~ away ,to their
eventual ~lnt victory.
One casulltv In· tM alfair
was Costa Mesa's Steve
Turley.
The scrappy S-10 play-TU<'leY ' I • Miiier ' ' " maker was forced to le-ave Stllllll > 1 • the contest wttb 8:» re-Ger,.. • , 11
QllljllleM , ' ,,
ma.lnini in the third quar-SMIH ' ' It
ter after crublnc to the Tthla 1' .. 11•
hardwood with a b a d 1 y ....
twi.Sted a.alr:ie on • ll)'·up .. n ,.,.
MlcNI • t 12 attempt. ....... 1 t ' . ._. ' l IS ._...,,..,..,.. ltnltll • , ,,
loulll n • M »-114 ...... 11 c " North 1S222t»-ft L-• 2 t
twtll ~ • 2 t ... '"' ,,. Whti.n. ' • 1
~ • s ti ,.,.,.. • • I
(~ • • 0 Yew 1 • 1
·~ I I 1 , ..... " w n
* * * * * * 'We Were Olltpla1ed'
Oates Despondent
After South Win
An all•star high .chool
basketball rame in June ls
a bard sell.
Only 1,314 showed up at
Orange Coast cO~e Sabll'-
day night to see the greatest
graduating players in Or-
ange C.ounty display their
wares.
The 1&111 seemed lethargic
and, at tlm•, ao dJd the
players.
But baaketball ii year-
round austenance for a
ooedl. Bill Oates, the VUla
Park High coach wbo bad
been selected to CUide t b e
Northern temn Satwday
night, watdled bis teem lote,
114-92.
He didn't al)': "Wen, it's
only an all-ctar game."
He w~_briO:ly out of
the am IDd stood .a&ln$t
the wall beblnd the men'•
lcdel' room. Hla ........
mUIMd. and bll flt na u-kew. Be fldaeted ftlle talk· me to wrtten -be eeemed
ready at my moment to bit
the wall.
Bush Hails "We didn't do the job on
defense a n d that burta
more than anything," be
said, quietly. U S Spike "The South did a great
• • jo~they looked like they'd
been playing together for a
J year. Elmer'• a good bu-uggerD8Ul ketba11 coach ...
Asked to pinpoint the dif·
Ln.c ANGELES (UPI) _ ference, the youtbful (27) ~ mentor responded: "They
ALL-STAl[t STRUGGLE -Huntington Beach's Allan
Robinson ol the South and the North's Chris Smith
of Fullertoo battle for a rebound in Saturday ni&ht's
North-South game at Orange Coaat Colleee. The
South won easily, 114-92. From left: Steve Turley
(Costa Mesa}, Mark Miller (Marina}, Van Bye (Sa-
vanna) and Gene Bodini (Valencia.
Although head coadl Jim beat us with MJperior speed
Bush nas what he consid-and boardwot'k. Let's face
ers "The greatest United it: we were outplayed."
States track and field team Then he spoke of the
ever assembled." be is not South's great Tim Gergen,
predicting victory over the the county's highest scorer
squad the British Common-last seasoo at Rancho Ala-
wealth baa put together for mitos.
their dual meet July 8-9 in ''Isn't t bat kid some-
Ruling
Kills U.S.
-Shelby
DETROIT (AP) -A rul-
ing cutting down the size of
protype sports cars racing
for the m a n u f a c tu r-
ers championship "m a y
well knock the United Stat-
es out of long distance rac·
1ng," Carroll Shelby said to·
day .
Shelby, whose 1-'ord-
rowered Cobras won th e
World Manuf a c t u r ers
Championship in 1965, said,
"As far as I'm conei!med
it's kind of a klck in the
face for America."
The lntemalional Sporting
Commission, which sets the
rules for the manufacturers
t·ompetition. announced the
decision Friday. The deci-
sion w a s made in Paris
June 13, just two days after
a seven-liter Ford prototype
won the 24-hour Le Mans
race.
Seven·liter fords finished
1-2-3 at I.A> Mani; in 1966.
Memorial Coliseum. 1hlng?" be said, and there
SMITH WINS
GOLF TITLE
PEBBLE BEACH, calif.
Donohue, by Half Lap,
Wins at Watkins Glen
Bush, bead mentor ot the waa wonder in his eyes.
USA team that will tackle "I felt going into tbe game
the "Empire's" best. has we could t.alte a third of hi~
just retumed from Bakers-game away by preventing
fie.Id where the National him from racing across the
AAU Championships belp-key like he does for tlp-
ed determine his squad to ins and rebounds. But Mike
meet the CommonweaJth. Michel (Anaheim), our best CUPI) -Bob E. Smith fig-
ures be laid the foundation
for bis victory in the Cali-
fornia State Amateur Golf
Championship two w e e k 1
ago when he talked with
golfing p-eat Byron Nelson.
"I learned more about
my game in that 15-minu~
talk with Byron than I
thought possible," the 24-
year-old Sacra mento car
salesman said Sunday after
whipping Jim Rheim, 23, of
Ohula Vista, 7 and s. in the
championship match here.
ln a special match for the
California Stale junior title,
Novato's Ray Leach, 17, de-
feated 1966 National Junior
Champion Gary Saunders of
Buena Park, 13 and 11.
/tf .c Conaeboek
WATKINS GLEK. N.Y.
(AP) -Clearing tile check-
ered flags with a comforta-
ble half-lap lead aft.er 2.00
milet over ~ laps Sunday·,
Mark Done>OOe, a 29-year--0ld
automotive engineer f r o m
stony Brook, N.Y., won the
20th annual W atk:ins G I e n
Sports Oar Grand Prix.
Donohue, a pre-rece fa-
vorite. now bas a big lead in
tbe Sports Car Club o!
America's U.S. Road Rac-
ing Champiorn;hip with a to-
tal of 40 points. and has
eUminated all but Lothar
Mostshenbacher, of Bever-
ly Hills. Calif., who finished
fifth with 17 points.
Earlier Sunday in the 50-
1 a p 115-mile prelirni.n.ar)li
Glen Ct.allenge for Manufac-
tuTers, the races of the se-
dam. Alllld'l Moffatt. '1:1 . or
Melbourne, Australia beat
Ray Caldwell, of Marble-
head. Ma ss .. while B 0 b "This team is better by defensive player, told me he
Tullius. or AJex'3ndria, Va.. far than the 1964 Olympic couldn't stop him. He said
wes thlrd. team that made sucll a fine he just rolled otl him and
Moffa showing at Tokyo," the we11t for the bucket."
tt won two trophy youthful UCLA mentor said··========== cups as he recorded the fut-"But~ opposition is go-
est lap in tbe race and the ing to be a far better te
S2.500 t.op prize money f 0 r than the 011e hastily assem
first. bled in Los An·geles las
Donohue's speed for th e summer alter the Russian
circuit was 110.87 miles per pulled out -far better tha
hour, a new sports car rec-what ttie U.S.S.R. co u I
ord, as he beat Sam Posey, muster," Bush said. "A
or Sharon. Conn., in a Mc-the climate djfferences i
Laren Cbevrolet and third-such parts ot the world a
place Skip Barber of Con-AustTalia and New Zea
cord, Mass., in another Mc-land keep us from knowin
Laren ChevTolet. how good some of the Com
Another McLaren driver, monwealttl stars are goin
Don Morin, ol North Tttle-to be."
boro, Mas6., finished fourth. The squad the Nati
Donohue's time was one Trade and Field Commi
hour, 53 minutes, 24.4 aec-of t.be AAU has selected f
onds. Bush includes five wor
A $500 prize and the Onyx record holders and two oth
Trophy for ttie fastest t a p ers who have tied globa
of the day went to Peter' st.and,ards.
K
AllGIU
SENATORS
Ht ANAHEIM STADIUM
To11itlit I ,._.
T •m•rrow I 'M
Weclnel<llley I ,._.
YANllU
M...s.t...S....
Revson, of New York, wno "Where we had one 9.
set the lap mark at 112.73 sprin~r in Bob Hayes i .-...Got..:,.';*.!,.~
m.p.h. in his McLaren be-11164:" Bush enthused, " ..... ....,.....,._.
fore he was forced out with have two on this squad i ._.,v;::,_,"'-:6-~ ...
engine trouble. J1mmy Hines and Charli ....._.,ai..~
Donotiue took $3,000 of the1,_Giiilriiliieenlliiiiieiio. __ ~------------.-' Sl2,200 purse.
Midlway City came back Cards Win, Tle
from a 3-0 deficit Sunday lo Fountain Valleys' Cardi-
defeat Anaheim, 6-4, m nasl and the Costa M e s a
American Legion baseball Comets will engage in a Na-
action at We~tminsler High tional Baseball Congress .==========:;;I
School. doubleheader Thursday at BRAKE SPECIALS MU!r trailing 3-0 at the Fountain Valley High at 6 LOCAL
DONER: SMASHING SUCCESS ... end of two and one-Ital! Jn-p.m. WOil.O'S u"m HAii AND N0"1' IWD IPlaAusn
· h M.d i The Cardinals beat t h e No o+h•r "•w111•p•r ••II• You nings. t e 1 way Ci ty n ne L L llPIAT OF A SIU.OUT ... , • 4 WMBLI bounced back for one In the Santa Ana Angels Sunday, more, every dey, •Do..,+ wnet'a COMPLETE 0 -
(From Pagt 17)
hand."' The Rocket. naturalJy. is a
5<>uthpaw
check to Laver and Charlton Heston lower half O{ the third, two 5-2. In a second game, Foun-901119 •11 '" tit• &reet.r Or•11.. YERHALL
gave the top prize to Rosewall. Heston. in the sixth, two in ttie ,ev-tain Valley and ttle Harbor C.ert *"•" the DAILY "LOT. •uALITY PAllTS AND ucPHT wc1tut
Hollywood got into the act w h e n
J nhn Wayne presented the runner-up
SPO RTS LOG
. be d f h. lat t movie th and · h h Dodg-s pl.a ed to a 2 2 ti. tY MATIOMWIOll Sf'llCIM.IST'S growing a ar or is es en one in the eig. t i.iiiiiiiiii"'ii.:iii~Y~~~~-~e~-~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'ill -"MIGHTY GRIP'" Torture T"'"' GUA•· role. is quite a tennis fan. Last week lo put the game on ice. ANTEEo L1111,.. • WMtl• -~ Cyt111-n n tb t St l uJ t -lltbullf, 4 wt.els -All F-On.... he ew a e way o . '° s o sc.,. IJY •1111i.,.1 • l -- - - -- ---Turned -All un111e1 Arc-GrOUllCI '°' ,,...
watch the pros in action . •" 111 ., ""· Maximum CotltKt -Front w.....
Al\fll>elm l•uedvl 111 OOl ~ 4 1 COMPLETE DYNO CHECK FOR ALL ... '11191 It-cited -Mesttr CvllllOer 1"" Proving again that the whole world M•dwa• cuv 001 om ,.._. u 1 IP9Cllld _ ara11e .._ ChecMd _ G,._
is indeed become a stage, the players Mlfwn cu, I AIR COOLED ENGINES Se••• Oltdied -trek• H~lc IVttem O • " llll I I tied & ltefllled -trake A...embly CIMMll were forced to speed up activities Sat-Jo/I" Ho0•"· ll> , o 1 o, -ere1c .. Mluslld .. Factorv ~
It seems sponsors of the m~ °''!'•" ?b. 1b .. io 1111111,. ,.._ trwk• a.1enc1 end O!ler•-
2795
fOU
CHllYIOUT
l'\.YMOUT'H gels. Anaheim Stadium, 8 p.m. were paying $100 a minute and at c;,.,,.., •• lion -l'1t1111 .,..... Mlustments '°'IM i.1,.
8ASE8ALL -Washington vr; An-TV th· Mnf!da, .. ·.' !1 o~i I 11111 •m• Adl11rttc1 -Your~ 1t-.T .. ..., urday due to the television coverage. S1><ncer. P O o 1l s9ts -Eccent11o leeted elld AdlUIJotf -f'ert;-
811.L.IAROS -T o u r n a mf'nt Bil-,. Moccar1,,.. 11 1 • 1 of Your Hew L11t111e1 -•t NATIOHWIDf.. OIMr a--._, that price didn't want a lot of feeling ,.,,,,rQ .. c1 1 , 0 I "'"' enc1 Lellor GUARANTEED '" WR1T· ......_ c... l1arrlr;. Inc .. Culver City, II and 10 p.m. He~""· c 1 , 1 ING bY N1tlonwldt1 ....., MIN
Ri\lllO·TEl.f:VISION around. "'· MCC•,ln••· rl 0 0 01 -------------------•~ASERt\LI. -Oodger~ at C'incin· As one Australian player put it. "'Tht CIYMll. '' ' i ,1 2 ,.,, A II R . . Sh BRAKE RELINE lf'lly ii; for the birdi;." 11,..., Hco•o 1b •, o1 ,' 11 I I 01,, PP " to epatr tn op n1l1. KF'I. K\\'KW. :i r m : Ansieb \'!\. $mllh. I), 211 I .;:-=-='~'·~a=s~~1-ng~t~o~n,~K~~-M_P~C~·~R~r~-~==·===.::=====-===-==A=m:e=n=!~P-.-;;-;;-;;-;...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;m;;;;;;;;;;1~n11•"_.-;.;-.-.-.-;.1•'._• .. 11;;;;;• _
The City of Newport Beach Needs
Police Officen
S•l•ry $636 to $773 mo. T .. t date: Jufy 7, 1967.
Excellent fringe benefits. Current openings. For
requirements •nd additional information contact
Peraonnel office, City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.,
Ntwport Beuh. Phone (71.C) 673-2110.
IDEAL CAR LEASE
GUARANTEED
Lower Rate• -Better Service
ALL MAKES & MODELS
CALL FOR RATES: 642-5421
NEWPORT V.l.P. CAR lEAS,NG
Al JACOllSOH -AOfNl
410 W. COAST HIGHWAY -NEWPORT BEACH
Bankamericard -Union 011 Credit
RACEWAY
UNION
76
2281 Newport Blvd., Cost11 Meu
Call 646-6607 for Appointment
ALL C WH••LS LIN•D WITH ~M19MTY
CIRI"'' TOllTUR• T9STID LININOI
.......... hi "'''""" -,,... ..,...,.,._,. tw LllltltM 9' L ....
12fl FO•D
l'LYMOVTM,
CHEVJIOLET
Molf .....
"" 1'.ts
Tlae1
Hru
Wi
•.
•.
By ALMOfii .....
Scott A11li
$prague m
atst from De
wideDed the Southern Ca
Friday to n
North Apler'k
iog teams I
for the HeDl']
moriaJ Tropl!
~Y racint
tht lntem>l.JE
Racing Anoe
America.
In the filw
races sailed
Yacht Club L
USC trio pllec
score to b
PrincetOa by
Jt was the
Moral TropbJ
won by a Wes
in YI years •
and by a tbl
the first · ti.me
'l1le Mona
J;X>inted the
Staru
Bui
lo 1n
tpefl
DELUXE STATIC
The
)rMt
0 0i
Kac
STANS
BUU
234 East 11
Cost• M.sa
l
SAVE .......
COSTA ID ...... -·-'--IUCI
. .• . , ...... , .. , .. ' ~-.. ...
~. Junt Z6. 1~7 OA1LY PILOT 19
r1ae1 Did ra
Harbor Collegians llilKfAlll ••••••••••••••••••••
OUTI' .~J)RS1'
Win Morss Cup
SJ ALMON LOCKABEY ...........
Scott All&n and Henry
.. aiue m -with an ...
st from Dennis Parka -
ideDed the Univerlity of
tUlbern CaDfomia 1 e a d
rlday to swamp 11 other
>rtb Al!lerican college aall·
g teams tn com~tion
r the Henry A. Mont Me-
orial Trophy, symbolic of
ngby reclnc 'upremacy In
• Intem>Ueelate Y a c h t
Icing Association of North
merioa.
lD the final three of J 2
.ces sailed at Long Beach
ICht Club last Friday the
SC trio piled up a 2Si-point
ore to best nmner-up
:iDcetDn by 32 potnta.
It WU the ftrtt time the
ons 'In>phy bas ever been
lll by a West Coast college
'SI yean of competition,
id by a teem .ailing for
e first time in the aeries.
l1le Moru Trophy victory
illted the Peclflc Coast
~---...-
:Stansbury
Buick
·Ills .. UIS
lhlf nst
• Y adlt Raclog Aaaociation
toward a clean •nei> in the
ICYRA of NA competiUoa.
Earlier ln the week, use .
Cll-State Long Bea~h and
San Diego State teamed up
to win the Walter Wood Tro-
phy for the team racing
cbampioubip.
And ln the M«ss Trophy
competition, PeclJic Coast
sldppen woo the Robert M.
Allan Jr. Trophy for tndi-•
vidual bigb pol.at scoring
hooon in both the A and B
divialoua. Allan, son of ttie
dooor, won ln Division A
with 1211 polnta, and Henry
Scbolield of Cal State, Long
Beach won Division B with
139.
All that re!Mim iJ for a
Pad.fie Q>Mt ailor to win
tbe North American inter-
collqiate sinl)e-h a n d e d
&ailing cbMnpioosbips which
.c.ted tocia,y at Minion
Bay, Saa Diego, in OK
Dinghies. The single-banded
competition is for the Glen
Foster Trophy.
FAVORITES
Henry Sprague ol USC
and c..t Van Duyne Of
~ wen top favw-
ites • the Foster series got
und«way.
In Friday'1 Wl'llp-Up of
tbe Mons Trophy. ADP
b.911 i-1-3 ftnilhn, ~·eue
blld a 3-1 record. and Den·
nil Parker, wbo 1ubttituted
one race for Spra1ue, fin·
Wied aecond.
COLLEGIATE SAILORS - Winning tkiepers and
crews who brought the Henry A. Mor6s Trophy to
Univenity of Southern OllifornJa congratulate each
t)ther between races of the intercollegiate dinghy
n iting championship at Long Beach Yacht Club.
From Jett are Henry Sprague m and his crew. Ann
Barneson. and Scott Allan and his crew, Scottie
Bevan. All are from ttie Newport .-ea.
Wins California Cap
Stormvogel Best,s Kialoa
Hanging out everythine
but the akipper'11 T-shirt on
the downwind legs. the crew
of Qmlellus Bruynzeel's 72~
toot ketch, St.onnvogel,
from the Royal Dutch Yacht
Club, South Africa, IOUDdly
trounced Jlm Kllroy's 73-
foot aluminum sloop, Klaloa
II, Newport Barbor Yacht
Club, to win c.&tfoon.ia
Yacht Club's Callfornia Cup
in three 1tnligbt races Fri·
day and Saturday.
Kialoa II fot the start and
led Stonnvogel tO the wea-
ther mark in all three of the races off Safi ta Monica Bay,
b u t was no match for the
1lo jibe again, douse the
chute and set a ge.noe Jib
to fetch Ule mark.
On the next downwind
leg Stormvogel inc:rwed
her lead to 3 minutes, 35
aecoods, but on the final
beat to the finilb JCWoa D
erued 1 :22 of..._ mapa.
'!be l'9Ces ,.,.... .., • boat
for boat basis. It was inte.r-
elting to note that had they
lJeEiJl sailed on hancicap,
K.i:aloa woukl have beateo
&be hia ketch in at leest two
of the races.
Both yachts are Cla.ss A c n••m' in the upcoming
Loi Anetles to Honolulu
rect wtaidl ltarU J&lly 4.
Maruja Takes Rhodes
Racing Championship
NOW_.DS TUISIAY
111.W
... ~ THE LUXURIOUS
~~NEW Ill ..
I... THEATRE
flOMI Of aocll ... OWi ~IS .f. 1" UST IN.JOA llYl ~ IALIOA PllllSL4• 11l-*'
• CNU wmt H.abfT oettT •
Open 6:45 -Sunday 2: 15
Now -Ends Tuesday
TH• 81!ST ~Afn'Y
YOU watt• l!Valt
INVITl!DTOI
"THE
APARTMENT" -JADlt LDl•O#
•111111.D •-'Alli£
~ ••••uwr ................. ----
o \ • t11 I.
Now Thru Tuesday
0,.. Nltlift1 610 P.M •
.,...... ht. & S.•. 11t 2 r.M.
Princeton'• Van D u y n e
and Bill Floyd fbHsbed &-4-1
and >4-4 respectively to_
mow into lecood place
aheed ol Uniwraity ol Mlch-
igeo's Chia Clwltain and
Steve KJotz, who fell behind
with a 2-10-12 and 2-2-11, re-
spectively.
'66' Yachts
Finish Race
On Deadline
All boats en~red in Bal·
boa Yacht Club's 66 Serles
finished the Dana Point race
under the 7:30 p.m. time
deadline Saturday in a re-
1ail o( the contest ttiat was
called off alter it was orig-
inally 1tarted May 20.
lighter displacement ketch Bob KetteohoCen'a Maruja meister was ttie w i nner
with h« spiona.ker and miz. wat ttie wi nner of Che over fi ve rivals i.J\ ttie Wil-r:::::::::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::==::==::==::==::==:1~~!!~~!!!!!!!!!!~
zen-splnnaker in th e light, R.hoJea.JJ championship at 90ll Jnvibt i o n a 1 for ttiel;:::;::===================.
downwind going. the conclusion of a five race Finn Class. in a three-race
.lo1n1114
eperllel
&Aal.......,
DtL\llE SPOltT court
l..m.,..,..,
!LUX£ STATION WA~
he
eet IUICI wOpel
Kadett
tTANSBURY
BUICK
~4 Ent 17th Str .. t
sta Mesa 54t-7765
COMEBACK
Cal StN, Long Beach
made the moet remarkable
recovery in the final three
racea when Hesry SdlOftekl
and Eric Conn came beck
•ti-one with 1-6-1 and 1-11-8
finishes to move into third
place ahead of Micbigan.
Oil-state Long Be.ch was
boct to the collegiate aail-
on in tbe Wood Mid Morss
Trophy M!l"iel, and San Di-
ego s.t.e will be lat in UM!
Foeter' Ser"-.
The ftnal ICOl'i.ll1: USC
'-&9, PriDceflon 'm, Cal State
Long Be9cb 219, University
ol Mkibicm 115, Tufts Uni·
ventty 211, TUlane Univen-
ity 179, ~ Guard Acade-
my 189, Ohio Wetleyan 158,
Georgetown University 147,
Seattle Univenity 119, Uni-
versity of Weddncton 1<».
norida sait. lot.
Lido Champs
Stu RobetUao and Tom
Connerly ol AWnitos Bay
y ac:ht Clbb temned up in
Lic»14 sloops Sunday to win
the second annual Yacht
Racing Union Dinghy Chal·
lenge against seven compe--
titors.
Argyle Campbell a n d
Dave White for the Defend-
ing Balboa Yacht Club were
1eeood. Long Bach Yed!t
Club with Alex and Carol
Kimbell ... third.
In Saturday's race a light
southwesterly kept the fleet
moving wittiout tacking on
both legs of the course. The
winners:
CLASS A -~'•"*· Jim ll-r-,.,..., I YC; ~~· J~ lalllle. I YC1 Ul S 1, th ll &. Wllllt mt.. NHYC.
h~11:c:\t> Cll~~'hf4/~ r.;c. HYCI u F alc:on, ""'""
.~~,, \.; o\':'. t~ 1:'::!
.... t1l It_,,., l"!lft Wlftlor, llVC.
Cl.AU D -SMll llatw ~··~ ~ekw, Sf. FYC1 m '•l1Nfra. Wr'I Mc:Clet,.., LIYC1 Ol V01a11te, M•e Hlnfl. I VC.
MOttl" -Vlv.clou .. 11111 ¥Gn ICloi':..
lml4 NHYC1 1i1 Ti.to. PretlOI\ ZI~ '-"· IYC; Ul 1'1n..ers111.. IMhon & C-I YC.
NHYC Girl
Wins Trial
Friday's two races were •er I e s sailed under the series Sunday.
sailed over a 22-mlle Olym-SponlOlship ot the Newport ---------
pie course, in which Storm· Hwt>or Yacht Club.
vogel bullt a 6 minute, 23 Runners-up in the com.-. ~il'O!liiii:~ second margin and a 12-mlle r-.,
triangular" course in which Ution wse Jack 8'ut.ey•1 j
she won by 2 minute., 21 Temptation from Voyagen .. IDIYllli:IL_fill .. __ i=W•. • seconds. In the final race YC and Bill Taylor's Mia-" ...........
over the 12-mile triangle Sa· tree5, 8atboe Yacht Club. -n:=.:.1~
turday, Stonnvogel's margin Taylor. a former cbam-1:.u OttLT
was 2 minutes, 13 seconds. pion in the Deet, miJSed a ...... c.-& ,.._ w..
Kilroy and company blew chance for another title in1~~~~~~~~~~~ whatever c h an c e s they the third race !Mt weeti. ~ght have had in the third when he rescued b'ee peo-
race by a tactical error on ple from a sinking boet off
the secood leg of the course. Newport and misled t b e
After leading Stonnvogel to start o( the race. 1'le rece
the mark by ooe minute, is c«nmittee refused to delay
seconds, Ki~loe's ~· 1 et the race until Taylor could
the big chute smartly and t r a n sfer bis unscheduled
appeared to be well on thelr passeogen.
way to victory. But when Jn another championship
Stormvogel got her ward-seriee conducted by NHYC,
robe of light sails drawing Warren Part:er's Fugitive
she pulled within three boet emerged • cbempioo of
le11gtlM of Klaloa. t h e Jocal 5.-• Meter fleel
Jn an effort to get from Runnen·up were G«ald
under ttie big blanket, Kia-Madipn in Shady and Scott
Joe's crew jibed, putting b« Allan in Yankee 11.
on a cOUrSe some 60 degrees ln the Star Class etimi:DA-
of:f the course to ttie next tions to deUnnine tfle New-
m•k. Stormvogel eased her port Hwbor' Fleet in tbe
Letlie Messenger of New-spinnakeT" pole forward to world c b amp i o nships,
port Harbor Yacht Club won the heaci.tlay Mid drove f« Chuck Lew.dder was the
the Yacht Racing Un i on the mark while Kialoa had winner. Runners·up were
quarterfmals of the Ad.ams Kevin Jfllfe and Seymcxr
Cup competition for t h e B k All a.-k ·
women's North American Turning Point tr~· NHY'C.ee 5 ippers are
champiOOIJhip Sunday in an
elimination series sailed at Victor at Lido Steve Seal o< Lido Isle
N_. Harbor Yacht Club Yacht Club won the PC "'"Y"' • Robert F.Alsbnan's Turn· eLirrWoations to sel«'t ttpre-
in Shields Class sloops. ing Point kom Bahia Co-sentatives for the nati<JOaJ
In the YRU quarterfinals rinthlan YC was the winner c b a m pl o n s h i p. Mart
at Almlitoe Bay Y a c b t of tM foort.h annual En-Coflolan fA BYC WM sec-
Club f o r the Mallory Cup, deavor Fleet dwnpiomhip ond. and Bob Woodward of
men's North American sail-Saturday and Sunday under BYC wu third. me cbamplODlbips, Henry the sponsonhlp ol Lido Isle Ben Hromadka of Santa
Sprague IJI was the win· Yacht Club. --
ZSA ZBA QA80R 99YS -
DeT in Jbistle Class sloops. Monica Yactlt Club wes ~ Runners-up ln the cham-wtnnel' ol tbe n.eet elimina·
SemJlinab to d ettttnine pionsbip regatta were Don tions in the lAJders-18 Clan.
the California represent.a-McGillis's Pirouette, Balboa Bill Fundenberg of NHYC
tJve ln the Adams Cup will Yacht Club. and Bi 11 Lang-was second, and Kar; Gant-SAVE MONEY at AAMCO ..,. ._ AUTDIATIC 'llANSIJISSllll be sailed at NHYC July 29-jahr's Approdite, S o u t h VYC ... :-... ...,. ...... M·l'--' . it--'· er. • was uwu. ..... ml GUVlo, semi.,. IMW> Shore Sal.ling Club. £"red Miller Jr. in ~
COSTA IE& --lllTA • U. IUCI
8Pl!CIALIST81 will be held at ABYC July T-==========J_:_::::...:::::_::.:.:_...::_~::::.::;~~~~~~~~~11
22-23 . ..mwM•Bta ........... _
-"6ttfl ·-.. i .,,. " •• ----&1119•? rr ......... ~_........ .. ..... _... .. ,.._ r..:=.-t;-:-:. :J ·c.;.. ...... .. --.., __ ,..
In Ute semifinals teams
from YRU, Southern Gali-
fornia Yachting Association,
Y«llt Racing Association
of San Francisco and t b e
Small Boat Racing Associa-
tion of Northern California
will compete.
PARADISE
Are yH • 111tvrel • b1t11
"hetu treder 7" The DAILY
PILOT 9ive1 y .. • ch111ce
te He 4'eily i11 +tie 1p1ciel
Treder'1 rer1di11 1nti111
ef +tie went edt.. Whetche
we11t te 1we117 I
HOLD IT!
Don't make
a move!
WgnneWood
SANTAANA
'dido
HELD OYE,fl .............
'Prile-'Wlllabll
eMllllealC1•111f
W [iiiifi&I . .,,.. ... ..,.
ALSO THIS COMEDY
D.-#14 Mee.II••
SyM• IC-1 ...
''THREE BITES OF
AN APPLE;,
KOCM·FM
ORT ;1, . .1. -~ .
Be L COAST Nl...WAY eer-... ..,, &noa'9
"HRS UIE I TON
DF lllCIS!
F1sci11ting ! Shocking!
This film should b1
see1~1R!" -c ...
2nd BIG WEEK
FOR ADULTS ONLY
RCOND PIATVU
mc..-1
'101D1IAI~ -air ...............
......... .... ,...., .......... __ .. _ ........
-'pt .. ,..
I ' I I
......... _ _..,
•ANDRBWS·--PLUMMER :.~ iii.11.mt1l•.::::=-... l~R PARUR..:.. ~
=i.n Ym I ti.ao 90DCl.llS I®• •.ullllllml'lf n I &m.~ WOWf ~~.,, ............. ,,.,,,..,...~, ........... ._... __ .......,
•
ZO DAIL V PILOT MondlY, Junt 26, 1967
Coast Area
Baseball Briefs
Co•~U Win, 9.z
The Costa Mesa Comets
fell victim to Santa Monica
Sunday, 9-2, in Southern
Calfornia Baseball Associa-
tion action on the winner's
field .
Santa Monie.a took ad-
vantage of 10 watu offered
by Comet pitching during
the contest and also batted
out 10 hits.
The Cometh had to settle
for two runs on two hits
with both runs coming in the
sixth innlng.
kWe "1""4fltt
• HI•
~·· OOt t02 000-' 1 ' S."'• MOfllCt OIS t02 01•_. t I C-a Il l
Ml,..n!Y, It MctC••· Jb cno-."' Dul«. cf
S Andtf'_, <
FIM-.. rl
Ill~." 8¥ftf:S. ..
ll-,lb
J.,..., Jb
Hath•w•v. rl
D AllldenOfl, I>
TOl•I~
Al ll Hllll
1
1
' l
' I
' l ,
1
I
' ti
a
I 1 • • • • a
I • • • 1
0 •
1 • I 1
I 1 • • 0 • a a a a a o a o
0 0 0 0
' 1
* * * Con~ll; 6-D. 9·0
ConnelJ Chevrolet defeat-
ed Huntington H a r boor
twice Friday lo remain un-
defeated in Orange County
Connie Mack League base-
balf play.
'Jbe victors defeated l h e
visitors &-0 and 9-0 to gar·
oer their sixth win of the
season.
Jack Brobamer was the
hitting star of the double
header as he conne<:led for
a bomerun in the fiI'1t game
with two men aboard and
also bad two hits and three
run6-batled-in in the second
game.
ll M I
HV"'tf"llM ll~rbot/r 000 000 tl-0 2 I
("""'II 011 00:! •-4 t I c-n u1
~ Broh•mf't. I b
J 8r"ON1met. 0 Whl""°" H Elltr, c
Jt"lll .... 7b
Ballt>Y, cl
Gruw. H uppo. lb
Fr~. p
Jtkosk• p
T.,,_I•
At I H 1111
l I I 0
• I I J I I 0 0
I I I 0
, 0 , ' 1 • 1 0
I I 1 I
l • • 0
I 0 0 0
l I 1 I
)0 • I •
It MI
Hunll"IJlctl Httiloor 000 800 ~ > t
CctlMll ~lOOt-t I 1
C-ICfl
Al • H lll l
s: !Ir.,._, 111
~.lb J 8rahe~ • .,
Walth, c
Morr~. rl
8utle<. rl c;,._,,..
Win, :lb
ll•ilw , d
l I
1 I
' ' I 1
I t , 1
J ' • • > I
I
1
l
1 • ' • • I
• • ) • • 1 • • ,
HOLl.YWOOD ,.AlllC INTlllU
Ftr T..-Y. ,_ 21, lff7-"'ll OtY
Clffl" & FHI. l'lnl flftf I :0 I> .M.
S:llST •ACIE. • turlonQl l •-elm br..S I" C1lit. Cltlmlfto PU<V
~. Cltimono .,..IQ "°'° 04let
Gr-. IW ~e<l 1" •1
P!-.rmK-le IW llluml lH 1->
loek• M«1M Ill _,II ,., 10.l
Fla"1Y HO!ll IT N•lt"OfWI) IU 10.I
P11111'l Pride 11 Hewitt,_) llllM IS.I
Turi D~119111 (J Trvllllel 1l0t '-1
P~ OI Rom. (D V.itsquol 111 10.I
Mv S111wl (II. (Ampet) lat 10.1
AnyOl<llv (F Alvertil lot 1 I
~•r~ttt 18 Helml xlCM 10.1
Flttl lndl•n (W Hermal'Jl 114 .. I
Hold Hlfd ID lloul 114 1 1
IM Va~rutolal 117 1•1
PHAaMACOP'EIA i,..,t rtu w1<\4 II
•• TRIAi. Ao\ARTIAI. mu.I drtw I"
TURF OEl.IGHT mull do WtlH
Lct1gshot-GllOSI IA.
SECOND llACE. I 11" ml ..... MAtd·
~" 1 & • VH • 1>4d• '"''mlno. PutY uooo. Cl•lmlno !>"le• JIO.OOO. ~
IN Br~•~ 11 C Burr) 111 8 I
G•~ll9M (A V•ltlftr~le) 112 ._,
SOOOl>ft (W Hart8d< I 111 .. I
Alco< (W 511-"<tlctrl 117 7 I
Dr"1Clnauvlll (W Bluml 111 S.I
All Securt I> A Pln..sal 111 10.1
('Ml Bltu (W Fr-nl >10'1 )6 I
FAl Fel IH Howk~) xlll 4-1
SlronomM II V•ltnzwlo) I., 16 l Co-Parl~t Ill ~II) Ill IS.I
Bl•c-16w• (J LamW<1) II? 6-I
Val'" Prl"Ct (W ~ntYI 11? 7-1
FAI IOAI '1lerp In la~t • , DllAO-
NAUQHT rvrH ... slr"4cll • • • so-
&O•A dut to< Oood -1.~-VALl.IY P'lllNCll.
TMlllO ••CE • .sv. turloncu Mt>ckft
' YH<' old llllOH Cl11mln9 Putw ~. Cl•imlno prier 110.000. L<tOUIWI P~. oef•
Hondu C~ITW' ID kall) 111 S.l
All Thal Glllle<•
1 H Hawken\Oftl •"' 7 I
"''" Gio-• ff II~) 111 10 I P~ Al• ~ IA Pl~) 111 t.I
c.,..1...:1.-1• Cll -...111 111 161
G,.,.,.._" (I A VAIM-lol Ill .. , """<IP<' ltw• CO P\fo<ciol Ill 10-1
Ma""'"'ll• (A MA ..... l 111 I ~ I
11rw 1•, SllPDH cs-·-·'' 111 >• D~~ J.,.,. 10 llo"l 111 161
1'.••'<lbO IM V•"'n•u•IAI 111 1\.1
Su,i.·, RIQhl IW llhtml Ill 1\.1
HINDU CHo11•MEI "'°''"' orlld· tt•I• • , P'IE olll.A MOOI Wlf"'d.
.,..ighl do , TWENTY WINI ,,.,.
h..O.v In '"'"' l""O~ All THU GllT'TUIS
~OURlM WA.Cf t•; "'''~" 4 VM r
"left Mwt 11~ Cl•lmtno l'V'"" UOOll
( l••m lnQ rv•t• \)()Oil 000!\ °"''
'"'"' Cl\lnll• IJI M<-,..111 1?0 .. 1 Sut•,.'' Sw1no111r (W UMmM1l 110 \.?
r•lr ~II IA PllW'd•I f)fl A'
M t l'tt"' IH H•wt.."•""I •Ill I I
llttlr R..., MM IM V•l•"'""l•I llA 11
Htw>MI II""' IW S""°m•l.,I llA 1 I
tl•~Mw 1111¥ IW M•IWW,,..YI II) 10 I
HOMEIT BOY m•v !>nit! -
'UJll'S SWINGll -NI oand wl" "'"41 COUNt CMtfrif t t a cart 'U"
...... .,., th#4;fl'
I ""'I,_ l!liANNlf t0'1'
~I FTH l oll(f ~ '1iril>"O• l Y•o• '"°'• AlkJw,."'U'• r,, • ..,. ~~ { t \I' ... °"'I\ (,,l'iurr C1t11~~ OH•
""'•1if'• ~n r ,.. • "" •
''"''" QuArt,.u fY v.-~••1or 4 t t I I
.. U•lll I t'W H-•Dn• nr '"'' H~r•,,.I f.AQ.,, ' '-'»Y. tU t\ I
"' Ill Lt '' flt r .,,....,,.. 1 u H
OeMlllt. Cf
~.~
1(1-,lf
IGttller, If
LaP-. II
Pallo. •
TOia io
* *
• • • • • a • o 1 l 1 I
0 • • 0
t o o a
' • 0 0 11 • • 1
* '°"e• Star• Connell Chevrolet defeat·
ed Anaheim's Exporters
Sunday, 2-1, in 0 range
County semi-pro baseball
action.
Deoois Jones pitched the
entire g.ame for the winners
and allowed tbe Exporters
three hit6.
_.The Connell runs came in
the first and eighth innings. seer. .. ., 1..,. .....
·"' Anehelm E.l_,.,, 100 000 __ , > a
Cannell 100 000 IOk-' • 0 ,_"
F.lrcll_., 111
J, 8roM-r. .. Wlvmor-t, ~
Canar. Jll
lollll••· c1 c;1.,.....,c
EdWards. If
Munliefle,"
l(nigftt, rl J--. II Tolth
* *
Al a M Ill
' )
' 4
7 I 0 a 1 a
t 1 I
• • 0
0 0 0
0 , 0
0 I 0 a l o
0 0 0
0 0 0
Ji 2 I I
*
P i rate• T riumph
Ward's Pirates capitalized
on 12 Harbor Baseball
School errors for a 11-0 tri-
umph Sunday in semi· pro
~eball action.
The Pi.rat.ea &tarted things
off big In the leCOlld inning
when they scored aix nms
off six Harbor errors.
Meanwhile, 1be Pirates
collected eight bits while be-
in charged with o n e error
in the field. SC....,,..,....
a H I
H..-000 000 --0 t 12
Wtrd't P'lralH 063 Oll2 00.-11 I I
w111ou, ..
Bott\. 11
,..,.. ...
BOl'IK. M
Hodlenl:lo<ry, lb
11•1'-•· cf El~. c
Lcwa. lb
Crtnt. rl
011-. cf
ll<'tun. 111
H-. P Jtnll.,.,9111, 11 ,.,..,, p
Toltls
Al ll M llll
j , J )
4 I 0 f
I 0 0 0 s 0 0 7
J • 1 0
, , I 0
l 2 1 •
J I I I
I 1 I o
l 1 0 1
3 1 0 •
I
0
)6
• 0 0
0 • 0
11 • 1 .._
1.-. cf.' 8ef1ct1. p
Mallfloff. lb
Poul, 111
Aa I
I 0
"1111 I 0
F•I,, c
TrO'(....i. ( ~.111 P-. rl
Smllll. Jll
5call' •• ...._" '-"-·" Eldw, p 1.-v.,.,
ci.n: ...
Tolt lt
, 0 , .
1 •
1 0 , 0 • l
1 , ,
t
' ' ) »
0 • • • • 0 • • • 0
• 0
I
l
0
I ,
I
1
1 • • • I
Hollypark
'Cap
By LLOYD GRIFFIN
I
0
0
0 • 0
II • • 0 • • • •
All'I hb'I CW llUIT\) 110 ).1
Hutlngs Pat11, (I Htlml xlU >I
I.al o Tnofflc (A Plned•l 117 e.1
WILO LAltlC ,.., eqel~ 111• ""1t
• • • Al.I'S aAIY ,...y c.alCll ""°m
••• HASTINGS ,.AaK ne--..,.
~.
SIXTK ll,AC•. 1 l/16 mllft °" l11rf
) .,_ old .-........ All~M. PIH'M
l&SGO. c..ntl,.le Yelin' YW Wlwt
0-A.-rr ~a. IJ Lamtit-1) 11' S.I
O~ lAw (W ~-) 120 l·J
11¥~ 8..,_ &en>lmn (0 Ple<e») IU "' IMbei'• .._ (A ,.lneda) 120 6.I
Polly Pi. (A V1ltnluelel 114 S.I
IC!ne41 ID Hell) 117 ._l
A-G.lle? 0.-CM v.1 ... tuelal II• J.1
Amalorna (W ,.,_n) JllOf J·l
A-J. S. o....,., tTa lned entry
OIURT LAW >eem$ bHI of "-
MAlll.'S KONIY won QUldr
-ll'lf ..• MllllllY MA.Oii could
gel I SMOr1.
l.onosltol-OLL Y P'lf.
HVINTH llACll. 1 1/1' m llH ,. ..
Kes & mare&. • Y""' olck •rel UP. C..,,_Uled 1llow•ncM. Pun# 110,000. -llKk Ao•'" CD Pl«ct l IU .,
Pe90y I.. (A Pl~I 114 1·1
Aqul1<1gl1 IW lllum) 114 ~'
1.oucillt Dreem (J Trullllol ~109 L-1
TMINI (0 Hell) 114 l·l
ZtlUNall IM V1len111ol1l 114 10-1
A11'1 Thtme IW Sl>oemake<) lU H
111 Smart (H Htwlll'f>!IOnl xlOt S-1
AOUILIOtA !MY M Yf! JllgM t!110t
• , , ALI'S THIME tome good enougll
••• ,.IHY L. can la9 JM ~.
Long1'tol-ITS IMAllT.
llGKTH llACf. Jiit hir!Oflgs 2 Ytoe r
Old cott1 & g.ldlno•. Howard Slt~u.
Purw l10Al00 """"' Grl>5< S?4,700
To w 1nntf' UJ,700. --MOOO. 11\lrd
'3000. '"""" nooo -ll~OM lit •I
Dlevo S.CunlY 10 H1lll 116 10-1
llrOlld si..dows (W Milhoriwvl •n 1·1
lltttl• cw llklml 1n .. ,
D"Gme•'• 80\' (A Pl~a1 1" ~I
S.nd P@l>bw (R C&m1111sl llt ~I
llu'"" lleMI co Pit rC#l 1V ...
Paint •oc-II vai.nz.,..11) llt 4.I
lloul Foh IW HtrtNllrl llt l I
Ol!lnllu cw Sllcemake<l llf 11
BOUftCI" Tcm (F Ail<trUI 116 I I
E.....,..., Or1>llAn U La"1Dr.'11 17> 1 I
OIGN IT AS ,,., closlnt tlo
BA,1'1.E mvll ,... ~·••n .. •OY
Al. l'OLS 1Pffd to lllkt II
1.ong.,,,,,.-flAl"T aoc~.
NINTH llACI •• lurlOflQ\ • • •••
old• •nd up Clalmlno. Purw MIOO,
Cl•imotlQ Dt iCI '5000. O<N,l
A·Old Badget (M V•ltnru•l•I '" .. , Coll~m H°""" IRol»r'!IOOI IOI! I~ I Spdf>O Cll•rorr IA Pl....,•1 111 1 I
ll·fllg Holld•~ 10 Holl) 113 \I
Htl~ful Hint (W H•rm•ltl Ill t~ I
Morto~ BrOlcn
(I W SM,.mtkrrl Ill q
0..-ct W•lll •II II M<lho<n•YI 111 1 I
Milt' Cltv IF AIYtrtr) 113 1 I
...,_, S.m I ll Mtntlll 111 I I
\.U(kV M#I Jr (0 P~(ll I" 4-1
Vot llUllH IJ Ltmt.nl 111 I I
11111• Nigh! I ll Cabali..rol 111 10.I
Allf eu,1b1r
\rpola It IW l4•rt1c'l 111 1().1
II All Imo I) w ~-.... YI ,,. , I
• 11•1'-Fnorcrw p """"""'k•d till • I
/. C I-Cnmt\Afll" .. tr1tl""-t1 ,.,,., .. ,
A ¥t Uptl'W' '"""""" .,ntrv
11 IG HOLIDAY r~on<0 '' """°'
r.AO• TGAGf lllOl(E• gr,n<f ''",. '" 1~•1 \tl<llY ""IPL Jft .., .....
ft11Hrl,.....
ltw>oVl"'-YAST llULLl II
CALL
6
4
2 -s
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2 -
5
6
7
8
Results
,. r
HOUSES FOR SAL i HOUSI S FOR SALi HOUSU FOlt SALi
Generel 1000 0...Nt 1000 Gener.I
$2200 DOWM
MESA DR MAR
'nle "BUY OF THE YEAR."
DOVER
SHORES
Bly & Ocean
Views
O<* to Saudi O>at PS.ua.
eMY aoceu to ~
Entrance ball to La:rp rear
Uvin& room. Three bedroom
l ~ beth& built -bl lcftchtn, tlntc>laet, c a r p e t 1 Mid
drapet-Comc>letely land-
~ and fmccd. Doubl~
prll&'e· Owner mo'fini, will Seel.,._. la Luxurloua
sacritlce for only $22,500. and Worth the Effort
AS.5UME Ex I s T I N G to lout•
tdlt In °" th1' arp 3 BR
home. Tbal'I r1&ht-Sepa-,_ .. srtvate ... .. puk.
Inc &Ne PLUS m\dl yatd
• witb ~ patio 6
ao.d9oll~,w/w
carpetinc, cc:mplete bll·lft
ldldt, puelled n11a A
more. Can be purd.wed
VA-FHA or Cbo.entional.
JfjJa,,,._ COATS ~WA~Cl
RIALTOtt.S
546 4141-
$20,300 LOAN AT fl65 MO. Overlookinl Irvine Country
INC. TA.XES & INS., Club, and near Yacht Club. Easts1de Che1p11 15 minute. to UCT. '°'*' •¥¥••> roR oNL v $15, 750. ~t 1136 Santiaqo Dr.
$1.500 or $2,IXXI Down i D d
pay the r e s t like rent. Newcy furnished model. Four
HER.E'S YOUR CHANCE bedrooaw, f o u r bathrooma, s IEDIOOMS
TO BUILD UP AN ~Ul-Din.in& room, activlt,y room. Beautiful Ocean Y~
TY. Two large Bedrooma. fully carpeted and draped. In · F~le
Used br11.•k f i r e p I a c e, 3250 *IUatt feet. A custom Cameo Shm'fS
YoungstO\l/n lritcherl w11h d e •I 111 by Howell Zook Large Ivan Weill Bit Home
eating a r e B. LOCATED $88.IXn With View Kitcben
NEAR ST. J 0 AC H I M OPEN DAIL y Formal Diniqc Room
C H ti R C H &: CATiiOUC Private Pool
SCHOOL. Al't Fast • Call 501 Mornilll'I Star Anlple Parking today! ! •• '2 $89 .soo
Eves, 640-4579
HIGH INCOME VETS
$38,000 C.R. Y.
Neer • new Meredith Pwlr
If~ 7700 IQ. It., deJwce
UYini.. t\u!tom draperies.
$SCJO down + cloalng coetl
It "yoo're In'' 1$1500 mo.
income to quality).
Newport .,
Victori•
()4(>..881 1
lane cau Mn. Pnlovicb
CUiiom Ba,ytront. s 1pacioua Eves: 673-6.116
Bdrma (luxuriou• muter ---------· .Wte). S Baths, laJ"ie Fam-
ily rm. Dining rm. Owner
una~ to occupy -WILL
SEIL AT C.OST!
Choice of 3
tine BIU"froot bomea with REAL TORS
Pier .t Slip from $82,500 to ~!!!!!!!!!1!!!!16•71.!13-4400!!!1111!!1!!!!!!!!~ Sl.95,000. !!!!!
I/I
Cllolce
..... Sites
layview Lots
,,..... $11,500 .. $33,500
X\..NT, FIHANCIN8
AVAILAI LE
0 'EN DAILY
In Newport Beach from Pa-
cific Cout Hlgb'nJ north
oo Donr Drl•e or trom
Newport m.d. eut cm 17th
St, to
SALES OFFICE:
john mac nab
Quiet cu.I~ loc:&C}on ••
~ S!i0,000 to m.ooo
homes. Comers on the
Mesa Ven:Je Golf Cou:rar.
~ of the few vacant lots
left on ~ ioll coone. Out
~ lawn owner just reduced
price $2.500• New ~
$17,500. Approx. 1/.3 At::re.
Also. we have a wide lot on
Jamaica Av~ within a
REALTY COMPANY half bloct< °' A<him@ for
FOREST IN THE CITY 881 Dover Or., SUlte 101 ~~· Eves: 54ll-8868
BIG Trees enh~e. the ap-(714) 642.8235 Bal & 1--h pearanoe of this unmacu-AGENT FOlt -
l&le 4 BEDROOM .home •. 2 MACCO RHfty Co. Hlty Inc."
elegant baltll!. Bright ldt-2407 E-Coast Highway, CdM
dlen, stunning lhr\n& room 1~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!~1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'.'!!!!!!!
and Master .uile, both with I~ Ma•1emc S.J:t
indirect lighting. L I r g e v l Repossessions Level ~ resr yard &. PATIO. Qual·
1t;y built in 1955 in EXCEL-Avail. to E veryone Executive home near Coun-
LENT condition. Color ~ Low Down Paym~t try Club. Feature four
ordinated cari>ebng and 63 large bedroom. 3 baths,
draperies. CHOICE Ea.st-JO YEAR LOANS FORMAL DINING ROOM.
aide locatioo. A FANTAS· NO POINTS • NO ESCROW mammoth 17x24 f a m i I y
TIC VALUE only S21.950. NO 2ND TD. room, and ln!onnal dnung
NO DOWN VETS. Let ua qualify YoU DO"ll· arN o• ldtcherl. An ideal
WALKER & LEE TOUR dream home may be floor plan fot· the bury exe-
2629 Harbor available anytime. cuUve or prmeesional fam·
545-9491 Open tll 9 P.M. G. D. BUCCOLA ily who do both formal and
Customized Top Area 1"""tment Co. ~"°:~ :,~~c:!,~·ar!::
Official V.A. ManagemPnt and 500 sq. ft. of patio area 24 Hour Sl'rvice
881 DovP" Drive. N.B. round out this beautiful ,6.~1 "•,6.2 plctllrt' of your dream
-~-home. $41,500. WALKER &:
$.'I0,950 is a small price in-
deed for this 3 bedroom
and tarruly room, 2 bath, :; ~~~~ea~= !•iiii,iUiillA11111:ilg10 .. Jiitfixii•
d<>OOle fireplace, bi& cov· Cloee to ~.
LEE, 2043 WestclHf Dr,
64&-ml, ~ Eves.
ered patio. Located in Pre~ Fireplace. double garage, OPPORTUNITY tige Eulllide area near extra parldng -$311,500
Newport Hl&h on a corner George WllliamlOll, Rltr. Need 2 salespeople for old
lot that 111 landacaped to 673-4350 OPEN EVES. est.abliehed office. Special
give you more pleasure and ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~11!-~I FHA & VA training pro·
ll'si1 work. Eastside Special gram. Sales a~ good. Good OPEN EVES. GI no Down • 11nd In our walkin traffic. Top com-(OleSWOrfhJ & (O. best cootonning Eaat'lide miss1on!I. Your own desk
locatioo, n e a r Westclift &: phone. Call for appoint .
Pla1.t.1. Thia home is early RltT 1860 Npt. Blvd., C.M.
<'.alif. Ranch 1tyle with 3 646-3928 Call Eves. 673-4577
M 2-1n1
Next to Snack Shop Jr.
''Wff 0 SAYS SO" lovely ~· 1ot11 o1 W E lachenmyer wood panelling, large yard • •
wilt\ accea for boat or -..,--__..--------
$'ll.500 111 au you ~ pe.y trailer. ~ pa.inted 8lld HIGH ON A HILL
for a home in Mesa Venle, has 8 lbake root. Take over Offering a view al beautiful
:\bedrooms 1% baths-Built a 5% % loan and S143-per Newport Bay. 4 Bedrooms
m1, Adu I l occupied and mooth includes TAX~. + massive Rumpus room,
sharp -$1550 includes On OnJ,y S21,99'S. WALKER & stunning beamed ceiling
paymmt . C'I0111~ costs and LEE, 2043 Westcliff Dr, Uving room. Heated and
unpounda. $167 per month 646-mt. tillered sw\Jnming po o I
covrrg a.11 -Better Hurry! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia FANTASTIC VALUE only
OPEN ~. ENCHANTMENT S37·950· Colesworthy & Co. FOR SALE WA~~a~;EE
642·7777 4 Lgr BR!, 2 bathl!. Mesa _54_5-_94_91 _ Open Iii 9 P.M.
", ; , r .,.,,... ·. -.... ~ ... , ...
·--· ---r:. • . . ; .
.. .u171
$500
UnclerFHA
Ownen ct tbl9 1llO llQ· IL
delwr.e Imme In ~
-=tion ct Mesa Verde
have puntlMell a oew
bcme end are lftJdoua to
move. lmaalne • bed-rooms. 2 nice belb, for-
m.i diWie room, 2 fam.
ily rooms. All fer $29.50)
-FHA ..,a it'a worth
$.l>.000 -It'a h buy d
the year.
Corona Casa
Traditiooal Spam.lb wilh
muaive bdmed ceiJinp.
tile noon. red tile roof
ud quarry tile patio, J
Bedrooma. den. dinklr
galleria w i t b gnceful
st.airway leading to tbe
tulftt den w i t b ocean
view and apace for tdlby
ara. For the particular
buyer ~ will ...-ed-
ate e a r l y ca1ifomia
charm wYh modem cm-
veniencea m o d e a l l y
priced at $59,!rJO -PhOoe
for BA>Ointm9't to yjew.
Corona del Mar
4 Bedroom -2~ bad!
f.amUy borne. with added
tamUy room. 2 ~.
2 petioa. Extra dfloiac
areu iD kit.dMn plul
larce &amclry ~
room. 1bln .. ftm •
a"**-ti. oc~•n view.
°"8'nrl' will ... ~
with 10'% down.
OPEN EVENINGS
646-7171
8/1
CHARMER
ON BAUOA
POINT
Cl>arming, Warm It Frlendl.y,
Swvzy HOme in ex.oellent
condition oo choice comer
location clOR lo Bay aDd
Ocean. Large living room
and dining are a. Two
bdrma a.od a Den. plua two
balhs. Secluded Patio. Ex·
reUent value at $41,SOO.
Please call Dick Tryon.
673-9200 E•es: 673-7999
Bat.~ty ~h
2025 W. Balboa Blvd., NB
Desperation s. ..
Circumstances force tak-
ing sacrilice offer oo 4 BR
& family room Pacesetter
at entrance to Mesa Verde
Country Club. 85'x162' lot-
just imagine this much
prime land in this klcatiall-
CaJI to ~ now!
Salespeop .. Needed
College Realty 54S-5880
MESA VERDE
One of the very best! 3
BR, family room. new C'Br·
peti~. drapes. Home m
irnmaculatr mndition.
Quiet stT~l just north o(
golf rourse $24,SOO.
Wells-McCard .. Rltn.
1810 Newport Blvd.. CM.
548-7729 E•ei.. 644-06&4
4 BR-Poo~23,950
Sharp Seahaven Rome,
16'x36' Anlhooy Pool with
hand s e t aggregate pe~
bled decking VA no down
or FHA tenns. Hurry!
4 BR. 2 ba. family rm. cpt.s
& drps thni~t.. blt-inl. frpl.
lge feocf'd yard w/potio.
Shown by ~·t. $30,000.
Owner. 548-6306. VPrde. Floor to celling ex-
Nl'xl 10 Snark Shop .Jr. pen~ivc alone !rplc, w/w MONEY MAKER eo11ege rwa1ty ~
l'TPIS It drpe.. aparkJing
kilch., bit-Ins. Only $24.900
-no do to Vel!! or FHA
fin;inring. Hurry!
Cost11 Meiia Tr1plex
Good Rental rPrord
Md exc tin11ncing
C11ll to see
CURT DOSH, Realtor
LIDO spacious 3 BR, beam
Cfiling Liv/rm, sep din/
rm. huge patio. Owner/
aJ:t fi73·5lfi6
I'\ I I • \\ 11111
~t \I:\ \II\\
4·BR. LGE FAMILY-RM.
l~e yard, fuU c,>ls. Elec-
kitchen. NR-BACK BAY!
~ t \ I I ' I f 1730 W. CoMt Highway $29,950. Own<'T. LJ &-0371
54().5440 642-6472 EVES. 67~3468 White ell'Pllan~! ~line 10'J3 naker. C.M.
HOUSES FOi SAi.i
TRACT
CLOSEOUT All .... .,.. •••
YA&.91
2-J IBJI08MS
$16,300 to
Sll.575
FllENCH QUM'ftll
TOWNHOUSU
NA809&W.&
.... Aft.
• COITA MBA LOCK fOI SIN ·-· ..... ,_,,_.. ~
NOW V/Jl:Alfr--Otn« wi1
a:cuMet ... ,.. ......
oils. ~ 3 BR 2
bath home Oii pt Ira
lined lltreft. rnmwnt.te
eorwt!Onn., doalile raMd -
betir1la 6replAce. all ~
im. 9SVicr pordi, w /w
~ famibt rvom Ir es-
celleat .......... c . Terms '° fit ~S)4Jocly'1 ~
~ Wfl mondl in-
dudi.ne tax.ea..
CALL !;40.L15l
VlEW of, UPPER BAY!
A HAPPY HOME
for Cbe ..... family. Ideal
ftr. plan w/lge Cormal tn
rm. Muter BR. llitcben .t
tam nn owrtoolr 1u'ge bid
filt pool.. 1mmed. oompmx:y
00 lbia vacant l Bil beauty.
No dn GI. m.ia dD FHA or
-.ime ~ w ~ rnA
bin. A*ing $31.. '150. CALL
MR. NELSON S40-l1Sl.
Heritage Real ~
./ NEWLY DF.C! 3 Br-2 Ba.
• QKs.. Orpa., $900 -dn FbA
SU.300. o..,.. 548-39'11
S BR, 3 ba + lam rm. Did>-
ondra. Nr sctioola Ir 0CC.
Corori-lot. 134,500. 54Mf7-I
1105
LARGE 4 BR. Beaal CClll£.
tion W ~ rnA 7J!l5 Velu-
co ,Laae. 546-3140
1110
e SELL OR RENT e
J BR-. 2 ba. f1frn. home. Un-
usuaJ patio, lush planting.
Clolsc lo everything. 122.950.
546-65i6 5*6l&!i
BY OWNER
4 BR, 2 ba. Cor lot. ~
drp&. Reel Buy! $25,950.
DQs ~ FM. ~2517.
1200
CUSTOM IUIL T
CONl"EMPORARY S Br -4
Ba. Family, Sittiug, Dinq
Pl~. Sundeck. 3-lev-
els. Loads • S~! Many
EXTRAS
• BACK BAY o.aJ de Sac.
• SSl.500-• Prine only.
e OWNER. * 543-2'l37
OWNER DESPERATE
J Bdnna, 2 bett. Newport
T~ h om~. Cpta,
drpa. bltns, S!rJO .nd pick-
up pymnta. 2ll:.fn.14SJ
S4S.IXXI OCEAN FRONT Cce-
tage. Top loc! ~ Sea-
~ Dr. Owner, 6'1!>157S
QUALITY~
• 4-Br. Owner MUST Sdl!
• A*1ng 146.SOO. • 646-5a6'1
F11hionable BaycrHt
A truly dchghtful borne,
tastefully dccoratrd and tn
heauliFul condition! 3 spec-
ious BR.'!. appealing f11m-
iJy room. 'l lmmaculatr
bathl. spotless kitchen!
Olannlng garden-terrat.-e!
Metlculou.' thruout. Most
MCceptional for $49,jOO
Ruth Pardoll, Realtor
lrol WP!llrliN ()r 6tZ.5200
$2fSOO
NEWPORT Hl::JGHTS
BAY VIEW
$35,950 _f$i1lS T A R G AZEEl<l'~
AlllU By cu. y Jl POLLAN ...
Cltantt than r lt>an! Ovl'r·
517.Pd bdrms . fanlasn1· drn.
D r r am modt>rn kitrnPn.
Submit no dOWTI I.I or low
dawn Fii A 540-tnO
TARBELi. 2%!i I h111)()r
* CHEAPIE *
1 AR ~,Ox127 lot N1•wprn·1
Ill~. Sl :l,500 * 1 Hit R l
lot. n~~111 MPsn s1 uoo
MAHON REA L TY
NP"oVly dr.'OratPd ~ AR ~ -1
family l;\rge bark y1mt
llllr ~·i·;0 llarbor ln. C\I
·~tr.-;l(',o F\f• •l:i l'HI
BtlSJF;ST m.irk1•lf1U1°rr in
"'"" Thr D.\n 'f P11 rrr
n11~Mfll'rl '<l·t llnlo '\ 11 \ • I m,,,,.,., 11""' " f"flrlf'f l/\O~ nr.w• •'
This older 2 Bedroom home
almo~I Bay Front. Priced
to 51'11 al LAND VALUE
J.'or mort inlormet1on•
<'1111 John Marr
Coldwell, a.lctt & Co.
1100 I . COii! HI.....,,
'"•wl>Off IHCll. (411 ... "la
'(I •·1"1 °" .. ,...
~rrG ·
"I ~ 17th SI
l'fi,.. quiC'l1rr ynu ('~
ni, qujcktt you aeU
Mo\~ 22 Your Ooily .l.ctmly C.,;de SIP'T. D
A1'P. ~ AccorJi,.g to lhe Slon . ~ oct. 21'1l
l.fO ~ff) JlA.; 2.
,...,.,. • MIG ,
"'13-27-36-A• ,, !>'l-14 77
vi.oo / ~ '(',,
I croi >
To develop me~!.094! for Tue!>doy 1. S.lG.31
reod words c0rr~1ng lo 1'11..t'Tibe,.. ~73
of your l "C!ioc btrtn sign.
I Con'1 Ir~.;
t °''"'I 'I\ ~<.I,.,~
I\ Arc,...r i. '"'Y ... ,
H [1 '"''f'I" ?~nuw~"
n v "'' I 0,,,.
1M"' 'AwJ"' IC,.,
WI r.,..,
0.,., I
(,o,d
On
~1 "li'00<.,1'
.,,lf'9'>t•
M
Ill'\/{
·~
""
. .
11 Fo•r 120ur
IJ Try ,, f()<
S Authorny
6 W 1rh l1 ,,
'~w,.,.,
19 °" <O Bu1
'I (),
•1 I" •)No<
fl( 6U\1~
•'.> R•ly
'6Som< 410t~ •8 Hondf.,,
49 9":lr• •
50 f •none iol
')I Sugonttans
510r ')) l;.,.Yp«lod
~To
,5 '" .. ~ ,.,,.,.,.
1(.l1~lu'
~ <;. '""' ?qy-..
•10!
HOUSU FOi SALi
......C... 12U ...
lest '"' 1967 ~ "A" frame SJ&,900
CAYWOOD REALTY
13111 w. ()Jut Hwy. 548-~
,.
* S36r500 * Qmdmlpanary 3 BR. 2 Ba,
Qr. l o t. Nr-Wstdiff
Plaza.
1D CORNWALL LANE
m-B. (#' 6*1113
1242
IACHELOR PAD
REAL GROOVY
Best location • Blutfa Ang~
Uta. 2 BR. .uperb decor!
Malt ~ tbla! 644-0772
1250
Executhe Livint
OCEAN VIEW -Qistom 4
Br, J ba and Skyroom. Lge
.undec:k tor outside living.
330 Poppy • $67 ,5(1)
o.ner -6'5-0'lSl
Lido Is.. 1351
A SECOND HOME
SHARP l Bdrm, 2 baU..
new cptl. tbruout. new ~
good financing • ~r will
•<X."ePC llDltll euh $43,500.
R. C. GREER, Ree Llor
3(16 v.. um OR 3-9300
EXCEPTIONAL linancing
45' LOT * $47,SOO FUrniabf!od 2 b e d r o o m w,
Sunny! Den, Fittplace.
~
Huntinrton leech 1400
Y1e1nl-Sol Visl1
Tra~red owner had to
leave bia beautlfuJ 4 BR
home. OJstom drapes &
carpets throughout. AM/
FM intercom. air <:Ondl·
tioned It many more cua·
tom features. His loa -
your pin. See tbia today.
Paul Jones Realty
84'1·lllli6 Eve. 673-1!12
LOOKING FOR
A NEEDLE?
No haystack here but hon-
est value in -4 specious BfU.
Large stone r~. petio
Ir elec:tric kitdlen, with
dlmlble llhUte roof. Will
ael1 at VA or FHA Lenna.
FUl1 price S77 .900. •
PACIFIC SHORES
REALTY .
141-2511 Eves. 962.t275
* $llm dn. 3 BR, hctwd.
Amume 5%% int. $21,,SOO. * SPECIAL -$18,100 3
BR -hdwd, hi>lc, patio.
GI or FHA.
Pat Robertson Rlty.
147-8553 * 193-4152
-Outside Needs Pliat-
lnside real sharp w /w car-
peta Ir dra~ 3 BR corner
lot nur shopping S20,950.
HIJl'T)' on this ooe !
Ra L. Hodtes Rt1lty
147.2525 ---SACRIFIO. • LOT
Jt.5 Olrner-Great potential .
reducrd from $18.500 10
$13.M
BRENNAN REALTY
847-9658 EvH 51lhl.""'4
OWNER TRANSFER.RED
• GLEN MAR -4 Br-~ BR.
• WW-<i>t.g thruoul. ~wr
• Vic; Adams/Magnolia
• $24.<n>. 0wnt'r 536-8716
4 BR. 2 Pullman BA, tor-
m•I dln. nn, bit-ms ind
dishwasher. many ~~11'1\I.
WalJdng di.s1M4'e to !!Cbonl
It Douglas. $23.800. 897-0114
fl!IOO DOWN includes clntl-
lng. 5 8', 21i; be. bl~ ntow
cpta, newly dee. Xlnt cood .
pymnta $257. incl t~. It
Ina. OWJW'r. 96'2-2594
IMMAC J BR 1'w~. Fully
mamt PoolJi It "'°'"" · N f"W -rpta, cfrpe, •II •ppl +
wt r conct. It fi ,?Q S6:lS dn
962-2242
1-·~·!U FOi ,....,. ____ _
' . I ·-...... ....------. )tOME with
~UtOGel
I .. other. A l
:BR. crpta/d.11 zxcn. TE1Uo1
•ibm. ·-· _a. D. Slatt
• •• lfr·J H\lil L .. 1c
•·BR 2'9 bath.
·2:2xm patio, .. , lmle plaJ bl
• lfti.al f.H.•
·~.
I • I BRASHEAR.
sn&U 11
··------·~BR -2% I
i 0.,.. Plt.n11
.J\'P. Xlnt
: -OWNF.R
Out., Coun
w.tMINtw
Bi Oner st ~ tcie bk J .,.... °"" ~
.. iDcldl ta:
~Wpm_
I . Ana Hgh.
iJl $4'40 Y rly Ir
M Iii &e· roe
Reduced $39.~
1ffE .
GRAY J
"1lbt Aila't WI
To Be'' m D ..-f S BR I
Olll1 s rn '°
-DD. . ....... ~
Prime Oceen
. 4 Delux FUra
urt ta. Lot 6QI(]
pe:rldq. $1Sl,1
By Owner
HILLTOP/PAN!
/Bargain! 3 bl
,.Frpkl, Decl
'.$33.500 * °" NEW Beacbfi,
maida room. s
$89,000 *
Condomlnlun
2 BR., elm, 2 b
e:xter. Dble. i1
Beaut. alli>·
Frplc., alriwx
laie" plan C;
equity & as
673-1400 83.1-lU
APARTMEN.
FOR SALE
15 AP'lS. ' Nee4e •••
574 Bamilton, •
AENTALS
HouMIFu
. l ido ....
.
.
'•
: AU~LABO
Ommbll ArU
.StepMlub! Hi
Muter wile. s.aa. SllXXI· '
senta Ana
It. SMALL HO'I
utilltiet paid. · trance. Oa1e
·Senta Afta.
Month. JE 1-81
L-aguna Beac
'Ir SUMMER .
•• % blk. to Vk
Tlew! Owner .
\#acetlon Rer
FREE VJ.CAT
• trade our Man
High Sierra c
· weeka ID your
port home.
Aue. 18th. 213 . * qALBQA e XI.NT SUDlll e· Avali Nowl
'or Yearly • OWNER. ..
2' BR Modern
'(m Colondo
by day, weel
w ntact Dixie~
.. o:NTALS
. Houeee Ur
.:.. ..... 1
: .· LOOKIN
A IEN
look DO fm1h4
a little more t
A: lut moritt
can OWN tlrll
home, built-In
peting, t.am1l1
l.f $165 mo.
thl.nc. Don't bl!
"'( for detail1. All
s BRa 3 battw
, pol!Mleeaion. N.:
Siu\ta AM 0:
S.120 mo.
Wella-McC a1
1810 Newport
54~7'129 E
'Costa MeM
CLEAN! ATI1
.be. Lovely 11
'Mesa Verde
July 1. $225·m
NEWLY decor•
betM, rhldrn
1~ SlSO Av1
54IWl3:l8 alt s
I BR. Gar & ye
downtown CM.
rplr prrr. $75 .
. . . . . .. ,,. ... ' ' ' ' '
~usu llOI ~ .. UNTALS -11NTAU UNTAU ..... mun
a ii
MolldcJ, Junt 26, 1~7 OAILY PILOT ~I
sllVICE DIAIC1'01Y JOIS & IMPLOYMINT
* Ga,.,..ftl 6'IO Help Wanted, Men 7200 , _____ _.... ________ _ H .... """'"9hhN ...... U""""'9hN ...... Ustfsr I+,, ............. 1400 -------
COit• Mlle SIOO a.-.1 5000 a.ma., IMll!.~!!...!t!!IS~lt~~ * * * *
UKI NIW
IOME with INCOME
lve In one lide -rent
ie other. A 3 BR • a 2 R. Cl1)tafdrpa • blt-bla. 2 BR wltb IN't.P 185. Pri· "'CEL ,...,__.., or QI no VJte fence4 patio, dllpoW, ~ ·~ water pd. Im luta Ana
"'1lo ,fJi,990. Jwe. '511-0ISIO
R. D,-SI.._ a..lty NEW ROME! 3 ~2 Ba.
8r1 •3519 Dream ldtdlm, Panel'd
lifuge Lot/Cul....C llvin&·rm. ~ C\lS.
SR 2" ti.th, llballt NOf.. Drp1. + ~den, bdi5 pt.do, llcSe yard with MWSM ~
r'P pla1 bal.lle. GI Qo CQUJOOE P1r _.3 '8R -$125
wlMl ~.eoo. 0 " De t Meaa Verde 7 • BR • $175. ~ REAi.Tr 5'>mT * 5'$.GS ·.am Eves. 919-11'18 s BR., 2 .,.., ~ back Jard
fend, $150 mo. lOil WUaoll
~11
OCCUPANCY
COME OI OVER
TO .111 HAIBOI
llEl6His SIDE
New 2 Ir 3 n 2 be Apa.
3117 Cinnamon
Reotal )Ip". llrw. OlristenRD
Stl>-lOM 8T1:3233
-----~ ~=
VIEW ol tJPfD BAT!
2-&. Qlllil, ~ ....
Pool! SIJHm.' cai.-
Unfun 10WJiiU&;
Beau E/mdr., J .. 1~ ...
2310 Santa Aa. ~
11-m·• tt .. c.i ............ ..............
•Ollila ...
•Niil~ • Q a OQ. ~
c.rw ......... , .,,., ..
MISTAllml& r=
0
•
7
....
APAJmilDl'IB 7 2 7 2 1 · ....._ .......
Spedecds V'-~ .z c.4 · • -.
Waterfrallt/1.c • ... o...r ~ .. .a 8 -
Slipl AYllllllllt T ..... ., ~np
1BR-286,..._. LEASE -• aJY • I ........
.Unta1n Valley 14~0 =Al Dt!lli' 2 Bl\ houae flftlJ Ulll I
BR • 2% BAfEleo.bltl)a. bit • m., qita, drJ». $115 a a IR.Ul ~ ~ ~ ~:: mo. 1139 1tallace An. APARTMENTS 7 $315 llG. ... 7 --.. ................
p rrz I . .._.
.. 4e n n p--................. ~ OWNER * 9G-8687 3 BR. Co D d o. Cpm, drpa, 10122 s.nta Ana A•e. bltns, n10 Yd.1 JM, can a BR ~. edulta mb'
Jt of County l605 owner aft 4. 56-2962 Call tar u a.ppt ____ ...._ ___ NR. Westdtfl, ~ 3 BR., M344J
'ftlAC I BR, 3 k home In 1p. yd .. $150 mo. 142-~
!llDet. Suiblble for banes. 64Z.J5G ,.~ -· IC CJI' moft, ~ ...._ •• ~
$80 2 80RMS * Nesr --------
_Mtun_a.t.r ___ l6-12 am: .;.-;s--allace ~ HARBOR
-~ -------· .
5100
2525 ca-...... oms
613-1'181 -.. filll'6er ..,. ....... tnim,-.
-----ftr a c s .. LUJIDD1 ?~
--. t:Jl .. i::ll ~ Od us --.-......... Gl&la .............. .... q,, p i s a ......... -
7
, ..... ,.. ill •
._......_• ... a. wl.5&1&•s,....
,... -... .._.. ..... ~ -.... ....,__ mJGB •.lllblll tis2-.... ,...-au... ------•Mii»! ............... -. .....,.. .. GREENS=--=.._~ a...... .. ~.~.:..~
~ ~ mn:z.-JD.HD! Sm&.
......__ $100 .. 900 Sea Lae. Olll. ma. .. Qila ...... Prinlr -·--J -..... HVlll <Mdrilmr •· 0..8-t a 2 9mr RICE! .._ -BA.aD:l..()R, FURN • Ola lit...._ 111811 --.,. I ..... Ill em.
UNFURN ..-A I I a.dl; (U~lncluded) .... ~-·~ .... -2 ......... c...ea ... ,__ ........ $4440 Yrly Income. 3 H9es ------1
' ..__ -. lld mil ~ m..a .._
! i,t ac. room for mOfe. Newpert leach 3200 1 Is 2 BR Fum/UnfUrn 0,-'Dllr -. m-. _... 11 Fr Cllmll!r ••~'-!I'
educed $39.SOO· 548·'1249 e LOVELY 3-Br. DEN. 3 BR UNFURNISHED lO A.M. to 7 P.Jl.. ._ --..-,. Will
e' ~ DrPI Bltna. $2'15 Heab!d Poola Odld Care FUm. I: UDfunL SI» .. a.. 6• 'llUIJE ._. 'ID's • l!lm:la .,... ~ 1705 • M2-uSo . 1131 Ellis Apt c .... 2 a.a.. -Qd •• 0 • POOL! * Center, Adj. to Sbopplng -Tl2l Ela .. D .... l aa.. WWWWGU_llFADI a a .,. J.
TRE CU> t"lm ~ ... W~. at Ho-1'ill !JUI ._ c -·· 2 &.L • • &I ---a.a .._ __ Gail llARS' Newport ....... St20 ... Adlma, Oolt:a .... 1 wt ..... ... .... • pa a 7 • n 7 ... ...... .... .. .. ..
1be ~·t Wbst She Uled NJWIEAQ11 S ""2 Ba. 1-MMnO Ilda a.. ...... ......-. -.. ... Ck -= ._-. _... ..
I Be' an4 ...... la Uail "A" 2 ...., moclml. <Jab etle. ~ ....... .-. .. M g -....W 0 ............ Alie ~JS~ v!!--'oaM-~ 6 .... pU:l. -tG-31511 IM..mA1E . • Dllli aa: ....... ---.... 51181 ----...... __ ... ... -,,_ ... ..._ -oc,-i1pa.ucy ~ QilS .... llr _____ _,;;__ __ _ ~ Blty. et.am •Udo .... USI . ~-"" I ~ Au • ... "' M::ns •••••
, >-a a 2 ... .)111111. ..... S ...... 1 • f' , -.,. e e e e e CZ Yl!TA ·lme OcMnfront Prop. .CLEAN I: SBARP! 3 Br, 2 The fflrltor ffetghls Mara g a 1, 1111 r.· " wa ygrrr ...__. ., wmL 'lltlm ._. e • •
Delux FUrn 2 BR, 2 ti. ba· Near beach. IOUth patio. H.B. Pvt a. 1 a JI • ..._. .a:;.... ~ • • • • UJaL APIS.
MOBILE HOME
8-yside v~
TrW for boost.
C'all: Dee Canby
"4-156' or 646-7414
EUROPEAN GARDENER e LANDSCAPING e
VERY reu! 5'M337 evea.
Mowing and edging onJ:y
Newport Beach M"ea
60-2733
Haull!?.f 6730
HAUlJNG SlO LOAD
WIU take uaeable lte.ms ln
trad~ for terYke. 642-0920.
CLEANUP lot.I, pnp, etc.
~ upbalt. concrete,
ivy. Grade topaoll. 962r8745
6731
CCMPLE'l;E Hoose. Apt I&
Yacht Cleaning. Al.SO:
Summer Rentals. We have
experience & references.
<Estimatu.) Call 642-1400
6755 W11>! New CJaeT Caprice or lronint <:mnaro.Allextru! fOR1--..;:;_---~~
dear 1101t • Slltoa RMera, QJARGE BY HOUR OR
$«D ..,_ mltt. NEAR piece. Call betwn 8: 30 am
a.uBBOUSE * mans and· 2 pm. 642-3198
* 14' SKI BOAT * Landsaplni 6110 75 HP outhoud motor.1---.;..._..::;.... ___ _
Never ill 1 a It nter. Do you want an instant
Tr.-b-car ar pick-up lawn!
trDck. Call George
m.3835 642.2733
l'RADE '61 SAILBOAT O:>mplete Landscape Service
SIDlal ~ !>HP Out· Special m Sprinklen &:
board. Seawortb)'! Mkt Repair. Reas. 546-5176
value-$1500. FOR equiY ~ =======:;;::;::;:;. ~ ~~M Muonry, Brick 6130
• TRADE e Bncll e Block e 8tohe
1" HOIRSEP'R OU'l'B'RD Slate e Auten e V-.r
.. ... .. Al. !WANE. Ml·TllO
,_.. J H.P.~
_ __ 8B31b ____ ~ ...
s CABIN ow.er. 1962 Painting I._...,., ~ruiae 14 __ ,.,;;.... ____ _ 6150
tita. Lot &Ox160' • 10 car Lease $275. m.al17 1•1...111 w nts Gadleld, cm .... m.-... ... a9l!r ' p..-09llBa * 5SerJ5
nidna. $1&0,000 VUV OI I ~ MO. Util ... tW1m s-'* ai111 9IML TA ,-......_. I mod umta O:Jnun1 Gu/ y Owner 714: 5'1.2337 HuntlntrfOn IMch 3400 ...., OR EXTERIOR
lmota. Will take llD&ll PAINTING. Specialize in 2
boet ar car in trade plu& story Trim work, Over hue
cub. IQ.ml Ir Facia tJoerd. Free esti-
mates. 64&-2558 "Lett'
VUt Y DI Bac:Mcr Aft. :DflA n s a ........ar IA,_ ..... ? ? ••a. a.me. Grott sa.ooo equtt:.Y, loan INTERJ ..LTOP/PANORAMx: ~BEACH! ~y OI t.onAve.RBOllB9~ .._ ....... •CUB! ~-•/6a. na; _,,.. t.I. $22,500. Will U.tm to Fut&: neat. 1 BR Apt,
largainl 3 br • ~ ba. Den. 4-BR + Rumpus f001J1 $215. omce. D'l·l'l'a. a..55318 CAIL m LA J.flilS ~-. .,.,._. ....._ 11>'1, lud or cub. Art complete $119. 812-28118
rrp3 C/11\k:a •• ~ J>r1nc.<lnly• 4M-7W cpta!Drpe/Bltns. 536-1144 New 2 le-3 BR 2 Ba Apts. 2 BDRM ktNl -W. ... w - -ftW.. _., Giovinettl, PAINTING, Inter ' Exter
.-. Rental Mgr. Mrs. Qirlstemer bltDI, pool. di*' ._ ~ p & Dlillllt GleP-111-681.________ '13-'1GO, 61:>91J'1 Hnt clau work, reuoo-
EW Beachfrmt 3 bltba, Condominium 3950 3117 Clnn.n10n 1!1154 Sidclllt UL c.cm "11 ._. ,.. w ... 1: TRADE '63 c:Jaeoy. SS cm· able. Local refs. Kl-1358. :.: roam..~= 3 BDRM Townboulle with re-~lOM 871~ 1, 2 A: 3 BR'L lAIW ftlll! 5 fOll!I. I 5 'S 7 SI[,. ~· B 5 f 11117 wn. Full pwr., AM/FM, INTER ar Ext. PAINTING
fril., washer, dryer, 2 pooll 19132 Bllaticbl A-.e. Aft. B ~·4!!:,!!', .,,_. ~ ~=-,_ ~"' ~~: foraJlt.GOODtomevwau..·, Low ~D: ~~~1entocal ndom.lnlum 1950 I: playpoond. Brookhurst ~I Vl!llftftMf * ICT4'G2 * a.-:11 -8l'.llP. -• -.. -. ,.._,
neiar Adami. Oole to ocmD y HRUVl"I 1•2 BR (ar ... , AP1S. ... --.._ ' ~ 5i4IA8 60-35119 !Na. PAINTING A: Decoratir
IR., ckD, 2 bath&. SpeJah $150 mo. Call 5tWT16 1 Mi • BEACll/JIO PEIS. • -'* ..._ * . * * * * * Interior or Extttior. Reu. :ter. Dble. gar. 1 Yr-old. · e Splldoua 3 Br'a • 2 Ba a lilE1lllPIE-5511a Refs, 8!K.30
!&Ut. C&ll>· I: drapes: Dupl .... Unfum. 3975 •Swim Pool • Put/p-een • ' C L & E, .. !!!!!Jl!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!m!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ========
,,ic. auiwn. '"!be VU-e Fl1i · Indiv/lndJ7 fac'ls Hunfla4'• leedt sm -·-/ ._.. _. a-.U•DI• IENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumblnt 6890 ie"
1
plan C; or. UC!. Sell 2 • BR DUPLEX/BLTNS •Adults I: Family areas ~ .... f!llliitF ill ... MHICB ~a_.... .. h_....,_ ..... , ~ty & a.asume Joan. Cloeed aarate. Older ~ JM5 Anaheim Ave., C.M. Dll.UX 2 BR-~ *I' ,,.,..,.,., •"""' .,. ..... -.-~--
Summer Employment
"" COLLF.GE MEN
"" HIGH SCHOOL GRADS .,,, TEACHERS
No exper. nec .... ry
Al.SO
Perm Poaltlona Avalt
Large lnt'I Company
EXPANDING TO
ORANGE COUNTY
Will be hiring~ men fuU
Ir part ~ this Wffk.
CALL FOR
PERSONAL INTERVIEW * 537-2381 *
Teletype
Operator
Prefer recent U •
perlence. Must be
able to work any
ahift.
Collins
Radio Co.
19700 Jambor• Road
Newport a..ch
13~
Al applicants reviewe4 cm
merit with DO blU towanf
ltaaP, Oii«, Qeed or a..
Stock Clerk
Experienced v.uk-
ing with electro-
mechanical p a r t •
preferTed .
MRS. LA FON
VARIAN
DATA MACHltlS
('Formerly Didalon
<l>ntrol, Inc.)
1590 Monrovi1
Newport Beach
.. ·1400 _,, 1189 Eves.· pie pref. $U5 mo. 548-9937 646-579 ...,_. patio, bHM. StJ2.. Ii• e ~ .._ • Leif '411 c:.,...e. ... 6590 tan afford? Sel'vice calls
.,.. ,_,... J1K:U k I 11: ..... 9llllilJ...
1
onlJ $8! Heating and
••RT-MENTS RE~.!_ALSFum•,1...-..1 M1.w .., e "' lllr .._. ....._._ LC& -a. wlll _.._. NO ~OB TOO SM.ALL. All IPriDk1er systems tmtalled. --------
F"'oR s•LE 1980 "'•"-,_ $99 ILL-t:r • ~ ...._ ~ ....._ 11111r. v1r., a.c ~Add. remodel. pa-ean Ed 842-3410.
An equal opponunity
employe-r
"' Sant• Ana -............. Jm tills. Rnwonable. 9624371 _;__ ______ c..h Meu 4100 2 nice bedrooms, upm.jn. ~·---.... t -J ..... _... ........... SAV-ON General Plumbing.
15 APIS. sia.a.22 1% betht. ~ts. drapes. THE e ........ .-.-... e.m (H JD.Oii JULE ..... li9B' ...... c •• I''· Conca••• 6600 R,euooab\e. R.eHable work. Neec!a 1&!0.000 cub. $25 Wk. Private patio, Garage. DellddfDl ~ ¥ 119 • ~ al a & 4IN .a. JG.. 5*'31191 e &C..(638
't Bamlllon, CM.~ • Studio It .Ba.ch apts. WAU.ACt...AD,_ VILLAS ~ 'Wll'N a'-' ..... •IS• I• ... -'~ am~ CIXENT work. all~ No e Incl Utila-.t: Phone i«v. 2061D---W-.u.ce Ave .. C.M. SUI~ It Baib + ~ Wmt fWIUCML ~ mll& ,,.. i -.., tlDc. j"ll> lloo llDall. Fee estlm. Sewi~ 6960 :NTA.LS ~-t..a TV all. ("'•_. -·th j Hamil~on St.) .-.i-Ill ...... a H. 811J1t.ICK 11:.H! -~
HouMI Furnished • ...-.. Service • av r-le• ..... duo vm-=-~ hmf'• .. 'lkicA&a • a... Dt .._.._..., Specialty Services
.J_ Isle .... 51 ~~~~~:iv~~ f'lll8 ... a ••--.• I: beth dwwwtair&. ,.._. .._OU: 1 E ... ....._ mml. .:Chi::::.:'ld.:...;:C.~re:_ __ _:6'::..:.IO:l-,...and--Al:-tera~li-ona_._646_·21_m_ llV ~ entry, ExbdlldJ • ... ~ ..... 8dy C8t.
ALL UTIL PD. * STUDIO ~ 2 It 3 Br. 1~ be. not Panel'd Liil .. 1'111 ....,.... ~ .. .... ... PW:allldlel Dr., ·RB. CJm.D CARE/MY HOME. Tiie, Linoleum
AUG-LABOR • DAY. furn, Lawn, Trees. Adult. ~ Drpa, 2 pools. ~ ii*> • fl'W* : Q' L -· r 2 ..... ._.......... s dQs. wk. BROOKHtiRsr & Marble 6975
iarmJnc Artlltlc H 0 me. •mo. * 2335 ELDEN Nr sbopl'& It 9dlls. patio prden. .. m ' c llil& ..._ -.. ..__ Is ADAMS/BB. * 962-22721---------.,aub' Huce upstairs ntOM $89.SC area w/~-cU-._. l•all ....._ ... ftr ..._ * Vane, tbe 'nle Man * uter wtte. 2-br dlnailtn. NASSAU Palms. 1 I: 2 Br, Mnsr'· 221' Co1J,qe apt #2 to a 2D4 ~ u.;. ...,_ _.,,,. y _ a......_ ~ -cu.t. wort. Inst.all &: re-
BL Slim· Call "'14li6 furn A: unf. Sllfi • Sl40· Htd $110 ~· newer 2 l: Err ldtcbm ill 8lllllla -... IVAK"IJ ~ ConlracMn 6620 pain. No job too 11nall.
pool. l'Tl E 22nd St. 642-3M5 den. 2 full S., bltnro, etc. All elecl't · illd '' . _.. .. .-,..r-= JUIWI! . PIMter ~tcb. Lee.kin&
nta Ana 2610 $615 MO. J'Um Bachelor Apt. Area for lddl-Ottwl for nu Bau bame ii ..., PtiJWD &WiUE ~ OilllrS --...is UJOJ lbower repaired. 847-1.ZT. ~------UtU incl. 2526 Elden Apt C quiet adult.a. corwement to . -cond' u.. ~ GmlOOP ...-.. ...._ etc. a..+ua• ... , , •• , .
SMALL Houee, in """· Inq: ~Elden Apt B 3 FRWYS, falJu1oos So/ air • IW'*Ci'-am_.... _, ll6rn wl.--.,. ltaom ......,,,_ • • • • • ·JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Wttes paid. Prlnte en-$95n2 Br DUPLEX. Garaie. Cout Plaza. OnJ.y 2 left! = :'9 ..!a:,_.. w.urr .._.. __., alL ..,....._ ..••• • • .1----------
imce. Cloee to downtown Patio. 1 child OK. No pets. For best value ~7311. 2U3 E. CATM.•A a.. Olllll -. .._ W M PJL Fram J. Kclteab Job Wanted, Men 7000
lllta AM. (South) $75' Wettside. 543-l135 3 BR 2% be, bit-ins, gar-(tr 17th It 'hlllm ll&l ,.._ .... .._ DO,_ _. ~ llr ~ Uc. Bid&-Cantradar CHRISTIAN man, 34 need& onth. JE 7.ea. I 541.0llT aw .._ '-' 'Im APOLU> SU: ..ua, ~
PRODUCTION
CONTROl
MANAGER
Excellent opportunf •
ty foe' 111 expert in
~ and COO·
trollinc consumer
goods production •
Send ttllUDe or ap:
Pb' In perlClll.
U.S. DIVERS CO.
3323 W. Warner Ave.
S.nta An•, C•llf.
An euqal opportunity
employeT
bage dilpoul," "carpet.a, _,,_ -m • J ....&..nz-'ID -....r Im aie U ~1'4C...... . •eady job. Willlng to learn. gu ... n--ch 2705 Newport leach 4200 c:b'at;>es, FA heat. 2 story. --. -,._,.,. Oil Write Box P O Daily BECRON ~·;.;,;:,.-;::;.-~.;,,._---$150 mo. 9MA El Cami.Do R•t.11 w....-... mil .... ~ 1" • ~a.i.-..--. Pilot
SUMMER· 4 BR, 2 BA, DELUXE New Waterfrult. Ait· 642-4422. ._ill Olm~ ...,_ m .. -e WE WILL --------NEW FACTORY
• blk. to Victoria, great Wk or mo during .July l: l021EfC•mlnoDriva ~ ~~ .. ::t. IGGtl. UBE_... _.. wida BUJU> m ~~u:.~=-BRANCH
iew! Owner · • · 49'-2215 IMt 3 wka of Sept. Pn1*r 3 BR 2 ba, w/w cpta DRY OE.UllllC iClllEr Oma 61 ......._ ~ 9e R---...-_ NOW HIRING
• float. SI.pa 3. 6TM643 or walk in closets. Adults, ~ Duplex (ldlmll ~ ~ JIOll' ID.I.! * .DUE 'IO • 'f1WEii ~ • -=-• • 545-!llm • Company will hire 40 men
1eatlon ltent1l1 2900 (213) CR~ pet& 54IM1l54 or 646-69'l2 20Ctl. Write n.., ...._, ILl.JIES. * ._ ..,... ._. * 5iS-D5.l CUSTOM MILLING Job W•nted, Lady 7020 to st.art worlt immediately.
BLK to Ocean I: Bay Ex· 39126 stJNDAlE mL -._. AU Gllr UIJCIW EYES <n;TA MESA LUMBER T , _ _.._ d . EE VACATION: WE'IL -·'o:lfe 2 BR furn Apt Ww KIDS, pets w~me, -~•-BR, FREMONT, CALIF. ~a......__&...---. ........ ~ • .--..:... -..-., No Db PJmt. Ill "9m GRADUATE ot O.C.C. (Art op luuLWg pay unng .... ___ ,.th Lake11 ........ ..._ w/stove, re.frig. w.... to .......-.. ....._, --'-~· ~ • .._ k
1
_1_ training pmod and rapid
ade our .............. ' cpts, dflll. Sorry. no chlu.ru. mo Own I Agt GOING ON VAC.U'EIM! ~ ~ WtDJ I 5981 ca. ft 9 p .II. Mdlticn • Remodelin8: Major) t • n ' mo. uaui advanoonent to qualified
lgh Sierra chalet tor 1-2 $145 YRLY . .Dys, 673-9351. ltoret mo. er Fam.Dy w/2 cMlra ...... i ned H. ~ • Uc. cl.awl, deai.rs afternoon men. MUil ~ over lS
eek.I in your Balboa, Nl!'IV· Eve, 67S-4688. "1>4535 "' like to rent e.e. ar .,,._,_ :-.:: ..._ ~ m.a>n * 549-n70 work from 12:00 noon on, ye&r3 old, resident of
>rt boule. July nn-to YRLY • 2 BDRM. * Over 2 BR. Frplc, pr, cpts, drpf., 1-2 DJOI. from JtQ .._ Mlllmf .. .._ 6m JI ....._ NEW CONSTR. • A.dditicne during the summer, prefet--Onnre O>unty minimum
!Je. 18th. 21U97.e690 praae1. Adulta * no-Newly pelnted Is dee. ~ References. ~ . Bemodeline _ Uc. Qmtr. ably general otfioe or clerk-one year, and will1D& to ~ 13ALBOA ISLAND* 29th St * 675-4958 Broadway. 9 am -lpm. DtiPERAm Nee4 PD111! WE ape&A ...... ~ * ALOIWE! lllllt -.se DON HAWE 642-1246 ing. 675-1345. ae1:ept all overtime durinc Rentals 2 BR built . ... ... .-0 ... se C99--...._ 0.-. 0..C, Boar ---------1 XI.NT SUmmer · • . -m oven at range, for •tone"e ap flD 19 -. , -~ _. ..._ Jl9 -I Ila Ti.. REMODEL * ADDmON GEN'L OFFICE WORK the next three montba.
Avaii Nowt Alllo: ~inter Corona del ~r 4250 carpeted, $85 mo. 548-9393 Hti Bda « Seal 8da. cal ~ =.., ., ,._ ~ CONcr.ETE T. Erickson MY HOME. Typing, Com-start at $2.35 per hour.
or Yearly reaervatiOOS· Mabon Realty. 213: 4J4.0Dl, • _. Olm ..... W\llCE WCTO.Y Lie-Omtr Dy/Eve 642-4438 plete Advertisl.ng Service -ALSO-
f'NER.. * 673-1503 LOVELY 1 ·Bit APT CLEAN! QUIET! l·BR. 40-JSH Cple· WANT 1~ Br ..:. S.. • 6505 Emmds, Delivery. FAST! Several temporary unn
BR Modern furn Trailer over Garage. * Bltna etc. $79.50. Enclosed garage. Apt. HOUie ar Gamit W ~ -Am ...... C..,... Clunlng 6625 Call 64&-4871, ext-7118. mtt jobg available for col-
1 Colorado River. Rent Sl.50-mo lea(ie. (2l3) 355-4445 References * ~ _ for JUl..%6: AOC. CJ..M15 _, W p • 68 A WMt Senica PRArnCAL NURGE leoge students.
1 day week or month. DARLING 1 Bdrm Fum NICE CO~ i.Br. ,,__ WALL TO WALL CARPET with REFERENCES. CALL 534-0529 mtact 'Dixie: 673-6497 Apt. $350 mo or $100 wk. Trii>lex. G·~~-:-N~ pets. R~ a...t "'5 WAii!' • .......-1159 • .._...,, ... • • Ckafling. ~ DISCOUNT! CALL ~15 ____ MA_l_L ____ ,
:NTALS S42.J&t5 773-A Scott Pl. 6f6.l037 3 BLKS tio bMdal MUI_.. ......... ...._ ..._. TAI • U 1-8623 • PRACTICAL nww; Dr's Dtrect Mail Supervillcr to
Houaea Unfurnished snJDIO I No C<JOkfng $65. $8(). 2 BDR. w/w crptg, bit· vice. on rv. Ill w1r ._ -. ilJ..iaJ ~ • ,_..... refa., Wanll live-in. Buch handle Penorinel It mat
1 blk-Hwy. Resp, •ale only. ins, refflg avail, playyd. 5r1 421 8th St.~-oo-+ Bela. ~ .iE-X ... >I ..._ s..-. , C.rpet Uying & area (213) 941-4393. in 8Cheduling Dinlct Mail
lfferll ) 3000 4114-1270 ar "94-7'795. Joann St. 6U-O!l63 ROOM I n a.ea ._ .._ ..-.-~ CALL • ._.. Repair 6626 CLEANING • Romes and program of ~ Pbar-
-SEP. Bachelor. Refn,., no 2 BR Untum home $1.'1· * 5Salll aaw ll:ft CARPET la;yin&. Reuon-Apartmeota. 542-28!16 ma.cevtieal Company. M\llt ~OOKING FOR $71dtctlenO • ~~ foraft~Sman. WW cpt.; drapes, and ffter 5 p.m. • • P @4 Jlllml'U.U I I; • s 6550 able, Repairs, JWtretchina, nAYWORK. Beach area be good at detaila I: tollow A RENT AL 7 mo. vo......,;.• pm Heated pool! * S43-0j22 ~ Eatimatea. 527..(I034 :;u,9863 • All kinda through, be abie to wUt
further' For )ult 1 BR. Comp! tum. Sli-4. ==t; REAL ESTATE 1lnlllS llABiiilliNC Fl • hrt in warehouse, take tawa,
ok no th · the first July 8 • July 15. $100. General ..._ ,_, ~ ar 1 dQI 6637 Domestic Help 7035 tories. Experlenced lD Di-llttle more an 675-2062 aft 6:30. Newport Beach 5200 Eaille _ FBt:u _ ,,._. .._ Wllmm II a t.atioli m:t Mail or related fteJd
l&st moothl rent you .-.._ .. __._. _ __.,.,.. _.. --,.,., -..-.-~ PRODUCTS DESIGN '""""•OSA 00.............,C L..:J,.A,1 5a1,...., ...._.. ~·, •BR 2 bath Income ..,.,, 11 ft --.,,.........._ ..... ,.... ·~--™ .. ~.i ,..,..,..... --1 -..-. ..
IJ) OWN w.w.. Huntington hach 4400 .... ~ ""' --... SHIT .. .,.. PROOUC'MON DRAWING EMPLOYMENT AGENCY APPLY MORNINGS ONLY.
ime, ,built-Im. w/w c~ /') / * ~. U. * Wt ....,.;. .._. · I: DRAFTING 642~ Live in &: Live out boua-
!tlng, tamilf room· On· rro 1 BR Apt .,,;., cpta Larib~ Recent ,.., · • ll)t a : ~ ~ • ':'· = -.: ;.,:: : keepers 408 N. Main St. rm ALLERGAN
$165 mo~ pays nery· drpl. Pl & wa 1Jd. 913 ' SIL wata to _._. 811i1 11..ACK C OCKER nn 111ft tm ..-. Aw. Riii's Ge.-llint 6'IO 30t Santa Ana 543-!MX>3 PHARMACEUTICALS inJ. Don't hesitate -call Palm Ave., HB * 5.16-1297 Deluxe Apts. tylish 4 p)es. Owr 199 llm S. GRAND AVE. r det.allt. Agt. 54&-4141 W/Prl ... •-'t Sli-. a • --'-· _. ,.._...,. nii ~ .._ EXPERIENCED JAPAN-LIVE INS L a Belch 4705 ... -,..-MnUBl gro11. r.11a1 ~ -*8 'A: Qr.. ~ ... FAnployer nAvtr fees SANTA AN.A •gun 2 A 3 BR - 2 Ba Onl 10% d to tsa n>. -. --llAlllSIJJINC ... ..., -~ GARDENER Compl. ,.-...v BRa 3 batfll, immediate Y 11 .-.... SA.. AMRJ lll't' J1.,r ..._ Rrll. NB prdmins lmlice. Free George Byland Agency "" COOK lll8elllllm. N.E. CM near ON the Qcean. Gorgeous Crom S250 010· Y'S· SACK '1tillw _. ..._ -. o.. ..-. Af1w '-atiJD&tes. * 54()..1332 l~B E. 16th s.A. 547~
LDta AnB O>ontry Oub. view It beach. 2 bf" tum, •• CDARAPRPETSES !"!!.eye In~.!.!!"*' 4 ... ,_-\"'.-: 0.-. m.31 EXPER JAPA.N!SF. GardeJ>. CHINESE I: British Live·ina ~ .. rou~..__ ~. clean, sleep!' 5 +. St&!: wit ,,.,.,,_, _._ f'WS ~~-.a p _,. ""'~ WI....., 20 mo. e SOUND PROOF )A lllirA:ll. ~ ReliBPiPr a.,litltt. er. Complete yard Service. --..,.,.~ ... ~ • ermanent Ex Uent ~ty' tell1-McCardle Rltrt. til July 30th. 494-T37&. • HTD SWIM POOi,. SELL ~ lSE(BY OWJlfmt. WllnE Sllltla:r ---15r -..... ........ Frft estimates. * 548--~ Mayflower Agency. 673-5630 ce ~\In per'I' •
10 Newport Blvd .. C.M. $000 " e INDOOR PARKING : a:~~~ ...._ • ' ' rr Ma& _,..__ -._, : 3801 ~cl:it~~&J -·TT29!t!!!!!!!!!Ev!es~. !64~4-0684!!! _Ge_n_e_r..Jai..._______ 310 Ferllllndo, Bal. Penn R..t ZONED OJlfJ'i"S.. -... D!IJ .. ;E ..,aittEI 15c an =-: .~. •a!,u;:: ttelp Wanted, Men 7200, ~del Mar
:: 100 (on the Bay-2 bl from Fmy) Ad.'· -o.cc ... ~ SltN& G"PM• 9ll!PBElb> ........ Awilllllir ..,. mn.. New lawns ...... M2-79.l9 BOYS 10n14 --BO~Y~S-1 __ 0 ___ 1_4 __ ,
... Meal 1100 roa LEASE Phil &dllvan IUtr ~ •• ...... "---Yir: --EXP J&pllllae G«l"lkner CORONA DEL MAR. La.lune heh. So. Lqum
EAN! ATl'RAC! 3 ~ /')A._w Cl\. Luxury 2 BR '1 UNrJ'S NEW ......... ~ c. n • "" llalntmiwa. Rell&. Ra• Taldn1 appllcatiolla Good routes!. Good prolltar
N Lli J-Jr. A W Rff ltldw.triaJ siP fl2.S9 ~ ._. n du lllr s 1 OeaD-QP. ~ for tuture carrten DAIL y PILOT
1. Lovely lf! yard! ::i pt.-estc WEBB B.F+LTY ten.... ff am GJam CAIU*ENIEll ·New or aid. EXPER JAP~ DAILY PILOT e 60-4321 e ~\v:::mo~~ ~ LAGUNA 81ACH 2~ bethw, private pado, Su· · ar...tm a wtil ._. ._ 1 u ...._ tac.r 25 LA"ffiSCAPE • • M2..mi • BOYS 10. 14
Lwcury Fu.rn/Unlum Ml bfitb. swtmmlnr pool, THE SUN . NEVER ~ • OS. Jls ~ --~ JD. e+aitsa· ~ Maintenance. Made --0132 GENERAL MGRS R Good routes! e Good prolttl M'L Y decoTated! 3 BR, 2 Bach('lor • 1 .t 2 BR 1rarqt>. RdultJ oruy, S225 Claaifled a action ...-er-. . eapm.
tbs, rhldrn ovl't 12 O~. Mo. lnCfUIN' 1519 C'.ornell For an ad to tell ..,_. Leif '91 JUlPAIRS * ALTlllAnONS .JAPANESE GARDENER 11bl~. mature, must be 1.ble BALBOA PENINSULA
K> $150. Avail July bl Oc~~~e~ ~~ !::'r:.pt. t.an!>, Npl Bctl. &&2•3360 the clock. dw 6G-SQI. CA8l!CEIS. /wt/ an job. EXPER I Reliable m&int. to handle people. Apply •t DAILY PILOT
~ alt f> pm. Leaae from $'1!0 nm. -----·----1rs YOUR AD IN ~ rot .._., ~ ft: D,., ~-S4f.GU R.Na! Mo-ntN-lln-:mt 900 W. 17th, CM at 10 •·m e 842-4321 •
IR. Gar & yd. 2 blk from Month to Mo. A\rall.Able OlAL direct M1-56Tl O>a.~ FIEO? 8omeont will . Ille ..... .-.S Vk.. ~A * l'IRl'l'--UTE ~ e JAP~ GARDENING WTD Ex'per Ml!CNnlc SERV. Station Help. Exper ..
iwntown CM. Ret. lady or 100 CLJIT OR. C!W-2449 your ad. then lit beet and lookb-4t for ft. OW 60Jilnl Al9a.. CJI ~ ~ ..,. .. ._ _ ,.,.n · b/ina. SERVICE • CLEANUP • Rambler Salet Ir Serv~ full lfm~ days or n~htJ.
If' pfff, $75. LI S-3143 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!P ll8t.en to th& phone ring! tor quick, dJldmt ftllllla. ~ • ..,L_ r..-.. Rna. '41-BJ. LANDSCAPING .• Sll-7034 __ 4.l_O_M_a_in_s_1_. _HB ___ "m __ 1_N_f'_w..;.po_r_t _R_I _. _c_M_._
I .. ..
. . ' . . . . " . . . . ..... . .. .._ . . . .
" %! OAJLY PILOT Monctay, June 26, 1967
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS ' EMPLOYMENT JOtsS I EMPLOYMENT M>aS & EMPt.OYMENI ... & •PUrYllllBl'nma • ~ ..s & IMP\.cmmn' MERCHANDISE Fe*'
7400
._. .. w......._ 1-W-. 7m U ull ksliwt._ 7-SAU AND TltADf• .•
w.~ 7• s..ift1 Machines IJ'21D
COLLINS
RADIO COMPANY
Offen Immediate Openinp
MACHI.NE SHOP
Beginning Level Jobs
Mu1t hive high achool education. Pr•
fer experience or h1vt 1ptltude ind in·
tereat in metal trecs..
WILL WORK IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:
• Drill Press
• Vertical MillinCJ Machi_ge
• Sheet Metal Power Brakes
• Mechanical Assembly -
riv~ting & StakinCJ
Operations
•Second operators lay
work.
\. COLLINS
RADIO COMPANY
3324 W. Warner Ave.
Santa Ana
833-0600, Ext. 280
All applicants reviewed on merit with no
bias toward Race, Color, Creed or Sex.
ORAF"J'SMAN
DESIGNER
Electro-Mechanic1I
Dana Laboratories hu a
job opportunity for a man
experienced in mechanical
design ror Electronic in-
strument packa~. To
qualify applicant s b o u I d
have at least 7 years of
progregsively ~b\e
assignments in Electro·
Mechanical design prefer-
ably in comme.-cial pn>-
doct development.
CALL 833-1234
or
VISIT
DANA
Laboratories, Inc.
2401 C1mpua Dr.
Irvine, C11if.
lnear Orange Co. Airport)
An equal opportunity
employer
Machinists
Immediate <>Pening11
for qualWed machiJl.
isls to work on millll.
lathes a n d other
~ machinea.
Ttlonic i1 1 grow·
Ing tltctronic1 firm
located in L-vun1
B.lch In 1 ntw f1.
cility. Opportunity
for 1dv1ncement.
C11l Personnel Dept.
(714) 494-9401
IlLONIC
ENGINEERING CO.
P.O. BOX 2n
LAGUNA BEACH
An equal opportunity
employer
Auto Mech1nic
lmpe>rted car expenence.
Contact Bob ThomP110n
Marquis Motors
900 South Coasl llwy.
Laguna Beach 494-7503
SCREENED
PBX Ret.'t'C>Uon!Jt NB S2SO
Recpt, 1 yr bnk ~x NB open
Teller, I yr bank exp S32S
Ad Model. yourc ID $40/dy
Mgl' Trne, selling exv open
f.ID ~y. bad< ofc ex oi>en
Secretary. CM • • .. .. S400
Lepl St!cy. exp .. • .. . $450
Ofc Tme SH It type BP C40
Credit Oled<er . • . • • . $300
BY APPOINTMENT
642· 7484 546-641.lO
Screened Personnel Agency
901 Dover Dr., Newporl Brh.
P SECRETARY $400
Brillian! posslbililic~ ii
bright gal t·an tight up an
ofri ce. shine in skills.
CALI. Marge 642-7424
Unique Placement Agency
1827 Westdilf Dr , N.B.
General Office
$411
Front oltlre. well groomrd,
hghl typinJZ. no SI I.
Coronet A9ency
1202 E. Washington Pl.
1Grand It SA frwyl
Santa Ana :>41-41TI
JUX:'EPTIONISr S346
Dream job for wide awake
gal to meet publl< meer·
fully. Do some twuig.
CALL Donna 642.7424
Unique Placement Aizency
Electronic
Assen,blers •
EXPERIENClD
1 $T & 2ND SHIFTS
To work tn the _.., ol
printed clrcu.11 board ...
aembly le 9(11dering, eteo.
troolc d1Auia &S154.'IJ'lbW
and wiring. taper pin
wir,lng. MOii be able IO
Identify electronic cam-
ponenla and knOW eJeo.
tronic color t.'Ode.
MRS. LA FON
VARIAN
DATA MACHE
Formerly Decidon
Control, Inc.
1590 MONROVIA
NEWPORT BEACH
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
~~,;es~;i;;·· ;3~6 ASSEMBLERS
FM Paid
Type 60. ww 10 key adding
mamme & caltiilalor.
AIKI F~ Pos11iom
Coronet A9ency
l20'l E. Washington Pl,
!Grand & S·A· Frwy)
Sant.a Ana 541-4m
For basir electro • me-
chamcal assembly. Appli.
cant~ must have a &ood
work record. cau.tonUa
driver's license and be
able to Pa..sa a strict ~
sical f'lWllinatian.
SFX:Y JUD>T to $425 Startin& ra~ aC N la
Get a life oot al ret11n& '1~ 116 bow'.
In oo sround floor. Elevate
your aigtitz to "dp top" Apply in pera1 ~
job!
CALL M~e 642-7424
Unique Placemen1 Agency
UW Westcliff Dr., N B,
Unique
Placement Agtncy
• Fast placement
• Top Salaries
• Many Itt & free jobs
HUGHES
500 Superior Ave.
Newport Buch, C.lff.
Eq1.aJ opporutnity Employer-
M Ir F
•Personal & Confldenbal --------
1827 Westcliff Drive
Newport Beach 642-7424
GfRL rnIDA Y lo $2 hr
ll™"s your "dm !Ode"
manner? Gen. ok:. duties,
A/P & AI R. Great boas!
Beach an.>a.
CALL Donna W-7424
Unique Placement Agency
1827 Westcliff Or., N.B.
Steno9rapher $433
60 Wpm. SH 100
Coronet A9ency
120'l E. Washington Pl.
!Grand & SA IN'Yl
Santa Ana ~Hl71
• >I • ' STENO S«lO
Happiness ., a good }Ob'
A grl'el company. a glad
groop, a glowing fl:rure.
Go get it•
CALL Marg<> 642·742'1
Unique Placemenl Agenry
1827 Westrlifr Dr.. N.B.
SCREBf ED
EXPERIENCED
COMMERCIAL
TELLER
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
3029 Harber IMi.
Costa Mesa
546-2033
An l'QUal opport\IDlt:J
employer
Apphcanl.s considemi
on ment rc-;a.rdl~ or
rac-t. rehgjous creed.
rotor. natiolla.I origin or
ancestry.
FOREMAN
Or Leadman Lo aupel"W
approXJmately 2S girls ror
serruconduclor manulact ur·
f'r. MUlt have experience
in dtret'I supervi.&aoo in
el!'Ctromcs. p re t e r " h I y
CarHr Opportunities i;cmiconductor field. Della
All Levels Semiconductors, Ioc.. 225
642·7484 546-WlO Paularlno. Cost a Mesa.
Screent1t PersoMel Agency ~4160. An equal opponu-
901 Dover Dr-. Newport Bch. nrty employ«>r. =======:::: PROF'ES.SIONAL HOUSE-
Help Wint9d, KEEPER. Tak. charge of
Secretary
Te
Mwerfisi"' ......
Would hke bw:qi-OCmill
.. ~rtisial • ,..__ tw.s AgeDQ, bat will
.....,. girl ~ f!ICd.
)mt lllills. Salary ClllD-
ID!lll9W'ale with b;pdi-
e.ee.
Colli~·)'
ladio Co. .
19700J_...._ .... ............
8334600
All apph1.-anta reviewed
an m«>nl with DD biM
..,.,~ Raer. O:llar,
~or Sn.
()ppor11.1'1il.Y f o r .,..._
caot witb front oGicr •
pearance and good ~
inc skills. Previoae ...
pn>otSSifte a:periad
delirablf«
C11if. fe4erll
Snilgs ' I.Ill
2700 ....... ....... c....-.
M ...a IOU • '3
sPuu
SECIOAIY
To Sales Mmu11
Expe1 iencecl ~
able. ~ lbor1ll&nd
and typq *ilia.
~ 22 to ~ l'te.-r
aipply in penaa.
U.S. Divers Co.
3323 W. Wimer Awe.
Santi Ana, Calif.
An rqu.aJ opportmity
em~
COOi
Relief and vacabOD
hep needed in &t~
ary kitchen and em-
p 1 o 1 e e cafne.ria.
~ cootact
Mra.. Kuuna
lW-tminster
Community .........
19).11.$4 t, Ext. 332
MAlllE WCl4All
Wanted for pbaDe won at
1oc:a1 ol6oe. Full or part
time. Good psy. Call Mr.
ADdenoo, l!IUtll, Wesl·
miolter or Mr. Weld.
646-7904, COllfa Mesa,
W 7400 Children, Cooking Ir House. SALES CARRIER BOYS __ o_m_e_n _____ Only thole l!e('king a Good Fast grawini ~ will
REPRESENTATIVES GOOD ROUTES Earn Vae1tion $$$s Home. Nice tamilY. oo a train. Sales esperifnce. E&-
Leadtng independent special· AV ~BLE All oftll'e skill.s needed pr rm anent bu is. need a~ ~~ ~ peooplr.
llSIS dealing in C'JV!'r 100 HUNTINGTON BEAOi Regtsler nO'o'· with ~~Y.."". •..., $22:>-month. CALL 642_7424 mutual funds, cxpandmg in DAILY PILOT W G• I .,.., ~
Orange County. This is an e 6424321 e estern Ir F1LE • M " OR --TE.liPORA___,R,....Y.,,.--
d 1-,o• '\' l.1'ncoln. Anahe1n1 "' An .. clcrlc 7 opportunity to enter •itni· ========= "" • -3 o _,, _ .. _ OFF1CE JOBS 2700 Harbor. Costa Mesa ay!I w"'"" U•NO:T 55. hed professional selling full °'4-n <'3r. rar allowance. O;ie tnp lo apply. thell on
or part rimr lnvestmenl A~ncies, Women 7300 HJIO N. Mam, Sama Ana work on mast: 00 aeUing. 10 work. TOP PAY! NO
e'(p not n~ssary, we tram. Equal opportunily ___ ('fTl_Pl_o~_r1 F'leX1ble hrI.. It days. Givf' n .. "& latr.rviewilaJ 9:31).3:30
547-6621. ;\tutual F'und In· Employer Paid FH w AITRESS phone: wnlP p o. BoK m. TRUEMAN GIRL
vestors lnc. ~'100 N. Main. Secretary Hawthomr. C.alil. Phonr 547..J9!16
Santa Ana. Laizuna Beach Areti Prrmanenl, ~ood trps, -------1;.,r.:. & 171.b St., Santa Ana
I f . Full or P8.r1 Time. BAR MAIDS & .•• CITY OF' f'OUNTAJN VAL-Love y n fires. Xlnt work-GO-GO DANCERS
ndi SH 80 f:xl>('1"1t'nccd only. • • • LEY -Bulldtnit lnsp<'Clor. mg ro tJoos. . type Surf & Sirloin e $.100-WF.EI< SALARY. S63R-7fl.l. High School mid. 60. Over 21
Expeneni·r ii." Bld1t. In· Also Fee Positioni Rest1ur1nt e TIIE llUMDINGER.
sJ>('c or :i yr~ lolimryman Newport 5930 Pac. Cst. Hwy. • 638·5483 or 827-2340 Bring mm costume
lrade ex(M'nr11('r. Apply br· Newport Beach WANTED--:~rvic'f' st:ition Apply in penPOn &II 4 p.m.
ror" 715167. CITY HALL, Personnel Agency --SEC.·BOOKEF.P~ Alle11<1an1 . Experience. Fat Fanny'1
10200 Sla ter Avrnue. 642-3870 For onl' girl offtcr . Some mamPCI r1rrfrrrPd. Good 166.l."i Coast Hwy. Sunset Bcb
962·2'124. 833 Dover Or., N.B. lmowledgp of boJ1IS rlesir-hrs. sala ry • 1•nmmissinn.
FULi .. Or part llmr. oVM' llblf'. Apply. Superior Shell Serv-
111. Little John'~ Pi1.ln WILLA!lO BOAT WORKS ll'f' 14!6 SuJX"rtOr Avr . i'.B.
165:!2 Brach Blvd .. Ht Brll Htlp W1nted, Men 7200 I295 Baker SI., Cos1;1 Me1>11 MAIDS ft Summer & Win-
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii••------1111 _~5.i2'.! IPr. Apply in ,:M'rson to
MACHINISTS
Experienced
• Tool Makers
•Lathe Operators
NURSE/ DR's OFFICE "HS!'kpr." * flCYrEL l.A·
in Nrwport Bea1•h. full time. CUNA.
I SAT·AM's included Non 42:l S. Olast llwy Lili:una
smokrr. Xln1 salary & op. -c;feterii Help
~C:-:. with reasonable hours. Part llmr. l().2 p.m.
.,..., 511911 t'Vf'~. & wkends:..... Mond;iy thru t"riday
Hostess & W1itreu \all ll1.1-IWiOO. rxl 2roli
MANNING'S e <;1RL oVf:RZ:,. r.f;N.
See Manager • 2 tn 4 P\I ERAI. On 'JCE lB-2 in fai·-
240.31 EL TORO ROAD lnry near l'o\:th Coast Plaza
LAGUNA lllLL.<; Pholl!' Kl :,.7lOI
AYOI (•Hill
I Ram how )'OIJ can be l!Ul'-
c·esslul in a buainela. al
\oor own-We Crain )'OIJ.
c all ooU«t 5JG-5llli).
Dml'AL Sec'y H.ecl?pC.
~-Single. 2$-40.
X-Ra)s Ir boob 54b DJll
~STRUCTOR. attractiw
w .. man for maff...up m.
strucfion. will train l93-$TI
BEAUTY Operiior. Guar +
romm. HAJR HUT a l2od
~t. NB or ca.II .i73-1.95&
• Mill Operators
SALF~5LAOY forrxr~~ •. .°RTllOOONTTr°As.c;'T-
i womrn's wrar shop Sal I r;\114'f' Jlr!'f Nnt l'('(J111rm Jot. ;\\en, Wom, 7500
rnm o·e . s I C on~1rlr1 1ra111mi: _ Qul!'k
I m ""I" r~.rnC1i,,..' flN1 h'lll ty l ntrlh~rnt l?trl I.I R-.17:17 n: .. llO PIJllJAI
• Grinder Operators
Cont1ct Per1onnel Department
CADILLAC GAGE-
WEST COAST
1866 Whittier Av•nue
Costa Mesa
i ........ A•"•e•q•u••'.~.~ ..
6.~2.u4•"~.•y•l•em .. pl•o•ye•r ......
f,
Shop. ~a .1 r, .. :i~ wy., -__ _ r• • '"
Corona til'I Mar MANIC'llRIST -p11rt llmr.
WAITRESS. rxrcr C1111n1rr ~RY w1•1•k. Cnnrr~~a II~ Ir
Work. :!· :\0 In 9 p.m. rl~rd ~ Hllh1~n7~· 1~10 Rayi;1dr nr
Sun Apply In fM-r1.on ' .B 11 .i-3.'U!:i
HAMFll'nG1';H 111-.NrtY llSFJ<PRIP::irtr1rn1>~-I
21:\li r>larrnti11 <'M hrq rlaily for F1tlht'r & ~n.
--SECRETARY--Nwpt-Bcach. ·v111.,11~1
Over :ti. lntCTC11llng work -OPERATORS EXPE~
Shnrlhand rr<1 C'11ll 1.;irmrnt Mil: Tnp Pay l:\M
M1~o; J!nynl'S e 4'11 0711 Monrmia/NR • f>12.2fi61i
l.ADY TO ('ARI" tor e e e llOUSEKEEPER. l d-;y& wk
I childr!'n fl rlnvll w1·rk. 111 1 hn darly Rrr~ r•·
I \2:1 wrrk R 11'1 10 :i :\0 !)U111'fl fl?'\ l~IAA
(}Jd Fa1 m arr11 !lflR.t;,tlS COOJ\'S llrlrirr for ~
SllA~Jl•r)() c;iru-, -rr~• homr 111 Tu,lin 10
01 " "r> "" '" ~~~ ~n ~.lll '"' ~flJll ~n..UI~ ~.X I I.fl -;AJr~hch for JI"\'
._ t•"@ nAn \' rn_JlT ••I r\ ,rn1 r 1tl ('ntel11 \Jr"'
f'l9'~111Nt f>,.nn W1 11111
fh·!'r 71. f>ertlrmable. Non·
l n1on. Yor belier Dinntt·
h<lllM'. Call
OR.3-2930 After 1 pm
Sil~""-Cook-
MANNING'S
'.!4031 EL TORO ROAD
LAGUNA HILl5
.\pply beiwttn 2 • 3 PM
-COu..EGE STUDENT-
~ l'\'1' ... subject in Ptlydn-
lni;w~ R~ $4-50 fM
,; hours. • <'1111 m'5ffi
1n AM "' 12 or 1 In 3 PM
MON lhnl nu
-APT:-MANAGER-
'"wpnrt Bcti 4l>4-l1611
•
Acea I 2 c..
Sil.IOI
Degree. ~---...,.. tronics ;;;; ...
J ,.
.Acc1 s St.a. 9
Decree. ,_ )'e9'I f!K•
peti&te.
.Acc1 n 21 C2J St.a.
a1111ic ..
bt:'11•
1os10.-
0egree. Good bd-
IJ"OUlld m Iha llllOdy-
Offo::A:.-• ": ...,. • .,...m.
A.T.I. • ..._.. ftt"
laNJL e .._ .-. D ........... ~
--~ Or-. a..t.,.....
a..i.. Dllldd a • 'Pa: 'Ok.. nm,...._._.
Ollila ...
~ z.a. m
..... OltDla
W...-1:
Null
LATE MODEL Siapr _...
laC DIAd1IDt In modml ....
ad aimole. No attadlmmU
• "'. to zig.rag, malle bot-
...... OWftUt. clana.
...,. etc. s year pllr1a
,.....,.. f'ftle ftl'lily, w.
uce ..., $39.50 caa·•
tenm ., $5 ptt llMlllda. l'or
free home clelnomtntim,
... 521M&l&.
Muakal lmt . 1125
namicr. flllid ... ...... a and ,..ptiaw ... IU&~Nni;;;;;;;-"'.a:=-~=:
Ii.fable.
.. I 1 I
A:11 I
19 $611
Ground floor Cllpplr-
tanity.
S111i• f•i • .,
$14.000
Superrile e 1: e •pt
PM yean indllltria1
engineeri-c esperi-
ence.
Wz11W
&Ji 11n
$1.500
R e c en l p-actmtn
with fecbnical cfeo'ee.
Artilt
Ad i11i11iu?iN
Alli• s
Not just a sr.cu:l'A-
RY. Jror pn!:lidmt of
many nrioua eat.er·
prises. Salary opes..
h8CilliM s.cr .... ,
to $550
Poised and sharp! To
age 30 with marbting
and sales~
Grow with dynamic:
young people.
Forsamedynapiic
company (as abaft).
Must lype IO. .,...,
$550
To top marketing elec-
tronics executm with-
in a large firm.
Secnf•t
$450
P e r a o n n e 1 back-
ground. Attllta Rb-cemble.
Clertl
S43J
Al leut one years U ·
perientt in man~
luring. Familiar with
government billing. (1
pla~ hour boa -
he's great!)
WI&
TRAINING IN w.., St:~,
W" 6tAaon .. 11·' .. ... r..w:-. .......
I• •t S.,pln "-r ....
PLAY GIRL. INC.
1'21 E.. 17 St ••
Suil.IC. s..t.Alta
Cal 136 4059
Wwt&12 .... ea1y
LOOK AHEAD
,.. y_. Nin
Nt!w a • .hilly :1n1
., JBlif ~
, AdnnYldm
./ IBM Pragnmmiac
., 14'1 ' -., Stu da.riti-Typr
./ PBX RlecEpticwisf
M.T .J. Sdmols an. THE
~a:floolliDOr
ace ~_..led'°
traia by d.lr a.mr ....
_...by IBK 0.,..
TRAIN NOW PAY LATER
DA!' OR EVE.. ~
M.T.I.
UKE NEW! FURN.
~ -.k:h'c re.frig ' treezier
o.t -/Sdl $3SO. Antique
.... girts bdrm ~
s./Sdl $311-Diltlawd I
-.-D.iDing room at 3-pc
T•uillaR
1111 llW
Color TV's
Or Stereos
$6 MO.
Ho Oepolit • Free Serva
ALL RENT .•.
. · . cu apply ID purduue.
Rent from the BIG ONE Cal-· ... 521-7555
w 'p.m.
.... ,,,_,, ._ & ...
'IYa,WAI-,
U&l"AIW
FEZllS-11111$-IUE ,._.-. .... ,.,
illd Hlllc:MDI $CiO Sell ~~~=--~~~~ sm.. ~ -.Jgll Sec1 m.
2Pr ....... odrm ae1 $25. s-a ._ no. Mile home-
.... ilam! 541-llS
UNUSUAL OU: °"'-'r.
llatr .. F..iidmd 1904. f15.
Modml ~ $50. MT.QH
COUOI. dU. tables. ~
~
'1>3llJ5 A.NYmlE
JffiC9 c' b" ... I011
l-111 PUOl'O IUChine/Cmt sm.. Sell $15. Lmlht:r Sec'y
chair ~ Offiee sidiH:hain n .so. ti.dwr me cabinet s:a S4J.21m
....... aid Go.ls I020
A1mQUf1 Oddities. CJrim.
ta1 ,,.., a 1o rme. Mbrc:
fwuitwY ~
::::::=::::;::=:::::::;:;:=====:::::=
Rent a NEW
COLOR TV or STEREo
$10 MONTH .
Ope. Jo buy. Free inlblr.
color llDtema. Free Service.
Free del No obli tiooi sb.365T
OR 532-llSl
COLORLAND 'IV-Open 7. dya
UHF'-VKF' P/B 19" Por1-
TV. Like new~ S79.50 or
OFFER! 541'r5ffi4 aft 3 • pm
ea...,. a Equip aoo
Ger ... Sale 1022 MOVIE Camtta. New Bel
---------Howd.1 200EE. 16 mm w/
P'IUGIDAIRE 6 stove, apt.
Jibe; 1V, vac. dNner. aala
' 00.,. '"Goodies." 719 w.
..... Apt. 8-4
• 5o4l-3l9I •
GARAGE Fall d Ilea mark-
et Melm. Waktut A S.
Broedwt\1. S..A. 1..i Tues
Wed' 11lan..
1100
leather case. Make offur.
m.-0818
NEW llS Polaroid UDd
Camera. Cost Sl.25/ Sidi
$E. K.enmott Wuher liQ,
O:*bpot f.efng S1S. CAJ..l,:
~1670 after 6-PM.
WORJ<BENOi 36" wide/10'
long built from 2" planks.
POLLY PRIEST IENT ~~ Odds " ends!
BUS1Nf.XS <DU.EC.£ TV'• -R.dric -W a a II er• ---------"-~ .art f'Wl"Y l>rJ'lft . ~Op-CRAFTSMAN Tabk> AM'.
.....,.. ct.y or ~ tim to lll!y.,.,,.. Sfnb. orig. cOISt sal. will aell S'1J).
PQ lar )'Om' boob .... • Helldenoa's also radio dil"e('tion findrr.
..... ~--fd. ftl!ll -~--------llT. Hartlar. c w. 54UlS5 oety § per -S far ~ EARLY ·American Twttd
Por thoR who wish l '.arilll tnillills-CARPETING. ~en;ihle
to belt.er their poG-• 54H'12J • ~ 1110 Malae rifer. 3.16-3J93
lion in olMr fields ..... w.. St-,11., BASSET ~ • ARC Oiarn-
1-.,· _.,..sry f .. le PlON ~OC'k. Tri colors & not listed here. direct Well paid prafelllion. mm -.. , • .Ml rl'd Ir whit<' • mttles Ir fe-
and 1IOlllll!IL Toala and wip ma.lell, 54.'i-2083 resume to:
PLEASE CALL F0tt
APflOfNTMENT
-.pHrd. Day/'L.,.e ~ AT ----SJ4..5371 Ger ... Sale 'nc.J UPHOLSTERING .. $19-50. ?
C........... •~ Salr -Old Gum pc. <European craftsmen)
Sd..a ef W''P ~ • Botties -Ona Free est. del. pickup, 7J.5
f1c. Ma.in, HB ''Bmly" ~
EDOCATrolfAL mtlan .. ..,_,., .._...._,,., PRO~ o -~ 4dl V-.. ... r. -r .-.....>I NAL F'rencb ch. -.. ~ .,_,__ 11' & 17th SI Co&ta Mesa Ropletle Whet-I. $60.
<lailoo9I CBll &42-:m.l aft r, pm
ScN 17l i: :::-,.,,.. s..n... M.chines 1120 CUSTOM dnt~ ~ -;;~
U J.21159 t~ ...,_ TlfORNC\ RN"Ord ~ 95" loniz ttOO. f1utr Sl:ZS.
hrltn IPrll"-> •IFain'tuld C'JU1ndj,?('. Al -llidfo"IW'd Sl:ltl. 646-91U
VOtCE QAc;s&e; ~111 tn ...._"-~mp w/ _ ....._ • . wittt-... dirary lor cabinet. ti,,ath Kit WSM N~" ~andf-T
..._. a. dud! ~ amplrf~ ~lit! f"ind It wilb a want ad•
MERCHANDISE
S~J..I AND TR
M11e11ll•neo.n
J.~. d ... 1-.. .W4' :-
·SVERY FRIDA\
~ queUty fun
-co tblt blcbtst
• Arce Furnl1
.. IC4'lil
... Ml w. 19tb '°"* ... , Qll
.. ;:o& TM
•.• ia;w-a us
1"7 .. UNS1
$275 VALi
.·; ~ tt()W ~
~ lG04'll FINAN(
• SICARD~
3D s. Mam, Oranc =• AUCnc
• (J ,... wUI tell
.,.. W1ndy •
~~ .Wendy's Auc:ti
2015'$ Newpclt
8ebiDd Tuey'• B1i
tfedlaics Toole,
Oatt!tl. Electric
Ab' Oompnaors.
LOTS 01' MUC. -
• · $.S.S. Hot
. lJDiD Cbarte. C.M . 545-3111 or
KJNG Siie bed.
• ~ eecb. ioclude
• )&aD•a 10 epeed dt
"2-3424
I MOVING l
./HOUSEHOLD
. I REAS! * s
NEW 9' SURFBO
9 cu-ft REFRIG
cl.Iner chair SlO.
"""W1nted
PmERATE! Ne
-~qpt
HI& ti. Seal
213; OMD91
MM:hlnery, fk
a.ARK • 3,000 ~
tent condition S8
639-2691 or 897 -2
FREE TO
ADORABLE. awe
• grey It white ·
• housebroken • 1
homes PLEASE.
Newport 962-2709
CALI<¥) kitten. 7
healthy, beauUful
to kind adult h
536-40.17
GOOD Home tor 1
old female part c
el children. 2031
vie~ Apt. B. S.A
CUTE kiltml, Ho
64&-5273
CUTE black kitte
Kl 5Z104
G IV\ VEL Rocle
"""e. Newport
\·.BROWN Rabbit
A: ·white. Full UC
'{ecy bealihy. 541
WilMARANER
~lllome p~ cont ;¥-f178
~dirt -to
"haul, 646-3339· 6:
St. C.M.
M)pRABLE KltlE
wtit. 2 mos old
ho~. 642·9.186.
TWO kittens. gray
Mother cat. 536-
. 3 Female K
• 646-8555 afti
2 KITTENS 10 I' 642-nn ucirr yellow par
brtng cage. ~
DACHSHUND T m
S4&-38l6
~ BLACK SIAM E
548-1026
P ATOI ol baby b
SJS.2946
PETS & LIVES'
Oop
·· RARE PULi
Excellent Ole.m
Background • A
• (713) 626-!>
BASSET Pups -A !!Ion Stock. Tri cc
Ir white • males
St.S-D:J
:POODLES/'nny 'I
AKC. Adults fo
lease. Stud-ser. !
Z AOORABLE t
poodles. 1 year.
-.tllte. 962·2688.
HAPPIN~ is
Pup. All shots,
love. Dial 11 l 49:
OOCKER-POO. g.
SHOTS/FEMALE
• Call 1147.
* QUALIT"
GOLDEN RETR
842-3516
t.REAT Dane. bl:
Meir. Make offer
6'5-3935 ANY'
*FRENCH PC
AKC •
' CALL 646-4
8l1ck POOOL I
3 mo, AKC, ahol
Hones
QUARTER H
Yl'arlinlor.'. f'ilht',
T()f1 lllood ltnr
11ho\I. ~ pr rf onrn
IJlffl'r C'All ;~!16
... "" . \ f
~. Jww 26, 1967 DAILY PILOT ~3
CHANDISE FOR 'ETS & LIVISTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION n.AHSPO«TATION TRANSPOlt'TATION TaANSPC>lltTATl TRAMSPOltT T N ntANSPORTATIOh
: AND TRADE Honea IUO Seltboata 9010 Trudc1 9500 ~·~~ Milm MOO Uwl C... 9'IO u-1 C.. 9900 ioit cu -. 9900 Uted Cu s 9900
·"•~ ID DAM ScneD ma.re. Gentle 21 n · Flbealala llloop, JAAAI IUICI COMET OLDSMOBILE
dlien 7·30 ID toai. •• lleel. .,."' ...... ttat.. 1IUCIS FORD
:RY nuDAY~ 9Q.8la = ~ ~ 1962 CHEVY PICK.OP 1'5 JAMAi alMET'll41>.sed.WW tire '65 FORD f AIRLANE TOP DOLLAR
1 quaOty IW"Dlab1np TUNSPOITATION ..S ~ call one. Stick" Shilt • FatnUy pertect 3..1 S 4 *"" ...._ =.!::. S::::, t;~ •Station w.,., · Blue Lau ~w-Uled can
tbe biCbutF I bidder! mbole J.m. ., $1 W Equipped ...... _., 151, Pvt. ~· SERVlSOFT, e Powtr ~ at
1r'Ce urn tv,.. y • ..a..._ -&77. aatlDldk. ..... ~ SOI 1UI ~ m.4020 e Automatic Ttansm.iulon Ml~ St. ..... & _... .,_., Spull Ski lolts 90JO IEACH CITY ~~~:-:;uarac. 'D O>met 4 ctr, auto, rebuilt :::: ,.e~~ UNIVERSITY
:a Sbof'a a.trl c.11, IOAT IAIGAl"S '2296: OWENS 59 cc run DODGE SJ6fl ~. 111111 coad. S5ll9. • New Wblt.e Wall 11res OlDrMQlll IC
Q¢TMLES NoC..NMcled'* =·~=etc. lHaiBeachBMl.H.B. n•---•1111r m.%295 •=t~~:~ M'I u;
'NEW. um> mMS-SWAP ~., ., ..... ,.... CONTINENTAL •Stt at ..,. Rartlar Bl .. ('a.ta Mell
•1· .. UNSWICK ~ 16~ =.~ m: 'SJ Cllftraa.t a .:oN'l"INl:NTAL 4 ctr. tall DAD..Y PILOT ~
$27NOWS vA.,lUI. ~ mywl!eL...~ IC\lmmtl ··-e~··t XLNT! 946-9'1'3 2 T-_,_ EA 000 -"-Employe partdng lot. '5o5 OLDS 241'. 4 epd ti.ydro, ..,. .,.,... _ ....,.. -pc!W'er, .., • ..,, ...._.. 330 West Bay S~t buttcm, tuck Ir roll, Hrdtop, . Gald extttior. black leal"er " FINANCING haYe room for them." .... Mii_.._ ___ 9033 Cab over. New eQCine, 4 spd. a..-.c-n--Costa Meaa New lltta, new r.llrme rims
.,. a •o POOL • m..--tranamlulon with 2 speed ~~ mterior. High robber. Pr-. or Call 642-4321 and It spinnenl. :lecent motor
LS'-ftl!l pued for a trip. Will 11&<> llaln, Oranp, SD-1992 131 MEreAl.F -S.C.Y1A. YACJn' Maloten. Ir ttiplllr axle, FOCI rubber, 16' tno. riftce ~ ask for t\Ule-Up. R/H, S650 or beSt
•UCTION * WlnnJr Beauttful c:oodidoo at ~ dock. HuD or meda, tor hauling$::S· ~. _.. .. """"""RS 8ullinelll Manage~ OUSce. offer. 847-Mr> "' -New~ Coat. Piano l'iD-NM. 54MlDl/MJ.81119 ' 07 .;r.o;.;;;C..;:v~ll -.54-0_kt._._R_ll_H-.-2---=-Extra.,---1
'QU wW ..u or !Ny ilb OD ~· L&nU-SJllK'DlllY IUD '67 FORD n tires aod car ndk> all !or
:!ft W\Dcb • try mted Boom -Gold Am-loat Sllp, Meorintl 9036 ~ COIVAll $15. 681 Victoria C.M
1iom Frlda:r 1 p.m. dUed Mut, ~ Board, . .u........... frlne. Ranchero :fy's Auction Barn Rudder • XLNT Sall. DUE to a............. ex-pan-%100 lbui>ar BIYd.
H-~ ""'"'" SI'EAL at $595 &Ion. c:boQ yadlt slips a.ta Meaa 64HOZ2 14WNER 'S2 Chevy. O.Veir Monza V-8 _ .. ,_ .__ t t "'" .. .,... • , ... ......,._, now avail at 11.15 I foot. "'LEISURE WORLD'' Clean! s:rzs ca.ah. ' I""'"'" ,,.,..ter, au oma • PLYMOUTH
Id Tony's Bldr· Mat'll ...,-; "-~ ;-TIMES--Marina del o-Hotel J_,. .• ~ .,.~-.. --.-m7 Anabdm. CM le. power ~. bucket --------~ .. ·-~ ~ -. ~ ta '65 Plymouth Fury 111 mt.ca Toolt, AL-etyleoe LJDO 14 BRAND NEW 13M4 Bali Way, Marina del ... tWts. mtciml 1-4DDe Vf!J· aea . e FllUMioor Sedan. Blue
a, ~trlcal Tool.I, OOND. Owoed i.... FAon Rey. Aalc for Lob., &2l-46ll 190 JEEP, MBituy A calledar"a itaa! COIVEllE $2299 e n.....-r Steerin"' ::oai ... f8D'I. n-.. ·a n-.-7~ .. ,."".:: .... ,.,, ............ tor ·~ tt. 4 ..nee! drive '5f 1'F MG. Xllll ~ llaR n.: ........... , ,..,..,. • ..-....,..... ._._.LQ ......,. _....-_..,..,.. ,,,. -._... e Aulollllltic Tranamlssinn OF~ -CHEAP! cl)t." aloop, to pi mo. Call (213) f7S.-42!M after. Cmi11 ..._. ~ 'n1m11Qt A7ns a..rokl 1.,,... mad ' $19.80 a week o.A.C. •Power Brakes ~: ~646-Cmt o.~O:~~~ ~. c • ...,.,. 9520 ~ i:!. s.~ •=Ji .. ~~~v;! HRor Dodge :~:::
15 tsr 5*-C1a -- --- -Bo•t·Yecht CU.PERS .. PORSCHE Green m. CAD JllZ corv. :-: ~=-~ 21.SG HARBOR BLVD., c .M .• 36,!XXI miles and ln
St:r.e bed, twtn bed SKI BOAT, MCYl'OR·T'IUJt Cherters 9039 ORANGE OOUNTY'S )QM cmd. * ~· Oner Ail Qmd.. $1315. mGJ . ' ~ shOwrOOm condition ~. locludel framet. 14• lmm-.te • ~ LARG~ SELEC'I'lON ~'llO.. m.m * DllJ. 54M15i!n Ews. '65 CORVETl'E C0NV 396. · throughout. S19!l>.
a 10 ~derail«~. dee*, ~ cushklDI. ~ CHARTER zny bea1 .. equip. ~ Mpd. AM/Fii. Pwl'/win-'U fORD soo n • ~at
124 t., Mm: •• 2 tanka, wind-bed l.slander 24' cloop. FACTORY Dou;cr PORSCHE Callri*f 19 CHEYIOLET dowa Extras! Low-mi. Xlnt Deily Pilot
, MOVING EAST! IHeld, Chrome ~t. Sleeps 4. By 4-y, wknd ot OPEN ROAD DEn.1.ER £xcel eand. ala ~ ClOlld! SJl!iO. R.lldlo. beater, automatic, Employe parkwg lot. ~OUSEBOLD Ir MISC New $18915 • QWck Sale $699 wk. 6'Jr>.3'144 ~ea. '46-2571 * •AJr ( 1 fitienel"' Call CU TI6·4Hf power stttring. vi.Q)'I t~. 330 We.at B-.y Street
REAS! * 54()..7896 - --- - -Mobile Honies 9200 * ROUSE CARS * (]US. IOUS IOYCE •65 OtEV. STA. WAG. <QZD61J> CostA Mesa
9' SURFBOARD $125. DINGHY -------IS MOUNTS* SLIDE-INS Llmlrioal ''Bd-AS'" w/ DODGE $1199 or Call 642-4J21 and .. tt REFRJG $25. ~ Gl..ASPAR 9'8'* 20x60 CAMBRIDGE. Full * VAN CONVERSIONS 1·.-'62-RCJLU ___ ROY_CE.--Blk-I ''Tri"' v..a. t.ct air, PIG, ask for
r chair SlO. 962-4139 Xln~~ti~~95. ltngtti encloeed porch, Skirt * MOTOR HOMES wind ...... ..-. air caml. pwr/sttt:r. RIH.ft~ 'U DOD6f Finance aboYe amount af· Business Manager'1 office.
• Want.ct N 10
•£RATE! Need prqe
llanP up to $10 ruo.
8dl • Sal Bcb. Call
G4-G1b
,1nery, Etc. 1700
K -3.<XXI It.. Excel·
coodi tioo $8'15.
691 or 89'1-2433..
!EE TO YOU
~LE. sweet kittens
~y " white . s+ wk.I..
isebroken -1·esponsible
!I PL.EASE. H.B. near
jlOl't 962-7709 6/26
:¥> kitten. 7 wet.kl old,
hY, beautJ.ful.ly mar~
ind edult horm!, Call
037 6/26
1 Homa tor aix months
emale part collie. I.Ht·
mldrm, 2031 S. Fair-
Apt. B. S.A.
ki~. Hou.sebroken.
273 6125
: black kitten. Call
1ot 6128
: To good home, adore
kitm.. 201 »th St.
6/71
SJti EVlNRUDE
Stand • tank, cover
"factor)' FreCJ"
::. =·~I ~i~ ALL MAKES It MODELS fmmw ' .,, .. i'r>4Ml :ta! '! • d ~ ter normal down or trade 1 U Pl YMOUTH
Take over pa.ymes:ita. 1967 TRUCKS clld. dnme roaftop reel Sliliol ... wor:.::, ftA.laa
673-1254 or m-*4 de. Bedt. llilt BIR w/ m1uu .,.,.,.., SPORT FURY
·eo Fl.AMINGO 10d6. Clean BEAai an· ~ •· illlluc Tl!lll Radio. m.te:r. •tomabc. Nt* $275 SAC~ J185 1 Bft, Alum Awn. carpet, CAMPERLAND 8llW il!kr. A ... .... tstUOtJ 21.SG HARBOR BLVD •• C.M. v..a. power lleerinf, aut~
SEE AT ..,_, l'\lm. moo. alter tm ~"""' &.& dl*t __. .., a.. $119t 5t&-3Cf'IO ___ , matic. radio~ a.e.ter.
In Vla Udo Sood 5• 6G-29'l3 ~: at ...... '65 fCID (Jm2S)
P1eue call flm m.1344 TRAD..ER 1: Ca.bu& '4.m l.M3.....!:; ::!taiT SPlltm NOW 41l~~s•. n-e _..... M111ant at· $1399
Marty Loe1mq 1Gi311 Tmna to auff, 1'IO Whtttitt f'15..aM ~· le' normal dow1' °" t.nde llllll'UEM
•o.A.C. Space 18. CM. 646-ai39 -::::=======::I Radio. ...... DllC .tleelll. 2 Yr OK par/GMAC Ir.nm wortti BO. IOUIUIUlV
WATER SKI e e e 30' x 8'. patio A awnings. -1----a,.._ ~ 2 ...... 8riti9 ndilc CJ't!l!ll T1a1117 >.yrn ~ U-1.-Do~ .....,. _... .. ...... ·----~ tJ'll'NF'm• ....... S. C.__. Hwy. .....,.,. "l'5 • e • TO CATALINA !T ••vu ....,,. ~ --
You tao do both with thil 64Ui202 ! DESPERA11 ! $12" LAGUNA BEACH 2150 KAR80R BLVD .. C.M.
19' Owens gJaa 225-HP VB Motorrvc•~ 9300 ! We Rave El·~ Wal-! ()pea 'Iii t .fM.7144 546-3000
Inboard. Only 15-hn! Ra--, -Will pa.:r to~ll:r lor ~ Ir S9.90 per •eel O.A.C .-Air Ceollitiooeil '6§ DOD6f
ruo " full equipment. B s A Gold star $375, 1~ dean ,. whed driw .ebidr ~ D1 .. e ·s,..c.-Vehicle
v~ power steenni; radio,
beater. aatomatk: trans.
$1312
& SU.20 a "ec-• O.A.C.
It S8.80 per week. o.A.C
Harbor DodQe
Z1SO HARBOR BLVD., C.M.
546-JffiO
-,65-P-ly-mouth _F_u_ry_I -
548-795'f da 50 CC S!5. Honda 50 OC or lmpOrted car. CaD Cliff 'M CHEV V-1 BE1,AJR STA-
GOOD f'ishlng boat. 20' Fi· in bullet $45. 3 rail trailer at 646-0lJ %150 HARBOR BLVD .. C M. n <»i WAGON. ~ air DOT 6T terior
berglass. OlN Craft eng. S50. 646-1257, 823 Towne S5-Jll5I CllDll., pwr. *9'~ pn. r. 21.SG HARBOR BLVD., C.M. • Automatic 1hmroiasion
Ha~r Dodge • Four door Si.Hon Wqon,
BuH wlbrown Vinyl In-
Nl'W batterie9, bait tAnk i St., C.M. window, RIB. .ud 11 at V4, automatic, rlMlio, beat· ~ e Radio ' Heater
pump. Sac. at $1..000. FOR SALE AUmN VOLXSWA&EN ft loc:lrilc Wiili*llmml v.f. er, Po"er ateerifw. *"Air Condttioned" • Sl.595 ~1806 '66 Honda Jri Scramblef'. ftlU' dedl, de. AD Alub (f'CMC) 'S4 roRD GALAXIE "500" • See at
,,,, MUST SELLI Ex:tre de.an! S500 * ~~~otorw~~-~ '64 Valls •1 soo"S ~ ~. .. • 1;:!_ • •1 $1199 • Dr. spt. Sedan. AIT. Deily Pilot
·-JAG 3 " "' • •-_ ... 1 M2-34.U UllJU • .,,,....u.... ~ ..._ ,_ Pwr Steer, RIH etc. Stun-Employe pa.rkin& lot
.... .~. IUI WUU•. 64f>.3431 E'Y 2-0r a.o& A --...... dlmce! BOY A ··KNOWN PIS, Cllrome wire wtils + '6T HONDA SCRAMBLER ====·=· ====l -L.L.. ._ mi. .., .._ y •w ll'TC"'t." ~ above amount tJ. nine Arctic White w/im-330 Wei.1 Bay Street ..-.1 1 -· .. ..,....., ---...., l'lo&.<uc..: mac: Fawn inter. A low mJ. Oleta Mesa ~;'';,,(~, -;,_~ =L~Y th~~. AUSTIN HEALEY ~ ~ ~ ONL y S1D5 :.u. ~ --or trade imprelaive space age car or Call 642-<m and
.,.. --...... 2 y r-/C ... "C from a fine home! ask for ti" 37' CHRIS Craft OlnD.le, 642-5'280, 64U134 evea. c:o-.Mi--nn... Ii-La -r vn gall' --tft'1lls fin Dodge o ..• :---• _,,,_ '65 ................ conYt idnt ---~ -.... -, --... _ ,,___._. . r ONLY $15951 ~ Mlllllier' ............ fully loaded. XJnt C(llld. 2 SCRAMBLER. '65 Complete-...-~ '~ • wlbmaat. inter. ,._..ny ....,. ...... '-"'<""'•._. Marti~ cha.In. Air cond. 1y Mech rebuilt. Muat sell! cood. R/H. 2l,OOO mi SlB ONL y $1 JtS! 946 s. Coast Hwy. 2150 HARBOR BLVD., C.M. 2 Yr OK guar/GMAC .:rm. c~~:s~:~,
Will sacrifice for $16,000! ! Aak w,o. 494-2977 HURRY! 49t-UD6 or 49f.2029 TumnrJ Ayres ~ LACUNA BEACH ~ TOIDIQJ Ayre5 ~rolet PLYMOUTH
7J4.3J81 ' * m.3238 '65 MARUSHO 500«/New-COITINA 946 s. c·-Hwy Open ·~, -8-71+1 •Lr 11\ftfta:--946 s. Coast Hwy. COila Meu
SLIP WANTED eng. Saddlebap, Windsbield --------LAGUN-:-Bf:ACH • ,,, tunmftlft W UUUU1. LAGUNA BEACH 546-1934
for 22' boat. Call alter 1..Jke NEW! $650. ~44 Reprocnavl ~ UKfllULU Open ·w 9 &$-7744 'Tor tbe Dneat ~
C PM or all day Sat.Sun. ·-n~•. -"-mbl-'65 w:-orc1 ,._-....,._ 4 __,., ape. 'tit ' fM..7144 ( fOlef s w ~.,. ..,.. "--""'" ..... -.... ,.._ .,., ~n• ~· r """'......., .......-. -OI • II• r vnu "" .....,,Yett.., tie.ut. d bot.b New 6 lJaed Cara" e ~ -· ,...,. mi. "' .... --.• Incl. He' St•-·2 --'-. FuD--. • '6J"' cond N . ' ' """' c.Au... ,. .... -.... .,...... -. .... T • ew llre.. 1191n., •£ti PLYMOUTH. 6 c:yl, 4
18' Lmyan Lapstrake 60 hp met $411('l\U,.~/ext. D7 equipment. Wjth no c:ull 440. f'ull ~r and factory brUn. trans.; pwr. steer. vvd sed Lo .1 'EL Rock 1100 CUtf Gray eng. New cover Ir down 133.56 M'6. O.A.C dlr. Radio. hNtrr IPlMUI) Ir braJr.es $4~ 646-0428 oor an. "" mi eage.
?. Ne-.,iort Beach. cushions. Good cond. Auto Service Call Mr. Davia ~ Sedan t~ air. ' · Excellent condition. $350.
6/71 542.1124 tlM .,..,7 $1799 '55 FORD Wagon, l DR. VS. 545--0906 --~-~~=-& Perh 9400 .,.-,., 4 Bbl, burst, chrome rims,1---------
0WN Rabbit A: 1 blk. 23' Unifiite. 190 hp Mere ln-ENGUSH FORD ' $&..fill pl!I' wed O..A.C • ru -.,.-.. O.A.C. aood int., paint It tfre:a. S250. '55 PLY. &C'iL. * Over·
:Ute. FUil erOWJJ bucb. brdloutt>rd. 1o tn. im pl. ·so 2 DR. aed. le9I enc ' • ~ per --s o.A.c. • .-· ~ ~7453 drive. Uc. GOOD tiru.
healthy. 546-79'3 61216 Many xtraa! aw trir. $5895 tram $75. Cllet Heri>ert FR u---. n...a.. llllMr Dl .. e ....., ~ '66 FAIR.l..ANE 500 WAG. V8. RUNS. $50. * 548-l'188
...... .n:ou to •ood ~n47 cam It llft:en fot O>eY 283'' '60 Englhh Forcl ..... ,,..... '""'P
•
IAJVU• ..a--~~ -a-~-;:::::======= . 350", Jle'IJ $40. n. Madi· .... _u .. •• 2«. radiolblr ....,. ....... -BL...,. ,... PIS-8. Local klw-mi. XI.NT PON11AC .,...__. .. vm \A ~"" -%ISO HARBOR BLVD .. CJll, ~ ~ ................ %J50 HAR.BOfl BLVD., C.M. cond! 5C2-ll37 118 lt25 Sellboets 9010 _aori __ c._M_. _:ws-_un____ BARGAIN~ ss.31151 5t&-3J50 __ _:_...;..:.;. _____ 1---------1
BUICK* Enc1fte •trans. $99 CASHI '65 Mll.IU rr '62 IMl\U '66 FORD 4-Dr. Must ten! ROY CARVEi : d1rt -topsoil .. You 26 IT Yawl 1966, 2 cabJna, Overhauled. S160 perts in 946 S. Coest~Hwy. WI Illy JJ UUUVI No reasonable Ol'TER re-
646-J339. 6.17 Darrell sleeps 4. encl/head, hang· engine. Trans. o'hauled. S50 Laguna Bftlch 4M-7144 fused ! * 540-06Sl9 PONTIAC
:.M. 6/26 ing locker, teakdeck $5,800. likes alL 96U255 Eve. !!l!llal!-l!llllml!l!!!!!!!l!I!!!! Yns Volaw+w or PondllP Full power and fada'y air. St1tiol Ww1 '64 SPRINT Conv. V8, Air, ms Ha.rbor Bl., Calta MeM
tA8LE Kitten Tan & 1162·7875 • T II T 9•25 FIAT 1-,.,, • dDl1ara PDI ._ $1 J" -v• 4 apcl new tires. low mi. Kl 6-4444
2 moe old. to good FOR Sale KJte 1%1 (2 wlal _r•_•_r,_r_•_v_•1 ___ .. _ ---------1 ar nof. Oii Gmr R.-k. · ri Li~ new! Jl375. m-ooi9 Oran~ County'• Exclu.aiw ~. 642-9386. 6/28 noo.oo. Frank w. Lloyd, 13 Ft. Travl'I lrail~ in F·1at City 673-1190 .. Sl4 prr ..-ail 0.A.C. ~~ater. au1Cma c. ' '62 GALAXTE 500/4-0r. ~ala far Rolla -Royce and
kittens. gray, &wks, & 119 Jade, Balboa Jsl1nd. x.Lnt. cond.: llltt1)!1 J. $650. fflrW DI.lie $S99 HIT, V8, PIS. 46,000 • mi. BentlY·
1er cat. 536--0330. ~. 54G-~ '60 vw eus. Dellllu San-I S795. Owner U 8--0.171 l.==:::;;======::I
3 Female KJttena _*_U_'_G_LAD--IA_TO_R_*_ Fills ' A.rUrtln root. s-. xurr COHO! 2150 HARBOR BLVD .. C.M. FORD '86 Fairlane; 2 dr. RAMBLER
&t6-8S55 aJtu 5 $1400 for 14 ownenhip. Trucks 9500 ~ * '"°loto ~ It t5.90 P'1' •eek O.A.C. ltf!dan. Oean. aood CUJd. --------·•
:'TENS to pd home. 133-1021 alter 6 pm, ~~}'nt~ tnnat A: Ar-* 'M n;. Excftlrd cmA-1'&) CHEV-fmll8)a Sedln Hirt.or -$1&. 536..mI '60 RAMBLER Ambasaador m *HOURLY RENTALS• New 1967 u.cw ~ 0ruce tion. While. Katie. .-.. rill ...,. ...... cia.. wagon. IVH, pg. pb.
r yellow parakeet. You 1r oa:raailen · Rhodes 19 GMC 1/J.Toa C:· nnancmc o.A.C ~t• ,_, car widl bell ., ~ nso HARBOR BLVD .. c.Y. __ F_AL __ C_O_N ___ , S395 • 646-813.1
=cage. 548-Q28 6126 FUn Zone Boat Co., Balboa HGIHl·Y• Cam Own Cmtract.t 0.A.C. R.eu! Cal bdwem I 6 5 ~
mruND 7 m01. Male ~ *~S~~. Fully factory tqlup$)ed (QSJA W (0. VOLVO :--.,!"' 0::-50-Hlll. ut 'U D006E DART Reproc:eteec1 STUDEBAKER
336 6/ZT ~ $D). * Call 833-5016 $2599 'SJ VCLVO MODEL 544
ACJ< SIAMESE ltlttena. AUX>URT Catfub Catamar· 1969 Harbor Blvd. 642-417• BESl' Of'FER! ~· ~· OllP~
D'J6 6127 ran ~yra old. xint conct! STAIUBURY BllKI Opel a:30 to 10 Daib 541-ll1' brallm. '"' ::,r 1VR.
lf of baby tun, 548,934.}, 646-2259 JAGUAI -OllK lit. .... PYt. pty. M6 6/TI 234 E. 17th St. _A_.,,_ __ w_ ....... ____ .,,_,_ SERYJSOn' 5115 n.t NB
-------18' MALIBU Outrigger, w/ Coste Meta m4IDI
trailer, Sail. Anchor. de. 548-77 65 1967 JAGUAR Model 340 tour WE PAY · . .. --------5 & LIVESTOCK
• Radio, heater, lull faclory
equipped.
$1U7
I S9.fil9 per week O.A.~.
lllrbor Dodte
'M l'akon Conv't. White,•---------
black top, V-8, auto, power •OWNER MOVING!
steering. w+w. Llke new Ex'ce:llent Transportation!
With no Clllllh down. $36.17 1960 Regal Studebaker.
Mo. O.A.C. dlr. CaU Mr * PHONE 642-rus
O.Yil 6G-54fl). * '60 LARK WAGON *
·go FALCON RANCHER(). STICK $1$
STICK. * W2S * CALL 54~3806
CALL 548-3806
8825 ~UM:~ ::s~I=;~ t.l. '66 DODGE with s~· Cam~ ~ ~r: •whee~ CASH ~· !1., ~I ~~'::
-------Spinnaker, cover-, b) trlr. er. $2800. Can be eeen at 90!I er uphol s.1950. Xtraa! Pri-'11191. cmtom tonne:\u; blk. 2150 HARBOR BLVD., C.M. \RE PULi PUPS Uk ..,ttlll -3059 Dogwood CM ~ .... •ln.t ilJWr, t.o. mllr.: Sf6.JOOO
T-llRD MDCURY
" 1 ~ ........... '""" ' vatt party. n .. : '"'~ for um! can l crudm jmt MUST sdl! S12SIL May trade ========-~Ucnt QMunplooship RHODES 33, Xlnl cond., New '48 INT'L 'l(.T P U. 4-11pd. JAGUAR '66 XKE ro&dster, c:aU m lor free estinl*. b GOOD VW. 50-358 !!'Ya
Reproceued
1961 MERC . i«. Auln. .64 T·Birr Landau. factory
·lcgroond • Al8o Stud Jenny: with berth. Qwner. XLNT condr SlOO. NEED wirewheels, AM F'M stereo 6I01H nJEUnftllD
. ln31 626-5986 * 6'1'>Z711 Evenings CASH! 54>3744 tape, WAX! * 6T;,-4799 \,r&l~I '64 MALIBU Coewl'tible .. R/1J. WSW. aato. pwr lb'/g.. ET Pups -AKC Olam·
Stock. Tri colors & red
lite • males " remale..
QB
>LF.5/T\ny Toy &. Min.
. Adults for sale or
" Stud·lltt. 534-0'l86
IORABLE toy female
Jes. l year. Silver and
e. 962-2688.
•INESS Is a Bti1?njl
AU ahots, reedy to
Dial (11 49..'\-4009.
:EJt.PQO, S.MOO. ALL
TS/FEMALE. $'l0.
• Call 847-4676
* QUALITY * LDEJll R.ETRJEVERS
842-3.516
\T Dene. black, AKC.
. Make oflcr.
~ANYTIME
FRENOl POODLES * REG CALL 646-mO
lk POODL E Puppy
>. AKC. ahots. ~4421 .. 8830
IARTER HORSES
lin~. f'illlr, r.rl<llngs.
hlnod hnr Rrf'd fnr
'1 prrfo1-man<'t' ~!ii
• C'1ll :'4G-~
lmeorted Autos " 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos
Solve 4 Simple Scrambled Word Puzzk for a Chu.ck!~
O Reorra11g1 letters of th.
four xrombled words be·
low lo form four simple words.
I CI XTE F I I I' r I
l~G_o_~ Y_G ______ _.l &-lb
. I r I _
IFEKAl I . r 1 r I' .
INOTIAN r I I r I
8 PRINT NUMBERED I' LETTERS IN SQUARES
C) UNSCRAM81E lE nERS I
fQP ANCiWER ..
Tip from Cupid: The surett
woy to hit o woman's heort
istooim-.
O Compleht IM d1vdl. quote.I
by fllllnQ in the miuing word
you ~velop lr'?f" step No. 3 below.
I I I I I I I I
Screm.1et. ··A...... in c .... 6400
9600 Red wi red Int. SHARP!
SIS 6*4IDtl
.. OIEV 4-0Jl. ~ Stick
S-. SEE TO APPRECI·
ATE! m.Ni3 eira
'S OiEVt dlllfd tillle. NIN'
paint. tirn It ~ SJ50.
Only dean ones. ~ m 5GOJ%
duty daily 8:311 to 11 P.M. -.. -8-UJE--Qlf! ..... -,-,.-"-.-ane-
COS'I'A CAR CO. OWller. X1nt Cond. VI. alllo.
1969 Harbor ~· R/H. 494-811
0... C... ,,., 'S7 Impala. a.. mi. poow-
--------er. wl•. viQ)'1 mp, ttereo, CARRY OWN timed g:1ua. 642-261?
CONTUCTS
Tr•tf 1 rtatioft C...
'S7'• 11n 'M's ~ llliifta
' •utamatics.. Sfl0'1• cara. trudm • ~ can.
MAJQ' to cboow fro&
100'# fW.nc:inc anil-• wtt11 terms o.u :
COSTA CAR 00.
19 Bm11ar. CJI. MMnt
()pm I: JI to ti Didtt
C .. YSLEI
'6] etmntll
4 door. ntdio. heatrr. aul~
JNtk. power stttrln&.
{NBY1671
$11'9
It ._. a w'ttll O.A C.
llllMr DMae
ZlSI HARBOR RLVD., C.M.
S45-nO ---
OON,. IJW .. ·~· CE1 ~ cult tor ii with a
Oaibo P9ot .. QI Ad! ~· --
EDSEL
Trcmportatioll
Special
1959 mm
Radio aod heawr. au~dc
$295
DWIURY IUICI
2100 Harl>or Blvd.
Cast.a Mesa 64&-9022
FORD
'S7 FORD 2-dr. Wairon.
Oun. runa ,,,,ell. PS. PB.
T°"" A rntry radio, SAC
~ 642-14.ll .
I '64 GALAXlE CONV.
I f'ul1 powu, Alr BEST
OfTER! • 67>'nb4 "8
tram, ps, air cond. Vf17 air, ful power, electric
good cond. Fi1'111 S550 tAk· l"indows & seats, vi~o.
es. 546-1953 aft 5 pm. w;th reer ~. C:ar in
MUSTANG
'67 MUSTAllG
Radio, heater. automatic,
IJOWl!I' ateering. vinyl top,
air coodition ITWUi29)
$2699
' n .ao per wttk o A.c.
tie.utiful t'Ondltion· With
no cash down $64.58 mo.
O.A.C. d!r. Call Mr. Davia,
642-5fllO
67 T,BIRD, 4 dr Landau, full
power & air. Dark gray with
gray landau upholstery 5,.
000 miles with htll Ford M~
tor Co guarantee 24,000
mile. Ret&il.s o~r S6,!XXI Will
t1Bcrlfice $4715.
NEWPORTER MOTORS
20J6 •!arbor c. M. 54"5~ H1rbor Dodge '62 T·Bird full flOWel' & 8.ir
2150 HARBOR BLVD .. C.M. new shocks. new t>r:a~~ ~ It in immaculate rondihon.
---1--__ .... Mus1 sell. 675-3777 eproces-
·~ Mustang Coupe. v.s. YAU .a.NT aulo. W.S.W, RIH. With no-----"----cub down. SSJ.67 Mo.
O.A.C dlr. ean Mr D11via. * Red Vaflant
641-5480. '6.1 PLY. 6 V AUANT SIG·
NET 2 -dr HOTP SPT. OLDSMOllLE CPE. Std. shift. RIH. w/w. --------1 Glistening Royal Red w/· ~ ~ In '80 OLDS ~pua Fietlta pluah r«'d vinyl seat inter. rown. The OAD..Y PILOT wag. PIS, Antn. Fccy air. 1 tn 10.000!
0-.Uloed aedion. Sawi JG99 * Call LI 3-0JU JNVESTTGATE ~. t1me 11 et:tort, Looai ONLY $995 now!!! '64 OLDS F..g;. Air. PIS-
.. 8. XtrH' Blur. 40.IXXI mt. 2 Yr OK 11u1r GMAC term•
S18:i0 or offer' 646-9143 Tomm>' Avl'l'' 0i<'' rolet ~~.:'°1'1ookt"":' ~ o~ 'f'IS OLDS. rn. PS'PB. •~kC' 946 s. Coast Hwy.
Pn.(1f cJasallied 64~ over paymM1t11 ph111 S20!l LAGUNA BEAC'l I -m~ Oprn 't1I q t!ll 7114 --------
r
. . . ... -..: . . --.... . . ~-----
ilAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
... -. . . . .. . .. .... . -. ... ,
'Relax, dear-you had your d~ at the U.N.-•::~
Harassing the Hippies
Poaibillty of 1 hippie invasion·in·force of beach
communities on the Oreoge °'85t la cauaing concern both
to police and to resident beacbgoers.
Hippies ~ the "flower children," usually non·
violfll4 so the CODC."ern is not so much with potential
trouble--making (u with other ''mod" manifestatkms in
the recent put) u it ia with the presence in the com·
munJty of a pltlful mob best described as slobs.
A Redondo Beach Chamber of Commerce executive
told Laguna Beach businessmen last week that he con·
sidered the beftt way to get rid of the hippies was
through "plain old fashioned harassment." He advised
laving city inspectors -fire, building. sanitation -
nail hippie groups in the old houses they favor for minor
violations. And let the police take over on loitering on
the streets.
Unfortunately, this recommendation has an ugly,
un-A.merican, police state ring to it that smacks too
much of the back country of Mississippi and Alabama.
We doo't believe that good professional enforcers
of the law on conduct or the fire. buildini? and sanita-
tion code.; want to be party to selective and unequal
application of the law. This could only breed distru~t
and disrespect for law and would be demeaninl? and
d~grading to our public servants.
If some laws are to be strictly enforced against
hiopies, then they should be strictly enforced at?:tinst
all residents and visitors.
A sharn distinction should be drawn between firm
and fair enfor<'ement of law\ and enforcement based on
the ''I don't like your look~" theorv. As for the loob of
hippies, thev r.tn11p from the furmv lookin11 and harm-
lm to the vul ear. nbscene ancf dP.linQuent 11seri: nf
mariiuana and L'm. Thev should be ;udP.eci indivicfually
and t"Nted accordin11lv hv our enforcement a1?encies.
"Pinn but fair" treatment of masses of vounlt$fers
on Oranire Coast be:1rhes h:ic; emerl?ed as the most effec·
tive control during Easter Week and on hectic summer
-A Dictionary
Of Ruralisms
For City Folk
With summer upon us. p«'haps it's
time to qmeot and reissue my Short
Dictiooaey of Ruralism1 for the City
Tourat:
"Down the road a piece." means
either a qUBrter-mile er lix miles, de-
pending on bow the person who is llv·
ing you dl!'ectiona feels at tht mo·
ment
"I don't oare" is a laconic allirm.a·
tive, and muns tbat yt>ur oner 0( a
cola or a beer will be gladly accepted
if you ut a couple of times more.
"I'll be around to fix the tcreenl
tomorrow," mems that you can ex·
pect to bear from him in about two
weeks -if bis cropc don't spoil, the
chickens don't sicken. his pump
doesn't fail, hi.a car doesn't break
down, ot his own screens don't need
repairini.
"THEY'RE BARD lo get thiJ time
of yeer," means that S10me excuse,
however lame, has lo be found for
doubling ttle price of produce f<>r the
summer visitors, who tr&ve more mon-
ey than they know bow to spend.
"So-and-so's a good place to e.it,"
means that ttie recommender is a first
cousin to the man who owns the res-
taurant.
"The bus is usually a tittle late."
means that the arrival or departure
of the bus bears only a coinddental
relationship to the times indicated on
the schedule.
"He's a gentle horse," m6ans that
the riding-stable owner h• given you
a nag that is too old fX> run and too
tired to care.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
The Redondo Beach official's
advice to "harass the hippies''
out of town is a line example of
the "cop" mind at work. You
can't banish the hippies legally,
he concedes, but don't let that
stop you.
J.B.
TIMI ... ,_ -9• RMtn" ..........
•• wlY "'-" ,... _,...,, s...
-"' -.. .._., ... DellY , ....
''They've got danclng there." means
a juke box filled with polkas, or (on
Saturday nights) an acconllon, a
drum, and a musical saw, played by
the owner's son·ln·law and two of his
unemployed cronies.
"UNUSUAL WEATHER for this
Orne of year~· means practically noth-
ing -for die area hasn't had "usual"
weather since tbe polar cap receded.
"You can't mlss it," means that
you're going to miss it. unless you ig·
nore the verbal instructions and use
aerial reconnaissance.
"A quiet homelike atmosphere,"
means that the hotel has no guests
who are ambulatory and under 85. and
all the food is mushy enough to be
gummed rather ttian chewed.
"One thing for sure -you sleep
well at night here." means there is
absolutely nothing else to do at night
here.
"I'm not from hereabouts," means
that the speeker was born in a ham·
let eight miles up the road, and doean 't
know much abo ut this foreign locale
with its exotic inhabitanta.
"The best time of year here is in
September," means that the p•ace
isn't fit kJr human habitation unW the
tourists leave alter Labor Day.
Changing Soviet Society
When Svetlana Alliluyeva , Stalin's
remarkable daughter now in the Unll·
ed States. was a little girl. her moth·
er died.
In a recent article about her in At·
las magazine, it was related that the
cluJd was in bed in a Kremlin apart·
menl and heard her parents violently
quarreling. followed by a shot.
The mother's death hcu; always been
an impenetrable myst«y. It is not
known whettler lhe committed suicide.
Her death was publicly annoWlced as
rtue to illness but this version had lit·
tie acceptance anywhere.
Last month KJavdia Kosygin. wife
of the Soviet Premier. died or can-
cer. lier illness was publicly known.
and several thousand persons attend·
ed her funeral
TllOliGH ON A narrow base. the
<'Qnlrast here seems to be a valid sign
or lhf' extraordinary chenges occur·
rm~ 111 the Soviet Union since Stalin's
<IPa\h. Both anthropologists end histor·
ians have always read significance in·
to how a society treats death. or course, the change In the Soviet
society following the death of Stalin
has a much wider spectrum.
Josef Stalin was plainly 11 sort Of
)alter-day Callgula-or name any olh·
er of the morP maleficent of the Ro·
man emperors. lie was. politically and
personally. amoral. Thr corroding
struggle to attain and keer power had
dr:unf'd from him all human COTJSCJ·
M r t'. 11 he cvpr had rnut"h lie was a
1 ·"~''' !or B1~ Brother 1n Orwe ll's 1984,
illl'f hr "al\ prohably Ot\\l'll's model.
last years, he might as well have
been. His suspicion of his fellow be·
ings, and his treachery, had indeed
reached paranoiac proportions. But
Caligula. and Nero also. were probab·
ly medically insane.
there is no madness in Kosygin. but
he also flouri shes in a different time.
Jt would not be impossible. but it would
be very difficult, for another Stalin to
emef'ge in the Kremlin hiecarchy.
The subord inates of the hierarchy
perceived this immediately on gaining
their freedom . They chose to call the
late dictatorship a "cult of persona·
al ity, ·• and they formally repudiated
it.
THE COLLECTIVE leadership
which followed did not have pro mis·
ing historical precedents. but it seems
to be working. lf It i!\, it is because
lhe Russian people have gradually
?chieved a mass pressure which holds
the collective leadership to account.
It is hardly democracy in our sense.
or in the ancient Greek sense. but it
may evoJve in a decade or two into
sel f-government , where dissent is law.
ful, and a parliament acquires sub·
stantial power over responsible> min·
isters.
This wou ld not pul an rnd to the
philosophy and practice of commu·
nism. bu t it woultl put <1n rn<l to thr
<lk 18l0rsh1p of lhl' prnlr111ri:it a11d
Comrade Marx would t)(' conr.t<IPrably
dlm1ni~hNi
weekends. Cert.alnly thla should be the atf{oach to the
hippie problem. if and when It develops.
But to combet a 10cial fad, however d.lstatefuJ
it may be, by debulng our American heritage and· pro-
hibiting oon~ormlty would be a serious mistake.
Major A~ts for ~
Commendable forward thinking is evident ln the •
moves the BOlard of Suf>t:TTfsors is making to develop
four park sJtes in the county f)E'ks 6ystem. Two of the
four are in the Orange Coast area and stand to become·
major local assets. ,
The Irvine Co. offered last Monday lo donate 350
acres for a park adjacent to UCI provided the county
can obtain adequate financing to develop the parcel into
an elaborate regional part. The site, located between
the UCJ campus and the San Diego Freeway, would In-
clude a lake, a central green area. walkwa)'il, bicycle
paths. turfed fields and a cultural center -plus a
privately developed museum and art center.
The county counsel's office, acting at the direction
of the supervisors, is applying immediately for $229,550
in matching federal fund! for the fim-stage develop-
ment of 100 acres. To be known as Universitv Park, tbe
area would, over a IO.year period, expand to include a
nature center, zoological and botanical gardens, an out-
door theater and hiking and bridle trails.
The second local development would be installation
of 300 picnic units, horse and bike trails and 'Other facili·
tie6 at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley, also with
matching federal funds.
Mile Sq uare Park is needed for that fast-growing
area, even though it will not be as spectacular as the
proposed University Park. Both projects are highly de-
sirable and will, it is hoped, move ahead as rapidly as
funds become available.
Site Ga"e More Tlaan f7 Million tO.. Amerulans
Pearl Buck Is 75 Years Old Today
Mention the name of Pearl Buck
and the average middle-.aged and
older American immediately thinks
of "The Good Earth" and Paul MunL
The association ls not entirely fortun-
ate. A woman who has given away
more than ~ million to square the
American conscience deserves to be
known for more than a movie that
some sophisticates like to down-
grade.
In her autobiography, "My Several
Worlds," Pearl S. Buck wrote that
as a resuJt of her early educatioo-
wlth lessons from her American
mother in the morning and from a
Chinese tutor In the afternoon -she
became "mentally bifocal." Jt'a re-
ported that she spoke Clllfteee before
she spoke English and that she be-
came suddenly aware that she w• a
foreigner in China only wheo, at the
age of nine, her family was obllfed
to flee for safety in the Bour Rebel·
lion. They returned to their home lo
Chink:iang when peace was restored.
PEARL C 0 M F 0 RT SYDEN·
STRICKER was born in Hillsboro,
West Va. on June 26, 1892. Her par-
ents had been Presbyterian mission-
aries in China, and ttiey went back
to that country when she was only
five months old.
The missionary heritage is per·
haps the central explanation of Pearl
Buck's life. She i! best known for
"The Good Earth" and other vol·
umes of the "House of Earth" trilogy
-''Sons'' and "A House Divided."
But she received the Nobel Prize for
literature ln 1938 primarily (or the
biographies ahe had written of her
parents. "The Exile" and "The Fight·
ing Angel."
"The decisive factor in the Acad·
emy's judgment," wrote the critic
Anders Osterling, "was, above all, the
admirable biographies of her parents
... two volumes which seemed to de·
serve classic rank and to poeeess the
required prospects for permanent
intttest." As for the novels, the Nobel
committee observed in its chation
that they were outstanding for "rich
and genuine epic portrayals of Cbl·
nese peasant life."
PEARL BUCK ANNOUNCED on
May 21-as she prepared to leave oo
a tour of Asia-that she was giving
her estate and most of her earnings
-more than JI million-to her own
special welfare p r o j e c l for half.
American children living in Asian
countries. She has signed over her
television and motion picture royal-
ties worth some '6 million, her
suburban Bucks County, Pa. farm,
her Vermont property, and all future
book royalties to the Pearl S. Buck
Foundation.
The explanM>on Ls simple. "I was
in Asia, making a movie," she said,
"and I saw the dlUdren of American
men and Asian mothers. And I was
really quite ashamed."
The story of the camp follower and
the soldier la legend. Homer wrote:
"The sex i! ever to a soldier lciod."
The novelist's foundation lo a way is
an extension of her own life. She bas
10 children, nine Of them adopted
Amerasians.
Mrs. Buck has been able to look at
two cultures cfearty and with under·
PEARL BUCK
st.anding and love. She pabli.sbed Ln
1933 a translatloo of the classic Chi·
nese novel 1'Shui Hu Chuan" under
the bltre "All Men Are Brothers." The
title makes an appropriate text for
observance ot her birthday.
Kosygin's Cynicism and Dishonesty
It cannot be said that Soviet Pre-
mier Alexei N. Kosygin closed all av•
enues that lead le a conceivable
peace. He did indirectly ded are for
the existence of Israel. But he made
peace the more difficult by using the
United Nations cynically and disboo·
estly and at the same time ~g
the world that peace is a matter for
the powers of ttle world
The Soviets and the French ha ve
not paid their bills fo r the United
Nations' housekeeplng activities in
the past. Indeed, the Soviet Uniop has
declared the General Assembly to
have no authority ror peace-keeping.
It required considerable cynicism to
be in default for peace·keeping assess-
ments and yel demand use or the Se-
curity Council and the General As·
sembly for propaganda purposes.
THERE WILL BE no peace in the
Middle East until, and unless. the So-
viet Union and the United States can
join to brJng the Arab nations to ne·
gotiatlons. The Soviets. at least, did
not exercise the Arab myth or insi st·
ing that Israel does not exist. But
Premier Kosygin did rereat all the
old charges or "aggression" by the
United States.
Nor did 1t seem a contradiction to
the Soviet Premier that he should,
when discussing Europe. sav that the
borders created by the Second World
War should remain as thev are -
the Soviets will hold what lhf'y took
-but that l!\rael should "rull b11ck."
With equal negle<'t of t>qu1ty, Pre·
Bu George
Drar George·
The other night whrn I broke
up with my hoy friend I took
orr my ring and threw It In hls
face Later I recalled h<> hadn't
ev<'n iz1ven me a rmg lie won't
~1ve 11 bark What !!hnulrl J do'
~·1 rnrous
f)p111 Fur ious ,
ll:1vr ym1 lrH'd ''''illiflJ! his
wnsf w:ikh ·•
mier Kosygin declared that Israel re·
fused lo accept the first three cease-
fire demands. The fact was that ls·
rael accepted but properly demanded
a reciprocal acceptance by her ene-
mies. It was they who refused.
He also branded Israel the aggres·
90t".
THE UNA VOIDABLE truth is that
there have been 20 years of aggres-
sion in the paranoid acts of Nas~r's
leadership. He daily committed him·
self to the utter destruction of lsrael.
Mr. Kosygin joined the Arab states
in condemning the U. S. for "aid to
Israel."
This would be amusing if It were
not so debaslngly and blatanUy hypo-
critical.
The undisputed facts are these: In
the past 20 years United States a.id to
the Arab states has been a little more
than three times that given lsnel. If
assistance is limited to military sup.
plies. 'the Uruted States has allocated
more than twice as much to the Arab
states. Israel has r~eived about $27.8
million in tanks, jet fighters. and de-
fense weapons. King Hussein, whose
small country of JOTdan was created
by Winston Church.ill, alone has re-
ceived some '66 milJion in military
aid. In addition. U. S. military aesis·
tance has gone to Saudi Arabia, Syria,
and Yemen.
JN THE PAST %0 YEARS this ooun·
try ha5 given 16Tael Sl.1 billion ln
nonmilitary aid and more than S2 bU·
lion to Arab countries -of which
Egypt's share was 50 percent.
Yet, Nasser -and the Soviets -
denounce and harass this country for
assisting lsraeL
The Arab people are in desperete
need. Their leaders, including those
rich in oil, have for years neglected
and exploited t.heir own people Jo piti·
less, ruthlesg fashion. N86ser baa let
his people be ravaged by diseaee and
hunger so that he could build up f<W'Ces
to destroy Israel. The Arab has •al·
ways been a victim of his own nders.
There can be no peace unless ttie
Arabs negotiate with Israel and lta·
bill.ie the Middle East. It will be bclp·
Jul if the U. N. is used. lndJcations
are, however, that the Soviets want
It lo be a power decision.
Insomnia-a Big Price of Success
Jumping to conclusions:
Insomnia is one of the big prices
of success. The guy who 's at the top
of the ladder. and trying to stay there.
usuaJJy takes more sleeping pills than
the one who has only a foot on the bot·
loot rung.
No one keeps a secret diary without
a hidden hope that eventually some·
one else will read it -someone who
really appreciates the diarist.
One of the surest ways for a man to
avoid promotion is to have his boss
come in every morning and see him
gulpin g his breakfast at his o{fice
desk. A guy this disorganized tn his
eating habits ls probably just as dis-
organized about his job.
YOU CAN'T BLAME the preacher 1f
thf're's always al least one lady sing·
tf' In tht choir who would like lo run
away from home with him. Few wom -
en go through life without th inking at
sometime they're in love' with their
doctor. th eir mlnl1;ter. or llwir
butcher
P'lowen fn a gr~nhou11rntvf'r lnok
!!< llWl'IV ;>e fhPV rln 1n fh,. f"\tltl\c nr II
girl carrying them home in the sub-
way .
The job we'd least like to have: be·
ing a bill collec tor for the U n i I e d
Nations.
Some girls will marry men even if
they propose with garlic on ltleir
breath. tr you're a bachelor. try this
and find out for yourself.
IT IS Gt;NERALLV a waste Of time
to get involved in a cultural coiwer·
satlon with anyone who habitually
douses his lrench-fried polatoe11 with
hall a bottle of ltetc!'lup
Nothing make11 the electronks age
lleem more mysterious lhan listening w a televiRlon repairman e x p I a I n
which tube In your sot went blooey.
H th ey weren't In th e educational
field. most American un lversily presi-
dents could e;irn 11 good livln~ 11elling
nil stocks
It'!! :imazing. isn't ll how Ccw bis;
n.-w night club11 hJJvt"opened up ~tnee
lhr irovPrnmrnt ~tArt"'1 chPckinr h11~.
ness entertainment a c c o u n t 1 tnbre
cJ03ely?
You 'll never hatch your nest egg U
you lend it le a fellow who carries a
racing form In "hi!! "N'lcet and wears
sunglasses on rainy days.
,.
··~11;11.11
Monday, June 26, 1967
Th• cctUonal poye o/ the Dalt11
Pilot •Hkl to inform aMl stzm-
utou reotUTa by prestnhng tht1
newrpaptt's opinions end com-
mcmtaru ·on topic& 01 bi~rut.
ond signlfic<mu. b11 providing a
/oTUm for the exprtsnon o/
"''" renders opinions. awf b11
presenting the diveru view-
point& of tnf onncd observera
nnd speke.fmrn on topics of thr
<Ln11
Robert N. ~Weed, PubUsber
]
•
VOL
SAN drug .
Lal ef
San F
two dJ
could
nation
"'lb
it.a tr
we ju
L -
2
New
Mood:
bead:
ed a
surfin
At I
cipal
surfin,
and fl
two OI
Cow
swimr
vicinil
ini th
Co1
4-0.
Foi
StatA
cial b
Beach
4().(oot
ci6c (
City
day oj
ticaJ c
lurt! 0
lie We
The
high ti
ture, '
coostn
The
ous fO' JS yec
bridge
from t
Devi
of Higo
~stabll
used a
Ing st.I.
He~
ed mi.I
ready
ange C
State :
Divi.slc
In a.
of the
proved
feet Co
presen
ance <
The
traffic
reet s<
rreewa
The
with U
Paclfi<
bay de
freewa
The
Stat•
dream
waler
Upper
Public
lln dis
Devi
D1visi<
ment
-A
$.17 mi
than «
-A
CM St
milllor
crns11h c.ru