HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-05-20 - Newport Harbor Daily PilotToday's Closing
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
YOC. ?>T, NO. lff, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 20, 1968 JEN CENTS .
' I
collle Tax
lash Vowed
yReagan
SACRAMENTO (AP) - G o v •
eagan announced plans too.ay to cut
te i.ocome taxes by $35 million next
ear, mostly in the middle income
acket that was hardest bit by the big
x boost this year.
Reagan said the cut was permitted
y a brighter-than-expected state
· ancial position.
The state is collecting $.15 million
ore this year than had been forecast.
That figure will increase to $76 million
during the fiscal year starting July 1.
Reagan said.
His office made the announcement
in a statement just as Finance Direc-
tor Caspar Weinberger presented the
new figures to the Senate Finance
Committee in a private session. (See
earlier story. Page 6.)
Weinberger said the state is ex-
pected to wind up with an unexpected
surplus of $42 million next year com-
pared with the earlier forecast of a
deficit $17.5 million. This depends on
passage or several cost-cutting bills
proposed by Reagan in the legislature.
Tbe suddenly bright financial pic-
ture was caused by Reagan ad-
ministration savings and unexpected
drops in the cost of the state's welfare
and medical care programs, Reagan
said. , Democrats have iraisted for months
I.hat the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n had
overestimated the costs of Medi-Cal.
Inflation and other factors boosted
income this year by $43.3 million more
than expected, Weinberger said. But
expenses are running $10 million more
than planned.
Reagan aod Weinberger said the
unev-cted windfall ahould not be used
Jor new spending Pf1'1RJDI. Rather. it
should be used to lDllke certain the
new '5.7 bililon budget -scheduled
for deba~ in the Senate Tuesday -is
balanced.
Teen·ager Hurt
As Motorcycle
Collides With Car
A San Gabriel teenager w a s
reported in rair condition at Hoag
Memorial Hospi tal today with injuries
s uffered when his motorcycle slam-
med into the side of a car in Corona
I.lei Mar Friday arternoon.
Richard C. Hubbell. 17. wa s one uf
two youths hurt. His passenger. James
Gri ffith , J6, of 2517 Vista Entrada.
Newport. was treated at Hoag for cuts
and bruises and released.
Young Hubbell suffered a fracturerl
tert arm, concussion and laceration~.
Police said Hubbell's motorcycle
collided with an auto driven by
Barbara A. Sadler, 32. of 603 Iris Ave .
Corona del Mar. The acc.ident oc-
curred at the Intersection of Third anti
Marguerite avenues at about 5 p.m.
The car was headed west on
Marguerite and the motorcycle sot1th
on Third, officers said.
Lung Transplant
Patient 'Bright'
EDINBURGH, ~tland CUPI)
Europe's !irst lung trat1sp'8.Dt patient.
15-year-old Alex Smjth, was "very
fresh and very bright" today ac-
cording to his father wbo V'isited him
in hospital.
l laulage boss Finlay Smm1 said he
s3w his son through a glass partition
at the Edinbur~h Royal Infirmary.
"lie was smiling quite happily. t
sigrsled to him if he wanted anything
but he shook his head ... he seems to
be making good progress,'' Smith said.
Alex Smith received a new lung in a -~n plant operation 111191 week.
DAILY "II.OT ..........
'HAVE A GOOD DAY AT THE HOSPITAL, DEAR'
Anlt• Meiater Senda Blk•Ridint Doctor Off to Work
Bicyding Beach Doctor·
Practices His Preachings
By PAMt;LA POWELL
Of 111t D•llY l'llel Start
Dr. Lester Meister a Long Beach
Veterans Administration JI o sp it a I
pbysidan rrom Huntington Beach.
believes a doctor should practice what
he preaches.
The 57-year-old doctor does just
that. He climbs astride his bicycle.
pauses for a buss on the cheek from
his wife. Anita. and rides the 13 miiles
Lo and from his work at least three
times a week.
"At the risk of being considen~d
even more of a nut." the lanky
metabolic specialist said. "after t ar-
rive at I.he hospital I climb the JO
tlights or stairs in the tower building."
Preaching that exercise do n
regularly can prevent coronary heart
disease. t:he doctor. who, by the wey is
not a nut. bas good reason to protect
his health.
Bor,n into a famiy with a history of
heart ailments. his father and several
uncles died in Uleir early 50's of cor-
onary diseases.
Another reason for the lengthy
jaunt, the doctor says, is ''because my
work is sedentary and goll isn't ex-
ercise in the medical sense."
Traveling along the Pacific Coast
Highway as he does. can be quite a
hazard. "No one !\as ever given a
thought to pedestrians and bicycles,"
he said. "It is obvious that our cities
and highways are planned around the
wheels of automobiles and not human
beings."
But riding his w e a r y looking
English racer can also be pleasurable.
he feelii. "When one can forget about
tfle traffic and the wind is behind, It's
like sailing .. , the agile sports en-
thusiast said.
Averaging about II t-0 12 miles per
hour expends about 10 calories a
minute. the doctor figures. or 600
calories each way. "whlcb is equal lo
about one hearty mul." be lldd.
Although bkycle exercise con-
tributes profoundly to the general Joss
of body fat. weight loss, especially at
middle age. he said, is not pro-
portionate. "Whatever one has as
hel'editary endowment he c a n
develop." the doctor said speaking
medically, '·but he can't change it."
.\fter sLx years of steady riding, th!'
uoctor plans to continue hili almost
dally excursions. ''Besides,'" he said.
.. ,, gnes one a reeling of heing qu11t•
virtuous.··
Neighbor Douse8
Fir~ in Balboa
With Garden Hose
A neighbor using a garden hose to·
day was credited with preventing th,.
spread ol flames at a Balboa
residence Saturday night. ·
Firemen said Don Beatty, 'Jffl Lindo
Avenue, put out a living room fire at
the house next door -at 305 Lindo -
at about 11:30 p.m.
Frank Levins. owner ol Ule house.
was not at home.
Beatty rushed over with a garden
hose as soon as he spotted the name~
through a window. Other neighbors
called firemen as Beatty hosed down
blazlng draperies.
Firemen said the fire was under
control by the time they arrived.
Damaged were the draperies, a wall.
three sliding glass doors and a color
TV set. Loss was estimated at $1.WI.
Firemen salct the blaze was ap·
parenUy caused by an electrical short
circuJt.
Annex Vote Set
First in 11 Years for Newport B~ach .
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of 1M Oelty Pllll ll•ff
Two hundred out-of-town residents
may move to Newport Beach Tuesday
-without leaving home.
They are the registered voters in a
56-acre patch of county territ.ory west
of the Upper Bay. They'll vote Tues·
day on wbether the so-called Moden
Amiexation area should be amexed by
the city or Newport Beach.
Rocky, Reagan
Meet to Assess
Dent Candidates
From \Vire Services
Republican governors N e l s o n
Rockereller and Ronald Reagan today
huddled for a half h<>ur of analyzing
Democratic presidential candidates,
after their tour paths crossed in New
Orleans.
The top executives of California and
New York told newsmen afterward
that they clid not discuss the poSsibillty
of running together as a ticket.
"I'm not interested in becoming vice
president." said Reagan, who will at-
tend the GOP convention a s
California's favorite son candidate.
Rockefeller -who himse!I hopes for
the presidential nomination -said he
feels Reagan would accept the
nomination under pressure of a draft.
Activities of New Yock Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy. currently campaigning in
1he Southland, were also d\scussed by
the two GOP leaders, with Reagan
briefing Rockefeller.
Reagan said Kennedy has suddenly
put on a suJt of arch-conservatism for
hi~ West Coast visit.
On another Issue, Reagan said Sun-
d:1y in New Orleans that the United ~tates should "reassess its military
opt ions" in Vietnam unless the current
p:iris peace talks make sizeable pro·
grcss.
"When you siL down to negotiate,''
he told an ah'port news conference at
;\ew Orleans, "you should negotiate
lrom strength. You should be willing
10 make some threats of positive ac-
1 ion.'" Ile said the North Vietnamesr
~hould be told that ''\\e are going to
reassess our c.:llntluct of U1e war. the
manner in wl11c11 we are going to tigh~
and the place we c;,re going to right. ..
"I t hink that at the same time
llanoi should recognize that in an ef-
rort to end this war. ir they're not will-
ing to end it peacefully and honorably.
we are going to reassess the fightini:
the war on South Vietnam soil and we
may consider giving them a taste of
Wctr."
* Elsewhere on the political scene
today:.
Jn Los Angeles Sen. Robert F. Ken-
nedy put himself on a 13-hour-a-day
shift today as he brou~ht bis campaign
(See POLITICS, Page %)
Bed Tax Increase
Decision Delayed
A proposed increase rn the city's
motel and hotel bed tax. which would
aCfect some 1,800 innkeepers. has been
held over for another "eek. City
Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt said to-
day.
Councilmen were to discuss lhe sub·
ject at tonight'i; adjourned session. a<:-
cording to earlier reports. But more
Ume is needed to study the plan,
Hurlburt explained. llr said rccom·
mendations from the Newport l larbor
Chamber of Commerce will be con-
aidet'e<I.
Municipal officials expect them to
say "Yes."
The annexation election is the city's
fU'St in 11 years. The last one involved
a stretch of territory along Superior
Avenue. Since 1957, the city has taken
in hu~e parcels of land, but none re-
quired an election because they were
all at the time of annexation uninhab-
ited.
Only one polling place will be used
for the Moden balloting Tuesday. It is
UCl'S NEW LEADER
Rqn Ridgle
Ridgle Elected
N C\V P1·csidcnt
Of U CI Students
at U1e William F. Harper home 458
Francisco Drive. '
The election culminates years of an-~xaUon efforts by property owners
tn I.he area. In the past, city councils
have rejected annexation petitions and
refused to call for an election because
the territory does not meet municipal
standards for streets Md other im· provements.
Last year. however, the council
(See ANNEX, Page 2)
'Dead Girl'
On Bad Trip
Calls Police
Newport Beach police took~ 17-year·
old girl into protective custody Sunday
after she told officers:
"I think I'm dead."
The girl said she had taken the dru" LSD. b•
Police went to her apartment In re•
sponse to a medical aid call. When
officers arrived, the girl said she had
called them because she thought she
was dead.·
"My body reels strange, inside and
out," she said, sobbing.
A male companion at the time was
sleeping in another room, police said.
The girl told officers she was a
widow. She said her husband died re·
cently Crom an overdose of Seconal.
She was taken to Orange Countv
Medical Center for treatment. police
said.
Schools Announce
Tlieir Graduatiow
Dates, Locations
Oates and place of graduaUon
non Rid gle. 20·yc:?r·old history ma-ceremonies have been announced by
jor. has been elected UC Irvine stu-Newport-Mesa Unified sC@_ool District.
Jent body president. Newport Harbor High seniors wilJ
Bill Coon was elected student body ,llraduate at 4 p.m. June 12 at
vice president and Danny Santucci. Davidson Field. secretary, in elections held Thursday and Friday. Corona del Mar High seniors will
OHicial results won't be released un-graduate at 5 p.m. Ule same day in the
lil Tuesday. but sources said Hiclgle school quad. and Estancia High com·
defeated Jim F: ·lC'y by several hun-mencement ceremonies will be at 7:30
1:lrcd votes. p.rn . at Davidson Field.
More than l.ILO ~tudenls \Ull'<l -<t The rollo\\lng day .. June 13. Co la
turnout of about 40 perc:ent. ~Jc~a IJigh seniors wilt graduate al 5
Ridgle. of Los An!!ele s. is 1n ht~ p. rn. at Davidson Field.
third YC<JI' at lJC.:I. I le has been a Oaccalaureate for all rour hjgh member of thr student senat~ since .lanuary and belongs to Blue Key l' ~chools will be at 4 p.m. June 9, Davidson Field.
honor fraternity. Graduation for the six intermediate He ran on a reform platrorm. pledg-schools will be at 1 :30 p.m. June 13 on
ing to spend student money more the respective campuses.
wisely. llis contention was that stu-?.tembers or the school board will dent body fees have not been spent on what students want. and therefore present diplomas al the variou~
programs consistently have I o s t ~adualion ceremonies.
money.
lie promised to poll students to
determine how fees should be spent.
He also pledged to put the question or
compulsory student body membership
to student vote.
The student body government now
1 has a guaranteed income. he said. He
argued that the extent to which it
serves student desires ought to
determine its income and its very ex-
istence.
He criticized expenditures on the
student newspaper. "Anthill."' as an
example or waste. Jl e said the
newspaper cost $12,000 this year. in-
cluding $4 .000 for staff salaries.
"'Considering the quallly or the
newspaper this is absurd." he ~aid. He
proposed no salaries unless the ~tu
dent paper ''perfom1s a real service
to thr ~tudent body or shows a profit."
profit."
Stock "Jarkets
NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock
market drifted into lower territory
again today but. for the most part,
declines were in fractions. (See quot.a·
lions. Pages 18·19).
Prices opened slightly lower and
selling spread throughout the list as
the session wore on . Some issues met
~upport in the afternoon and were
above their earlier levels.
Orange Coast
-·/(A( --~
Harbor Schools Weigh Sex Course
In other campaign promises, Rid gle
said hr would work ror student dis-
counts at stores and entertainment
events. for a free film progr:lm. for
student participation in planning
quarterly conclaves. for double book-
ing speakers previously hired by
nearby campuses. and for a student-
raculty summer retreat. •
The ~un's oul to Rtay. for a
wrule anyway. assures forecast·
er Gil Granon who predicts a
high of 72 ror the Orange Coast
Tuesday artrr the usual morning
ovcrca~t.
INSIDE TODAY
Don 't get 11our fingen burnc<l
ht dealings over new 'l1ot' 3t.ock
i~~ue1. That's the waN1ing flno11-
ci<U columni1t Sylvia Porter
gives on Page I B todau.
A recommendation to adopt 1
"family Llfe and Sex Education" pro·
gram beglnnlog wit.h kindergarten wl11
be considered Tuesday night by
Newport-Mesa Unifie<l School Dlatrlct
truitees. ·
commlttee « teache11 and prln·
dpals has been working on the pro-
posed ramJlf ure plan for about one
yur since Jt was requested by the
Harbor ..c:'Oun<:ll PT A.
Tho committee's pl"" call~ for
teaching oS the role of the r1mily to
be&ln i.o the early a:rades •It\. sex
I
tducatlon to be gradually introduced
ln the later yers.
It ts ~oested that district teachers
be employed during Ule summer at a
coM of S2,000 to develop a c:urrtcuJum.
Pilot programs would tbe:n be IW1ed
at several tchOols In ~ fall.
Meanwhllt. if the -Plan Is ulopted.
pnrent Information programs would be
Initiated.
1-'amily lire Instruct.I.on would be
voluntary with pM"tntl encouugtd to
have their ctdtdrcn ucused from any
lesson they don't C\J?tt w1th.
~ committee ~ down lesson
''strands" to be carried through the
teactting from year to )'tar. Among
these are:
-"The family Is the basic social
group 1D American tociety.
-"In any human ttlatloMhlp, con·
nict will arl.se. Tbe resolution ol th~t
conruct In an .mlcable manner ls Ule
ttapon$lblllty of all Camll7 nfemoors.
-"~nonallUts are d • v e l o p e d
basically from reltidonebipe with
family mem~.
-"Lawful marriage, Is the socl~Uy
approved union of two pc:opJe for tM ~ ol physical intimacy and
ultimate procreation.
-"An ethical and moral standard
for bis own behavior must be
established by the Individual to govern
his relationship with others.
-"Human life Is unique among all
living creatures.
-"The .. scxu&l drive in all Uvtn" ~atures Is ~econd only to hunger in
the mainten1nce of aU life.
-"Stxual matul'lty in adolescence
precedes emollonal m'turlty."
~,
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Guards Re cue Two
During Calm Weekend
Despite a big beach crowd of 65,00l,
Newport Beach Ufeguards Sunday had
to rescue only two swimmers from •
mild surf. Both saves were described
as rouUne.
Mr temperature reachrd a high of
aboot 75; water temperature w'l!ls 3
cool~. •nd the 11k;y was cloudless wllh
an t:1rty momina overcast. Muth the
same was rxpecled today,
. -
..
...
I
DAILY PILOT Monday, May 20, 1968
U.S. Marines Kill 600
[n Fierce DMZ Fights
SAIGON (UPll -Co m m u n i s t
oops mounting one ot their heaviest
1Teat5 along the Demilitarize~ Zone
)MZ) to coincide with the Pans V1et-
:Un talks ran into stubborn resistance
om U.S. Mwines and l~st an
;timated 600 deed in a series of shary
atUes, U.S: military spokesman said
t<iay. The righting centered . near Khe
anh Con Th1en and in a Jungle area
!) miles southwest ot Da Nang. The
eavtest dama~ inflicted by the
forth Vietnamese came at Camp
:vans -jumping off place. for the ~e
ent A Shau Valley campaign -with
ieavy rocket and mortar attacks.
U.S. ambassador W. Averell Har·
'iman in Paris bas propo6ed a Com·
nunist withdrawal from tbe DMZ and
·est«atioo of \be neutrality of ~e :ooe as a first step of de-escalation
nat could lead to peace talks. Instead
Ile North Vietnamese increased their
attacks along the border.
The biggest battle was around the
llorth Vietnamese jungle fortress 20
rules south of Da Nang where U.S.
md South Vietnamese troops counted
it least 401 Communist dead in a five
jay fight. The U.S. Marines lost 65
jpad and 250 ''wounded " -ma_ny of
-~ ftf ~
them victims of the 100 degree beat.
The Communists launched their
rocket attack on Camp E\•ans just
below the DMZ Sunday night, firlni!
huge 122mm rockets wruc:h t~ched off
; fire, caused "heavy"' dama~t to am·
muniUoo stor~ aod "li ght" damage to
fuel sttres and other war materiel.
Extent of the damage was not
reported but such losses arc serious
because or the difficult supply problem
there.
Near the Marine fort of Khe Sanh,
just under the North Vietnam border,
:.,cathcrnecks Sunday killed at least
126 Communists in two fights. In one,
a Marine supply convoy charged
through Red rocket., mortar 8J!d
macbineguo lire cloggmg a mountam
pass and killed 66 North Vietnamese.
In the second. Marines killed 43 North
Vietnamese who tried to overrun their
post just outside Khe Sanh, the U.S.
basUon that withstood a three-month
siege earUer I.hi& year.
At the nearby Con Thien base.
Marines killed 16 more North Viet·
oamese. The Kbe Sanh-Coo Thlen bat·
!ling killed 12 Marines and wounded
47.
U.S. military commanders said the
North yietoamese are making one of
* * *
their greatest threats to the northern
provinces or South Vietnam, switching
the main war arena from Saigon. In
the capital area. U.S. troops Sunday
killed 108 Communists in mopping up
after a Red try for the past two weeks
:it invading Saigon.
The ·orth Vietnamese ac t ion
:1oss1bly ''as aimed at bolstering the
bargainin~ position of Hanoi's delega-
tion in Paris talks with American
negotiators.
In the air, U.S. jets Oew 136
m1s3ions again:st the supply lines of
North Vietnam 's southern Panhandle
Sunday. They bit 41 trucu, five
bridges. 10 barges and four weapons
sites.
The Communists shot down an Alr
Force RF4 Ppantom reconnaissance
jet Sunday. Its two-man crew was
listed as missing. It was the second
U.S. ob erver plane lost ovu the
Panhandle in two days. Hanoi radio
cl aimed four were shot down Sunday
alone.
I
Harriman Gives British
UN Association,
W omen Voter s
Plan Joint Meet Briefing on Paris Talks The United Nations Association and
the League of Women Voters are co·
sponsoring a dinner meeting Tuesday,
al 6:30 p.m. at Hotel Laguna in Lagu-
na Beach.
P ARIS (AP) -Ambassador W.
Averell Harriman sent an aide to Lon-
don today to brief the British on the
status of preliminl\1)1 Vielnam ~~ce
talks here, in aft3:0ce of Britis.h
Foreig.n ~cretary Michael Stewart s
forthcoming trip to the Soviet uruon.
The oHicial U.S. spokesman at the
talks. In which the American and
North Vietnamese stands apparently
remain tar apart, wu asked whether
the United States was requesting the
British government to serve as go·
between for the Americans and
Russians on the peace issue. He
replied that since Washington and
Moscow have direct relations he saw
no need for a go-between. ·
The spokesman. Will J, Jorden.
recalled that President Johnson bad
Prom Pqe J
POLITICS ...
for the June 4 California primary
toward its climax.
Kennedy's schedule ran from 8:30
a.m. to 9:30 p.m. and includOO m~re
than a dozen stops in vote-nch
Southern California where all recent
state elections have been woo or lost.
* In New York Sen. Eugene .J.
Mc e arthy. at a slur-studded rally
which marked the new Madison
Square Garden's debut as a political
arena. urged Americans &today night
to "break out of lhe patterns of the
!last.'"
McCarthy's initial campaign ap-
pearance m the home territory o( Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy drew a crowd
esllmated at 19,000 into the new
garden. McCarthy aides said $.'m,000
waa pledged to help finance the
sPnator's campaign.
McCarthy flies today to the Pacific
Coast to begin a series of campaign
appearances in Oregon and Calilornia.
* The latest Gallup Poll shows
Richard Nixon letfding all other
pri-sidenlial aspirants in "highly
favorable" ratings bu t running well
behind the percentage won by Presi·
dent Johnson in May of 1964.
DAILY PILOT ~
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appealed to Britain and Russia, as
cocbairmen of the 1954 Geneva
Convention which divided Vietnam, to
work for ~ace in Vietnam .
''ietnam will be a major topic of
Stewart's Moscow sojourn.
Jorden said there have been no
private contacts between t h e
American and North Vietnamese
delegation members since the Salur·
day session.
When the tmks reopen Wednesday,
the big snag, as before, is likely lo be
North Vietnam's ins istence that the
United States. without asking any con-
cession in return. end all bombings
and acts of war against the North.
Beer Ga rden
Open at UCI
Der Spritzgarten. closest be e r
garden to a California college campus.
opened Friday at the Irvine Town
Center, immediately adjacent to UC L
The beer garden, which will serve
beer. wine and Gennan food, has the
blessing of the UCl administration.
Students will senre as bartenders
and wailers.
Owners of the beer garden are Rolf
Engen. who has been teactling a
UCI course in wine tas!Jng, Dave
Dawson and Gale Pike.
Dawson sa1d the management wiJI
be '"hard-nosed about dteck..ing on
idenWic ation because the A B C
C Alcoholic Beverage Control Board)
will be watdling.
Dr. Carl Q. Christo!. international
authority on the United Nations, will
speak on "The 20th Century Individual
and International Law."
Dr. Christol is processor of in·
ternationaJ law and political science at
U.S.C. and sE!l"ves on the State Board
of Directors of the United Nations
Association and on the UNA national
board.
He addressed th e 1967 Geneva
Conference. "World Peace Through
World Law,"' and participated in the
Pacem in Terris 11 i;t Geneva.
Mrs. Val Sherman, president of the
Coastline League of Women Voters
and Mrs. Be~e Harris of the
CoasUine UNA chapter extend an in· vitation to the general public to attend.
Reservations may be made by phoning
673-3Z79.
~Tcsau~ fj, Ahno~t
t..:hokc · to Death
A 45-year-old Costa Mesa man
received emerget'lcy treatment at
Hoag Memorial Hospital Saturday
night after ahmst choking to death on
a piece of meet while visiting friends
in Newport Bea<>h.
Robert Norris, 3214 Nebraska Lane.
got the meat caught in his throat
~:1orlly alter II p.m. lie w;i~ at a
rriend 's home at 2000 .N.a11t1h1s A' cnue.
Firemen were called. They di.;iodg-
cd the meat and used an in·:ialator to
helll Norris regain normal bc'eathing
until the arrivaJ on <:'I ambulance. lie
received further treatment at Hoag
and was released.
'Be fl, Look at Me' 4
Pbllllp Squier, 7. of Huntington Beach. visits UCt art exhibit and
sits at foot of rag lady made by Stephenie ~austad. Art exhibit was
p~rt of campus Festival of Arts on Satu rday that lnclude,d music.
art Olms. drama and dance. Carnival at UCI Sunday took 1il $600 for
student-run Unicamp, summer camp for needy children.
r•
'"
HEADED FOR NllWPORn -Here's Moden Anne:ration area whose
residents decide Tuacl.ay whether to be annaed by city of Newport
Beach. Territory, now in county, la bounded roughly by Irvine Ave-
nue (shown at bottom of white "Study Area" borde.r) and Tustin
Avenue (top). Twenty-second Street is on the right.
p,.... P .. e J
ANNEX •••
cleared the way for the eleaion by
adopting a men f1exibie annexation
policy. Areu with subltadard im·
provememts may now be considered
Cor annexation if they meet other
Ernest Ml19' Jr.
crileri.a. ·
The Maden AnnexatiOll area is
bounded by Tustin and Irvine avenues
and by 22nd Street and a Dne roughly
bet~ 21st and ab streets. It is
oear the Costa Mesa city llmita. •
The territoey bas an usesaed val-
uation of more than $1 million, accord·
ing to Newport PI.mmklg Director
It bu about m homes. JD06t rang·
Ing in market value from Pl,IXX> to
t&0,000. Mayu say the tierrltory would
"pay ita own way" oo the city tax
rolls Lf it i.a amexed. 1
A petition requesting city support
for the annexation was submitted to
tbe council· last SUJDme.f. In the bear·
ings alnc:e, no one bu protested it.
Concluded City Managtt Harvey L.
Htalburt today:
"All lndlcations are \hat it will be
approwd by the voters."
Youths Slww Knowledge
Of Space at Seminar
Space research, conaldered un·
fathomable by moet adults, bolds
fascination for youth.
Aerospace acientists who will lee·
lure to students again this summer in
Newport-Mesa'• Space S c i e n c e
Seminar had this to say ol their first
encnunler:
"I was amazed at what they already
knew They had gone farther than just
i e::iding the headlines. They asked
aduit caliber questions," said Dr.
D:inlel N. Tompkins, manager of
James Winston
Ne\~ Directo1·
At Youth Center
There"s a new face at the Newport
Harbor Community Youth Center to-
day. rt belongs to .James Theodore
Winston. 25. who is the center's new
recreation coordinator. ,
Winston was selected from a field of
lj applicants Cor the $6,066 position.
Re was graduated from Arizona State
University with a bachelor of arts
degree in recreation.
Before starting his Newport post.
Winston served as assistant youth
director in Hawaii at Hickam Air
Force Base.
Jn 1962 he was a recreation leader
for the city or Duarte. Calif .. and from
there went to work at the YMCA in
Mesa. Ariz.. a.nd for the recreation
department in Scottsdale. Ariz.
Winston's new youth post is located
in Corona del Mar at Fifth and Iris
Avenues. He Uves at 2000 Holiday
Road, Newport Beach.
space capsule prognuns for Philco-
Ford Corp. 's Space and Re~ntry
Systema Division.
"After I got t~ talking to the
students I discovered I had pitched the
tal.lc too low," agreed Dr. Ernest Kim-
me, techrucal director of ,engineering
research and development at Collins
Radio.
Tompkins, Kimme, Mrs. Kimme,
who is an independent computer pro-
gnunming C0011ultant, and Dr. A. J .
Vander\.Veyderi. senior director of
research at McDonnell-Douglas Space
Systems Center. recently were in-
troduced by lhe school district.
They and other aerospace scienl 1sts
wiU join selectf.'d teachers and l 'Cl
professors in stimulating students dur-
ing the summer space seminar.
VanderWeyden. who was formerly
with the Atomic Energy Commiss1on,
for instance. will talk about how scien·
ce can benefit underdeveloped coun·
tries. or, as he put it, "some of the
spinoffs where technology c a n
benefit."
Tompkins will discuss deep space
hardware and planet exploration.
The program. open to 19th through
12th graders with aptitude m science,
will be held at Estancia High School
and UCI with several field trips plan-
ned.
The course is not for credit and no
grades will be given. It is fede rally
founded, as a pioneering program to
be copied by other school districts.
The aerospace men said they will
not lecture so much to the stiWents
this year, but will pose problems the
students can work. on solving.
This involvement, they beUeve. may
light a spark that ~ter on might cause
the students to follow space research
careers.
Laguµa Police
Probe Latest
F1ag Misuse
Laguna Beach police today sald a
complaint ls being sought from the
dlstrict attorney'• oUice cbargi.Qg the
victim of a minor house fire with
desecrating the American nag.
Linda Hern Walsh, 21 , z. former Cal
State Long Beach student, apparenU1
used the banner as a table cloth, police
asserted. It was dlscovered when
firemen fought a kitchen stove blaze.
The incident was the seventh alleged
mlSU!e of Old Glory oo the Orange
Coast Lil the past month. All ol them
have involved young people.
In Newport Be~. police have ar·
rested suspects for uslng the flAg as a
window curtain, an auto seat cover
and a beach towel Laguna police have
booked youths on m is d e m e a n o r·
<.'barges for displaying Ho Chi Minh
pictures on the Flag and for weaing it
as a dress.
In the latest incident, Laguna police
said Miss Walsh's Flag was found
food-stained and lying on the table at
'"her 523 N. Coast Highway home as
firemen hosed down the stove fire.
The blaze was confined to the celling
above the stove. Damage w a 1
estimated at $250. No one was hurt.
Police said Miss Walsh was Mleep
in another ~oom when tbe fire oc-
curred. At the ti.me a male companion
was using the stove.
Top Harvard
Professor
Moves to UCI
UC Irvine has lured a professor
away from Harvard.
Or. A. Kimball Romney. professor
of social anthropology at Harvard
University, is ooe of two full pro-
fessors appointed to the UCl faculty,
effective July 1.
Dr. William F. Sharpe, professor or
economics, will move from the
. University of Washington.
Professors Romney and Sharpe both
are noted for the application of
mathematical analysis to their discl·
pUne.
Professor at Harvard since 1966, Dr.
Romney's field work bas beeG pri·
marily in llOUtbem Mexico and Guate-
ma.la. Prlo1.1 to joining Harvard, be
was director ol anthropology research
and chairman of the committee of
Lalin American studies at Stanford
:ind a fellow of the Center for Ad·
'anc-rd Study in the Behavioral
:->c:icnces.
Dr, Sharpe is noted !or his theoret·
ical eronomic analysis of investments
.ind financial management and for his
work on the ecooomlcs of computing.
He twice has served as a research
economist at the RAND Corp. in San·
ta Monica.
Church to Use
School R()(»ms
Second Churcll of Christ Scientist of
Newport Beach has been given
permission to use Corona del Mar
Elementary School Sundays a n d
Wednesday evenings to Ude it over un·
tit its new church is completed.
Use o( the school will begin July 3.
The new churb on Pacific View Drive
should be completed by the end of
August.
Newport-Mesa school district will
charge $38 Sundays and $26.50
Wednesday evenings for use of the
school cafetorium and one classroom.
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in vites readers
Coast -or at
Sup re
Picke1
WASHINGTON
preme Court decla
cannot flatly ban
ban shopping cent
on privale proper
The 6-3 decision
,·ania case where
gamated Food En
CIO) was prohlbit
der Crom setting
around a market
near Altoona.
Justice Thurgoo
m:.ijorily opinion
way for intensifie
ihc mushrooming
d2velopmenls goil
country.
In other action!
-Heid in a Lo•
constitutional gui
• trial by jury in CI
Ing on the states.
its costitution pr
Ml
Si
Si
,.,
l
J
Monday, May 20, 1968 DAILY PILOT :J
Talie The Breaks
Craig Lockwood. new DAJLY PILOT sur!ing editor.
invites readers to ride the breaks along the Orange
Coast -or at least, enjoy reading about them -
in a colorful special section, SURFING 1968. to be
published Tuesday in the DAJLY PILOT. It's surf-
ing made fun !or everyone.
Supreme Com1 Approves
Picketing at Shop Centers
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Su-
preme Court declared today that states
cannot flatly ban picketing at subur-
ban shopping centers even if they are
on private property.
Tiie 6-3 decision came in a Pennsyl-
vania case where a local of the Amal·
gamated Food Employes Unfon (AFL·
CIO) was prohibited by state court or·
der from setting up a picket line
aJ'ound a market in a shClpplng center
near Altoona.
trials for misdemeanors which are tle·
fined in the state as all those which
are not punishable by death or hard
labor. Thus in Louisiana. murder, ag-
gravated rape and aggravated kidnap-
ping were the only charges where_ a
unanimous verdict or a 12-member JU·
ry was mandatory for .conviction. The
vote was 7 to 2. '
-Ruled, 7 to 2. in an lllinols cas"
that a Chicago attorney had been e11-
tilled to a jury trial in a contempt of
court conviction because the state leg·
islature had not fixed a maximum pen·
alty and the lawyer was sentenced tu
24-months' imprisonment.
Teen-age Dancers
Hospitalized by
Mysterious Pills
SAN JOSE (UPI) -The rock band
was gushing out its message to the
15,000 youngsters in the audience when
the tall stranger mounted the stage.
"I'm a hog man and this is a hog
woman." he said with a wave of his
hand. "and we invite you to share our
pi Us."
Then the mysterious couple walked
through the crowd Saturday, poppini::
hundreds of small orange capsules into
outstretched hands. The band resumed
its tempo and the "hogs" drifted away.
A few minutes later, a teen-age boy
hegan vomiting, another doubled over
with cramps, a third passed out. Oth-
ers tumbled over Uke bowling pins.
Coast Girl Needs a Heart
Tot Faces Surgery to Repair Deformed Organ
""By 1\IARGARET RALL
Of .... 0.lly ...... llett
Laura Carney will be three years old
Tuesday. She's probably lucky to have
lived this long.
Laura was born wiU1 a deformed
heart. Her parents, the James
Carneys of Huntnlgton Beach, can't
give the techniacl terms or ex-
planations, but they know Laura's
J1eart performs only four of the seven
major functions it sboul<i.
Just a week and a day after her
b1tthday, Laura will face 12 hours or
st:rgery, to be performed by a team of
seven doctors at St. Bernadine's
J lospllal in San Bernardino.
lier doctor, I. Hunter Crittenden,
MO. wanted to delay the surgery until
lhlura was 5, but decided he didn't
dure wait any longer.
When you watch Laura playing .
q·1ietly on her living room fioor, you
find she is usually crouched down
respng on her heels with her knees
high .
• Vier playing a few minutes -or
11 ·olking a few steps -she pulls
hc•rsclf up on the couch drawing her
knees high to her chest in an in·
i.tmctive gesture of self preservation.
You see, Laura can't really get a
;;ood breath unlll her knees are lucked
undt'r her chin.
~he's already had her hear t
1 athrlcrized, when just seven months
old. Thal helped, but not enough.
Sht• loses consciousness several
11111~~ a day Crom lack of oxygen, her
mother says.
The other Carney girls -Debora.
1:;, Celinda. 11 and Terry Lee. 7, -are
•·used IQ her being sick" and all the
.' oungsters around the Delaware
Studio Apartments in l luntington
Beach where they live "mother" the
prl'lly little blue-eyed brownette.
There will be a small birUlday party
to: Laura Tuesday. She can't take too
much excitement, so it wi11 have to be
~mall.
You don't have to really know
Lam·a. Just lo meet her makes you
\1 ~rnl \•ery much to keep that tiny
he:irl beating.
The surgery she requires i~ going lo
t:ike a lot or blood . • Justice ThurgOOd Marshall wrote lht>
majority opinion which may open the
way for intensified union activities i11
-th e mushrooming suburban shopping
d:!velopments going up throughout the
country.
In other actions. the court:
--Granted a hearing to a theoloirical
'itudent who was inducted after he haJ
sent his draft card back to selective
service in protest or the Vietnam war.
·The case involving James J . Ostrei-
cher, a 24-year-old student from Chey·
enne, Wyo., has also brought disagree·
ment between Selective Service Direc-
tor, Lewis B. Hershey, and the Jus-
tice Department.
"They're dropping like flies," a San·
ta Clara sheriff's deputy said. Ambu-
lances roared to the county fair·
grounds. Twenty-five youngsters were
given emergency treatment for violent
nausea, vomiting and blurred vision.
'in .!une a bloodmobile. will be' com-
ing to the Huntington Beach area.
'fhc1t's the best time for people who
Ii\'~ here and want lo help Laura to
donate blood toward a life-giving bank
account for her. DAILY "ILOT Slt ff .......
-Held in a Louisiana case that the
constitutional guarantee or a right to
• trial by jury in criminal cases is bind-
ing oo the states. Louisiana laws and
its c05titutlon provide for non · jury
A spokesman at the hospital, wher"
the victims were t~ted and later re·
leased, said the pills apparently con-
tained amphetamines.
The DAILY PILOT will report
details later on just where and whrn
the blood\llobile will visit. But keep it
in mind -it would maxe a great
lnrthday present.
BLOOD IS BEST BIRTHDAY GIFT YOU COULD GIVE HER
'Luc_ky Laura' Carney, 3, Faces Open Heart Surgery
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BeautUul L11 Taylor needs a mil·
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.ow off her assets like tbe Egyp-m Pyramids need all that sand.
Jt husband Richard Burton says
s glamorous wife occasionally ~ars diamonds and other precious
ones worth that much in public.
ne actress bas added another bau·
e to her collection in the form ot
33.19 carat, white diamond ring
>ughl al an auction fo r $305,000.
he emerald-cut jewel is describ-
1 as "one of the world's most per·
!Ct stones." •
Mood.it. May 20, 1968
Riot-tor11
Saljsbury
Guarded
SALISBURY, Md. (UPI) -State
Police' and NaUonal Guardsmen arm-
ed with rilles, shotguns and teargas.
patrolled SaUsbury and Its suburbs to·
day, arresting curfew violators in an
area wracked by two successive
nights of racial violence.
About 25 curfew violators were ar-
rested during the night but a National
Guard spokesman said most were for
mlnor traffic irregularities ''having
nothing to do with the racial situa·
tlon." .
On Sunday night a snipe;r fired shots
at 3 State Police car and police fired ·
tear gas at a crowd of rock-throwing
Negroes in this Eastern Shore com-
munity. A suspect in the sniping was
apprehended.
$%06.000 LOSS
Qty officials said today that since
the disturbances began damage and
economic losses totalled more than
$200,000 and there had been about 50
arrests and 20 injuries. Seven fires
were att:rlbu\ed to· arson. Salisbury
has 16.000 residents, about one-third of
them Negro. The city is the com·
mercial hub of the predominantly
rural E~tern Shore section and until
six years ago was c o m p 1 e t e I y
segregated.
/
New Miss U.S.A.
Breaks Tradition
..
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Didi
Anstett, the Kirkland, Wash., girl with
the .. Miss U.S.A." ribbon across her
40-lncb bust, is otf to New York
Wednelday to give television talk
show audiences, something to look at.
Then the 20-year-old former student,
model ud reitalD'ant hostess will
return to Miami to pick up her '5,000
~k for winning the 1968 crown
Saturday night and sign a few con:
tracts worth another $5.lm• for guest.
appearancei and sponsorships.
"A ti d learn bow to wear my n e w
('7.500) chinchilla stole," added the 5-
foot·9 brunette whose 4().2>36 shape
proves well-rounded girls are still in
demand.
Dtd1 was picked to represent this
country in the Miss Universe Pageant
as the prettiest of the girls from 50
states in the contest.
Runners-up were Miss Maryland.
Paulette Reck: Miss Nevada, Kathy
Landry; Miss Louisiana, Kathy Hebert
and Miss New Mexico. Bonnie Tafoya.
To keep her dates as the new queen.
Company supervising e I e c t r l c a 1
engineer, Didi feels that the way to
win ls to keep cool.
"Don't take it seriously," she ad-
vl!ed other runway hopefuls. "U I took
the whole week leading up to Saturday
night serloosly, I'd be a nervous
wreck".
Didi had called borne every night
last week to let her folks in Kirkland
know how she was getting along. But
when it came Ume to tell them she
had won the crown,. all she got w95 a
busy signal.
''Everyone was calling them at the
same time, and they were still waiting
to see me actually. win it on West
Coast television," she said. Because of
a time ~g, staUons in the Pacific
Time Zone were carrying a delayed
broadcast.
"Most of my four brothers and four
sisters were watching me at my
grandparents' home." she said. "and
tveryone was calling to tell them I'rt
won and to be sure and watch -a s if
they needed reminding."
The new Mi ss U.S.A. says her am-
bition is to "help others. model, travel
and teach high school for the mentally
retarOOd."
The curfew was lifted at 7 a.m. but
was expected to be reimposed tonight.
Schools were open but absenteeism '
was hlgh. State Police and National
Guardsmen report~ a quiet night
from midIDght on.
MISS U.S.A. OF WASHINGTON STATE
Didi Anstett Aims for Miu Universe Title
Didi-Dorothy is her •·real name" -
is going to have to 'break a couple of
contracts for the coming ~ear. One is
a renewal of a television commercial
series in Seattle and the other is
enrollment at the University of
Washington Where she dropped out
during her final quarter as a junior to
enter the beauty pageant.
The daughter of a Boeing Aircraft
Miss Anstett. keeping her cool to the
very end, broke another beauty con·
test tradition Saturday night.
She didn't shed a single tear a s they
pt.aced the gilded crown on her dark
tresses.
:obin Norjleet'1 Siamese cat has what
ppeari to be more th.ail ca1ual inter·
st a sit watches mistrets f eed baby
wallowa that fell out of their nest.
:obin, 19. of Salina!. has been taking
-i stray bird& for three years, t urn·
1g them loose healthy. She feeds her
ringed f rienda watered-down cat
Jod. So far, tabby hasn't made a
ieal of any o/ the birds. • Charlie Brown may be a good
a ndidate for president. Nearly
1veryone can identUy with the lik·
1ble comic strip character who's
ilways getting his kite caught in
.rees, according to Dr. Leo Alexan-
ler, psychiatrist from Tufts Uni·
1ersity Medic~ School. "~eople
>ick the candidate who mirrors
lieir own feelings and when a na·
lon is intensely disturbed, a lead·
:!r will be chosen who is even more
iisturbed. The people will pick a
oorderline paranoid," he said . He
hastened to add that "none of the
oresent candida tes in this country
3re borderline pa ranoids.'' • F -z=
lf ice cream parlor chairs are
of value to antiqu e collectors. '
then Milwaukee (Wisconsin)
County has found a bonanza ill
an attic. Howard A. McMillan,
the county's purchasing age,1t,
said tllat 36 wire·backed chairs
were f 01111d stored in a11 attic of
a cou11ty-uw 11ed building. Mc·
Milla11 said officials cton 't know
how or wllc11 the county acq11ir·
ed tile cllairs.
• A Panamanian stowaway, Alan
Ramuick, 19, is being sent back to
Chile on the same ship that brought
him to Britain . . . as soon as he
gels out of the hospital where he
is recovering from a stomach ail·
ment. Dockworkers. unloading the
freighter Orcoma, found Ram uick
c rouched between crates of melons
which were his sole diet for 30
days.
There were several reports of win·
dow smashing and looting in the Negro
section of the city Sunday but the
violence was not as severe as Satur·
day night's when about 1,000 Negroes
ran through the downtown section.
smashing windows, looting a n d
starting fires.
NEGRO KILLED
The violence followed the killing or a
Negro deaf mute burglary suspect by
a policeman. Detective Jerry Mason.
26, was charged with manslaughter
and suspended from the police force.
He posted $1.500 bond.
Police used tear gas and dogs Sun-
day to break up a crowd of about 300
Negroes who were pelting firemen
with bricks. bottles and stones in the
Negro district. The firemen were bat·
Uing a brush fire believed started by a
firebomb. Fire Chief Wilson Taylor
pulled hi s men out of the area and said
he would not send them back unless
the streets were cleared. ,
A drenching thunderstorm helped
police and guardsmen clear the
streets but minor incidents occurred
after the rains passed over. Several
fires erupted in the south suburban
areas and police set up roadblocks to
Jook for carloads of fire bomb
throwers.
GUTTED BY FIRI::
Two lumberyards were gulled by
fire in the small town of Fruitland,
seven miles south of Salisbury. One
fire, at the Pineland Lumber Company
burned into the early morning hours
as firemen called several times for
assistance. Several arrests were
made.
Gov. Spiro T . Agnew ordered the
National Guard to take charge Sunday
after sta te and local police quelled the
violence Saturday night. The governor
said bis move was taken as a precau·
tionary measure and he gave the Na·
lional Guard commander. Maj. Gen .
George M. Gelston the authority to ac-
tivate as man){ guardsmen as he need·
ed to restore order .
Eight hundred of the state's 8.000
guardsmen were placed on active duty
and assigned to Salisbury. Two hun·
dred of them had been barracked in
the Salisbury Armory since Saturclay
night. About 400 state police were also
m the city. Atty. Gen. Francis Burch
said "there are no plans at present" to
activate any more troops.
Spock's Lawyer
Asks 'Why Few
Women Jm·ors?'
BOSTON (UPI) -The trial of Dr.
Benjamin Spock and four co-defen·
dants charged with conspiracy in
.Wding young men to evade the draft
opened today with defense counsel
challenging the list of prospective
jurors.
Leonard Boudin, counsel for the
famed pediatrician, questioned w h y
only five of the 100 prospective jurors
were women. Clerk Russell Peck of
the U.S. District Court said the names
were chosen earlier this month from a
box filled with the names of 300
persons. as required by law.
On trial with the 65-year-ollL Spoc
were the Rev. William Sloane Coffin
J r.. 43. chapJajn of Yale Divinity
School, Michael Ferber, 23, of Buffalo,
NY .. a Harvard Graduate School Stu-
dent. Marcus Raskin. 33, o f
Washington, co-director of t he
Institute for P olitical Studies. and
author Mitchell Goodman. 44. of
Temple. Maine. and New York.
All were charged with conspiring to
counsel young men to evade the draft
during a rally last Oct. 16 at the Ari·
ingto n Street Church lo Boston.
Five U.S. marshals stood guard in
the 12th floor courtroom which spilled
over with spectators.
More than 5,000 persons picketed the
federal courthouse earlier this year
when the five were arraigned on the
antidrafl charges. but no pickets
gath ered In the light rain today.
Boudin tried to determine from the
clerk how the names of the pro·
spective jurors were chosen and Peck
said the disproportionate numb<.'r of
men to women "makes me look like a
misogyn." The courtroom broke mto
to laughter.
Maximum penalty on com ict11)r. is
five years in prison and a $10,000 hne.
Blythe Broils
Along With Palm S1Jri11gs, Tli errnal a.t 106 Degrees
Te naper•t11re•
Mltll Ltw 'rec.
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HUNTINGTON EACH-PHONE142-4495
Mon. to 'IWs. I a.111. 'til 6 p.111. FRI. 8 q,.111~ 'ti1 9 p.111. SAT. I a.111. 'til 5 p.m •
(
)
Volont t
Poo1
City
WASHINGTON
Eager volunteer!
late into the night
Poor People's
more than double
its "Resurre<:tio1
U.S.A." over the
setting the st
possibly major <
lions early thls W•
With mote thai
projected 3,000
now housed in I
Potomac Park qu
So uther n Ch
Leadership Confe
for the first time
nucleus of demon.
which to draw.
The Rev. Ral
Abernathy, SCLC
is to huddle with I
day fo r a strate~
that could well
nighUall. Exactly
where to demonst
or the topics on t
da.
Only sudden r~
prevented organi:
previously ~ n n
march around t
Sunday alternoor.
Rev. Andrew "i
ecutive vice pr
SCLC.
The 63-year-ol<
told newsmen h
week-0ld campai1
"extremely well
"stirring the cor
America .•••
talking about p
never before."
Negro and wt
leers had p u s
struction of the I
plywood huts tha
most of the city
way down the
stretch from th
Memorial to the l
Monument by SIU
Neither a sea
morning sun no
'ernoon's bluster
kept busloads o:
·ivals from pouri.
hanty city with
•red suitcases, l>
lankets
Most had been I
1rge groups. the
ifidwestern cara
arrived Saturday
was housed in the
Columbia Ooliselt
8 2 5 ·man N1
car avan housed
days in IUburbaJI
churches.
Many campaigi
slog their way tht
mud left by a
afternoon downi:
the high spirits o
peared unda mag•
The last major
due until Thur
persons who left
two weeks ago, a
Sunday night a-
down in the c a
Northern Virgini
to await apace i
rection City."
A spokesman
camp3igners wer
15 churches afte
the last 90 miles
Gun Ba
Continu
In Mid«
By Umted Pr~I'
tional
Israeli and J o 1
troops exchang·
across the Jorda
cease-fire line tc
side accused the •
ing on peacefu
villages south of
Galilee.
Israel reportei
minute gunbattlt
when Jordanian t
a volley <1,shots a
tractor iri the Be:
30 miles south of
Galilee. J orda1
reported clashes
in the Damiya B
north of the Deac
There were twc
or firing Sundal
one along the b
Syr ia and anotht
the Sea of Ga.UJe.
EarlieT" a IPOk•
te r r or is t s
grena<les attacke-
truck on ttle Gol
near the border
Sunday. An lsrae
truck was the t
m achine gun b
across the J ordai
day incident souU
ol Galilee, offlci.a
No caalllide
reported m •
clashes.
At the United ~
Security Council
lng anotber atter
UM ltey to peace
di. EHt "1th 1 s
ed today to hea
nlan com pa.Jnt
fsrMl'1 pollclts I
area1 f1' Jeru1.i.
Volunt eers Grow
Poor P eop(e' s
City Doub"led
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Eager volunteers working
late into the nlght helpe<l the
Poor People's Campaign
more than double the size of
its "Resurrection Cl t y ,
U.S.A." over the weekend.
setting the stage f o r
possibly major demonstra·
lions early this week.
With more than half the
projected 3.000 residents ·
now housed in their West
Potomac Park quarters. the
SouthernCh r istlan
Leadership Conference has
for the first time a siieable
nucleus of demonstrators on
which to draw.
The Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy, SCLC president,
is to huddle with his staff to·
clay for a strategy meeting
that could well last until
nightfall. Exactly when and
where to demonstrate is one
or the topics on their agen·
da.
Only sudden rai n squalls
prevented organization of a
previously a n n o u n c e d
march around the Capitol
Sunday afternoon, said the
Rev. Andrew Young, ex·
ecutive vice president of sctc.
The 63-year-old minister
told new smen he felt the
week-old campaign is doing
"extremely well" so far,
"stirring the conscience of
America . • • America is
talking a'bout poverty as
never before."
Negro and white volun·
teers bad p u s h e d con-
struction of the lent-shaped
plywood huts that make up
most of the city about half·
way down the mile-long
stretch from the Lincoln
Memorial to the Washington
Monument by Sunday night.
Neither a searingly hot
morning sun nor the af·
'ernoon~s blustery r a i n s
kept busloads of new ar·
·ivals from pouring into the
hanty city with their bat·
1red suitcases, bedrolls and
lankets
Most had been part of two
1rge groups, the 1,000-man
Aidwestern caravan which
arrived saturday night and
was housed in the District of
Columbia Oolbeum. and the
8 2 5 ·ma n Northeastem
caravan housed for two
<lays ln IUbufban Maryland
churches.
Many campaigners had to
slog their way through thick
mud left by a series of
afterooon downpours. But
the high spirits or most ap·
peared undamaged.
The last major contingent
due until Thursday, 400
persons who left Mississippi
two weeks ago, arrived late
Sunday night and settled
down in the c a p i t a l ' s
Northern Virginia suburbs
to await space in "Resur·
rection City."
A spokesman said the
camp1igners were put up in
l!l churches after covering
the last 90 miles Crom Rich·
Gun Battles
Continuing
In Mideast
By UnJ&ed Pre11 18'enla·
Uooal
Israeli and J o r d a l'I i a n
troops exchanged r 1 r e
ac:ro.ss the Jordanian RivP r
cease-fire line today. Each
side accused the other of fl.I'·
ing on peaceful farmin g
villages south of the Sea of
Galilee.
Israel reported a five·
minute gunbattle f I a r e d
when Jordanian troops fired
a volley of shots at an Israeli
tractor in"'the Beisan Valley
30 miles south of the Sea of
Galilee. Jordan I a t er
reported clashes there and
in the Damiya Bridge area
north of the Dead Sea.
There were two outbreaks
of firing Sunday including
one along the border with
Syria and another south of
the Sea of Galilff.
Earlier 1 spokesman said
te r rori s ts with hand
grenades attacked a civilian
truck on the Golan Heights
near the border with Syri~
Sunday. An Israeli armored
truck was the target of a
machiM gun burst from
across the Jordan in a Sun·
day lncldert south of the Sea
ol Galilee, offlal.als '8.id.
No c111n1111de1 w e r e
;reported in an1 of the
dashes.
mond. Va .. in nine buses.
Campaign leaders said lit·
tie over the weekend about •
the shortage of funds they
reported late in the first
week. Other officials said
the Rev. Bernard Lafayette, •
campaign coordinator, was
mistaken when be told a
news conference $3 million
was needed just to complete
construction of the city .•
Although the camp was
close to filling its 15-acre
allotted site by 'Sunday
night. piles of u n u s e d
lumber still dotted vacant
areas of camp.
Several campaign con-
tingents are still on the road
from the Midwest, and of·
ficials expect a total of 5,000
once everyone has arrived
by the May 24 target date.
Student
Uprisings
Continue
By Unlted Press Intern•·
tional
Students at Ohio Universi-
ty stoned campus buildings
Sunday :light and blocked a
downtown intersection in the
coUege town of Athens in
protesting against a decision
not to end the academic
year two weeks early.
At New York's Columbia
U n i v e r s i t y • 25 un-
dergraduates involved in re·
. cent campus disorders were
ordered to report to the
dean's oCfice this week as a
possible p r e l u d e to
disciplinary action. The let·
ters s u m m o n i n g the
students warned them they
may be suspended if they
fail to comply.
In Chicago, a handful of
alumni of R o o s e v e I t
University endorsed student
protests which inspired a
series of sit-ins and Ioele-ins
last week. A threatened
boycott of classes at the
University of Chicago was
called off because of the
threat ol. finn action by the
administration against unru· ly students.
Fourteen Negro students
at Marquette University in
Wisconsin withdrew a threat
to quit in prote.st against
"institutionaJ racism" when
university authorities yield·
ed to ttieir demands.
About 1,000 of 0 hi o
University's 16,500 students
were involved in the rock·
throwing, which was in·
spired by the reversal of a
university decision to close
the school two weeks early
this year because of a strike
of non-academic employes.
The students massed on
the campus shouted "we
want to go home!" as they
stoned the home o f
University P r e s i d e n t
Vernon Alden and then
marched away to block
Athens' main intereection,
on the edge of the campus.
City police, c amp u 1
patrolmen and some state
troopers were alerted for
trouble, but there was no
,major violence.
I ''This do e s n • t ·look
serious," said Police alief
Fred James. "We've had a
few windows broken. but
nothing major ... they see m
to delight in blocking the in·
tersection, which is the only
major one near the cam-
pus."
At Roosevelt University, a
group calllng itself "Con·
c erne d Al u mni of
Roosevelt" urged o t h e r
graduates at an alumni din·
ner to w i t h h o I d con·
tributions from the univers1·
ty until controversial history
teacher Staughton Lynd has
been hired full time and
students involved in the re·
cent disorders are promised
that they wil not be punish·
ed.
Pakistanis
Cease Lease
RAWALPINDI (UPI) -
Paltlstan announced today
the United States will have
to give up t h e com·
m u n i c 1 ti o n 1 bate in
Pakistan trom which u2
pilot FranciJ Gary Powe.rs
took off on his ID•lated flUgbt
OYer Ruma in May, 1980.
# •
Monday, MlY 20, 1968 DAILY PILOT 5
S~ Million Strike
Spreading Chaos
' Cripples France
PARIS (UP I) -The
series of strikes that has
crippled France in a threat
to President Charles de
Gaulle gained momentum
today and unions reported 5
to 6 mlUion workers on
strike. Public ser.vices were
at a halt. ·
1-lousewives panicked as
more and more Communist·
leti unions seized control nf
factones the length and
' breadth of Fr a n c e .
TOP EMMY AWARD WINNERS -Three top in-
dividual winners at the annual Emmy Awards Sun-
day night were, left, Don Adams for comedy in "Get
Smart," Lucille Ball, four·time winner as best
Fourth Win for L~v
comedienne in her "Lucy" series, and Bill Cosby
for drama in his series "I Spy." Adams, Ball and
Cosby, all repeaters, received their awards for out-
standing performances in a series leading role.
Emmy Awards to Repeaters
HOLLYWOOD IUPI) -
Television's Emmy Awards
looked Uke a summer rerun
Sunday night with Lucille
Ball. Don Adams a n d
• · M is s Ion : Impossible"
repeating past triumphs.
Miss Ball won her fourth
video award as best com·
edienne on the air and Don
Adams of "Get Smart"
picked up his second con·
seculive emmy as best corr
edian .
' ' ~ission : Impossible ·
named best dramatic seri1
last year, made it two in ;
row this year and Barbar•
Ba.in won her second Emmy
as best dramatic actress for
h e r performance in t h e
sen es.
"Get Smart " nominated
twice in past years for best
comedy series, was award·
ed the gold statuette this
year .
Bill C.osby of "I Spy" was
another repeat winner. He
was voted best dramatic ac·
tor for the third year in a
row.
Winners of the b e s t
· r a m a t i c performance
wards were M a u r e e n
•tapleton for "Among the
laths to Eden" and veteran
actor Melvyn Douglas for
"Do Not Go Gentle into That
GO'ld Night."
Tn t h e n el w or k
breakdown, NBC and CBS
had 20 winners each. ABC
won siX and National Educa·
tJonal 1'elevision won four.
The national Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences
selected 50 winners Crom a
total of 262 nominations and
a parade of individuals
trooped to the microphones
in simultaneous ceremonies
at the Palladium i n
H o I I y w o o d and the
Americana Hotel in New
York.
The new "Rowan and
Marlin's Laugh-In" wa s one
of ~ big winners of the
evening with four statuettes.
1'he anthology • • CB S
Playhouse" a I s o received
four awards.
In the s upport i n g
categories, Milburn Stone.
the argumentative D o c
Adams of "Gunsmoke!" and
newcomer Barbara
Anderson of "Ironside"
were voted best supporting
players in dramatic series.
Werner Klemperer. the
bumbling Colonel Klink in
"Hogan's Heroes," and the
late Marion Lome o f
"Bewitched'' were selected
for best. supporting comedy
emmy1.
Out of the Clear Blue Sky ...
Supermarket shelves were
swept clean of sugar and
canned goods by housewives
who swarmed through them
like Jocusts.
It was the bigg~ labor
walkout since the end or
World War II ood the
greatest threat to De Gaulle
since he came to power 10
years ago. The spreading
chaos came as he faced a
threat of censure in the Na·
tional Assembly Wednesday
on his economic policies.
The situation was out of
control of the government
for the time being as
workers seized g i a n t
automobile factories and
smaU town plants and as
political opponents demand·
ed De Gaulle resign.
De Gaulle cut short a
state visit to Romania this
weekend and rushed home
to size up tM crisis which
started when students seiz·
ed control or the universities
in a demand for reform. The
unrest touched off the wave
or strikes.
De Gaulle after a meeting
with his cabinet decreed :
"Reform yes. chaos, no."
But the strikes spread and
he called in his cabinet
minister today to confer on
the situation. He already
had mobilized the National
Gendarmerie ( N a t i on a I
Guard) and thousands of
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police were on duty.
Airports were c lo s e d •
Railroad traffic was at a
standstill. B u s e s and
subways were halted and
the heart of Paris was jam-
med by thousands of cars
brought in by office workers
not yet on strike. Tourists
were stranded. unable to
leave the country or to get
money. There was a run on
filling stations ·and some C
banks had run oµt or ready
cash.
De Gaulle stayed behind
his antique ·desk. consulting
aides. Premier G e o r g e s
Pompidou emerged smiling
Sunday night aod t o : d
newsmen De Gaulle ended a
cabinet meeting with the
words, "Reform. yes, chaos
(or disorder). no."
In Parliament where op·
position deputies were mov·
ing a censure motion, his
critics called him Charles
the Silent, a do-nothing.
In the country, mail went
undelivered. Coal miners
began marching out of the
pits. Paris traffic, never
easy, clogged. Workers, who
had occupied 120 large
plants by Sunday night,
spread their takeover to
other factories today. ·
The average minimum
salary in France is about
$90 a month. The Com·
munist leaders demanded
$200 a month. Unions said
the work week must be cul
from 48 lo 40 hours.
Threatened with a tellers'
strike, depositors mobbed
banks to draw out money. It
took an hour in Paris to
cash a check. OJI firms told
drivers not to worry but
motorists jammed filling
stations. predicting a fuel
workers walkout. Power and
gas were cut.
Most of the students,
whose battle with police
against De Gaulle's school
polkies set oil the national
unrest, continued to cripple
universities. Teachers stop.
ped high and grammar
schools today.
,I
At the United Nation1. the
Security Council was mak·
Ing anoCbe1' attempt to rind
tbe ley to puce In the Mid·
d'le Ectt •Ith a 1e1slon call·
ed todlJ to hear a Jorda· mu cocnpa.tnt a g • I n s l
llrld's poUdes tn occupied
&1'H!I tt JsusaJem.
Foreign Minister Ar1had
Husain told parliament hit
government has informed
the United States of can·
cellation of the lease on the
bale • at Badeber n e a r
Peshawar .. about 100 miles ~ J,, .... , nrui•ttt~RawaJpindi. 1~~~~-A~l--~-:-~~~~~~---_.~r---_..!J~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---,,r-----
/
-.-...--.. .._ ~ ----- -.-.. -..-... .... ...-.. ..... .-...-----~~--------. .
... •
v
C DA.IL Y Pl!.OT MondAy, "1.llJ 20, l %8
"He atarted out with; 'How do I love thee, let me
count the ways,' and before be wu finiabed the
· whole ~I waa abot."
BAKERSFIELD (AP) -
Two light planes collided in
mid.air Sunday killing four
Bakersfield residents.
Authorities said t h e
single-engine planes had
just taken off from an air
Girl Hippies
Buss Mayor
In SF Park
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
.1 -MayoT J oseph Alioto
strolled thr ough G o 1 d e n
Gate PaTlt to investigate
complainta of lewdness and
criminal <activity -and end-
ed up hummlng a tune and
receiving a kiss.
Alioto, reacting to citizen
grievances the park is being
desecrated by hippie$, made
hia personal i n 1 p e c ti o n
Saturday. but found himself
answering. so many ques-
tions, he had no chance to
ask any.
"Hey, Alioto. what do you
think ol black power?" a
Negro in a 1beret asked. And
a long-haired blonde chimed
in: "You ever smoke ,
Alioto?"
2 Brothers
Feared Dead
BAKERSFIELD (AP) -
A 16-year-old boy drowned
and his 18-year-old brother
who tried to save him was
missing and p r e s u m e d
drowned Sunday in the Kern
River about 15 miles east of
Bakersfield.
Jimmy Royce Hart and
Johnny Mike Hart. o f
Bakersfield, were swim-
ming with two companions
when Johnny, the older
brother, was told Jimmy
was in difficulty. Both
disappeared.
The mayor moved away,....==========
chatting with several groups
and watching two hippies
dance to African drums. He
hummed a tune with a
group who were singing.
Two young girl hippies ran
up to him and kissed him.
BEST
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AC,_. flW'ft T""°*" 111"4,. ,.,.,
FREE Car \Wsh
WITH &AS RU-If· to &AL Ml.
WITH THIS COUPON OR SOe OFF
CAR WASH wftheut ... ~ _..., ..... ,...,...,..,_
UM YOUI Ca9fT CADS H•
1 Killed,
6 Injured
In Blaze
Estimates Presented Actor Nabbed J=-====--------=----
State Tax .Income MALCBU (UPI) -Britlabi================:; actor Terence St.amp and
bit brother, arrest.ci during
the weekend on mart)uana
posae1Poll charges, were
ftee on baJl today.
~ stamp. out IGNORUNCE ..• »' read a BOOK Above Forecast? Sheriff'• deputies said
they smelled a "ttrong odor T•e lleelultaD u> L 1M It.. c:... .._ MM611
of bum.lng marijuana" as l'==================' they waited behind Stainp's ------------------
rented car at a 1top sign
OPEN HOUSE STARTING
SUPERIOR OFFICES
MAY 20TH . • . UNIVERSITY, SUNNY HILL~, AND
. • REFRESHMENTS . • • FREE GIFTS FOR All
Far new accounts and present depositors of
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK
f /egant Lady
REINFORCED SILVERPLATE
Classic in design ••. with grace-
ful handle enriched with tradi·
t ional floral and scroll mot if
enhancing the smooth surfaces
of gleaming silverplate.
Tradewinds
rAREFREE STAINLESS
Stunning contemporary deslcn
with bold rhythmic lines and
smooth surfaces ••. all beauti·
fully interpreted to create 1 bal-
anced place setting.
HERE'S HOW YOU GET YOUR FREE GIFT I
or
SPECIAL
for new accounts only!
Your choice of the flatware, or,
one of these three silver acces·
sories in Original Rogers Sitver-
plate. (These 3 items only avail·
able until Aueust 1, 1968).
ADO TO THE TABLEWARE OF YOUR CHOICE:
Each time you deposit $25 or more to your 11vtngs account, )'OU
may purchase a place setting of your choice for only $2.50. Build
your tableware service while we bulld your savincsl •
Hew Accounts: Open a $100 account. checkin1 or savinp , end
select a five piece place setting in Original Rogers Silverpl•tt,
or in Stainless by International. or a Pllul Revere Bowl, an exquis·
i1e tray, or a crystal salad bowl .tttt silver servers ••• all in
Original Roten Silverptate.
Preaent 0.,,0.iten: Add $100 to your present savings account Completin1 units, (extra teaspoons, storaae chest, 4-pe. hostess
. and select your FREE five piece place settinc in Original Rogers set and more} are also available with each $25 deposit to your
Reinforc~ Silverplate or Stainless by International. savings account. Open or add at Newport National Bink today.
Join the celebration in honor of our three new offices: SUPERIOR, UNIVERSITY and SUNNY HILLS ----' ~ l&tWPOR7'-~
I ' NATIONAi. I ' ~,'-Bt\-.;){ '~ -x0 ~~ -
SEE OUR'M'.AUTIFUL DISPlAY OF SILVER!
Select your FREE gift at any of our 7 offices
A.a.T omcr ..•...... c:.,. •......,,-...it ..... ~n
lmlCIEomcE .......... ..,.... .e ....... ~ ..... tu.ma
c:ou.nE ~Ill! OFFICE •••• tM.-It C. ...... tal. ........ 171-2IOO
!UMY HIW omcc ....•.......... ,.... "-. ,...,.., •. 11Mno
SUPHIOll OfflCE .••••••. ri.c.tle .t _..., ....._ IMdl ... 142-ISU
UNM:llSITY omcc .... blt CM,mlll It St"' Cthet. .......... l?MMO
WESTCLlfF OfJICE .......... W..cdiff It 0...1 """'9t ........ MWUJ
----·---------....-... .......-.. ___ ,_ -..
Irvine
University of C
week-long c e n t
celebration got
a.tart at UC lrvin
with an • ' A n t
carnival" that r<
for a student-n
c hildttn 's summei
Ceremony is sell
all nine campuses
of the universit
birthday.
The highlight '
Thursday when C
H1U:b is jnsta
DEA'J'B N01
WAGONE
JoMnle ltcP °'#-'· H. C-r, Santa AN. t ,,_.y II. SuNIYl!<I by ... ,
Mr .. Eldon WH0•1er; bl 1N1 Wiiii.,,,; two 1l•ltr Marv Ell..,., I ll of Ille lonltlhl, 7:JO PM. lte<1ult• city. I AM, boln al SI. 8• Cllurcll, Santa A-.. tn Sllt9M<d Cemeterv. Ciro
MOfl\HI ry, 17 41 S-1« •
HEGEWO:
.AMn w. H*Gewold. Ave $1., Bllllot. Otte ol d $<1rvlvld trt wile, Clelr He1twold1 1llltrs. Vlol1 Wllm• Tl'lllMn. ~NICu,
dlY, 8alfl Ch-I. Dirt MIKtVlry, 17 41 s..i>erlor,
CUMMIN•
Marlor!• L. Cummlnn. W. Wtl-SI .• cosla Mtt motMr. Mrl. ManJartt brottwr. Or, DI• T. two sl>tets. Mn. OOrot Mn. MarY C_ .. lld .i.v. -.v. 1 PM. , Cl\loel. wllh llev. wa• 11c1a11119. Interment. M4mcH"lal P1rlt. Dir .. lro•<JW•v Mortuary, I Cost• /Mtf.
GOBLE
ltUlll G<ible, 1'1'2 I WKlmlnater: Dale of c Survived llY Cllu9"ter. son. Jame\ w. Goa .. ; Hun•1 sl• tr.tNkhllclre 1rMlddlllclf"'. S<!rvkts PM, Peek F•mlly Cc Homt.
HAU?li
Wllll"" A. HIUfl. llZ H~M 8Mdl. Dell II. lw'Ylwf 11'1' wife, ! Pall'"kl• A. Stevensi i.. A. Heun. II, end Dile I slsttrs. Luelle Ha,,..,, wnner and Emllv To,. Elmer. J1rnes I. Cher ~~~J.~ 1°P'M.'?:: F unero I Home.
BEND!
Dor• v ...... ,. ,, ...
!lnglQll SI., HunOlltfOll
dealll, M8V 11. Sv<VIY nltCH Incl M!>heWS. held Tue~av. l PM, Sf ltrment, Wutmlnster
Smiltts Mortuarv. 01,.
SMITI
KING
Henrlttt• M. KIM . Ac CoH I Hltllwn. L..atun.
tel by hu.-cl, Otvl6 homtt tncl Ill.ct. Mn. San Fren<lKOI Servla dtv. Mtlf>6ty, WHICI 1~1. Pacific View
WHlcHff Mor1uorY. "
CERVM
,Aur.tlo"O Ctrnnlft. $1\allmar. Ca.t• Ma
witt. Cotrnen; lllree
Auro llano, •"" JHus; 0oton1. IE-I•, Svlvla, 111 of !tit llOI Dolores C.,,,.,,lts. fM !O f PM. Mondly e ChaPtl. Rourv. TUtM ~uelm Mau. WednNd• St. J-'llms CathOI ~~n~ =.,.,5:":
BALT'l MORT
Coron del Mu
Cot&a Meta
BELL BROA
MORnJA
Ill Broadway, C
IJ ~
PACIFIC '
MEMORIAL
Cemetery • J
S5ll Pa~~
Newport Beao,
144-!'11
PEEK FAJ
COLONIAL Ft ROME
"'1 Bolla
Wettm'M'tt
IMJTll'I MOI .,, ... .........
LEMI
WEl'reLln. m &.116 St.,• ....
Antknnial (;arniwal
)
Irvine Marks VC's lOOth Birthday
University of California's week.long c e n t e n n i a 1
celebration got an early
start at UC Irvine Sunday
with an • ' A n t e n n i a I
Carnival" that raJsed $600
for a student.run needy
children's summer camp.
Ceremony is scheduled oo
all nioe campuses in honor
of the univenily'1 lOOth
birthday.
The highlight will occur
Thursday wbeo Charles J.
Hitch is pistailed a s
DEATB NOTICES
HEGEWOLD
Alvin W. H99ewold. Age 74, ol 207 M.tln
St.. Belbol. Dile cl dta!h. MIY ''· SurvtnG DY witt, Cl••rtr .,.,, urrv Heeewoidl Sllllts. Vloll Slmomon Incl Wllrm TMIS.n. Strvl<t" 11 AM. T~
d1Y, B1l1J C-1. Dlr«llCI 1W ll1tt1 N\Of1U1ry, 1741 SupfrlOf, Coote Mesi.
CUMMINGS
Mu lorlt l . Cummlnvs. A~ 40, Of ll3 W. W11$CH1 $1,. c:osl1 Me ... SIWVIYad b'f
molllef. Mn. M1r111ret Ntw1Gn1 °"' b<olher, Dr. o. ... T. lffw10ft. lowe1 ~. '~:~;· t:~·~:.y s::i:~ 1;:
~:.:·oe~~rri· Jev~~.~~· ~~:::W:r. llcl111"9. Interment, P1dllc View M«rnofiel P1r1<. Directed b'I lltll lll'OldWIY Mo<ruerv, 110 llr01dw1y, Coate l'Msl.
STOVICK
ltslv P. Slo'tldc. f36' Murllne Dr, Glrclfft Gr-. 0.tt Of tltl lh, MIY 14. Survived IW wllt, M.try. two c11u9hrers,
Mrs. ~Id Wylmoth -Mllll ~ndre S~dtl ,_ slstrs. Mrs. Ruth
f lrnNWt ..,. Helen JtMll lfld """ 9flnddllldreft, S.rvl<H wtrt Mid lo-:r;, ::r ~ "'"" F1m11Y C04·
MAR11NEZ
Juen P. Mahl11tz. lOlfl O\Hlnul St.,
St1nloll. o.i. Of ... th. Mar 17. Survlv·
ed by '°'" slJttra. Mrs. Jttil• ll~lol. Mrs. Fern1nol0 S1nde1. Victoria Flqrer. Ind !Anll• Estrtd•. Rosary WU roc:lttcl ..,ndrf 1venlno. I PM, Peete F amity Cotonl1I Funeral Home. Rt· Cllliem Mesa. todly, Monc11y, f;lO AM, HolY f-llY C•t""4k Churcil, Arle>l1. DlrtdW .,,, Pe f1mll'( Cotonll l Fu-lfH-.
BAUN
Uniwnlty president at younc scientist& were to
UCLA. H.itcb and Yale · · • p r e • i d e n t Kingman recelve ..,,000 and a gold
Brewster will speak Friday medal each for r e c e n t
&t the third centennial coo· meritorious cootribuUom io
vocation at the Berkeley tbe field of atomic energy. ·
campus. Centennltl day will be
Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, observed in downtown
chairman of the U.S. AtomJc Oakland Wednesday when
Energy Commission, was University officials and the
scheduled to speak today at Alameda County Historical
the dedication of the Ernest Society place a plaque at the
0 . Lawrence Hall of Science site of the old Col!ege of
on the Berkeley campus. Caillornla, predecessor to
During the <l,edication five the University. ·
Jury System Ch~nge
Urged by Educator
The jury system should be
eliminated from most civil
cases a n d substantially
modi.fied and improved for
use in criminal cases, a USC
legal educator said today.
Dr. Dorothy Nelson, in-
terim dean of USC's Law
Cent.er, believes s u c h
changes are likely lo come
within the next ~ years.
elicit an emotional reaction
from jurors," the use
educator declared.
OCC Youths
Collect Aid
For Indians •• A!f 1he system operateS""
now, jurors are expected to do the impossible," she said. A group of Orange Coast
"They are bombarded with College studenta collecting
extremely complicated in· materials for a destitute In·
structions and d e t a i l e d dian tribe will show a movie
evidence which they are ex-Wednesday depicting th e pected lo understand. Then they're expected to Indians' plight.
determine the facts an<t ap· The movie, "Between Two
ply the law. This i s Worlds." will be shown at 11
unrealistic." a.m. in the OCC Forum. The
Dean Nelson advocates public is invited.
adoption of the special The students, who call
verdict. a process by which themselves "Concerned Stu-
the jury is charged only to dents for Indian Affairs."
Fellowships
Awarded 9
CLAREM.ONT -Sixteen
courses in 'religion will be
offered in Claremont Col·
Jeges summer session by a
faculty of eight drawn from
Claremont Graduate School,
the School of Theology at
Claremont, and Blaisdell In·
stitute for Advanced Study
in World Cultures an d
Religions. Most courses will
be hlom June 10 to Aug. 30.
There will be courses in
elementary Greek a 11 d
I lebrew and on biblical
literature, a e st he tic s ,
classics of the Christian
church, salient features of
world religions. m a j o r
Christian doctrine6, Roman
C a th o I i c i s m. recent
developments in Continental
theory, and theology and
psyctiology.
Librarian
In New Post
determine the facts. Ap-are collecting needed items ORANGE _ Mrs. Jean· plication of the law is left to for the Pala Indians in the the judge. Paurna Valley, located about nette Kerry of ~ta Mesa
The USC dean said she 25 miles Crom Oceanside. has been appointed assistant
also favors increasing com-According lo the students, librarian at C h a P m a n
pensation for jurors and the Mission there is the only College in Orange.
shortening their terms of one still actively helping In-Mrs. Kerr has been an
service in order to en-dians in California. assistant 1 i b r a r i an at
courage persons lo serve Among items the Indians Orange Ooast College since
who are unable to do so most need are books f o r 1965. under the presept system. the fourth through eighth At Chapman, she also will
"Juries should include a grade, school equipment, be an instructor in library
broader representation of baby clothes, old nylons science.
the community at large -which they make into rugs, Mrs. Kerr received a
including educafX>rs a n d and building equipment. masters in library science
more professional a n d Most needed for building are from UCLA.
business people who are 2" by 4" boards 10-12 f e e t She is a member of the
aware of the cultural, social long. The y also need ply-Orange Co u n \ y and
and political events of the wood sheets. California Library-Associa·
w1111-•· H-. em 01rcv 0r1vt. community. Persons having any of tions, Costa Mesa Hlatorical HIMfllwtoll llMCll. Dl19 Of cleelll. MIY The • 1a. awv'-1 tw w1i.. Ser•h1 .,..:nil~· " present Jury system these materials may call Society, and Cali for n i a ~~'::!,.~·1.•=;,.'7 .. ~1 ;:::: frequently is misused by at-Bill Klassen at 543-4~ a n d Association of S c h o o I
alai.rs, luelll Ha,,.y, C I th Ir In e\ torneys WhO attempt to ha'""' them picked Up Librarians, ":t:e7.' S~"'l~·c~ii~~~l=~ --------------"'-' __ ....:... __ ......;....._ ____________ _
~~~. 1-P-M.•P":rf1.!::11, 5t~r:1 Funer-11 Home. ,
Westmlnsltr. O.te Of c1t1lll. M.v lf.
•rno•d D,D!,2.~~~~.,.., "·· A All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
=:~~,:J~a~~;..:= enne~J 1nd Um11erto1 t oraMclllldrtll lftd 2 9'Ml11rlfldclllldren. ROHrv. Tvesdrr. I ~:n..P'feciuf.:'l~~~Mf.i~·~ AUNAV8 FIR8T 8UAUTY
AM, lllMMCI $acre"""! Celtlollc
CIWT'Cll.
BENDER
Don v. lleNltr. A9t .. Of No. IO Mu..-
tln11lC11 SI., Hunlfll9!Cfl leadl. Det1 of
dHlh, Mev 17. SurYlwd bv nutMrous nwcf'l Ind ~. Strvl«s Wiii ~ ,,.Id Tllfldav. 1 PM, $Mith• Cl'loel. In ttrmtnt, Wutmlns~ Mottn0tlal P1t1l. Smllns Mortuerv. Dlreclots.
SMITH
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona clel Mar OR S-ttll
Costa Mesa Ml I-UM
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cotta Mesa LI I-USS
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • MorturT
CMpel
ml Padlle View DrlTt
Newpert Buel, callforma
Mf..%'7•
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL BOME
'7911 Bela An.
Wntmlnrter --
IMJTB'I MOll'l\1Alt'f ., ..... ..
Batta ..... lea LB.,_
waretlPP MOmJARY en &. 1• a. c.... Mna .....
WF.STMINSTER llDI01UAL PAU ••-g .. c...terJ ......
1•1 ...-. w ... tMtt .••• -.-a •
COSTA MESA
We ... -..rall fwnitw9 ltylft
....... ,.W te 11M111.,.:a,t
FOAMBACK
Throw
Covers
Multi.,.,,,.. .........
1ucnnteecl ndf to slip or slicltl
Cut... Tn1wld _.,. falllic Ii
_,,,,,."'> lllOChlne ... "'" Gold, .-,tw-oriw..-..
60•72 5 •• tOd! 791
their 9'' CWr 10lx72 12'•721191
w. ....
-.. --~ .......... tliith ._._ ............. O...,fllld, ......................
60•72 3 91 tOdl 5 91
a.. a..
10lx72 6 91126x12 a•• w. w.
...... Wd, """"' flofal cles9'
..,.. ... for o -•o:a loci6t fit.
.._.,....orM...,,W.
60•72 4 ,. 0
90•72 6 ••
a.Ir a..
10lx72 8 91 ath72 9 91
w. ..
HUNTIN&TON IEACH NEW'°RT HACH
C FHhl9il lsle"4 I
8800,000 lob ..
Anaheim Center
Plans Complex
r.~ •• 1<1a1. M~ 20, 1 %8
~ t:A.l.lrOINIA'I &IQt.'•ar I N llUI ... .tu, UN06• 01'1• aOOll , _____ e...,.
Ill ...
MAY 17·28, 1888 a,. ..... ..,, ____ "-"_
•-• .wnn •Jt ~ ---==--;:.... .u.d:;:;:;~!i!I!!·~ ANAHEIM -Anaheim capable of changing co,)y :=.:...~~
Convention Center wlll in-every second; and two ••!i:.!!,i:..!,0~~'"
DAILY PILOT 7
stall a '600,000 electronic portable electronic reader ~ -A~==--
information complex to in· boards for inside the exhib.ltl_!;;:;=:;:;=:~:=:=;:=:=:=:;;;~~~~~~
elude an eJgbt-story mar-_ball_·---------------------------quee and two scoreboards to
be in operation before Feb.
1, 1969.
The announcement b y
Anaheim officials was made
as the result of a five-year
contract tentatively -o-eed
on May 14 between the City
Council • n d Continental
Airlines.
-·NIGHT DAY SERVICE
9:30 A.M. "TO 9:30 P.M.-SATUllDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 ;M.
Terms of the cooCract call
for Continental to p a y
Anaheim '6,000 a month
With an option to renew for
an additional five yeerg at a
negotiated prlce.
Continental will have ex:
elusive advertising rights
and payments to the city
will cover construction and
installation of the entire
electronic information com-
plex, according 'to City
Manager Keith Murdoch.
The City Council adopted a
resolution of intent pending
some mJnor modifications in
the contrac .
The system includes an 80
foot marquee theme tower
to be located in front of the
center oo Katella Avenue;
two animated cartoon type
informati on and
scoreboar<l.iS for the wena;
an 80 foot long reader board
for the top of the exhibit hall
~OOOO~;nney Stom Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
Jr. sport sets with
peek-a-boo H-backs!
Moifl ottnKtion o~ loWtl thi1 su'""* is oll
c~ jomolco or alodi Mtl •ith br.ery bock
itllerttll E"tronci"I boot MCI< top HpoNs bore
JO" o~ 9lld below t+. a.trop bock clowre ..•
an oify ot1011,."''"' fw t+. fllll.lo•i"'• sun·
lo'l'in' goll
Sletk Mt "flhi1111the11111'1 dleeri-in !lot·
tolied er-. orof191 ond Y.9flow. C011tinuovs
waitt alocb oft<! H-boctr top. l to 13. •
COSTA MESA
(He,W Shojpin9 C."f'lr)
'10
HUNTINGTON BEACH
(Hu"tington C•nttr)
NEWPORT BEACH
{F.shion lalencl)
I
DAILY PILOT
For Tlie Record
Meetings
Divorces
DIVOltCH "LID Anna Merit ThomPM>" Y\ For .. t Llovd
Thotl"o-Jo Rt11 Holllr19~ed V$ L~rd D
Holll"9'11tld Gtrln>Cle C. Ollvtt Y• Gordon Ollvtt
LEGAL NOTICE
ClttTll'ICATE 01' I USINISS "CTITIOUS NAME
onducll"ll • bu .. nni 1t IM llr'JC)l(ll"" rive, Cost1 Mti4J, C.atitorn1e, vndtr ftlt
cllllOVI firm Nm• ol R ICHllRO REELANO LANDSCAPE CONTRAC70R
..S 11111 llld firm Is comc>OMd ol lt>e
flowing ~·-'· wl>M• r11mu In lull lei pl1cn of r~td1r1ce .,, o tollows: ll•rOfl WMIMY· ,.... Tthlll Drive.
C0tl• Mell. C1lllornl1. Rl(M•d F•••la""· IM llrool<llne Drlvt. C0tl1 ~. Colllornll
D1ted Mov 17. ltOI. 111ron Whit,,.., R•thord Frttl•r>d alt of Ctltlornla, Orange Counlv
-On MA'I 11, 1'68 .. b~forf m•, • MotArv
JbllC In orld tor ••Id Stolt , ..ersoMllV opeortd Boron Whllnl'"f alld RIChord
'"'t't!IAM known 1o me to be lh"' oer~~ns fltO\~ n11mrs .,,.. \obSc,.ibfid to trwa wUhln
,rrum•nf 1rvJ •c~now\edvtd they t>C·
vftd IM lln\t Oorothv A. Null Noflrv Publlc-Colllornl•
Pr1n<Jole Olll<o In
Oranoe Countv MY commtulon IExotru Jan. t), 1969 Publl\Md Or1119e Coos1 Dolly ~net.
"'' 10, ll alld June 3, 10, 1'68 us.a.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI 01' SALi 01' RIAL ,.O,IRTY AT ,RIVATI SALi
No. S27,M4 In lne Suoerlor Court of tne State of
•ltlornll . lor Ille County of LOt Afl-
•:~• tht Motter ol the Esf1te o1 OKor
• M•rch, ••to kno-NI'\ ., 0 . W. March.
~:t~:!01, llt rebV vlvtn t111t 1tle u,,.,.,,.
ta""" will "'" ot Private '°"'' to tne lohe•t •nd ~t bldcler. suble<I to CO>-
irmatlon of •aid Suoerlor Court, "" or 1t., 1t>e 1'•h dav of Mov. 1961. at the
•fl<e of lier Attorney Robert A. Nttb, r , t..O Wltshlrt 8ouleverd, Beverly ~1111. C1lllornl1, Count'/ of Los Angeles, tt•t of Ctllfoml1, 111 tllt rlollt. !Ille
md !mffttl of .uld de«Ued 1 I ll>t
1mt of dtttlt and all lllt rl9lrt, lltlt
nd 1n1erest 11111 Ille "'''" of u td dt-eutd hH 1coulred bv GC>trotlon of law
, othtrwllf, 01t1er lll•n or In lddlllon
, that of u td dt<used. ti IM llme
1 c1e11n, In •"" to all Ille cerfoln proo·
r1v •llvlled In Ille Counlv of Oronff,
1110 of C111tornl1, ~rticulortv dtM:rtbed
s touows, 10.wit • ORANGE COUNTY
I l'Otlftlll• Vollev Joint Vtnt'W•l LOI S4 of Troct No. ~. In the City ot Fovnttln V11tev. County of Or1n1e, State ot C1lflornl1, o per m1P rP-eorelt(I In BGOI< 210 page 21 lo 23 In·
ctuslve ol MIJcella""°"' M101, In tt>e omct of Ille county re<ordtr of Hld
cOtJntv EXCEPT llltrefrom 111 mlntrols, oil,
••" petroleum. end otllf!r h•drou rbon wbstan<H In or un~r or wlll<h mov ~ oroduceO from said lend below •
d .. th ot SOO Itel from Ill• 1urt1ce of
11ld ltnd. w1tnov1 Ill~ rlohl of surtect tntrv u rnerved i nd erenfl'd In deeds
ol r>CO<d. O<-<•d•nt owned an Undlvld@d OM-
~rrd 1nt•~t In ~ •bov• dncrlbtd
~,~,,.,
t •rm\ elf w it: c.alh 1n t1wful mont't
>l lht Unlttd States on <onflrmotlon ol
sat11. or oart c~sh end b1l1nced tvt· 'tnttd bv noft secu...i bv Morloeae or Trust Deed on lt>e PrOPtrlv so sold T•n
:>er ctn• OI •mount bHI to be ~POslltd
wllh bid llld\ or oflert to bo In wrlll1111 111d will bo received II ti.. olorellld ofllu
tt •nv time 1t1tr 1119 llrtt oubllcollon
hereof •nd before dllt ol \llt. Oottd !Ills lO!ll day of M1y, 1'61.
GERTRUDE II MAl'Clol E•e<ulrilt of the Elfote
of ••Id OKldtnl. "*'' A. N"•· Jr., MH Wll,,,lro IMr.v...i,
BIYfflY """· C•lllenlll Tth C2Ul l1t1•11fw .... At,_., lw exocvtrtw
Publl\M<I Orona• Co.st Dolly Piiot Moy 10, 11. 21. 1'61 lt2·61
t't'!.~
8arb<l•1 D S•bor1 •• lltlHl ll S StbO<t
11-•t A Doi lllO •• l(f llllffft D•te Doi !too
Anita lou1w Stih'~10n "' Gravtt SflYl"toft
l~M•I • J llrl<l~s VJ John l\r1~9~
Mflf.,,,1f'I J,..f\#
W1llltm Tr1toor
I nut\ I Ft l<Oflt Yi AM l fot<-~~lt~~!:n D~I~~ ~11~~,;:l\Rlol ~:t
$htron L SoHltr Y\ DUllnt 8 S.1t1tr JKSt l JOM• Y> Coll\•rl"l! S JO<ln Dovld N Wltlfulr v• Jo.t""" L. Wllll u.,
E ll111>e111 Emm• Mviotr vs Mulder
Ev1r19el/r1t M.. P•tmt r vs
$t1n•t'f P•fm-r T•,...•• L M<Mllltn n
.YcM1ll#n S.""'* F1vt SttYtnJ SloVtn\ GltndA L Oltruda VI Rlcllard Jolln
01\retd• .An•lt R Volltr vs Jolln Paul Voller, Jr Londa l •• Wlllloms 11s llobert Mlchoel W1lll1ms C•rolbtll• J l{trlOll v> W~ F l{lrlott
MArQUttf\• ti B•r,.tr "' F""' x Bir· " ....
J;:.~. M G•rntr VJ Rolorld S Garner ~ M•roartl a Ctork vs Jonn Cla•k U.!L~,~~:..•"lllm
Ailllf'IV P HAMman "' lren11 H~rtmllln G••~ldll"l' D Carrl~•n n Ardis Eaw1n
Carrio•" l(enntlll Gtot Qt Wtlke-vs Ht i<'M W.1t"'"" Wtftc:tne.r Cec·lt L""'" SC!lr~r VJ llV Gr"'OOrv S<hrodder
D·••t G Seo~ VJ Don•ld G S<n"1
Antmdt H Ron v• Ht nrY M Ros\
Bab 0••1• •• Elhtl Jun Davi\ D•vld R Stout •• ShorOfl Ann Slovt And•• D Motto YJ Romond E
MU l"f1 J<>hn D Sfubbleblnt Ys •ubv 11. Stub-bltl>IM Anne N thOI• VJ Cl\orlH E Nltl>o~
M••I,.. A Atlln vs TllomH D Allln
HOW TO PACK A BACK PACK -Explorers from
Costa Mesa Post No. 189 are shown demonstrating
the correct packing of camping gear just as they'll
show guests at the Orange Empire Council Scout-
0-Rama June 8. From left, Tom Johnson, Costa
Mesa ; Mike Woodward, Costa Mesa : Gale Maxwell
Laguna Beach; and Phil Venard, Costa Mesa. '
LUClll• T tvlor Houchen Vl Cloud« Hovc,,..n J•mf' Giibert Mvn>hv VI Jun J.
MU•PhY S..m L Ttrrv vs Bernice I. T•rrv
O•ttV M••I• llenson VI AWr~ a • ..-. Scout-o-Rama Slated Jr Alice Jene Tllo<noson VJ J•cklt Wiii TllOmO\Of\
Henrv Grt•M Lois H•lltr "' 1o1-oro Wllfl•m Htt!H DtlOru M SchOllt v• Frlll S Scholl? M&r>hl c. Andrevn v• Mlchoel J . Arldr•w• M•ro1•t11 ~torar "' Jttus S1luar Helen Mtrle Z•k•rvan vs lhvmond
Ml rlO Zalt1rv1n C•rot A Lloo.'1 V$ Jolln Ii. Ll11.,.rt How•rd l. CorMllUS "' Norm on F.
Con'tetivt Frtd Holocker vs Luclli. G lolofoeker P•tfltl• E. Peter-v1 Al"'n T
P1111f1111,.10n Btv•rlv A. Hlr1e. vs Thomu C "lines B•llv M. lo•9• vs LHl•r L. Lora• Erwin let H•ll•n v• Nin• Jt4n Htll•n Vlrolnla El•I,.. B•rr•ll v\ D••ld Wiibur Barrett Wltllam l'IO•d Conltv. Jr v' Cl1vdl1
G1vle Con•~'I lrm<1.,d EtiHbeth •ll•n "' J1mn 0
Allen Jvll• /4 Olstn vs Phfllp L 01\en Jerrv D Ntl\Of\ vs Chtrvl Ntl-Oonn1 Jean Llcorl vs Gt U>tr Llu•I Ronold H Rowt ,,. Su•tn J. Row• Htlt n A. L•fku vs Nl<hOlu J Lalk•• Vl,.tnla ArltM Rulhertord Vl Oon11d Jov Ruttl•rtord Don"" F. Miiier V$ Simuel A. Miiier, Jr Judith c H•lch VJ Gltnn M "latch Ruth Monico Snow •s Jt\Orl Vtclo<"
Snow Dale w. Rllofds vs J .. n It. 111\o•d• G~rga E. TownHnd vs Ann It. Townstnd Norm• Jten HU<ll>H vs Jomet It. HU9h., Jonlc• E l•lne McMltkln Vl Herold Edword McMllc1<1n Btrnlco MIY G•llavll., VI Dtnltl GeorH Golla!lhtt
Fire Calls
More tban 15.000 boys
irom the Orange Empire
Are-a Sc()U( Council are busy
sernng tickets to their an-
n ual Scout-0-Rama. J une 8
at the Orange C o u n l y
Fair_grounds. Co6ta Mesa.
The boys, repr esenting
All-County
Business
Meet Slated
ANAHElM -''H ow to Sell
Your Product to the F ederal
G overnmment" will be the
topic under discussion T ues-
day, June 4 during the A\1-
0range County Business Op-
portunities Conference at the
Anaheim Cooventloo center
S111 lllLll DeTe. '·~: 1.m. S.turdn. "'' 11••· 121 1'1h Sponsored by the Econom-
7;W •·"'· $und1v. mt<1ic.1 •Id. um ic bevelopment Council oC 'l:~k .:::.". ~~~·lire, "" Stroer arid the Oran"ge County Chamber
ae.c11 of Commerce, the second
Wul,..lnster d ( th t "-f J :AO D.m. Soturday. CM fl••· 1.S.UO ay 0 e WO-uctY con er-
Cub packs, Scoot troops,
a nd E xplorer posts are rea-
dying to show some 60.000
persons every aspect of the
Scouting program. They're
als o selling tickets at Sl
ea ch.
The ticke t sales are being
directed by Paul R obbins of
Santa Ana. He said that ad-
m ission to the Scoot-0-
Rama is free tor children
under 16-years~-age, if ac-
companied by an adult.
Admission also is free to all
Scouts and their leaders if in
uniform.
E-ad\ of the Scoot units
participating in the tic ket
sales will share in the pro-
c eed s, according to Dr.
Willi.am BUTilS of Santa Ana.
general chairman of the
event. Individual prizes will
a lso be awarded to top
salesmefl.
2 Engineers
Go Overseas
Bmh a1vd. ence wiJI feature lnte mation-s:•• 1.m. Svndtv. c.r ""' Son D1eao aJ trade. Two Collins R a d Io
Froewn •nd v111ev vitw R e ngineers have been invited s:w 1.m . nre 1nvu t10111on. um egistration w ill be from
ouve s1. 8:45 to 9::.> a .m . followed to speak in foreign countries
10 ..a 1 m • lrull ti••· Wurmlnsttt this August. 11ou1evard by a program orientatioo
12:09 1.m. Mond•v. mo<11u 1 aid, 13'AI session. individual counsel-R. A . Johnsoo will present
ceder 5'icY"'1"''"' 1 .. ,h Ung and a lun cheon . Price a technical paper on elec·
3:12 • m. sun01v. itruc1urr fire. mo1 for either day of 1!he confer-tronlc fil~r de6ign to the
llu ch 81vd. S8 50 · th I t ti l t"IWUOP 12.l• pm .• 9,, .. fire. Mlonoll• Avt-ence is . • including SlX n ema one 'V'.l<'lY ess
nue • .,., HamiltOrl luncbeon. R egistration for of Acoustics in Tokyo.
n Sl "·"'·· ~•<•• •Id. w7i Sit• Drive both days ir Sl5. R. L. S'---an w t" 11 7 .05 P.m.. 9.-ou !Ire, 80IH AW~ '" llldl Ill
•nd ea....rd1 street Further information may present a technical paper on 7:~r1:t m.. i lructvre lire, StJ2 Pvdua be Obtained fro m the Office data process;ng tO t h e
coot• Mil• o( t he Orange County Cham-International Federation of ''.~.!. m Pl!~!urday. rtM:vo. ,roe) Pt-ber of Commerce. 1477 s. I n f 0 rmation Processing
'11 • m . ••Kut. 1•11 Church Apt 7 M anchester Ave .. Anaheim . Conrerer:ce at Edinburgh,
1 ~·.;, m . re.eve. IN Jomlict !food. telephone n4-28.51. Scotland.
I 46 om. lr1>1> tire, 1871 Htrllor lllvd. • -=================:.::=======::: 1l 01 a m Sunday, hont•I mlst1••· r
107 M .. 1 Drlvt ft I lO D m., 9rau lire. :loll llochoster New_. ... ,~
ll II om. Sofurday, mtdlcot eld, 2000
Ntutrlu' Lo'lt
1l U P m • itructure llrt. >Ol5 Lindo
Ave , ""°° domoN enney1 12 II a m. Sun<11v. COU<ll ti re, llAI
51nllt oo Drive, t700 d1mett -1:00 D.m., "nokl"9 drl"'"-, l01 Mll,-•· " _. -·-C..:...; ·: •' •
rfn1 Av~. ~ .. , .. l
Pilot Visitors 1IB1EA1U'JI'Y §A1L({])N
~ ' ~ ftlo \\ot\·
st fmP<>rtant thing we sell IS satis•tc
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
' 6 DAYS ONLY AT
THIS SPECIAL PRICE
t..-........ .....,._ .. 1...,., --.. .,_ ......
y-Welch wm .... .. ~ ............ . '"""" .. '" .,...........,, . ..__._"' ~ ·-..-.........
5.95
·OUlt PtlST THOUGHT ••• YC>ua CONflD .. Cl
YOU CAN 1IUST OUI IXPRTS IN ................. ,.... ......... ,, ......
.... •-.lla ''a ............ ••••Il a .................... ..., .....
CHM.GI IT Ar YOUI' HNNrrS
'1Nf JIWllJtY DPAarMINJ
Get set for
summer with
a Restor Beauty
Glow perm!
$10 No •ppof ntment
'"
We specloliie In the core or foshion wigl
NATO ProJeet
Hughes Computer
Goes to England
FULLERTON -A com·
plex computer sub.system
that will be the heart of
NADGE, the _.NATO Air
Defense G r o u n d En-
vironment, has beeo ac-
cepted b y London-based
:'-lADGECO Ltd., the cor-
poratio n building the S300
m illion project for t h e
NATO countries of Western
-;:urope.
pany's facility here, is the
firs t e lectronic hardware to
be accepted by NADGECO.
P r o d u c t i o n of the
equipment is s p e a d
throughout the NATO coun·
tries. exc luding Iceland, in j
direct proportion to the
financial contribution o l
e ac h nation to NADGE.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Thtre's going to be a
rreet BIG, BIG "antique
show .. ! Must see It!
• Nice furnished room for a
gentleman, very pleuant
and sunny.
e BEAUTIFUL BOAT fot'
bay cruises: Catalina and
Mexican waters!
• Re~·s 10mething very
RARE . . probabl.y tilt'
only one like It in the US
, .. a 1951 Allard GT.
e ENGLISH B U L L D 0 G
PUPPIIS, AKC .•. OiA~1-
PJON SlRED .•• REA·
SON ABLE.
Dr. Nicholas· A. Begovich,
a vice president of Hughes
Aircraft Company. said to-
day the computer sub-
system, built at t h e com-
A total of ~ of Nie sub-
systems will be buHt at the
company's Fullerton plant
and installed at NADGE
sites extending fr o m
northern Norway to eastern
Turkey. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ft All Penney Store• Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
AL~A!!!~TV'f J
omens an g1r
sandals for seaside sunning.
or in-town casual dress!
The shiny look in sandals is here!
Gleaming patent vinyl T-stropwith cutout sides
loola great with-spomw.ar or casual unnw
...... -~side budde. White; blade,
pink, ora11g9, .,._.or~ Wotr.fs ..._
-U-VDUA
3.99
EN NEV
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TODAY I
Dress up in Italian sandals Slip into bare little things
51e.,.. ........... ........
a.. ..,.,, WMp. See ... .. """ ............. .....,.. ...... w..1 .....
.,
5.99 Ho,,.,..m.ppy ftloftp ore 3
•" ........ Greet '"white, 99 "~ w",......,. °'I.lock. .. __.,, ... ''"' ...... .
f'\IU.HT ... °"-C4<11 ..
--"'~-
NUlfTINeT'IM MACN
~, ....... Cil!flW
Ud~tt
.. ._..T BUCN
""l'lloft tal-
Mtt<#1tfw ti ,~ CM Mw'r
~LLIH'*
Or.-t•lr '4tl~
NUNTllMTCMll BUCM
H\1111 ....... C4ftlW "NN!t' ••c11 COSTA tlSA HllTl&TOl IWH IRPORT BEACH
,:,-.:;_ :: I Harbor Shopp int C.nter J ( H11nti11,ton Center) I Faakion lalentf 1 Sift 0'"9 .. ..,. ~ ,,,. ,..., .,, ,.,.,, .._----------------~~-.--~~~---.,4~----~~~---J~r--------~1 ,,.,. -· "'-40
Boa1
Act
Yacht raeefs h1
sionally "missed tt
buC in Saturoay ... s D
race -the third l
Yacbt Club's 66
there seemed to be
to miss.
The missing n
"D" mark, a fiag 1
customarily be lot
a mile seaward oJ
boa Pier. It was tc
CBYCG
Dave Ullman c
Yacht Club won
Beach Yacht Ch
ricane Gulch Re
the Snipe Class Su
ving himse li a top
for the nation~
pion.ship when it
Southern Califor:
this year.
The Snipe natl
sc heduled for AJa·
Yacht Club Aug. 9
Ullman capture•
r ace series in "
peaked up lo 20 kn
the two days c
Somewhat the s
ditions are expect
n a t i o n a l cha
regatta.
Ullman has bee
his way into the to
the international S
for several years.
he finished thlr
Earl Elms of S:
and crewed for E
world championsh
1
1
(
c
~
I
i }
! !
I
t
]
0
' J.
1:
T'
1::
a
t
tJ
tl
• (
' 1
Boats Really 1'1issed Mark
Monday, May 20, 1968
Actually There W as No BYC Mark to Miss
Yacht ra~s have· occa-
sionally "missed I.be mark,"
but in Saturday's Dana Point
race -the third in Balboa
Yacht Club's 68 Series -
there seemed ro be no mark
to miss.
1'le mlssing mark was
"D" mark, a fiag which can
cusromarily be found about
a mile $eaward of Ule Bal-
boa Pier. It was to serve as
the windward mark aod the
rirst mark of the course on
Ule 12-mlle ja.unt to Dana Point.
It was a foggy day as lhe
nearly 100 yachts started on
the race and set out in
search ol the tiny square or
bunting. After more than an
hour of groping, no one barl
found the mark, and many
figured they must be well
past it and changed course
in the general direction of
Dana Point.
With visions ot ~ts
dandng in their beads,· the
r~ committee upped anch-
or and set out ln search of
lhe mark. After all, they
knew where they had plant-
ed it the day before.
But alter a cursory searrh
tlie committee decided the
mark ·just wasn't there any
more. Maybe it had been
mistaken !or a lobster pert.
Witb the protest vision
gro~g mo~ vivid the race commJttee hoisted"' the .. N ..
(for nothing?) pennant and
began sounding three blasts
on the horn.
Within a few minutes all
hands got the message. Race
abandoned.
LAYC Seeks
Data on
Big Ra ce
4 National Sailing
Regatta Dates Listed ·
CBYC Gulch
Race Won
Ullman
Los Angeles Yacht Club
has sent out feelers to gain
an e.xpression of interest in
the 1968 Los Angeles to
Mazatlan race scheduled
Nov. ,16.
The preliminary notice is
designed to alert all poten·
lial participants and ro draw
an expression of interest
lrom qualified yacht owners
desirous of receiving an in·
vitation.
Sho uld it becom e
necessary ro limit t h e
number of entries, the
following criteria will be
followed in U1is order:
1. Membership in the Los
D '"'---nge es ac u . ave vllliuw of Balboa 2. p a rt i c i p a t i 0 n in
Yacht Club won Oabrillo previous Mazatlan races.
Beach Yacht Club's Hur-3. Participation by vessels
ricane Gulch Regatta for of Mexican registry.
the Snipe Class Sunday, pro-4. Dedication or the owner to ocean r a c i n g <:s Ying himself a top contender measured by his or her ac-
for the national cham-tivity in ot.ber ocean racing
pionship when it comes to events.
Southern California later 5. Origin of the entry with
this year. reference to geographic con-
siderations. The Snipe nationals are 6. The number or potential
scheduled for Alamitos Bay participants in each class
Yacht Club Aug. 9-15. with the objective or main·
Ullman captured the five-taiaing a reasonable balance
race series in winds that between the higher znd lower rated vessels. peaked up to 20 knots during T h 0 s e r e c e i v i n g
the two days of racing. preliminary notices are re-
Somewhat the same con-quested to return them to
ditions are expected in the the LA YC committee by Ju·
nation a I championship =l=y=l=. =======:; regatta. ~
Ullman has been nudging
his way into the top ranks of
the international Snipe. Class
for several years. Last year
he finished third behind
Earl Elms of San Diego,
and crewed for Elms in the
world championship regatta.
NO. I
One of the mo1t popular
new•p•p•r fe1lurH in the
entire United St1IH is the
Ann l1nclers column. It's •
clally fH lure of the DAil Y
PILO .. encl our rHclert tell
us it's ovr No. I colum".
The Yacht Racing Union
of Southern California h&!i
announced dates for the
quarter-finals, Area G semi-
finals and the N o r t b
American Yacht R a c Ing
Union finals of the four na·
tional Sailing cbampioD6hips
for 1968.
The four championships
. are the Adams Trophy for
women, Mallory Trophy for
men, Sears Cup for juniors
and the O'Day Trophy for
single-handed sailors.
YRU quarttt finals are
s<:)leduled oo the following
dates:
Harbo r
Yacht Club, June in
Lightning Cla6s s 1 o op a ;
semi • finals, San Francisco
Yacht Club. July 13-14 in
Rhodes-19 sloop5; finals.
Bay Head N. Y. Aug. 26-29
in Lightnings.
~ A L L 0 R Y -quarter
finals, Cabrillo Beach Yacht
Club July 13-14 in Tempest
Class sloops; semi-finals San
Francisco, July 2 6 -2 7 .
Tempests; finaJs, Rk bmond
Sail Slated
By Squadron
The sailing fleet or the
Balboa Power Squadron is
ptanning a cruise to Long
Beach Saturday and Sunday
to honor recent graduates of
the sail coorse.
Hand.ling arrangements
for the cruise are Bill
Anderson and Al Wallace.
Power boat owners iif the
squadron are urged to join
the cruise.
Meet three new owners
of the
Gas Company.
"lft~·
How can you tell?
Yacht Club, Aug. 26-29,
Tempests.
SEARS -quarter-finals .
Newport Harbor Ya c h t
Club, July 9-11 in Shields
Class slooJl6; semi-finals,
NHYC, July 24-26, Shield&;
finals, St. Francis Yacht
Club, Aug. 26-29, Rhodes-19.
O'DAY -Se m 1 • finah,
Mission Bay Yacht Club,
June 22-23, F inns; finals,
Rscine Wisconsin, July :.> to
Aug. 2, FiM. (Quarter finals
were held Saturday and Su·
day at MBYC. Result.. have
not been announced.)
SAFECO
INSURANCE
for special.
GOOD STUDENT
DISCOUNTS on
your Family
Auto Insurance,
Bob Paley
and Associates
INSURANCE
474 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESt
642-650Cf
Uoy4'•
WALllE TALllU
$11.44 '
Our lletular 12.11
Set ol lwo w1lltie t•lkies with telHcopln9
••lenn1, volu,.,e control, 90 d1y w1rr1nty.
ArtLIAHCI DE".
While ~ MAY Ouanlllln Q 1t-Jl·D Lall
Sover•ign
DIVERS WATCH
$13.67
Our Reci11lor 19.95
Witch hu luminous cli1I, sweep seconcl
hi nd ind mov1ble bnel.
"HI JIWILIY Din.
l·Pock
TENNIS BALLS 77¢
Our Requlor 97c
PH~age of 3 K marl br1nd l1nnis bolls. 1
R19ul•lion ,in.
SPORTING GOODS DE,AltlMIHT
&
While ~M4'f °"~:\''" ~ ,.,,."
'9-·YH II
SLIDE VIEWER $1.97
Ow Ret11lor 2.49
Ll9htecl 2.2 viewer.
CAMERA DI".
Whlle ~ Clu•ntt• a Lall
J unior £c·,·s
BOXER JEANS 77¢
Lon9 jun1 I~ 1ut. colon, All m1chi"•
wuh1bla. Siaes J.7. limit 3 per cu1tomer.
MIN'S WIAI DI".
Polorold
SWINGER FILM
1.47
Our Retulor 1.74
Specially m1cle for the Pofaroicl Swinger.
CAMlltA DI".
Polypropylene ,
SCOOP CHAIRS
2r4.99
Our Req11lor l .33 ea.
Scoop conloure4 modern ch1irs in 1uorl·
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FU1tHnu11 DE".
I W~lle ~M4Y QllMlll... Q 20-2Mt ......
fosy·Clean
SPONGE MOP $1.56
Our llett1lar 1.78
N• wrin9in9 or drippin9. Just tquute
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HOUSIWAllS DEn.
While ~MAY Q1m11f1... Q 21-21-Jl
Lisi
Liquid
GLAMORENE(!t; $1.27
Our lletufor 1.48
One qui rt Gl1morene Ru9 Sh•mpoo with
Nullte.
HOUSIWAlllS DE".
W11t1e ~MAY ....,."" a ,..,..n Leet
Peorll1ed
CHIP & DIP SET 97¢
Our llequkw 1.27
Av1ilable in ••oc1do or '"ow whilt.
'WTIC.S °'"·
6-Ple<e
SNACK SET
$1.47
Our llet11S. 48c
l•9 ol en!. spon911 for every houHholcl
tuk.
HOUSIWAltlS DE".
Handy
CLOTHESPIN BAG 47¢
Our llet•lor 68c
Holch enou9h pins for • fu9e wu h.
HOUSIWAllS DI".
• Whtie ~ MAY QuenllllH Q tMl•H Lnl
Inside Frosted
LIGHT BULBS
~ 8 BULBS I 99¢
Our Requlor 38c Pkt.
Four pack19u of two bulbs uch in with
from 25 to I 00.
ILIClltlCAL DI".
Wto• ~MAY OVIOltnlal Cl »n .n
Liii
72-011nc~
BEVERAGE SERV!R 47¢
Ow ll .. ulor 66c
Ser••r i1 clishwuher ult, 9uer1ntnd 2
yo. Euy to UH sfid e-1ul pour 1poul.
'LASTICS DI".
Wlllle ~MAY Clll•nltll• ma 2t-21·tf Lat I
Plano Hhtt•
TOOL BOX $5.67
Matter of fact, you can't-just by looking et them, because eo many owners
of the Ou Company look juat like your neighboni. In fact, they probably are
your nei1hbor1. For the Gas Company (like any investor-owned company in
America) is owned by all kinds of people from all walks of life.
· I Our Retular 1. 97
Vint19e peller11 HI hu four cupt 1MI '4 ,, . .,.,
Our ll .. ulor 6.92
lox hu 111111y comp1rtmenh for slere9•
of •melt nuh I bolh u well h l119er
There are more than 16 million shares of our business owned by people 11kf'
barber Vince Cotlone. Some of those people bou11,hl our stock in their own
names. Others may h:iv" become owners of the Gas Company
by way or inve!'itmC'nt~ their omploycr'I have made for their pension plan~. !foll
ot.ht'ra, like Duke Morton (aettinR Im l1d1r <.ul), m9y h.:1ve become ownen
uecauae their 11andfathen bought them ~hares 1IS birthday present1.
People who have a financial stake in the Gas Company know that any company
that can offer 1ood 'service at reasonable rates i1 coinc to do all right. And thal's
th• ••1 we do bu1irie11.
But whether 70u're an inveator or not, the Oaa Company wOTb for JOU
. anyw.,-. M •n inTHtor-owned company, reculated by th•
Califdmia Public Utilities Commission, we depend' on ~
your aupport. We do our best to deserve it. ·
That's oirfly w,. work extra hard to plca·H~ you.
(lftw.1or~"'~~~Pa~1~1~ •QllB--11 COMPANY . '
..
W1111t ~MAY e.tM!flft :r.11 ,,
Lall
HOT DOG &
ROOT BEER
27¢
TMID DAYS ONLY ,.
WITH THIS COUPON
' (
items. '
HAltDWAll Din.
W~llt ~MAY ~llti.s Cl ,..,,,,,
LMI
-ide'em
HORSE $1.77
0..1..-2.11
'••h a ,11c1. rlcle ." h.r,. with .. ,. pl•?· tit wh .. I,,
TOY 19'T.
·"'
r
DA.IL Y PILOT 9
w11• ~MAY 0.Mtllill 2Nl•D
Lall
Met(ll
CABINETS
s21.95
Our Reciular ll.88
Wh11e utility c~binet or w1l1111t finish I
wardrobe. Your choice 11 thi• fow, low
price.
HOMI IM,ltOYIMENT DI"· I
White ~MAY oveen11tt »Jl·D
Lall
r·oo:c·.'s
SANDALS
$1.88
Our lletulor 2.44
Cool 1iry Hnclah. Pick your foorit•
sh1de.
MAY
Zestee
PEANUT BUTTER 83¢
Our lletuls 97c
Two pouncls of tutu PHnut butler.
While ClulnllllH
Lall
72-Cout
CLOTHES PINS 44¢
Our Retular 61c
72 wood 1prin9 type pint.
HOUSIWAHI DI".
While ~ MAY Clllt11llllH Q »Jl•D .... ,,
Half Gcnon
BRUCE WAX $1.37
Our lletulor 1.'7 & 1.u
lruce w11 for woocl flaers er for fife.
Your cholct 1t the Hm• low price.
HOUSIWAltH DI".
Wlllle~M4Y OlllllllllH Cl •21•U ..... ,
.. Llghtwel91rt
WASTE BASKET $1.46
Our Retulor 1.74
Euy lo carry bu~•t hold, 9rocery b19
u finer.
W~lle
Ovlftllllts
Lett
lwlrl·Around
SPACE SAVER 97¢
..
I
Our lte4111lor 1.47
Proftd your precious c~a ••P ~
and pl1te lurnt1ble.
DIHHlltWAltE DI".
QuonllnH Q Jt.Jl·U White ~MAY 1
LI U •
12" Giid• Awoy
Stora9e Drawer $1.96
o., .... 1or 2.9'
lncruse yovr u bh1tf ster•t • eru ..
HAHWAll DIPJ,
bbt & OH
CHANGE
sl.99
Y ovr choice of thrtt "'•for w1ftcf 1
of oil.
AUTOMOTIVI DI".
' I
DAILY PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE l
~OYIUISIMINT ,OR llOS
ICt [S ~rftly lllYtn 1,,11 11\t
I ol E"ctuutlon of lh• Nt"1port Unllltct $cl'tOOI Dlrlrltf ol Or11111•
1y, hllftll\tlltr rttffr~ to u tllt M" will re<tl\lt 111> 10, but not l.lltt
J;OO P.M., Mondi•" JUIW J, IM
I bids fOf' tt.e ew•rd of ('Oft' tor Int ClOflS.lcuction ot REMODEL.-ANO ADDIT IONS to NaWPORT 50R HIGH SCHOOL, PHASE %, Ott &Heh, Calllornla. ~ bids il\•11 b<! r..:e1Vtd In Ille
, o1 Stnool F1c11111~. 2000 Cliff . Ntwl»f'I 8eecn, O,.,,q. County, i<nle. end •~II b<I OP"f\f'd onO :Iv reed 1louo •t Int •bove >l•ttd
rk lncluou remodttinl ol two nQS. :n bid rnv1t conl0trn ••d bt '"
1ve fo th1'1 lnvlt•Hon. fM OI~"'' llullons. And tll other conrrect
nenh. C®I" of Ille Contr&tt 00<·
1t1 are now on f1lt •nd ooen 10 : Ins~ tle<I In I~ olllc., ol tN> r, MO ol Wlllltnt E. BlutO<k & :latts, •rcnllect\. USO &ay.,de •, Coron• del Mltr, Cthf0tnl1, •nd t>o obt~IM'<I at tit• ofllu of !tit trcl• bv ckOOS•llt19 0.5 on for e&eh >I 9eMtral ol•n• Ind •-ltlutlont.
(2J &el5 to be lUVfd to Gen<trll ·aclors only. Tnl• dt""l•I will bt ctect onlV If Ille ••~ 1re returned 1lel1 1nd ln ~ condition wttnln nan 11ttr lhe bid co•nlt\9. >or end M&ttrl6ls Bond •nd Ptl0
~nc• Bono w111 bt "qvir!d of Jn• ·1cr.>r s•t•cled. I •E RATES rsuanf ta thf! L abor Codt "• th11t ot C•llfo,,wa. Soulntrn (alol«>I nl•
h"9 ind Conwuctlcn T•eot> Coon
I
Monday, May 20, 1968
Butldlng •"" Con,lructl()n Tr•d~ ell of Orangt Cot.1ntv, ti'\~ lolld d ol Trusltn no 11url•1ntd lh•
r1I prevallino ral9 cf I>!' oi .. m
IS for Nch cratt or •v~ ol WO<-· L.: .. rary G~ng Vp needed to f")CKute trit contr11c•1 .. u v• ~ wlll "" dW•rcltd lh• WCCft>luf ~s: and ~.. preveltll\9 rain cor1te1noc1 in ••Id ,,,.,;11ce11cna Seventy-five thousand books will replace workmen and libra ry silence s~plant
ltd bv th• aoerd, and 1re as list· t' din h tl 3 ·11· 0 l d ,.,.,,., construe ion w en v . m1 JOn range Coast library is comp ete in arch,
v ctanlllGallon not entlclP"ttd ~net 1969 'w!1;!~.~al:or~h:'~~o11~.~~." 1~:;~ ---·------------------------------------cl&nllfutlon in tll•tl with th• ·• 1111e<1 Tr.Oes Council•. If '"' : llrn•d betow Oft "°' current or r•v"td bY labo< 19roem<:nl$ dur· ttie blddlno tinw or construct1cn . •u<h rtvlslons sl,.11 bi> consldn· • P•rt ol tne below 1 .. 1..s r~tu 3 Get Straight A's at Ensig'n
Some Never Liv e • • • • ~.-:..,~ • • • •.
Not All Recall Child AbusePittur-e:
"It'sW!fieliltW <lelefnifne Attomey's office Crom Ven· conUnued. "One woman who peeks :
how lo.ng it would take a tura County said. had beaten her child to •
child's hand to burn ove.r an L.. M open name." she sald. ''I've "Unfortunately, even with death was virtually infested .., ;mw,,a 1 • • • • •
seen small c h i 1 d r e n , the worst cases, sometimes with lice, and that was the Don't look now but if you d
sometimes only t h r e e the most we can get is se· most we could get." see two Yul Br;nner in ~
months old, with multiple cond degree murder," he "M:>st come from a .
5
fractures, b u r n s and trauma or tragedy home " forthcoming feature at the
partially healed sc~s." Dr. J ames Apt h o r p, Mesa, you're rigb\! Tbe Dou·
These are the cold. hard y p e d i a t r i c t r a u m a ble MID is the appropriate ti·
tacts of child abu se. oungsters coor~nator at Cbildrens tle or this spy thriller, coming
J<'ortunately, many of these H~spital of Los A~gel~s in color for local patro
children never remember F • d B ks said. "The saddest thing 1s . ns, how they were injured. or ID 0 0 ' these children can't speak along with Kona Coast, •
why or by whom - some or for tl,)e.mselves." likewise in brilliant color.
th e m never 1 iv e to ··stories are a joy to me, ''The same woman that
remember. merry tales, all bright with beat her child a year before Yl!-1 plays a CIA agent in
iv.rs. Helen E. Boardman. laughter. But best of all are killed her the next year," The Double Mu. He suspects
director of social services' at those that end, 'and t!ley Uv· Serg~ant Andy Fletcher . of hls son's' death in ttlttAustrain
Childrens Hospital of Los the Los Angele& •Police Al . d "_ be ed happily ever after.'.. Depa1·tment S";cJ. "l asked P.S is mur er.~ delves Angeles. divulged t he s e ... facts to more than 70 That'.s the way a the social worker how many deeper, he encouoters a
women peace officers Tues· decorated poster on the wall times she had visited the Russian plot destined t o
day. many of whom had of the Little Book Room at ho~e and visited ~~e moth~r replace tile legjl CIA man
handled similar ca 5 e 5 Woodland School in Costa during that time .. she said. with a look-alike commie wh
themselves. lv.esa reads. Kindergarten ··To both questions she . . . . . · 0
and first grade children are replied 'n<>ne'." Then I told will have unlimited a<:cess to The 41st annual Women U S C A ~ now being read to in the new her the child was dead and · • o · s.,... .,..s. Peace Officers Association Convention, meeting at the room and listening to stories she hasn't forgotten it yet.''
Newporter Inn, heard four contributed by Mrs. Sara Appearances can be Lloyd Nolan, Britt Ekland,
prominent speakers discuss Brant. remedial reading deceiving. they a g r e e d . C'J!ve R.evill and Anton Dif·
the clinical, legal and social t,e.acher. Many of tbem dress well, fr1~g. aid and .a~et Yul in
asnects of the battered The converted teachers' keep nice homes and beat brmg1!1g fil! exciting story to
child. lunchroom also contains two their children. Most parents the. big, wide screen at the
original Pa i n ti n g s by say the child fell off a bed or Mesa.
Somehow though, no mat· California children's authors down a flight of stairs, but hefflh. w'flart, vocation. orom<>-°' othtr ben•lil> sh•ll b!! In Ml·
n to Int below lltltd W•9• sea••• •tnllcH rnav be ~rnptOVf>d in cc•·
1ilv with Section 1177.S of the Cali· ,. Lebor Code. The third quarter honor
roll has been released for
Ensign Intermectlate School
tcr how clinically the facts Ta y shl d Le h li Terry Prt•lev. T•m Ovinn, Ric~ R!<I-Ch"'H Ann Norin. Martivn P11~r. ro a ma an o l ese a 'bis are ridiculous," "'""· oroole P1v1as, P•ut Pewi, Jent Pet· are presented, the empty Politi, and a glass case con-Dr. Apthorp said ... Most x-
Petff Roche, Jenice Rodm1n. Oov9 ti119111. M•roart'I Porter, Clerk Po111o1r. words are filled with com· taining a little book called rays can determine the
Ro•enrr. P1u11 S<M•ldu, Chervt ~g.;~~b'.:.o=!~~··· .eonller Rom, John passion for the helpless vie· "The Little Book Room," tru .......
. Sctlollerman, SIO!Ohtn Scl>one, PtHY ti f th oti all u i " ... I Loura Rowlt11e, Ken SUk lsslon, m 0 e em OD y from which the idea comes. The Los
•"t<tlme ai..u be 11&id for wor• ormed In ucess of t~ r!'gular d•V"
t 1n<I at Ille rate for overtime of Int
~nt1n.:ifc..b~:4~"~~. t>:;~:~;:~ Three students received s~1~ie G'~~~r,osr'r."c~r~"rig,~:."L~-,.,, ~7:.~~!1•·51~:~. s~~:,~n, 5~~.Sh~;:~ e w e Pan e 1 e ep men one a es
·• c1mu1u11on or tn• 01 work· A0s in all subjects. exclud-t~~~~·nrr.:r'.7t.v,9s~.eeyon:1~sJ"v.T•~~li Tsce0.c,",'' Liz Sweeney, cul Swldter, K•rl "Most of these women room is to encourage entry over 1,000 cases a year. But
emplovtct °" tne proloct. · h · I d ti " " h no oa· on C • to tllfll bt mandatory uPOn ttie Con· mg p ys1ca e uca on -w.11. Pai Wiiiiams, R<>Mtnn• w1nn. Bob Greq T1ube. G•r'f ThOrne, Ttrrv ave em S, no roo JS encourage entry these are the only ones '
I-to w ... m • conlr·~ Is 1ward· e1·ghth graders Denny Clm" e Wood. Treocy, Charles Turner, l(art Von re11rets It's qu1'te s1'cken by childre 'nt h t ported M
1";.ct u~"'
411
sut>conf~S undY 7111 tra-...HollV Anderson, More Al· Henen. Calhy Vivers, Elfe11 Wflktr, ~ · • TI l 0 W a re . any C3SeS go UD·
1o ~v not , ... 111an .aid unera1 and Carole Schmidt and tei.tv. cvn1"'• Bocktn. auton Buk, Keith w.u, N0<t Wood Gerud ing." Harry Barnett, in· teachers call "the magical noti'ced u ... il the child a·s ~ 1 $oflv Bemus, Carta Benvenuti, Karen Wool~''' Deni~• Wuncsertlch, Lella "' alllng rain "' per d em W.tel•• seventh grader Betsy Staub. Bls>Onnt'llt, Ken Brown. Lori Brown. Wyman. Parn Yo<Hr, vestigator with the District world of books." dead. ~~~-~~~~·• T! l I ~~~~C~~~Jan~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;I ., 01 the ct>nruct. ie comp ete hooor rot : c A c1 k c 1 Ct k r;l(LAYIR Hourly R11u Ith ''"' -MJJrv Adams, Julie aB~I~~ l:a;..,." ;..,~j "lo11," icoth•f man (tmPIOV ltss """ 5 men> • not Afltn. Nikki Apoltm<'ln, l(ev1n As~. COfesworlnv, Carl• Collev, St~ve lhan fl,00 per day abovt Jovrn.v· JoM Beeman, DebblP Beckwllll. IC11hv Colller. JMniler Conov.r, Laure , ratt. BMson. Kris Ben"°", Tom &llll"Q" Cornett. Scoll Croct<lord. G r • 9 <Javor t. Slone MU(lft , .. JS.IS Jthn Bowman, Phi! Brown. Oobble Crowl•Y· Anna Oolov. Su•Y oovle, O•I> 1 :KTENDlll Budnick. Jane Burton, Charlollt Bull, Die Ounn. J. 8. Esslc.k, Lori Etkin. ~t~;RS "10 ~~cus~·r;~v'cu!-1"::'.n D~~"81ckl~~~~'. re;~• /i/~!:i~. William Franklin. Jo~
ienter u O? ~~an?'~:fci G~~:.,.if."~~~ ~l~k~ j~~~YGo~~~~: H~!':J· G~:~:i •. ~l~'.1 ~ oow~ u w operolw .. . . .S 19 Ann Grouo. TraCl'Y Gus!, 8111 Hedgfl ov Hall, Marv Ham•l1~ Ham-.,rlvnt . S '19 Rick Htathef, Borbllra Htlstarld, Su••n mersln, John Harris. &Ill Ha•entuger.I
" ll>fleumallcl S l4 Horman. Pino Ho. Heidi llfinosworlh, Wllll•rn Htldbrlnk, U i HtlHr. r!Wln 3l>c Ptr hollr more l!>an hion-Marlt JIJISOl>, Terry Johnson, Valerie Robert Hendershot, Lvn Hl9ntand,I ctHslflc<>llon svpervis.O, exefpl JoMson. Teri Kanan, Ktn ICalmt>ach. e~T:.1 p;t,~1~nl.:;:;sc-lvl!':"i.~~~:I ~~lie& "t',':oLEUM LAYElt ~:1~.Y Kawarnur•, Sll"it Kn1nz, Vtlor•e James lord, Bl!lh Luyrnn. ll5A
ti, LJnot.um a. SOii Tiie O~;olrnMl~t¥,11~i~.°eb~ad~1~l~ ~~~:::fhalj,a~:!ct1eyM!~~~~;· S~1~':::i~ ~NT .. MASOlllS....... . . .. S5.l.2 ~~ftY·~i~J!:IS~·~:~kl,ol?Ci;~. N~~:. Monahan. Terrv Nvoort.
e"1 M•..,.,., tloetlne •rid trowllnq Peck. Sandv Pttenoo, Steve Plumb, M~~~~'l,.C,,~~rpJ:.;.,!~. ~rJ:~t"N~~c;:, c~lne OPtrtfor • $5.09 --------------------------tnl Ma1on Journ<!Ym1n , •.U m.n 3l>c Pff hour 1bOllt Journev·
' rate. iCTlttctANS ent For•m•n . . . . .. . .. . S!l.'19
"""" . .... .. ....... 1.12 ·nevmtn Wirtman .. . .. . .. . .. . 6.H '""'n C1bte Spllur ....... ... 7.to le Spllc0< . . • . .. .. .. .. •• 1.09 tlflf!d Wtld•r . .. .. .. .. . .. . .. 6.H IZllll rler • . .. ........ $5,16 N WORKERI amefl1•1 t•on Wor~cr .. .... $5 91 1fort1"9 Iron Wor-tr , ......... 5.~ icturol Ira• W0t~tr . . . . . .. .. . 5 •8
ICA Er9'1or . ' . S.7f ema• •Sc -hour more tl11n hivh· ' claulHctfi(lft superviS«d. rMER M< , . ,,, .,,. ............ _ ••• U.76S 1mtn not Jeu lllen I°'\ ,.r f'IOllr '" than JourneYTNn flft. IORIU orer. o-ral or eo11ttrucllon . S3.IS r•tor• and tencte~ of •ntumtflc and nrle tools, vibration r!Wlchlntt •nd
•lltr ~cMnlctl tool• not Hperate ty
Hlflod htrtln , .... ,. , 4.06
•e<>t dumper Ion I ~d. or '"'9er ml•· Md hal'dlfng bulk nmenll . 4 06 i1lt roker on<l ironer 4.06
:rtll curtr • lmo.rvlcvs n..rn«irant I torm oiler . . 4,0A
:::: O~:I .r~ri~~~!~';t. Pol l!l;:;. and form MM . . U~ Obt1ster 1nou1ern1nl , . .. A JO Ot>l••l~r loot tendrrl . . . . ... 4,0• ~ laYtr lnon·metalficl ...... 4 16 ! Caulker tnon-mtl•lficl . .. .. •.O•\ oow cltener .. . . .. Ju tchman J 1•1 eman JOc per hour mor• than hloh·
r cJ•niHcation sutl"'rvistd. El.ATINO •NGINEEIU
'UD , ••• • ••••··••• •••·
IUD 1 ••••••·••••·••••• ·• >UP J ...................... .
IUC> 4 , , , ,, , , ,, , ••••,,, ••• • ..,. 5
KIP 6 ,
·emain Uc ou hour "'°'ft than
1 c •• lflcatlon suoervl>oct. IHEU I IUIM bru!ll Nl•t.,. 11.'91 1!11 •w•ng sllllf' , . .. .. , I SI I tdblatl•r . .. . .... ~ 79 tdbt•••er swlnt •lave .. . . . .. .. . 6 Ool
Jrn .. vm3n Spray • • S )A
1rnevm••· ScrfY swtnv staiie . . 1.7'1 'E TRADES '~" ond F 111.,> 1$,64 ~· ol F oren11n · lO"• a t>ovt gros• iurntvmtn rat•. ,.....,n . 10-. tbov• erou Jov•MY·
1tn r&f,,. HIV Plo•llM Jovrn.vm1~
1lltv p-o•ll"e. Foremtn , , . , As-TIR E RS t• ._, Forem•n
1ste.rer • ASTER TENDER.
11:1>r Te-nd•r
~FEllS
Jrl'~Vmb"
b Fortmen
"""" IEET METAL WORKERS
SS~ s.tl
15.ll
4.04.S
••t Mtf•I Wotlltr 16.00
llllll'Q ln•l1t1tr . 6.00 rtrnan · 10'1> 1bo•t JourMty""'n r~lt. iAMSTERS rtm.ln 2k oor hr. rriort than hltf>. ,, clusllfcatlon luoervlMcl. t•trs of dump trucks, l•n tllfn 4
" . . $00 1wr1 of dumo true••· 4 vclt. bvt u thin t vets. . . . . •.53 1v ... 1 of durno trvdt1, I ydl, but let.•
\On 12 Yd•. . 4,)t Ivers of durnc> lr\ldlt, 1t yds, but
u than 1' vds. . . '-" ivtft ot trU<ks. leOll pevleed C3Ptcltv "' tllfn ' ton> -. • . . • . U 4 1v•rs of trvw. 11911 PIYloect c-cllv ~IWM!n f Incl 10 Ions .... , . . . . 4.Sl tvrrt of flv(lc1. legit ,.yloMI OPIClly
tlween It 1t>d U to,.. . . . . . 4,SI •Iv"' of Tr1nslt-mlic trudu under Ylrdl . , . .. .. . , 4.1• l•tr• of TroMlt-mlx truclu 3 m or ..,... • .. ... .. .. .. 411 ,,., truct< driver, undPr 1500 t•l •.56 1lfr lrU<k ctrivff, 2'°° 911. to «lOO ti. . . • . . • • . • 4.6' telld IYP. equl-t, L.-TOUtnHll """' ~ tlmllar lvM eciul-"' ,. .. S.~ IRltAllO WOa K•H
fTI UO WO<'kel' ••.•••• , . • J,.17
IRltAZIO wo•K••t "'"''" I -fl\IOllN ~ ..... • M.17 ~-*'<fd llUt mtetllne . . t,14S ~I-1t>d ltoer IMClllN _...,. UOS
LI SlnlR 11 Settw .. , ........... , .. tl.'4
Of'tmln • !MM n.... 11 -) tt.JI il'tr
tY1 -::~ .. :~· rt S.l!ff Helper .. .. M.AJ r~ ~ ,.__ 11'11 rllhl to r• ~ ·~" '"" 111 bklo or ••lvt Ifft Ir· IUltrlllft or 1 ...... 111* Ill 9'lf lllcl Ill 1114 llfddlflt, "' 111.-.W fl'llY Wllfl.
•• ~k llld lor • ll"10d f1f ftlll'fY t>ol v• •lttt tM All Ht ftr h ..,,1no .. .-. 80~•0 ~ Tlt\ISHU llllWJ'ORT MESA UNl,.ID ~ OtlTtltlCT SIGNIDt Int*"' (1"11 ~\lbll"'4Cf °""'" c-t " '°' 2:7, , ...
PENETRATION
Sears
Behind The Ear
the incompicuowly
~onvenient
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•40
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TRU-EAR vu Hearing Aid
T~Ear VII makes wearing a hearinc aid
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it'a am.alter, lightweight, and inc::o?lllpicuoua.
You'll enjqy lull power, fin,ertip volume
control, and sreatet conwnience with this
comped, behind·tbHar hearin1 aid.
Regu lar ~199 '159
You Can Count on Star•
For Your Ht01i"1 Ai4
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NO MONIY DOWN• s.u.-.., •• ,_.-PJa11
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nu..uam a..u.,AM ....................... --------'
: ALL RoAns LEAD To Sears '························ ":-------.. UAJtS, °kODUat AND CO.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA STORES
LET YOUR
PATRIOTISM
Fly a new flag at your home or office during
the yHr's "patriotic sHson." You c•n save
money •nd help the Boys' Club of the Harbor
ArH •t the same time, too. Just order this de-
luxe fl•9 kit at only • fraction of its reel ret•il
value. You'll get es • bonus a minature Celi.
Forni• stet• fla9 -111 delivered by a Boys'
Club member to your door or m•iled directly
to your home in time for the holidays. Home de·
livery in Newport and Cost• Mes• only: fl19
kih will be mailed to other Oren9e County
•ddresses.
UNIRD
STARS FLAG
Stote 'Flog '395
Included I
C'omplelc r 1., s,t eo11taln' J by s roo1 na,
6-foot MafT, llaJ~ard. m~tal mountinc hr~1.t·
<'I .tnd '4:rt"' \ •II In 1 11~11-vy ~rrll!<'~tJ
'flf'1'.ton,.. <Uhm.
-
SOAR
Memorial Doy-Moy 30
Flog Doy-June 14
Independence , Doy-July 4
Labor Doy-Sept. 2
Order Now
.. -.--------.. I Date ............ I
(llOYI' Club "' "'' Htrtlor Arnt I Central lraMh Upper lty lre11th I
jt4 Cenl•r Strl'll iiJJ Tusll11 AVtll\lt
I CO'll• M"", C.•111 Coslt MtM. Ctlll.
s.oH>11 '4>Cn I
I ,, .... ,.,,d . . . . . . . • "'' ~it, •• u .t\ ,., ~i•.
I Ns:."'.'t •· ~d· ............ " • • ' • • ... • . •. • • •. • ' • • " • • " .. 1,
No ••••••.•••••••••• , ••••••••••••••• , ••••
I ~~:o~~~-h J ..................... •• •••. •• .. • Zip ........... I
I IM•k• (h'I(~• or "'°"" orllet\ Nv<lt to Sovs' Ct~' of !ht I HAr1lCt MUI I
-~-------~
Richard Boone shows as a
fishing boat owner plying the
Pacific around H a w a i i a n
Coastal waters. He sets out to
solve the murder of his te~
age daughter Who had taken
on drugs. others in the cast of
Kona Coast include Joan Blon·
dell, Gloria Nakea. Chip Raf-
ferty and Vera Miles.
Oscar Champ Rod Steiger is
the star of No Way To Treat A
Lady Which heads for the Lido
in Technicolor print. George
Segal and Lee Remick are co-
starred in this tale about a
New York strangler who baf.
fles the police with senseless,
wanton muroers.
Don't confuse the film
Seba.tin with the one titled
Guns For San Seba&Cian. The
former is h~~e<l for~e big,
wide, 'W'do<lerful Lido screen
with Dirk Bogarde. SUsannah
York aod Lilli Paimer in top
roles.
John Gielgud, Janet Munro,
Ronald Fraser and Margaret
Johnston round out the talent
which brings you a real spy
thri'tler. with a modern-day
touch o.C computers very much
in the cbase sequences or
Sebastian.
Guns l'or San Sebastian •
plus Day of the Evil Gun •
rr.ake their final showings at
the Mesa tonight and tomor·
row eve. Both good for
western-type shoot-outs and
drama.
The brilliant screen version
oC Thomas Hardy's famous
novel. Far From The MaddioJ{
Crowd, with its all-star cast
headed by Julie Christie,
leaves the Lido tomorrow eve.
Also bowing-out will be How
To Save A Marriage-And Ruin
Your Own Life, starring Dean
Martin.
Ylll IRYllNEI
MESA V.A TINEES • form
quite a nice habit for many
Harbor area home-makers •
This is the way to enjoy ttle
nilW films at tbe Mesa, taking
a break in the middle of the
week on a pleasant afternoon.
The progr-ams start each
Wednesday at 1 o'clock, open·
ing wito free refreshments.
FREE PASSES to ttle Lido
or the Mesa theatres will be
mailed today to Andrew Tru-
jillo, 641 Victoria, Cost<J Mesa.
J. A. Pistole, 2116 Miramar
br., Balboa, T. J. Belford,
6181h Begonia, Corona del
Mar and J. I. Doughty. 2001 ~~ Lane. Ne w po r t
niere·~ a foursome schooul·
ed to be the guests of "Picture
P~s" at the Udo or Mesa
soon to enjoy another really
fine moHon picture.
We slnce,rely hope that your
1~mc will :iw>ear herC!' in th<!
::>Hoo-far-distant future. Sec-
·1ou al the movies, Lido or
Mes&, that Isl
4 Recei
All A's
At Rea
The third quar
roll aod scho1anbl
been released i
lntermectlate Sc
Oosta Mesa.
Je'our students
A's in all subjects
graders Suzanne
and Vivette Cr
and seventh grad•
Nickerson
Washburn.
Scholarship stuc
received at least
A's as B's are:
Kids Like
'Ask And
·~ t
~ -·--
4 Receive
AD A's
At Rea
The third qQal'ter honor
roll and scbo)msbfp list bat
been released fOr Re a
Intermediate School In
Oosta Mesa.
1''0\U' ~ received
A's In all subject3 -eighth
graders Suzanne Cecconi
and Vivette Crumpae.ker
and seventh graders Susan
N i c k e r s on and Pat
WashbW'n.
Scholarship students who
received at least as many
A's as B's are:
\
MOfldly, M_, 20, 1968 DAJLY 'ILOT JJ
J' ... en Plaee 12 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
,.._. IA& ...
IUHlttOll COUllT .. T• IUPHMMI CIOUH W ~·
191 On Honor Roll at Harbor High snn w CAL,,... .... ,.. ,,.,.,. °" CAUNa#IA ..oa
THI COUNTY 0, OllAMO• THI COUNTY OP OllA ... I llle.A4t111 .... ........,
MOTICI 01" MHlllNO OP l"ITITION NOTICI Oft llaAalN9 • ,nlTIOll .... ~ ,._.,. W wtU ANO l"aoe.H• .. WILL &JIP l"Otl LIT• COOICIL ANO Ha LITT a a I TIH TenAMllfTUY TUTUMINTAIY &.lilt ti1 Mwlotie l. .....,, OecMMd. hlil .. If .. M a..L elM ,_ •• NOTICS IS HlltllY OIVIN Tllllt One hundred nlDety QM
abldents blve made the
th1rd ql&ll1er' bonor roll at
Newport Harbor Hi g b
School.
The senior dasa ~ 43
students on h llCholar list;
the junJor dua 51. and t.be
sophomore and Creabmen
classes each 48.
Straight A students were:
Seniors William Dugan,
orgeanne Hanna, Wendy
II, Elissa Llndroth, Lyn-
Schneider, Kathy Sheen.
·chard Show stack a n d
David Vierling.
Juniors Kat hleen
Q-awford, Cyntb1a Fart.es,
'rrac.7 Kllhan, Rau d y
Oliver and O>onie OlbonL
Sophomores D a Ti d Ec-
cles, Lui Lamberth.
Roberta 1'~ a D d
Steven Slap.
Freshmen Sbawo Biuon·
netae, John Gallia, St.eve
Ko p an s k't 1 Ch ristine
Kopitzke, Nancy Palmer
and Oliris Quinn.
The rest of the hoflor roll
students received at least
two A's and two B's in
academic subjects.
~ -R.Olllld Aebef111rd, Pt9QY f llonl, JoM Belt1gll9. Otrui anl!ltfd, Rr'111rlrlfl~~. J1~ eo1f~~!'i~~ ComslOCk, GetY Frence. S1llv Frost.
~ ~--..Miil"" ~ ~ ~ =-5-ft lea Nelllt S.5*1. Ot<fflff. Mt<lorle ... --'* fl!M MNlll • •,S,...:ti,... .......,, 111 f: • hirer, NOTICI IS MHllY GIVEN ... , Lyla !Nllllea lw ,.,_ .. tll Wll IM IV I,~~~ ........... -fllM ..,_,.,. ,..., ... ,., .._ ........... , ........ dwY .. Ille ~1?tt11:,. RL~~L ...., 1f'~· "·., c~~.!: MiMtt ••Ill .-C0111k11 .,.. ,., , .. .,. "-llttlMr· ,..,._ ........ 11 _. ttor '"lftle ._ tl Y:' rl 1,.e~ "-e ._ et Letlltrt TM!t_..,., 1e ... ltklf>. lwr!NI Nltlcllltrt. Miii llltl .. """ •nd c•,i( "'---.!:• =:J-,~11 .,, ,...,_. le wllic:ll It "'"' 1W l\lr-•i.tt ., llMtlM ... w-._. 119111 Mt '"" -' •oi.. .. __ ~ ·~ ...., H rllC\I .. ,.. end mer 1111 ,,,.,. •nd .., Jw. '· IN&. 11 tiao ..,.,, ·a. Ille totn II-'!, It, 1tl13 ' MUlrWJ, ~ f/I llMllM Ille -.... """ Ml ,~,_... ol ~ Mt. 1 fll Mid 4~tui. ~ v IC ~ n.n... 1W Jw-. 7, 1'61. •I M l e.m., ... thtl (OWi, •I tOI N. lr~n. Ill h Cltr ., · J__. ~ "o~ ,...:i11. l.'orri. P51*"!"'· l ~"' eour1,_, " o.o.r1men1 N•· 1 " Hid ~".~Me':~~~~ t= I! IW. to w, Crtkl R01111-••• ,, -·ti •1 ~ 8-•Y• la h City ' W E' $T JOHN c •• 1~1 · v irew ..-=: :=:.. fkl! 111~ '-• T•~· " '-'• Ml. c e11tw .. i. c · i c11 -. ' Cqri1-... ~ t 0,__ _,,_ I 't!l , Al~9'1.lr.Qt71s:.::"wt:f!,~ Oli.t Ml• 17, Ifft. • .._ t. ....:"' y 1
~Cllt,. f~1Mlr11. 'p~ -:u: ~ l!Wll\, l'MrO•!tl You.... ...... w. E. $T JOHN. Covntv Clttll. ••• '· 11.-"t c-
rledlfte I , #«"I A:NI .... • ~-~.A~"~~:~ N ._,':t., ,,=~. Sot11e -•I e. ( ...... llfC. &1~~ Ha=.~ •• ~rll g~=: '"' Buti.r. J1mes · cotm, J .. n,,. 111 s.-''""' 51,.11 ,......_ et•t. tlltl ~n1th HI.,.., ROS\ H~ Jttl HlrKh, rewtord, ICtlh,_ Ecc~l, Jtnnlt LM A-let, CtNltrflle' ... 11 Tth (tll) '"""II ..... ,..,. ~ Cllard Howl1ncl, lrlKt JohnMlll Ftrbtr, Jtn Flll9tt1ld, Rick Flem!~. Ttl OUI MAdl-,_1614 .,...,... flt ,........, Kk•r1en Jol\111041, Jtttlu J.onu. Rooerl M~lut FGW ku, ltrrv Genlos1. Publllhtd Or•no• CA• 1 0 11 l"llol l"uOllWf Or1nte c...t Otlll' P'llol, ~e gn, Ctraj I \..,son, KtlllY Mtlio AtidiN H1mmonc1. -· • y • Mtw ..... Ho '"' t1HI '""""" McOan .t. &lerlvn Howua, Ktll• H~. M•r 11• '°' 75• 1"1 177..,1-------------Bonnlt M<Ooneld• K•tllleeft Murotw, llobcrt It~~· Suun Jurom, Lucln~ ~:1n~"'~1c~'.'i'~~uu;1~.'·'~ ... ~~ i~... M1:rq~11e uJe.ineue, lm1e LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
Piace, RllChlt Poll, Robert ,mlnlle, li'l'cic'irc1 C~1or111, lt~( P':~~t ~~I J•• >t11w1r1, Lucfu5tm'"ul-. •«110h Pet°''°"' 1-------------T)ltll
Smhh. Sieve Sulh•"· Ca"'v l ilt'\\ l-fl llecllY( \/1l_trlt Sdlmtnlt1, NOTICI 0' INTUITION TO MOTICI TO CltlDIT'Oltl ~"~~~ Wtrd, v 0<'9 Wtili.. <;II ~od't k~w1r1, orl Sfimtrnilk, Uncle ENGAGE IN THI SALE o• IULIC TIIAllS,111 s llolwell. Br~ SPtncer, J ' m . l 01' ALCOHOLIC HVlllAOIS (hn. 41tl .... u.c.c.1 F1.:::.-r-i 7w c~ro1~nc1e~. :{!~"'ii~';{.· '~f~1·· ~or,.~·~~ ~y 11, ,,.. i.o11ct " htrov ,,_. '° .,.. crW11or~ 0811TI Bf'<lv.,,.,"ll, 81:'111 8llllncu~ Vicki Ucox, Attdr" Wllllems, l 0 r I To Wnom II Mey COftCtrn: el TM ~II,..,_. Col'Mllllon Tr~.
David Vierling, who
earned straight A's,
was Kiwanis Bowl cap-
tain, a bandsman and
_,. ti'~ -K••llfl AklN, P•m d't f lit Ali..., Melortv eenton. c11err1u 1 e l or o a erary 4 Students
rown, C~ 8urkto lllcNrd DUllon, Ww.,.,..llcll. Tara Younoi, Tine Ztmar, Subltcl IO luu•nct of IM ll<tMt 1• ""'°"' lioDIMSI ..,.,._ Is le.JI El CMlllM ---------------------·--__;;._;;.;_.;__.;_.;_..;.;.;:_...;;...:.;;....;.;;.;_;,.;_...;;....:.;.~ Plltcl tor. nollct II htrlOV tlvtll 111•1 Ille Dr., Cott• N\tt41, C-ty fl/I Ore-$Ille
uncltrsltfttcl pr-.. MH tkollollc o1 C1lll0<nlt. NI I ..,. tr...-r It eboVt btvtrlffl 11 1119 ..-1-onctlbe<I H to bt ,....,. lo lt1ul ..,., ~,.., 0 . NIIMI C.mobtlli-,Altft CO<flrl'!-~~*· Collboft. . t N t ~~~ ~'5 H!.1::,.. ~"/J.i•H, '::""' maganne a ewpor c'11rl$1f,,. 'i(1~men, 1<fts1i. ~r'""'· Harbor High School will ~,:..~·r~uJ!w.1~ 'o..!i•bdtl::! attend Stanford in the
lnMI Dwell, Tim Qutro1, Cerol llab-fall
blf\S, Chuck 5'19", Oorolhv Tlwlor, ---·---------IUclllfd TlllYtr.
1<11::., 93:_ lua"'e'::.!:\t A~~I Cnrb lensen. J-. C llrk, ~ t n d • 't!/;,'l:lre 'I:~~.~~· NJ•~ n!:r.P~~ Hen!..,., L"llt HUI, te.1111 HINNw Muclt Homl'lc. C•rol l~ed1. Juli• t:::t• ~~. K9f.l~ne ""fu:.'YllJ"!,"y
$ntlltlfl, Stelie $owcltn, E191ne Str111t, ~'::11;o11 111/CHnls who Khiev .. et INS! • 8 ••trlOf:
A~:'~"tt~~~:~~·· Ri.:::, Ber-~rv C.rd, 8erblr• "•'•· Bob H•rt~ K•f,111 Herrin, Ktll1V Hlicleorend, Gav Hllel Ke II Holfm9n, M•rv lou HwmDhrev.
NHHS Grad
Gets Honor
William T. Rothenburger,
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer W. Rothenburger,
2024 Highland D r i v e ,
Newport Beach .. a senior at
Honored
By Clerks
Four Orange Coast area
&tudenu were a w a r d e d
scholarships by the Retail
Clerks Union Local 324 at a
m e m b e r 1 b i p meeting
recently in Buena Park.
The
Colorful
Sound of
Or•n1e
~= Ind ,,.. $ew!llt.nd c-.. '~-!ff-. 41t l!Mt 17111 SlrMI. Cool• Nitti -IMltllA .--11 1'31 El C-lno ,.~ Ill a.JI l"""'lon. "'4 -Dr" Cotti -· c-tt .. Or-..... ~ II -lrlne 111 ... Dfftrfmtfll ., C.lllor'llle. •
of A~ 8......,1 C-1 IO( IUWlll(e Tiit •-"Y to lie lf-i..Ted Is ~ IPf .,......, ol •" 1tc.llollc bevtr-.e c.etecl 11 lt:ll l!I Camlfto Or~ C• .. ,,....,
tlttftse lor ll<tnMs) tor !"-preml'cs •• county ., 01-. Stal• 1111 C1.....,11.
follows: S.ld H-1Y It clelUllMO "' _,.,
ON-$A\.E BEER es· a-• WIM ""1 ~ S .... IM/M" Anvono cHslrl"' .. prolttl Ille luu1na "-"-• 7/E......,. FoOlll Steni IM. C09
ol lW<ll llUMoltl ,,..., Ille • -llltcl oro-.... lal:Mtd II le.JI El c:em1 ... l)r., Couno
19tl wta -omc. 1111 "'4 0-rlmtnl of IY of Or•-· s11a. o1 Cell-. Alcaloellc ._,_ Co,,,,.I, wllhln :IO ,,,. ..,. 1,_,.. wlll llt ~ml~
•v• el Ille •a. Ille ~ Prtmlsn aller lllt 27111 ,.., ., M9t" Ifft, •I ..,.. fl"t _..., ,,.llfll ,,.,.,,..,, tw °" or 1 ........ ........_ 1111 Et ..,,,., II _..,.. b" 19•. T1w Prtmlus It A M. •I 71 ....... "'"""' --llctNt<I ltr .,. .. ,. ., olconollc C1mlflt Or .. CG&hl ,,_., c-11 Of bivtt•"'· The torm of wrmullon mn °''"f' St•~·~Tt. ........ all be obt1lntc1 trorn eny office of lllt ~~ et 11 ...... ___ w..i w tr..
Dll>artmenl .... si--.,_ --· PARlORS NO. ,, INC. ,,._,.,.. lllf .... ..,.. Yte" "" ......
,,...hl<I Orlnte Ca.11 Dilly Piiot, -o~=MaY 1S, lHI.
INY a l9'1 .,.._ THE SOUTHLAND COit,.
.LEGAL NOTICE er: $tm c. Ml'ltr R..,IN-#MrV 0. NUlllU
5Ul"lltlOlt eoun °"' THE TIM,..,. .... c.r..
C1"<1V Jonn, Ol!bble Jones, Tern1 KtsPer Ch••~• t<etiler, 0eca11 K041tos ~~ ~rilord, Jtnt Miiier. M.srk
School has been awarded a
Leadership G r a n t to
Mr-yville Co l lege,
MaTyville, Tenn.
A wards totaling $10,000
were presented to members
o or re a ~~~~~~~~~=-~~--1r-~ .... ~.t"' .. ~------+-~s~T~A~t;•n°"'n..e~A~Lr';"°;•~NJ1111A,9orRrr~~1t2P...,1~1~1.c...ilill'~'·~orr.-·-------~-----------
'"· "'· JJt m ,,.11.,,... 0r1.W. c..tt OlllY l"llol.
Kids Like to
'Ask Andy'
The grants are offered to
high school students who
have made an outstanding
contribution to their school
or who have demonstrated
exceptional l e a d er s h i p
qualities in exlracurricuJar
activities.
Ralph G. ~carelli, 10091
Birchwood D r i v e , Hun·
tlngton Beach, received $750
for study at the graduate
level.
Tho se receiv i ng
Music!
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM
Consideration for t h e
grant is also made on the
basis of academic achieve·
ment and college entrance
examination scores.
scbolarships w o r k un·
dergraduate work w e r e
Catalina Petera, ~1 Lincoln
Ave., Huntintton Beac.b;
Thomas L. Martin, 80ID
Blaylock Drive, Huntington
Beach; and llowud D.
Osborne, 118·C First St.,
Seal Beach.
FROM FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH
Chevelle puts the
other mid-size cars
their place. • 1n
Second, Third, Fourth and so on.
There ore on kinds of reatON wfty Otevelle is the most popular car in. its field.
tt giv9s yov tti. mid-size fl.lcfs greatest <N>ice of engine-transmission combinations. Thor includes six V8's
ranging up to o 350~p Turbo-Jet ovalloble in the SS 396 above. tt allO gfves you the kind of ride you'd expect
Clit••ll• SS .396 Sporl Co11P"
onty in the MOte expensive cors-wfftt fun Coil suipension ond a seporate frame with advanced body mounting syste&
And Chevelle CIOtM$ on wfth oil tOfta of credentlolt. for tnstortCe In ttie recem NASCAR·sonctloned Union/Pure 011
rerformonce Trials, o Chevelle won the Spoc1i Intermediate Closs, scoring the highest number of totol
po;nts In the broking, ec:OOClfRf and occ.lerotlon t91ts..
So what elM can Otevelle do for yout How obout gfvlno you the widest choice of penonolizlng feolures In its fleldf
And .omethlng elM that contrlbut" to Its populorlty1 prket that start o full $100 lower than competitive models. ..
------------~-----------------------------------------------------------------------
You've never seen savlngi 11~1 this I01tut Sevlttft ''"" I A11y Clttwrolet or Chevene Wfl#i 2')()..hp Turbo·F/11 VB, Powerglide and whitewalls.
on '68 Chevrolets ond Chevelles. '°""' S•vm11 ,,,.,. t ~ny Chevrolet or Cheve/11 wfth 2SO-hp Turi>o·flre VB, Power9llde ond whltewolls.
Save on popular VB engines, 1011111 Sm1191 """ J Any regular Chevrolet with 250-hp Turbo.Fir• VB, Turbo Hydra-Motic ond whitewalls.
outomotlc lronsmiislons, whitewall " lonua Sovln91 "°" 4 Now, for "'• first tlrne "'"· big 1ovlnQ1 on power disc brok" ond power
tires-and more Just toke o look ot •teerina when you lwy any Chevrolet or Clt1velle with V8 t nQlnt .
rltese 11111 bonus savings olons Then lottua SoYl1191 ,.,.,. S Buy any Chevrolet 01 Chev9'/e VB two• or lour·door hnrdtop ~
talk /o your Chevrolet deol1r. model-Jove on vlnyl top. electri<.clock, wheel covors ond oppeoronce guord Items. ' ....._...,.
Hopponlng now ot your Chevrolet dealer's, o tremendoui ox-plosion of ex1ra buying power. Only 1he l.ader could mok_e ii hoppen. .. . •
HOTICI! Of SALi! 0, RIAL MIY 20. lMI I~
P'aOl"HTY AT l"lllVATI! SALi In ,.,. IM!l9r el tl>e Ellllt flf
ANTONIO J, AVILA. O.C.aMlll. LEGAL NOTICE
Hallet Is llereb¥ •I-!NI the 11n-dtroleftOll Wiii .. 11 11 l>t!'H .... i.. to 11191------TMll--t------
lllthtsl Ind Msl ~ ...... ct to <or>-llOTICI OP' INTINTIOM TO flrmtllon of u ld SUl>erlw Court. on or CHATI HCVltlTY lwntlftf
·-h 3111 •Y flf ~y, lMI 11 IN of. HOTICI It Mttbf t l'IW .. tlle flee of H1rrv A. Fry .... Ro!Mrt V. C,,..,1..,.. o f MET•O<JollFOaHIA
l1udud1le, '1 Soulll l11l1 A-. Sul .. IUSINESS E~al"lltlSIS .... MITll0-203, P1sadent , Celllornla 111 tfle rl9hl, ti. CAR WASH. • ..,,,,..,,. .,..,,,. ""'°"'
tie en<I Interest ot Mid -.-1e0, <or>-busl ..i.lrf'M Is 3'7 "°"" Turtl"•
•l•llne Of 1 ~tnlll ln..,_t, I• 1nc1 .. Or -counlY "' o r • 11 •1 State of ..,., ClfMlft ,.., ~ 11ca ... '" "" eaT:... ..,.. • _.,., -., ,,
CllY et AntM!m. Countv ., Or-•· 51119 about " be cnott<I .,,. o-end : f.~ "*" "rtkvl11tl'r de,crlbed ,,.,.,.. .. Kerl "'"'"'' 5'olrM ,am. •Unc11~ldM _St......, 1-.,1 In \.ot -bln'irwU Nc:lrn.a II 2M l'eter$0<\ ti, Tr.ct 179 M -"'91' recordtcl lft wn. Coot1 Mltl, C-IY If are ..... Si.le
1k1o1t lJ, p.._ 1f 111d 20 ot 1111 Callfonlla. Mlscelleneo<n Mos rttords of Ortiw. TM p,_rty In wllldl tt.. ~ l'jj County ltrttl Wiii bt etMteol II. Ill -· Ttrm• 'of Sale: Cuh '" l1Wful ~Y ol 11•-•nd __,,...,., "'"""',. tn<I
lh• Unlltd Slaltt on conllrrnatlo,, ol wit. l\lrnbll._ of .. D,;;.'°' =~~ I~ of tmounl bid to bt dtooslled 11<1111 now localM Tl ,. • • bid. All bids subltcl to t<CtPI•"'• 11 ,,_.... 11111 111a1-. _,_ et Ell ......,.
discretion of Admlnlslratrl•. Bids or of. WASH. 1 ... .__ .... ~ wlll tors lo bt In wrlll1111 I ncl Wiii be roct lwd TM ...,.....,. -ur ,. "'---:"'_,
at Iha tlorHtld olflco ti env tlrnt elt.r M ,_mm9tecl on GI Iller 1111 tllll elev
the first publication htroof tncl btloro 1111 al Molly. lHI. •I 11 :et '·"'· 11 U-Bank, del• ot site. 500 SOUlh Mtln, Orante. C1lltorRlt,
DI.TED: this Uth cley of Mey 196f. S3S,000.00 C1"1 end Slf0,000.00 kcurtd
Oorolllv M, Avll1 Promluory Nolt
Admlnltlutrl• ol Ille So for H -"""'" to IM 5'°'"41 l"ertv. lsl•te of Antonio J, •II buslMU nemu 11111 ~ uMCI by
AVlle, 0tt1ued tne Debtor lot lht lllrM Yffn IMI Pl'I' .,... '"' MRaY A. flltY a SAME llOllRT V. LAUDlaDA\.I OATEO: MtV Jrd. IHI. Altet'M'tl Al I.aw SECUllED PARTY
SUlte 211 tnvt""" 1.allll11t Kori R ... ltf '1 S..lfl Lelli A-Unit• left-,. ......... c........ "'· o .•.. 1151 ,... UUI nu-. t•UM Or-. C.lltt'llie 11111 MU,.,.., _,. ltc.-.Me. -ISi .... A-,. tw u I I lt .. rl& Put>lltM<I Or._ Cotst 0.1~ Piiot, ~llllltd o..,... Coul O.lty Piiot. ~v lO. 1'61 17MI
M9'r 20. 21, 27, IHI M1 ...
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
~ HOTIC• OI" TIIUSTll'I SAU
NOTICI TO CalOITORS ..._ J.1111 OI" IULll Y•ANSl'll Oii M1V Jt, lNI. al 11:00 o'dodt A.M •
U9Ct-""" "' u.c.c.1 11 "" 5o1r111 t,..,.1 111tr•nce to "" c.ounrv Notice 11 .,.,_... •'""' to 1111 CrfClllOrt cou.--. In Ille d lY el S1nl1 Ana. of KAltL llES&l ER, TrtNltror, -• C.llfotnl1. WESTERN. MUTUAL COii• buslMSJ lddrtu Is ,.,. H•rllor Blvd PORA TION •• C1Nlom1• CorPOfaltofl. ~ ~ s _; '""'"' uncle• "'4 o.ect of tMI ...-uy Cosll Mn9, COUfltv ot "''""' 1111 "' OHu J DICKEY AHO CLARA R. C1Mlomta, llltl • bull! ""'" ... It about lo J " · ftd rcled l>e mtclt to METRc>cALIFORNIA DICKEY, hulbtftd Ind wll9 a "°'
BUSINESS INTlltP'ltlSE$ AND MElll(). Mardi 3, lMP. In loolt ""· ,_ m,:
CAR WASH, e par~lli-, Tra11Slt,..., ~. R_,,.I lo .:v,.~...,.J:~:
-bullMn ........ 19 lt7 Nor1!1 C•ll...,,_ 1 ""' f\.LY AND
TU$lln. °""'"' County .. °'-· Slalt ·~ ··-ol WllLIAM DONN .... wlf• ol C•lllonllt. LILLY I. OOH NELLY, rwa-::. Mid bY
TM _,.., lo l>e tttl\lfffff Is lnc•locl u lolnt ttntnb -~ "' cartaln
et tH9 H•rbor ,,.,_,, Cott• lw\a9, Cowftty :;;:. bY -::i::., "*""• "°"ce of o1 0r.,,.., s11a. of C•llfoml1. . wlllc:ll "!: ,_.,.., ,_,., -. 1'6t, In
Stlo .,_,., h dftcr"*I "' -•I &ooll uos. ,.,,. -. of wld Olflcltl H l All tla<k In tr.oa, ll•lur11, 1<1ulp,,,.,.I 11 rd will sell ti llUbnc tudlon to tllt
•"'1 '°°" will of IMt nrt1111 ur wash h,::St 'btdcltf tor cttfl, pay1ble 111 llwtul bllsl-• IVIOWn u EllTE CAR Wi\SH of Ille \Jftltod $1ilet 11 Ille tttT\I of
ind lo<thMI et 7UO H•rbor 11\rd., Cotti "":!"Y WllllOUI wur•nly n te Ill~.
Meu. Cowntv ot Or•lltl• &lelt of sa itulon or enoimbr•llCIL tM t11tere.1
Celltornl•. -"' Ill Incl -Mid bY Mid Trut!M Th• bulk l••nsler wlll Ill con1umm11td c:Y seld Offd of Trust, '" end to the
on or elltr lho 1tll1 d8Y of M1v, 1969, II ri>llowl"' dncrlbecl .. OMrtv, tl>-wll: 11 :00 A.M. 11 U"lon Benk. SOO Sovth M•l11, Loi t« ol Trict No. 2'41, II\ lht CllY Ortnoe. County ol Oranveo Slalt ol 01 Cosl• NIH•• es per map ~ In
C•lltornll. '°'* 1'. ..... ) .,,., ' .. Mlscell•MOU• So fer H know11 to Ille Trtn11treo, •II ,,. .. s. records cf said Or-Countv. bu•-na1Ms tftCI ..idrnsu uHd b'I Ctllfornl•
Tr1nl ..... r ~ flll tl1rW YHrl 18'1 Pill, '« '"' ..;,~ cf ,_yl119 obfltellonl
•rt: Same. sKVrtd W Mid Deld lnc:WfW !ft•,
D1'9cl: MIV 3rtl, 1..... cht"" •11111 ..,.,... cf ftll TM• •lld METR().CALIFOltNIA of Mle
I USINESS AND INTllt,Rl&EI o...d· IMY 1 lMI ANO METlltO<Jo• • wni.rn Mlllull eor,er.tlO!lo
WASH, • P'•,,...rtlll• TrvtlM
I v: ,,. ... Y. llllldllftl I Y ''°"' Va11 Yt~• Mlkolm Colw1M Vlce-Prnlcttnl Tr_.._ MDI
UNION IAlllC P'-.itlltd O..llH C...S Dell'r Piiot, ~~::.... MIY .. IJ, 2'. 1MI 76Ut •--•111,... CE """"".,,... ~ c-11 0.111 ,,tot. LEGAL NOTI
Mn 11. IHI 111 ... f-------------
ltOTICI 01" TltUJTll'S SA\.I
O.. TllurMllY. JwM 20. IHI. •I 11:00 1-----------".""'.'.""-t'cloclt A.M • •I "" Gr ... StfMt (WHll
ltOTICI D, nustel'S SALi! "'''111(9 Ill '"' CIYk c ." I. r
LEGAL NOTICE
..._ 1.. fAdml11lslr9tlon l ulldl1191 Ill h Cllv al
Oft JUNE 7. IHI, 11 ll: .. A.M. !JEN!· Ot•-· CelllOnll•, THE l'lllST NA·
l'ICIAl SERVICE CO. e C•lllarnla . cor· TIONAL BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY,
-•llOll, •• dlltv •-lnteol TrustM under H dutv epoolnltd ,,..,.. ulllltr •n<I encl .. ,..,.nl to Detd of Tl'\l\t dill.., Ju"• wrsuent i. o.-ef Ttuat dtltd July 15,
71. 1"' t U<Utecl Irr OOVER·BERGlR 1"6. exttutecl b'f GEORGE W. HANYAK COMPANY. a llt'l\lled 1t1rmttslll1> tncl rt-alld THEltESA M. Hl.HYAK, llUtNnd oncl
C'Of'cl<ICI J.,... JO, I,..., H 1n,1r. No :IOl'J, wilt. •ftd r•cordlCI July 27. '"'' In Boote In boo1t 711', .. _. 201, of Offlcl•I Rt<-IOOO. l"lte jlJ, of Olllclll R.-dt 111 the
Of'dt In the offl<ll of IM Cou"tv Rtcordtr elllc:t al !flt county Recor• ol Or1no•
of 0••""" Counlv. Cl ll'°'"'"· Wil l SELL Counlv. C1lllor11I•, Will S!Ll /4 T AT PU8llC AUCllON TO HIOHEST BIO· l'UIJLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST lllD• OER FOii CASH , ... , ...... , tlm• ol Milt DER FOR CASH. Myllblt II llrn• of ... ,. In llwlul molleY of ll'HI U11lllO Sletul 11 In lewtul mont'I of tl'HI Ulllttd !tetts, all
""' Soulll Front •""""ce to Ille Ora"" rlehl. 1111.i 11111 111terat convwtd to eftd Cou"tv CovrtllollH, CllY of Stnle Af\t, now ~lld Irr 11 UflMr MIO Ot10 Of Tru1I
Sl•I• of C•lltor111t ... ''•"'· fllll Incl , ... '" "'' pr_,.,, tlMtfld "' Mid (ounl'( l•re1t c:on•••td lo Ind -lleld bv " Ut>-Incl St11t. clft<rlbecl It: ~r Old 0..0 of Tnitt 111 ll1e er00<rtv '"· Lot 74 of Tr1cl No. Ult " ....... Oii ueled In u ld COUfllY end Stele detcrlbtd • M•P l'!(:orded In Boal! lU. '-" u u : 111 47 h1c1Ullvt of Mltcelll-~ A LNMlltld Estal9 Ill Ind to lof " of rttllfdt o1 0.1"" Ceu11tv. Cellfof"ll .
Trt<I No .,, ... ,..,,_ "" I MIO ,. ~Id .. it will be "'"°' but .,,,.,,.,. ..,.e1ec1 111 loolr 1Sl, -1 to II 1 ... co-nl or wtrrtntv. _..,.,,.u or 1-lltd·
ctvslve, Mlsc•ll•,,_,. ""'""'· rf<tt"k ~I '"'"""" fltlf, "°'-loll. ., ,_ O••nff COUfllY Celllornl•• crttltcl by cvmbror1Cts. to PIV Ille rffMllllne .,,,..
11111 ~Hl•ln INH •""' JuM 10. IKJ by cll'al sum o1 Ill« ....i. *"""' W Mid elld be-1M lrvlM C-nv • Wtsl Ottd o1 Tr1111, to-wit: Slt.360,JI, WI"' ,,._
Vlrtl11l1 CorPorl l!Oft fl ltt-oncl ~c-tt•tll trom NO\Ott'l\l>Or 1. lff7, tt '" u ld
tt Ctr90<•11on. • Nevede eor-•tlon. note prov.....,. -•r1ees. 11 .,.", "'*" "" H1rbor l11vnim.nt C_I...,, • Cillo tw-mt of Mid 0.-el l ni•t. left. <11<1-.•s
-..11 C-•tlon eotow bllll"t•I n and f!tl>tMft ot ~ Trwsiet •ftd of tM Oovtr SllorH Otwloemf'fll Ce , o In-trvst. cret!M Irr sal4 0.0 of TMI. _.
IHI ,_..,... A11tUll n. IM) !ft ~ Tl'HI 8-fkl•"' ""'"' NII °"4 .,. U1L NM 70 flf Olflcl1I RKOfCIU IM Tnnl, by ,.._ of I ~ or .....,II Ill
1t1-•1 tn-llft-.. Mldlt•,.hn 1119 oll~lleM NCVrtd tlt•r•llYe
bttfl t Mle...i to Oowt•llffltr C-• """"""'' IJ(IQl!wd lftd .. llwt'tll Ill ~ ,.., ,. llml'" l"ar!Mnlllo, bY '" ~ ~ltntd • ..,.rttM Dec..,....,, .,.
···-"' rf'COf°dfd Auo~I 11. lt6.J Ill OefW" ..... Ot!Nncl .., Stlt ..... Wl'llte., -.... Hot "1 of Oflkl•I llW"'ds NOiie. of Offt Ull d Etectllll Ill ~ S..ld .. it wllf bt m~. bul willlWl ll'HI llft(ltrsl9nfod Ill 1111 MN ,,_,., 19 «I'"'"""' or wtrr•ntv, •.o"'" or .,.,,. tttllfY ... ,, obhl"'"" ""'~ • .,.
"""'· '"•rcJIM 11111, POn•nlon. or ...,. '•bnl•,.,. u. , ... , "" =~=-°'::: c\H'llbrt fl(f\. to NY Ille ff"'l llllne l"lt>-N l4 NOiiet flf Otf•Vlt -.,. I~
<IHI svm OI ttw """ \Kur.O "" Miid rte-" lfl loolt tJIJ, '"' .,. • ., M'" Oeed "' '""'· ...,..,, se1.m oo. w.111 ..,.. ()fllc111 Rt<Of'dt • l'llt>I I,_ Oc~r IJ, '"'· U !fl Mid D•ltO: Mt'I lJ. 1 ... nolt 11rO'llcltd, tdvallCfl. If l llYo 111\0fr 15Mll 111t 1trm1 Of uld Dttd of Tru>I. lttt. THE ,tlt$T Nl.TIOMA'-N'98 tftd .,._ of Ille T'tlnltt Ind BANI( 01' OllANOI
of lflt !tlAlt crfflff W M141 Offd el COUNTY t• .. Id T .....
Tnnt. l y '*'" C. ~ Tiie .....,,,,,,.., ufldtf Mid ~ al Vl<t ,mldtlll
Tl'\lfl, w rMIGll If I ~ or ,,._ II, f. Ortlllt"'1t
ftvll Ill fllt fflltellon• M>tured tMl"llbYo Tnitl Offl-
M"""°" •"tcutod •"" dtllvered to ll'HI P'llllnllltd Or•-c..t De4tr P'11of, UlldenltMd • wrltte11 Otcllr•llall of 0.. MAY Mo t7 IM'-I. IM ...,.
'"'" .... o ...... lld '°' $•'-• •fld "''"""1-------------ftOllOt .. WMdl 91141 .. ·~ lo u --------------
,,,. "'"""ltned to "" u ld ..-rtv "!;::============:,
Mllttv w ld ""'''Ion'· and !Mf'Mntr., on Juty u. , .. ,. ttw und•"ltllfd Cl"litd
.. ,d notice o1 lwtl<'ll ~"" °' ttectte.o It bt _,,_ Ill bealt P!f, ,..._ 4M. r
Mid Olllcl•I lt.cor-d1. Ottt: Oc-U, IM7 ll!NEl'ICIAL SEltVICI CO.
81 Mid T~Mo
I Y I.. L. TUllNEll. Vita 'r"'""' ,.~nWd. ~ •:;~ """' .,...
BEST
Tiit DAILY PILOT •fhn MM 1f th kit ftetwK, .., edul '"".., •• ,....,,_, ... tt.w. 111 111y etwt,.,_ II tk .........
~ntd wlllt 01ll'r ,llOt, "-' a..d\,
C:.111ornl1 MAY fl, JO. JI, '* t t~ ::::::::::::::;:::::::::::• l
I
......
·ohless Indian Wants to Join Other World
Dy NEIL BIBLElt 01>1>0rtunity -con Ider the
lr:uoees for the mosl part ~llSSOULA. ~font. I \P) the hard-core unemployed.
the basic educaUofl courses
started wlt.h a grade-level
average of 7.4 on the
C a 11 fornla Achievement
Test. Alter 20 weeks of
study, the average was 9.1,
Twenty-two persons have
passed tests to earn the
equivalent of a high school
education.
who held Jobs earned '300-
tl.500 a year.
Under the program, beads
or family get ~ per week
for subsistence, plus '5 for
each dependent. They also
get $70-$114 per month from
the BIA. A family of five
children gets '360 a month
and pays its own rent and
uhlities for campus housing.
They are given a BIA grant
for furniture at the start.
Those in the lamily lire
program study such sub-
jects as birth c O"n tr o 1,
preparaUon of budgets, and
how to cook nutritious and
varied menus. They make
field trips to supermarkets
for shopping study and to
banks for training in handl·
ing checking accounts.
iJ'j;.1'US, thell return lo the
nursery. Toddler$ ~ n d
sUghUy older children spend
the day tbere. but all eat
with their families. School·
age youngsters a t ten d
Missoula public schools.
j ' Sci.II~-~
lht '"""'" •••
• Sec-r.teri_.
e Me41u l
l11t.r•11,.
The project provides basic
,bless Indian has a •·cry in skills a n d prevocaUonaJ
s hei:rt to become one or orientation ; the BL~ then places the grilduales in ap 1e other people." A pro· propriate work. knowing the
·am at the t.:n1vers1ty of individual 1s ready for the
lontana here ., :?1vm.: h1~her step and bas some
hole ramil1es thal chJncc idea of where he wants to
The $850.000 federal-stale ~0.
roject takes the lam \1el> l w1t1st1(';llty the ~roup in
!f the reservation :ind -
Montana·s ha r d · co re
laces them on l0ampu.~ Cur •
u.idy in basic edticat1on.
With the r ea d i n i:
rnguage s k i 11 ~ and
rithmetic go health and
ome e<:oo0mlcs for the ln-
ian housewives, p u b I i c
chool for their o 1 d e r
Less than one-quarter or
the Indians was employed
befo1·e the project. Those
. hildren and nursery care
or the little ones. The new
•
Among the ch 11 d re n .
preschoolers who are old
enough go to head start pro·
Hall feela the program's
success lies in working wlth
the whole family . "It's with
the single indlvidual where
you have the drop-out pro-
blem," he says.
AIC SHORTHAND
111 w. 5th
Santi Ana
e l ookk••jllllt
e Da11tal
Aulttl11t
•
The project is taking place
1ear the Bitterroot Valley.
11h1ch was once ~ home
•round oC the Salish Indians.
ro the north lies the
·eservation of Kootenai and
\allspells lo which the
)ali sh were moved in 1981.
May 17 is graduation day
"or 76 heads of families
rom Montana's seven In·
Jian reservations. Most or
.he trainees bad less than a
1igh school education and
~ere without jobs or locked
n low paying ones.
Mercedes-Benz ·280SE·:
They represent 00 petccnt
!4 to JG.week program. One
>roject leader, Dr. James
l<:H. calls the drop-<>ut rate
'quite minimal.
·"These people were school
lr®.·outs before they en·
ere~ program." Hall
;ays. •·1 would have been
1appy with 40 percent re·
nain111g in." Hall i s
!oordinator or extension and
:ontinuing education for tile
miversity. He drew the
1lans and got t.he money for
.he project.
The federal agencies in·
•olved in Indian affairs, the
vfanpower Development and
i' r ainlng Administration.
ind the OH1ce of Economic
Fight Due
In Courts
On P1ivacy
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
:omputer-era privacy battle
.ooms in the Supreme Court
wer New York state's sale
>f auto registration data to
.he highest commercial bfd·
ler.
Author Corliss Lamont, a
Nealthy New Yorker, wants
.he practice stopped and the
;tate law that authorizes it
jeclared an unconstitutional
mvaslon of privacy.
Computers bave become
so efficient a n d so
sophisticated, be s a i d
recently in an appeal, "a
terrliy.ing array of personal
Information'' be com e s
available at the push of a
button.
IC sale 0£ auto registration
data is pemutt.ed, he sa1d.
other public records could
readily find their way lo
private hands.
New Yorkers, like car
owners everywhere, have to
supply the state with certain
infonnation wten regimr·
ing a vehicle: name, ad·
dress, date of birth, sex and
the like.
The state then reproduces
the registration applications
on 35 mm microfilm rolls
and sell them, wit.h lists or
car owners. to t.he highest
"responsible" bidder.
The information, Lamont
said. is then used for
u n so 1 i ci ted mail and
telephone pitches, especially
in the auto trade.
New York sold the li~t for
S.'36.000 this year lo R. L.
Polk & Co., a Delaware cor·
poration.
Federal Judge Jv.arvin E .
Frankel or New York City
dismissed Lamont"s suit last
.lune. He said the m·
lormatJon sold ls not vital or
intimate.
Polk, the company that
seems to deal with most of
the states, say~ the only ex·
ceptions are Ala.'ika, Illinois.
Kentucky, South Dakota.
Washington and ttie Dtstrtct
of Columbia. •
The U.S. Circuit Court in
New York City afiirmt<I
Frankel's ruling 1 a s I
December.
Last Tuesday, New York
I\ t l >. Gen. Lou Is J . ~fkowi~ responding in a
brleC to Lamont's appeal.
told the Supreme Court "It
cannot be plausibly con·
tended that the information
requlnd o< the motor veht·
~ regi.strant toucbes the
lndlvlduaJ'1 private life or
habllJ."
•
ineered''
·you'll ne~r
fear a panic stop again.-
TI1c new Mercedes-Benz
280SE has a disc brake at
every wheel. So do all 180-
mph Grand Prix road-rac·
ing machines.
Some critics have called the new
Mercedes-Benz 280SE "over-engi-
neered." Sure, they say, a passenger car
needs good brakes, but does it need
brakes good enough for a ;acing car?
"Absolutely;' say the Mercedes-Benz
engineers. "Test aher test has proved
that disc brakes provide the most pre-
cise braking possible-at any speed. Put
one wherever you have a wheel."
By conve.ntional standards, the Mer-
cedes· Benz 280SE is "over-engineered '.'
And Mercedes-Benz is proud of it.
f\lost conventional cars have old·
fashioned drum-type brakes. They're
cheaper than disc brakes, and good
enough for most average situations.
But drum brakes can be,rnarginal in a
"panic" stop.
It .. ke1 horsepower to stop
Most people don't realize it, bul it
takes l1orsepower to stop. It's the same t
had drum brnkes of t11e same ruameter,
thjs area wouJd be cut considerably.
There would be less area to develop
bra lUng horsepower, less area to dissi-
pate heat. Such brakes would be more
prone to fading, swerving, and ju.dder-
ing. Drum brakes lack the feeling of
authority you get with disc brakes.
Disc brlkH •r• , .. nd•rd
equipment
That's why Mercedes-Benz engi·
neersinsisted on disc brakes for the new
280SE. And not just on the front wheels
-or as an extra-cost optfon-but on all
4 wheels as standard equipment.
The tremendous margin in braking
pcrfonnancc you get with 4-wheel ruse
brakes is just 011eexampleof what"over·
engineering" means to the owner of a
f\ lercedes-Benz 280SE. Herc ate some
more:
Fuel injection
Usuall y, yourc.H'i.cnginci~dcsigned
eirhcr for po\\ er or economy-not both .
1\lercedcs·Bcnz. engineers found a way
to give you 1hc l'°''cr of a \'.8 and ll1<:
I ucl cconomv or a Six. It\
called ''fuel.injection," :in
mgcnious device thnt rnm·
feeds gasoline into the c·n·
Rine under high pressure.
Hcs ult : horsepower i'
boosted by nearly 15% at "''
'ncri{ice in g.ns mileaJ?,c.
~... ~> ·r~-...
(Tecl111icnl note: 'nie "~"
111 tlie 280SE's 11m11e stm1c/,
ft "S " TI "E" I "Panic stop'' de111nn$lration: A l&I drfrer s1'tms the 11ew ir 1111er. 1e Stall<' l\·lerced~·Ben: 280SE IO a sure siop from 80 mph. /or'" Ei11spritzmotor'' or f 11el·
i11jec1io11 erigine. And "280'
kind of horsepowetthat makes your car i~ tlie si:e-tlie metric dispfoceme111-
go, except that it's applied in the opp<>-of tl1e engine, wl1icl1 is 2.8 liters.)
site direction. And, instead of being f uel injccrion also gives the 2soc;;1
produced by the heat of gasoline burn· excellent engi ne response at all en~tnc
ing in your engine, it comes from f TIC· speeds. with exceptionally ~mooth p il k'
tion in your brakes. up from low revs. The 280 E cngmt·~
l n a "panic" 'it op-real or ~imulatcd overhead cam ilcnccs tbe fuss an<l ckit·
-it takes the cquivaJcnt of n I hor(C· tcr of COO\"Cnt ional tappets. /\ncl it~ i
power to stop a l 500.lb. car £rom 80 mai n bcarin~s ~ive the cranbhnrt hr
mph. This energy transforms the car·, 1er supporr than mcxt V-8!>, fork~, 11
forward momentum into lieaL. J\n<l th1, brat ion at high ~pcl·ds.
heat must be dissipated by your brake~.
The disc brakes ol th e ~lcrccdc... 10,000 body welds
Brnz 280 E have 42 l. l VJuare inches or cffccttvc braking QCCJ. II the 280 L
10'\t co1wcntionJI CJ~ ha\"c .• '( r·
arJtc body Jn<l eh:liSi5, hc:IJ tugcthi;r
llil-The itnpeccable Mercedes-Bent 280SE-with di.sc brakes on all 4 wheels.
with bolts. Arter a while, the bolts can
work loose. On a rough road, the rattles
can be deafen ing.
Mercedes-Benz eliminated the rat-
tles by eliminating the body bolts. In-
stead: l 0,000 individual bodv welds.
Result: a strucrureof immense ~trength
and rigidity. After 50,000 miles or i.o,
you may begin to wonder if your 280SE
will ever rattle.
Built to be the best
-not the best Miier
After welding. body sea ms are
ground down and checked with a soft
glov~. Any bum are fi lled with pewter
and palished smooth by hand.
The body i~ then dunked in a 52-ron
primer bath until 24 p<>unJ!> ol a spc·
ci.il anl i·corr~ion fonnula h:ivc sccjX'd
into every cranny. This primer coo t 1~
baked on. Tl1e nc:<t is sprayed on. Be-
tween the last two coats, the body is
hand-sanded. lhc final coat of enamel
is hand-sprayed. There isn"t any ''orange
peel" or other minor blemishes. The
finish is as nearly perfect as the present
"state of rhe art"' allows.
(Nore: Nitpickm will frnd 1101l1i11g
to carp about. A sln1l1eri11g of perma-
nent plastici:etl t111dercoa1in.~ fi gl1ts
road snit. ru« a11d rot. T11e i11sides of
tlte l111bca11~ nre 11rimcr-coatecl after 1l1e
0111 sides are cliromcd. Even 1 l1e 1111clcr·
side of tl1e daslt is {111/v trimmed.)
By the time your 280SE is complete,
it has passed 8.11 7 impcctions. One
our of every 11 workers is an in5pcctor
to make s\Jrc th:u \ lcr<.'Cdl's·Ben1. ~tan
dards arc m:11ntJincd.
Clip coupon for brochure
For further details on the new ;\lcr· cedcs~Bcnz. 280 'E, :ind 6 otbcr new
models r rom j\ lc.-rccdcs· Benz I send toclllr.
for you r copy or the r ree, 24-pagc. rut .
color brochure (clip coupan at nght).
T1ke • Int drive
Better yet, visit our showroom where
the 280 'E is now on display. Kick the
tires ... lam the <loon. Get behind the
wheel. Then make your own decision
about the "over-cngin~rcd'' l\lertcdes-
Benz 280SE.
Merced••·B•nz motor cars
from $25,715• to $4,446•
You may be able to afford a ~ Ter-
ccdes·Bcnz without realizing it. Here
are suggested retail prices for 9 of the
15 Mcrccdes·Benz models:
600 Grand ~lercedcs ..••••. $22,472•
300SEL Sedan . . . . . • • • • . • 9,489•
280SE Coupe . . . • • .. .. .. • 9,262•
280SL Roadster . • . . . . • • • • 6.568•
280 E Sedan .. . . . .. • . • .. 6.336•
250 Sedan. . • • • . . • • . . . . . • 5, 150•
230 Sedan. . • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4,63 1 •
220 Diesel............... 4.sso·
220 Sedan . • • • • . • • • • • • • • • 4,446•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
: llSENDFOA • FREE BROCHURE • : (or bc11cr yet. lomc
• in aod pick one up) •
: "'• lie-. ,...,. ....
• 120 ·-·-·-: s... ..... c...... t271f • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Plcue lend the me. l+JJ18'• fufl-rolot
brochun thu 1clli all about tbcs o~ cm
from Mcrcedcs·Bcnz.
Sm~·~~~~~Zlp~~~~
110 W. WllMI' Awnue, Santa Ml, Cdtornl8 l2101Phone:71W41 4114 At the Vtty IUl&t. LantOl'C
Is tsldng that a three-Judge
federal COU11 be tmp&Mltd
to pa~~ on the const1tutioa1l
•uat.ions. . i
'Jim Siemens Imports, Inc.
\ . .,,;~~~~~~~~~~~-:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:--~.:._--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~---.~---~~~~~~~~.:...~~~~~~--,~~=-~~~~~~--~~-
~ ,
~
..
•
..
19
#
PREPARING
League debu
O'Bryon, Chr
01
THERE'S W•
do their shar
and the Joh
Home,' their
Goi1
DEAR ANN
season is here a
received a ulli01
TV sports fan:
Landers tor a £
DEAR SISTEJ
glued to the TV
My husband it ,
from 10 to 12 be
not out selling
booze. I've ape1
wondering w:her
bow much mon
M's lo jail or Ni
JdUed somebod)
dJd be kill hims
Be tbanldul U
alive and not Ir
with some blmb
tfle 1pOrts he
Amcrtcans can'
-··
1968 League Debutantes Introduced
,
Excitement will continue to mount for nine young Harbor Area
women who were introduced during the traditional Announcement
Tea, given by Newport Chapter, National Charity League last Sat·
urday in Irvine Coast Country Club.
Fo.r they have been chosen as 1968 debutantes and will be pre·
sented to society Saturday, Nov. 30, in Newporter Inn.
Highlighting the afternoon was the presentation, by their moth·
ers, of pearl and gold crown medallions in recognition of six years
of philanthropic, social and cultural service as Ticktockers. These
will be worn for the first time at their presentation.
Debutantes and their parents are the Misses Mary Barr, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hislop Barr; Linda Susan Campbell, Mr. and Mrs.
Allen T. Campbell; Sharon Haskell, Dr. and Mrs. Earl William Has-
kell; Robin Ann Horn, Mr. and Mrs. C 1 y d e MacDaniel Horn, and
Christine Londelius, Mr. and Mrs. John Christian Londel~us.
Others are the Misses Judy Meeks, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Ervin
Meeks; Mary Alison O'Bryon, Mr. and Mrs. William Lapp O'Bryon;
Kathleen Ann Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Walter Smith, and Paula
Maxine WiJliams, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Joel Williams.
While Mrs. E. Morgan Quinn played background music, post·
debutantes modeled appropriate balJ gowns from ·Robinsons. Fashion
Island. Modeling were the Misses Nancy Bing, Sally Sheward, Kathy
Helperin, Terry Londelius and Stacy Schilling.
Receiving guests were the Mmes. Woods Barneson, immediate
past president; Lynn Kloepfler, national. board president; Harold S.
Voegelin, national debutante ball director, and Londelius, chapter
ball director.
Pouring at the tea table, decorated in the league's colors of
yellow and white. were past presidents. the Mmes. William B. Trit~
Norman A. Bing and Barneson and the newly installed president. Mrs. Earl S. Olrich.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
M9Mal'1 Mrt a IHI Ill-CM Pl• 11
PREPARING FOR BOW -Selected as 1968 National Charity
League debutantes are (left to right) the Misses Mary Alison
O'Bryon, Christine Londelius and Sharon Haskell, who will make
their formal bow to society Nov. 30 in the Newporter Inn. They
were among nine young women who were introduced and hon-
ored at the traditional Announcement Tea Saturday.
Officers March Into · Duties
THERE'S WORK TO BE DONE -Ready to
do their share in directing chapter activities
and the John Tracy Clinic Demonstration
Home," their major philanthropy, are new
leaders or the Newport Chapter, National
Charity League (left lo right), Mrs. Jack
Caldwell and Mrs. Lee P. Jordan, vice presi-
dents, and Mrs. Earl E. Olrich, president.
Mrs. Spenrer Tracy was on hand to
congratulate members of lhe National
Charily League, Newport B e a c b
chapter. at their installation luncheon
in the Newporter Inn.
Mrs. Earl S. Olrich has been
selected to lead lhe group's activities
which include the direction of the John
Tracy Clinic Demonstration Home for
Deaf and Hard-of-hearing Children.
Assisting Mrs. Olrich wiU be the
Mmes. Lee P. Jordan, Richard L.
Lawrence and Jack L. Caldwell, first,
second and third vice presidents;
Howard L. Bryan and William H.
Coal~. recording and corresponding
secretaries: John L. Laun Jr.,
parliamentarian: John C. Londelius.
director of debutante ball. and Robert
S. Rosenasl, director of charities.
Newly elected omcers and members
of last year's board. headed by Mrs.
Woods Barneson, will be attending the
league's biennial convention scheduled
for May 22 and 23 in the Huntington-
Sheraton Hotel. Pasadena. The Time
Is Now is the continuing theme of the
league.
Representing Newport Beach as
guest speaker wiU be Mrs. Sylvia
Bogen whose topic will be Com·
municat1on Between lhe Generations:
Who's Listening? Mrs. H. John Meany
will be convention chairman ror the
Newport chapter, assisted by the
Mmes. William L. Stabler. Jerrold E.
Spangler. John M. Thomas. Kenneth S.
Ross. Alle n T. Campbell and Guy E.
Miner Jr.
Mrs. Norman A. Bing has been nam·
ed t.o the league's national board. She
will be vice president in charge of
standards.
SIGHTS SET ON FUTURE -Look ing forward to a round of parties
which will prevail until their presentation to society in November are
other 1968 National Charity League debutantes (left to right), the Miss-
es Judy Meeks. Paula Maxine Williams and Kathleen Ann Smith.
Going Bats Over a Diamond Beats Someone Stealing Home
"\ -
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Bateball
season is here and you have pTObebly
received a zillion letters from wives oC
TV sports fans. May I play Ann
Landers for a Cew minutes?
DEAR SISTERS: So your husband Is
glued to the TV? Well, you're lucky.
My husband is a salesman. He works
from 10 to 12 hours a day. When he is
not out selllng be is out buying -
booze. I've spent bundreds ot nigbtl
wondering wllere be ii, who he's witb,
bo-w much money he .is spending, if
he's in jail or la the hospital. if he has
Jc:tlled somebody or maybe this time
did he kill himself?
Be tbaf).lduJ the big lug is at home.
alive and not in jail or watcl\lng TV
with some bimbo. Take an interest in
tN sports he likes. Fifty mJIUon
Amerl,cans can't be wrong. SET· .. ..
TLING FOR LEs.9
DEAR SEmJNG: nuks f o r
playt.81 Au Luden. 5'e coalU't
hve ff• better llettelf.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: wt sum-
mer you printed an excellent letter
warning parents agalnst locking their
children in oara while they went shop·
ping. Often they lnt.eoded to be gone
only a few momenta· and it.yed
longer. In some Instances tlley stayed
away only 1 few mlnutts but traged)'
struck swiftly and something terrible
. . -... -........... ~ .......... ...i .................. .,.___.._.. ___ , __
happened.
Summer wi111>e here berore we
know it. I hope you will priM my letter
as a reminder to parents that If they
don't want to take their children into
tile storesAthey ihouJd leave them at
home. Never, and I mean 11ever,
should a child be left in a locked car.
A few months ago my husband was
walking past a department store park·
lng Jot. He ,.w tT!O children huddled
together ln the bick ae,at of a cu.
Smoke seemed to be curlln1 out ol the
windows. My husband tried to open
the oar door but it was locked He then
discoverrd thr front srat was on fire.
He broke the wmdow. opened the car
door and pulled the children out.
They had been playing with the
cigarette lighter on the dashboard. It
got hot so they dropped it on the seal.
If my husband had not walked by at
that moment Ult children surely would
have suffocated or been burned to
ck a th.
Please. Ann. print this letter. Peo-
ple need to be reminded from time to
time. -RUBY
DEAR RUBY: Here's yon letter
ud I prtnt It H a remt.dtr a. ,.reels
.. erywlttte. Ruclf•C ~s ctl1m1
co.Id be the most tmport111t tlll•c Y••
itd aO day .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mat'·
riage wM grand until my husband'~
ex-wife rediscovered him. When they
were man and wire she never cooked a
decent meal. The, beds weren't made
from one week to the next, his socks
lta,d holes in them and she charged
ti6n '5 for a kiss.
He has been seeing his u every
weekend for the past month while I've
been sitting home with our two small
chJldren. She leaves gloves. lipstick
and lniUaled han<14erchlefs in the car
so I'll find them. When I saJd I refused
to stand for any more foolWl ness he
yelled, "This is my house. Leave if
you don't like it." What shall 1 do? -
FED UP
DEAR FED: Yn boUt need counsel.
Inf. If lie refu1ea t11 fO, 111 younelf.
\
The houst It NOT his a11d you do1't
havt tn leave. HE mJfbl have to
leave. however, If you decide to see
a lawyer. And If It come. to that.
tell him you want to bear from hlm
every week -even U It's oily a
check. .
What is Frend\ kissing? k it wroogt
Who should set the neckin& limit• -
lhe boy or the girl? Can a 1hotcun
wedding succeed? Re.ad Allrl Landers•
booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Ways to
Cool It." Send 50 cents in coin and a
long self-addressed. st•mped en.
velope
Ann Landers will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send them to ber
In care Of the DAlL Y PILOT enclosinC
a stamped, seU-addreesed envelope.
-................. ---·· -· ......,_._....-.. . ~ .. 1
f 4 OAtl V PILOT Mondi,, M~ 20, 1968 /
Wise Wives KnoW Good Buys
By DOROTHY WENCK
IU li.r't ..... , 'flllt It Ille -ltl IR a -et .,'llclet "' Ille _,........ ltclH .... Y's CM-
,,, ~y Mrs. ~ w.ctt, -le ._ --.., .. ~ --c.lllwlll ....,......, b'-.... wYIU.J
The greatest challenge facing lo-
day's consumer is shopping wisely for
food. The average npermarket offers
you a choice ol over 8,000 items.
How are you to decide wbich will be
the best buys -give you the most
satisfaction, the most food value, the
most convenience for your money?
Weekly decisions •
may seem small,
but the differences
in costs can add
up to a significant
sum. .
For example, the
difference in cost
between two equal-
ly nutritious daily
ll}enus for a family
of four might be
S2 or more. Two
d o 11 a r s a day
would add up to
S14 a week, '60 a month, '73> a year.
One thing is sure, spending ~ lot of
money for food doesn't guar'5l.ee you
a good diet.
-Families are-wealthier today than
they were 10 years ago. yet there are
more families with poor dieta . now
than then, according to a recently
published {!SDA Food Consumption
Survey.
In 1965. only 50 percent of the 15,·
000 "representative" families survey·
ed in all parts of the U.S. had diets
which rated "good" -a4equate in all
essential nutrierrts. Over 20 percent
had diets which rated "poor" -
seriously lacking in one or more
nutrient.
e resu s s survey were com·
families having "good" ditll. and a I
percent increase in those getting
''poor'' diets. r
When quality ol dieb wu compiled
by Income level; the -low -inc!ome
(under $3.000) families had~ smaller
percentage of good diets -~ percent
-than the average. u one would ex·
pect.
But even at income levels above
$10,000 only 83 percent of the families
tiad good diets and 9 percent bad poor
diets.
The survey showed that we are
spending more money for food and
getting less foOd value now tbaJl 10
yean ago. Why?
Rising food costs are only a small
part of the reuon. The mpre im·
portant reason is our changing food
habits:
1. We are buying more high-cost.
low food value snack foodr. Spending
for snack foods went up 75 percent in
to years.
2. We are shifting from the less ex-
pensive plain breads and flour to fan-
cier ready-made bakery and frozen
products such as rolls, cakes and pies.
3. We are spending 75 percent for
ready-to-eat breaklast c e r e a 1 s •
particularly the sugared, which offer
much less food value for the money
than home-cooked cereals. (Sugared
cereals contain more sugar than
cereal.)
4. We are using less milk and dairy
products. Total use of dairy products
decreased by 10 percent in 10 years -
a reuon why calcium and vitamin A
were two nutrients often lacking in
diets.
5. We are spending more for meat.
6. We are switching from less ex-
pensive fresh fruits and vegetables to
more ex nsive canned and frozen
orms.
is elaborate. aa 11\ TV dinners. But
some convenience foods, such as
frozen orange juice and cake mix ac-
tually coat leta than their home·
prepartd coun~. other marketing ftl'Vfcts alio add
to the coJt. Out of every dollar you
spend for food , the farmer gets less
than 40 percent while marketing costs
-tabOr. packaging, advertising,
supermarket overhead. etc. -take 60
pereent.
One out of 10 dollars you spend for
food ,goes fOr packaging. The smallet
the package unit, the big.her its
percentage of cost.
Advertising costs vary from a high
ol 20 percent of the price of breakfast
eerealt to a low ot 2 percent ot the
cost of fresh fruits and vegetables and
3 percent for meats.
Exactly how · much merchandising
promoµona such as aames and trading
stamps add to the cost of food has
never been figured" a c c u r a t e 1 y •
Obviously they do add coat -the
retailers pay between 11,1 and 2'12 per·
cent ot sales for stamps. for example,
plus dle time and equipment for
dispensing them.
And since the con1umer peys all
costs of the seller, plus a margin for
profit, the ultimate cost of stamps and
games is paid by the conaumer.
Basically, food prices are determin-
ed by supply and demand. 'Ille supply
depends on the farmers' decision on
what to grow· and in what quantity and
how growing coodltion1.' putlcularly
weather, alfect the yield.
Demand depends on the conaumen'
decilions about what to buy -their
eating and buying habits. Each year
some 1500 new items are introduced
by food processors, but only 500
survive more than a ear. Conaumer
Costa Mesa ~hurchwomen Staging Benefit pared with the results of a similar
survey of 1955 ~ showed a 10 per-
cent decrease in just 10 years of
The built·in maid service of con·
venience foods usually does OOlt us
money -especially when the aervice
pre erence -111 e orm o ar
votes -is what determine• wbich
food product. will continue to be
m•keted. Hanging baskets will enhance the mood of An After-
n-0on in Canada luncheon , fashion show and card
party presented by the Woman's Auxiliary of St.
John the Divine Episcopal Church, Costa Mesa.
next Thursday at 11 : 30 a.m. Costa Mesa's Reinerts
dep ar tment store will offer fashions for the benefit
showing. Making arrangements are the Mmes. Roy
E. June, fashions: John Donaldson, decorations,
and Gene Adams. general chairman (left to right).·
Tickets are $3.50 each and reservations may be
made with Mrs. Stan Brooks, 540-7478.
Wedding Plans Made
By College Students
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
LYNN REAVELL
November Bride
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Reavell
of San Anselmo announced
the engagement of their
daughter, Lynn M a r i e
Reavell cmd Thomas James
Markel of Playa del Rey.
The bridegroom-to-be Ls
the aon ot Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Markel ol Costa
Mesa.
The bride-.lect is a
gnduat.e of Marin Catholic
High School and attended
the Colle.ge of Marin in
Kentfleld anct-now-U-enrou~ ·
ed at California S t a t e
College at Long Beach.
To avoid disa ppointment. prospective
brides are reminded to have their weddint
stories with black and white gl06sy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart·
ment prior to or within one week after the
wedding.
For engagement announcements it is
suggested that the story, also accompanied
with a black and white ilossy picture, be
submitted early. U the betrothal announce-
ment and wedding date are six weeks or less
apart, only the weddfog photo will be ac-
cepted.
To help fill requiremenL'i on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are avail·
able in all of the DAILY PILOT office6.
Further questions will be answered by Social
Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494·9466.
Her flanee is a graduate
of Mater Dei High School,
Santa Ana and will be a
June graduate of Loyola
UniveraJty, Los Angeles,
wbert he will obtain a'--------------------·
desrtt tn biolol}'. He wu
pretl<t.nt of Delta Si.Ima
Phi fraternity.
The weddlng will take
place In November at St.
Anselm'• Catholic Church.
Associates I nstal I Slate
Eastbluff Philharmonic Wednesday. at tt a.m. in
Associates will meet next the home of Mrs. David H.
~~;.::=:~~:::;;~r:mii~~iiiimiicm~~~~~~~G:~ Garber. ( Mrs. Carl E. M u 11 e n.
SOo/o off
• PRINTED SPORTS CANVAS
• TUMBLEWEED PRINTS
• CREPE DRESS PRINTS
• DESIGNER PLAIDS
• BUTCHER WEAVE PRINTS
• NO IRON COTTON PRINTS
• COTTON DUCK PRINTS
• NUBBY WOVEN FANCIES
• MANY I MANY OTHERS
36";t45".
widtha
chairman. wiU welcome new
officers during the in stalla-
tion. Heading the group will
be Mrs. Jghn H a r d i n g,
chairman ; Mrs. R o d n e y
Jones and Mrs. Thomas T.
, Rousselot. secretaries, and
Mrs. David Duff. treasurer.
Later in the day Miss
Cindy Speyers will offer
folk songs on the guitar and
Miss Joyce Dawson will
sing. The Associates is a
women's committee of the
Orange C o u n t y Philhar-
monic Society.
Art for Show
Exhibited this month in
the Newport Beach City
Hall is a colorful show by
four Harbor Area artists.
Sponsored by the City Art
Committee the s h o w
features the works of Lucia
Anderson, C a r o Eaton,
Rivella Malinoff and Alma
'l'hlstlethwaite.
Newport
UNWANTED
HAil IEMOVED
PEIMANENTL Y ...
Horoscope
Taurus: Don't Decide Quickly
TUESDAY, 21): Work neglected today Jan.19): Accentonhowyou preparation on yOlU' part. MA y 21 demands its proper at· hand~ practical 1ituation1. People in position to grant
tention. You may have to 10 Real estate, property mat-reward want results. Know
By SYDNEY OMARR back. check de t ails. ten are 1potllghted. What this -act accordingly.
Relative on the move calls happens at home ii of ut-Seriou.sneas of purpose is
ARIES (March 21·April upon you. communicatas. most importance. Tak• weighed.
l9 l. Lunar cycle is high. Don't be dissuaded from nothing (or granted. Check IF TODAY' IS YOUR
meaning you can safely em· central project. Use will -double check. B I R TH DA Y you are
bark upon new project. power. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. versaWe, artirlic, fond c.f
Your judgment apt to be ex· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· 18): Accent on journey•. travel. You are now due for
cellent. Circumstances turn Dec. 21): Change. travel. mess.ages and relations with ch an g e, intensified rela·
in your favor. Your timing variety, your ability to ex-neighbors. Key is to see tionships, which if single,
is good. Make that contact press yourself are em-persons, situations i n could lead to marriage.
today. phasized. If single you may· realistic light. Not wise to GENER AL . TEN-
TAURUS (April 20-May have to make decision about feel others Meessarily think DENCJES: Cycle JUeh for
20): Some people want you engagement, marriaie. If as you do. Investigate. ARIES, TAURUS. Spec.ia l
to arrive at quick decision. married, q u est i on of PISCES (Feb. 19-March word t~ AQUARIUS: what
but you are wise to hesitate. children arises. 20): What you gain depends you seek may be under
Much is happening behind CAPRICORN I Dec. 22· upon amount of research. cover. Dig deep.
llie~~u -wa~~tilllie l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
picture ls crystal clear.
Don't panic.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Friends may be en·
thusiastic. but w h e r e
respoo&ibility is concerned
you must act in independent
maDMr. Don't attempt to
please everyone. Stick to the
facts; fulfill commitments.
CANCE R (June 21-July
22l: There are some blocks,
obstacles. but those in
authority are on your side.
Know thi s -act with con·
fidence. Finish project. Let
people know you are not a
novice. Exude confidence.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Good lunar aspect promot~s
connection with tboae at a
distan«. Day especially
favorable for w r i t l n a .
p u b 1 i s h ing, advertising.
Don't be limited in outlook.
Gain sbown -get ready.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Look in hidden c~vicea.
Much that is obScured ca.n
aid you if broutht to llgbt.
Cycle today is one which
demands that you probe, in·
vestlgate. Mon,ey question 13
settled if you demand facts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22):
Accent on public relations,
how you respond t o I
criticism. Key is to employ
senH of humor. Avoid ex·
tremes. Don't commit
yourseU to one course. You
learn, evaluate. Hold off.
SCQRPIO IOct. 23-Nov.
SECRET AGENT, PERMA-BOND:
BY HELENE CURTIS
f'ERMA-80ND0 ••THE SECRl:T AGEMT IN OUR HSLDfE at.1'"°15 WAWS
P'OR NEW BODY AND SETTING POWER0 MORE LUXURIANT• LONGER
LASTING CURLSo LET ONE OF OUR EXPE"'T Ol'SRA.TORS Aao THIS
MlftAC&.£ INGREDIENT TO YOUR HAIR:
f'R'"CH ftOOM 1TRIUMf'H EMPRESS1 WAVE, WITH STVLC CUT, 20.00.
ROlllNAIRE 1TRIUMPl'f DUCHESS' WAVE, WITM CUT• U .00.
• HERS FftOM ~ARIS, Mft. PHILIPPS RANDIE&.. MMTSR HAIR oaa•a~
OIM:C1' f'ftOM HIS -.oatA'ft• """ CMl'TA Ofll NIHee 8Ull -.-.vs
MEW "DIDGCT STYl.S DIMeroft MWo PHILl .... C re 91DC Tit TMS A MSW
HOND PLAZA
17TH AT .-•STOL
S1'Nf A 1'NA
SAMUi
\ I f ,' ,'\ I ' I I I ! ,
HUNTl ... TON llACH
IDtNaER AT HACH
HUNTtN•TON HACH
"J.901>
SOU1M COAST PLAZA
H ISlOI. AT S1'N DIEGO
FWY., COSTA MlSA su.1u•
gone forever' from face, arms, tega
with our medically approved, gentle
electrolysis method. Consult with
our technician', tt'a compUmentary.
In our Beauty Salon.
AVNfT ~ACM TO f'ABHIOM 1M MAii'• A MASTl:lt Oii' 9TVl.C0 CUT9 NfO
COU>ftlHO. • .PftCSIHTING TME CUftftlMT t.o0!<5 CW TME f'A9HIOff 'l'OU"nfWAVI!,
' ,1 RobiHsoK's Ntwport • Fashion IslaHd • Phont 644 ·2800 . • , • .. • .. . d....or.· • ., 4 ,
J. .. l < .
--'--
Same
B.y..JlEA Al'
s.ci.tY I
Women's fa.
are never out
No matter th
no matt.er how
avante gard, n:
IS interested.
And, so it w~
coUectioo p r
Georgia Bulloc
Miss Bullock
a white siinpl)
with ma<tchin1
EVENINGS
cape-dress el
in to the plai
choice for th
Elimbe
ismucl
A• I
fums'
help
sec re
and
mket
Comp
Beau•
Newporl#l F
MOflday, May 20, 1968 DAJL V PILOT JS
Same Lines • • • • • •
(
In Autumn-Hues
It's Still Milady's Choice for Fashions
BJ BEA ANDERSON
S.U.IY .....
Women's fashion shows
are never out of style.
No matter the season and
no matter how feminine or
avante gard, milady always
1S interested.
And, so it was fer the fall
collectloo p re v i e w of
Georgia Bullock.
Miss Bullock appeared in
a wh.ite simply-styled dress
with matching coat and
trimme<L with ...-red .Doral
print and pinned a perky
red velvet bow in her hair.
Her Bluepdbt for Fall was
spoMOred by tbe Women of
St. James Episcopal Churl'h
to raise funds for the Ct11Jd
Care Center. Santa Ana.
Actually k>oking toward
the autumn season ud what
it will offer seemed like a
good idea, for the weather
man hes not been too
amiable with the days he's
EVENINGS SPARKLE -Adding opulence to this
cape-dress ensemble is the gold lam~ thread ~oven
into the plaid-printed brocade fabnc. Fur is the
choice for the collar.
Buff urns·
Elizabelh Anlen face treatment
is much tnore than just a facial
A1 En_.. ..... .._ Jn Buf·
fums' Red Door Treallllent Rootn will
help you discover deli;,tful beauty
secrets. You'll haw a face treatment
aMI .er11 will I luxurious new
.nakeup as well as a lldiant feelinf.
Complete ftltmeAt, will1111keup IUI
Beauty~iQ
been servJng. ~Some wool
worsted with fur t r I rn
sounds like the ensemble of
the day, \oday.
The audience of about 500
in Balboa Bay Club brr;<e
out in unanimous cheers and
applause as the designer
opened the show with the
P,rofound prediction that,
'Women are back in style ..
.. overemphasis on the youth
kick bas met its force. . .
women are in good taste,
though the good taste wiU
hav.a a youthful look."
Then mannequins. in a
ftBt-paced show. walked the
ramp dressed ln her concept
for fall.
S c a r v e s accessor1zet1
most. and about half were
shown w i th knee-length
boots and~ eolored ·hose.
Shoes have a little higher
heel than spring's but they
still have a heavy bulky
look.
According to this presen-
tal:on, colors are changed
BEL TS ARE A CINCH -Contrasting leather,
chain and matching fE;tbric belts are making a
comeback, and the popular accessory is a
Spring Stripes 'Sewn Up'
Pure cotton takes a stellar
role in depicting the shape
and softness of fashion 's
new silhouettes.
Dimensional fabrics -
like diagonal cotton twilJs,
sculptured cotton cloques
and piques. and rich-tex-
tured jacquards -lend
fresh interest to the spring
ensemble.
Kids Like to
'Ask Andy'
u umS'
Special! Streak your hair
with "Frosting" for summer
15.00 reg. 25.00
Glamourous .,frosting" adds intriguing streaks
of lightening to YJ>Ur hair. Looks marvelous
with any hair colo\ It's especially pretty with
0ur new Daisy cut, a.50 Call for an
appointment now!
Beauftj Salon
Tai. advanlate of &iffut11• eemptetl beauty plan:
Mlnic11es • Pedicures • Facials. Electrolysis
but Ul6 lines rem£1in-&lmost
the same as· offerings for
spring.
Suits, coatdresses and two
and three-piece ensembles
were shown in soft. muted
colors, with a sprinkling of
bright red and turquoise and
shades of green. Gray was
the most popular.
But, milady still has her
choice of the relaxed or fit-
ted look. Suits and coats
were belted; some were not,
and some festured the long-
torso ~ with pleated or
flared skirts.
Daytime and e v e n I n g
dresses offered the same
cllolce -either belted or
unbelted waistlines and
dropped waistlines with full
skirts, or pri~s lines, al!o
designed with a flare to the
skirts.
The Collection still bared
the mannequins knees and
m0& were two to three in·
ches '
scarf. The accessory is used as a neckline ac-
cent and as headgear with the green (left) and
pink daytime frocks.
FRONT ...
SIDE .. .
BACK .. .
ALL CURL, ALL COLOR,
ALL CUSTOM
We snip and shape, custom-curl yournew
hai rdo. Thrn we cu. tom-eolor your hair
wi th your own personalized color. By
Fanci-tonr, of course-our tint in a nt>w
push-button di spenser that lets us create
j11 • .,f thP color you want, and duplicatR it
evC'ry timr ! Na tural looking colorn for gray
hair, toning colol's for blf'ached hai r, and
our ultra-~ophi~tiratt'lrl "Color Original ;"'
thr style colors that set the styles! Fa nci-
tone color doesn't wash out> conditions
yQUr hair as it colors.
COSTA MUA. CAUi'.
'" It. 11111 '""'
COSTA MISA. CALIP.
UGO Het11or 91\'f.
K..tMrt Pie» ,,_. .......u ..... ,, ,.....,
"""" $.IM6l1
SUITS AUTUMN -.•. and even late summer, ac-
cording to designer Georgia Bullock who explained
the fabric is light-weight enough for most any
weather. The tweed suit was shown in red and white
and green with white, with turtle neck bodice.
COSTA MISA, CA"'-
,. w. I"" Street ""°"' Ul.nH
.. •-.t
Salons
,,
•
-., •-.··~-,.,..,,,.,,., ..., .......... __ ~
97.91
OUNM, CAUP.
U:J•W. C~
l'llolll5n·Dd
.. _________________ _.:MIWPOIT •ACM, CALlll. POUNTAIN YALUY, CAU...
I Jilt Ne-1 ''"" lnll Mawdle
SANTA ANA. CAUi' •
tlWf wntml1111tr
T-C-
SANTA ANA. CALIP.
nit ,.,,..,""'
POUNTAIN YALLIT; CALIP.
Ja21 ,.,... et alldld
Valley Qinter ,.,...Sll ..... "•""""' """" PllON .. JOll Marlrtt e.~et l<!Ulre VIiia" Ctftl9t ....,.,. '1~1610 ~.._ .. , ... ""-Ul·'lll Newport 11 Fashim Island Newport Center• 644-2200 •Mon., lhucs., Fri. 10:00 till 9:30 Other days 10:00 till 5:30
'
.... -----__ .._ -• ---................. .-.. ..-..., .... ---............ ~ ---....... ---. --------·-................... .._._. --· --· -----· -.--._....,. .._, ..... I -.~ .....
l
J 6 DAIL V PILOT
Closing Activities
Set Vacation Mood
Home with d~rt suntans
and re&ued &ft.er a fun.
pecked w e e k e n d are
members of Irvine Terrace
P h ilhllnnomc Associates
and their husbands who
wen iuest.a of Mr. and Mrs.
Alan Stoneman in their
Palm Desert home for the
Mnual windup party.
On Saturday e v e n I n g •
~ and buffet were
A!l"Ved on the terrace near
the swimming pool, and
tater iueste w e r e en·
tertalned by the hostess, an
internationally acclaimed
pianilt.
A.Nilting with hos t e s s
duties were the Mmes. Cora
Peggy Wa.llece, Claude Pat-
terson, M. A .• Manderbach .
Vince~ Arena, L I o y d
Aubert and W.ary Graham.
SeUing the mood for fun
and relaxation was the final
program of the group last
~~e longest Half Hour jn
Hiltory," a bum or o us
musical review ol t h e
.NeWl)Ort Harbor ChUdno's
Theete.r, was p.-esented by
Mrs. Ralph Tandowsky, who
wrote the muac; Mrs.
Ralph Holden, lyriciJt: Mrs.
Basil Bookasta,=tnd s. John Kerr.
The musical 'th
excerpt. from the seven
shows of the guild, for whkh
Mrs. T a n d o w s k y and
Mrs. Holden wrote original
music and lyrics.
Closing the l u n c b e o n
meeting in the Dover Shores
home of Mrs. Cecil Shirar
was installation of officers.
Mrs. Lloyd Aubert is the
new chairman. and ervmg
w1tti her are the Pl.me~.
Graham. vice chairman 1n
charge of p r o g r a m ~
f'rederkk Prescott. VH;P
chairman of special events:
Thomati Allinson. recordin~
secretary: George Farmer.
c o rresponding secretary.
and Robert Mille r .
treasurer.
Sale Atmosphere
Market Time Nearing
A aa.y Pariiian nower
cart, a French cale and
b.andaome antiques are just
a sample ot. the tuau Jn.
st.ore when the Irvine Ter·
puta together its seventh an-
nu&l Flea Market.
WedliesdaY, May :n. ltte
women will gatMr in the
home and gardens of Mrs.
Face Look
Familiar?
Ron Harrod, 1912 Seadrift
Drive, Ooron• ~I Mar. The
market's hours are from 11
a.m. to i :30 RJlh
W.n. Richard Kredel is
· · John
Heikes m>ci her commJttee
are in charge of the
sidewalk eafe.
Working in boottls are the
Mmes. Lloyd G re go r y ,
decorations; Harry Baker,
antiques; Robert B'-ckmar.
children's deUgbt: L e t
J<ll'dan Jr., fa shions ;
William Moody, sweet shop.
and Ralph Morgan. wine.
What'• old about this new Also 9el"Ving are the watch -the Mickey Y.ouse Mmes. Kalman Spelletich,
face. flowers ; Wallace C. Olson.
What's new about it: a boob; Jot.i. Crimp. art ob·
big, wide red vinyl strap j~s: William Faulkner.
with fun cut-outs. The face, . ~~a. &nd Ro b e r t
the manufacturer repor16, is Humchs .and James Tyler,
exactly the size of the old boTi~~~ •t ~" b one. \.:11.'C" ... are • "°"' may e
purchased at the door.
The DAILY PILOT
Best in West
Proceeds are earmarked ror the OC Philharmonic
Society.
LINDA McCOY
Brid•to-be
OCCCoed
To Marry
The parents of Lln<Ja
McCoy have disclosed her
engagement to H ow a r d
Anthony Wight.
Miss McCoy Of Cost.a
Mesa IS tne daughte'r or the
Ralph McCoys of Morro Bay
and her fiance is the son or
the Howard L. Wights of
Newport Bea<:h.
No date has been set for
the wedding.
The bride-elect ~ an
alumna of Newport Harbor
High School and is a sllldent
al Or-.ange-Coasl College.
The benedict·lo·be is a
Harbor, OOC and is at-
tending StaU College at
Long Beach wher~ be is ma·
joritlg in psychology.
AAUW Hosts
UCI Graduates
N e w p o r t-Costa Mesa
branch of the American
Aaoc1ation of University
Women i n v i t e s UCI
graduating women to 111 in·
formeJ open house next
Wednesday in Pf.esa Com·
mons from 12:30 to 2 p.m.
FurUier information is
avail.able by ~lephoning
Mrs. R. K. Arnold , mem·
ber s hip chairman,
M5-5214.
GOBI PRIN'TS BJ Ameritez.. co1ortu1 99¢ homeepu look always important. Ideal for
""*taweu, er fw dnperia, iprada, slipcovers,
too.100..:. eottoa. Wwide. Reg. $1.49 rtc1,~ yd.
..
ST. TROPEZ STRIPES By '198 llNGJtR. Keoa-briabt colon march boldly .
acroll 1~ ORLON Kr7tic r.ct. Kuy to ICW,
1~ llCetatetrieot 1*kinc. w wide.
Reg. $2. 98 ,..,:-" yd.
SUNGARI SATIN STRIPES '198 BJ GaJq Ill Lent Briaht, bcld ad becwninc-
ftripm ia a blend to mb with your 1prin1
moodaf ~ J'ab I t• t '°" Cotton. 45" wide.
Reg. $2.98 ~ yd.
n.ti w}tw•w"°" II at SINCE R today/•
StNG.ER
)
GAIDEN GROVE--8831 Chapman o ... ,. Couaty Pima 530-4010
ANAHEIM-515 N. Loara
AIMllteilJI Cewter 535-1126
HUNnN6TON llACH-Edt...., at leach ........... c..... 197·1~1
COSTA MISA-llOO Harlter ...... , c .... 549·1105 ~
COSTA MESA-lristel & S.11ftower. .,.... c •• , ..... 540-2633
..
I
---·;._-'
Art l••tu•, Leonard-Ream Nuptial
Vows Read in Church
Toastmistresses Debate
Personal Development
Waverly Church in Santa Walker of Costa Mesa. Ana was the setting for .... _ A formal debatt> on per-to be presented the most we nephew ol tne bruit, was
Lab Park Clubbouae ii
the setting for IDiHt.Mlfs of
the Art Leacue Of Hun.
tiJ\gton Beadl. Menbers
~ lbe-6rat W~y ol eadl month at 7:30 p.m.
weddJng uniting Sandra Jo son al development ot po&a eflective debater.
Leonard and Harry F . ringbearer. · and confidenc\J wW take Arn w9men lnterested in HB Mothers
Ream ill. · Organist was Roy Rutter place dW'in& tbe meetinK·ot self·1mprovernent are wel·
The Rev. Or. Charles and soloist was ¥115 Pat Las O I as Toastmistress come to attend and addi· HuntinltA>n Beach Blu.
Simon. eastor of the Church Kovecses. The church was Club of ffuntingtOI! Beach tional information regarding Star Moltlers, Chapter 2,
of Religious Science solem· filled, witn baskets of which takea place Wednes· the club may be obtained by stage meetings the .econd
nized the double r 1 n g flowers contalniJ>& white calling Mrs. Joseph Nebel· Mondays of tbe month at
ceremony. carnations. atock and creen day. May 22. sky. 962AMB. or Mrs. Gary 1:30 p.m. in Lake Park
The bride is the dauibter The program will be led GUes. 545-ml. Clubhouse.
of Mrs. Pauline E. Leonard fern. by Mrs. Paul Bronson and --------------------· of Costa Mesa and Leroy A. A sit down luncheon look participatin& will be the
Leonard, also of Costa place after the ceremony for Mmes. Gary G~. Allan
W.esa. The bridegroom is 70 guests at. the Revere Kennedy. Phillip Billington
the son of Mrs. Harry F. House in Santa Ana. and Joel Frey.
Ream II of Denver and Har. The bride will b e Other activities planned ry F. Ream II ol Santa Ana. for the 7 :30 p.m. meeting
Given in marriage by her graduated fri>m Costa Mes. in the Surfside clubhouse.
father . the bride selected an lligh School in June. Her include an educational cap·
Pmpire gown with jeweled husband, a graduate ol sule on developing and un·
bodice and cap sleeves. A Foothill High School, wiU dentand.ing debat. proce· complele his second year at d b Mr Cal in 01 tt floating cage of silk orgW. urn Y s. v co . extended into a chapel train Orange Coast CoUege. The Mrs. Howard Jones will
'th d · li and couple will make their home evaluate debate techniques wi aay app ques a in CoSta Mesa after a trip to and the audience will J'udge daisy border. A seed pearl coronet held a fJnlertip iJ. Mon~rey and Carmel. participanta with a trophy
lusion veil. A bouquet o1l;:::;==::::;==============;;:;;I
cascading white r o 1 e s
centered by a white orchid
completed her ememble.
Miss Cheryl Strlemer ol
Costa Mesa was maid of
honor.
Bridesmaid was Miss San·
rlra Ewing of Costa Mesa.
Attendants were identically
dressed in lemon yellow silk
organza over taffeta gowns
with empire waistlines and
ruffled coll•s. Their bead·
pieces were of yellow il·
lasion. They canied coJonial
bouquets of blue dallies.
.JuUe Dahl, nieces ol the
bride, of Sidney, N. Y. were
flower girls attired in white
ELECTROLYSIS
,., ... •lti111th ift
tUicleftt heir ~111evel
we 1n• th. Dwel-ed ioft
fleetr•·ltl•"' 111•tho<I. "'•ft• 1 .. c .... ,u. ..... ,., c ..... 1t.tloft.
... v+, s ...... .
sjlk shantung A·llne dreaMl.1::::==================1 They carried whit. lace
baskets filled witft blue and
yellow daisy petals.
Best man w~ Don Morris or Tustin. Usher WU Larry
Reed, also of Tustin. Dwaine
The Great
No.
Orange Coast's
1 Paper!
BRECK'S
'9NIST NlM •• •
"IRECK IEAUTIFUL''
ll'EAMANENT WAVE .... .,..._.._... _
. •. -Ip 27 ..... efllrW IW ................ ...., llJI ..•
I UT ••• tlle Mee ii ONLY W - -•Yl ···-··T•.· WM. C•I -fW .,.., --'ftl-
-· ,. .. -u .••
...._ m.01st
HUNTINGTON CINTH
HACH a IDINGll
Atr ... '•rtlfte Lit 119111 ,__., ...... _.
El Rancho invites you to enjoy interesting food specialties
from all corners of the 1DOrld ! ThiB week ...
.
11 ~ ;:.~~=-ITYLI CUT lMAMl'OIUT
rrna~ • CCMIOme.11 ti .. THI PllM
London Broil $1.29.:
F' rom Merrie OUU.
EftDl.a.ftd •.• rttipu
youra f<W tM taking
at our sMviu
~t COUftUrBJ
Y ortshire Pudding ................ 3 Na '1.00
Goodall's ... TIO"' it's so simple t.o prepare this favorite l
Smither' s Beef Tea ........................ 79•
Authentically English ••• concPntratf' .•• ·Hi oi. iizc
equals 14 CUJ>I' ! So srood ••• &nd good for you !
Robertson's Marmalade .......... :-..... 49•
Twelve ounce jars .. varietfet th.at offer so mtlCh appeal I
Cheshire C9teese. ~ ........... ·-··· ......... 7r
What could be more authentic? ... imported •.. '-«. pq.
Ballentlne's Ale ............................ '1.42
Cartoo of m 12 OU.nee tU1 • • • I Hanr ~-... !
\
,,.
/,
Boneless ••• U.S.D.A. Choice Beef ..• lean ••• delicately
marbled, your uaurance of j uicy tenderness! Barbecue or ovea
broil! The English have never had beef this aood !
Beef Kidney
There's real deliaht in ''steak and kidney pie" .•• an En&'lillh
treat ... with savory seasonings ... to be remembered.
Beef Shanks ............................ 39~
Center cut ... so much hearty bee! goodnesg on these ! Brai•
them ••• serving beef bouillon in cream of mushroom IOUPI
Dover Sole ........ u ........... ·-··-· 79L
Serve rriUed aole with mustard sauce ... a delicious treat widl
a most inte~stinr Engh.sh accent! Ocean fresh!
Cabbage .··-······--···----··-·-3~
Crisp leav• .•. aolld bead& ••• aa tr..b u if it ad just -
from a cool shadowy En11iah prdenf
P~u~ i" tf/Pcf nf tJll tfrwu
llO?L.. T•~B .. Wsd .. Mar to, fl , n
j
\
Gorden Cer•
Costa
Sbtrry Ma.rte Fran
Ted dt Plomb ~xct
rlnp and vows at a Pl
MR!
FEMININE FC
Miss Pot lead
the way to fem
with these all-
ma tch·ups of
Koratro n dirnc
c.otton blends
that wash
well, weer
well. Femous-
for.fit
regimental
skirt is
f eshionized
with smart
stripe belt:
metch up
with long 4
sleeve tucked
front, blouse
end girls ere
feminine egei
Skirt 10.00.
blouse 9.00: i
Yell ow /White
or Pink/White
sizes
8 to l.J.
COITA MISA
111 L IM Sf.
14e.un
•
Mond1y, M~ 20, 1%8 DAILY PILOT J 7
Garden Ceremony
Costa Mesa to Be Home What's
Doing Sberey Marie ~ran\ anil
Ted de Plomb ~xchanged
rl:np and vows at a poolside
wedding at the home of the
bride's parent.s, MT. and
Mrs. Harold S. Frank of
Costa Mesa.
The Rev. Dale Culver o{
Griffith Park C h r i s t 1 a n
Church solemnized t h e
ceremony in the presence ol
MRS. TED de PLOMB
~y Bride
70 guests. TODAY
Given In marriage by her "'""1-a..m To,.s ,..,.,.
father, the bride selected a '~11~;s1 ;C::..0. .. 11 white lace dress witb long vrew tralrer N rk. HunlilllltM a.WI.
sleeves and a fingertip veil. 7 ;~s ... ..., 1.19111en -H.,.,.,
Sbe Cil'l'ied a bouquet of ~~~.:: :;:;.~:~::,· .... 11,...
blue carnations, white roses • -co11... P•rtt sct1oo1. '4511 Meu. a
and white daisies. '·:;'.;., .. ,.,.. AllOftYmou• _ Andert011
Mrs. Jerry Hehn served Scll004 tue111or1um, WH1m1"'''" a p.m.
b ' le tr f TUl!SOAY er sis r as ma on o ... ....,. w-n·• CllOfai. _ ,,.,b.,..
honor, wearing a white lace r.r11n Churdl of cove"'"'• coo11
over yellow A'1lne gown and Mc::i.''!.:.ms...1or eit1it111 _,°""
carrying a bouquet of yellow 1nun1rv RK l'NllM centtr, om••
carnations. c~~":,:•r:i:~~;J! ~;~; vottr•M Best man was Steve ti WOfN Wer 1 -Amu1c1n LevloR
G . h H&H. Costa Mu1. ' P.m. rims aw or N e w p 0 r t Twtntlelll CtftlUtY Club .i Hwntl/19-
Beach and ushers wert Bill ::;,.1e1m-L1k1 Park c111br.ouse, 7:l0
Frank,. the bride's brother, su • ., s.""' *· Natt•• Dawthlln and James Masucbal, both " Go'"'1 Wtt1,.-.Locat1on ;, •••ll•blt bv calllnv Mrs. Jade Wilson, S4-U79, of Costa Mesa. . a Pm. MU• ........... L•-.odd Fer-. The garden was decorated H111. cot11 Me». a P.m.
with white doves, bells and _::~oct!.":'a ~~"'~ u-a..ca
vineE entwined with baby 0w,...,,,.. "--L•111n• breath cmd white ribbon. Hiiis, L1t.ur1 World. ciubhouM t.
Pink daisies floated in the 0~~~11cr'"-~~· ;·mK.c. ... ~oca-
pool. Assisting at the lun· d ~p~.~~·~ra:1~,,';, '!'.~"" Mn. Jectc
cbeon reception for 100 Councils Heap Big Awar s on Camp Fire Girls Woman's Avxllllry lo 1m.m111oMI
guests were Mrs. Paul t,:~"~ :,_Eu~!ica~.,~~:~~
Fuson of Huntington Beach. Cindy Lauber of Newport Beach (left) and Davette ed at Grand Council Fires. The Costa Mesa cere-Ana. • p.m.
who cir cu 1 ate d the Chambers of Costa Mesa (second Crom left ) proud-mony will be May 24. 7:30 at the fire ring in Te· w""""""'w!!~~!0~~b o1 Cott•
guestbook, Mrs. J a m e s ly exhibit two varieties of ceremonial dress as they Winkle Park while the Newport Beach rite will be M1u -a11bol B•v c1••b. 11 • m
Arensdorf of Costa Mesa. receive awards from Horizon Clu b member Molly May 23, 7:30, in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. .:~~11~1~~, .. ~=hc•n;~~s, • ';., .. ,.,
Miss Carol Richardson of Brecht o( Newport Beach and ·Jenifer Hutchinson Chairman is Mrs. William Baden and fire guardians roPs 511 51""' -ic:it1vbroo1o1 ·u : S 5cnoot, Coste Mesa, I om Long Beach an<{ 1•uSS an-(right) thinks about next year when she'll be will be Mrs. John K. Hamel and Mrs. John Tracy. 1.u 0111 Toa•tmistross c 1ub o1 Hun1.
dra WilkJnson of Lynwood. eligible for an award. Awards are annually present· !~~'.°" •11c11-Sumic11 Clubhouse, 7:30
The bride ia a graduate of .----------------------------------------------------
Corona del Mar High School
and attended a business col-
lege. Her husband, son of
Edward de Plomb and Mn.
Phyllis de Plomb, both of La
Jolla, ls a graduate of La
Jolla High School and at-
tended Orange Coast col·
lege.
After a wedding trip ln
California's coastal cilies
the newlyweds will make
their home in Costa Mesa.
C1'1r91 Accounh Invited: UH your lank• 111ericud 111d Mastar Char9• 1t 111 Storti
FEMIN INE FOREVER
Miss Pa t leads
the way to femininity
with these ell-new
match.ups of
Koratron dirndl
cotton blends
that wash
well, wear
well. Famous-
for-fit
regimental
skirt is
fashionized
with smart
stripe belt;
match up
with long
sleeve tucked
front, blouse
end girls are
feminine egain.
Skirt I 0.00.
blouse 9 .00; in
Yellow /White
or Pink/White,
sizes
8 to I~.
~ HU~TON CINlll. Hufttit1ff-leech "'•"° lt4·)U I
COITA MISA
111 L 17t" St.
141·12'2
I. COAST PLAZA
JUI lrf,tof
Ml-2UI
IALIOA
ISLAND
LAGUNA llACH
,,
204 Marl11t Ava.
•7MJOO
, At .. & II.UNDO, JU M1h1 St .. Jt1.flH
\
240 ,, .. , ... .,
4t4~11t4
• \
A personal message
l · Marshall: from G oria am or complete .fisure·
. ersonalized pro~r ert instrucuo n on
My S)'St~m IS a pent combined ~1th exx cing system can,
d posture improvem No other weight re u
an facet of beauty: lose those every erv1ces. d asy way to or docs. offer my s \axing. tffortlm. an e repin and keep a
My system is r.c h We can help you time release
Pounds and inc es.h "" and at che same • extra . d uthtul s a...-trim. pa1se .• yo . ealch but t~ many
muscle cens1onh. ·s not only damaging to1ler than she is. :rhhe
Overv.ie1i; c ' ap"'"ar years o to \osc we1g c, ak woman ...-alon v.iant
pound.s m f ·~:men who attend ri~:a is to see ho• '°uch more
maionty ~ However, the ?vera 'rtfll short IL'ttks. does and they o. become in 111st al' onal appear11nce .
attractive you can knows that her pe~hange a norm.lily v1vad
Every woman . Overweight ca~ c ressed. irritable an -'f ct her personahtY· . one who is dep . h herself, the
1U e . v.ioman into becomes wit . d cious, charming dissausfied she d less exercise an The more Sh gets less an / . I aJ kn&
... and now,
Gloria Marshall
olf et'S a
WRl'M'~~
m:ARANTEB fhat she
ran do the
same for
you!
~uaranttt unhapPY· . \'kely to overeat .. e l'f You can look 01t Y n more she is ' lead an acuve I e. k like a new woma .
loses the enerl(Y to easier than ever co loo day for you~ free
'"you lfrt. Tod~Y/:~~ difficult part. Call hlf :~ion. 1 will discuss_
1 will take ~~:t f~p,ure an.3\ysis. wit~ ~~o: y~u how we can guar
treatment rob\emS w11h you an late to ht lrwtl)~"
Your figure P L., it's nti•tr too
I remtmuc /~-
Every patron receives a wrilten guarantee
thac she will reach her pre-decermined
dress size wich in a specified cime.
antee resu ts . . . • { / ~ 11 '*"' rnnm,~·d um11t~ "" "'-'" mit1ntd ~,,,. v~~uk-. lilYl• Manh..U ""'"hmm>.
dmu1u J U(.tlmt'fU\ Mf'tOI ·~ lfUlllJ!'Hf"f It JutfiJ~ If fliO .:fd1nnruil (.,., ()f obts.p~
f'mn fO lht r••Mfl.
--~-. . Forget slan·ation diet. strenuous exercise,
pills ... lose pounds and inches quickly and
safely 1'is one ahsolutely ~arnteed lny!
Our highly successful figure beauty plan is based on
rhe use of very special machines de\igned ro banish
every correctable f1gu.re fault On your first visit. for
o.·hich there 1\ ah111/111r/y no rha~;.r 11r obl1gatinfl, your
trgure will be ,rnaly1cd .ind you will be ,1;1vcn a demon·
\trauon treatment Ettry• worn.in sees results immed1·
.irdy! It's the most plc.1\.1nt, relaxrn,i:: way to lose wer,i:hr!
For~nen i\ the 1rrt1ahtl1ty c.iu\ed by the stresses of
1l1eting. O ur mach1n<'s inv1gor.1te, yet relax you ...
you leave che salon each time feeling like a ne• woman!
......
How Can We Guaranf Pe Rrsults~
A personalized progress ch.in 1s prep.ired, so chat each
11me you visir che salon a trJined counselor can gurdc
1·Qu coward your spt:cifrc goals. We keep a constant
check o n your progre-Ss roward a lovelier figure
In this way, you reach ydur desired soal in cM shortest
rime •.. and for che lease ei.pense ..
' NO DISROBING·NECESSARY
WE ARE Mill A GYM
ran CllllD CHI r0t MOTllHS
WITll TOUWG CllllDHll
How Mir~ Does All Tbis Cosn
n.~ "andud pnu lor ~•men1:1 •• S2 00 You Att
cL~uly rold rhe t1um~r .me! freq~ocy o( t~aUMnti
rcqu1~d ro ~Ip you ru ch your pre-de~rminN F>•L
Tlm .. ,, \'OU know r~a«ly wllar ynur self tmprovr·
-nt " tp.n-rn "'" vou , , , rhr~c arc no ntriH oc
luddcn char~ whatsl>C"ver
f!GUR
CONTROL..
SALONS
.... _, IMO(JI -coon~ MlW
-" Ml~ -"OUT CA4l'Ol!Ol• • -----~ ··Clll N11 Fii' Free Fipre Alllysls & le•Hstntill ~
NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA
.UO 'eclflc Coast Hwy. t ......... , ......... .,c ... 1840 W. 17th St.
543.9457 642-36.30
M,,, .• p,;. 9 11.,,, .. 9 p,,,,, • Sitt. 9 "·"'··JP·"'-
~,J 11.J M~ FlkMtt
..
..... -
Jfl DAILY PILOT Monday, Ml'/ 20, 1968
Clo.sing Activities
Set Vacation Mood
I\
Leonard-Ream Nuptial Toastm istresses Debate
Personal Development
Art L••CJU•
Lake Park Clullbou.se l1
the settine f« mMtiqs o(
ltle Art League ~ Hun.
Ungton BHdl. Members
gather Im first Wednesday
ol taob month at 7:30 p.m.
Vows Read in Church
Home with desert suntans
and re'-xed after a fun-
pKked w e e k e n d are
membe.rs of Irvine Terrace
P b Uharmomc Associates
.tnd their husbands who
were iuesaa of Mt. and Mrs.
Alan Stoneman in their
Palm Desert home for the
aMuaJ windup party.
On Saturday e v e n I n ~ .
~ arld buffet were
An'ved on the terrace near
tbe swimming pool. and
later rueste w e r e en-
tertained by the hostess, an
internationally acclaimed
piainUt.
Atlbting with h 0 st ' 5 s
duties were rhe Mmes. Cora
Peggy Wa.1¥t<:e. Claude Pal·
terson~ M .. A. ManderbaC.'h.
Vincent Arena, L I o y d
Aubert •nd Mary Graham.
musical review of t h e
Newport Harbor Children's
Theeter, waa presented by
Mn. Ralph Tandowsky, who
wr«e h music: Mrs.
RaJpb Holden. lyricist; Mrs.
Basil Jloobsta, and Mrs.
John Kerr.
The mueicaJ deals with
excerpt& from the seven
shows of the guild, for wblch
Mrs. T a n d o w s k y and
Mrs. Holdert wrote original
music and lyrics.
Closing the l u n c h e o n
meeting in the Dover Shores
home of Mrs. CecU Shirar
was installation of office1·s
LINDA McCOY
Brlde-t.be
Waverly Church in Santa
Ana was the setting for the
wedding uniting Sandra Jo
Leonard and Harry F.
Ream Ill. •
The Rev. Dr. Charles
Simon. pastor or the Church
of Religious Science aokm·
nized the double r l n i
ceremony.
The bride is the dauiflter
of Mrs. Pauline E. Leonard
or Costa Mesa and Leroy A.
Leonard, also of Costa
Mesa. ~ bridegroom is
the son or Mrs. Harry F .
Ream JI of Denve-r and Har-
ry F. Ream U of Santa Ana.
Given in marriage by her
d father. the bride selected an acc . (oe empire gown with Jeweled
hodica and cap sleeves. A
noating cage of silk organza
Walker of Costa Mesa.
nephew ol the bride , wa,s
ringbearer.
Organist wu Roy Rutter
and soloist wu ?IJas Pat
Kovecses. The church was
filled wilti basketa o f
flowers containing wh.ite
carnations. stock and green
fern.
A sit down luncheon took
place after the ceremony tor
70 guests at tbe Revere
House in Santa Ana .
The bride will b e
graduated from Costa Mesa
lligh School in June. Ker
husband. a graduate of
Foothill ffjgh School, will
complete his second year at
Orange Coast College. The
couple will make their home
in Costa Mesa alter .t trip to
Monterey &nd Qarmel.
A formal debat~ on per-
sonal development of poise
and confidence wtll take
place during the meeting of
Las 0 1 a s Toutmistress
Club or Huntinrtor Beach
wruch takes place Wednes·
to be presented the most
effective debater.
day. May 22.
Area women interested in
~lr.tmprovement are wel·
come to attend and addi·
tionaJ information regarding
the club may be obtained by
calUng Mrs. Joseph Nebel·
. sky, 962-4548, or Mrs. Gary The program w1ll be led Giles. 54-5-?'371
HB Mothers
Huntington Beach Blue
Star Mothers. Chapter 2.
stage meetings the second
Mondays of the month at
1:30 p.m. in Lake Park
Clu bhouse.
by Mrs. Paul Bronson and -... ------------------· pargcipatini will be the
Mmes., Gary Giles. Allan
KeMedy. Phillip Billington
and J oel Frey.
Other activities planned
for the 7:30 p.m. meeting
in the Surfside clubhouse.
include an educational cap-
sule on developing and un-
derstanding deb~te proce-
dures by Mrs. Calvin Olcott.
Mrs. Howal'd Jones will
evaluate debate techniques
and the audience will j udge
participants with a trophy
Sdting the mood for run
and relaxation wes tbe fi.oaJ
proeram of the group last
wee" "ite longeet. Hal1 Hour jn
History.'' a h u mo r o us
Mrs. Lloyd Aubert is the
new chairmafl. and serving
Wlt'h her are the Mme~.
Graham. vice chairman in
charge of p r o e r a m s :
rrederick Prescott. vic:1>
chaJ.rman of special events.
Thomaa Allinson. recordinJ!
secretary: George Farmer.
co rresponding secretary.
-and Robert M i I le r .
treasurer.
To Ma r ry . extended into a chapel train
with daisy appliques and a
daisy border. A teed pearl
coronet held a fingertip D· The parents of Ltnda lusion veil. A bouquet o1f;:::;==================;I
McCoy have disclosed her cascading white r 0 1 e 1 engagement to H o w a r d cente.red by a white orchid
Sale Atmosphere
Market Time Nearing
A PY Parl&ian flower
cart, .t French cae and
handsome 8'1Jti41ues are just
a aample of the treats in
at.ore wtim the Irvine Ter·
race 'PtilHilrmont~
puts together It& seventh an-
nual Flea Market.
Ron Harrod, 1912 Seadrift
Drive, Oorona del Mar. Thi'
market's boors are from 11
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
W.n. Richard K.redel is
ctndnnan -wtitte Mrs.
H~kes and her committee
are in charge of the
sidewalk cafe.
Anthony Wight. completed her ememble.
Miss McCoy of Costa M" Ch 1 S'-' of Mesa is t:M dau""ter of the iss ery u iemer t." Costa Mesa was maid of RaJi'.)h McCoys of Morro Bay honor.
aoo her fiance is the son of the Howard L. Wights or Bridesmaid was Miss San· lira Ewing of Costa Mesa.
Newport Beach. Attendants were identically
No date has been set for dressed in lemon yellow sill!
the wedding. organza over taffeta gowns
.
ELECTROLYSIS
we u•• tlot Ovel-ulio•
Electre-~le•4 ,,..tho4.
ri.-fer C.Mpli• ...... ,., c ••• ultetiot1.
IHuty S+u4io
M...-ttt Fflhi(ll tslald M..,,art Cd• •m
BRECK'S
"NIST Pll M •• •
"IRECK I EAUTIAJL"
JQMAmNT W.4.Vt:. ........... _ __...._
WedlesdaY, May 22, the
women will gather in the
home and gardens of Mrs.
Working in booths are the
Mmes. Lloyd G r e Io r y ,
decorations; Harry Baker,
antiques; Robert Bleckmar.
oblldreo's delight: Le f'
Jordan Jr., fashion s :
The bride-elect ls an with empire waistlines and al~mna of N~ort Harbor ruffled collars. Their bead·
High School and 1s a student pieces were of yellow il·
at Orange . Ooast Co_llege. lusi on. They curied coJonial
The beoedict-to-be JS a bou.q~ts__g!_blue dalliu_ ~ u o e w~r--·Tbe Misses Dalyce and H~. OOC and 15 at· ,Julie Dahl, nieces ol tbe
tending State OoUe~ al bride, of Sidney, N. Y. were ~o~g Beach wher~ he 1s ma-nower girls attired in white
JOrmg in psychology. silk shantung A-line dreaaea.1:::::==================1 They carried white lace
• •. _., 11 ..... --fir ................... , 11.Je •••
I UT •.• Ille "'° II ONLY fer
--M\'1 ••• -•• T .... • wee. Cal -ter ""' -'""" -•· s.ve-u.•1
Face Look
Familiar? William Moody, sweet shop.
and Ralph Morge, wine.
What'• old .oout. thls new Alao serving are lM watch -the Mickey ~ouse Mmea. Kalnw1 Spelletich,
face. flowers ; Wallace C. Olson,
What's new about it: a ~; J~. Crimp. art ob·
big, wide red vinyl strap J~s:. William Faulkner.
with fun cut-outs. nte face, . paul!i"«S• and Robe r t
the manulacturer reports. is Hinrichs and J ames Tyler.
-exactly the size of the old boutique. one. Tickets are St and may be
purchased at the door.
The DAILY PILOT
Best in West
Procffds are earmarked
for the OC Philharmonic
Society.
AAUW Hosts
UCI Graduates
N e w p o r t-Cost.a Mesa
branch of the Ame.rican
As6ociacioo ol University
Women i n v i l e 5 UCI
graduating women to 111 in·
formal open house next
Wednesday in W.esa Com-
mons from 12:30 to 2 p.m.
Further information is
available b y telephoning
Mrs. R. K. Arnold. mem-
ber s hip chair man ,
MS-5214.
·-~ ~~,_ ...
of'D \ \
GOBI PRINTS BJ Ameritez. co1onu1 99¢ homapan look always important. Ideal for
tpCllb:Wellf. «for draperiee, epreeda. alipcovtn,
too. lOO'f.. Ccttaa. Wwide. Reg. $1.49 rtd::*' yd.
ST. T ROPE Z ST RIPE S By '198 l lNGER. Keoa·bri&ht colon march boldly
ICl"Oll 1~ ORLON ac:t7tic r.ce. BM)' to ICW,
1~ ecetatetricot~ 5+" wide.
Reg. $2.98. rtci:*' yd.
SUNGARI SATIN STRIP E S s1ee BJ GIJey • Larc1 BriPt, bcld lmd beccminc-
ltripe9 in • Wead to mis with your 1prln1 ·
moodal 5°" pabcwber, ~ Cotton. 45" wick.
Reg. $2.98 ~ yd.
WJaati w /II•••• "at s 1 N c E R todar 1 •
SINGER
' GAIDEN GROYE-1831 Cha,._
OrafHJe Co•llty Pima 530-4010
ANAHEIM-515 N. Loara
A ....... M C....., SlS..1126
HUN11N6TON IEACH-Ecll..., at leach
I la sll .. ,_ C....., 197· 1041
COSTA MISA-2300 tt.rt.r
tt.W C...., 549· 11 OS
COSTA MISA-lrlstel & S.tlower
S.... C1mt ,.._ 540.2633
-· •I
baskets filled with blue and
yellow daisy petals.
Best man was Don Morris
of Tustin . Usher was Larry
Reed, also of Tustin. Dwaine
The Great Orange Coast's
No. 1 Paper!
,._ H 2.015t
HUNTINGTON CINTH I UCll & IDINGll
AcrMS ,trlllftl Ltf ,,_
l ...... Y't tlHl-tM
El Ra.ncho in vites you to enjoy inte resting food specialties
from all corners of the arorld ! Th iB week ...
Fr""" M erm Ouu
Efllgla.1'.d •.• rttipu
11oun for tM ta.kittq
at our aef'"vice
m.eat c.oufl.Urs!
Y orkshlre Pudding ................ 3 ,.. '1.00
GOO<iall's ... now it's ~o simple to prepare thit favorite !
Smither' s Beef Tea ........................ 79•
AuthenticAllY English ••• concetalt'l\lf' .•• • ~s <n. siir
equals 14 cuJ)8 ! $('1 flood ••• and rood for you !
Robertson's Mann11ide .......... -..... 4r
Tw@Jve ounce jars •. varMti• that ofter 10 JMCll appla) l
Cheshire Citeese ............... -......... 00 7r
What could be more authentic! •.. Imported ... ""°'-pq.
Ballentlne's Ale .......... -................ '1.42
Cartoo ot m 12 oanca ........ a ..._. •• •••'
\ I .
London Broil $1.29~
BoneJess ••• U.S.D.A. Choice Beef .•• lean ••• delicately
marbled, your uaurance of juicy tenderness! Barbecue or ovea
broil ! The English have never had beef this good!
Beef Kidney
The.re's real delirht in "steak and kidney pie" ••• an English
treat •.. with savory seasonings ••. to be remembered.
Beef Shanks ............................ 39~
renler cut .•. M> much hearty beef goodnes.<1 on these! Braiae
them ••• serving beef bouillon in cream of mushroom eoupl
Dover Sole ........ -............... ~··--· 79~
Serve rrilled aole with mustard sauc.e .•. 1 delicious treat wifl
a most inte-restinr Enrlish accent! Ocean fresh !
Cabbage ·····-···--·----·-···-·-3~
Crisp le.av• .•• IOI.id bud& ... • fr.has if tt had jQlt -
from a cool shadowy Enrlish prden l
Priru ift tl!ecf ttt aU 11.oru
llO'll .. T·.u., Wtd., Mtir to, tt, ti
--s-t & .......... Dr. (B Rlldo ~
NIUllL 318 Welt r..llirlllD aw .... NSrat FremclM & ltlwtlina• ~
llmllTll IEACI: W... aRd Maonqull (Just East If~ Hlltillr1 •11•• ml.It 'll'lJ ...,...,.., • a &a1Rtt 0r. (f.lltU •• 1111 '
\
Gorden Cei
Costa
Sherry ManeFi'a
Ted de Plomb exc
rlnp and vows at a J
MR
FEMININE FC
Miss Pot leoc
the way to fer
with these el
match-u ps of
Koratron dirn
c.otton blend!
that wash
well, wear
well. Famous-
for-fit
regimental
skirt is
f ash ionized
with smart
stripe belt;
match up
with long
sleeve tudec
front, blouse
end girls ere
feminine age
Skirt I 0.00,
blouse 9 .00:
Yellow /White
or Pink/Whi1
sizes
8 to I~.
COITA MDA
an L 11ttt St.
..... ,m
(\ '
Gorden Ceremony
Costa Mesa to Be Home
Slierry Marie Yrank and
Ted de Plomb exchanged
rlDll and vows at a poolside
wedding at the home of the
bride's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold s. Frank ol
Costa Mesa
The Rev. Dale CuJver o{
Griffith Park C h r l s t i a n
Church solemnized the.
ceremony in the presence of
70 guests.
. ,. ...
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride selected a
white lace dress with long
sleeves and a fingertip veil.
She carried a bouquet or
blue carnations, white roses
and white dabies.
Mrs. Jerry Hehn served
her sister as matron of
honor. wearing a white lace
over yellow A·line gown and
carrying a bouquet of yellow
carnations.
Best man was Steve
Grimshaw of N e w p o r t
Beach and ushers wert Bill
Frank. the bride's brother.
and James Masucbal, both
of Costa Mesa.
The garden was decorated
with white doves, bells and
vine! entwined with baby
breath Emd white ribbon.
Pink daisies floated in the
pool. Assisting at the lun·
cheon re<:eption for 100
guests were Mrs. Paul
Fuson of Huntington Beach.
who c i r c u I a t e d the
guestbook, Mrs. J a m e s
Arensdorf ol Costa Mesa.
Miss Carol Richardson of
Long Beach and. Miss San·
dra Wilkinson of Lynwood.
The bride b a graduate of
Corona del Mar High School
and attended a business col·
il:j~:J;2~~~~~LJtt~· Her busbanJh IOD_!'f
Edward de Plomb and Mrs.
Phyllis de Plomb, both of La
Jolla, ls a graduate of La
Jolla High School and at·
tended Orange Coast col·
lege.
MRS. TED de PLOMB
M.ty Bride
FEMI NINE FOREVER
Miss Pat leads
the way to femininity
with the5e ell-new
match-ups of
Koratron dirndl
cotton blends
that wash
well. wear
well. Famous-
for-fit
regimental
skirt is
fash ionized
with smart
stripe belt;
match up
with long
sleeve tuded
front, blouse
and girls are
feminine again.
Skirt I 0.00,
blouse 9.00; in
Yellow/White
or Pink/White,
sizes
8 to 14.
After a wedding trip In
California's coastal ci ties
the newlywedJ will make
their borne in Costa Mesa.
Nwi NU..,._TOM CMI&. Huftth•tfetl .. ech
Plle11• H 4·JUI
COITA MISA
21t L 17tti St. .,, ...... ,f1
S. COAST PLAZA
UH (,1,t•I
Ml-U U
IALIOA
ISLAND
204 M••i11e An.
'7J.JJOO
AfM &'llHMDO, J21 M•l11 St. JU -llH
\.
LA•UNA llACH
UO l rH4wey
494-1lf4
Monday, M~ 20, 1968 DAIL V PILOT J 7
What's .
Doing
TODAY
...... '"'99 aMCll TOPS ,_, .. ""'°'""""I"" sa-f, 1 "·"'· ~ 2 .. JI\ TOPS C~••" View tralltr ,.rk. Huntllleton k•<ll.
1 P.m.
TOPS Hal'Mr &.1•t.n -Honoer ScllOOI, (0411 Mesi, 7:)0 p,m.
H•l'Wll... CN,ltr, s-1 AINU .... -Col lefle Park School, Coste /Mu, I
p.m. 0v-ren AlltftYIMllt -Aftdt~
School tudllorwm, Westminster, a p,m,
TUHDAY
Ha.-Womt1t'• Cllorale -,.,..,tiy.
ttrll n Churd\ of Coveriant, Calle MHI, t :JO a.m.
C•la Mesa Senior ClllHM -C°"I' munllY Recte11tl011 Center. Of•ne• , County Felrvrounds, 11 1.m,
AuxllllN It larrecb UO, VtltrlM
ef WorN War I -Armrlc.n ll!91e<t
H•ll. Co.to IMt.11. 4 P.m.
Twtftllelll CtlllU<Y Clull el H1111ll1t9-
tOll .. ,.,._L•k• Perk Clubhouse, 7:)0
p.m.
Sliver S.MI ... NlliVf O.utlllen
ef Ge-Wttt-4.oc.liOll b 1v1ll1t>lt
by Clllln9 Mrs. Jedi Wll~, 54-1479.
I P m,
~"' •tllekall LM......odd Fellows Hill. Costa Mue, I p,m.
amllletll CW. 2'1 If ~ a..u
-Elks lodN. I P.m.
Owl'Hltn ~...,.._ • -levune
Hiii>. Leisure World. C!Ubtlouw t.
Dlnff\O Roorn 1, I "'"'·
Councils Heap Big Awards on Camp Fire Girls
Ha..W e1iw1tr ef HKauall-Loc.e-
flOll Is IVt lllble by C11fl119 Mrs. Jadr Cn1Pman. ~137', I p.m. Woman'• .t.udll•rv to l11Mn11tleiiil
l rollltr,,_ of Ei.<tr1cal Worl<en.
Looi UnlOll 441-VnlOll Holl, Sin••
Al\f. I P.m. C'indy Lauber of Newport Beach (left) and Davette
Chambers of Costa Mesa (second from left) proud-
ly exhibit two varieties of ceremonial dress as they
receive awards from Horizon Club member Molly
Brecht of Newport Beach and ·Jenifer Hutchinson
(right) thinks about next year when she 'll be
eligible for an award. Awards are annually present·
ed at Grand Council Fi res. The Costa Mesa cere-
mony will be May 24. 7:30 at th e fire ring in Te-
Winkle Park while the Newport Beach rite will be
May 23, 7: 30, in St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church.
Chairman is Mrs. William Baden and fire guar.dians
will be Mrs. John K. Hamel and Mrs. John Tracy.
WEDHESDll'f'
A pers onal message
l · Mars hall:
Wtdnudn Mornint Club ol C0tll
Mt1~-e11~ Bav Club, 11 • "'
H•nllntlon llf!itCh TOl'S ......
llbH -RK rtariOf" C'"',.'• 1 Om TOPS St• SirtM -Killvbr-•
School, Co1ta Mesa, 7 D m
Lu Olu Toa1tml1trus Club of Hu•I·
11111• 1 ... 11-Sumldt Clubllout.11. 7:30 P.m.
f rom G oria of complete .fisure·
. ersona\ized proF:ram ert instrucnon on Mv system IS a p t combined with exx . ng system can,
and posture improvemeNo other weight re uc1
every facet of beauty: es ~ to lose those
or does. offer m~ ser\'c in~ tffortlm. and easy ~n and keep a
... and now,
Gloria Marshall
oHers a
WRl'M'HN
GL:ARANTEE
lbat she
My system is r.e axh s 'we can help you re time. release ds and me e · d at the same · extra po~n outhful shape an
trim, poise~. Y . health buc coo rnany
muscle tens1onh. t is not only damaging ~Ider than she i$. !hh:
Ovef"'•crs ~p""ar years to \osc -we1g • k woman • ...-alon want po~nd.s mf ·:oamen who attend ri~:a is to see ho• 1r1uch more
ma1ont)' 0 H ver the overa h t u·ttfu· and they do. owbcc~me in JllSI "ftw s or al appearance d~s
attractive you can n knows tha~ her pcrs~:Oge a nor~.llly v1vad
Every woma Overwer~ht c~ c rcssed, irntable an
r-an do the
same for
you!
aff t her personality. . one \lo•ho is dep . h herself. the ee . woman rnto h becomes wit . d
ciohUS, chyar;~~g more dissa11sfi~~eS p.:1.5 less and leSSkfxer/JCI: ~nng ~uarantcc un app .. l kely to overeat. rf Yo11 can loo oil n more she is I I ad an aCtlve I e. le like a new woma .
loses the enerl(Y tot i~ easier than ever to\~ todiy for your free
as yo11 lii•t. TodJy,t' the difficult p~rt. Call hli ation. l will discuss_ Every patron receives a u1ri1ten guarantee
l will take ca~t i°gure analysis. ""11~ n~ : y~u how we can guar rhat she will reach her pre-determined
treatment an roblems with you an s ilt lo~ /1wtl}~·· d your figure P /,fr it's nti•tr 100 ress size wirhin a specified rime.
anteC results · · . rcmem\q~llt9~ ,, __ -____ '' _'"_' _P'_""'_"":'J.'~""::"l=i!••P""!I' !!'"'~-' ... ''_"'"'d "" "h•Juk Gl.v .. \~tnh•U .,,,u funmh a.ddmonaJ l't"""'"~ Until f~ JUi'lttnttt '' tulhUrd, '' oo .dtf1no~•l roi-t or nbts,. "tm fO tht t tfMfi'
proof' ~
just ask these women or any other of Forget stan·afi on diet, strenuous exertise, our thousands of satisfied patrons
pills ... lose pounds and inches qoic~ly aad HousEwIFE
Safely ... ,.s one altsolutr ly •uarn teed way! ~!-"~:i~:~d ~~, '¥.."~~~:"l:r~~=~:F1:b~·, tr;~~~JI4.:d,np'~~u~~~ UI 6 ... down lhrtt dr'"" alus In h b now ut • trim •lte I!
b 1 b d phr•lr1ll>· o.nd rn•nt•ll>. •uc • 1 ort llrnt. and I lttl Kl'Nt both Our highly successful frgure eauiy P an is ase on Prior to >'nur "''" and lr••llll•n~ 1 h·A
h ( -' h d · d to banish number or nrl~ and rle!d di -lrll!d wuuectvtully .IJ\T ' e use o very spec1,.,, m.tc mes e~1gne und "'"'' happy •nd utt•tl~ .. ,r~t.th~11 ,~;~ir, di::e-~~Wi~"l;-1 ~.tyolu ·~ every correctable f1Au re fault. On your first visit, for .,, •xtr•mtl)• proud J , ..... ~mm•nd y •• I u~· r. ... _, "'hich there 1\ ah1n/111tfy n11 rh11r1t.t nr ob/1gatum, your anynn• wanllnr In •rim down « llrm ~ ~r c~r~· '"'lhnut ••••M'OI on "''
tr~ure will he .tnaly1cd .ind you wi ll he _Rrven a demon· .\I" Drr "'""Ph,..... S•11}•u 11,, 'i.,,,;, Girtt
~1rauon irearmenr. £1 tf') v.•om.in \CCS resuhs immcd1·
.uely! h 's rhe mosr plca,,mr, rcla.xi n,R way to 105<: wer~ht!
Forgotcen 1~ the 1rrrrah1h1y c.iu~eJ by rhc stresses of
1ltering. O ur machine '"'''~ordte, vet relax you ...
you leave the salon each rrm e fcelrn.it lrke a new woman!
How fa n We Guarant ee RPsults!
A personalized pro~re~' chMr 1s prep.ired. so that e~ch
wne you visir the ~alon a rrarned counselor can ~wdc
1·0u toward your specific goals. We keep a COMtant
check o n your progress 10.,,•ard a lovclt~r figure
Jn rhis ....,ay, you reach your desired goal rn rh< shortesc
11me .•. and for rhe least expense ..
' NO DISROBING NECESSARY
WE ARE U.1 A GYM
Fan ClllU> U H FO• MOTMHS
WITM TOUH CMllDHN
How Mir• Does All T~is Coslf
Th~ •tandud price ICIC' IJ'cKmena ii $2 oo. You &re
clearly, rold 1he number and frcquu cy ol tru 1.mcn"
rcqu1rtd 10 help you ~ach )'OUI' ptt1lettrm1nc<I F•l
Tim way ve>u ~ ....... c~anly •hJt your st'1£1mrrovr-
tm'n1 " f/O'"A rn fMI YOU ••• there UC no U:tm Of
h1ddr" char~' •h•noc~r
FIGUR
CO/\lTRO£.
I \
""~I ....-11 _,., COH!IOI mtW
-,. '4\0HS -"OUT CM/00till4
SALONS
~-~··Call New Fer Fm Fit•re AiaJysis & le111stnti11 Trel&llelt
NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA
430 P•clflc Cotst Hwy. 1840 W. 17th St. t Mi. l •tf ti....._ .. , Clft
642-36-30 543.9457
M,,, .. p,,;, 9 "·"'··9 p .•. • s,11. 9 •. ,,, .. , J>.•
~ ,,,,J MIUllrC S1"'-"
..
.. ,.
J 8 DAILY PILOT
~our /ti oraey' • Worth
Don't Get Caught Gambling
Blin(l ll1 New Stock Issues
Mutt1al
Funds
'-"'"1111311m•:C:::m~-"":3 AbKUl 171 AbDGll LO I •
By SYLVIA PORTER hours. Then came th e
Ont:e again, 1 n r o r m e d cleaoout. Scores of the com·
spttulation in "hot" new panles went bankrupt. New
stuck issues is showing signs issue prices were brutally
or turning into dangerous shaved an the market col·
gambling. lapse or 1962. Countless
• ' G e t • r ich-quick'' in· n u m b e r s or greedy
d1v1duals and iost1tutlons gamblers were wiped out.
are rushfog to buy and whlrl Even today, some of the hot-
up prices of new stock test stock issues of 1961-62
issues on nothing more than a re still trading at a fraction
vague rumors and slippery of their initlal prices.
promises. New stocks are But while 1962·62 isn't
bt>ing btd up in price on pack. trading in new iss,ues
nothing more than names 11; becomin~ f e n z i e d
suggesting computers. data Stories are circulating about p r o c e s s i n g • medical the deceptions and outright
franchisin~. leasing frauds or SIX years ago. And
WE ARE not yet wit· U1is lime, investing in·
nrss1ng a repetition or 1001· stitutions are joining in·
62. Early in that period. you dividuals in a search for the
may recall, new stoc k issues hot stocks which will soar
came out Jn record volume and swell the value of thetr
and many soared 100 to 500 portfolios,
~nt in a matter of This could hecome an -------' J.n:10Uftc in1 free lecturu for investors in Mutual funds:
HOW WELL DO
MUTUAL FUNDS
--PERFORM?--·
What is the record of the mutual funds? How well did
they perform during the 1966 market decline? How
did they perform m 196 7? Could they have advantages
for the growth-minded investor-or should he be
caut ious?
To help you decide, Goodbody is holding one·session
seminars. designed to clear up questions you may
have about those mutual funds. These sessions-pri·
marily for investors already familiar with Mutual Funds
-will attempt to probe into areas generally not
covered by the usual investment sem1nars-1nclud1ng
the important income and growth situations.
Whether your a im is possible long-term growth of
capital or higher income, or a conservative approach.
we believe you will find this advanced seminar most
interestina.
NEWPORT BEACH
TUESDAY-APRIL 23
Conducted by:
Dennis L Halloran
WEDNESDAY-APRIL 24
Conducted by:
Pa~ Skillman and Jim Chadburn
Goodbody & Co.
4501 Birch Street
(adjacent to Orange County Airport)
Seminars from 7:30 to 9:00 P. M.
~ease phone Mutual Fund Depart rr~
for reservations
GOODBODV & \,Q.
UTAILISHID 1 ltl
M .... ~.,. ol loo<l1•g Slo<~ o"'J Com,..0J1lf f1C~o•t••
4501 BIRCH ST., NEWPORT BEACH • 540·8121
Ovtr 90 otflcn ttirouchout tht N•tlon
~ ...... ~~~~ .. ~
NEW CONCEPTS $
IN
MUTUAL FUNDS & ESTATE PLANNING
ROBERT l. SPRINKLE Ill President of
COMPETITIVE CAPITAL FUND
investment I The only
company with indepen·
dent competitive multi-
ple management.
TRUSTS, EST ATE PLANNING &
"FINANCIAL COORDINATION"
Hugh T. Mulhem, C:.l.U. Vice Prt,ident
International Securities Corp.
•
THUllDAY, MAY 23 7:30 ,.M.
IRVINE RQPM -NEWPORTER INN
1107 JAM8&EE RO., NEWPORT IEACH •••erwttiott• Requiml -Moll °' ,hone
~---~-------------~ I INTllNAT10NA1 RCUllTIU COD. !
,., 90Ylll ...._ aum ,,., I:,.. llACM -..,_.,,, J
1 ~ I I ~ I L":" , NO. TIOTT I
. ~---------'
'
open scandal. The threat o!
a blow-off hurtmg all of us
cannot be shrugged of!.
There is a real possibi!Jty
that if you ar~ gambling
blind. you will be caught and
will end up owning a batch
of paper valued at far less
than you paid.
Tin; TIME to hE'Come
familiar with and to follow
the rules 1~ . OW. Herc,
the~efore, are ~1>. b <N l'
guides
f 11 OON'T buy j 11 '5 I
bet'ause of an e"<htlarating
nam e! nl 1961 · 62. thP
magic lures included words
such as nuclrar. electronics.
astro -and the list of dead
companies with these lures
is long and painful. In 1968.
the lures are. as mentioned
above, in Qffice ef!uipmenl.
heallh. Ir :aing -and once
aeain. t h e public i<; j11rn
pini: in to buy comµle~el~
unscasCJned is5ues.
I 21 00~'T bU\ lifter a n
issue is on the market. on
rumors that the stock 1s oue
for a tremendou!> price rtsl'.
You C1>uld be huying at !he
top, simply he lpin g insiders
to unload at a profit.
(3) DON'T buy any slock
tssue umu~ yon "3Fe ru1ry
aware of what the company
· does and until y o u · v e
studied statements a n d
figures in 1ls prospectus. An
odd point 1s lhat speculators
who would not dream of de·
fying this fundamental rule
in buying seasoned stocks
utterly ignore 1! Jn buying
new one~.
( 41 DON'T tr;· to get
bloc ks or hot stocks by ma k-
ing questionable Ue·in deals
with a broker. F'or uw ance.
don't agree to bold the
shares ,·ou 1?et for a
spec1hed 11mt ~a) ~ 60 90
da: s: the brr er ma' be tn mg to hmJI tbt amounl of
~to<'k a,·aiJable to Pl"n up
the prire dunnc the renod
insiders a re unl("lad.i~g Or
don·1 agr~ to add to yc•ur
origi nal allotmem b' bu:1N:
some shares in tht a!ter-
Market : ·• a)?ain. the hro1'er
may be trying to dr1\'e up
the stoc k's price while
preferred customers unload.
Or don't agree to buy allot-
ment or less attractivf'
sloc ks in return for the
allotment or a hot rssue ;
you 're just bailing out the
broker. And certainly don't
agree to spilt profits, this is
obviously illegal.
15) DON'T buv on the
baSIS of information not 1n
the prospectus. Promoters
might be spreading reports
to whirl up the price so they
can unolad. If the in·
formation is factual and
valuable. it will be in the
prospectus covenng t h e
stock sale.
(6) OON'T Neglect the un-
derwriter's reputation. This
could be one of your best
safeguards. for a firm with
a long-established repula·
lion for lnte~ity will not
knowingly risk 1t on a single
deal.
THESE ARF. are special
guides geared to ne w issue~
ThPre's no rea.sQn yo 11
should lake a beating in new
issues because you're an
amateur But if you're a
greedy amateur. you will.
EASTBLUFF POST
Willi•m E. Hill
CHANGES BRANC.H
Larry M. Gwynn
NEW YORI( IAPI Gn'-19'921 U Abo (11 UO -Ht IOllo\1111"9 04.0',G ... ron n.2J z..n ACF 11\f 2.l!
l•llon.. wP-.1.0 11'1 HI"' IOdt 1~ • II =~· o4l: the N•f,~I Auocl-HHwl 11.ft If.II flj., llton OI $tCllt11146 Htco~ I'd lit.! 1' » :~~IJ1.: Ote .. r~ 111< .,. H MeM l•.O "7t AdmlO]
::.: tt :1(11~~~ r,::~$ t:.. ::t :t:~ ~~~: ~ covlO ,,... tUll lmD Gt~ 1.14 t.50 Air Pd pfo,7S t:~i.i,~1.01 11' t>outlll l~ ~~ •J:ll 'i:: :1~=.~.:i:
AllerdtM i1~ L4: ::::~~ a-: :rn :it.:::·,·"10
AIMlrdMll J IA l d 1114 l'unO 1 9~ r ff Alc•Mllltll I AO•~ I'd 1.73 ~ Sol ln•B~ Slit s ll s.n "'!"" "'' .u Allil FO • 71 ' 50 Inv CoAm u tot 1 · OS A 14'9Lud , '°
All A""'r US l,o/ invft u os IJ.70 1: 91 ~ lt9'J,ud rJ Am au• I.SO J.lf Invest C.roup·
1
,,0 w • "m Divin II so 11.51 MUI IUt 12.49: 1·r:~ 1-:8 Am Grlh • 09 1.79 Stock r. l' IA Jl IA ea Klei' I Am Inv 37 t2 '' 11 StlKI f,U 10. U All eo Mlill 7 Am MUI in OS ll'0.99 v., P•Y t,, I0.03 Allied Pd '°
Art~ r..o ~ 1' 10 16 ISi G Ml~ SH S7J Al lldStr l • .0
Security Gi res Hill,.
Gwyrin Neiv Positions
Am P•c 2l I 23 In" llHll t t2 20.S7 Al,l(dPd pf l
Ano I'd I ., I IS h•tl I'd 2S S1 l6 !16 "' l~SI pf • ... •• Ho..ohloll IYUI Fd 17 u ... 1o111e0Sup u l'uncl ~ l 5• t •I lyy <JS 13 16 JJ 16 Al s Ch.ti l Fund 8 II ! "&J JOhrs1n }: 11 2, 11 AIDIWI P Ctm SIO<k t )Q t II ICtYstont Fl l'ds. Al\.de ,, S El IU I •) Cus !II 11 21 ;:;t Al<U I.JO B• ·,en I as I c· C••• 82 7T." :J '9 Am ISu, l "I
lllue ;.o I) ll I• •s Cu• 8• Ui 10 ~ ~8AC ... >O ar·~11k I 1J 1 iio Cu• ,(I ~.lo . .: •' ,_mtr.c.S: J
llMI r j I•• < ~ Cv> '1 I IS• 1, '1oX:t111r M !11Qad SI 14 ., 16 ll CU\ SI 21 ?l .•"Am Alrlln .. llullc<~ I! .. 17 H Cu S 1111 17 J ,..., P•~tl 1 C• G•n I IO •• , Cu• Sl 1~ ll 11 27 Am80C.SI l.llG
Wilham E. Hall l)as been
namr d a~~1stant manager of
Se<:urJty First N a t ion a I
Bank's En~lbluf! Branch in
~ewport e t>nc h lo succeed
La11y :Vt. Gwynn who has
bt>Pn 11ss11:ned as assistant
inurJ_ 1•r of lhe CtJSla Mes,1
Bt ,1nl11
fl ,11 Joined Secun ty Bani.
la,1 yrar ,lfter hav1nii begun
h1~ banking career in
Con ~1 111' la II Cut " 190 l.6J Am C•• 1.20 f n· nu. lie JS a resident of c·~11 '"' 1 11 9. ·a 1111 Fd "·" 11.11 "'''" .,. 1.75 • ,., I <11r 6 ii I II 1<n1ckD J ·" 9.•2 Am C•m 60 r 1tllt'1'tOO. oni siir 'n •O.JO ICn Ck Glh 11.IJ ll.p A Ch•ln 1:.a (~ h kA 'th Ch•Ml"9 I un1• Lolnv1 I0.3S H .;I AmCcn1 .651 1\\ynn C:·S u.::en WJ &ai4n 3.3~ 14 ,, Lo Ra<h U.t• 11.•• A"'Creclil to
Snt'llfltv since }964 and Com Slk tr.I U 6 Lloertv l.~t a . .ro ACrvSuv 1 . .IO < , • c,,, ,, 11.12 '° ,. Lift ,.,. 6._o 6.77 AmCYI• 1 7S
mar·a"er .or Ule Eastbiuff IO(on 1 '~ u 1 L••• s111 • '' "·" .t..mo111 1..01 ' ._ s~·i•I ) <f j tt l.ce>mll SaYltl A"' Ou&IVt>I Br .ir11.:n since its openin" '""' ;:1 1: ~. '' 11 F,, • 1oo'l!1 Pt••• o ,,,.. >'1 I: 1? 'Y t' Canad l6 45 A 0 Am · ow I Sl l.1 r .lulv He holds (\\ o c.1 •• ~1 3,, • ,, ""'' 1J )I ll 01 AmE:>h 11 JOd
· t I !9 i 11 "'"' S ~· ·' 6• Am "•1> r l'{I '111\~ (':. fr 0 ffi the C 1 ; Ml n'ln .116 j° 9 AmHolsl 10 . , ~~n F=nd ,f co •J 6' A HOt"t ' 10
\Ill rt! J O }Oi.f1,U (' or 8 J 11J\· ~ .. ~~ / ., 1 ~ ;; MIU Gin lUS 1J '.~ !:c:ro•,pl>f .l
II' ' Oranc:e c 0 u n 1 v GM'•• •• "'' MlU Tr ,,~a a •2 Am HOSP wl ' / Cc• I ;>• " 't i Ma fl S _J ! .J Ami""'' l 10 ( 1pler c~"'"" '• -,. "'<Don l1JAIJ S7 AmMFdy t0 ,. ,. _.., ,. ,i • i 2 ' M10A Mut 110 c '1 AM t Cl I 90
l 1\\\ nn re~1<lr:. In El Toro. Ir. m : ;·· 1.•· ~=~ ~~ :rn :rn Am. Motor •
1... 0 ' •II) Morion Funes AmNalGI\ 1 Slee• 10 II II.I I Grwtn 1, 17 IS» Am Newt I ~:::~ ~t~ :·~ rn •ncom um~!' ~R'~~toc..,r. N t N l • I B I com~•' 10.01 11.01 v.;iu~~ 1,~~~l"o's Am S••I 1 ewl)ol,. a 1ona an ,,{' Como Bo II •O 12 )9 Nil vt~ 6 ll 6M Am Ship 60 . (: .~ ComP Fd 1'11 13,17 Mui snrs 20·n 10•1l Am Smell l CO<lccrd l l.31 11.n Mu• Trust 1· 76 1 11 AmSoAfr 10 Cons Inv 13,JI l•.7S NII WSet ·o·u I '•7 AmSAtr In /0 J:im~v sn 5 ~ ~•I l•o iJ'J; 1::~3 ~I 0 -s 2 M Off• Co•o Ld ~1h N:r1~11 ,_,.,_A Svver ~1-ljen 0 l •e ]L•es C•lrv Coo IJ U I• 11 &• nn ll 63 "11 AmSuo 111 61 '-., Crown w 1 •> I 17 llon( S .O 6 ·0 Am T& T 1.40 ~lltq/I M 71 ll 11 ~ 01¥•<1 5'" s'" Am Toll l.tO
~r"' port Natrnnal Ra n'k
opened two new olfices to-
d<1v 1n thE' two tallesl
b111hhnl!s in Fullerton.
The bank will be the first
noor tenants or both the
C'ollrge Park F 1 n a n c i a I
CenWr and the Brashears
Crnlcr. both seven stories
high.
The <lual onl.'nrn~ replaced
two temporary ofliCl's -tile
l'nl\ l'rsily and Sunny Htlls
branches.
The ne w linnrrs1ty otfice
"'as opened in the Collegr
Park Center. at the J?ateway
tn the campus of CaLiforn ia
St:1te College, 1-'ull<'rton st
10 a m The ceremony at t11e
new Sunnv llills office
followed an hour later and
l\~o mi les awav in the
Brasheari; Center at U1e
Harbor and B r e a in·
tt>rsecllon.
Be11ea Ups
Income 20%
.'.'iPt Income of Bertea
Corp . Irvine. in the first
f!Uart er of 1968 recorded an
1ncrea e or 20 percent over
the corresponuing period a
year earlier. H 1 c h a r d
Bertea. p r e s i d e n t , an·
nounccd
~et sale~ for the three
months endrd March 31, 1968
advanced lo S4 .!l l6.000 from
$4,470,000 1n the comparable
period of la st year.
Net income for thE' first
quarter a m o u n t e d to
S2:l4.0(Xl. C'qual to 18 rents
per share. l'ompared 11·1th
189,000. nr l5 cent~ per
sha~e ror the corresponding
pr rind of la:.! yrar. Per
share fi~ures for '1 o I h
periods are computer! on the
haSJS or the 1.300.000 <ihares
or c·ommon stock ou1$tan·
ding at March 31 .
FullPrton. recently openf'd
another office. the Superior,
nPar Hoag M e m o r i a I
llo~r1tal.
6 Suppliers
Der•I '"' I] 15 IS OJ Pl St< • ea a fl ,.,,.WWI<, }& ~I• Fd 1616 11,ll tnc~rn 6 ~ ,8 "w pref 1 2S O•v Gr II JI It IS St~I I •S t'ii AW • lpt I ..i
0•• Inv t tO 10 I• G ''" 11· l~ 12 '• ""' ZlllC OIVld Snr l 19 • 16 " , \'f,. 5·~1 ~ l Amrlele le OnwT• In I )1 I 9'I Nt m ( 1• O• ll '9 Ami•< Inc l Or•.-1 11 11 II "j Ne';. E~'> 1~·96 1 u AMOC CP JOO ~~~~,·~.1 :~~ :rn ~ ..... ,, i~ •mos !~~.~ '°-o E>" Slk It'' 11'.l; NrN lll'ld "n IS S• Ampex Corp Ebo'r\I "?O 15 60 Gocrv IS.SI 17.?I Amcnenol 10
e-• Gr is 01 "ia ?~~m 1~ ~~ \rn ~::;,~~o 1;~ Ener9v 16 11 l6,, I Invest U 6 1.'1 AnchHG 1 00 Enlotlu 8.'6 t.79 Reo i ech 1:.0 7.65 A~~ Clo 1.10
Equll Fd I I.II "·~ RtVNt 1: 23 11.13 Anken Chem EqJll Glh 17 SS I• ,3 Scudder F~r~s. Aoco Oil ·'" E•olor ?6 9J 21.u 881 11u.17 u Aou1 Chem Falrld 1S ,, 16 6J Com SI ,.·is 11 ·s ArchO•• I 60 (., A d Frm 8 'Au l1 Mll6A 1n11 1nv 1s;o 11'5 Arl1PubSvc1 et Wa r S F•d t';rlh 1>'111~1 Soe<I •2 .6J•1 ~ArlOll$ 0 Sir
J · ~~ ~"u"nd '.! % ~t.~ Ste Olv lS oe 16 ll :~~~r SJ"60 l
"•O 1toO J' fl :1.75 L~ ~~uil 1n; 1:-;: Armr of • 75
'\1:-. 'outhern Callfornia
r1rm-> ha\'e received "Zero
Oefct't' Awards" from
Plulc'o·f'ord's Aeronutromc
01v1~1on. Newport Beach.
for outstanding performance
as s upplier s lo
AHonutron1c.
The six compames are:
Clary San Ga briel, Com·
ponent Research Co., Inc ..
'anta '.\lonlca, Gener a 1
Design Inc , Sun Valley, H.
A. Henderson Co.. Los
A n I? e I e s , Southwestern
Prec1s1on Co .. Gardena, and
Western ~ar Co rp . ,
L~nwood.
·The suppliers w e r e
~elected in accordance with
.\ e r o n u t r o n i c quality
assurance vendor rating
system , which provides a
method of rating supplies by
product defects based on the
results o( receiving in·
spection. source inspection
and material review board
dispositions
Presentation of Z er o
Defect awards was made by
John B . Law s o n .
Aeronutronic vice president
and general manager,
Earnings Soar
Capital Alliance Corp ..
owner or Mariners Savings
and Lo a n Associati on.
Newport Beach, reported
net earnings for the quarter
ended March 31. of $100.SO.'J
as compared to $12,213 for
the comparable period of
1967.
l'•no•c 11 p < •m S•IK Am 11 61 12.M Arm Ck I 't p~~m ; ~ ~ g ~1 So•cS l•:« is:,. ~~::'Rc"c~p 1 to '"° ~ , olJ 6 fl Shrhold ll.U 14.6• Arvin ll'CI •o F\I l~Glh 9 o IO,, Sfvm• 10."4 ll.6J Ashld Oil U O ••t ln~I\ 10 96 12 oi ~.:r"v1~: i~il lN: ~~~,.:11·j'&. ~:t: ~J· I~;~ Slalt SI s1:u 52.12 A•sd OG 1 • .0 Fl~ Gin 7'" 1.71 i::.•dr,.~n ~i',. U,07 :~f~!n I.~
Fnd LI 'I.I S.JO FldUC 9,17 9.69 Auoclnv I.'° Founcitr• I IA t.S.S Scfen 7.72 1.44 Al<nlSC<l 1.60
Fou"q 10.06 U.ll> Sleln Roe FuundS' Aichi> ol .. SO Fra•klln Cusran &al 21 16 21'74 A.ICl!Ytl ..,,
Com Slk 7.59 l.Jl Stock .. :,. 1i.t6 ~:f1~1ch 311~
1ncom 2.61 '·" Intl 16.37 166 31 AtlRch o13·71 UM 7 tO 7.67 Slfrl Inv 13.09 14.15 Atl Rld1 o1' J fund Am !1.7612.IS SuP l11Gth 1.35 I.OS Atlas Ch 10 Fund Inv II .SO 11 60 Tuchr• ll.68 IA.25 AllH (qrp G•n lllvril 7,10 7'3 TKhnol 10.H 11.06 AllH ol 15" Gtn SK ,, '6 11 • .16 TtmD GI 11.J .. 20.0• AuroraPI ]q ~~ s~ irn :~ ~~ ~~::c ~~h 1rn 1~:t: :~sl~~ :6/k)
Fut AO 9lO 1011 TwenC Inc S.st 6.ll AulSPklr ~ Grth 111<1 1J •l ~ 1J Unlltd Fund>. Avco CP 1.20 ~~~o G~3:'!,
MARKETING CHIEF
Jotln Gordon
.... ,..'l '"' .so Avon Pd l 60
Your future could lie with Merrill Lynch
\lO MATTER
-t-\OW You :..,.;;--
You've had some business expertence
-preferably (but not nece~sarily) 1n
sales. Now you want lo move inlo work
that otters more satisfactions. more c~nce to help people. more responsi
b1hty. and greater inco!T'e potential.
A.s an account executive at Merrill
Lynch, your sat1sfact1ons can come
from knowing tha t you helo people in·
vest sensibly. And you'll adVance pro-f~sslonally -in income too -proper.
t1onate to your own etforts. Our average
tccount executive ranks in the top 1 °4
of AmPricans In earnings after five
years ot selling securities, and his in-come 001entlal is virtually unlimited.
You'll need plenty of desire, 1nit1a•
live. and wit. Since you need no previ-
ous brokerage experience, we'll tram
you And pay you dunn1 the training
period.
II this sounds Interesting, let us hear
lrom You. Including details of your
school and work background and any
outside interests or activities. Send •
letter or resume. In confidence, to
Richard Thomsen. Pert0nne1 0e08rtment
•
. . -
MBRS:.ILL; LYNCH,
Pl•AC•, 11t•NN8R a •MITH INC
1001 NORTH BROADWAY, SAfllT~ AN" 92702
..
~AVEL ..•
~'"'"'' .......
Yoo need Mutual'• ran: Vaeattoa AU.
and Qulde Book. Plcll wp Joar CIOpJ
toc1a1.
MUTUAL SAVINGS .................. ,, ...
2867 Edt <:out Highway •eo.oNA On MAI, Calif.~
Tcltphonc 61'· ,010
-~ . ._ m r COlOINO awi1. • rASMOll, CM• •11•
I
J
' ,
GAF c.,., A C.AF 9fl.JI G.ma. 1.» c;.mS ..it 1J G...,S 911 ...
Git WOO/I c;.rdDen 1.45 C.trlOC'll .. Gtmllll (;, grc~=~ .~ G ACClftf ti l g11 .. t"'Pl~f0 GlomOll .llOlt
Glo Trell l.U tnll•l!C ..... Gn C»bll l.211 G~be~, ~
Gt110Y...,.. I
g: ' .. ~ ~= onFI•• .90 tn Fch 2.41 1n Hosl t11111tl I 2tl t nlntlt IJf J tl!Mlll1 .Ill
Miiis Ml.'5 .,-Mot I. JI ~:~bl
•nPC. tm , ... tnPrec ''« o;i. ,ubUI I.
ff\ Rt lnlC ll: ~/~
• 11.1,ri ';f t~lt ~''° tnTl!'l'lt .10 Tire IO Tlrt IJf S .~"~' tt tPK l .... t PK 1 .. rbt< ,10 tvOll .n. f~~~ /d-211 ..
!br•ll 'I• <!d LM IO 1i.1tt I 20 lmbel l r I "" ~ .n !:~ti ,,}.~~
t11Alcl .::t~J~
rlcf\11'°
ld#l!..rt ~~~ ·-= f~ 60b
"''' 1 '° ran~· 1 '° r•nl 1 JO ~Y.DMI U O t•Hold 1.40
1 "&P 1 30• Nolr 1 J»
INoPap l 40 INcrP ot 410 I Nor RY l
I Wn l Finl 1wll\Jn 1.eo Un oll.M ttnGnl .IS
Hf!Sh 1 10 ~•hound 1 olltt 1.60 umn.Airc 1 llMO 2.60t II 0 11 UO llSl~OI .Ill II SU o4 S llSU Pl• JO lfWln :x>b llW ptl,IS lfW el1.17 tfW PIJ.IS
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(
--)A RY P ILOT EDITORIAL P AGE
Desalt _Success Vital
The Real Opponents
Tn an era of millions and billions and trillions. of war
budgets and peace budgets. maybe money loses all
sense of proportion.
Still, it's hat:d lo see bow anyone could be out o!
focus to the tune of $306 mimon -even in California.
where budgets are big enough to absorb a million here
and a million I.here in mistakes.
A case in point is the program to build the world's
largest, most advanced nuclear desdtling plant on man-.
made Bolsa lsland in Huntington Beach. Its lwo-Iold
purpose would be to produce, smog-free. enough power
for a city of 2 million and enough potable converted
sea water to be a major relief to parched Southern
California's ever-growing waler needs.
When Bechtold Engineering Corp. was instructed
by•the Metropolitan Water District, the Atomic Energy
Commission and the Office of Sa li ne Water to develop
cost figures, for some reason Bechtel was t~ld lo ig-
nore inflation facts. They were to develop the f1gu1es a~
they were at the time and not as they might be when
construction should begin several years later. . .
The total cost fig ure "as of then'' was 8444 m1llton.
The MWD. its public power partner. the Los Angeles
City Department of Water and Power. and its tax-pay-
ing, investor-owned utility partners. Souther.n Califor-
nia Edison Co. and San Diego Gas and Electric ro., an·
nounced they were prepared to participate at that 1965
figure.
All the legal hurdles were clearerl and the public
was led to believe .the huge project. was off the ground
and on its way.
But no. The $444 million of 1965 bas risen to $750
million in 1968. due to inflation factors omitted from
the 1965 figure and to design changes to increase. power
output and provide greater earthquake protection.
And there bas still been no final resolution of ques·
lions related to beach erosion, heat pollution and in-
creased ocean salinity from the proposed operation.
Even at--the-$750...milliop ngure...1.some...say $1-65 mil·
l1onT,l 1s confeifde<ni someexpe-rts tnarthe i>t:n1
would produce power at lower cost than steam generat-
ing plants now in use-and without air pollution.
The surprise involved in a 70 percent boost ln colSt
estimates over the 1965 figure could have been avoided
had the Bechtel Corp. been instructed to develop 1965
cost Cigur~s and then make projections to allow for in·
Ilatloll and changes in construction plans.
This. of course, would have recognized political as
well as economic realities and avoided the present pub-
lic consternation and doubts about feasibility-..f'n many
quarters, including. perhaps, Congress.
The Bolsa Island project is tar too Jmportant, both
as a pilot devel,0pment for use the world over and for
its immediate benefit to Southern California water and
power. to be allowed to die. The money can and should
be found through the promis ing partners~p of public
and private capital.
OCC's Great Crew
Orange Coast College's crew of ejght oarsmen ·and
a cox'n, all sophomores, has accomplished a feat bor·
dering on the unbelievable. .
When the crew captured the junior varsity event in
the ninth annual Western Sprint. Regatta on Seattle's
Lake Washington last Saturday, it left in its wake such
major leaguers as the jayvee crews of Washington,
Stanford, Cal. UCLA and Ore,on State.
Tills climaxed a season o 17 victories against no
losses. In rive major contests between April 6 and May
18. OCC's oarsmen defeated not only the five universi·
ties named but also UCI; Loyola; Cal State, Long Beach;
San Diego State: UC. Santa Barbara and Santa Clara.
As a result, Orange Coast bas been accorded the
singular honor of an invitation to compete in the Inter-
collegiate Rowing Association championships at Har-
vard University June 14 -an event usually reserved
for Eastern colleges and universities.
Coach Dave Grant and his gritty oarsmen have
earne.d the tradition.al naval accolade. in spadeli: WeH
<Jone!
, Next stop: Harvard. Alter that, ~he Olympics (all
can hope).
Mu st Find Pill Says Delay Benefited Wrong Party
WASHINGTON -Recent riots in
rashington and other major U.S.
ities have definitely affected and
ardened the tbiDkitlg of many
. mericam.
A wrvey by the Republican National
:ommittee, Whidl is now being
irculated among GOP members in
:ongress, clearly &'hows its dramatic
hange.
When voters were asked six months
~go the question "Would you use a gun
o shoot another person to proted
rourself during a riot?". the GOP
;urvey showed that only 'rl percent of
:hose polled said "yes."
Since the riots following tbe shooting ,c Dr. Martin Luther King, 62 percent
1C those questioned answered '!yes.!!
WHILE U.S. negotiabxs ere hol<l,ing
1ut hopes that preliminary talk$ in
>aris will evolve into something more,
he realities in Vietnam offer little en·
:ouragement for thia optimism.
Since the partial bombing halt was
1rdered on April 1 by President
fohnson, the North Vietnamese have '
;ucceeded in reducing by two-thirds
:he time it taJtes to send military sup-
>lies and reinforcements into South
Vietnam from their main staging area
1n the north.
''U.S. Army units are now taking
'forth Vietnamese prisoners who say
1l takes only 11 days now to travel by
truck from the Hanoi·Haiphong area
to Sai gon," tile latest U.S. intelligence
estimate on enemy infiltration states.
''In the Ashan Valley, American
units have captured North Vietnamese
regulars who have been in the South
only four days," the military report
points out. "These enemy ..s<>ldiers
reveaJ that they were able to ride aU
the way from staging area11 north of
Hanoi without being bombed." Thii;
compares with from 30 to 45 day~
previously needed. '
THE NEW CAPABLLITY -The
South-bound traffic from North Viet.
nam also has reached unprecedent.ed
proportions. Infiltration into South
Vietnam is currently four times thf' 6.(l()().man-a·mon~h averi ge of late
1967. An estimated 150.000 have gone
In to South Vietnam or n e a r h y
sanctuaries in Cambodia and Loas
since Jan. 1.
This logistic speed-up, due in part to
the bombing reduction. means that
Hanoi now has the capability of
launching major attacks against
Saigon at least once every six week.<;
according to U.S. military command
in South Vietnam .
Bt1 George ---
Dear George;
I have often read that young
people everywhere are rebellinit
against the Establishment. ( live
in a sparsely J>Op\•lated area
which has no Establlshment.
,What can we young rolks who
have nobody to riot against do.,
FJWSTRA'T'ED
Dear Fnutrated:
Ask yOUl' daddJcs and mom·
mies to help you form a
volunU!er group of adulu to help
you. Perhape from time to time
they .,JU Jet you lock up
everybody over :r> and hold them
as bOc\ages.
C 0 NF ID EN T I AL TO J.
EDGAR UOOVER: Ob. quit
WOfT11ng about unemplo)'ment
Insur~. -maybe Mccarthy
wori't evet1 bt tlected.
(Problem• solved by G~ge tn
a tti<.'!t -ocict be Oncts oot wtlat
a trkt ft.)
Many ol the North Vietnamese rein-
forcements in the south are sup·
posedly being replaced in the north ror
the first time by regular Chinese Com·
munist military units.
While nothing is being said about
this in public, adminjstration officials
are beginning to admit this ominous
development in private. For example.
Secretary of State Rusk told the
Serrate Foreign Relations Committee
re<:ently tbat Chinese Red anti-aircraft
units are now operating in North Viet-
nam.
AMERICAN MILITARY officers in
Saigon, coniused and literally burned
up by what they term the ''phased cut-
back" of bombing C'aids over North
Vietnam , are adjusting their tactical
operations to meet a complete halt in
U.S. bombing of the north.
These tactical operations include not
only the aerial attacks up tX> the L9th
parallel but also the U.S. Navy's ship·
to-shore bombardments which also
will be halted soon.
ln opposition to any further cutback
in bombing, U.S. military officials in
South Vietnam have sent an urge nt ar·
peal to the J oint Chiefs of Staff fllr
auth<>rity to begin hitting airfield"
above the 19th parallel.
Pointing out the new build-up ol
North Vietnamese air power on thesn
fields. these military officers have
warned that Hanoi will soon be in a
position to stage successful raids on
U.S. bases in South Vjetnam unles
immediate American counteraction i taken.
IN ADDITlON TO :JO Mig-2ls. mor
than 15 medium-range Soviet-made je
bombers have been spotted on fou •
airtields in North Vietnam that tht
Reds have rebuilt since the Presideri·
ordered all bombing north of the 19tli
parallel stopped
The Joint Chiefs of Staff have
recommended that these airfields hr.
hit. No Hnat decision is expected until
President Johnson d e l e r m i n e s
whether Hanoi is prepared to enter
full ·scale peace talks
Members of the Joint Chiefs of Starr
have told members or House Anned
Services Committee that they are
mystified as to why President Johnson
11rdered the bombing cut back . rather
lhan to seek lo negotiate the cessation
in exchange for some reciprocal act
.. from the North Vietnamese before th1'
Paris talks.
·•Ir the President has some unknown
ace up his sleeve." statoo one or the
members of the Joint Chiefs. "we
have never been told about it. All we
know is that the bombing cutback is
puttinll American troops in Vietnam in
11 dangerous position despite our
present mmtary superlority."
vrnTNAM HEADLINt:s -North
Vietnam Is usln~ Prei1iden1 Ho Chi
Minh's birthday as a spurt to greater
production. lie will be 78 on May 19.
Hanoi's propagana machine has been
urging workers to greater effort as
part of nn "emulation drive'' In hon·
or of the occasion. ·rhe pressure now
is on In both agricuJture '1!d industry
• .. . Ho Chi Minh also has sent word
to Ills negotiators in Paris to press for
a . ha.It In U.S. bombing ol all North
Vietnam by May 19 . . . Communist
China ls maintaining lta dally ~·
ganda 1upport for what It terms the
"Neero revolution" In the U.S. The
campalgn began with a rare personal
statement by Chairman Mao Tse-Tung
on the sbooUng of Dr. Martin Luthi!!'
King. Jr., last month.
Paul ~tt
To Change
Human Brain
ln his recent book. "The Ghost in
the Machine," Arthur Koestler makes
the r~dicaJ suggestion that only a pill
can cure mankind of its deepest ill -
hatred and aggression. He thinks
science must find a pill to change the
workings of the human brain so that
we do not commit race suicidt; in the
next war.
According to Koestler, man is a
freak in the evolutionary process. Due
to some unknown mutation in the past,
he thinks our species is operating with
two different brains joined together:
an old animal cortex, and a "new"
human br~These do not fQne!tiort
well together . and their dysfunction
results in our clash between mjnd and
emotions.
CERTAINLY WHAT he says is true
enough. We seem t.o be a
schizophrenic race of creatures. We
venerate love, and practice hate. We
hooor thought, and live by emotions.
We profess religion, and commit the
worst injustices in its name. We are a
bundle of conflicting and contradictory
ideas. attitudes. impulses. appetites,
and reactions.
Most of all, we are paranoid. We
project our own faults and in-
adequacies upon others -not merely
upon other individuals. but upon other
groups. We seem to have a deeply
rooted need for some Enemy -by
whatever name we call it -to blame
for all our woes.
KOESTLER'S DIAGNOSIS is grimly
1ccurate. The major powers are now
l!mbarked on an arms race that can
ttnd only in mutual ctisaster ; both sides
have acknowledged this. and yet
rveryone seems powerless to halt or
reverse the steady slide toward the
cd~e of the cosmic precipice.
If we possessed only an animal
hrain. we would be creature~ of in-
stinct. and do instinctively what ls
be st for us and our speciei; If we
possessed only a human brain. w~
would pe able to reason our way out or
this impasse, as coolly as we haw
been able to order all our te1:hnical
and material progress.
BUT THE NEW intellect in the
neocortex has crippled the ancient in·
stinctual impulses, wb.lle the human
brain ha b been impede<! b~· its an·
cestral vestiges -and these two
elements clash rather than c<>mbine.
Th.is maifunction has made us more
ferocious than any other species of
animal -using our intellects ror
bestial purposes.
This is an intriguing theory. Ratber
than being the lord' of creation. man 11
seen a.s lts dupe -as a curious aaa
ominous "sport" in the evolutionary
process. who ml19t now u1<e the ln-
tellec1ua1 part of hi11 brain' lo rectify
the error of the evolutionary procesa
and make his own mutation into a
creature whlch cao survive ii.$ own
biological lnsulliclencles. Rut if we In·
vent auch a pill. what will make ua
take it?
Billion
Slutloa, S.D •. Com1er: ''Rigl\t "°"
Congreu is tettln1 r~ady to ha"
•nother J.O -1 ~ndlna billions. and
undoubtedly they'U do a n un-
precedented Job. It wou.ld b e
tomtthl.nl of a surprise tf tht ad
bud,et does not hit another au.ume
hip."
t' '
"'-"'~ ... -...... -,..... -.... --·------
A Question for Lenders
To the Editor:
The recent FHA interest increase to
711-. percent (including the 1h percent
insurance) has posed a question. To
elucidate:
My daughter and her husband, who
have looked forward to buying their
first home for some time, on March 26
fOWld what they wanted in a Hun-
tington Beach tract. They made a
Le"9rs fro"' rudet's •re welcome. Nomially writers
should convey their menage In 300 wordJ °' le~ •
Tiie r11111 lo ~no. S.ller• 10 flt -ce or ellmlnele
libel Is reserved. All lellers IT!utl include sl9nature
Ind m•lllM •ddrtss, but t\llT!a Wiii bt Wttlllttld on requnt.
deposit that day. and were oold the troversy over arresting people for
papers would take about 30 days for "defacing" the American flag?
processing. My persooal opinion is that I'm a tit·
When they were found to qualify. tle tired of people screaming at me they were informed that they could complete the transaction by sub-that the flag is SACRED because it
mitting a cashier's check for the STANDS for millions of American
balance of the down payment, and lives and ao on. I will not let any man
then, hopefully, the. loan would go tell me what is sacred. It is not his
throu~h before .the mterest rate. at_ptace· no m1111 has thar much authori· that time totalling 61h perce"t, was ' raised. ty.
THEY COMPLETED their part of
the paperwork on Saturday, May 4. On
Tuesday, May 7, as you know, the in-
terest was indeed raised. A phone call
on May 9 elicited the information from
the lending agency that the paperwork
at that end had not been completed in
time, and that the interest would now
total 711• percent.
However. although the bulkier·seller
was not oow required to pay the
higher points in order to obtain the
loan, t according to a r e c e n t
newspaper article, the difrerenoe in
this case woold be about $1,200 to $1 ,.
400) the price of the house remained
the same. even though it had originally
been priceo to cover tl)e add.itlonal
points.
/To all questions to the bank, the
seller, and the FHA concerning the
matter, the stock answer was, ''The
seller pays the points, so what's the
beef!" The FHA did gnmt, however,
that the seller bad to include the
points in the price, for obvious
reasons. I
TRUE, GLORIA and Rick could now
refuse to accept the bouse under the
new interest rate, but it is just what
they want, and s u b s e q u e n t in·
vestigation has indicated that an new
construction is being sold under the
same conditions.
Question: Why was the deadline for
the lower interest rate NOT based
upon the buyer'• actions -since he
was the one who stood to lose -
rather than upon the seller's and-<>r
the lending agency's since they stood
to gain by dragging their feet?
To me, this kind of setup makes
about as much sense as if a taxpayer
were 1lc> be granted a bonus for filing a
late tax return. Any comment?
ELIZABETH LANCASTER
'f'l•I I• Not S.erefl'
> To the Editor:
May I add my views to the con·
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
C~iltg all thJ1 flat contro·
versy. l With people would spe.nd
more tJme practicing p,atrlotlsm
arid leu time "talJdni ' Jt. . -T. J.
I
U there is a God, and I believe there
is, it is His place alone to declare what
is sacred. H there is oo God (or
EternaJ Force~or whatever) then
nothing is sacr tba; case. we can
be governed by ma -made 11aws only.
And no man can, th refore, proclaim
the law as sacred, and the taw can be
changed to suit the times and places
relevant, being merely a toot of the
society.
MOST PEOPLE believe that GOd
has proclaimed human life as sacred.
But this is no excuse for transferring
this sacredness to a piece or colored
cloth which traditionally symbolizes
human lives or "freedom" or a million
other thjngs.
I repeat, HUMAN LIFE MAY BE
SACRED, BUT A FLAG IS NOT. no
matter what it may mean to some
people. It must be one of the ultimate
absurdities of our society that anyone
could be imprisoned for lying on a
piece of red, white and blue cloth.
PLEASE DO NOT publish my name.
as I have no desire to be socjally
"hung" by my good American iriends
and neighbors because of m y
''radical" beliefs. [ am peaceful,
sincere and gOOd-natured. but I guess
T think "d21ngerously." r have no
desire to be known as a Good
American. just as a good person.
B•d•••'• .Polltln
To the Editor:
T. 1.
Two items in the May 15 edition of
the DAILY PILOT pique my curiosity.
The first on page 2: Assemblyman
Robert Badham's proposed study by
the state on the jet noise at Orange
County Airport. And the second on
pa~e 14 in Political Notes stating
Robert Badham's current political
stand on the wie of the Orange County
Airport
EucUy one year ago, May 15, 1967,
on the opening morning of the Public
Utilities Commission bearing on the
applicatlon of Pacific S o u t h w e s t
Airlines for a certificate of nec:essity
and convenience to serve Orange
Co1tnty Airport. Mr. John Hopwood.
representing Mr. Badham. read a
statement ror Mr. Badham en·
thusiasticallv endorsing I h e ap.
plication of PSA.
APPARENTLY Mr. Badbam WH
not at all con«med with an Increased
use of the Orange County Airport by
jet aJrc:ratt, but wu encouragtnf 1ucb
~tMty.
I was pre1tnt at the S&nta Ana
Chamber of Commerce •hen Mr.
Hopwood read this statement. In fact
he rpob to me that mamln~.
Since that dme tht "allence '111
betn dtafe.ning" on Mr. Badham'a
potltion on this subject until today.
lntttesUns? ~
PoUtJc.1
RUTH H. KENlSON
Silly Sarcasm
To the Editor:
Here's my reaction to "Curriculum
for Today:" (Comment Page, May 11)
Someuoe bas spent a lot of time
organizing and writing this so<elled
curriculum, and r feet -what a col·
ossaJ waste of time! U. this person
would spend an equal amollllt of time
vwiling a school. he would realize how
inaccurate a picture he has painted for
thousan·js to see. Also, he must feel a
little ashamed after reading just below
his hit of silly sarcasm to the article of
an 86·year old man who actually
visited a school. was quite impressed
with what he saw and urged others to
visit schools.
IF m E S E L F · PROCLAIMED
"curriculum director" really is con·
cerned why doesn't he help UCI
students raise $4,500. They don't need
this money for a Sit-In : they want to
take less-fortunate kids to camp Utis
summer and the money is needed ror
food and equipment for the children ;
(the college students wiU volunteer
two weeks of their summer to be with
the under-privileged kids ).
There are thousands of other things
the "Curricuturn Director" can do
with time such as dropping by OCC
and listeni·ng to the spring band con-
cert or the spring choraJe. or see the
rodeo, or forget about writing a cur-
riculum this month and write a note of
congratulations to the young gent from
OCC who just won a nationwide speech
contest.
These opportunities exist every day
and on every campus and they don't
take any more time, thought, or
energy than drawing up ridiculous
.. curriculwns'' that only make the
generation gap wider.
A FINAL REACTION: the author of
the 11State University Curriculum" is
a pretty good example of the genera·
lion gap. He obviously felt that private
universities such as StanfoNI and
Columbia were bastions of law and
order and free Crom student dissent
and unrest -even though his own son
attends one of the two schools.
Unfortunately. the self·proclaimed
"Curriculum Director" only con-
tributes to the conditions that be, and
everyone else, deplores so much. But
the solution doesn 't lie in aattasm.
The thousands of outstanding students
who read his "curriculum" mUlt only
think "here we go again. another
armchair expert; why doesn't be tum
off the TV and come out and set what
we're really doing -and wbo we
really are?"
A more positive approach can be
made with the tame amo1.111t of t.lme;
and l.U'ltil it la made, we'n probably see
more of the ugliness described in
"Curriculum for Today." Writings
s\dt as this are more the cai. -
than the solution.
JIM WOOD
Monday. May 20, 1988
T,.,. editorial pagt of tM Dant
P1Lot .,,1u to inform mid ltim-
1'latc nadna1 b~ prttcnting thfl
nciolptll)fT"'• opfnlON crnd eont-
mnta1'y on topics of int«7Trt
crnd rignificcmcs. bfl prwidiftg 4
f ontm for the t%J)rflrimt of
our ''odtr'' opfniont, crnd b11 prt1enting tM djvtr11 vicw-
poinfl.-of in/ormed ob1cnier1
and IJ)Okfrmt'n on ~ of <hf
daJ.
RGbert N. Weed. Publilber
INt>lANAPOLIS.
Drivers of COllVen
al:lout read)' t:oda)r
SQG.mile Memorial
the LotU4 turbines
dianapolis Motor S
records over the "
But they could b4I
A. silbermaon. mE
time U, S. Auto
heads the 500 techr!
He noted that thE
and chilly Saturda~
ol Loodon set the .
Si:%1ing
Jim Seymour (
330-yard interr
field champior
Tenni s ·
Rates 1
Over Li
NEW YORK (AF
great, but I'll hav
Tilden as the best
time."
'l'he speaker' was
eran tennis offLicat
West Side Tennis <
N.Y .. who has beer
and near great fot
··As man and bo
all of them." Ben is.
remains the great
He could bring his
tuation.
"He was still a Ii
the age of 50."
Benisch was 001
1L108 fans who sa
tennis' grand slam
three times world
fessional, win ti!
Garden Invitationa
6-3 triumph over fe
Rosewall.
After the spec-
match, many of tht
cla.iming they had
between the two bE
lived.
"It's true, it's a
day," Benisdl said
compari.lons. The
rillc. The service :
powerful n8'1f •ei
used wf th t uch dev
"But you have 1
with their eru. l ~
have ma~hed the
ltft."
&Disch pointed
Budge, In hJs he,.:
yean without Joli.
of •11Y dacrfptkm,
"Which of the1e 1
claim?" he asked.
''Budfe was a p
"" EUIW'Orth Vin 1.11ybod,y on a lfvw
and Roeewall and
must C'Ollftu. art
Molt ol the pl'os 1
the French Open ti
,.
Mond1y, MlJ 20, 1968 DAIL v PILOT D
Weather May Be~ide Fate of Turbos at Indy
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) -
Driven or conve.odooal racers were
about read1 today to concede 1be 52nd
500-mlle Memorial Day race to one of
tbe ~ turbines that dashed to In·
dianapolis Motor Speedway quallfying
records over the weekend.
But they could be premature, aaid S.
A. Silbermami. metallurgist and long·
time U. S. Auto Club official JJbo
heads the 500 technical committee.
He noted that the weather wu damp
and chilly Saturday when Graham Hill
of London set ~e 10-mile qualifying
record at 171.D m.p.h. and Lotus
teammate Joe Leoovd Of San Jose,
Callf., raised it to 171.561.
Silbermann uid the picture could
change if Memorial Day is bot.
"The turbines' ilorsepower and tor·
que wil drop off about 20 ' percent if
the temperature is 85 degrees." be
said. "They hJt their peek at 58
degrees."
Bobby Unser of Albuquerque, N. M.,
winner of the last three USAC cham·.
pionsbip ra~s and defending In·
chnapolil champion A. J. Foyt Jr .•
Si%%1ing Timber Duel
Jim Seymour (right) of Golden West College sails over sixth hurdle in
330-yard intermediate race Saturday night at the SoCal track and
field championships at Cerritos. Seymour held this slim lead over
Hout.on. were amona a host Of drivers
l.DCl c.ar. owners whet llicl .the phton
can will have to run a separate l'aCe
behind the turbines.
They said the "heat engines" will
ruin auto racing.
Sllbermann commented, "did you
see that crowd Saturday? Turbfnes
won't kill racing. \be crowd will
always turn out to see sometb.mg new
and controversial."
The Saturday turnout was estimated
up to 2&S,OOO.
Unser bad the third·best qualifying
speed oI 169.507 m.p.h.Jn...aaEa&le·O!·
fenbau.ser ~ wW 1hare lbe.lront IOw
witb Leonartt and HUl.
Fifteen oau that quall!ied Saturday
averaged 167.225 m,p.b. a g a 1 n st
163.577 for the first 15 last year.
Mario Andrelti of Nazareth, Pa ..
who held the track quallfying record
of 168.982 with a piston engine, burned
a piston Saturday in his turbocharged
Ford.
He came back with a replacement
engine that bad run only 10. miles and
was fourth-fastest at 187.691.
Santa Monica City's Noell Carroll (left) for fourth place in the event
and a trip to this week's state finals at Modesto. Seymour was clocked
in 38.4 -his best this year is a 38.1. (See Page 24 for details)
Tenni s Vet
Rates Tilden
McGlothlin Hurls Tonight
Over Laver
NEW YORK (AP) -"Rod Laver is
great, but I'll have to stick with Bill
Tilden as the best tennis player of all
time."
1'he speaker was Henry Betlisch, vet·
eran tennis offtical and member of the
West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills.
N.Y .. who has been watching the great
and near great for 54 years.
"As man and boy. I've seen almost
all of them." Benlsch. 69. said. "Tilden
remains the greatest I've ever seen
Jle could bring his game up to any si-
tuation. ''He was still a master craftsman at
the age of 50."
Benisch was one of the gallery of 11.l~ fans who saw Laver. winner of
tennis' grand slam as an amateur and
three times world champion as a pro-
f essional, win the Madison Square
Gardea Invitational with a <Ml, 6-3, 9·7.
6-3 triumph over fellow Australian Ken
Rosewall.
Angels Return to Face Bosox
ANAHEIM -Boston's defending
Am«ican League champions Invade
Anaheim Stadlum tonight, a place
which brought anything but happiness
to them a year ago.
Despite winning the peMant, the Bo-
sox could capture onJy two o( nine
meetings .against the California Angels
in the Big A and l\lng Carl Yastrzem·
ski had a . 182 batting average theri~
and no Imme runs durillg a season
when he won the triple batting crown
ThJo; three-game series marks thr
first return or 1968 lo Anaheim for
Boston whJch split a pair with the Cai-
ifornians in the East earlier in th!!
seasan.
J06e Santiago, who pitched the 4.;
victory in Bostoo, takes the hJU fo1
the visitors tonight opposing Jim Mr·
Glothlin.
Santiago stands 5-1 oo the seasor
and McGlothlin Z.2. Jim, however, ha~
a 3-0 ~ mark against Boston
while Santiago Is 4-2 vs. the Angels.
California split its double header at
'\finnesota to wind up a road trip, win·
ning 2-1 in the o~ and then losing
3.2.
Ex-Dodger Ron Perranoski receipt·
ed for the winning California hit in
the o~ner but then put down an eighlh
inning Angel rally in the nightcap.
Perranoski relieved Dave Boswell in
the ninth inning of the opener and
Angel Slate
~:: ~ ::::1: ~: :::::: d1 :·~ ~~~( :rn: May 10 Anciels •s ,o~ton 't55 o.m. KMP~ !'Ml
M-v 73 ""°"" vs levolaNI 1 SS o l'l'I l(MP( 11'M
~ave up a run-scoring single to O<ln
~fmcher which was the Angels' seco1i.1
and the eventual decider.
Sammy Ellis had pitched a Lhrct"
hit shutout for eight Innings, and had
two ouf in the ninth when Cesar To·
var beat out an inlleld hit.
Paul Schaal committed a lhrowin~
·rror and Tooy Oliva drove in a run.
Minnie Rojas came on in relief and
'!Ot Rich Rollins on a called third
strike to end the game.
All three Minnesota runs in the c;er·
ond game came off Clyde Wright whO
left in the third Inning. Jim Kaat pitch·
ed a three·hitt.er for seven innings
against the Angels before Don Min·
cher and Tom Satriano Jed off with
successive singles in the eighth.
SICOHD OAMf
CALll'OllHIA MINHISOTA a• r ~ '111 o , ~ rbl
Schaal. lb • 0 I I Uhl1tnd~r. cl l 0 0 0
fltl>Oz. c1 l 0 0 0 Tov•r, u • 0 0 0
Morion, rl I O O O Oliva, rf l 1 I O
Fre<i0tl, 1' • 0 n 0 Klllobrew, ID 7 1 1 I
Rtlchord1, II • o I a ROiiins. lb 7 o 1 I
Hinlon. rl ' n 0 0 R,CIArk. 2b ' 0 0 0 Minch••. fl) • I , 0 Alll•on. If , 0 0 I
~11rlano. ' ) 0 l 0 Herntrldtr. u n 0 0 0 "urorMI,,. or n t 0 n C..,.tw, lb J 0 I 0 PnlO\, n 0 ft Q 0 Z1mrnu,...,n. c J 0 0 n
IClf~P•lr·c• "" I 0 ft 0 ICAAI. 0 l 0 I 0
KllOOC!. 1b l o n o Wo-1t1111<1..,,. • n o o o J Hall, (I 1 0 0 I Ptrrtr>O>H o 0 0 0 0
Wright, o I 0 I Q
... ,,~ •• 0 0 0 0 0
He~. "" t o n o Ptllln. o 0 0 0 0
Roelflrs. C I 0 0 0
Tolals JA 1 I 1 Totals M l 4 l
CtllfOrnta OOl 000 O?O -' Mln~so11 701 000 OOx -J E -SCM&I. OP -C1lllornl1 1. Mln-11 l
l08 -Collfornlt t, MIMtso•• S. 28 -l(flltbrtw. S8 -Ollv1, ScMal. Rod9tr1. S -Rollins. $F -
Allfson.
I~ " " Ell •• )0
Wrltlll tL.l·l 1 1 Ill • l l I I
Hellner n n o 0 0 I 0
1>1111n , 0 0 0 I 0
Rolai I • 0 • 1 0
K111 1w.1-11 1 s ' ' ' Worthln9'0!' I ) 1 0 0 0
Perranoskl M/J 1 0 0 0 Time -1 ,., ,Attende~ce -14,t)t
Rain fell a1Jn05l all day Sunday and
the weather clear~ onlunu.Jl2.U1h.
for one more driver, Jochen Rlndt of
the Grand Prix circuit, to qualify. He
put a Brabham-Repco into the line-up
at 164.144, slower than any or
Sat.urday's qualifiers.
nie crowd had gone home when the
rain stopped 1t1ddenly and the track
dried enough for running in the last 15
minutes of the official time.
Speedway officials hurriedly brought
back tow cars, ambulances and timing
equipment which had be&n removed.
The special effort was made
because Rindt, Austrian livinc hi
Switzuland ~ -lG-rlMl in the
Monaco Grand Prix next weekend
whlle final trials are being held for the
500. .
So does Den.is Hulme of Ne•
Zealand and lie also was given a last·
minute chance but couldn't reach
'qualifying speed in bis Eagle-Ford.
Ronnie Duman, Indianapolis, and
Chuck Hulse, Shingle Springs, Calif.,
bumped the wall In practice runs Sun-
day before the rain. Neither waa hurt
and the cars can be fixed.
Brickyard Action
Gurney Qualifies;
Vet Quits Racing
INDIANAPOLIS Corona de!
Mar's Dan Gurney qualified for the
May 30 Indianapolis 500 in the fourth
row and veteran driver Chuck Hulse of
Shingle Springs, Calif., announced his
retirement in Indy action Sunday.
Gurney drove his Santa Ana-made
Eagle to a 166.512 mph speed to put
himself in the first position on the
fourth row.
The pole winner is Joe Leonard of
San J ose with a record 171.559 speed
in his Lotus-Pratt and Whitney
turbine.
Arson Blame
Hulse announced his retirement ___ om...racing shortly after ~escaped
ln Fire Loss
Of 10 Horses
ROSTON (AP) -Ten thoroughbred
horses and a training pony perished
Sunday at Suffolk Downs Race Track
in a stable blaze, Fire Chief Alfred
Long said was started by an arsonist.
The fire was positi vely arson. Long
said. He said two fires were set in
toilets earlier in the day.
"There's nothing in that barn or
open area that would have caused
this." he added.
More than 50 horses were driven
from the burning stable by stable
hands and track personnel. The fire
was in a one-story combination Ce·
ment block and wood building.
There was no estimate on the value
or the horses.
The dead included Bar Roller: Loris
Mel : East Best, valued at $5.000 by
the Gin-Jo Slablei;: Brooklyn Brid,lle,
valued at $30,000 : Finest Crown.
valued at $15.000 : Xenophone. valued
al $35.000. a n d Ma ybe This Time .
valued at $6.250.
The first six were trained by J.A.
"Pat" Patterson ; the others by Bryan
Webb of Detroit, track officials said.
A goat -a stable mascot -and a
dog also died.
Thomas Beedem. general manager
of the b'ack. said races would be held
as scheduled Monday.
Long said stable boys discovered the
fire but were driven back by intense
heat when they tried to free the horses
who r>erished.
Three feed rooms and several stalls
in the center SC'ction burned. Long
said. but the fireproof construction
kept the fire from spreading to other
areas of the J.year-old structure.
The building contained a double row
of stalls, each housing 30 horses.
injury in a crash.
Hulse hit the inner wall coming out
of the northeast turn.
His car was damaged too badly to
be repaired for Sunday's trials. there
wlll be two more sessions next
weekend.
Hulse. 40. announced after his wreck
that he was retiring from racing. He
operates a tire store in Rancho Cor·
dova. Calif.
It was Hulse's third wreck at the
speedway since he first showed up
there in 1960.
He took an eighth place In the 19Q
Memorial Day 500 but had crashed in
the last three seasons.
He was 1959 champion of the
California Racing Association and
finished No. 4 nationally in the U. S.
Auto Club standings in 1963.
Hulse was in a spectacular accident
during a sprint race at New Bremen,
Ohio. in 1964. His car flipped end over
end with such centrifugal force that
his eyes were damaged and he was
unable to focus for several months.
* * * Indy 500 Lineup
Dancer's Image Nearing
Triple Disqualification
BAI...TIMORF, f AP) -There are
two triples In the m a k i n g in
thoroughbred racing. Calumet Farm
wants one; Peter Fuller wants no part
of the other.
A triple for Calumet would be reatiz.
ed if Forward Pass wins the June 1
Belmont Stakes to go with his tainted
victory in the Kentucky Derby and his
convincing triumph in last Saturday's
Preakness at Pimlicv.
Fuller's unwanted and very im·
probable triple could also occur in the
Belmont -a disqualification of his
Dancer's Image.
ln the case of Dancer's image, the
odds have already been defied beyond
belief.
The gray NaUve Dancer colt Hnlsh·
ed first in the Derby ahead of
Forward Pass but was disqualliied
when a urinalysis revealed an Wegal
medication in his system.
Then in the Preakness. he was dis·
qualified rrom first to third for bother-
ing Martin's Jig and Nodouble in the
stretch.
They were the first d.Jsquallfications
in the 94-year history of the Derby and
the 93 years of the Preakness.
But by the time the interference
took place. Forward Pass had the race
well in hand.
After the spectacular, fast-pacec1
match, many ot the gallery went away
claiming they had just seen a match
between the two best players who ever
lived.
"It's true. it's a dlfferent game tn-
day,•• Benilch aaid. "and hard to make
comparisons. The ahobnaking is ter·
rilic. The service and I.be volley are
powerful new weapons never before
used with such devastation.
Olympics Next Goal for OCC Crew
Jockey Ismael Valenzuela kept the
son of On and On in good position from
the start and when he asked hJm to
move turning for ho1™!, Forward Pua
sizzled through the stretch to beat
Robert J. Kleberg's Out of the Way.
Another head back was Dancer's lm·
age, whose jockey Bobby Ussery wu
held blameless by the stewards who
ruled the interference was beyond tht
veteran rider's control.
"But you have to compare playera
WiUt ~ eras. I am sure Tilden could
have matched the present-day pre•·
sure."
Ben.Itch pobrted out also that D o n
Budge, ID hie be~. oace went two
yean without Joa1D.C a llnllt match
of any~n. "Which~ M boy1 .can make that
cJaJrn ?" he uked.
"Budge WU a pOWerf\Jl player. &t
WU ElltWorth Vfnes. wbo could btat
anybody on a lfven day. But Laver
and Rolewall and theM Other kids, I
must confe11, are t.trrtftc."
MOit of the pros left for Parts where
the French Open belln• May '17.
By RAV PLUTKO " .... .,..,. ...... ,...,
Saved by the bell -mate that read
Olympic Games.
Aft.er all, when Orange Coast
College completed its first unbeaten
crew 1M1on on record lut weekend
there wan't much to look forward to.
That ta wfth the uception of a berth
ill tbe 1988 OlympJc Garne1 at Mexico
City -the nut tarpt fOr tl'lt
1wuhbuckling Pirates of COtdl Davt Grant. Oran,e CO.at mack that posaible
Saturday Oft Le.kt Wuhlnltbn .. Ult
Buer ~led ,rblt h8d to be the moat
ttarttinf up.t m crew hiltorJ by cap-
turing lhe Western Sprint ch11m·
plonshlpg.
Not only dld the Pwtes post thelT
17th straight win of the campaign, but
ORANGE COAST BANQUET
Oruge CoHt Col~le wlll stage tht
ftnt of two eprtac 1porta awards ban·
~ at t :at toalOl 18 die studut
ee.ter.
Swlnunlai. lllllq ..,. enw &eam~
wlD be llelMrff tilt evellla1. wltb
heeball, track, tituh Hd IOU tuml
la d9e spotlJPt Mer fl.
became the flrat junJor college team
to ever win the title -logaing that ef·
fort in record time.
With Al Pla"Ce seNtng as cox'n, the
combination of Jay Amesloy (bow).
Ron LJndsey. Phil Peterson, Cary
Simonds, John Bale. Dave Haloday,
Geoff Strand and Jim Jorgensen
(stroke) iipped to a 6:07 time over the
2,()()0..meter course.
"Actually, we expected more trouble
In Friday's heats with Oregon,'' said
Grant. "However, we were ill front
after the first 30 strokes and I knew
we would win easily."
In Saturday's finals ol the JV
Wutern Sprints. Orange Coast won by
1 ~ lengths ovf'r hMt Washin«iton
<&: 11.9). with Cal f8: 12.S). Stanford
(l:lU). UCLA C8:17.4) and tM
University of British C o t u m b I 1
(8:21.8) fol~ng in that order.
Wiltl the exception of the win by
Stanford last year. the host -Huskies
!lad won every previous race -that Is
until Grant and his Pirates hit the
waters.
The warm weather and calm waters also played a ma.jor part in the win by
tbe Pirates ae the looals clocked 44
strokes (average) -the fastest ever
logged by an OCC entry.
Orange Coast grabbed the lead at
the outset Saturday and held that
margin untJl the finish.
Grant wlU now break hJs crew do9iln
to the belt four men to take part ln the
Olympic Games' trials at LOng Beech
In \ate July. Orange Coast Will eater
the four·man crew competition.
Forward Pass covered the 1 3/11
mUes in 1:56 4/5, running the final
three-sixteenths in 19 1/5. He earned
$14UOO ftom the grou pune of
$19.\200. the richest ever for a Triple
Ctown race.
Gene a«rs Nodouble, whose rtder
stood up in the irom at tbe 1lxtffath
pole. was rnoved to third after:
Dancer's Image wa1 set down, mid
James Sklnner's Yankee Led wu
given fourth money.
Apprentice Wlllle McKeev.r, aboarcl
Nodoubte. wq fined '100 for ml.1-
judgtng the flnlJh line. but Goff and
trainer Gene Sonni• qreed the-...
Judgmerit dJd not alftct the Gl1llr' " llnlsh. . .
-~-... -........ .._ . ..._ .......... ,.,,. ..... -.. -._ .. .,. -...................... -. -.-. .... ~ -..._, ... --..... ..,. ... ---· --·-. ----., ........... --~ ..... . .. ~· ~ -···-~..-...· '
(
ft DAILY PILOT
Anemic
Dodgers
Face Cards
LOS ANGELES (AP) -lnjW"les
and a frequect lnabllily to score more
than one rua a game continue to
plague the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The miracle ii that they're only 4~ '
games out ol the National League lead.
'The Dodger hitt.en were happy to 5 hit the road today. The club opens an
11-game toor tonight at St. LoWs.
Af~r four games with the first·
place Oa.rdina!B. the Dodgers will play
four at Houston and three a• aitein-
nati before returnTug home May 31
·against San Francisco. The attack has sufrered in the ab-
aence ol outfielder Al Ferrara and
aecood baseman Jim Le!~bvre.
Ferrara fractured an ankle early in
the season and Lefebvre baa been out
three weeks with a sprained wrist.
Casper's Victory
8enef its-€b.urch~
U.S. Treas.Dry
F 0 RT WORTH, Tex. <AP) -
Methocllcal Billy Casper. became the
first player iD golf history to wlJ'I over
$100,000 this early in the year Sunday
wttb a runaway fiv~·stroke victory in
tbe Colonial' National I n v l t a t i o o
Tournament.
Cu~· '25,000 flnt prlz.e put him at the $10S,•..M bracket. He says the
Mormon cb~h 1eta 10 per cetlt and
the 1ovenunent the re1t. •
"But 1J n c l e Sam won't help me
a.Ink thOle Ulree-foot putts," cbu<:k.led
Oalper, f\&elled by four bolled egg1 and
• papeya.
Caew II* a cloaing round two-
Ullder·par •over the tou1b 7,~yard
pg-'10 Colonial Country Club course to
flnllh with a 275 and become a two-
tlme winner in the tournament.
The victory also put Casper alone H
the only three-time winner on the 1968 tour. He previously 1oored victories at
Gree~boro and Loa Angeles.
His ooJy hint of trouble came at the
par 3 No. 8 where a five-Iron landed in
the middle Of the green Ind rolled
over. Casper chipped beck and three.
putted for a double bo&ey.
"I wun•t too worried ewa ttt.u,"
said Cuper. "I bad a lar,. Jead.;r-
Cuper was ao unworried tbat on the
next bole he fished for pit balls in a
creek wlllle Uttler puu.ct. Tba be
calmly wallted up ancf lmocked b1I ball
in for a ·bird.
On the 18th areen, a spectator
shouted to ()asper .. don't milt Jtt" u
be approached a abort par putt.
"I won't," Casper caUed beet. He
Clidn't.
* * * $$$Winners
For Colonial
The injury llJt mounted over the
weekend. ShorUtop ZOiJo Versalles
bruised a shoulder Saturday night and
was oo the bench Sunday when Hoos·
ton swept a doubleheader from the
Dodgen, 2-1 and 3-1.
IRVINE WINNERS -Dr. John Helton (center) re--
ceives the Irvine Coast Country Club's president's
cup championship trophy Sunday after he defeated
Woody Smith (!ight). BiJI Schau_ppner (left) was
The earUelt previous date for any
1olfer to win over Sl00,000 was lo
June, lWT when Arnold Pabner won
$15,000 with a leCODd-place ftnish in
the tourney aupervisor. P resenting trophy is club t be U. S. 0 pen to get a $113,225.63
president Forest Smith and in rear ia Mu Miller, total. !CCC tournament chairman. Cuper wu never rNlly pressed -~__,;..;;;;._;,;;..=;;===:.-•al;;~r;: be ataz:taLtb&..day tied-With A1rtcaJr' GvrPlayer,w?loliJQ ~-WU. new..c:amiu,1or woay._
in Sunday's 9eCOOd game. Starting
pitcher Jim "Mudcat" Grarit bad to
luwi the game in the 99COod inning
after pulling 1 muscle in his shoulder.
Then, late in the game, reUewr Jack
Billingham, a rookie 9e11satioo, pitched
so ineffectively he was sutpeoted ol
oonceailnC 1 tor'8 arm.
The Dodgen are IO rich in pitching
that they can afford to reet Grant and
Billingham unW they're recovered.
But the attack mistel Ferrara, who
may be out for the eeaeoo, .-id Le-feb~. who hopes to ~um to duty iD
another week.
At home the Dod&ft'I UHd to be al·
most unbeatab•. They've klet 12 of
their first 21 home (Amel, acoring OO·
ly 35 runs to the opposition'• 48.
IKCHIO NM•
ltOUITOM l.ot AJtO•LH ., .. ,. ... , ....
I r..... c 4 t 1 0 W.Oe111t, ct I I I O
Meftlle, 211 4 1 1 I Perlter. lb l t 1 O
S11u1>, lb 4 1 t t Sell•9t, H I I 1 O
Thomel, rf J I 2 I Cof111"9. rf 3 0 1 0
WyM, ct 3 t t t ll.hllay, 3b 3 0 0 0
AJPrqmon!e, lb J t 1 t Halltt', c J t 1 I
W•fMfl. H t t t t Altlf'I L 211 3 I 1 I
Torrea. u 4 0 1 1 P-lcll, M 4 o I o
Cwli.r, It ' t I t Gr•nl, it O t I O
Ktllkh, it o o o O
F1.....,, "' 1 0 0 11 .......... .. • 0 • 0 l llllf'tlllem, fl t I o o
'"""""' .. • •• 0 F1lr1v. "" r o o t Tolals II I P J Totals 21 1 f I
HOUllOll ................. , 1Cll 100 910 -3
Lot Antllle .. .. .. .. .. .. 000 OD'I 000 -I IP M ll •ll 81 IO
Cu.lier (W,M) f I 1 1 ' 4 Grant (L,H) 1411 t 1 1 1 t
Ktlllcll ~113 l 1 1 3 1
Ao11lrre 2 I o t t ' lllllntllem VJ 1 1 1 I t Purdin 1·1/1 t • t O J WP -~ant, Mu'"-. TlrM -t:a. A,__ -25.tlL
MURRO BREAKS
JAVELIN MARK
GARDEN CITY, Kan. CAP) -Mark
Murro, 18, set 1 world javelin reeord
for junlora tn leading Mesa, Ariz., to
the championship of the National
J unior College track meet Saturday
night.
Muno'• throw ol 1'73 feet surpassed
the former world junior mart of 5-
lllh, aet in Rome by Arne Os of
Norway.
Sports In Brief
Competition Picks Up
For PAC-8 Tracksters
BERKELEY -It's oU to Modesto
this week for a number of Pacific
Eight Conference champions who may
find the competition a bit tougher in
the California Relays.
• Earl McCulloucb, Lennox Miller and
Bob Seagren or PAC-8 champion Uni·
versily or Southern California are en·
tered for the Modesto competition Sa·
turday night along with Terry Thomp-
son and Dick Fosbury of Oregon
State and Gerry Undgren of Washing·
ton State.
USC won the PAC-8 title Saturday
with a near record 128 points with Mc·
Cullocb and Miller the big heroes.
Each wa. a double winner In his own
right and they teamed with 0. J. Simp-
son and Fred Kuller -to lead the TfO.
jans to a 39.3 victory in the 440-yard
relay.
McCullouch won the long jump with
a leap of 24-1~ and the lZ.yard high
hurdles in 13.8 seconds while Miller. a
native of Jamaica, took the 100.yard
dash in 9.4 and the ~ in ~.8.
At Modesto, McCullouch will run
in the hurdles against such as Willie
Davenport and Richmond Flowers
while Miller will go in the 100 meter
run against a crack field which in·
eludes J im Hines. Charlie Greene and
Willie Turner. Miller nipped Turner
in the PAC-8' 100 and ~.
Thompson took the PAC-8 880 in
1:49.3 and iD the California Relays
he'll go against George Hunt of the
Houston Strlders and Dave Perry of
the Pacific Coast Club.
Fosbury. the upside-down high jump-
er. cleared seven feet for the first
time in the PAC-8 cbampionsblps. He'll
have to do better than that with Ed
Caruthers, Peter Boyce and J o b n
Rambo lined up against him at Mo-
desto.
He'll go against Ron Clarke of Aus-
tralia, Kmy Pearce, an Aunle a~
talding the Uniwnity of Tuu at El
Paso, and Alvaro Meiji of Colombia
in the 5,000 meter run at Modesto. It
could be the best event of the show. .
BoWea Pu1e1 Tut
LOS ANGELF.S -BW B.lda ... lie~ 1 l"llled &aU at UCLA ba& lie
eame ..,_._.. WI ftn& Mt ""
creditably.
Bolde• &Ikea over at Quarterbaet
~lams Gau Bebaa, die inee~ear
replar wbo wood •P W1 aeldor year
u H All-Amertcu ud winer of &lie
Helamu Troplay.
Bolden directed the ofleaae ln
Saturday'• ~crlmmage wfndtn' up
sprln' practice. He completed five of
et1ht paues for • yards aod one
touchdown.
The junior laad 1 far dlffereat 1Hu·
tlon t.hao be '1 expected t. ope• wUll ln
the fall. Gre' Jone1, the No. 1
tailback, sat out tbe workout to pro-
tect a 1U,htly 1pralned bee and hla
replacement. sophomore M I c k e y
Cureton, wn hurt after 15 minutes of play.
Dr. F .. er 1Aa1'e•
INGLEWOOD -Dr. F-ager, the well
known horse, flew back to New York
today but racing people, with some ex-
ceptioos hope he'H come back to rWl in
the rich $100,000 • added Hollywood
Gold CUp Himdicap in July.
Dee DeBusk Second
The except!one are the owners and
trainers of the California-baaed han-
dicap horses. They'd ju1t as soon Dr.
Fager would race 90Dle pla<:e else.
To Barbara Ferrell
Mn. Dee DeBualt ol Coeta Mesa was
a 9eCOlld place finisher in the 100.me-
ter duh Suoct..y at the women'a South·
ern Pacific Aaaociatioa ol the Ama-
teur Athletic Ur»on Distr1ct track and
fteld championship in Santa Monica.
And she loet to the glrl who was
chotea the outlltandlng tndlvidual per·
former of the meet. Bu-bara Ferrell.
Mlsa Fem!ll was timed ln 11.3-two
tenths off her world record-and Mrs.
DeBuat logged an lU time.
CroW'G cttlel pl.led up 149 point& to
score an easy win over the runnerup
LOI An~let Mercurettet with 100
points.
Then wwe teYeral former Olym-
plana and Olympic hopefuJs kl the
"'1d of 350 girls and women who par·
tictp9ted In the meet.
Olga Connolly wan the diacus with
a toss of 155-feet-7 while Mary Rand
captured the long. jump and the 80
meter hurdles. She leaped a rather
unimpressive 18-feet-11 IA to win the
1oog Jump and toot tbe burdlec in 11.1
seconds. ,
Debbie Norris ol tbe Southern Call·
fomia Miasl.let set a new national rec·
ord for the 12-13 year ase group wben
she won the 880-yard run ln 2: 19.3.
Sixteen · year • old Ordillla Smith,
OOUi&in of sprinter Tofnmje Smith, was
another double winner in the girls di·
vision. She won the long jump at 18-
feet-1034 and the 100.yard dalb in a
time of 11.0 seconds.
U.S. national champion Lynn Gra-
ham was the winner in the ~·s
shot put With 1 beavt! of 46-feet-4.
As Hollywood Park headed into a
busy week, to be climaxed Saturday
with the $30.000-added A r g o n a u t
Stakes for 3-year-olds, Dr. Fager and
his impresalve triumph in the $119.600
Callfornla Saturday was sWl the talk
on the backside.
Per1clte .._..,
ADENAU, Germ1•1 -Por1che ltaa
its third atraigld Werld Cap for 1peed
ud eadaraace a Miid a.day after
conquertn1 Ole wtodla1, irueUng
NuerbarirtDI moutal• track Sunday wt~ 1 l·Z Olllala.
Josepll Siffert ef Swttzerlaad bancfl.
e4 the wtuiJI' West Germu thrtt·
liter Po14aclte aM set two tract
record1, vtrtuDJ 111artn1 Por~e of
Uae worhl trademark title.
More Sport•
On Page• 2 4, 25
Fuelers Eye $4,500 P"Urse
Two special events have been add•
ed to the weekend's raclne calendar.
A fteJd of 100 Volkswqena art plaD-
ntnc to com~te {n the speclal "8 u 1
Eliminator.• Two"Y.l\L teU handkap
brlclttta have been t1tabllabld.
Jn addition. u experimental stock
match rac. be1Wttn tbe Rua Davia
Ford Mustang of Gas Ronda and t h. e
''Blue Fox" Chevrolet Camvo owntd
and driven by Norm Cowd.ry will be
held. It'll be a belt two.out-of.three If.
fa.Jr. •
8 t e v e 8ovan of .Puadfna b r o k •
OCl.R'a track record for fwm1 cars
..
Jut Slturday nipt, ltnakin& to •
7 .ee and 195.M mpb docttn1.
Bovan drove bll car to three
strllcht wiDa Oftr f\lll 1Jtertd oppo.
nenta. He plJola a Dodi• Cbarpr.
Jolnlnf Bovan la .tlJle 11 to 2 tunny
car tr1umpb °"" the ""1 altertds
wtre ~ Yotblr, a.M eoaw..1. Fred
Goetb and FraU Plluo.
Bovu. 24. ctro.. IUa macbl.ne to
three lttallbt WY cmr fuel altered
foes wnu. 8oncb. t.eoa ntapratd
and Gary Reed. •
Helton Cops
Irvine Title
With 7.5 Win
Dr. John Helton ls Irvine Cout
Country Club'• pn1ideot'1 cup cbam·
pion for 1988 after be turned beet a
bid by chief cballen1er Woody Smith
Sunday aftS'DOOD.
Dr. Helton, a eeveo handicapper,
defeated Smith by a seven-and-five
count. Smith is a 10-handlcapper.
The winner t h u 1 emerges 11 t h e
kingpin of the 132-man, month-long
tournament. He is • golfer of 22 years
and a former amateur champion of
Kentucky. He also won the ICCC
clwnploDlhlp in 19116.
Smith la the son of club president
Forest Smith, Jr., and has been
playlnt IOlf ooly_U1ue years.
Vice president's flight winner was
Lee McCoUOCh with Milo Marchetti
runnerup. Winner of the secretary's
fli ght was Verne Schauppner and Sid
Kelley was runnerup.
Tom DeForest was the champ in the
treasurer's flight •nd W l l b u r
Robertson was second. AJ Leedom was
No. 1 in the director's flight and Bill
Metcalf came in second.
The low qualifying medalist for the
affair was fred Kalanborn with a net
87:
Stanford Gets
Delayed Win
SEATn.E -The Stanford crew is
celebrating a belated victory <Nf:r
California.
Two weeks •ro when the two crews
met at Redwood a ty. tbe California
shell 1ank early in t b e race, giving
Stanford an apparent victory.
But California protested because of
the weather conditions and it was sug-
gested that the team finishing highest
in the Spring Regatta last Saturday at
Seattle be declared winner of the dual
meet.
T h e Bears finished fourth behind
Wasblngron. Stanford and UCLA, so
the win went to the Iodians.
be shot b.ia "worst round in flve
years" in soaring to a 78 for a 283
total.
Gene Little!' fir-1 a closing round 88
to finWI second with an even par 280
worth $15,000. Tommy Aaron carved
out an even par 70 for $8,375.
The 36-year-old Caeper, HCODd on
foll'• all-time money list, said Colonial
was the type of course that required a
)ot of thini:ing.
"That's the reuoo Ben Hogan (a
five-time winner) does ao well here. He
has the ability to tblni bJa way around
the course."
The affable Ca.per blrdled No. 1
with an elght·foot putt, and Noa. 2 and
9 with two-tooters, and drilled a Z.foot
bird OD No. 12.
'A Long Wag to Go'
Stanky Still Dissatisfied
With Chicago's Rebirth
CHICAGO (AP) -Four straight,
eitht out ot 10 and 12 out of the wt 18.
The Chicago White Sox are coming?
Don't bet.
"We're still not hitting or pitching
the way we should," said Eddie
Stanky Sunday a f t e r his Sox h a d
polished off the Oa.kJand A's 6-2 and 7.
3 to sweep the four-game set.
"Don't get me wrong.'' said Stanky,
whose club lost its first 10 games of
the season. ''I'm not knocking winni ng
games. but we have a long way to go.
"Somebody's going to pick up a
paper in Texas or in Oklahoma and
see we .won four straight. 'Here come
the Sox.' they'll say. Well. I hope
121ey're right.
"But somewhere else, somebody is
going to say 'the Sox haven't beaten
any of the top teams' and they will be
right," continued Stanky.
"Yet. we lost the pennant last year
because we couldn't beat the A's and
Washington conlistently. We held our
own against the top teams and I think
we can do it again this year.
"We will have to get the hitting from
Pete Ward and Tommy Davis." said
Stan.ky "and our pitching isn't up to
snuU yet.
"When we lost those first 10 games
a lot or people wanted to count us out
o.f the r aee." sajd Stanky. "Now that
we're winning. the same people are
asking questions about winning ~
pennant. "I've aaid all along that this ia a
long season and there 're 1 1ot of
games to play. Sure, we took four
straight from Oakland, but we didn't
play that well. We have to play a lot
better if we're going to keep winning.'•
Bob Kennedy, manager of tbe A's,
might have said amen 11 he were
listening to Stanky, But be wun't,
although he concurred that the· Sox
didn't play that well to take all four
games from his injury-riddled tum.
"We played like little leaguers,"
sajd Kennedy "yet we could and
should have won the first two games.
We made crumb head plays but that'•
what lwlppeM when you go with
youngsters.
''I'm not making any alibis but we
have had a few injuries and that burt
us, too. Rick MoOO..y batted only OftC9
in the series and hit a pinch homer.
Also I've had guys in there wbo
shouldn't be playing. But what can you
do?"
Monday has bad an injur-1 let mt
Joe Rudl has been playing with an in.
jured toe. Jim Pagliaroni left the ftnt
game Sunday with a sprained shoulder
and Mike Hershberger baa been oat
with a shoulder injury.
And seven of the Sox vidariea in
their recent revival have come at the
expense of the A's.
"Remember," said Stanky, ''they
were the Kansas City A'1 tut year
and they knocted U1 out ol the pellDIDt
with that twi-aigbt l'ktary t h •
Wednesday bef«re tbe 1euon IDdad ...
Baseball Standings
Amertcu Leape
W L Pct
Detroit ....... 22 12 .647
Cleveland ..... 20 14 .588
Baltimore •.... 18 16 .529
Boston ....... 18 18 .529
Ml.DnelOtl •••• 18 16 .529
Chicago ....... 15 17 .469
CaHfontla ..... 16 19 .457
Oakland . . .... 15 20 .429
Wasblftllon ... 15 20 .429
New York ..... 14 21 .400
~ ........ w11,t111111':."o-._fe1ro;1 ' ~r:,,. ~ 81~rmo.. t , It IMIM' !:t:.;"ta afMM~tO,t, rain
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St. Louis ...... ~ 14
Atlanta ........ 20 18
San Francisco 20 18
Ci.ncimati· ..... 18 17
Chicago ....... 19 19
Los Aa1ele1 .. 17 20
Philadelphia .. 17 16
Houston ..... 15 20
New Yort .... 15 20
Pct •• .$58
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,!.f DAILY PILOT Mondiy, M11 20, 1968
Golilen West Track Coach Tars Romp Long Beach io Battk
In Finals Sacramento for Title BUD TUCKER 'Compelled' to Make Trip
:: LOS ANGELES -Considering the empty gestures of
)>aseball people. you conclude they are in no particular
Jush to correct the major fault of t!'e game ..
' Critics of the pastime are not without a point when they
complain the game has a tendency to drag. . • An inspired statistician once fi$ured out that during a
iwo hour and 30 minute baseball contest. the people in the
)<lats actually witnessed 18 minutes of action. ~ A veteran baseball writer once estimated that in 30
;ears of covering the game. he spent a total of three mo~ths ~f his life watching pitchers scratch their noses and vanous
other parts of the body.
By RAY PLUTlO
6f .. Del" ""' SMff
N'OR W ALIC -Coach Tom
Noon ot Golden W e s t
College had planned on tak-
ing in this year's state JC
track and f i e I d cham-
pionships, but his plall6 have
changed slighlly -now he's
compelled to attend.
However, tbe personable
mentw will take t h i s
weekend's jou~y in stride
as a· trio of his prize athle~
will be on die ovaJ for
Saturday's runnlng ol the
aMual championships at
Modesto.
Miler Bob Messina, hurdler
J im Seymour and two-miler
Biil lnglehart proved worthy
of the trek, h a v i n g
qualified as one of the four
top athletes in th e i r
s.peci.alltles last weekend at
the SoCal finels at Cerritos
College.
Messina (4:11.2) an d
Seymour l38.4) just madt it
at the wire in their mile and
33().yerd intermediate hur-
dJe events. each netting
fourth pl~e by a matt« ol
inches.
However. I.he reaJ story
was the feat ol Ingteh.-t in
· · ,.._, • ""'}·'Tlile race as
he ran 8:59.6 for the.· third
fastest cJoctlnc In that
event iJl the Ualt.d Stat.
(JC) this yeer. ?
lronioally, tbe time "'
only good for third place ln
his race as Ron Filter of
FullertDn set the pace with a nation's top 8:51U' effort
and Randy Hartmao of
Palomar was second lb
8:59.2.
Fister's time was juat one
of four So<AI records tbet
wet"e erased on the evening,
whil& another WM equalled. .. As mentioned earlier, It does not appear likely the
brains of baseball could care less. In the event, however,
they ever make a move to give the g~~e back to the fans,
the following. suggestions for streamlining are respectfuUy
submitted for consideration.
For openers, running around the bases arter a home run
1..'0uJd be eliminated without any noticeable loss to the .for·
mat of the game. The entire ceremony is rather mearung·
less. certainly needless.
* * * ~ *
H er ma Jl F r•a"n k I i n
(llarbor) ripped to a 35.8 in
the 330 intermediates, Fred
De B er nardi (Glendale)
t.hrew the discus 170-9 and
J:>hn Holladay (Chaffey)
tired the javelill 217-7 for the
new marta. SoCal Track Results
Seldom Any Drama -. -Ste~I .IC ,. ..... 1-1. l uuell (LA CllVI t.7 2. ~
1Ea11 LAI f.I J. Turftlr 1c-1on1 t,t
4.. MUt'I CL.A Velk'll f.I $. Scott
ICotleH flf OtMrll N 6. J-CL.A
Cll'll f.t.
Tllere is seldom any drama oonaected wl~ a play-
er Jotclng alone around the bases. Jim Piersall oace hit
a bome run and ran backwards around the bases, but
such a radJcal departure 11 altogether rare.
Actually, spectators do not watch the man run around
. the bases. If a guy In the seats ii a sufferer of tbe side ~ which gels the home run, he 11 occupied with jumping
up and down and spllllng beer down the front of bis wlfe.
If be Is a fan of the team against wbicb tbe blow Is
smitten, be ls sJltlng with bis head In his bands and
crying and looking al bis feet.
Another waste of lime Is tbe ritual Involved witb
the Intentional walk. Little purpose Is served by a pltcb·
er unloading four wide throws to the catcher.
It would be expedient for tbe catcher to 1lmply bow
to the batter and Invite him to take Drat base with the
compUmenta of the defending sJde. Not oaly would this
save time, It would add a touch of claH aad dignity to
the game.
The argument against the foregoing, of course, 11
the possJblllty of the batter reaching across the plate
and depositing one of the '4'ide pitches out of tbe ball
park. Statistics reveal, however. this bas happened Je11
than ten times la 82 years. For one thing, a batter 11
required by the rules to remain In a certaln area around
home plate and few ball players have Jong eaougb arms.
Dread~d W cute of Time
Another dreaded waste of time is the conference with
the pitcher when he is being belted around and the manager
goes out to gel him. OnJy the lip readers in the seats have
any idea what is being discussed.
At that, the conversation Is of little interest. BIU Rigney
of tAe California Angels was once asked what he says when
he walks out to the mound to visit a pitcher who is being
abused by opposing batsmen.
"I alwyas say the same thing," Rigency replied. "I walk
out to the pitcher and ask, 'Whal the hell is going on out
here?' " "fr he can't give me a satisfactory answer, I ask him
for the bal I." The foregoing ls the quick way. There are times wbe.n
the pitcher chooses lo argue with the manager and the tans
are forced to sit impatiently while the two engage in a
wrestling match over the ball.
There are countless other ways to speed up the game.
For instance. they could do something about doubleheaders
such as starting the second game first and the first game
second .This Ugures as the next best thing to abolishing
doubleheaders altogether.
Probably the best idea of all wouJd be to play all base-
ball games like they were going into the tenth inning. Sud·
den death. in other words.
This plan would work as follows.
If the team batting first scored one or more runs. the
opposing side would get a chance to tie it up or win it in
the bottom of the first inning and so on and so forth. This
would save hours or time, to say nothing of adding many
thrills and great interest.
The more you contemplate such a formula, the more
vou like it.
· l. for one. can 't think of an ything more delightful than
a one·inning baseball game.
t•rrl1h1, ,,.., iov TrllH1111. llK.
Deep Sea
Fish Report
Baseball's
••Md "" !O ., ~It.
AMUICAN LUOUI
no-1. M-. (1!111 LAI 211 2. l u'"
Mii IL.A Cltyl 21.l l. L" IComl'IOftl
21 ' 4 Coe (1'1Hdeftel 21.7 S. J-1
ILA CllYI 11.7 6. kolf !Coll-of
Ouertl 21.t.
.-1. Turner Clell LAI '1.4 2. Coe
IPtwdMtl •7.J J. Ettlft IPlu~el '8.0
•. Watson ICMfff'll •.t .I. M<KlnMll (Mt. SACI ...,, •. ,. ... non (Gltl'IClelel
0 . .1.
--.1. /Nrt1tdt<1t 11'1trte) 1:51.0 2.
Hall IEI C1mlnol l:Sl,6 l. Crene CLOft9 aHdt) l:Sl.7 .. (O<lrtd (~~
l<lrton) 1 :SU J, CHl!tmell ( Blil(r>
lltldl 1:'2.1 •• ~rtlftet (Eut LAI
l:SU.
Mll.-1. MulllM ll'ettdeMI 4:" > 7. MIMldt IC:•rtllol) 4:10.0 ). Strodl
IS•nle ANI '''°" .. ~ .. 1 ... 1Gokkn WHI) 4:1U S, "OJI (l'elclme'1 4:11.J 4.
Lootl (lektnfleMll 4:11.t.
2 Mtlt-1. Fhtw (l'ullerlon) t:•.,
(SoC•I RKordl 2. Hartman I Pelomerl
1:!'2 l. lnelthert (Go4<9tn Wnt)
l:SU '· AIPlttr IL-1111,hl t:OU 5. Lewson (P11ff•11•tl t :OS 2 6. llodrf·
-• llektnflekll t :07.0.
120 HH-1. Frenklln IHertlorl 14.) 2. • Vul (ComotOftl l.t,I >. IClnt !San
0.... MHI) lU '· M<Luc.e• 1v .... tun) IU s. Seymour (~ Wnl)
H .t 6. ltltt (Pt lom.r) "·'· UI IH-1. Frenlllln (Hertlor) lS.I
(SoCAI lltcordl 2. DullOft (UI Clt'f)
ll.J l. Wlllltmt I Stn OIWO Mnt I
11,, 4, Seymour (Golffft WHtl Jl..4 S, Ctrll0<1 (Full<lrlOft) JU 6. Ktl1IM
(LA Vellnl JI •.
440 lltle'l-1. LO! A""ln Cll'I "1.t,
Tiu SoC•I IKordl '· COINllOft ('1:11
]. bhr.lltld (O." 4. EHi Lot ~
vein 1'1.61 s. Herbor W .11 6. San
l ernerdlno Valley 1•1.11.
Mlle ltl"'-'· San 01-MeM
U:IU) l. Etsf Los A""lea (l :IJ.11
l. Lot AntelH Cllv 13: t4.41 4. l'lerc1
U:IS.11 s. Cerrll01 (l:IS.S) •. Chtffev
(J:IU).
J1¥elln-I. HolladtV IChtffevl 21M CSoCt l I Kotdl 2. Sulllven (l'utltrtortl 1,..0 l. curt11 IStn 01-MIN)
lt).I 4. l'owell (Fullert"'l lf0.11 s.
Trntrelt (Pllomtrl 1•1 •· OOllbl (Vtnture) llM. ,,._,, Murollv (Fullerton! JMYt 2.
O.lemtrdl (Gltnd•lel SJ.Wt >. 11-
Mr ILA Vellevl 54-1 4. Howertl Cl'tt• 6t11tl Sl·llV. J. Tatum (S...ta A11tl
»II'> 6, OuM !Rio Heftdo) 49-J\4.
f'V-1. Ori•*• IGr-fl'IOl'lt) lU 2,
l'lokler l"ltfnl IM l. Din (I I-·
11del lH 4. Nl•on (L-htdll
IU S. (lie) lair (Hertltf) eM ~r
(PaudeM) IU.
LJ-1. Wllllt ms ILA ClfYI D-7 2.
Frellltllft (Htrbor) n•~ ,, J. F•llowt IC~aflrtl ~·~ 4. Swltitr 1"111-)
ll-2 s. J-• IStn ler,.er•tne Velle'll 2).1 6. aalr CHerborl 22·!0\ll.
HJ-1. Lt.,. (East LAI M t. H\lfl
(LA Cllvt H l. Wooltft 1'-'"'-t.
em) H •· Mc<llll (llekonlleloll ... S. Voes IG-....lt) U 6. (tit) FrKtteua
(LA Cltvl end Ove11 IMooro1r1I) U .
TJ-1. GI"'°" (L-lu~lt) 1M14
2. Wllklna IEeat LAI '9-0 ]. ll111C1tr
ll•ktnfl•kll •1.. 4. ltoben Oft <••
ttnfleld) ... , .... s. SCntHl IMI. SACI
4'-414 6. H1usm1n !Fullerton) ~4.
Discus -I. O.Bernenll IGlefldtlt l 110-t ($0(11 ltocord) 2. Wll10!\ lie·
ttnfltld) l!l·I l. J01tn1on IS1n11
AN) Ul-7 4, 1(,,.,. lle•er,flekt) IS.J
J. MUl'PllV 1Fulltrlon) "'.. •. ''" (0re"9t COH I) 1411\o,,
l' ... I l'.Cot SltM'-
1. LA Cltv (tllhl 2. E .. 1 LA Ut )
l. lllkerslltld 1361 '· Htrbo<' UlV.l
s. Fullerton 1:121 •· PHed-CH\111 1.
llltl Compton •nd Pierce IJll f, L0<1v
leach IJ41 10. Stn 01'90 MeM (221
II. Glend11t 121 I U. 90LDI H WIST
Top Ten ·-.. .,.. ·-Mc(.....,, Saft l'r-lsco, 17 I Swo-
• Al ll M Pct.
F How1nl W•llllntlOfl lS m 22 u .1"
boo91, -Y0111, •1 ~L Cinch,.
111n. 211 1tfti.. Cll~ 221 s1-.
;.s lit It 11 .Jll -.toll. n 1 a.Ma. Cll~ 211 L. White NV
w Horton Dtlroll
MOftdlY 0.klend
Cerew Min-•
Yolrttm1-. lotfOft
•Mt Cle••ltnd
Frttlten Dtlrolf Foy aotton
,. 1CIS 1' n .Jll Mey, ClftCl ..... 11, n.
JO " 12 ,. .lOS ~ Dec"'-~ \~ \! ~ ~ "*• Allellte, M. 1.•1 S.lma.
JS m n 11 .2" Hew Y'"-M. 1.•1 carne11, s1.
JI 12, II l1 .!ti L..,lt. •I, ... , WIN, ,._llMti.llle,
.Jll 104 If )1 .291 ).I, •1•1 IMflcllel. le* "rll'Clla.
2S ~1'U .t11ji•iLi.~7Aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill ....... _ Hamiton. '"'°"
F Howard, Wnltf"''°"· 171 W,...,. '°"· 0.frail. •1 "-. Cel"""'-· •1 Kll!ffrtw. Ml,,.,.10f1, 81 Ward, Clll-
cu o, II M<M<llle<1, WUlll,,.,... a. ·-.. .,.. "' l'.Howe ... WHlllnt ..... ,., .._...
llllllmot'I. 1AI W,Hotteft, o.!Nlt, 221
•-· Call!tfftlt. 211 T • ...,,..., C ..... lelld, 11.
John. Chlc.e90. •t. l.000: Witl"Olllll.
Detroit, M. 1.0001 f'trn!IOllll, Ml!IM-
aote. i.o, 1.0001 Sefllleto. aoeton. ~1 •
. al1 Mc:L11ft, o.tr.4t, •t, .m,
MATIOUL L•A•U•
f'ltyw C• • H •" N .
·-CIMlfll\ttl lf 144 17 JI ... FIGOll St L..,la }I U1 tt • ..
M.Alou "111*1,-. U 17 • 1' .211
Oro" Htw Yorll ll '" ' ,. D l'nnc-Atlente l• St t It .m
A,J...,_ C·lftC...,.." ll ''° U U .'21 F Afeu Atlen11 lS Ul " 4' .120
s111111 """'""' u ns " a .ltt l .Wllllem1 Chic"' JI 15' " '7 .lit T Aaa,.... Atlan11 11 Q t 1' .JN -·-H.AMwl. lllltfW.. ti ~. .... Fr~ •• ...,...., ,... Yn. t; "'"· * 'rMCI-11 ,..,.. $aft ,r~._ 1.
Every minute and
a half ••• someone
calls AAMCO
(YefY ...... MMCO ..tl911ft -
t11a11 ro.ooo ''*"-""''°" IWOlllMta. Yau 1et frM ._..,._ • trM f'Off•
cMclt, fnt. ~ Mn'lc.--.t
tlfnft 1<1 Jlltt -day. AM ••tll
MMCO. )'OVt tn1<1t111la•loft c1n 1111
· Walter Winchell ~ ~ -IOO MMCO C"en-
IWW -· to c-t. l¥ef)' ml"ute aM I llaff, -
. says·
"Oeck E.xtcwd••'• 1•a1 Car Leaee
-the o• that aa11 'Baade JM wla
-tall• , .. whl ... !; It'• • lal• .,
a lease!"
PMOM TOIAY-
lltlCT OI Cou.ICT
-llfOll" ••• ., ......... ,..,
• F ,_ .. AAllt09I
EXECUTIVE
CAI\ LSABING COMPANYto
e...o...,. c..., •
Kl 7-3011
l , .
----
,, ................ "" 0-... ...... .. ...... .._ .......... ....
S.nt1 AM "' .. ''"' .. .... ... .. . ......,.
(16) IJ. Stnll Ane l"l 14. (!fl) UI
Vellev. Clltflty elld Ptlomaf Oll 17.
llltl Grcasmont tlld Ctrrltw (II) If.
II Camino (fl 20. 11i.1 l lwn1* eftd Soulllwt11em 161 22. (t,.) V-ra end
Mt. SAC 141 M. S." krMrdlfto (JI
lJ Cot!-of Des.rt l•I •• l"•I
OllANOE COAST lftd lllo ~ OJ u. Mocr;>ar' l"i) '
Additional balls •too eech
Los Angeles City College
breei.ed to a 41.0 ln the ._,
ya-d relay to equal t.he OCber
standard and also won the
team tiUe with 63~ pointa to
59 by runoerup East Loi
Angeles.
.iN.BEAOTiFUI·A·tt'AiiEil''srAoiur.r •..••..........•••.••...•....................•..•
TICICITS: ....,..,.._, ...... ,... .,. ...................... ca.
Alf u..... o.u ............. 0..,... ~ .... ONwa:,,,,,. Tfdoll ~ MlltM. CIW..
low•'f. 11rlt:•-•r•r 011 nrltl·l•moa•
fi.tt$f ont" 500"
lu/14-/ll, NT/on lord Tit••
7.75-14
7.75-15
8.25-14
8.15-15
lat TIRE 2nd TIRE
'27.00 •13.50 •30.75 '15.37
28.75 14.37 32.75 16.37
29.75 14.87 34.00 17.00
31.50 15.75 36.00 18.00
34.50 17.25 39.50 19.75
1.95
2.()6
2.05
2.19
2.21
2.35
2.3&
Ill the .FIRESTDIE _h_s~:4_, _38_.o__..o _19_.o__.o .___4_3.2_5..__2_1.&_2i,__~.5---'.s:
SAFE TIRE MAii .__:~_~;--+: _4_2._25-+---21_.12--'-4_8._00_.__24_.o--Jo '--~-.!.~~
In the checkered _:_~:_::. __ 4_3_.s....,,...o....,__21_.7_5 ...... 4_9_.7_5 '--2_4_.87~~_.,..J~;
hlrt f k All prlcn l'\.US tu" end 2 ttadfl.ln ,,,.,off youre«. I D •A ... lllllle "' wflh• ..,.,. tftly
FAST,
EXPERT
SERVICE
ND MONEY DOWN
Take months to pay!
riced ot f irt1tone Deolen and at an MrVlce ltati•n• 4i.,layfnt the f irestone sign.
2
Locations
to
Serve
You
Better
COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH 9 HUNTINGTON BEACH
475 E. 17th St.
,
646-2444 16171 leadl llvcl. 847-6081
IOTH STOIB MONDA T-FllDA T I A.M. • 9 P.M.
--'
-........... ....--·-....... -,_,,,. • '
' ·-
GOU
Wilt
Alli
Whtn hltti
sand,YoUr ch
·minimum °' r aand: You c.
under tht b.
I "thln° shot
bell out readi
Howev.r,
wet and hta\
ah1llow cut ·
If you cut too
1et tht club·
with· enouah
'baU QUt.
I
Thus you
and a shal~
You can r
cut simply l
illustration) •
and thus ''c
be the cut yo
So. use ye
10 to a more.
-·---.... T_.ey, INY
Clear & "•'-'I"
"IST IACI. 1 okh. Clt lm..... l'ur erk• "2.IO.
N lccolor1> I J Lambe< ,,,..., Some thine I 0
CheerMtder 11 Carr
CMryl'• Dtllthl u
SllU9 llulle CJ Sell• ~Lttf
El Orai
Out 0.. lelt IM Vt
MeVt l IL Glllloan)
Jaelt't Alolle (J At
Flt unll"9 IA Plnedl
SICOND IACI .
olds • 11p. Clelmln~
clelml"t "'ct MO! Mr. C. IC. CA Pl"'°
Velvet Promltt IW
Phenaon IR lleftCO
""' .. le <>n. (W He Hw Sam IM Ye...: Turft To ""c.e (W
Mllel CllY (J Trvlll
SuMll Ctktr (J 0c
t ronrv Io Vel .. 11U1 l'etO loCJlft (M VI
Art ··-,. C."'4 • ..... , (0 ~terc.1
AIM I
Trvdli. •0¥ (It Ce1 C·•rrontde (J Arter
"'"' fndltn (J S.I ...lle't Prln IJ Tr
TMlllD HU. S
old mt Ml..,• brt<I Ir
1"11. Pune MSOO. •
SIJ.000. 01-le A. A.()11 5-Victory
Kolo IC0<1 (0 ,.ltrct
leClllHI Gembler
llun fl Out IM Ye"
Al>o<ft1e10 (0 Veter
Ptl•me l(ld (J Tr
ll·Wllerelort Art Tit Iron Admire! IJ Le
Sweet Motion Ill ' Llllle Scrlb (W IN
ltcfOft Hiii (M V•
Set Wlllle Win~ C
AIM I
Mr. ,.unctuel (W i.
Ledy lotlQUt (J St
A·Chentrlo II 1111
l ·ROVll& l(t ltd (A
A-J. s. Du..n tr 11-L. J, lroolta
l'OUITM IACI.
4 11ur otd rnekttna.
-Hllll Juniors. Subdue
Mister Ed M. (0 I
Secret Fleet IJ S. A-lteconnelsaence If 8-Golor Me .... , (
Buono 0-nko I~ "•rttsl Treder IL
A·Toucvle (W Mllh
Sell Life IJ GonD Ht..,.11 ICkl IA f'llll
9 .. .. -
'
._ -'"
' ....... ti·····~' ···"V -... , •. J
G0Lf1NC1
WITH ~llltJ>&t p~ _....., _________ ...__ -.... .,..,.__
ALTER STANCE WHEN SAND.IS wn
When hlttlnc shots from soft1 sand, YoUr club will tncountir •
·minimum of resistance from th•
Nnd: You can cut fairly dffp
under tht bmll-thus avoiding a "thin" shot-and still pop th•
ball out readily.
Howewr, when the sand is w~t and heavy you will need 1
shallow cut throu1h the sand.
H you cut too deeply, you won't
pt th• club· through· the sand
with· enough speeii to pop the 't>mlJ QUt.
j
l
·1 ·~
I • •
Thus ~ need··• d"p cut t_brou1h soft sand'
•nd •·shallOw CJJ-t through deep sand.
You can mak,e· this change in the depth of your
cut simply by changing your stance slightly (see
illustration}. The more you .pull your left foot back
and thus "open" your stance, the shallower will
bl the cut your club makes in.the sand.
So. use your normal stance in soft
IO to • more..open stance in wet Hnd.
Hollypark
Entries
,_.........,,,,_, '-:;ti-llSlllmii!!!lalllll'CllSWll ... ~!aii~
,.., TWMl•Y· MllY 21, IHt-2'111 D•y a.cost• Del Sol ID Piere.a)
CIMr 6 f' .. t-l'lnt ""' 1:• P.M. A-R. Crill tr1lnecl entry.
a-1.. J. 1roa111 tr1lnecl entrv.
r<UIST •Ac•. 1 111' mllH. l yur
ol<b. Cl1lmlftt. Purse S59CIO. Cl1lmlnt1
prlc.a ""°· Nlccotorb (J L•mben) 120
She's Somtlhlnt ID Vtlas-J) 109
Chetrte1<1er (R C•mPH) 109 CllerYl'I 0.119hl (J Gon11te1) X1~
S-Rulli (J $elltrs) IU
A•pen Lu f 11'
El Gri z 114 Out On 1111 (M V1lenz11ela) 11A
McVll IL Gllll91nl 11'
J1d<'1 Alolle ( J Arterburn) l<J
Fi.unllM IA Pine<i.J 115
SECOND llACI. • turlon91. 4 vur
olds a. UP. Cl1imlncr. Purw MOllO. ToP
cl1lmlnt1 trice s.IOCO.
Mr. C. K. (A Plr>ed1l Vetv.t Promise (W Giies)
Phlmon (R l l1nco)
Pr011lc Ont IW H1rm11J)
...... Sim (M YIMl) Tum To P11ce IW Mallomevl
Miits CllY (J TrullllO 11 SUnnv C1ker (J GoflzatezJ
lronZY (0 VtllMlltl)
P110 Robles (f.VValenzuet.)
A rt ISIUI (It Cl,,,,.11 1)
llndber (D Pier~)
AIM Wllllllle
Trudel• l cw (R C1mP11 2) C1rron1de (J Arterburn)
F leet lndl1n (J Sellers)
Belle's Prlre (J Trullllo 2)
IU xlo.4
11• 120
11' 111
112
)II~
11'. 11'
109 114
lU
112 114
lot
THl•D ••cw. s turi-1. 2 vear
old m11den1 IK"td In C1llroml1. C11lm-
l"9. Purae M500. ToP cillmlnw l>f'lct
SIS.000. Glowdlle A.A.R.P.
A·Oll Sweet Victory (W H1rrts) lit Kolo Kon tD Pierce) 111
Reckless Glmbler (J Gonzalez! Ill Run II Out CM YaMtl . 11l
Aboul19lo CD VefaJQUHI llJ
P1l1m1 Kid (J Trullllo) lit
I -Wherefore Art Tllou 11' Plntdl) Ill Iron Admlr•I (J Limbert) 111
SWffl Motion CR York) 110
Lilli. SCrlb (W Mlhorney 1) 111
llecion Hiii (M V1leniuei.1 113 ~ Willlt Win~ (l Plngy Jr) Ill
AIM Wlltl1'11
Mr. Pur>ef\111 (W Mlllorney 2) 11'
Lldv l otlQUt (J Sellers) 115
1'·Ch1tterlo (R lll1nco) 110
l ·ROYl ll K1ltd (A Plned1) lit
J.,-.J. S. Ounn t111lned entrv. a-t.. J. llroalls tralMd entry.
rrouaTH •Acl. 1 111• m11es. 3 • 4 YHr old m1ldtns. PurM lSSOO. Wtsls
wood Hills J uniors. Subdue 112
Mister Ed M. ID H•"> 112 SKr.t Flett (J Sellers) 124
A·Reconn1lu1n<e (R ROSllH) XI09 9 <otor Mt FHI ( D Pierce) 112
l uono Domenico (W Herrll) 112
F1re1tl Tr1dtr IL Plnc1y Jr) 112
A·Toucult (W MlhorneY) 107 Seti Litt (J GollzeleU ll102
. H1w1ll l<ld (A Plned1) 112
911 .... -.... --
"'"™ a.Ac•. s fUrlOMs. 2 vtar
olds. Allow•ncet. Purse 56000. Hl1ll-
11noers Club ol Rolllnt Hiiis.
$lell1ko (M Y1ntzl Good M1nners (D Pitre.)
Clluckle l ov cJ Stltersl T.V. Doublet1lk IL Plncav Jr)
IHhl\11 lob (R Cl mPH)
Poonurull•ll (W H1rmelO
SIXTH aACW. • turlon9s. 3 vur old
fillies. Allow1n<n. Purn S7.!00. Wom-
en•1 Gulld HoPe for He1rlnt.
Money lo• C R York)
F.,..m•I /Mrrln• to H•lll CUrr1tll Mii (W Herr ls l
F•lllnt LHVH (J Sellers)
MaktedHI (J GoflUIH)
lrlsll Mi ll (l Plncay Jr)
s•v•NTH ••c•. ' turl-s. • ve.r
-6 1111. Cl•lmlM. Purse SIOOO. TOP
cl1lmlne pric. SIS.000. St. An1st1sl1
COUflCllolWomen. A-P-Hiii tW Harm>
Adobe (J S.Utrs)
La Qulnl1 1<1"9 (L PlncaY. Jr)
SICGll1rln Pl~I (W MlllOrMY)
On Tiie lltcony (M YlnezJ
ROYll Houst (J Aw1I) A·Rovat Eltfet (J Limbert)
COlll lr•v• IA Plr>ed•l 112 A-M. E. Mllttrldt tr1llled entry.
•IOKTH aACI. 5 furlontl on ttle
turf. 2 yMr old tllllel. c,.,.,., St1kn.
Purse l20,000 lldded. Gr-•2•.300.
To winner SU,300. Hew Rull• (R Yont)
Super lrttlt (J Sellen>
l ox Of Outtons (L Glllleanl
Huel A. (D H1lll A"1Mlh1nt (M Yenez)
Jen Jessie (W Herm11J)
Flee! Flot1lt (J l1mberl) o•Luckv You (0 Pltrctl
commlu arv IA Pined•)
F1lmvllle HOMY (L Plnav Jr)
Flcldle Times (W Mlllorney) No C1ullon CW H•rrls)
NINTH ••c•. 1 1(1' miles. • year
old• .. 1111. Cl1lmlnt1. Purse $4000. TOP
cl1imlnt1 price Sl200. Cr1ftv PuPll (W HUll'lllJ)
I'm Hltll <• 111nco> Cut A Melon CD Hill)
G111clous Hnlod (It G1rcle)
Hloll Rld1n CH JI-MU
Rov•I Oltte (M H•mlllon)
All lob llob (F G1r11)
Turks Cl1ulc (J Gont1le1)
Golden Wtd '" PIMd1) Don lob Jolln (M Y1nez)
Irish Frltndlhlll CD Pierce 1) Moon's Delltllt (J Arterburn)
AIM U_.. '°"' eunnv 1w ones> S.tflow.r (M V11«nt11el1)
Comolete Control IW Mllllornty)
H•nd Of r<et1 tD P ierce 21
,..._ ... __ , ... ,..._,,_ ........ _._ ... .,..,...._,"' = = :.: .;..:.::: .. ·~ :.?:"..:: _,.._"_.,..,._ .. ,..._,
tan WHAT TOU NI) OUT ••• ·-------·---::::::.:~.:::;.·-,.
11 .............. ........... = I .. --..: .. ,_. ·-..... ... -.. -:-,. ..... ~ ..... -.. . ..._...o.-ir ......... _ =::,:::----.......----
For Two Countf Teana•· Irvine Tennis Finals
·CIF PlayOff s Continue
Prep Golf
Summary
Varalty
ltv14'1 ...._ 111411~1 ........
SIMlet
Godthall CC-Ml fff. IC. Deaton tCMl 1~. '4. C. 0.1tot1 ICM) ftf, T1tt (C4M) t.2, •l.
.....
Hol.lt!N!l W1!1 Taft ICdMl ., ...
llff alld Creln (Loera) .,,, •i.
Hilton 111C1 FrMtll (Loera) dtt er...
erY Ind Wlnltrt (Etll ..... •2. • HoUemM ..,. T.att (CdMJ def ICi.M
and Fradtfl (Loart) •2, •1. Loara and Sevanna, 1a6t
ol the Oraage Couoty teams,
rema in the field in the
CIF AAA baseOall cham·
pionships aill.er Costa Mesa,
Westminster and Anaheim
fell in Friday e.11C0unters.
Loara is scheduled to
meet top seeded Long Beaoh
Poly in 'JWsday's feature
g.mne wbile Sav.anna travels
to Long Beadl to batUe St.
Anthony at Blair Field.
Ramooa, nerTOW victor
..... ~r_ Cost a M*l_sa, · hosts
Mllflo,wer at the, &cene ot.
the Rama.co.ta MeM tilt.
Evans Field.
AAA """'., ....
LI w loira•
Wtl'f'ln at C.llaffw
Thoulll'ld 0.kt W Rolll"9 Hlllt"
Notrw O.me •• SoUm Hlllt
1..WW l rlCftl
lelltl-r at RI"'-ll!Vl lll l"tril) '°""' Hiiis vt Glendlte• SIVIMI ., SI. Antllonv lll•lr l'leldl
P1I01 VtrdU 1t Doml-1 •site to be Clelermined t*v.
AA u-lr.aat
SI. P1ul at Dulrll
La Sllltl 11 Glendon!
AnltlOP« Valley et St. ''""'* Clllnntl IJlancls et RlllMttl
L-. lrlCMf ·
-.CW1I OM 11 GlreY
1'1vtht at ratm Sprlnws
Ounee 1t S.nll1" Killlla •• c-A
u-l r.cftt
V1ll1v Cllrislian YI ~ al
ctrrlt°'
C.lil>llrl1 11 '-" Jetlnto Horii•,. or Wlllllltr Cllrlrlt.11 1f Ontario ·
L-lrlGll
Aoole Vtlllv llve
llllhOll 11 llt Pine
Merf<OP• 11 P.,acltlt • •
Celt " HNburv P•l'll
Bait Info
Allow woolly worms and
nymphs to aink deeply and
work tJ!eip with a slow, twit-
ching action.
Wettmlllater M1rtn1
(!t) ilt)
c. Otlltft (CM) .., o.hlllll (CllMi ,.,, ..,,
Abbey (M) 72, def Kribel iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij (W) 75, 5-1.
Nichols (W) 73, def Po4cy
(M) 751 5-1.
Switiers (W) 76, def Das
vidson (M) 81, 6-0.
Powers (W) 75, def J. Pol·
icy (M) 83, 6-0.
Kampman (M) 80, def
Swain (W) 82, 4·2.
Markin (M) 80, def Els
dridge (W) 83, 6-0.
Junior Varsity
Westminster Marina
(6) (31)
Merits and Benefits of leasing lhe F1mily.C1r
lncr11sin9 numbers of Am1rie1n1 now 11111 the fa111tly car. ,.,_
p1rently the id11 ii: "wh1h' 9ood for co•l·C011aclo1n buslnen
men ls 1110 9ood for Mr. f1mily·111an." Exampl-• new Colony
Park atelion w19on'with a ir conditioni119 nn be l1uad for $119
111onthly (the f1bulo111 little Cougar 9011 for about $91>, which
lnclud•• all required service end m1inte n111c1 for 40,000 mllH
(oil chen9es, tune.ups, ate.). The clealar buys your preHnt cer,
frHln9 capihl for Investment in the marltet or that n catlon
properly 011 the river. An excellent booklet oft thi1 1ubfect la
fr.. for the askin9. Phone Johnton & Son lincoln·Mercury la
Newport l11ch. 6'42·0911 or 545-1271.
All Penney Stores ·Open .Every Night Monday Through. Saturday
PASSENGEI TIM GUARANTEE
aUARANUE MAINST MILllltE
P'9'!noy1 1ual'8ntu1 Wefl' FcweMCllt• tNe
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·----=-=-=---=·-=-.._.. .... ..,.. .. _.,........... t ____________________________ ..:., ________________________________________________________________________________ --:~-----------------------------:~ ................... __ ........ ;.
.._,_. ....._ A 1,. .............. _....,...._ •• e s ... .,,...,. ,.....,.....,_ .......... ' --....-..... ..,,,. ----
' .. . ... -... .................. . .. -
NEWPORT BEACH
( Fa s h i o o I s I ~"h d ) ·
-..... --........... __ _ .. --.... .._ -...... a.t ...........
HUNTINGTON BEACH
.. (Huntington Center)
t
c
------91.
• '
DAILY PILOT Monday, M~ 20, 1963 -------
•
POVERTY -A witch doc tor. right. on lhe Island
or Yap is seen on tonight's color special, "In the
Name of God." at 10 p.m. on Channel 7. The docu-
mentary follows work done in four poverty-ridden
outposts where missionaries are working to bring
economic and social awareness to the people.
TELIWISION VIEWS
'Emmy' Show
Disorganized
PEANUTS
GORDO
ly C..,._ M. ScWI · ....... ------~~--------~__.; COOMP1
CHOMP!
THe. TeNSION BETWEfN
PIUllDARf AllD DR,
~N IVOR FORCES
JENNIFER DELON TO
MAl<E A DECISION ..•
:~p~
l 'M 50RRY, .Wss PfLON, IM'IM. Hf HROS MORE
TIME ... MAYSf Wf ALL
NeEO MORE TIME.
PON'T OU. Mf ·; .X 'LL CALL YOU.
MD THAT COULD 8e JllWlfl'
ly Gus Anlola
l I
=:::.!.=:;...::=;;;;;;;;;;;;.------------·1 __ -
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -It must be embarrassing
to the televison industry that its Emmy awards
show Sunday night, honoring its best programs and
performers. stacks up with the most maladroit and
disorganized programs of the year.
THE PROGRAM, live from New York and
Hollwood, encountered all sorts of troubles, par-
ticularly on the New York end.
Dick Van Dyke, host of the Manhattan end of
the program, bad so much trouble with his cues
that lie finally gave up, walked off the dail, grab-
bed the script from one of the technical crew and
read his lines.
WHEN ART CARNEY and Pat Paulsen -one
in New York and the other in Hollywood -were
given spedaJ 11indlvidual achi evement" awards,
something went wrong in the coordination during
an attempt to split the screen between the two men.
gbth of them just stood in front of the camera for
what seemed endless minutes, not knowing whether
they were on camera and certainly at a loss to
know what to do. It was, quite frankly, a perfectly terrible show
rrom the standpoint of production. But it is hard
•o argue about the quality of the selections.
THE AUTHOlt and the 1tar of CBS Playhouse's ·oo Not Go GenUt Into That Good Night," Loring
.\Iandel and Melvyn Douglas, both were honored
for the original drama. Maureen Stapleton won for
her role in "Among the Paths to Eden."
"Rowan and Martin's Laugh-in" was picked as
the outstanding variety special and the outstanding
variety series, and its writers picked up a third
Emmy.
LUCILLI BALL for the second time in-a row
won for ber oerlormance in a comedy series; Don
Adams, for &la clowning in "Get Smart." Milburn
Stone, after 14 yean in "Gunsmoke," was reward-
ed with tbt supporting actor's Emmy while Bar-
bara Anderson, after less than a year in "Ironside,"
was named top supporting actress.
The late Marion Lorne was a popular choice
as best supporting actress in a comedy for her part
in "Bewitched," while Werner Klemperer of the
long-playing "Hogan's Heroes," was also awarded
for his support in a comedy. Barbara Bain, of "Mis-
sion: Impossible" and Bill Cosby of "l Spy" were
chosen as best actor and actress in the dramatic
series categories.
OUTSTANDING dramatic series was "Mission:
Impossible," and "Get Smart" was picked for the
comedy aeries prize. Outstanding dramatic pro-
gram of the year was arr adaptation of a stage play,
"Elizabeth the Queen.,,
There were far too many awards in far too
many categories. There were too many presenters,
and there wu too little organization.
FRANK SINAT~ the West Coast host, and
sev.era.1 of ~e presenter• and accepters, larded
thetr hnes with political cracks, mostly out or con·
text. Neither Sinatra nor Van Dyke was particular-
ly effective in host roles, but maybe it's bard to
follow the professional tnow·how of Bob Hope.
r·
Denni• i•e Menflff
. ' '•
JUDGE PARKER
1M NOT <5E:TTIN~ ANY ~sR.l..ADYP.
\NOU!.0 Yoo At>VIS6 ).4~ TO Mj\AAY?
®
f'flLOW CITTZENSJ .. GRIMYGU.~
IS ON l1S LASTLEGSl A VERITABLE
PISASTER AREAl .. ™E TIME HAS COME FOR POSITIVE ACTION!
Mun AND JEA=
MISS PEACH
Dlllll DEERE
'
ly Mel
I
J
I
,, J.
MONDA"'
MAY 20
: • N I •• (.
..,.,fl ......... .
llt ..... (11) • e Cll... Mtl: (Q !Ill
.,,_ """ U..-lelt • A ...
INM Mr WI llrl""8lt,....
WlltMbb .. tlle ........ ..,.,. (11)
• .... ., .... ~(30) 8111 ........ .....
&.• • ,.. .. .....: (C) (&0) Jerry t:tO • 8 CJ) .. ., lrfttitk (C) llOI
Ovnpl!J. Htwl~ qulb ~It borlnc lob •
ft ......,.... • ., ttl*t IC) (30) cavntJ der\ and becomes a Cd.
9 ""' Allll Sher. (C) (90) bt.. bl111' llMcll:omber. (R)
Steve's p1sts .,. Lou RIWb. Cliff D 9 (J) n. Duny n .... Arq~. Cuolyft Jones. Mlcllel Lt· Mer. (C) (60) "The lero Maa. •
tnnd. 111d 0011111 llorm1n. Rid Buttons port11rs Al Rlsllo, 1
D 111 O'a.ct fllowtt: (fJ -c... '°"'"' flWI ~I 1thletic 111rt
W (Wtst•NI) '58-J1ck Lammo11. wt.a IU.,llCfutllt lift has bltft •
Gte1111 F«d. Brl.n DonltyY. flllura * Mlthtr. John M.,..
• ,ortrays Jff/, I boy •hose tp'*"' m Tiit FlilrtltlMI (C) (30) inc. 1114 lttllter makes him ...... . . IE httJ .,... (30) much misfit as Al. Nehernia~ f'w. m TY Nlcll Sdleel: HNalurtl Sci· IOlf II McH1tly .,, , ...
tnca." r11111 ""' of cl•-bf. 1111 1111• with • leaon ~11 dltml1t!J II (1' (J) ...,.._ ..
*llY lft. "W " Set si.t
f!) 0 ..... lrlas flunt I ,.....
..... ICClllld at klUfllc llb tWt
!Mf. (II) 1:31 D DIC lllwl SerM (C) (Ml)
G n. ...., ._ CC> (30)
ID Cl!lmD °"' """ ,....._
Ilk. (C) (3•h llr) Rod Mtcltlah
...... (C) (30)
., ...... Holt M S.W....
fllb ... l ift SIDdt.
....... 'tllrwlll "-t 111rrates 11111 forceful, authoritlllw
IM C0111peillr1c apecl1I r'llOft '" t:JO •• CJ) ,..., Mc It) (!Ill
!tie rtCltl crlsi&. 8otll """' •d Tiit lwl111 111Nt 1 crippl.. ..,
wllit• discuu ltltlr '""' ftellllp wllOlt Mr·~ Mii• 11111111
lftd thoulflb 111 tllt cMI llPts JodJ II tll 1'111111 t ,,.~ ..
laaut. The first !lour daela "'"' tllt dlael ,,..... ... SlllJ ,....
"'llldlvfdutf," I llflltt tNClllf II I 11*1. (II) "*" adloal. • Nturn111r Y11t1t11 D tm (J) ,_. ,._ 4Q (Ill
""""· • welf·lo·do wtiltt i..s1nna-Jiii .,,... ,., • Jab wltfl "" ...
1111• 11141 •----'111 -_T.....,_ durilll a Mdir ... ._-J...
... .,.. Tiit ..... -llfl1111 ..,. 1111: Diii .. CIMtltlct di-. •
........... ,..,.. wltll ... ..... -..: -.. llld ...
ftlctin1 YI.-te • f t11fJ ull cloler It -.itlp. ~ "" "1111dtntllldl111 .. ,.. • n. ..... (Ill)
Tiit tlllrd llpttnt IXlllllMI """ l!l Im ................ "*"
ll01lliw lflpt m 11t1111 ttbn hi A "9fllnf 1M111 CIOllllllltled 9
tltt public 111d "'°" pm.ta aectof flllb II Ill YtrllOll, RIW YCKt, •
lo cruta t "'°" tciUll aocfct1. "' ~ tilt tide at mial I#
P11nlltfl Of tllt Mure art lnttr· tnnca.
1inld ....., fonl, •• ... • ........... ....,.
Ind McGalt 8Cllldy. The llst fief 10:00 9 QI (() CR hnMilt: CC) (m)
hour brlnrs cMc and llOl!lcal i.... Lucine Biii. nm eon.., i nd Gloria
en tolfflltr wtth t11t vitwfr, to 110C Lorine suest. <R>
onlY 4bcv• tilt Ioctl 111111R crisla. 8 ID (I) 1 SW. ~ (60) "W
W allt II "'""' "'"'1 COii· Stsh of c:o.. ... • Aalped .. i.
cemtd tlltll · tile PTObl• In tlltlr "9tlptia unlKPllillM crnhea " If.
.,... lied tlrmft .., ,,_, lloblrllOI
aJ lkllMt ""r (30) and Scott run Into UlltJl*fad flM.
Ii) T .... 'II bit wlltn tilt tn11pd fatlltr GI I
I!) llolldtrt J4 buuttful puant 1111 recoplm
Kelly. Ra19r C. Clnnel ,uw. (R)
7:00 • Cll lWlllat .... (C) (30)
Walt• Cron•ll•.
Q r r,.., (30)
II) I Hllll'I llf ... fQ (IO)
mw......-111 ..... ce> .,Lt C..Ylde
a''°"' ...... ,.... m <60)
D IN THE NAME OF GOD * An hour look at tht
changing world
of the missionary •
D lftJ Cil Cl!Bll!IJ 11 .. ._
7:JO II 8 (() ....-. tc> (10) " w. CC> C&O) n.11 ....-rt
Kitty ind Nnty .,. tbducted fn111 !lie "Siii of w.tn IH" ..r•
• tta11COKll 111 ttie "111 " Dod11 was m1MC1 111 locetkMI 111 -..
City and lltld ll'boMn In tM Ith llnt lllllldl of tllt h df1e Oc.tL
of border cutt!I~ hdro M11111. The sto11 toeusa 011 tllt nilssioNf·
.loflll Smn, Bid T eylor l\ltll ( R) Its w11o ett ,.rt 11 t11t 111M11!11C
8 n. lleMtes: (C) (30) '1titt!111 dmttd to M111fn1 Ntmcy, W~·
t11t Hllfl s.. • Tiit boJ1 becomt am medld1t ""' rr..-1ro11
•111111 abotrd M aid IC!loonw, ,.... ~ ti t11t ...
UlllWtre tlllt tllt "~" ,,... " fJ r..,. (C) (IO)
loot !ht lllllf Qute11 EJ1Dbe111. Chips ................ (C) (IJI
Raffarty l\lfsta. (R) E Tllln , ....
a wi .... YtNe: IC> (1J) "Road 10:• m ..._ <e» (30> Bin .1o11a
lo Munich. fl) Wlllf• ...,,..,.., Ir. llllllf
D (l7J CJ) CMlr II Mrta: (C) (Cl A look It Ille Mlnfln1 llnllt
(60) "llldd1nt at Dtratl WtllL" lift f11tura • bachelor party, b
Jim Silld1lr II lddnaptd 111 1101111d1. ton dltlnc W'S, and sllll1t hanf'
(R) outs.
Ill MllllM • """= (C) ....., ....... .. Piie. ..,... (comtdy) 11:00 81IMI "*' ~ (C) (30)
'59-Paul N1W111111, JNllM Wood· Jerry Dllnplly.
ward. D lh 11111 Meir R...: (C) (30)
Gtorse Sklnnlf. m""' •-<IO>
fll)lhf .... CW
Ill c.-.. , c.tllaea
• """= ~ .,..... laWtn"
(IMftturt) ~M CocJllll, L•
Gordon. D 11ewc tc> (30) 111ter wm.
l.110 0 .._ a ...,.. '-IMr. (C) Q Mtwlr. -S.rwdtr-41111!" (drt·
(60) Connlt SIMns, Ul'TJ Slorcll, 1111) '59-«tltll Andet. Susn Clbot.
•nd Tiit r tmp1At1oea IUllt. (It) m i.. err.. .,. IC>
..... ,,_ ......... ('"""'1) ....... fQ .,....., ......
'45--.IMlllf• Jlllel, ---Clftt11. hit I (l'lllltnct) '47--U!dl IW-
8)....... "'*= ~ .... Conitl Wilde.
""' S.S. """ Illa ... ll:Jll.... -r... letdlllttl'
PTI>ltlm wit!I ll*b ttdl ""l 111 (ldwlltu11) '51-Kerwin MathtwS.
tllb Prtlllitrt PJOll'lm, k11J Sainte. lllJ D.1nton.
Merla 111.u. D QI (I) n. T•ICM .... (C)
lllAllW•el .... u... 8 l!! (J)...., ...., ... (C)
•:Jt • a Cll Tiit L11CJ --= CC> C30l •,. ,,. IC> "°'
luq heilps MOOMJ ~.., 1 ,,...., 1.t:J1 ....... C11J
for lllit wft'a ....._,..., ....... • ..... ~ "Y1lt M•ft I
him tt 1""'_....llf1 "''" llerriM,•
TUf~OhY
sa-.titl
Pubic and Tr••
COMPLETE
PRINT1N8 SBVICI
---'4MJ21 ... ,.. .....
/
I
Sufi
By TOM i .. .. °"" '
.. Barefoot in
tiptoes &lngerly
stage of the Sant
munity Players'
with a curloua
stralnt that mu
berent comic ln
Neil Silnon's
almost unreco this treatment •
of a pair of nc the top floor of
apartment. Dia
---?.~1, =· -'t"..:C lt:::" ttt!'·~ ~~,.,o:ia
Tiii Cl ""' ....... . Corrie~ ...... .
~ ......... . ... ,.,., ~:~ :::::::
situations w h
peals of laughte1
county stagings
tie more than
knowledgement
Ana version.
Director Rost
lllWPOIT IUCtl -t .....................
TWO BIG :
A willful pulloaa
1betblecmeaG
PANAVISION Ml
ALSC
lfM I, MARTINS ,., ... ... -... ........ ... .-1
({ J
11ROl'llU
MrJllMGa
RUDI YOUI
0 PAN!'1S9' ·~
...... St
CelltlRe•t
The story o
she gave tc
man each r
EXCLl
COAST
RUI
f ..
..
us • • ..
I
~ .. • "
•
Ill • Ila ..
~
mi
~
I
'Barefoot in the-Park'
Suffers From Cold Feet
By TOM mus
• .. Dllw "'"' ... "
0 Barefoot 1n the Park"
tipt~• gingerly across the
stage of the Santa Ana Com-
mwlity Players' t b e a t e r
wlth a curious sort . of re.
straint that muffles its In·
herent comic Impact. ••..:
Neil Simon's gifted wit is
almost unrecognizable in
this treatment of the trials
of a pair of newlyweds in
the top floor of a New York
apartment. Dialogue a n d
......... ~T II TMI .. A~l(ff .\ ~~ 1bv N~?5;r~, dlrw~ by R°" ' Ol'lllll, dTrtf. Lff """"' -ltlltlnq !I Ill , -ed 1!1t S.11 a Alll
,.,,.,..
nTIY Play"' Frlcl•YI •rid
y "" lh llM 1 " lfll ~te~O'JO ~. tit! St .. S.nla
THI CAST Corrle~r .......... , S.Uy Brown Ptul !I ............ Gordon H•r•ls ¢1~ s ............... Rvlh Gabler "~'rv ~:= ::::::::::.c~:~r"K~ii~
situations w h i c h reaped
peals of laughter in previous
county stagings generate lit·
Ue more than polite ac·
knowledgement in the Santa
Ana version.
Director Ross Corbin has
mounted an amusing but
undisUnguished production
hampered by aw t ward
staging and a general lack
of comedic insight on t h e
part of his cast. Barbed
laugh lines are tossed over
the shoulder rather than
played for their potential
guffaws. An exception-and a shln·
ing one-is Ruth Gabler as
the bride's mother whose
whining voice and put-upon
attitude offer a new dimen-
sloo to the familiar cbarac-
_. refreshlng chanfe · fro1ft
the sopblstlcated dowagers
of "Barefoots'• past.
Sally Brown u the dlJtatt
half of the honeymooninC
couple 1s a vivacious, bust·
ling, finger a(l8pplng bride,
but falls to convey more J.~~i=i~iiiiiiil than surface exubel'ance.
All too often she neglects
the comedic _potential ol her
character. one of the better
writted ingenue roles in
modern theater.
Part of this problem may
be the nat, mechanical per-
formance of Gordon Harris
aa her lawyer husband who
moves through his role with
almost indifferent detach·
ment. Be speaks with an
accent which seems a mix·
ture of New England and
old England-which rubs off
on Mlss Brown, along with
his slow, unmotivated pace.
'Bow Does This GrafJ You?'
Carol Faulstick as a high voltage comedy writer acts out her idea for a new
script as Chuck Schicker (left). Mike Flood and Mike Moran watch awestruck
in a scene from "Nobody Loves an Albatross." playing Fridays and Saturdays
through June 15 at the Orange Studio Theater.
DISAPPOINTING
"'1 the ''Btuebe•rd Association Thaxton Combs U.S. upstairs" who takes th!! trio
out on the town to an Alba-o~ . .
Monday, MlY 20, 1968 DAILY PILOT 27
Season Saeee•slul
Optjmism Reigns
At Lincoln Center
o/ By WILLIAM GLOVER
NEW YORK (AP) -At
long last, the modd Js up-
beat for Lincoln Center's
oft-troubled a c t l n g com-
pany.
''This season w e ' v e
IOUdi!ied a beachhead."
•ayg Jules Irving. artistic
director of the repertory
the&<ter.
Special interest attaches
to the troupe's operations
because, as part of New
York's $175·million culture
center, it vies for achlevei
ment with such prestigious
artistic rivals as the
Metropolitan and City
Operas, tbe Philharmonic
Orchestra and a world-
famous ballet.
"For the first time," Irv-
ing adds, "there is a sense
of balance. a sense of
equilibrium and at the least,
hope for continuity."
CAUTIOUS
The new optimism is
aft.er 13 1ear! of running tb•
San Franc:sco A c t or s
Workshop. He had quit
&bruptly, claiming he could
no longer f u n c t i o n
arUsUcally under t h e
pressures of big c i t y
theatrics.
The pair took over the
directorship in 196.5·66, suc-
ceeding the o r i g i n a 1
management of R o b er t
Whitehead and EUa Ka.zan.
That regime had foundered
on the rocks of confllct with
the board of directors.
Emergen~ hasn't exactly
ceased. In lus first solo pro-
duction at the end or~ last
season, "Galileo," the 42-
year old Irving lost Rod
Steiger to illness at the last
moment. He found Anthony
Quayle as a replacement
who won superb reviews.
'Th1·re Bags
Full' Set in
Costa Mesa
~·~--4~~~·~.-..,--,~ . us
a fidgety neurotic complete-
ly befuddled by the goings
on In her d a u g ht e r's
apartment, but who stays
on to find them almost fun
.JlialL,_ustauram'.:..and WCQS ~mng_.-.:.___V ~r ¥ utL~f l ,,, -1 -ni
tne bride's re 1 u c tan l I'"TJ -0 ,, u -rnre
tempered with ca u ti o n ,
however. Partly because
that is the· only sensible way
to operate. Partly because
after much anguish, turmoil
and cr~w;.ing,-mo.t.0£: a
five-year career, wary bn-
age repair is in order.
A fardal CO'"°rmr-w111t-1w-~~~~-~
the early 1900's, Jerome • ..
I ,
' •
~.~ ht.
ALSO
DEAN I STEilA ftWTIN STf.VfNS
0
I ~;•
11ROl10IMA
IMllRIAG!-MD
RUIN YOUR Uf!•
10 PAN.!(!S!(!!I ·EASTMANCOlOll 1'J
lwe. SIMlw Stem 6:41
C•llflllffa SlllHlay
1\uffi~Sa
-' . •'
~!Pc~:\ ~~~ear CCITA M!S4
1urz1 !4'·1111 POI INR>IMA 0'
Tw•Altl111t ladi Otlier
••• For•
Woiu1t °"''Oft• C.1114 "•"'
Glenn
ford .., ..........
MtuKemedt·~~
ALSO
...... s ...... 7 ,.JI!.
CHt. Set. ,, ... I , ...
S."4ay ,,.. 2 , .....
The story of a girl called Sara and the ket
she gave to a differenf_ f
man each month.
EXCLUSIVE
COAST AREA
RUN!
A Jelll'1 &RSIM·EWOTT ~ PldXJCTOI l1Mll9 • ,._ +g11 CID
WilY IEHi·NfiiONY NEYID·fHEb R
BURR • SAr«JY ~ PROM----·llYlmMTI
DeBEHNING BARtW .---. • .,.,_.7Ur-·-"iliu •
•ISO EUZABETH TAYLOR
MARLON BRANDO
I DUHi lllllHr•llWDDOI REFUCTIONSilN A ~
...... 111011"'
LAST 7 DAYS
WINND 2 /ACADIMY
011 AWAIDS
, l ..
mother,. J~ck Kieison a1so 1a Melooyland
disappoulti.ng. Like the two
leads, he also misses a num-
ber of Chances to enhance
hiJ role with a continent:il
flair and command of the
situation. neither of which
be demonstrates.
The role of the telephone
man can be far more than a
walk-on, if you happen to
have an Alan Ha~ at your
command. This production
doesn't, and ChCV"les Guyot
also does little with his
ass;gnment.
Pace and tempo, two all-
important Nquirements In
mounting a production of
this nature, a r e con-
spicuously absent from the
snow. Characters with no
lines at the particular mo-
me-nt are given nothing to do
but stand around watching
the doers do, to borrow one
of Simon's lines.
"Barefoot in the Park''
will be staged for the next
two weekends, Fridays and
Saturdays, at the Players
Theater, 1020 W. 8th St.,
Santa Ana. -----~~ ~j-
The story
of a girl
called Sara and
the key she
gave to a
different man
each month.
The Association, one of
the most successful vocal-
instrwnen·tal groups of the
past several year.s, will open
a one-week engagement in
Melodyland Theater o n
Tuesday, wiUt special guest
st2!' Wes Montgomery.
Popularity of Ute AS6ocia·
tion is evidenC'Cd by the fact
that Melodyland r e p or ts
that thil box office already
bas recorded the largest ad-
vance sale for this at·
traction of any show Ul.is
year.
This will mark the first
ti me Utat the Association
has appeared in Me:lodyland
but their recordings are
reported to be among the
hottest selling in Orange
C-Ounty. •
Montgomery, a recent
Grammy Award winner, is
generally credited w l th
being the best of the
po,Pular·jazz guitarists and
his recordings, like those of
the Association, are con-
sistently in the top 10 on the
oh arts.
The show will play night-
ly, through Sunday, with
performances on Saturday
at 6:30 and 9 :~. and on Sun-
day at 3 and 8 p.m.
Public Service
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
Cliff Robertson will make a
series of public service an-
nouncements for radio and
television on behalf of CAP.
the cadet flying program or
the Civil Air Patrol.
By VERNON SCOTT B o s ton • Entertainment "There's still a long way
to go before we have what
we want.'' Irving says. ''Lit·
tle by little, one fights for
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -citadels all.
Thaxton is a handsome, Surcease from the regular
season's television shows
can be a two-edged sword.
ls one better off watching
re-runs of the regularly
scheduled shows than tuning
in the rep1acement.s? It's a
chance proposition.
One of NBC-TV's summer
replacements is a nugget
titled "Showcase '68." For
10 or 11 weeks beginning
June 11 m a s t e r of
ceremonies Lloyd Thaxton
will b·avel around the coun-
try searching out fresh
talent.
Among other cities the
show wiU emooate from St.
Louis, Pittsburgh, San
Antonio, Chicago an d
Cal Statel"s
To ~ing for
Schola1·ships
likeable man who once
hosted his own syndicated
time."
He calls the statistical
record of th~ current sea$on
"phenomenal." musical show for teens that
broke records for t h e
number of markets it played
-90 in all.
Item: Attendance h a s
averaged 94.2 percent of
capacity, comp&red to 75
But his summer show is percent last year and a na-
tional average of 67. something else again. The
talent will be professional
and the finalists will com-
It.em: Subscriptions have
risen to 40,000, the biggest
of any repertory company,
pete on a windup show from and exceeded only by the
New York. first season mark or 46.000
"We expect most of the -which subsequently fell to
talent will be individual 29L~: Total income from
singers or some new young boxoUice and subsidJary ac.
musical groups," Thaxton tivities reached $1.6 million.
said before embarking on Ag&!nst a total operating
his great talent safari. budget of $2,200,000, that
He'll be lucky if be drops leaves $680.000 to be raised
his net on the Likes of Tiny by the board of directors.
Tim , the boy soprano of the
"Rowan and Martin Laugh-PERSISTENT
In." Irving. whose calm man-
"The talent will come ner belies an inteMely
from whole areas, not just a persistent spirit, took over
single city," Thaxton ex· under in ti mid at in g
plained. "For instance the circumstances as operating
~participants on the show chief 17 months a·go.
from St. Louis w i 11 HL'i partner H e r b e r t
Chodorov's "Three Baga
Jt'ull." will be the last pro-
dudion of the season at tht
Costa Mesa Civi c
Playhouse. opening June 70
for a five-day run.
Directed by Pati Tam-
beillni, resident director of
the group, the show stars
Rey L'Ecluse as the bluster-
ing Bascom Barlow, a role
created on ~roadway two
years ago by Paul Ford.
Other major roles in th•
comedy of mixed up
finances will be taken by
Shirley Dillon as Barlow'•
wife. Kathy Ladd as their
''hippie-type" daughter and
Tom Titus as t.be clerk woo
embezzles a fortune frem
the Barlow sporting goods
firm.
Completing the Cos t•
Mesa cast will ~ Jeanne
C-Orrell, Rick G u n 't,
Barbara Garlich, Loi •
Wilson and Ed Little.
"Three Bags Full" wil1
mark the playhouse's third
birthday, closing on th•
theater's annJversary daU:1 June 24. Performances wiu
be given at the CommunltJ
Center auditorium at th•
Orange County Fairgrounds,
with reservations available
at 834-5303. California State C-Ollege at represent the entire Middle Blauthey had come east
Fullerton's Symphony West. --------------------
Orchestra will join wiUt the "Jt is a youth-oriented
C-Ollege Singers Saturday show. We're looking for
and Sunday, May 25-26, in a young singers between 14
program of music designed and 21, a Ith o ug h we Crossword Pmzle
to raise f u n d s for w o u I d n ' t turn down
scholarships. somebody 26." ACROSS
Set for 8:30 both nights in Not since Horace Heldt the Little Theater, the toured the c o u n tr y ' 1 Bird sound 6 lllsslle performances are the first spotlighting amateur talent discharge
scholarshlp benefits ever has a network show hit thP 10 Brought Into
schedul~ by the music road flushing o u t un· txlstenct
department. discovered stars. 14 Book
The program will include "We've already started bindery
"Academic Overture'' by 4uditions," Tha xton an· 15 :Ti~':r~:"
Johannes Brahms, which nounced. "The show is only 16 At anothtr
will be played by ti1e a half hour so there will be time
orchestra under the direc-three acts per night, plus an 17 Ptrsoni-
tion of Prof. Daniel Lewis. established act. like the flcatlon
The College Singers and solo Association." of couragt
quartet will join th e Somehow it would be a lot 18 Having
orchestra i n presenting more fun il Thaxton and 19 wRl:!!
"Requiem Mass in D" by company dug up some "' stdil1en t Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart musical saw virtuosos or 20 Jeer at
under ttie direction of Prof. perhaps a bird call expert or 22 Prime -
David Thorseri. even another Mrs. Miller. 24 Rivulet
Al seats are priced at Reruns of the Monkees 26 Llbente
$1.50 and can be ordered by would be preferable to 27 "· -in 1 ~~~~ calling 870-2481 between 1 watching a bunch of new 2 words
a.m. and 1 p.m. on groups of rock· 'n' roll 31 Ptrformtd
weekdays. Tickets also can singers stomp and holler 32 Spot
be purchased at the Little ~round ttle country. At least 33 Leg bonl!
Theater box office on the with the Monkees the faces 35 Chubby
44 Ir.
Levenson
45 Portion of
acad~111lc
''" 47-
Cartlet
51 Direction
52 Tett11td
54 llcroscopi:
uni cellular
alg1
SS African
rtpubllc
59 Weathtr-
111an's word
61 Cut ltathet
Into slices
62-College
63 State
64 Belltf
65 Dispatched 66 ltll known the111e song
67 Entrap
DOWN
1 Dresstd
2 Rodent ·
3 Baker's helper
Saturday's Puzzle Sofnl! ·
~~ ~~ -----1 1 ~J T R DI
!Ii. ·~ ' Ill
A 0 T a A N I
y R N 0 s "r A H
A o lnln 1 11 ... II
If"' 0 IR ... 0 E
N l .. ,. ,, II ,
1111& I II G 1r I IT It
I& lllMI E
CH I• H It
14 A $11 (
Ii Gives ou t sparingly
13-noua
21 Fortst 1nlmal
ZJrCertalit
lbonrs
25 Allow to
bt known:
2 words
27 Building
f~f] tfµ11
.!! .!! .!: J. J .! '/ZO/"
40 Wrong
4Z ltural deity
43 Stops
44 Loot obll.., 46'1tcfl~
Abbr.
47 lan'a n•• 48 Dl•lnf ..
I I
I
I
I
recus
28 Quarter, e.g.
29 Intimation
30 U.S.
49 Puncblltlol
111artc -----.... niPts of the performances. are familiar, I think. 38 llake melod-11;==========:;.,;:==========•I fous sounds 39 Kupsakt
4 Not forwlrd
S Prophesy •lsslles
)I Sprinkle
with
11olslurt
35 Order
36 Englisb
queen
50 Treaty'
organlz ..
tlon: Abbr• 53 GraduaW
"·~· ) ·-..at) ,,,.,,,"*".
··--·fllD'T llSID,.,.,... ~oYDENNIS
ANlttONY NEWLEY
THEODORE BIKEL ......... _--=. ........ -.. ::r=---·---::.r.::.~..i. ....
Albert llDn8J ..
'Cbarlle Ballbles'
Hit No. 2
NA~L CENf:RAlCOl'IPORATION
Fii~n!!!!
.. -..,~ ............. 1112
NOW PLAYING
Best Picture
&.st Actor
THE LUXURIOUS
NEW IALl9A
THEATRE
MOMI OP IOCICIMt (MAii lOOfl
I 709 UST ULIOA ILVO. \ tJ.mm p{"lllSULA· 613-4041~
0,.. 6141 -s-t9y J:1 I
• N..-IMIT...._, •
~!ost.
Ghost ~
Laugltsl .... _ •. -• CllClll ..
~
USTINOV. JONES . TU'SHrnt
• AUO •
I
40 Posstssive
• word
41 Noun or 1djectiw
ending 42 Imposed .a
penalty
4l Ancient
lt:illan
deity
6 Srnall: Scot.
1 Ship's
ste1ri119
1pparatus
8 Walking-:
2 words
9 ltnt to be~
2 words
10 Assembled
11 liss Loos
,,. , ,
J7 Lacerate
39 Ratt against
tht clock;
2 words
pllte
55 Ftt1fnfM
nlclm••
56 Finish ... 57 Apportloa
'tly •taslftl
60 National
Housing
Agency:
Abbr.
.. ..... ~ ~ -~~ ......... -·-·-~ ............. -. ................ -...... ......
U t>4JL V PILOT Mondaf, May 20, 1968
Realtor eek
'
••• a wee\ set a$ide to honor the professionaly qu11ifi.d men ind women in
Newport Harbor-Co1ta Mes.a who are entitled to use the word "Realtor."
School&d, experienced and bound by a strict code of ethics, a Reattor is the friend you tu"'
to when ,you plan to buy or sell real property. H Is thorough knowledge of every facet of real
estate transactions is your guarantee that, buying or selling, you are in good hinds when you
enlist the services of a Realtor. ·
Everyone Has
Something That
Someone Else Want$-TBE 81GGES'J' SINGLE MAJIKE'J'Pl.ACE ON 'J'BE 01.tANOE C.OAS'J'-PBONE DIUCJ' 842-5871 ' •.
You C1n Sel It,
Find It, Trade It
With • Wint Ad
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSIS FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
Daily Pilot Classified General 1000 Gener•I 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 Gener1I 1000
CLASSIFIED INDEX
HOUSES FOR SALE ===~g:~ ~:~;~n 42tl DIMOLITION UJS
OINlltAL I... ..i Wl'OllT SM"llU f1tt OllAl"TINO HIVICI UJ7
COSTA MllA 11M WUTCL"• 4'11 ILECTRICAL -
Mt!SA DIL MAit llH UNIVt!llSITT l"Alll OJI IOUIPMENT llNTAL.I U50
MISA YlltOI 1111 IACK UY •1J> FENrtNO MU
;~~L:oo.~ "•A•l•~M :~ EAST I LUF"
l24t "LOOIS "'5
00 l'URNACI lll'AllS. lie. Ule
lllWl'OllT MllGHTI l>tt ~~~:~: Oil MU t!Jt GAllOINING ....
IAL.OA COYIS nu IA., ISLANOI QM GINlltAL SllYICH Un
NIWl'OIT SMOlll 1211 LIDO ISLI 4$ OHOING, DISCING UIS
IAYCllST nu ULIO,J ISLAND 41$1 GLASS ""
IAYSHOltlS nu HUNTINGTON HACH 4HJ OltllN THUMI Ult
DOYll lltOlll 1
1!2_! FOUNTAIN VALi.iV -OUN SHOI' '71t
:::~~~":.OHi.ANDS IW SEAL IEACH
+Ill HEALTH CLUH •nt
-HAULING • 41Jt
VI SITY l'AIK 1217 LONG llACH ~:~K :_., n•t OltANGI COUNTY
4Ht HOUSECLIANIN• •7JS
-INTHIOI DICOIATtNe '7J7
ta&m 10_ ~="~o .... v_1 __ _ Mlt INCOMI TA-lC '14t
lllYINI TlltlACI nu MIOW•Y CITY ~ lWOlr."Oniiliiilll& itc 11111
COltONA DIL MAI IUt SANT.a ANA MU llONINO '7S.S
IALIOA P'INtNSULA 11?!! SANTA ANA HllOHTS 4'21 INSllLATINe 67H
alrACON IAY ,... -INSUIANCI •77t
UY ISLANDS UH ~~!~~~£. ~ INYUTIOATtNe, Dt11ctW9 ., ..
~~~~!L~LAND ::: LAGUNA llACH
47.. JANITOlllAL '7ft
47'5 JIWILllV llPAll. ltc. ....
HUNTINGTON HACH 14M LAGUllA NIOUll 47t1 LANOSCAl'IN• •11•
HUNTINGTON """aoua I.., SAii CLIMl!llTI 47tt LOCKSMITH 6l2t
"OUHTAIN YALLIY Utt DANA l'OINT 474t MASONIY, 811CK .. U
SU.L l lACH IUf Tlll'LIX. etc. -MOVING A STOIAOI ....
SWflSIT HACH ltU CONDOMINIUM .. st l'AINTINO, l'a••rll..,1l•e fist
OAltDIN GIOYI 147S RENTALS t:~:V::O"'i" ::: Apt1. Unfurnished
Olt1'HGI COUNTY Uot GINlllAL JtM OUT OF COUNTY IHS COSTA MESA Slot
OUT O" STATI Uot MISA YllDI Slit
STANTON 1611 NIW,.OttT IUCH UM
WISTMINSTlll 1'11 NIWl'OllT HllGHTS Utt
MIDWAY CITY 161' NIWl'OIT SHOllS Hlt
SANTA ANA UH WISTCLll'" St• SANTA AHA HGTS. 101 UNIVllUITY l'AltM S2J7
C>'IANGI 10• UCK 8AV S24t
TllSTtlf 1,.t IAST ILU"lll '142
lt>RTH TUn1M l,.S COIONA OIL !Mil USO
AN.\HllM 11.H 8AL80A UM
SK.YllAOO Ct.llVOlt USS IAY ISLANDS SJJt
~GUNA HILLS HM LIDO ISLI SlSI
Uos\INA llACM 11" HUNTINGTON HACH S4M
U.OUNA NIOUIL 1711 '0UNTAIN VALLIY , S4tt
SAfl CLIMINTI 1711 IJ.LIOA ISlAND SJSS
S>Jt JUAN CAl'ISTllANO 111t SUL 81ACH S4Jf
C"'ISTll~NO HACH 1115 LONG 81ACH S.Sot
DANA l'OINT 17)1 OIANOI COUNTY SfM
CAllLSUD 114t OAllDIN GIOVI Ult
OCIANSI~ 11H WISTMINSTllt un
SAlf DllOb tns MIDWAY CITY 5'16 lllVllSIDI COUNTY ,... J,J.HTA AHA S61t
HOUSH TO H MOVID ltM SANTA ANA 1411GlfTS 54•
CO!IOOMINIUM IHt TUSTIN ~ Dll .. ll'!lCES FOlt ULI 1t1S COASTAL S7ot
APAll'TMINTS ,Oil SAll "" LAGUNA llACM 5™
ffENTALS ~:u;~1,:~~~~L ~~
Houses Furnished ~~~1u~ .. ~"11THNo :.r':
GP'i!!IAL .
ltlRTALS TO SHAii
COSTA MISA
MIJlt OIL MAit
MISA VllDI
COLLIGI l'AllC
NEWl'OIT HACH NIWl'OIT HOTS.
NIWl'OIT SHOltll
IAVSHOllS
OOYElt SHOltll
WISTCllFF
UNIVl'I SITY l'AIK
llYINI SACK IAT
= REAL ESTATE,
"" Gener•f !ltt Tall'LIX. fie. SMe
111' CONDOMINIUM fKt ms lllNTALS WANTIO ""
ttM ltOOMS 'Oii lllNT ''" Hll llOOM • 80AllO '"'
mm. 's MOTIL$, TllAILll COUITS "" GUIST HOMIS SN
m7 MISC. llNTALS 5'H
2Ut INCOMI l'ltOl'UTY •tM
22J7 IUSINISS l'IOl'llTY '°5t
1211 TU ILll l'Altl(S 'OSS n.. IUSINISS ltlNTAL , ...
2242 Ol"Ftcl llNTAL Hit
l'AINTINO, Sit• HS.I
l'ATIOS -l'HOTOGIAl'HT "7t
l'LASTlllNO, "•ft'-1191'tlr 6at l'LUMllNO ....
l'OOOll! OIOOMIN• OM
l'OOl SlllVIC:I '911
.. OWEa SWlll'INe 011 l'UMI' SEltVICI .,,.
ltOOFINO "Jt
llAOIO, llt,.I"-lfc. .. ,.
ltlMOOILING I ltll'All ....
lllMOOILING, KITCHINS •HS
sc11ser1 Sii•,_ 6'5S
SIWING 6Ht
SIWING MACHINI U.l'AllS ffO
Sll'TIC T•llKS, s...en. lie. •MS
TAILOllNO .,71
Tl ltMITE CONTllOL "" TILi. Ctnmlc 6'74
TILi, Ll11tl"'"' • MtrMt '97$ Tllll SlltYtCI ., ..
TILIVISION, It-I"' lie. "H
Ul'HOLSTllY '"'
WILD I NO ""
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
JOI WANTID, -JOI WANTID, Wt111111
JOI W•llTID,
MIN • WOMaN mt
DOMESTIC MIL.I' ms
AGINCIH, Miii 71M
HILi' WANTIO, Mell nit
AGINCllS, W-7Jot
HILi' WANTID, W-74M
JOIS-fMll A W-1JM
AOINCllS, Miii e W-7Jst
SCHOOU 6 INSTlt~CTION 7HO JOI l'ltEl'AltATION PtM
THIATlllCAL 1ftt
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
l'UttNITUltl .... Ol'l'ICI ,UINITUltl .. ,.
Ol'l'ICI IQUll'MINT lt11
STOii IOUll'MINT ltll
CAFI, IESTAUlt.-MT .. It
aAI IQUl,.MINT M1S
HOUSI HOLD oo<ios ..,.
Goven111ent ReS1les
514 % -$16.5 MO. INCLUD-
ING TAXES & INS. $3.000
Dn. -TIU'ee Bdrm, two
bath, built-in kitchen, fully
carpeted & draped homo:.
f .P. $23.500.
514 % -$152 MO. INC. TAX·
ES &: INS. Three bdrms, 2
baths, D I N I N G AREA,
breakfast bar, space saving
Built-in gas kitchen and sep.
arate servi.ce porch. Newly
paint~f. e811)ellt.
drapes. ONLY iii.ooo.
5~ % -~.400 LOAN -$165
MO. P.J.T.l FOUR BED-
ROOM EASTSIDE six year
new home. Extra closets and
wardrobe 1 p a c e. Dining
room with sliding glass doors
to patio and enclosed fenced
yard. Built-In kitchen wlth
breakfast bar. Large 165
foot corner lot. with room
for boat and trailer. FULL
PRICE ONLY $25,950! CALL
US NOW before it ia too
late!!
Evenings Call 54.8-7850
fantastic View
1 . .tST llUI',
'llVINI TlltltACI
lOltONA Dll MA• l .\llOA
no INOUSTllAl .. IOl'llTY .... nst COMMlltCIAl HU
2t:IM]•• INOUSTlllAL ltlNTAL , ...
GAIAGI SALi •ti ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!1!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ l'UllNITUlll AUCTION IOlS '!!
A""LIANCH lllt $11,500 ~ LOTS '1ot
JJJI llANCl411 •Ut
IA Y ISLANDS
LI08 ISL.I -llTIOUH 1111 SIWINO MACHtNU lt>t FULL PRICE
2414 Vista Del Oro
Newport Beach
Enlbluff Speci1ll
The Bluffs 1001t favorite
(The "E" plan)
~~nent location-the txRe..
ot-hllnle~Wtg'Oerlia-na-Jl
hand with the beach. 3 BR
extra large family rm, 21,S
beth1, high balcony over-
looks all below you. carpel!,
drapes, bit-in appliances,
huge walk-In closet.!, elec
dbi garage O!>E'neT.
~ady right now
Call for special pi;ice
Ph. 644-1133
$114 A Month P1ys All
You will cry 11 you miss this
buy!!! Estate like sweeping
lawns lead to the custom
quality beauty of thig charm .•
ing Califronia Rancho, Ha.rd-
wood floors. 3 bedrooms,
Ftreplace. 2 baths. Shingle
R o o t. Assume e-xretlcnt
41,t% loan. Full Price S22.900
COSTA ME.5A OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open ti! 9 PM
BADLY NEGLECTED
Ne.eds cleaning It some paint-
ing. Ideal i.itualion for en·
ergetic buyer. Fix up and
make some real money. 3 + famil,y room. Vacant. 2
baths, hardwood floors. AsK·
Ing S23.995 -but make your
offer. A real steeper! mm
1093 Baker, C.M. 546-5440
IAl,,OA ISUllO
HUN\'INOTON HACM
'OUN~AIN VALLIY
SIAL ''IACH
;: CITIUS GltOVll •175
Nit ~=A=~SINOtlll ::
MUSICAL INSTllUMINT llU An unbelievable home at such "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! PIANOS • OltOANS lllt
t4H ltlSOltT l'ltOl'lltTY 61'5 uo10 '* a low price. Bunt on sturdy
LONO HACH
OllAltGI COUNTY
IMTA AllA
WflTMIN'111t
MIDWAY CITY
~ OHNGI CO. l'IOl'llTV 0'7 TILIYISIOtl l2t5 HARDWOOD F1..00RS w1lh
!ft·l"t a STllllO nit LARGE BEDROOMS. Q•----... OUT O" STATI PltOI'. ''°' !!1" MOUNTAIN • OISllT Ult
TAl'I! •ICOllDlltS Int """'"
.. 1 SUIDtVISION LAND 9211 CAMllUS • IOUll'MINT UM size kitchen with separate
HOHY SUl'l'LllS -service porch. l.._l to live
SANTA ANA HlleNT1 ~~ ltlAL ISTATI SlllVICI ms Sl'OltTINO OOODS tHI """'
llNocuuu. scol'll tsst in or rent out as an lnvest-COASTAL
LAGUNA llACM LAGUNA NIOUIL
SAN CLIMIHTI
mt ::'a. I~~=~::• :~: ~ BUSINESS and M1sc11.u.111ous -ment. 127 ft. lot. E---IIent MISC. WANTID NH n'-"
m• FINANCIAL MACHINHY. .... t7ot Terms. Call Now!
Ull JUAN CAl'ISTllANO
CAl'llTltANO HACH
DANA l'OINT
ltlVllSIDI COUNTY
VACATION llNTAU
CONDOMllltUM DUl'LIXll lllUllL
RENTALS
ms
J7Jt ,, .. , ... -"" •n
HoUMS Unfuml1hed
elNlllAL ltlt
COSTA MHA lllt
MISA OIL MAI 11N
MISA YlltDI 21tt
I USIN!SS Ol'l'OltTUNITllS
I USINISS WANTED INYISTMINT o,,.,,,.,,1ti..
INYISTMINT WANTID
MONIV TO LOJll
l'lltlONAL LOAllS
JIWILllV lOANS
COLLATlltAL LOANS
llAL ISTATI LOANS MOITG.t.OIS, Tnlt 0..-.
MONIV WANTID
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
COLI.IOI l'AllK ms "OUND ( ........ , ....
NIWl'OIT llACH tJOt LOST Mfl NIWl'OIT HOTS. Ult l'll!SONAlS , .. ,
NIWl'OllT SHOlll ttn ANNOUNCIMINT1 Mlt
1.UMlll 17M
STOllAGI ins
IUILOING MATlllALS l'H
1WAl'S ll'tt
PETS and LIVESTOCK
l'ITS, GINlllAL ....
CATS M1t DOGS WIS HOllSll .. ,.
LIVllTOCK -
CALIFORNIA LIVING
NUISlllES 1'1t
SWIMMING l'OOU "" l'ATIOS °'U o\WNINOS mt
Y.tCATIONS t91t
TRANSPORTATION IAYSHOltlS UU l lllTHS '411
OOYllt SMOlll ttl.1 ,UNllAU '411 ::~~so:TSUCHn =
WISTCLIFI' '71' l'AID OllTUAltY '4U l'OWH CllUISIU "1t
UHIYIUITY l'Alk Ul7 "UNllAL DlllCTOltS '414 Sl'llD-SKo IOATS MJI
lllVINI nit "LOltlS~S •41S IOAT TllAILlltS t"tt
I.ACK U Y ,,.. CAltO 0, THANKS .... ao•T MAIHTIHANCI ft.U IHT 8LU"" 1141 IN MIMOIUAM '411 "'4
laVINI TllllACI JM CIMITlltT LOTI ••tt =~ .. r:~:~~~G "'5
COttONA Di&. MAI nM CIMITlllY CllYl'TS '4lf IOAT SI.II', MOOllNe ft>t
e.u.IOA Sitt ClllMATOltlll ..,. eon SlltYICIS ,.,, ..-y ISi.ANDi nM MIMOltlAL l'AlllCS "1I IOAT lllNTALI ftlt
WOO .. LJ JUI AUCTIONS ... IOAT CHAll:Tll "If I;:~ Is•·-_.. AV. IATION SllVICI .. ,, --... ,,_....,. ...,. "'SHING IOATS ..... • OllT WIS1' ms TllAVIL '4JS 10.\T MOVING .. ., -4• NTINOTON llACM )4ft All TIANSl'OllUTION .... IOAT STOltAGI ft4I
tlMTINOTOfl NAllOtt• Mii AUTO TUNSl'OITATtON 1441 IOHS WANTIO ttM
1 • •.;u1111 YALLI Y 141t LIOAL NOTICIS '4H AllCIAl"T '1M
COSTA M~A OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
34f>.M91 Open till 9 PM
PARTY POOL HOME
Sharp, Early American 3 BR
home. t ·~ baths, separate
family room with fireplare
& huilt-in bookcases. Lush
landscaped rear yard with
sparkling pool. Terms to
suit ASKING $23.500.
•
COATS
wAti.AcE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Eve•ings)
'9AL, HACH •• eUMAN a TUTO•IN• .... FL YINO LHSO!IS '1M ~:::~".:c"..ov• :::! ?c~~~N~ DIRECTORJ.. =~;~~1 "=~$ ;;~ 4 BEDRM :3 BATHS
011 .. 1101 COUNT'I Ult ANSWUINO SillVICI utl llCYCLIS t'1j $21,900!
SANTA ANA 1'1t APl'Ll .. ,.r. ltll'AtltS. ,._ m• SLICTllC CAllS '"'
•fnMINnl• ,.., Al'l'lt.AlllN• C$11 MOTOltC'l'CLIS .,.. Professionally decorated, cat-,_.,..,. ctn MU All'HALT, 011 "" MOTOIKDOTl.IS '* peted thruout. Formal dln-
=AtllA Ml!Mn = :~. i_::A::., ""' .,._ :: !~: =~c:s .~:;:~" ':: ing toom . .Electric "Awvd"
"'...,... IUCM .,.. uaYSITTtlt• .. TIAILllt. TltAVIL MU kitchen. Dishwasher. IArst ~ MleUft. .,, IOAT MAINTIWMCa _,. TllAILllti. lltlfMY ... ,,_1_ IAll ,CLIMlllTW JPte HICIC. MAIOfl•Y, e1C. 61H CA!oll'l•S fl1t petio. '"" ,.., CM'ISTtMO .,,. IUllNISS ••'•flCIS &Mt TltUCKS ,,.. TARBELL 2B ~ ~:~ ,.,._ :: ~~~~~= ~ ::=:,..o '~ :!: 3 BEDRM -FAMtL Y c~:~i:.v... :: ~::~".':~~:r.· !: !~~u~":usstc1 :m RM-POOL-$21,500t dNTALS CIMINT. CMtf'll9 .... UCI CAI$. IOOt "" Built l't>t run a fflterta1ning.
ADh. f umlshed ~:::f°.1~'Rs LicwM :: :~~:S •;::::_0 !: Cheerful ti.replace. DI try
lllllUL ... CNt,.IT CLIANI... MK ltlW CAU nt1 ball. He&ted t fllte.T'fd pool.
COIT• Mat.A .... CAll'IT LA\'11t• a llil'All .. ,. AUTO LIA.$1... !!!! Bath hUM. O:w4!'n!d -uo. 1.-•.DiA....,_"9..-.•~oe----------~~·-"-o-~_._•_1_1_•• ____________ .,. ___ u_••-~.--"'-"-'-----------....... ~ ~10-1720 ,...
HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR
THE HIDDEN DOLLARS
IN YOUR· HOME LATELY? t -•
I ==---=-=-~--------;--o -- --:.--~ "--~ ~-_--"'--= -----• ' '
TARBEIL
This Pace
I EACH ES .
11,172
HOMES
EACH WEEK
NO DOWN
To Vets tor tbia cute East.
side 3 BR home w/frplc,
several fruit trees. Out.stand-
ing buy fol' only
$20,950
PERRON REAL TY CO.
18th & o~ange su.1m
TERRIFIC IUY
R-2 zoning. 2 BR 1 be.th
home. St ucco .l plaster,
hardwood noon with adjoin-
ing vacant lot. 1 block to
dO"-lllown Costa Mesa. All
this for only $19,500.
Rltr. 646-3928 Eve 642--0185
*LAC HEN MYER
OCEANFRONT
BF.ST BUY IN AREA!
Balhoa Peninsula Pt. near
jetty. 2 BR "Doll Jbut" 40
tt lrontage! Room to expand
$60.00).
Balboa RMI Dtate Co.
700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa
ORiole 3-4140
L., .. or Sele
POOi... HOME • $185
with option at $21,960, Cute
3 BR 2 bath, Anthony heel-
ed pool, trnhly )laJnted in-
terior, other extra.a.
COU.EX.;E REALTY 546a80
LOOKIE!
ALL in MESA VlltDI
3 BR, Pacnetter . • $30,500
4 BR. 2 1tory ...... $.'W,900
Lg Jot, Agle llm'y • • $36,960
Republlc, 2400 tq' .. 146,750
Men Verde Rlty 54&-5990
DAVIDSON Realty
NEW LISTING
S.r Harbor 4 BR + formal
din + ram, cpCI. I dnil.
tlect. bit -...
.Rltr. mt~ •• al
54S-6t60 i:.-. MS-510
V.A. t.o.n, .. don. 4
~roorn1, ~ tlethl: 3 cat
flrlft; deft, form&l ..... ~lta R8I r..tate .-....04
DillJ,.. .......
Aiw.,. • a.Gel
PENINSULA SHORES
New Balboa
Oceanfront Community
THREE NEW 4 & 5 Bedroom two • story
single family Homes and three Duplexes with
a Deluxe owner·s 3 Bedroom & Den Home
upstairs, and -a=8-~Bath.-Rent.4
down. Now ready for occupancy.
Ocean and/or Bay Views, Family rooms, Wet
Bars, radiant heat, insulated, carpeted, wall-
ed, landscaped, sell-cleaning ovens. Formica
kitchen cabinets.. Powder rooms, Etc. Etc.
Come see for yourself: ·
GOLD MEDALLION HOMES
OPEN DAILY 1 'TIL 5
"F" Street and Balboa Blvd.
on secluded Balboa Peninsula ' Priced from $79,600 fo $109,600
For further lnform•tion call:
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO.
'l200 E. COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH
Kl 9·3351 675-2000
.,..~
Lenders
Generosity
Some interest minded luck
buyer is going to take ad-
vantage of this 5~ % FHA
loan. N~wport Beach 4 bed·
room, 1~ baths, Harbor
High school Dist. Vacant
clean and sharp. $212 pe.r
month includes payment &:
taxes. $33.600.
Colesworlhy & Co.
642-7777
1904 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Open Eves.
VIEW
What's new? How about an
immaculate 4 bedroom
home with a panorllllic
Tiew al the city lights and
ocean? Well, -we have one
waiting for you. Just listed
for $41,500.
••~es;i1Na
12111 •REALTY
••• ''ANYTIME''
l*>l WestcUtt Drive
NEWPORT SHORES
$22,500
Popular "A" frame · 3 bdrm-
2 b&tM -Large family room
1 block from Oubhouse -
Luxurious
Duplex Home
Have you ~n lool<i.ng for
an almost new, modem,
luxurious, quiet. one-story
duplex home? We found H
for you! You will enjoy the
fireplace in the large living
room, the formal dining
area, kitchen buillins. two
kids bedrooms and the sep-
arate m a s t e r bedroom
suite. Two car garage plus
extra enclosed parking for
boat, trailer or cars. In-
come oft one is $170. Both
would bring $360 pei-month.
Asking $5,000 l?<>WD· Call -
~
2043 W~FF DRJVE
646-T7U Ope.n Eves.
WANTED
Real Estate Sil.ea People.
WHY NOT GET ON THE
BAND WAGON?
Over 2S Y ean In
Orange County e Full pege advertisinl
• Inter oUice teletype
• Training program
• Insurance
e Many other benefits
Call 64&-4494 -For interview
short walk to beach. Beach lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.
living at low cost.
646-nn 546-2313
THE Q EAL
ESTT-.TER!_~
-DAILY PILOl' WANT ADS
BRING RESULTS!
BUY
OR
LEASE
This beautiful 4 bedroom
home. Lovely kitchen With
all appllanres. Large din.
area. Fireplace, w/w cat·
pets & drapes, dbl. garage.
90% loan available or wtll
1eue Ior 1 to 2 Yl'L
$27,000
293 E.17th Sta. 64S'4494
Eve. 64&5'152
Harbor View Hills
Corona del Mar wak • built homes located
in the Southland'• most d&-
lirable 6 fascinatin& area.
School• I: Calif. Irvine
CamplLI just moment 1
away. SenslblY priced fr-om
$M.900 to $48,900
LUSK HOMES
Directions: MacArthlll' Blvd.
from Pacific Coast Hwy. or
Newport Fwy. Tum on San
Joaquin Hills Rd.. then
follow signs to model area.
4 Bedroom
$19,750
Better see his one today. Just
put on market. Lots o.1 shade
trees. big lot, 2 baths. Won't
be. around long at U9s low
pnce. / ::a
2043 WESTCUFF DRlVE
&J6. 77ll Ope.n Eves.
Estate Privacy
F.nchanting 3 BR 21h bath
home -meticulously main-
tained &: beautifully deco~
ated! Near Bay, on fee sim-
ple lot oppasite delightful
tree shaded private park
with 2 pools & putting gree.n
shared by a small group of
distinguished families. Only
$49,500.
Ruth Pardoll, RHltor
1609 We11tcliff Dr. 642-5200
cCrmin, Rome
Just ott the Beach
$29,500
Lot • 50 ]( 175
R-2 Costa Mesa
Can zone Commercial
plus small house. $15,<XK>
George Williamson, Rltr.
673-4350 OPEN EVES.
if~TAR GA'ZEK1t~
Mm Br CLAY I. POLLAN _. .~ ~ 23 M Your Ooily Aclmty G4iide M. SIJT. a· t'h :.A,.,._ Y Atcordine to tit• $tor1. T od. 11,~Mi}
To develop messoge for Tuesday, tWdd words c:orreponding to runllers
of yo.A' Zcdioc birth sign.
FOR Sale. Fallbniok area.
1~ ~ w/vlf!W, I rm ranch
hse + 5 rm gueat or rental.
Avocado I: 1ruit tree•. Lri
pool, patio. $54,000. Bkrs.
OK. Ph: n4: 728-3lll or
213: J86.6J30 OWNER
1100
Victoria Mesa
Homes
16 NEW HOMES
Low dn. fH_»~
"'"'~-.so---a.~~
valley Road at Victoria
(Juat E. at. Brookhurat
up on bluff)
Lido aize lots, fee limple
land -High above aea level
Built • in electric @kitchen. Conveni-
ent to shopping
center, near new
schools.
3 and 4 BDR.'1'.S -11: 2 sty
Fireplaces, auto prage 01>
erator, carpeting, drape.ries,
fencing, landscaping.
MlchHI Kay, Builder
Phone 642-2821 Eves 642-Sli.i
Big Splash!
in this 18x38 heated pool ju.at
in time for summer -DJn-
dy clean 3 bdrm -l bath in
College Park area • Assume
5" % I o a n and $169 month
pays all.
646-7171 • 546-2313
OPEN~.
.THEQEAL
1ESTATERS
SACRIFICE • bring paint
brush. Assume 5~ % loan/
no loan fees. Submit on
down payment. Large 3 BR
home -nice residential area.
2 baths, family room. double
fireplace I: all built -ins.
Payment under $200 mo in-
cluding taxes. CALL 54().1151
<open eves> Heritage Real
Estate. -------.,-"FOR ADULTS ONLY"
Cllolce, nr clubhouse loca-
tion! 2 &: Den, 17' master
suite, 2 be., dlx bit-in kitch-
en. w/w cptg, patio • dbl
garage. No exterlor main-
tenance !
ONLY $20,!rJO!
MONTICELLO HOMDI
R8ltor ~1210
BY Owner. m Bowling
Green, College Pie. 3 BR ..
tam. rm. 2 ba.. frpl., elec
bltns. $24.500. Existing loan
Sl9,300 at 5~ % F H A ,
paymt.s. $166 Mo, incl.
princ., Int., taxes, Jna.
546-3860
TRANSFDUUD to Samoa 3
BR 2 ba, patio, elec kitdt
dlabwuher, drapes, W/W
cpta, beautll\Jl!J landlcaptd,
fruit~ $74.960. ~zm
OWNER'S Salt. Cinderella
house. College Parle. 3 BR.;
ldnl $23,B. Detalla. Bo:ic
67(, Sac Harbor. N.Y.11963
WOULD )'OU believe 1J acn
~rd? 2 Hid. poola. ten-
Dia ct., J BR., deft. bltm.;
low ... 54MSl'1
Attnctm a BR 6 ~.
O:aer. C4mftlllmt loeatbl.
SD.M $1!11 i. UIS AllltlD
C>ntr 5$.2m
EASTSIDE J BR l" BA le ,
LY nn. ftp1c, din al'fa 5" 9'
to..n. Owner. 5--7400
...... . -. . -
~ ----....... --~-..... ..._ __
For Disc
11,000 .-q. fl of
sq. n. in •in&le
in S car OU.1•
in Lge walled
secluded.
AppraiMd 2 YI
Tax appraiser 1
buy at •115,00
1%. Submit.
LOUIS W. II
714 E. la1boa I
M ... Verde
BY Owner moving -
possess. 3 bt. l~
fa::n rm, frpl, nu cpl
nu pnt in 6 out, J~
loan~4
5 BORM., by owne
cr.rp.,, 2 Ba. lee.
many extras. $ 3 l
545-1844
Newport e .. ch
$23,900 BY OY
3 Bdrm, 2 baths, t
buUMns. wall to w
pl'tlng and drapes,
the beach. Plus 2 9'
teMi.a CO\U'ts. 642-3
4 BR-OWfl
2 Ba., Crpl., beam c1
cpt.s. Comer loc.; cl•
W'gent, $28,000. Ope
ends. :h'"l 62nd St.
547-7401 Owner/Age
REDUCED To price
U>w dn .. E-Z terma
3 BR 2 Ba home on :
bay It ()Cean. Can 1
~rm~bld,P
1Z1 41st Owner 6'13-
PRIME Joe.. Bluffs
View ot lake. 3 BR.
BY OWNER 6#
6%% LOAN; xlnt ·
BR. 2 Ba.. Jge. ru
wd. paneled den; cc
Lovely yd. ~.750 .
1900 Beryl Lane
BAYCREST BY O'
5 Large B<lrma. 3,2:
Ivan Wells built. Ft
2100 Windward l
WATERFRONT, 62
Coves. 3 BR. $75,1
trade for property,
horses, or -? LI 8-77
LUXURY Condom.
br, 3 ba, below ~I
$36.500. Owner tra
Owner evea aft 5. &
OCEANFRONT o·
2-2 Br units, 1 new.
Lo dn. Pi,xi int OK.
wkdy6. 673-6769 wla
~awport Hgts.
AVAIL lmmed. Cliff
Br, 2 ba + 2 Br C
Int Apt. $49.~. 548
Corona del Mar
Cameo Highlands, SJ
br, 2 ha. On canyon
OWNER 673-4-
Lido Isle ----B1yfront Lida
2 Story, 4 BR, 3 BA
ens, best side ol bE
be converted to
Watch the boats ca
In 20' of front windc
tacular v i e w!
across from Ball
Club.
ONLY $119,
Phone !or appoirt
673-9412
Builders H1
S<XXI sq-ft. 4 BR l
5 ba, 3 car gar.
Unusual features.
to appreciate. Bro·
come. 520 Via Lide
642-1615. Eves 6'
MOVE RIGH.
Beautiful 4 BR, 2
pletely furn. New c
redecorated. targ
!lltndeck. SS9. <XX>.
R. C. GREER, l
3416 Via Udo
Must sell. $60,<XK>
estate sale. 3 BR
Ma.ke otter. 219 Vic
548-0787
rr·s e.ach ~ t rest aei.cttoo eYtr
DAILY PILOT •
aecdofl NOW!
Lido life
.,
Solff 1.1 -
SCIAM-U
..
.. -
HOUSH llOa SAL.I HOUSIS FOi SAL.I HOUSIS '01 SALi ·-·--..-.
1_L;; .. ~l;; ... ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1U;;;;I L;; .. :;;;';;;;;lle;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;'J;;S1 .._,.,..... '9Mft 1400
1• Fo COMPLETE PAC<ACE r DtscrlmlnatlnCJ luyer • BR. 2~ BA, 2 ttor)'. eeach
11,000 $(1. fl Of Land at Zurich Circle, 3,144 Noltb Develop. Elec. Bit·
1q. fl iD liD"1--story Residence. TOO :'Ip,. tns, ll1and atove • '*· ~ u.. Paaelled .._ m-w/~, in S Cl1' Garan W7wort bench, Heated ool liY ra w/frplc, 6t rro w/
in Lee watrecl landscaped patio, 111nny and blt.ln bl.ll.cb. crpta, clrpll, cov.
teduded,. ered patlo, bloct wall pool
AppraiMd 2 yn ago by State Inheritance me, tmeed )'9l'd. 2 car pr.
Tu appralaer at '125,000 -A really eound C.meot drtvrwly. l'omwr
buy at '115,000. Owner may carry back at lnOdel bome -lit owner.
'1%. Submit. Well cu'td tor. 2~ 11"1 old.
LOUIS W. llllOGS er ST AN HI NLINI 5 min. to beadL &duced
b•ltors to SlS,900. Call owner tfT·
714 E ... lbM l tvd. (7)4) 67s.t110 llH> evM A wlmda.
WE WILL ADMIT
M..a __ v _ _. ____ 1_1_10 Huntiftlfen leech 1400
BY Owner mov\nl -1mmed
poaaess. 3 br, 1 % ba, 1tg
fam rm, frpl, nu cptS, drps.
nu pnt .in le out. $23,500 SY..
loan 54(>-0(14
5 BDRM., by owner. New
cr.rp.,. 2 Ba. l&e. patio;
milllY extras. $3 1 • 5 0 0 •
545-1844
Newport le•ch 1200
5%0/o
Pre int1a Uon price on this
large 2 story 3 BR • 20x24
family room. Take over
$23,400 5% % loan • total pay-
IM!lts S.191 Includes wees
near freeway accus.
KATELLA REALTY
8-17~
$23,900 BY OWNER MEREDITH GARDENS 3 Bdrm, 2 baths, fire'plaoe
bullt·ina, wall to wall car-s BR 2 story s ta, lovely petJ.nr and drapes, walk to k nd the beach. Plus 2 ~ and cpts/drps, li e new co ·
tennil courta. 642J.273, 2500 IQ. ft, many extra• a
owner trana. -any offer
4 BR -OWNER considered or will lease/
2 Ba., Lrpl., beam cell., ilew option.
cpt1. Comer loc.: club priv.; BRASHEAR REAL TY
urKent. $28,000. Open Week-' 847-8531 Eves. 839-1537
ends. 351 62nd St. 675-0H4
547-7401 Owner/Aaent
REDUCED To price of lots!
1.A>w dn., Fr-Z terms Lovely
3 BR 2 Ba borne on 2 loti. nr.
bay &: ocean. Can use as 2
$1000 DOWN!
It needs IOme paf:nt a.ad 11\b
or repair but S14,500 la •
good prtoe for a 3 bedroom,
2 ~th home. Juat I ftW
blocb from lbopplni,
'1612 'EDJ:NCER
M2M56 0pen·Eves.
3 BR 2 batb, b I t • i n s ,
opt/drps, bloct wan. patio
attractive lanchc. $22,500
owner. 536-7872
3 BR. 1 ~ ba, View bome.
Newly ~ec. bltna, Pl,950.
Vacent. Owner. 968-3985
Fountain Valley 1410
$'26,000 1 STORY. Airline
Pilot's Home: Comer lot,
beaut trees, 4 bdrm, 2'>f: ba,
frpl. nr schls. shops, o!! SD
f"wy +. mi. BY Owner Call
952-5129
ASSUME 5% % G.I. Newer 3
BR. 2 Ba., fam. rm. +
bonus rm. Owner SJS-2370
llNTA.LS llNTALI
"'-U.hwu....... Apia. U..tumlthed
!!!.,... .... .. ....... 5000
==;:::====:::I L\Ol!l.OR • UNFURN.
Huntlnttena.ct.MOO --------FREE RENT AL IOOK
Drop lJI end 8row11e
WE HAVE SOME
7682 EDINGER
8(2.....W ' OPEN EVES.
,,.. $100
Ind. util.
1•2 AS BDRM.
nJRN, A tJNFURN.
U.a~ .Pools. Qilld Care
Ceoter. MJ. to Shoppina -
No pets allowed
2700 Petenoe W11. at Hill'
bar A Adlum, OIBta Mesa.
546-o3'IO
3 BR, 2 BA, tam rm .. b}t.ins, Ad lt Onl • dlahwaaber, crpta A drpc. . U s Y
BBQ area In kitcben. Fenc-D1scri~dve Tenants
ed yd A covered patio. Avail for Pruti&e Address
6-15. lAe $210. 847--0047
LEASE, walk to bch, 4 BR. 3
BA, trl-level, N!Wport W!lt,
$250. Ownr-bkr 83&-6341
Ev ea.
MARTINl9UE
GARDEN APTS.
Parklike IUlTGCllldings
H I ... ...-. FURN1SHED BACHELORS
unt ngton ch -UNFURN 1 BR • 2 BR . 3 BR
2 Bn Hous.e. Large lot, '.! mi 2 batba available
Irom pier. CaU U3: ED Carpets. drapes, ~araee
7~;,s ait S pm or wknds. 11th & Sent• Ana, C.M.
$190 MO lease. lge 3 BR. nr. 646-4233 &t&-5542
Freeway, major shopping,
16791 Newland, 1m. 833-1730
ts rm.-to bid. Prk~ rear
121 4lst Owner 673-2719
Elegant 3 BR with electric
kitchen, corner location &
2 full grown olive t:ttes •
room for boat or trailer. m .soo ruU,,nce. 1705 f ountain \llllty
SILVER H104-GITE-
PRIME loc.. Bluffs condo.
View ol lake. 3 BR. 2 Ba.
BY OWNER 644-1157
6% % LOAN; xlnt cond., 3
BR. 2 Ba.. lge. hi-beamed
wd. paneled den: cov. patio.
U>vely yd. $30.750. Owner
1900 Beryl Lane ~2909
BA YCREST BY OWNER
5 Large Bdrml. 3.250 sq. ft.
Ivan Wells built. Fee land.
2100 Windward Lane
WATERFRONT, 62 Balboa
Coves. 3 BR. m,ooo. Will
trade for property, Arabian
horses. or-? LI 8-7771
LUXURY Condom • Blulfs 4
br, 3 ba, below ~t val at
$36.500. Owner transl. Call
Owner eves aft 5. 644--0509
CXEANFRONT DUPLEX
2-2 Br units, 1 new. $64,900
Lo dn. Prpd Int OK. 548-0lm
wkdy!., 673-0769 wkncb~ve.
New port Hgta. 1210
AVAIL lmmed. Cliff Haven 3
Br, 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean Vu
Inc Apt. $49,~. 548-7249
1250
Pacific Shores Rftlty
847-3586 Eves. 96l-5408
One llock leach
4 year old, custom built. 2 l
3 BRs, enclosed garages. No
vacancy. Priced for quic.k
salt.
BRASHEAR REALTY
847-8531 Eves. 968-1178
ATTENTION
Builder trade-In. lmmac. 4
BR + tam rm, upgraded
cpts/drps. GI • no down. •
$1400 dn FHA. ~uced price
to S26,400.
l' 1llage Rea: Estate
962-4471 S46-8JU3
Only $650 Down
Offered VA (no down) or
FHA lenna • sharp 4 It
.fami1.y room, newly painted
but yard needs work. Va-
cant-ready to ao. Full price
$23,500.
COLLEGE ~ft S46-S880
A sturdy houae. Immeculall!,
2 bedroom. 1 ~ bath, plus
lanai, large ltvi~ room,
sweepltia view of oce8Jl
from all sides, comer fire-
place, deck A: patio, refrig.
ere.tor, range l washer. dry.
er, garbage disposal. North·
w~t from Alpha Beta.
Phone 494-1462
Several NEW HOMF.s IN
l.AGUNA Be a c h • 5%
DOWN, NO CLOS I NG
COSTS. Carpels, drapes,
landscapine. bit-ins LOS
PAD~ REALTY, 895
Glenneyre Street Lacuna
Beach. Ph. 494-8833
THE BEACHCOMBER
Looks to the See. clapboard
siding, pointed pbie roof·
lines of wood !!hake, cozy 2
BR, oaken flrll, knotty pine
walls, Frplc, Only $19,!00.
Miuim Rlty 494-0731
OCEAN V1EW 3 BR. 2 Ba.
fpl Deckl, patio. Reduced
$30,800. 4M-6678, 83J..544l
IU:NTALS
HoUMt Fumlthecl
Newport Beach 2200
NEWLY dee 3 BR den l fam
rm frpl, bltna, $225 1 yr lie.
Call bef 5: 30. 213: 9.lS-19'l9.
17624 Walnut, FV
Apartments
Deluxe Bachelor Apt
Uv nn, br, kitch & ba.
Summer Rent1ls 3995 1 & 2 Bdrm Apts
-------3 BR Apta
DELUXE waterfront duplex; with 3 baths.
Newp't. Island. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Near schools, freeways
each unit: boat dock, gar., Walking distance lo OCC
laundry; 2 Week minimum. 911 El Cimino
~7861 or 67S-1908 Apt. # 1 Cost• MeMI
BA YFRONT, Oppoelte bch 3 FAIRWAY BR, Z ba Furn. $250 wk for
~t~nq: 233-C l 9th St .. YIUA APTS.
Kc:t-.TALS
Apta. Furnl1hed
HOU DA Y PLAZA
DELUXE. Spaclou11 l·BR.
Furn. apt. S135 + ulil.
3 BR APTS
POOL
ADULTS ONLY
Manager Mrs. Carson
20122 S•nt1 An1 Av ..
Nr. Orange Co. Airport
546-8260
Htd pool, ample parkini· BACHELOR APT. Bii-in ~1v
No children. No pell. ~ :elrlg, cpt.s. $82.50 Walk to
1965 Pomona, CM 64'2-5858 or:c. 984 E. Camino
Coat.1~
2 BR Apt. Sew opts, drps, No
4100 chldrn or jlets. $120 mo.
---------Pvt court-yard. 548~i69
$25 Wk. Up
• Studio A Bac:JI apca. Newport BHch 5200
Cameo Highlands, spaciou.s 4
br, 2 ba. On canyon, $36,500,
OWNER 673-4423
* Closing Cost Only
Cl · FHA buyers, we have 2
4 bdrm Prestige bomea.
Owners have been transtd.
A: must sell. Onty $28.900
• Incl Utlll A Phone wrv. AV AIL. June ht lhru Aug. e Ma.Id Service . 'IV avail. JUST Completed 2 BR, 2 ba
Lovely 2 BR., lleepa 6; e New Cale 1: Bar i.ngle-sty. Frpl, chndeUers. n,ooo For summer.673-9453 2376 Newport Blvd. 548-9755 Juah cpts, drps. iron gated
Lido Isle 1351 RENTALS Pvt patios, cement walls
HouMI Unfurnished E/SIDE 2 BR. Elec bltna, btwn unils. Med1111ion kilch, HARBOUR REALTY B1yfront Lido Iii•
2 Story, 4 BR, 3 BA, 2 kitch-
ens, best side ot bey. Could
be converted to duplex.
Watch the boats come with·
In 20' ot front window. S~·
tacuJar v i e w! DlrecUy
acrosa from Balboa Bay
Club.
847-8595
patio, Adults only. 361-B FA heat. Across rmi Coco's,
Gener•I 3000 Ogle $135 mo. 642·129& WatcU Pla.za. 1665 Irvine.
$21,850 n~. CHARMING 2 BR ulil l200 mo. 642~
1 BR, stove n!frtg, Util pd. paid. Blk to K·Mart. 5n GOLD Medallion. 2 br. 2 ba,
S8Z month. Nr airport. 20'232 Joann. ~87. 646-28ll cpta. drps, bit-ins. $155 yr
Assume 51' % Loan. Lovely
corner 3 BR 1 i,t baths.
S. W. Birch ~5630 -========= QUIE"J' 1 BR, dL~hwasher, lse. 673-2370, 675-1995
ONLY $119,500
Phone Lor appointment
673-MlZ ----luilden Home
5CXXl 1q-ft. 4 BR &: maid's
5 bl, 3 car gur. 1~ lots.
Unusual features. Must see
to appreciate. Brokers wel·
come. 520 Via Lido SOI.Id
642-1615, Eves 675-1669
MOVE RIGHT IN
Beautiful 4 BR, 2 be, com-
pletely turn. N!W carpeting,
redecorated. large patio,
lkl ndeck. S59 ,000.
R. C. GREER, Realty
3416 Via Udo 673-9300
Must sell. $60.000 home in
estate sale. 3 BR A: den.
Make otter. 719 Via Orv1eto.
548-0787
rr·s Beacb boule time. Bia· rest ee'9cdon ntrl See dw
DAILY PIIm Q&llified
aecUon NOW!
HAPFDAL REAL TY Coste Meta 3100
"Homes to Match Income'' 4 BR, l~ Baths; large fam.
8740 Wamer 842-44:xi nn. w/bllJl. BBQ; 2 frpl.,
POOL TIME carp., drapes. bltn1. 2 Car
garage. Fenced: &ardener.
4 BR, quality carpeta, all S235 Month. 546--0125
built-Ins Larae enclosed P•· 3 Bdrm, 2 ba home with pool
tio It a cool pool. Owner szso mo. (wW Furnish) BurT
trnnsferred • only $26,500. While, Ritt. 2901 Newport
P1ul Jones Re1lty Blvd. Npt. Bech. 675-4630
847-1.266 Eves. 84Z-5844 MONTICEU.0 Townhouse. 2 e FRANTICll Br. dlx kitchen. Adults only.
Tl'ansf, Must Sell. 4 br, 2 ba, $187.50. 54G--Oll29 alt 3.
1 1try, Bi yr, patio, bit-ins. Mesa del Mar, Jg 3 ·BR, fam
Asking $28,900 Owner •· d .... , t.
962•7935 rm .. cp.,., rp1, new ....,n
all bit-in&. $225. 56-5270
Must Sell Prestige 1850 Sq. l BR, den. crpta. drapea.
Ft. 3 BR. Atrium. Near water paid, gar, $145 mo.
new. 642-3375
5241 Glenroy Dr. • 842.7277 =========-
SALE or le•~. nr beach
•paciou1 4 BR home 1~ ba,
cpts, dishwasher, frplc. b1t·
Ins, 16'x40' vaUo. Owner
962..qm aft 5
PLACE your .-ad wtaen
Uiey are lookinc -DAILY
Pil.aI' dulUled SG-5678
3115
VACANT 3 b e d r o o m a ,
carpell, drape.a. covered
patio. Colteize Park. $200 per
month. Agt. 54&-4141
Attrac:Uve 3 Bedroom +
guest room, l~ ti.th.
336 Princeton Ml 2-2222
Lido Isle 2351 Lido Isle 2351 Lido l1le 2351
"oCC\\4llA-l&~~s·
Solve c Sbnpl« SCf'Clmbtect Word Pu.ulc for 11 Chuckle
0 .'°'"'"99 ""-' ef .,,.
fOUf 11:1Cllftbled -.rds "' low to form low ..... words.
IPUPEKE I . r1rr1_
I I r " I ~CAVHO I .,. _______ ..,..-t I wtnf Into a jewelry store . I I f to buy my glrl o ring. I told __.,__,,......,_~$ -21 to th• dertt, "SID la no obfect.
I
AIASAN IJ111tglwmo •--· ~.':1::L::1::1 ::1•:._ ~ =~!~
·-------•
laundry rm, Adults only. B k B 5240 $120 mo. 546-7285 eves ,_•_c __ •_Y ___ _
l ·BR .. close down town:
w/w carp.; adult.s. $98
168 E. 19th 642-8?13
27' CCYITAGE Trlr. $65 mo.
Vic ol Mesa Or. &: Santa
Ana Ave., CM. 642.-5359.
NASSAU Palms 1 &: 2 BR Huntington Be.ch 5400
Furn or Unf $UH150. Htd ---------
pool. 177 E. 22nd St. 642-36"5
1 BR. DUPLEX * F'URNlSHED * 2 Bdrm Unfurn
Adults. $87.50. ~ Utilities included
2 CLEAN Fum Bachelor Cot· HEATED POOL.
ta1es l 2 Apta. utlls incl'd. 80'l Knoxville, ApL D. HS
'No peta. ~ SJ&.2914
5990 ;N;ew;;;;;;port;;;le;;ac;h;;;4;2;00;;I Rent•ls W 1nted
1WO y o u n g responsible
women who have Uved and
worked in the Laguna
-I Will lWE
ADULTS ONLY Beach area for soroe time
July • Aug .• Sept. Ire willing to pa,y up to $180 per month for the right
apartment in Lllgunl, Coro-
FURNISHED APT. na del Mar or N!'wport area.
2 BEDROOMS -2 BATHS preferably near be 1 ch.
W •tt rfront I Loe Desire nicely rumlshed. 2
BOAT SUPS bedroom dwelling. Would be Channel R..t permanent but definitely do
not wsnt to be bound by 2525 Oc .. n Blvd., CdM lelllt'. Want to move ln early
673-1711 June or late May and would '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!)~~~~~IJ!m!l'I Uke garbage disposal and
BAYCLIFF MOTIL other modem conveniences
l.ndry, TV, maid """• btd If PoUible. 494-61H6 after s
pool. 455 N. Npt Blvd. p.m.
leUt.. 4* RESPONSJBLE Young fami.
-------....--ly, perm .. 2 or 3 br house in
BAYVIEW 3 3br, 2 ba. Apt. LliUJ11, nr lw'h, lo S160 mo. l~ae. near N!WJIOrt Harbor WUJ paint • rep11lr. Pt>ts.
Yt1cht Cl.lb. Bun-White, 494-5!m er l2l31 86Ml18.
Rltr. 2901 Newport Blvd. 8MAU.. 1 BR turn or unfum
Npt Bch. m-4Sl> with fent'ed y(! for dog.
Q.EAN BacMor Apt.. 6'2--0fl3 al1 4
AJI utll Ind S75 u» WANT prage to l'Mlt for atol'-
115 E. Balboa BJ...S. aee: Coat• Mesa art•.
BALBOA m-H ReuoMble. ~-2158
Huntl'!P!!' leach 4400 Reems for Rent 5995
FVR.N Bachelor '80 mo. All ROOM for LAd1 Cb I l d
uUl pd. Patio. Gflltleman welcom~. rrC<' rent for t
,,.ef. 211 G40nen, a3&-2280 mo, SlO mo. while wtfe coo·
RINTALS vale9C:eL &U-SOi1
Ap!I. Unfumlthed SlNCU: Penon. fVn., 1
0..-I S000 room. PrL ent A: bath a w/ahwf. Crpta .l ...._.
96WS7I llNT J • ..,,. flumlture MESA v~ al"N. "'--nl.
Kltdl pr1v., rarut. JJll w. $25 Mots" au" st. CM 546-8229 ruu.. OPl'lON ro BUT $1~. UP "4t W/lcftdlet
No d~11_1l 0.1.e-. m. up Studio Aptl.. -"" H.fl.R.C. Newport B!Yd. CM~ '""'ttvr. Renf1l1 SLEEP&NC Room. Pvt home sc••u I ... ANSWlll IN CWllRCAnON tJOO 5lTW. m ,CM. 541-l«W and ""'· !ly montll oni,. ~ • • ,... 1a11 w. Lndn. Anhm TT .. _. a oo Orlnlf!, ex. ----~-------------------------L~-1 \ ~ .. ,
RI AL ISTATI '
General
Income Property 6000
DRIVI BY
313-319 11th St.
H'°'NTIHQTON I .EACH
11,,,... tn two ba.Hdinp dd
11 praaes plus ~ va
for ale or trade fnr San
Dleao property by very all·
xioos ownert with large
equity. For appointment
plPUe write err p b o n e
(297-47741
* * * * *
DAIL V 'ILOT Ja,
.ANNOUNCEMENTS -·
•nd NOTICES
Found (Fr .. Ada) 6400
CAT. Male. Adult. Wht It
bl'n/blk. .Blk collu w/
C'llineatones. Vic al Fai.r-
vltw St, "°6]1. ~im.
SMALL (emale. n d d ii b
brown mixed doJ. Vic !'ran-
claO&n Fountain, HB.
842-4n2.
Burke Investors Realty
3731 Sixth Ave .. San Di'IO
FOUR BEDROOM
OWNER'S An.
' Whldclya Wentt WhMNya Gett
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOi
NATURAL IORN SWAPPEltS
Sf*lal Rate
FOUND y04.ll1&' boys watch
blk strap vie. Tm-111ln Way
N .B. ,.54M2'77
FOUND • turtle. Ideotify.
Vic. Newland A Zeldtr.
847-403.1
+ 9 dclwce rental u n I l •·
Never a vacan<.'Y. Out of
lown owner must sell.
5 li nes -5 times -S ltucka
ltULU -AD MUil tNCLUDI '401
l-Whel l'W ..... ,. ...... ._Wiie! yeu ""' ... ,.... a-vou1t •'*-ant1w ... -. ._J """ • _,, • .._
WAµ.Y M<.~ REALTY•
642-6487 anytime ~411
6-HOTHtHG l'Olt IALI -TltADH OHL 'ti LOST: Baby (lrls flan]. reel
multl colored bonnet A p PHONE "42-5671
knit twe&ter, U found or ',
taken by mistake, pleaa
return. PhCl'le 642-4980
Te Place Your T r..,.., P•rMI" Atil
15 units, 2 BR, hardwood,
noors, garigea. laundry, HAYE bc:aul Improved vac
Sl,4.35 mo. income. 548-3846 lol Zephyr Covr Lake Tahoe
574 HamiltCll\, Colla Mesa. Nt!trada side. Sl3.000 clear--
HOME & INCOME b Ow Want Ilse • Units· Alrpl111e Y nr • TD'.s or" lor eq 61S-5T16 Exr depres/lnvest. oppty. 4 Own r t · BR, res. 4 1~2 br Apls, __ e_-ag....;...... ____ _
pool, 2-yr old. Eslde. 675-L393 KEY . CM I rna)Or comer . . w
B · p 6050 some improvements. C-2
u11nen roperty _ prop. St,475 sq ft. Will trade
rNVESTORS ATTENTION ror income w/spendable.
Huntington Beach, improved Rltr. 64.2-6487 5454412
Beach Blvd. corner. This
fine C-4 property with older DLX Balboa dplx, 2 BR, bll-
bldgs. Present income over tn K, tum almost new, rpt11,
$i000 per yr. You can atforfl drps, frplr. patio, fncd yd.
to hold lhis ror appreciation, Bick ocean. Trade up Or·
Hu1Ty! Call s.47--0811 Brokrr angr/l.A Co. units 213: ========;;::. 69ll.ro12
Business Rent1I 6060 --------
. ~ View Arres Laguna
F:. 17th St .. Costa Mesa :l~OO Bl'ach. So m e improve.
Sq. fl. bld,::~. ICt ~ ant' <•f n11•nl " income $7700. $243,·
land lor l!'asr. $600 Per Mo. 000 equity. For. TO's or \'
!Walonomics ~5<>10 Ownrr. 49-i-465.l. 494-4957
e Excellent Location • 4 Units nr. Npt, Pier. &st
Newly decor. store, 17x.\O rcnlal area. $58,500. Ex-
1873 Harbor, C.M. 646-6654 cllange for small house-har-
bor area • Own!!!'. 20061~
Office Rent•I 6070 Court. 67~27
LAGUNA BE.ACH 3 BR., l ~ ea .. Costa Mesa
Desk spac~s ava~la~le tn home, val. $18,500: will take ne~est oUl.ce building 81 newer car or wbmit for pnme location In downtown . •
La B ch Air d. down payment. guna ea . con 1· Ow A tioned, c.arpeted, beautiful ner. gent !'>1&-5580
paneled partitioning. T wo '62 DODGE 500, l'<>nvertible
entrances; rear leads lo VALUE $15, TRADE FOR
Municipal parking lots. $:'!() utility trailer, boat or small
per month for space. Add bike. 642-0096
SJ for desk and chairs. Add
$10 for business hours an· *
swering service. All utilities * *
' . WANT rllx 3 br. 2 ba coodo,
Npl or CdM. Uave view lot
Lag Sch + S20,IXKI CQty, 3
br, 2 ba home In Tustin.
Call Roy al Vic Tomek 494-
9'188
GREY &: White long-~ •:
cat; Ans. to "Sam" cir a •
11o•h1slle. Vic Ramona UI.,
Deanr Garden Home tnct. •
llB. ~ward 968-4175 t
400 Acres !clear) Trade
$1,000,000 equity ror lg-e
Comm'l or Apts (any area.)
A.!lk for M/Purcell 675-4031.
Richardson/Purcell Rltr.
BEAUTY Salon. 6 1t1tion.s,
estab JG.yrs Udo are•. Will
trd rrce and clear $10,000
eq. IOI' R.E. or what·have-
you. Bkr. 5'1S. 77ll
REW ARD. Lost Male
Burmese. Vic 2500 bllC
Monte Visla, CM 548-BT
REWARD: Ladles c r e en
wallet. ll found. pleue call
646-1846 or ~
Person1l1
f,...
Batie 8o•tin9 Cl•SMS JO UNIT MOTEL, near air-Offered to public by
por1. TRADE FOR vaClllll, B•lbo• Power SquMron .
TD. or carry ba('k TD. A Elt>menlary Piloting Q>ur1ei
stt>al. °'4-11er ~5832 Every Monday, Startinl
7 OLD UNITS + 2 vacant PM, June 10 Newport Har-
lols, Bal boa, $63,500 • $4,000 bor Yacht Club, 720 W. ~
Down or try Car, Boat. Ave., Nev.'J)Ort Beach ;
...camper BQb.J,_..,m,..r:.o.,S ...,67...,lJ)......,?JwD+..,~ ........ ~MW'-CXIUY.CNl!IW:l'I
Oceanlmt Oplx, Bel Sl4,000 Every Tuesday, startins T
eq. Will trd for CM or ? Call PM. June ll, Ensign School
Asgl"I' Jensen IAssoc with Irvine & Citt Dr., Newporl
lerry Harris, Rltr.I 546-1440, Bcacn, in Ca1etorium. ·No
962-1141 eves. advance registration neceS:
sary. Enroll at class; iI any O'Keete & Me.nil! range. questions phone 543-1374
Deluxe, full size. 27" 15 sp 673-l855.
Schwinn bike. '57 Dodge lo -NEW--SP-AP_E_RS_,-out--ol-.._-..._•
mi good motor. For furn., ......,
recorder. tools 540-8376 & foreign: magazines, Eng.;
TRADE Germ., Ital., Span. Frencbt
Tri-plex E. Side CM China, Russian; also adul
Comp. furn. $15.000 cq. + magazines & paperbaekS.
13' cabin crsr. w/nt•w v-8
eng. For: live aboard boat, 1875 N. Harbor, CM 64&.~
TO's or 7 64&.7616 Ber Family Membership.
* * * paid except telephone. !!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!I!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
DAILY Pll.OT REAL EST ATE BUSINESS •nd
Will pay t.ran!Jfer ftt. MoV:
ing. Fee increased June 1-
Must b e 11 immediatel~
Make olfer. Write Box M
Daily Pilot
222 FOREST AVENUE Gener•I
LAGUNA BEAOi
494·9466 Mount. & Deurt 6210 ___ F_O_R REN_T...,._----~~~~~---
Approx. 450 Sq. 1''t. carpeted Mountain Home
It drapes, air·cond.
MARINER'S BLOG.
1515 Westclilf Dr., N.n .
Contact Mrs. Rainio 642-4000
1741 Westcliff-0.::--
Prime toe for slore or offices.
2000 sq ft (t 2Sc. WaJ/pan'l,
Crpts, Drps, 11ir-cond. <A>-op
Bkrs. Owner 548-!r.>86.
Modem Office-Orange Co.
Bank building, 230 E. 17th
St., Costa MeH. 642-1485
Beautiful new Lake Arrow
head home has rumpus room
with wet bar, kilchen with
walnut cablnclS, b r u s h
chrome appliances, 16 C'\l·f
combo freezer and refrig
crator built-In vacuum. sau
na bathroom plus many
other features including
docking privileges on the
lake. Priced al $65,000. For
more inf:> please call GleM
.
t .
.
Thompson with:
Lott 6100 Eckhoff & Assoc. Inc.
----------1818 W. Chapman Ave.
Specl1I Offer Orange, Calif.
I wilt build a 4 BR 2 ba home ~l-2621. Elles-wknds 538-6T.!7
11343 sq-ft) for the low price 5 A. • b' $2 99'5 S600
of $7.22/sq.ft on your lot. cres "' ca Ill, ' · down Other models avail. CaU Don BRECK NCYrt' RLTY 546-6464
at 537-0380.
R-4 LOT. 25>.117' \i blk to R. E. W•nted 6240
ocean .. 13th St. HB. Will WANT lo buy 3 BR, 2 BA or
subordinate, sell on lo dwn 3 BR & f 11 ho
or trade. Bkr. !>-1Hl933 ·Pref ambl ~ roof'!l 1use. er gas t-ms, 1rcp ace.
._ 6200 carpets. drapes. I e n c e d
__ r_•_•_ge_____ yard. $23.000 price range.
TO SETILE ESTATE
2 1/3 ACRES
VACANT LAND
Costa Mt>sa or Huntington
Beach area. 646-7022
14·30 Day Listings
Call Agenl ~1440
Bua. Opportunities 6300 .----·-
OFFERED AT NEED AN
LESS THAN EXTRA INCOME?
APPRAISED VALUE Would S500 or more per
2 J /3 A C R E S commerr1al month working pert lime
zonrd IC-2> on major lhor· hrlp?? <Costa Me1!8 • New·
oughfal"I' rn SMta Ana. :\,o port resident >
trl. apts . business. trailer
park or other <..'Ommercinl No selling, no solicitmg. Prov-
01<, or hold for future In· ed sue<:1lsslul business avaU·
('Teas!' in value when Bois.\ able for respon!ible perty
Ave. lll)ly rlevclops into 4· with (oresighl and aggreu·
tane blvd. Sewer line stul> iveness. Musi have cash ca~
bed 111 property. A m p I r Ital to invest, good cbantC·
waler supply. Appraised at Irr r('ferenccs. and be able
$f,0,000 by inheritance-till< to make decisions.
appraiser. Available f o r
quick solr at 10'1 le.ss, at Interested parties call Mr.
$.~.000. nrl to estate. Drivr Stllllderfcr t2131 9J6.Z76j
by 4i17 W. Bolsa, Santn COLLECT for an interview
Ana, t h 1• n phone ownrr In your area.
~2·9'.;3.'l --CONFEC"l1--0N __ _
RO ACRl:.:s • •on ~ltn ea.<it, 'SUPPLY ROtrrE
west roa<ll N c \\ berry . Unusual opporl\inlty for men
l"alif.. Silver VaU('y, h1-or woma.n to restock new
dl'S<'rt. rlry, 111 miles east ol t.ypc c<>in dlapen&crs with
Barstow. "Laoo ot Lake~" hl!(b quaJlty Ptekaged food
1rr1. 90 Man-made lakes in producta. Handling brand
valtc-y. Alfalfa. fi!1b raisin11. n&mea only. No sellln1.
•-I u •II t r Dependable person ~n net rttl't'Rhvnll . c~ rn or VERY HIGH EARNlNGS.
trall!'r pork. Man~ drvrloJ> PRJ'I or hill tlmr. RequiM'S
menls In progrr~~ such H o $USO to S3l'l0 cash secured
ak1 lake for ~·llt!'r ~ In-by invtntory and equipment.
1tructJon; much 1 I t a I r I Write fOf' p t' r 1 0 n 1 J 1n-
rmwtn1t: flnlshl"I mrtnurl'nl IMVI~ &Mng p h o n e
with sevrral lnkes tor flab-numhtt' to Inter-State DIAt.
Vig It •wlmmtn11 & overnJtc Co .. t~ll West Kt1teJ11, Suite
ciunpers, 11nd ~f cau~: • 221, Anllhelm, Calif.~
lakr with Wl.ltt'.r1ronl perr.11
· 1vall1blt tor homr boildln1.
This level !W) aettS bu •
Wl'll & pump l n'tlf'tvolr nn
property • rrntty to "'lit al·
l&Jl• 01' build I lR.k(I f(llf' Wit•
trr Milne or fot fish rals~
OwnM' 147.fiG40 eves. •
wlmds.
MAKE A MEMO to t•lMr
up toys }'Oa llO lonlZt'f Mtd, a.a tbftm fer tuh .rltb
Cla.aifl.a Ada. Dial Ml.arJI
~
NOW'S THE
TIME FOi
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY Pll.OT
WANT AD
-------------------------11;.---------
MUST Sell Holiday He FINANCIAL
Bus. Opportunlti" 63
Sp:i Membership, 40 mos1o
00 1, 20 mos for 2 only $3001 First payment Aug 15, Cali
646-2152 after 4:30 ., cANDY SUPPLY ROUT E
Part or Full Time
Man or woman to refill & OLD private papers of Judge
lrom 1870's thru early 1900's
& Dodge City, GuMisoo, Colo:
e d Sall Lake City. OR ~~.
& Cd:'vl eves • all day wkends •
collect money from new
unique coin op e ra I
dispensers <candy
nabisco p r o d u c t s I . ~ ALCOHOLICS AnoflYllUlbl cellenl income for few ho Harbor Area. Phooe 673·~ 'c!; P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mea weekJy work (day or eve
No selling. $875 to S34
Cash required. For person
inteiview send name, •
al FOH Sale; charter m@)-
d-bershlp In Newport Beach
to Tennis Cub. ~39 . dress & phone number
Tran1-Wes1em Dist. Co. • 590
if. N. Azusa Ave. C.Ovi.na, Cal
91722
CdM "'ennis Cub, Sgte.
membership ns mo., no.Jn.
it1ation fee. Call 673-5ID :
PROVEN. Sure. moder
method al lea c hin
D NEWPORT Beach Teanl.I
g Cub Membership for sal~.
permanent habit ol. 64-1-2640 con tr
IE.G. Eating for wcig
control) with new low e ht MH t Dyn•mic Friends·
ost with sterling qualities. I<' public. Now i.eeki
associate offices in So. 0 . ng • 839-4990 • c.
Moderate lnvestmenl
quired.
re-WOULD like to meet other
ry non • s m o k I n g BRIDGE Phone for inqui
appt. n4: 774-TI50
Buy Now for Summ• r
Toy shop on Balboe Isle.
Established 20 years.
W•lker Re1lty
3336 Via Udo, NB 675-S 200
Real E1t1te Loans 63 40
PRIVATE MONEY
Jack Smith Co. ~i.nce l!M9
1323 North Broedway, SA
f>43-8381 anytime
Pl.AYERS. 642-6772
Announcements 6410
Coast Health Cl..ta
Hospitality is Our Motto
FREE SAUNA WITH
SWEDISH MASSAGE
Open wkdys 10 am-ll pm
su'nrlays 10 am-8 pm • .
132 E. 18th St. 642-5090
Funer1l1 6412
Mortgages, T.D.'1 63 45 WESTMINSTER . ~ MEMORIAL PARK $4~ u t Trust Deed payab
S48.65 mo, includinR S~o
small IC'vcl Oceanvicw I ot.
All due 3 yrs. lO'd discou
wely rrioms 12%. 49-1-11
n1
37
-90·1.-Low to $60,
or more. SINGLE FAMlL
000 y
Bay Mortgage Co. 646-16 fi5
Mortu•ry & Cemetery .
Complete funer•I• ~
from $245 '
Cemetery Iott ..
from $130 •
Money W1nted 63
Includes Endowment Cu-a
Everything in one buutlful
SO place means less cost. '
FOR Private Invtstors On
A 5,000 1st $29.17 mo Int on
du!' I yr teeured by $40,
No traffic problems. ~>' 14801 Beach, Westminster
000 531-1725
Home Laguna Beach
B 10.000 3 yr 2nd $100 mo '
10';: lntl'rest b l 35, :; Cemetery Lota
~rt'd by Commer('lal hi dg 2 Lots, Harbor R e I
Lees rd on
valurd 16.'1.000
Lincoln A no Cemetery, VeterMS secti.ODl'
both Jor $300. 54S-4678
C 8,950 lst $90 Mo 6n% 10
discount secured by 3 BR
Commercial lot G a r d (' BABYSITTER, Your ~
nn Mothrr 55. xlnt refereneai
ly Guest cottage or gara«e ~
th aa ptirt aalary, Anll. NtJ
Orovf'
WE have tne.ny o~r Ut
requests cominl in dlll
notice A muat be .,Id wl
either Bar C
REAL Eatatt Lotl.n Rn*!'
111: pennancnt. C&tl: ti~
!'!> 247-7903 Eves. Apple Vallq'
Soo.> in GP<'1I t to 6 pm t Ill BABYSITTING In 111:1 bO ,
:lSl nr. Paularino Scbl., enY •· noon Slit or call 54.\-8:
1323 No Bdw $,\. Lar re wkdya. ~-.. puldnc lot In nwit
OLD private t::';ra of Jud
WlLL bebyalt I chlJd -S mae
gc to 3 yn. QI ••ltly. DQa. N.r.
'1 H.,. Sboppln«i. ~lo.
from 1870 a I early 1900
Dodse Clt)t, Gumilon, CO
Se.It lAkt Qty.
OIM Evte · all clay wkt m-:6 Irick, Meee.,,-.y, lh.
$25,000 for 6 montba •t 10 and
deed .. 10 wllh noo.ooo trust
an 200 Octanvl.ew Iota
eolla.lttal. 4N-1137
ANNOUNCIMINTS
1M NOTICIS
"eund (FrM Mt}
FOUN'D:
-REMODEL , retatu '4CIO 111u.mb'1 .• sitllltl!w. M.. ca~, l'fttd., I FE WC,
lo room lld&U... a • a 1 • Wallde-T'allffe
NetrpOl't BtlCh. m-1193 m.am
White~ . ,
..
•
l
Sla VtCI DIRECTORY
C.r...,terint 6590
!NO JOB TOO SMAW..'
Ruldent • Industrial Com-
merclal • M a 1 n t t n .a n c e
Repair and Rl'mod ,. I
Reas. Uc. bonded, lnHurrd.
• 962.J.!161 or fH2 · 5004 •
• C'atperltry • C-ahinels •
• Bit-In• • /\ltera!IMS •
• Jtepelrs • J\A'IS' l).l&.9583
FREE estimates. No Job too
small. Rt model5 and Ad·
di tlona. :><&8--07S7 -R£PAIRS + AL TERATtO~S
CABL'IETS. Any SllJ> Job.
23 yrs ex-per. w1.sn3
Cement, Concrete 6600
CUSTOM t>ATlOl; ~
Block walls. Also l'On('rerc
sa'Rinc .t removal. S.!2-1010
CEMENT work. all IYJ>(>S,
No job loo small. f'rt1" 1·~1.
H. SI'U F1..1 CK 54 \-F.6 I j
.Floora-WeJks-Pattos & E~-
polifd Rodes. !:: x pe r t
11rorlcmanshlp. &U·R.iM __
CEMENT work. P a t 1 o s .
driveways. walks. rtr AJJ
types. Free est. 893-4818
C.ntractora 6620
e ROOM ADDmONS e
L. T. Construction
Family rooms. kitchen or
units. Single story or 2:
plans cusrom designed. For
esUmatu & layout. phone:
• 347.1:;11 •
ADD e Remodel e Repail'
Res • Comm • Industrial
Free Layouts & Est. DICK
HUFFMAN 673-1459
Additions • Remodding
Fred H. Ct-Jwlck. Lir.
6'13-ro41 * 54~2170
C1rpet Laying &
Repalr 6626
CARPET . Apts . Homu
Quality in~tallation. Free
estimate~ al your home All
prices. ~78 eves. Lie.
Contractor
3e DAJLV 'ILOT M,y 20, l~
ERVICI DIRECTORY JOBS & EM,LOYMENT t JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOU I I M,LOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOU a IMPLOYMINT_JOU ___ _,IWL~-=oy'""M1~""""""~......--:::-==:-:o=v·M1NT4 s
p aperha nglng
a inting p
(;
1
:'llT~IOR •'-EXl'Y.RIOR
Patntuui:· l"rl'~ uumate,
Jcrn.sl'd ~ I niurtd
Ca11 CHUCK S4R-53H
p lumbing -6890
L EAKS? Gas or water dec-
tronicaUy located Wider ce-
ment, blacktop. ;round.
walls. showers, any place.
Rrpa1red Wattr llnr~ clean·
e<l. pressure reMored.
CALL "L~'<S" l;l:-!./13.18
BllnkAmr11N rd OK
r u \ ufr" r.
R F.PAlri.$ IU:\t(Jl>EL
T 6974
('
* V,.rnr . lhe T1Jr ~I.in *
11~1. wnrk. ln~tall ,t,, r r11a1rs.
'\o J()I} too ... mall Pl.is1rr
11a1rh. L<-11kln1t "' h o w e r
rt pair IW7·l'f1il~l4i-'l'!Ofi
J OBS & EMPLOYMENT
J ob W•11ted, Men 7000
CUSTODIAN
CITY OF
NEW,ORT BEACH
$400-1486 per mo. Ll her a I
benefit program. lmmtdi.
ate open.Ing tor man with
nun. ~ yc>M rt poo.slble ·
l'Xpcnrnce u1' b u 1 I d 1 n I!
ma•tenanc·e and ro~roohl
work tn 'A<Orl< in City I lilll
l'Om ptrx -1..lO p.m tu I:.! .~
a m. \Ion thnt Fr1. ~-\t'rl·
Jrnt ph.)-~11·111 rnmhuoo ,.,..
11111rrd Ar1pl} ht torr j p m.
)'lay 2'i tfl
P ersonnel Offic.e
CITY HALL
3300 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach
-ELECTRONIC
TECHNICIAN
c Ex~ptinnal oppartun11y with APT All'#. L1rrn~rd '.?O vrs small firm for bn~ht and
{'Xl>fr ~lifl &t power yachts. am hitious l('<·hnirlan Agr
Fam1J111r \\. Cnust 1nrludm1; :l().30 with rxpcricm·r and
Culf ?! Lower Cali!. E. ~~ prov~n skills tn pr(l(fuctlon
Pac1f1c W11tcrs Btst o{ ln< al ·01 rlN·IJ•onk instrumrnts. 1n·
& strnrral rrlr1•rnr~. Call . . h;. • I &11;-~"971 bf'lort 0800 nr after durhni;: wmni:. m<'l' ·1n1ca um assembly. tr~11n1; ~nd lu;:ht
tmuhlP 'hoohni: ""M t •'•·
ob Wanted, Lady 7020 umr nr i· '11 J
c A R P f, T C\Patt ini:. FlO<lr
.s1r1ppm1t Waxm,i:. WaOs,
Windowi. u .shrri 511-0567
l 1ousr;-&-Apt Cleanin.e:
Drpcndablr & RA-es 774-A.5!)6
TI1E HOl:SI:: KEEPERS
p ART TrM~/Tem11. A~l
~Yr.ra!ll lypii;t. good
at fi1?Urrs. 64.241772
Domestic Help '-7035
I
LfV!'.: J:'-15
Employt"r pay1. let>S
1,ror"gP Ryllln(I AgPnry
~ R f;. 16th. C\.A. M7-03!l:'i
MICROWAVE
INSTRUMENT CO.
:Ill I :!nrl /\Vl'nllr
C'nr'0!18 t1PI ~IM 67'1-ifiAA
NEW
Mfg. & Distributing
Firm
w,.. nrN:l :!O mrn In tram
10 :ill dPparltnPOlS 1n All
pos111on~. ..;fl txpl'rrrnce
nCC'r~sary.
Starting Sal1ry
$495 a month
SKILLED
AND
UNSKILLED
MEN NEEDED NOW
TO FlLL V ACANCIF.S IN
NEW D EPA RT M ENT
OPENINGS DUE TO IC(.
PANSlON IN OUR OR·
ANCE COUNTY DIVISlON.
STARTING SALARY
$120
per wHk & up
J~l~lEDIATE t; MP L 0 y.
ME:-IT FOR THOSE WJIO
QUA L I F Y. COMPLETE
.IOB TRA INING AND RAP·
ID ADVANCEMENT.
REXAIR INC.
ORANGE C0(.,:'(fY Drv.
Fnr inlonnanon c1U
,\<lon<lay k Tuesdey
774-7251
PART TIME
Help nHdecl now
Tdeal pen time job
worktng 5 nights a week
from 6 10 9·]) p.m. Pay
1 a n i:: t s sta r1 from
$228 per month
'\n rxt:H'nrm•p neces-
sar:. \\'p nrl'rl nine l'X·
It a mr'n nnw '¥lust have
Jr, l"ri 1n 1h1~ ilrra t w o
yra~ fir longer. Call for
appo1ntmt>nt
Mr. Nelson
774-7251
P.F.C. International
Now Hiring
WI' will inlrl'\1f'W lht!! W('('k
yOUtlj( mffi h{'f\\ N>n I ht ll;tes
flf 19 and .tfi for rarecr posi·
Plastics and
Fiberglass Fabrication
Layout, fabricate and make build-up of
plastic and fiberglass parts and usemb-
lies including foaming from previously
developed Information ob~ainab1e from
plannfoi sheets and bluepnnts.
Minimum three years of experience.
High temperature resin experience
mand atorv. Ability to fabricate plastic,
plaster and wood molds from blue-
prints.
.Apply in P.r90n C!' c.11
(714) 146-8030
n32 H1rbor Blvd ., Costa ~. Calif.
• Atlantic Resnrch
CORPORATION
Mi11lle Systems Division
Production
Test Tech
Know basl(' tlt<'lrontc
l he or y. Knowledl:!! ol
logic circ11Ht'V des1rabl,..
Military !llld nr trade
echool.
Production-Mach.
Maintenance
-
MACHINE SHOP
DISPATCHER
Must llf" familiar with mil·
ctune shop practices 11nd
able to read bluep1inta.
(Day shitll
JMIIQR
Expcnenced in hbication
of machine tool5, chip re-
moval and general house-
keeping in machin,. shop.
l'lnfls "Ith u~ 1n mana2e-Sound mci·hanwaJ apli·
men1. 54-vrrRI po!ltliom• OPf'O !ude and tfl!ll~ nrressary.
fnr 11vrrwas 1•mptnyment.
IN ight shiftl
1.,,. ..
Operlfor
7G
Some experieace. requlr.
ed. MUil be &bi. to wortc
any boun, aQY llhift.
PIX Operator
Two yean minimum i,n..
dustrial experience muJ..
riple board. Knowltd&e ol
Teletype desirable. FUll
dmc, permanent, or va.
cation ttllet posltlon.
Apply Pat Fohom
133..o600, Ext. 2229
COUIS
RADIO CO.
19700 J•mborM Rud
Newport Beach
All applications reviewed
on merit with no bias to-
ward Race, Color, Creed
or Sex.
-EXPERIENCED-
• Commercial
Teller
Prefer height between
~· & 5'3"
APPLY lN P ERSON
1st llilioul-Bank
of Oranoe County
1650 Adams
Costa Mew
ASK FOR :
Mr. Stamer or Mr. Spnngcr
Mel, Wam.I w ....
DllUllEIS
Profit lharin&
J. C. CARTER CO.
'71 W. 17i h St.
Cost•Meu
s.ta.3421
An equal oppo~nlty
emp~.r
CLERK
Production Control Oi'-
partment. Office expen·
en~ required.
Call •r Apply
CLA·YAL CO.
17th & Placentia
Costa Meu
s.tl-2201
An equal opporiumty
employer
HOUSEKEEPER • hve m,
Cull charge 2 boys. Parents
travel. Privtte room. Must
have car. 5e7624 Newport
Beach.
e MANtCURIS'r -e
For Newport Beach's finest
aalon. For interview, eeJJ
• 642:6523 •
MATURE lady to contact
pUbllc <Public Relatioru.
work) part time on salary.
Call 54~9576 for appt.
ACCOUIJS
IKBVABI!
Cl.Ell
Detalled opel item a~
counts ~lvable, caab
dearlnp. Minimum one
year eX}>erience. l~key
addin& machine.
MASTER
SPECIALTIES CO.
4640 Monrovia Ave.
Costa Mesa
642-2427
An equal owortumty
employ('!'
J. W. Robinson
Has Of)9ning for
StOre
DetectiYe
f'l.lll rime. Exl)('ritnce
prcferTcd. Perma.ntnt po-
suion. excellent benefits.
Apply Personnel
10-4 Mon thru Fri
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
An equal opportunity
employt-r--
ALTERATIONS
Electric•! 6640 A genciea, Men 7100
FOR INTERVIF:W C'ALL
~ION. k TUES.
547-0607
Chrrk Qrn1llf1t·1111on~:
1\. llii:th S(·hool cdm'lrl. Test Operat1r
Min. 4;; hr worlc Wl'rk
Ste:irty employment
Profit sharing An equal npporlunity
employer
W AJTRESS, elCPerienced. 6
day week. Sundays off. Ap·
ply HAMBURGER HENRY
21:16 Placl'ntia, Coste. Mtsa
Quall fled to work m high
grdde fashion store. Able to
c1o both men and women's.
Offers permanent full time
work. Ple11san1 environment
11nc1 szood company benetils.
.1\1,ply: ELECTR!CTAN', Lirensed &
bond e d. SmalJ jobs,
mainten. & repail"l!. 543-5203
Gardening 66IO
ANTHONY'S
Garden Service
646-1941
COMPLETE CLEANUP
LAWNS REPLACED
Reas. monthly Catt. Prun·
ing. Landscaplni. Exp, hor·
tlculturist.
Japan•M Gardener
Exper., complete yard
servtcc. Fr~ estimates • ~-7958 •
EXPERT JAPANESE
GARDENER
Oean-up Neat Work 5'»-9"9"
t.A WN & Garden main ten-
ance. Cleanup -Spray -F!!r·
t1lize Com'l lc Resl. 962·T.M9
cut " Edge Lawn Maintenance. Lke111>t-d.
548-41Q, ~70 11tt 4 PM
e JAPAN~E GARDENING
Sel"ice Cleanup, Landscape
Ing. ~-7034 att 7 p.m.
*MOWING, edging, & clean
up. Monthly nit es. Free
estimate. Call 968-1911 *
,JAPANE5E GARDENER
Mtuntenance by the month.
Coorl refs. Exper 546-7758
MOWING, Etging. varalawn.
Gen'l d ee.mp. Hauling.
Odd Jobs. * 54~
JIM'S GARDENING
& Lawn MA!nlenance. Rest.,
Com'I A: Oee.nup. 548-8411.
EXPERIENCED Gardrnpr,
former nlll"Sfryman. L;uid-
gcap'ft, cleanup. 6424400.
Cut & Ec%te Lawn
l\111lntenancc Licrn~ed.
543-1~ -54;rs.;70 aft 4 PM
General S.rvlc• 6612
CRYSTAL WINDOW
C'!e11ning. Fri' .. est. h11~lnrS!'.
rrslden tial " ron~t nK't ion
54~737
P111nting. PlumbinR. Car·
pentry. Reas~ Rel Insured.
BankAmertrard OK
C11ll "'likr" 642·0.'WR
BILL'S SALT SERVICE
for auto Watt>r Softenrrs
Rrpeiri1, fnstalla11ons,
Rr nta Is • • • 962·4ll94
Hauling 6730
LJTILE GIANT TRUCK
Hauling. 6' heighth, 10· bed.
You name It I haul. Reiu
Big John 642~
C'..E' ~-.. ' Lots. garagt'I, rte.
Tree ~oval, dump. akip,
backhoe. flU. JtTade. 962-87<15
~ HAULING. Truh i11ckup. ~ Trlmmlni, Anything • wr clo
It all. Expert work. 54.'>-1792
CLEAN Loll, &lln~es. t-tr.
1: "'°" remOYlll. dump, sk~.
.. ckhoe, OIJ, itrade. 962-874.'i
l.enchc•pfng 6110
IGAYNOft'S LANDSCAPING
6 GARDENING SERVICE
State Ueeiwec! contrctr,
ltelldenUaJ • O:lnunerdal
rt... •t · No Job too bis-
~ ......
="""' 6IJO
~ PllNTiNG • Inttrior ~ :~. "'" ntlma b ........ MllM.~
biiLi P1LOI' DIME· A·
LIND. Y• cm 1111 tbMn , .. ,.. ...... ..,.Dial ......
newport
personnel
.... agency
113.l DOVER DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACI
ACCOUNT ANTS
Fee Paid
tmmrd1at11 Open1niz~
8':nd Resumes nr Cail
642-3870
"Jobi Ar•
Our Busineu"
r:XECl'TJVf. Typr \tan •
, 1a111n1: sal11ry tn S700
monthlv inrrr& .. tn!O: In ~10
at end ·of ti mnnths Sl():)(l 111
Pnd of first VP81 11 11b1hty
warranrs. lnten~tvc '\.\r;ir
trai.ninli? pr~ram. Carerr
pOSiuon w11h manag,•mrnl
nppo11unity. f; x c " 11 r n I
r··•irrmrnl. Rro\JP 1n1;urance
and hospitali1.Mm beorfit s
Expl'l'if'fle>e nnl nrrf'ssa1-y.
For personal ml!'rvirw
Cati :>.11-1167 w~day /I M '3.
B. Nrlll aJ>Pf>lotROl"('.
C. Ahle to rntl'r flllr 111110• Mlrro-rlertro1111· 1·1rr1111~.
Ing ~l'hriol immrriilllrly. Knowledgr fll lllt.:1C' theory
n Cflnvrrsr 1n1rlllcrn1ty. hrlprul.
:'\o rxf'('rirrll'r nrc•cs.<.ar) S.1
rrr h'"'.r c-111 "'~11111· 3I Sheet ~etal Mech. 11 m. tn ! 11 m ' * Wire Remover Power Brake Oper.
P art Time
$4 hr.
Wtrl' you \ookmc rflr a part
timP 1ob? Brcausr ynu nN'd
more ~onrv! Wnrk nights,
nn f'Xp. nee. f~rn S4 hc)11r
In ~t<lr1.
Both job5 rrqutrr knowl·
~ge o! hf>nd allnwancr .
Prt>eision al11m11111m fahri·
cation r-<penrnrP prP.
ferrcd.
s .. Luke Wood
Coast Employment factory 1 rainees
FibPn:lass mMula1·turrniz.
3 81\111 rota1100 ApfllY in
person
Wire you waiting?
Call (1 ) 179.9951 Now
\\ P 'II rrmnvt your Win'!!.
CO LU NS
AGENCY
Santa Ana Prot'l Bldg.
.1670 Santa Ana Ave.
RADIO CO.
Costa Mesa 642-96f1
Hrs 8:30 Ml -5 pm Mon-Fri. ferro Corp. Trainees-Over 21
Part and Full Time
Apply in Person:
• 3324 W. Wa rner
Santa An1, Calif.
J r Accnt/clCP/!lOme col SliOCJ
Vend.Ing Mach M<m .... S.~1
Fi~ri:tl11!1!1 Div1s1on
11!811 ril>f'rRla~~ Rflad
Hunt1m;lon Rr11rh
All applirat1on~ rrv1ewcd
on ment with 110 bias lo·
ward Race, Color, Creed or
Sex.
Inventory Oltrl/ exp .... s.;oo Shakey's Pina
Parlor ARGUS EMPLOYMENT -------OONSULTANT AGENCY
1
]
»13 Wl'tflcllff, NB ~77!l6
6'24 F.. 17th. S.A. M7-G3.16
6!l; C'res'nt/Anhm 6.~l
mr, ~pl Blvd , C l'tt ' Dishwasher -local manufacturer has
Q11a1tf1f'rl ,., v.nrk in hil:h Maintenance Man immediate openings for:
Opportunity Unlimited-
YflUllsr Spani1>h i;prakln1t man
to tnun in thr f'inancc field.
START /\T sm. • UNIQUE •
~~ l"l'~taur11n1. ()I I rr s NP" f1')r1 arc11 for fllhrr hu1lri-
l1tll nmr prrmoinrnl v.nrl; me 11 llr wrrk. Mu~t h;wr
Plraqnt rnv11'1'\f1mrnl. 20t11I cenrral kno"lr<h:r nf 11h1mh·
rompan)' h{'nrllts /\pflly: tn1t ~ C'll'<'trical. Plt•iiS11nl
• Electronic
Assemblers
Placemrnt Aarncy
Jlllrj Parle, C'M. 646-8831
BUFFUM'S workin~ l'flndlll0111t w fl/11!1
1ns11rancr & va,.;111nn. Prr. e w· Fashion Island m:rnrnt Plr;i~e sprrily ai.:r. aremen
Help Wanted, Men 7200
Nt'edl'd immcdtl\tely lor full
or part time job~. Chain
exp11nchni. ~ n~ loranons
in Ori\ngt County &r'f'a. A;:c
HI 10 35. Honest & will work·
t'Tl'.
No exper. nee.
Salary from
$3.75 · hr.
Can Mr. Howard
714-TR. 9-9951
CARPElmRS
Tr81lrr nr mohilt homr r~
penen~ Pl't.'ferrt<I E.'Ccf'I·
lent bc-nrfih.
EXPLORER
WANTED
1 Mechanic
ilnd
1 Lot Man
S1'9 Frl'd R1h~. Sf-I'\ 1r1• \l.1n
i'IJi?l'I' 23<\ E. 17th St.. CO!lta
Mrsa
-Salesm en & Managers
Career opporty with leading
firm oflerlnR ovr1 100 mu
tual funr\s. Full or pl time.
No PXfl('r nee. we train.
Npt Bch office, 642-6422
S8J113 AM oUlre. 547-8331
lnvl"slnra Financial
Services, Inc.
r 'I: p e r i P n r: r, n•lrrrnrr<;
Write Box Ml l'l Oa1ly P1lot. l
• Dishwasher -
• Busboys
\lust he ovrr IR
Appl )tn prrsnn only.
SUR~ SIRLOIN
5930 P . Cst. Hwy.
New rt Beach ---
No Experience
Necessary!
\fo~t havr t•lrnn C'ali lnrn1a
dnv1011 rrr<wri Ap!'lv
YELLOW CAB CO.
I~ ~; lfilh SI
C11~111 \lrsa
:>IE:"' <'11n:ihl-;-nf It n i n i:: ~o Radio M.n-
1ernr1 al l'lrnn1n1t It Ooor EX'J>t•ncnr<'fl or will Nlllsic1Pr
wa'Crnt? P11rt llmr rvrmng man , w11h similar h11rk.
11nrk 111 Orllnl?f' C'n. arra
Oir l'NJll ll'C<I. wrllr i::rvrni: ~~ B<>nc·h It R.<.R phonr
rxprnrlll'r, rrh•rrnrN. ,\
trlrphonr n11mbf'r Write A&H Instruments
Ro)( M IW 0111ly Pilot 1719 Nrwpfln Blvti.
Gel.Coat M.tn
•:xl)('nrnrrd Af\P.IY
Islander Yachts
161!:2 l"l:wrn111 Ave.
f'fl!llA Mr~
Costa Mrsa. C1111f.
MOTORHOME CORP. Hi FiTechnician
Purchasing Agent
F.xprn('nt'rd as 1 P A In
thr ho;i t hu1ldlnq mdu~
try .Jt.'N'EN ~ARINF;,
2.\1 Fu•r hl'r, c.,sta Mr~•
;,4().M<IO
t'f'I!' ~tor,. In Cfl''" M f'(ll Ofi-4000 Cam pus Drive portuntly In nr!v.w·r In itrr CARRIER BOYS
Newport Beach vir{' m11nR,,;rr Mu~ hr J;i. GOOD ~OUTF.S
We are an established
commu clal firm with
liberal fringe benefits.
Only people wrth at
least six months H·
perience should apply
to
PARAMETRICS
929 Baker StrHt
Costa MeM
549-2221
Architedur1I
Draftsman
Se11ior & Intermediate
~:XCEPTIONAL
\.R()\\IH OPPOR'rUNITY
ArPLY ED LEEDS
1 \in 11hone calls plea81!)
William Pereira
' Associates
MacArt+.ur & For d Rd.
Corene del Mar
milinr with 'llllkf ~IRtr rqutp. AVAn.ABLE
Park Caretaker I mrnt Xl nt lrtnl(f' hf>ll<'llt~ H~~~:.L~;Ot Yount) Fry Cook
Sal11ry $47~7!1 prr IT\(l. At 646·8895 • 642-4321 e or --Kitchen Trahtff Ltt'lt one }'f'tlr t'q)MiMl<'r RU\{l'ES AVAILABLE N'l:.\\'Sl"APERdtttrr-;-n,.
in li!wn. ahnib. and trl't' In hom• ~linry, Colts McSA NI~. Complttlln of 11th W~1tmln11er tor boys 1~14 lll't'a Earning Approx S4iiO
itrndfo. Valid Calilnmi11 dnv-Cood Profit• • No Sunday mo. Sood dcposll ~· Wmt
8'S ~. Wnttet rum DeU\•ery 642-4371 Box PR, 6370 Altun Bl•d,
Prl"lllanrnt ,)ob. Clwtct lor
8'1111nt:tmfftt.
INo ~Plee.e)
June I, l96&. F\Je •pplil'R· 2 SE'RVTCE stat:ionltt;; Buena Putt '
tion at We9tm1Nttt Oty danta it or ovrr. Full md SAL£DlDf lolt't llt leJ
Rall 143111 011~ St., Wf'8t. part t11n4r Harold'll Union f'ittmen etc. Sell on day off. 154 & 1'nll st. mlns~r befon-May 23, 1968 14912 Sprlnad11ll', HS. top Jflde tltc ittntt•tori. ea.ta,.._, Cal
Alon. 89.~U 89'2~1. Rnumr: P. Q. Bos ~l. Loe ltHl l ltlte S....._,.
WTD: Retlr~• pp 1111 n re SERVrCE---:lila Allendl\nt, Alamitoe 90720, Nrw lie~'• ft1comt. We
lltll'VICC man I auto. w1u1hrr ovn-21, llitht mt'Ch cxprr. e NE'ED· F 0 ",. m 1 n rrain DreWIJ ap.IMt con..
I drytr) for p/lim4'1 WOJ1c, Union Sr.tion, 371 Super'°" M~ldm1, AK1Mm1blrrt1 i, mlu 1nn ff JCl(l qUll.ll(f.
Mu.st be In aood ~•Ith snd NB 1 11 11 r m b I 'I T r 1 I n t t'< Rkbard~ll abl~ IO drln lnJdt, "7-6391 e I:: X P I:: R I E N C E D MatCrf'llOI' Vacht• l 6 6 5 Rr•lt:y IB-4031
JA N I TOIUAL-Erpttitnet OfTSl:."T OPERATOR AB 8abrot*, CM IOYS 10· 14
llftff!m'd, S2 hr .c.an. 25-30 Dick •. cau ~ SERV Sta. AtttDd. P/6mc Coad nMllaJ • Good lll'Ofkl
hr wit. lMS yn ll'W• SUrt EXPER 111anne d I t a t l Nf!l'dtd for mpt A wtinds. IALllOA pl:l'(llCSULA
I lilllli I &it n•••T
l ... ..... lmmetl. l4Mll1 IDfdlulc: (huts E. Smith Conuct Bii GMt tw .,._ l>AJL y PtLOT JIM e fiiii Tl gQ k1 Dim I e ._ 0.. • 1L1Ut. NII ltM780 Ml-111f e .... e
.-..-----------------•
J. C. CARTER CO.
671 W. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
54 8-3421
An rqual npportuntly
emplnyer
HERE COMES
THE JUDGE
If you"re behind with ynur
bills & want lo work tven-
ings 6-10 p.m. & e11rn .•.
$3.50
Per Hour
Call: Mr. Manos 774.:,mo
6 MA N A GEMENT
TR.AlNEE. 21 or over. high
school grad. Excellent op.
portunity! PUBLIC FINAN-
CE CORP. Call 646-4841
-f"TBERGLASS FOREMAN
10 man shop, salary open.
S<-nd refs lo V e n I u r ,.
Coachell 3..~ Wilson. Ban-
nintt 9'l220: &1~2771
f1.'l..L time focxl to JlO clcli
JOb. Exper or unexJ)('r. 20-30
yr~ old. Sr;irt $1 'Q hr. See
Harold 4!fj E. 171h SI., CM
N E EDED R t llable
dishwasher . kitchen htlprr.
Exc•el job for r12'ht man.
Cail 673-9757 for appl.
Saleswom1n
Experienced in better wom-
an' s ready-Lo-wear. Quali·
ficd lo sell in high grade
fashion store. Offers pleas-
ant enviommcnt and good
company benefits. Apply:
BUFFUM'S
Fashion Island
Ideas wanttd. ag..<>ressive r•·
dio station seeks person qp.
der 30 who can create con-
HSEKPR. Child care. Livr-1n
j•2 days. Pvt room w/bath
Need car. Simple cooking.
SJOO mo. 644-1179
DENTAL Assistant-~3.i
years. Previous Pxperiencr
optional. Top salary for
right girl. 673-1166 ---• EXPER. ANSWERl!'G
SERVICE 0 PER AT 0 R
Afternoon & evening shift.
Full or part timt, 540.2052
• SEAMSTRESS wanted.
Good pay iI exl)('rienccd.
Small i;hop, full or part
time. Phone 6To>-5761
test ideas, c om mer c i a I DENTAL Assistant -Prefrr
ideas, comedy ideas. Want European or Oriental girl.
fresh, original, vital a~ No experience necesi.11ry
proach. Salary open. If you _6_~_2926 _______ _
posaess real, provable ere-H O U.S EKEEPER/ Com.
ativity, send solid rxamples panion ror eldery lady tam-
lo Larry Grannis. Radio tiulatory l, on Balboa Island
KWIZ. 3101 W. 5th St .. Santa Eves. 673-1976
Ana 92703. FUl..L Time hsekrrpr1· &
KEY PUNCH Mother's he~r. I r v 1 n r
OPERA TOR Terr, refs rt'Q. o w n trans.
Minimum 2 yrs experience _6_'7_3-0988 _______ .,....
Contact: Mrs. Bradley Bllbysiller. 3 days a wetk
MACCO REALTY Own transportation
881 Dover Dr., Newport Bch ~31ll evt s.
642-4910 ext 278 -MAID " Main! Man Cplc or
• RN'll, LVN's. & AIDES ' singlr. Need for motel apts
POl!ition~ 11vailable on all 2384"' Newpart Blvd., CM
shifts. Nt>w Convalescen • RESTAURANTHELP-e
Hospital Newpon Beach Evt'flings. OVER 21
Salaries open. f r i n K e • 545.9863 e
benefits. Phone 642-8044 ---HSEKPR live-In mother·lt"ss Drug Store Clerk home. Approx 30 yrs. old.
Agenci .. , Wom.n 7300 Exper .. full time. neat. ma CdM. 547-6127btwn 11:30-4:30
lure. Apply in person: VII ONE Full Time & One Part
Mls.s Enc AGBICY ~~.~~~;~ Coast Time Maid. exp n o l
necessary. ;;<!~ BARMAlDS ... . Secy/corp/split lee . , .. $550 ... and GO.GO DENTAL Ofc. Mgr. Exper.
FC bookkeeper ........ $525 DANCERS or 4 yn college. Single. 2S-
Secy/career minded .. $500 SJOO per week 45. :>46-3000
Secy/legal/tee paid .... 1500 I 638-5483 or 633-9763
R.e<:orc:hl elk/split fee • • S465 MANAGERS, women. needed C.ost or Inv Cnntrof .•.. $400
Laundry shirt girl
EXPERIENCED
541-9550 before noon
Secy/tine arts ........ $415
Arcounting' Clerk .. .... $400
Mail Clk/spllr ftt ...... S.\'lll
Toy shop. 21 or over . single
S175 per wk. Must be xll'11
sh1rp. Call fflr • p p • t
642-8667
BABYSITIER needed im·
med. Prefer in rey home.
Ctn Ofcl lldvrrt15in1: '' s:m PART TIME S2. hr. p T S2 hr guar. C11s1omrr Gen Ofrlper.K>nnrl .... S372 p 1 It p u
Fnr small baby. 57;;..3939
ctk Typisti split fee .... S.16j "'~ out S8mt> es · · service for estab Co. Mrs ........... I _........._ ._, orders. H.B. & F.V. Mra Brown 54G-J932, H.B. rw-..-.oas ng UIUJ~ •••• ......,., Thackeray 540-1932
Gener81 Office ........ S.129 -========= BEAUTY OperatOt" needed Public: steno/S~ mo -I % 11ow. Apply in per30n. Call
P1·1'ime Secy ...... $2.'15 hr Dill1 6C66'78 b-RESULTS for appt. 545--0209
iiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii!
410 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
Call Betty Bruce ~3939
-SKYi.-f2) $400
Needtd! -sharp looktnc I
girls looking for a futuJ'\'.
G.Mral Office $375
Sharp, ambitious gtr1 to wortc
in loail 8""'
lookkMpert (3) $350
U~t! Sbarp KiJU wlttl tn-
lllAtivt, we need you.
Clerk Typflt $300
A terrific oPPQrtUnlt.Y for
young HS pit. e UNIQUE • Pllllr.Mnenl AaC'nCY
I tt&; Pa.ti<. CM, 646-AA3t
M('d !Ab Tecb ...... to S700
Sfct'tari~ 1 rN1\Y I .• to t950
Acnt1 Pay.a. ...... to S450 1
FM'row •••••••••••••••• ...., Gel. Ofb ............ ~
Purdllulnl Oertc • • • • • • S3'15
1".ttic Oertc • • • • • • • • • • $315
Tra1nee. ~ .... to -~. aJe elk •••••• mo
ni.. tactory • • • • SU D hr
MJ.Jn:r AG.ENCY
4.T7 W. 19th, C.M. &CU152
740() I
ELECTRONIC
IE C
Electronic Assemblers .....
hy -4 Afterlu• SMft
R•quires 2 yHrs e11perience in sub •ncf fi11al
assembly. Chas1i1 wlrin9, 1olcferin9, crimpi119
ancf lu9gin9 e11perlence required. Must be able
to wor~ from wire llth.
E•cellent Company b•n•fih, includint GROUP
MEDICAL-DENT Al pl•n, 12 dayt annuel IHve
plut paid "w .. ~ off et O.rlttma..
~ , ........... ,. .. ..,
70I E. YllMONT, ANAHEIM
INTERSTATE ,
ELECTIONICS
t.ECAL s r: c R E T,. R v co1P01A noN
w /I II It I s ti 0 & • SUISIDIAIT °'
rftPOnllbOlty. Vin I yr f'X• "Allfa• .... " ~I War,. __ ef A ... rr'-
Buffum's
Fu h ion laland
ADVERTISING
AGEN(Y
• Shari> with ahillty to ori:an-
itr il n rf follow t hrnugh.
Cocxl Sr<.'l'l"t11rial skills a
mu•t Under :!O.
Call Barbara 642-3910
Office Girl
Filing, typing. reception.
13-25 years of age. A
local. permanent rrsi·
drnt nnly Start S.W.00
month.
Richar s
Lido Cente r
Phone for appl. 673-6.160
Model-0-.monstrators
Ace 18-25: attractive & pcr-
son11hlP 1n demonstrate lrad·
mi: product. Tw1m-Tw1st. No
r~p n('('., xlnt salary. Full
nr pan ltmr poi<ition~ at ma·
lnr ri<'pt 'lnrPs. 0 r a n ; e
Cflunty arra. Call ror spp't.
21:1: .1~
INSTRUCTRESS
F"ull or P11rt-llmP. must havP
nr~ apptaranct . ahle to
me & deal v.~th peoplt.
81 20 & 25, we train. Ap-
ply in P<'rson. Holiday
liralth Spa 2nl Harbor
Blvd. C~I
• WAITRESS
Experienced. Apply
BLUE DOLPHIN
RESTAURANT
Mrs. Zimmer 675-4004
HOUSEWlFE, Over 2L Lor
!hat 1toorl paying 10 to 2 job;
rountrri:irl al thr Dorymen
Re~lllUl'MI. Apply 2100 w.
<Xran Front Blvd .. :-<l'wport
IJ<.Kh
BABYS._1_1T_En_. -L-1v_r-_i_n -6
dy!!, for 2"' yr old. Run.
t i n1tton 8 f'a c h .
Home-968-1102 Ofc...fi3S-&19
e NURSES.AIDE e
847-96TI
Joa---Men, Wom. 7500
PRODUCTION
ARTIST
11\'lth agency expenence
tor paste up and produc-
tion. Manager poslllon
wirh Orange C o u n t y
Agency.
Box M lf!'7 D11lly Pil11t
MEN .\ womr11 In l'irruht1P
pop11l1tr prlitkln. M11st ~
rf'l[islerrd 11ntrl' nf ONlnuP
Cnunty Cood PA~ lnriulrt
11 1905 £, 17th St . Room
2U, ~nta Ana or phone
~-~'i~
--. Hair Stytltt--
For bul;y MW lhop, ~
lmt opportunity! p h 0 ,, t
1111-t:m or l9UMi
TIACH EU
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT ~ Mn. Roblcbtt
m-GOT or 835-«IM
P!:RSON 'l'o call On bara and
l'Tlltt1urAnt. lo wtl Crl.Ybo
0r IrI11 e I armm~.nch
YNtl. tie&, 11nd W8Jtf
wtilonns. ~
~ IBM enc/ltenof· 1 ..,.. -r-,.._._
..... 09( oftlc.olt '15.llTF. Aft ~ °""'""""' .. .,.,
8XS ft' 'JO .... • ••• -.............. ________ .. , --------
'· ' " ' ---. .. .
I
,
MnawtDISI
SAU AND n , ........
Kf11t tit• t ,... I
wl .. ••...i.t. wff ..,...,., I ft. StM
N II w..4 tri111·911e
t•W• ell4 2 •114 t•
''" .... U.111 .. • .... ••c. ~..et. • ... s
T..,,..Av1lli er.cut i nm· , ... ....,. ..,....,.
JO•S & ~M.,,
.... w ....
-a..1tterec1Nu·
S.U:I> p.m. NI
-X.a•y Technlc
T a.a. tD 3:30 p.1
time -call backa.
--llect,..KG T ..
Full time.
wwoolWUlekMper
Dali.. f\lll tin:
-Linen Room ~
~.full t1m ~rt
Kltchtn, days, ful
tempom-y.
Cell., .....
WISnllNSTll
HOSPITA1
Jtl ........ Cl w ...... .
HJ-4141, nt. :
An equal opporo
employer
MOLDING
MachlM Oper.
Plaatic, ilrjection. I
nent pocition wit!
pay. Ex~Uent WOI
ditiona. Overtime I
trlnre benefit.a. I
ence de9!red but " sider tralneff.
CALI FORNI
lniectlon Molt
20Go&Rgga Av
Costa Mesa
An equal opport
employer
Real Esta
Salesma
Att YoU 1etting the
t\11'119 for ~ ban
Would you like to I>
a 60/40 split with a ·
ua apUt on your thlr
ToP Colta Mesa loci
Prorre•lve advert
marketing techniqu
This I.I where the f
Write Box P-U4, DI
for detailJ.
SHOULDN'T J'OU b
the hottest area -H·
Beach?~ Phil I\
for apJ)t. Vlllaie
Eat ate
962-4411
Schools·lnstructl1
NEW CLASSE!
I •• START WI
I Complete Secre
., Clerk Typist
l ~Oiww
Bnlahup Typlns:
IBM SfANDAJ
IBM SEI..rel'f
IBM EXF.c
Afternoon tl Eve.
u:NI BUDGET T
100' a of 1Ucceastu
atea these past 5 y
POLLY PRt'I
BUSINESS COU
325 N. Newport B
Phone 543-97
PIANO IHIOOI, you
~acher. new ill ar•
Sherwood Music S
Memb« Music
Amoe. Pri•. lesson
ttiru teem. sue 0.
Masnolla. CM 541-4
9CHOOL children'•
ratea. Olllcoat :
'IYPln& Schoo.I. 50
Del Mar, c.M.
MERCHANDISi
. "'.I AND Tlti
Pumltv,. -s,.nlsh Med~··
SHOWROOMU
I Ft wood carTed 1
van wttb 1arre man IDs cbaJr: beautU
ttrranean fabr1cl
on. 5 Pc beXqGE
dark mk-toP dtninf
W.dr Cll' •vocadc
dlaln; d«lOC'atlve
-5 Pc M«ftt btdroom let -t cb
• Mn. dMM', la:
ell mimlr, ...... I ......... :
...... h t l•ct.
$1tS VAU
l'wll MeettOW
C)A TaUll Al 1.
SS.•PDl WI <ftallllt:anllllll
MO DOWN u.o. .... c
Mo lllnq ftat I
AU'IT VALUES
APIOVIDPUltt
219' Hertler lh
DllbN.JN• . .....
gh
II>
i's.
:ne
?nt
its.
10
I
er·
ad-
:'ilo
'11JI
RR·
g t'
;>'t.
IVI'
to
>It.
\p-
lay
bor
ICM
f.or
:>b:
ien w.
~rt
n
y
~L
ne
MllCHANDID ftOlt MllCHANDISI '°' MllCHANDISI FOil ' MllCHANDISI POI MHCHANDISI '01
SALi AND TaADa SALi AND TUDI I~ AN_D ~ _ SALi AND t~I _ SALi AND 'TIW>E s.m..... 9010
,..,...... ._Pumtture IOOO ,.__ &_~_1_1• _Mltcef_ta,.... "°° FREE TO YOU --LIKE SAILING?
"
,I.ANO & ORGAN 21" PAOWlO ~U CDlot' DISLIKE nlESEt "SIU-IN.. TV, remote COG ... ,, w-1out 2 • lO ... old ldttena, to e p .. ..__. .... 1Ab lnt--, .. -, .,... llolDea. .lllO 2 yr, old ...,,......_ •ua 00"•• y.., we're bavl.Da a •-s.n. c1b SlSO: M~YQO( ltffto female at • mu.t So tO ~predatklo, al.{p not.all,
DESPEIU TE! ~ :,_ ~ ~m: ~'~t :ir~~h~~':; :::., at .-~;: ~:~u~ET~tc.
Contractor Wanta 'Out-: ::,0-Jwor::., .,w~ ·~tAnZrwh~~ 1i DWGJl'ITULLY p1ayt111 ~:;11:. ~~
U N DON'T YOU ... belran beach •: mM M 0 d c kittens. Very b • a l t h y . cal 25. u little u $20. ew; Decorator Spanilh \ J'OQ bQyf t)'pewrlt«, 11·· caniap Varied caklrl tome calico. • ct.y, avall IOOtl CaJ :st.
JI,. ••... ..i· WAR.D'S BALDWIN Sl'UDlO 0'15; Dry cow IHCbiDe • To epecial bomff. ~lS3 Try Our Club Plan
a; MeuUerranean Furniture 11111 Newport.°' MUtN IUpP.ia. uc model 550; a,,1are '-5121 NEWPORT wuNc a.ua
C ll~. • PLU10S a ORGANS * tape recorder $50; Other ft EC IS TE ll G tr man ~O ance ..:;u; • t.ars-t ttoq UI ... Calit. m1lc ltftll&. Ull H.lcbland Sbepberd. J'lm&le. 4 yrs. to BIG SAC! Lehman 1 0
ltl .. elte t 'fC•· Me4ltene••e11 ,.,..11 .. H it "''"• * ~'1,-401' oa~ pU.noe Or., NB~ tood bome-= plenty of Sailboat. FUil¥ eq., aood
.. 1 .. ••1111,lef• wltll kl11t .i .. ••",." I ~. ''"'""' 1000 rolla IO c.boole from room. &fl 4 eond, can be car-topped. •&ft&•• a It. s..-.1.i. ••'• c11t+e111 ~lillt.4 wltll ur.ff • Terma • Ttnp ·Tmna * SWIMMING .-OOL p1n. 5/20 $250. 54M706
Hk ••-' fl>l1111 ·•"4 -••hl11t chelt. Hu..y H k AcHell • 13 J't Pool, FUttr, Surface 3 LOVELY k'ttY•. White, '"-'.:-~=:--~~,..,---••~• ell4 l H4 te~le-. Tell teW lu f t•~I• l•"lllt. s,•11· cub ior 1C)Ur piano• trlde Skimmer, MaJntenanot Kit. loal·h&lnld male; Calleo MASTS need reflnbhing'!
l1h ,... ct..111 i....,._ lut• s,e11ltll atyl• 41111119 tet, srand piano for new a~lntt FREE Ground Pad. temalt, Ttpr.atrl~ male. Vam!.sh, pe,lnt, rlulni!
ek., •tc. Field'• Wbolnale Piano C.o. ,149 II UllL'>GcT Call Jim Ziegler
......... -M '* tl a 1 • •r. ..... ,. 12072 Brootbunt at Cbapman • 6 weelca old. ~ 5/21 ~ or 96i-0603 eve
W'*9 houlefvl ••NI·$ 491.00 Gardtft Grove (714l 131-lT'IO SICARD .-OOL PtJR.mR.ED OOCker Spaniel, Rhodes 33', racina sloop.
1'1JUt s.erif~e ,... BALDWIN ACl'OIOlllC aplnet 323 s. :i.~ Oranre = :ie;:tsh: ~C:: Insured for $400). SAC .. plaoo. $465. TERMS. $3000. &'fl..5004 (day•)
T..,.. .. w.lllW.-Newcomers t. C1llf. GOULD MUSIC OOMPANY • FABRIC SALE • ~r.m 5'20 494--8M3 cues>
Cndit Approved Immediately 2045 N. Main. S.A. 547..(Ql Mon. to Fri. S.ll:30, 12:30-4 1~:· ld~tens~i~~:: HOURLY RENTAI.5 Fnn' _.,8 .... _.4 WALNUT, two manual Of"Pll. S.t. 7 A.M. to 2 P.l\l. la I * RHODES 19"1 * ui,u II:' • •••1-Ure Sl6S. TERMS. Vast aelectlon ol knit fabrics. Prefer little Ill' to 12 yrs. Fun Zone Boat Co., Balboa
, ........... ~ .. C.... ..._ IO.tyl COULD MUSIC COMPANY Open DAILY to public, 1.1m-646--0MS 5121 LIDO 14 No. 1854, nice cond
IMry ...... 'II t-W .... S.. a S-. 'II 6 20tS N. Main, S.A. 547..(1681 ited time coly durtna iD-Ctn'E little lone haired kit-$975; also nice 16' Glaupar
-ventory c:Jttrance. ten• 9 wka. for wonderful 50 hp, '1995. 644-1349
JOI$ & WM.,• •it NEW tofas $59.75. Qeal'lnl Televlalon 1205 Cotta Meu Knlttinc Milla pell 892-6302 5/20 21, VICTORY. Excel cond,
M HOUie, 5201 Paramount. --929 BaJcer St., O>ata Meaa U I -.i
1.191e ... .._'°""'111ft"-Wem. 7500 Pico RJvera, 213: 699-9150 •• ,.,, 81 ... "' • PETS incl LIVISTOCK Fu y equ Pt""'. E x t r a 1 .
Heywood Wakefield Hutch R * AUcnON * Oofl 1125 546-6996 ~:!ii"':... It Dini!:,~~ $250. C•L•R IJ :ie ~n:U. ~buy GERMAN SHEPHERD Coron1:!.1 $6500
TIANSPOITATION
MOftdly, MlY 20, 1968 DAILY ,ILOT :Jj
TaANSPOltTATION TRAHSPO'ltf ATION TRANSPORTATION ·
Trvcb tSOO lmport.d Autoe ffOO "*' Cen 9!0f
'60 GMC ~ fOO pJck\lp. VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC . ' > MUST SEU.
LaiuM Bu.ch 497-1022
'63 MC Mld.aet. bllcil l>Huty,
pe.1ect .tape In A: out. 195
cuh down, pymll $35-88 mo.
Alter 10, 494-9773
'63 VW, dlr, dlx, xlnt cond. 1
OWllel'. Take trade. Pymll
S33.86 mo. ~7
• Spot Cub lor lmpur•a
We pay more tor •n> Import
regardlest Of year, make
or condition, Try ua before
you set t. ELMORE
MOTORS, 9625 C a r d e n
Grove Blvd JE 7-6630
ALLARD
1951 A.U..ARD CT, VERY
RARE. & U N U S U A L.
Possibly the only one like, it
in the U.S. Must sell lmmed.
Evea Ir: wkends 64&-2592, uk
for Phil Davis. Weekdays:
83S-4220, uk for Karen.
--------DATSUN
BRAND NEW AT
VW '61 Variant, Spbk, xlnt '62 FLEEtWOOO, ( dr ·
eood. n960. Priv pty. 67~ aedan, beautiM eond. l1~ •
~. w Via Quito, N.B. Prt\ffawner, m-ma
VOLVO
'681/2 VOLVO
NEW SHIPMENT
FOR SALE. '58 cadlllM"
Sedan de Ville.. Call after S
pm.6U-S(l96
CHMOLET
JUST ARRIVED! '51 ())ev Impala 2 door ¥
GET OUR OE.AL TODAY top. 348 t11g. Interior and
exterior in very &ood con· ,
fGll llJDi4 ~u00.1t:::SP~~st~34f75·
IMPORTS '56 <llev 4:56 Posl-h.eadera.
. New 283, Trans, dutch,
nywheet. and p r e s s u r 11 •
19$6 Harbor, C.M. 646·9:i.cll ~~· Tires 67$-150'7 $500
1963 VOLVO 122S 29,(XX) '&:.CHEVY fmpala 2 dr hdt:J>,
mUes. Perfect cond, Make VS, auto trans, Pfir air &:
oUer 6#-2180 or JE 4-303'7 brks. Pvt party. S 6 0 0 .
• ti 'Cl I 9615 4~ """ ques, au cs '-,67,....E=l-C_am_Jno_. _396_e_ng_, -4-,-pd
'39 BUICK SPECIAL trans. Rea.I nice. Take over
$200 pmts. ~
• 642-5769 • '57 Chevy Bel Air •
'39 BUICK SPECIAL 2 DR. $300. 548-1138 •.
$200 CHEV '61 Impala 2 dr Hf. ' e 642..S769 e 36000 ml. AC, Auto. P/S, V·
80ne owner~
Autos W1nted 9700 --,-S7_CHEVY ___ 30_1 __
4 spd -very clean
• 64&-2856 . WE PAY .•.
'62 NOVA CONV. -X.a.y Ttchnlcl•n . Aucliona Friday 7 p.m. PUPS
T a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Full Office flurn1ture I010 TV Windy's Auction Bem AKC rqiatered Champion
time -call bacb. OFFICE FURNm.JRE Behind Tony'a Bid&. Mat'I BLOOD LINES
Barwick Hayden
Power CrulMrs 9020 $199 Cash or Trade CASH Auto. Radio, beater. Extra
nice. Only S575. &n8409
-llect,..l(G Tech EXecutlve delk, modem waJ.. ~ Newport, CM 646-1686 1. Cb. ULK WlKING-
Full time. nut. Excellent condition. MOVING . Ever Y t b In I ERBLUT Sch lll
wHeutekMper Priced at 1/3 val~. FREE Re&llOllable f u r n i t u r e Top wlnnins Shepherd DllY•. fUll time. 642-7484 546-6020 Clodlea, fura. Re c ord 1. of all 'nmes
-Linen ltoom Aide Dishes. MISCELLANEOUS 2. Ch. NORDRAAK
'62 MERCURY 26'; sleeps 6; 36 Pymts @ $54.16 mo for used ears Is truclcl Just
ealley, head It bait tank. 75 000 ml Guiranty call ua for free estimate.
Only 10 hrs. on new 225 HP 494.9773 * 639-3617 GROTH (HEVRQlfJ Gray Marine ena. New can-
vas. N~s varnish. Only Ask tor Sales Mana1er
$6,000. May trade f o r FIAT 182ll Beach Bl..
CHRYSLER
1966 OlOWN Imperial '1!r .
HT. All power, air, spilt re·
cllnlng seats, low mileage,
Must Sell. $3395. 646-4()(2. Day~ ~ Offlct Equipment I011 Pvt. pty. ~ lria, CdM. of MATTERHORN ~Id vtrl Y.., • • c--+-''-te ~ S timeLJl!cific
Kl ..a....-.i.... tun .. __ ANSAFO!'lE macb, S 1 2 5 , 673-3316 Coast Victor
ti.DUI, .....,., wuc Royal office typewriter,~. Parts Ir Labor ZENrm COLOR TV, Zl" Males-Ftmalee (5 weeks)
wall« boa!· SUP ARace No, Huntington Beach
""?;-ll'Ollt1ngrll'!r M a l'1-wa7 '59TrATA1tAR1'M~ ____ xu.mi ____ ==.._J.;:;;;:;;;;:;=;::;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: t---------
"Sean". 838-7598 or 776-5930 lUH, orig. paint, clean Wi'I( Buy CO RV AIR
teinporVy. Steel cabinet incl 2 me $7 .M. • s:7S with l\l&r. APT. aixe J!lack It Tan (shots)
Cell • .,,.., drawers, $25. 675-3345 refrla, cr~top fm $35. BRED FOR QUALITY
WDTMINSTll HERMES Ambuaad« elec Full az El.EC HOTPOINT • TEMPERAMENT
~· ELCO Trunk cabin cond. $495 flnn. S46-3957,
cruiser, xlnt running cond. 67:Hi945 Clean 1966 Corvair Corsa,
Your Volkswaren or Porsche low miles. Call evenlnp
& pay top dollars. Paid for * 673-8226 *
or not. Call Ralph 1---------HONDA HOSmA.L typewriter. 58 el.ec devices. No Dep •s1·1 stove $37; Kenmore wshr Pedigree with eech Pup
JM ........ a. Perfect cond. $195. 540-6780, $25; 21" Consolt TY $25; LI 8-48ffi Daya 1~2 PM w .... 1 lflf aft 5 & Sal's 67:>-3832 Rent With & POTPOURJ! 1550 Superior 837-3865 Eves alt 6:30 PM
HJ-4141, ftt. Jlt (rear) CM 64&-9188 Weekend.I 837.3865 alt 9 AM
New canvu encl. for after
deck, new uphol le radio.
Ask $2,050. 673-4786 eves. '&l Corvair Mooza Spyder
HONDA Spyder w/hdtop. 673-1190 convt. wht/red, 4 spd, turbo
600 CC D 0 H C I chg. S650 646-3528 An equal opportunity H h Id Good ·-o Option to luy OUH 0 I "'" OfiNA • Odd cupe le aaucers. DALMATIAN Pups, Ch hik,
S-..t-Ski Bo_1t1 9030 ' . . . ., ow m1., Auto . 92 0 =========l .......,. never registered. S 1 6 5 O LHsing 1
employer b~ f dla IU 521 7555 Few pieces ot ailver • 5 •= lst or poa on, 2nd
NEAR new The r rn a d o r • Haviland platu & Haviland show. 1 M, l r left from lil-
l'. Fl glan I/O Ski or fish,
120 hp, OMC, t'Onvert top,
1eats 6, big wheel trailer,
very clean, save money, Uke
new. 962-8754
546-3957 or 67J...6945 L_E_AS_E---1968--F-o_rd_G_al_ax_ie COUGAR
Deluxe elec. oven w/spit, hand painted milk pitcher. ter of 8. Whelped 3/13.
fully auto. $130, CE washer-L.-:;•,..iii~liiM~t Misc. Movlnf. Reuonable 642-1937
dryer twiJ\I xlnt cond. S150 OR 3-8316 evea • wkenda A PET OR A PEST?
pr. Nr new recliner chair ,..... .. .._ ONL y New obedie\ce classes
:i°oo Hot Point rebigerator :New,,,._,, Hew g. ..,_It: D£VA.N & Chalr $50. GE con-startlnf. Lynn Russell
• sole color TV $300. Reclinin. 54&-.3890 534.2860
MOLDING
14' FLEETFORM. glass, 35
hp, Very clean. Days: 646-
5421 • alt 5: 642-0-116
M.chino Opernor1
Plbtlc, IJ\jection. Penna-
nent Po<ion with good
pay. Ex~ent wort con-
ditions. Overtime and all
frinre benefit.. Experi-
tnee dHtred but will CDD-
lider tralneea.
I022
COMPLETE double bed $20,
2 single beds comp $15 et,
Daveno le match chair $20, 3
upb chairs SS ea, cotfee le
end tables, beaut solid
mahog rhest <best oUer),
misc, c 1 o t b i n g . 1129
TVa, WAIBla, chair $35. Occasional chair UfmCla&Ton s20. End tables s15. eom..
merclat lia'ht fixtures, 8' f'llEZDIS-llYEIS·IWID dble, $15 ea. Lawn ed~er
$20. 646-3149
LABRADOR Retriever Pup -8' HYDROPLANE w/Merc.
male 9 wka old. Intelligent 20 eng., trailer It controls.
breed, rood with children. Sac. lat $300 takes 673-n47
49>5981 or 642-4321 Exl. 285 CALIFORNIA
lnlectlon Molding
~ggsAve.
FOAM Rubber cut to aiu.
Uphol suppUea, f a b r I c 1 ,
naugahyde. Factory outlet.
Low prices. A-1 Foam
Fabric It Upbo~tery Supply
Co., 3ll E. Sth St., S.A.
~ll81
A.KC Champion p e d i g re e 801t M1intenance 9033
Poodlea, while malt, apricot * COMPLETE-MA~E"
female. Very small Toya 8 REPAIR SERVICE Costa Mesa 5464460
An equal opportunity
empJoyer
Real Estate
Salesma11
MJramar, LagUna Beach -1~~~~~~~~'!!!!! tum at Bluebird Canyon. RENT
SAT·SWl. 10-5 PM Antique COLOR TV
chairs. cha.ndeUen. Min lroo $9 MO.
wks 962-8527 5-1&-5881
BLACK Male Poodle, 8 wks.
old; no papen,; had 1st shot.
646-1012 aft. 4 pm
Painting, varnish, carpentry,
mechanical, mast bldg &
repair, rigging. Free est.
John O>nnor, Joe Fry, 1640
Pomona Ave, CM 642-8961,
642-1924
A.re you setting the best re-
tunw for your-bud work\'
Would you like to bt eettini
a 60/40 apllt with a 70% bo~
ua apllt on your third sale.
ports. Indian ruga. Paintinp. Option to ~
Colored glass, J I! w e· 1 r y . Free Service
*SIMONIZE
CAR WAXING .... $5.95,
most cars. sun. AJJPt. OK
Dalmatian J>IC>Piet, AKC,
liver, 13 wka, have sbola,
$100 * 540-4287
SHELTJE, Male, Sable • Bo.t Slip Mooring 9036
White, AKC, 4 yrs old. Loves
children. 642-5246
Much M19C. 546-7101. 2002 Order By Phone
Valley Rd. CM Tum So on 523-3651 Cua rant~ 5484779
Valley Rd. at UOO blk Vic-Zl" BLACK A: whit l964 tor la e,
PAPER FABRIC, perfect for
c u r t a i n s, bedspreads,
tblcloths, or make your own
dr~ for SOc. No limit to ill
usea. Fireproof 642-2060 or
962-5752
Sllps Av1ilable, Top
Loe1tlon Nwpt Hubor
English Bull DOg puppies, 2 accommodate 50'
Top Colt& Meat location.
Prosre11tve advertlainf •
Zenith COMOle. Walnut. noo. AKC, champ aired, reason-2 accommodatl' 30'
Appll1nc" 1100 963-3207 aft 5, able. * 897-4978 * * 646--0201 *
marketing techniques.
Thia la where the action IJ!
Write Box P-124. Daily Pilot,
for details.
WASHERS S29.95; dryers Hi-Fi & Stereo 1210
S3S: Free:urs $75; Refrig.,
coppertone • A•oc.; Cuar. 1968 STEREO console solid
54C).1096 state, 4 speed changer. Like
UPHOLSTERISC • S79.50, 2
pc. (Europl!an craftsmen)
Free est, del, pickup, 215
Main, HB "Berny" 536-6405
BEAGLE Pups, 6 weeks; <10) Boat slips available, for
AKC. Show &: field Cliamp. clean 11Uboats. 25' to 35'.
Ped.; $50. 54&-1726 $2.25 per ft on Coast
SHOULDN'T you bt aellin&
the hottat area· H1mtincton
Beadl? ~Phil McNamee
for appt. Vlll•ite R e I I
new. Take aver small
e GERMAN SHEPHERD e Highway. 64.2-4235, 642-9202
~pple.s. AKC Registered
• 1Uaranteed. 548-3890 Bo.t·Y1eht
Estate
962-4471 546-8103
Antique. 1110 paymenta or $86.12 cub.
---'"-------Credit Dept. 53.S-7289
ANAHEIM Centt!r Antique '66 MAGNAVOX Stereo con-
Show It Sale: May 23, 24, 25 sole: walnut 8c cherrywood
le~ Thurs, Fri, Sat 1 lo 10; nevamiir. $90. 642-5235 Aft 5
7600 Sun 1 to 6; Katella 8c Harbor ---------School .. lnstructlon nr Disneyl11nd. $1.50 ad-.
Ml1c. Wanted
WANTED
NEW CLASSES miMlon. Chldm under 12 Sporting Good··--•-_85_00_ · • • Furnltur•Appll1nc"
1130
YOUNG Shetland Pony
w/saddle & Tack, $125
• 962-6722 •
TRANSPORTATION
Boltw & Yachts 9000 •• , ST ART WEEKLY lree. Colt .45 Automatic Color TV'~Stereos I Complete SecfttariaJ OLD private papers of Jud~e l.!rl7 Argentine model. _ TOOLS _ FrH
./ Clerlt Typist trom 1370'1 thru early 1900's Good condition $80.
./ Special Coul'IH Dodce Qty, Cunnaon. Colo. e 5&-0'283 aft 6 PM e 531-1212 er 193.0555 IHic Boating Cl ....
Bruabup Typlnc: Salt Lake City 673-8316 OIM ======= $$ CASH $$ Offettd to public by ~es . all day wkendl l•lbcN Power Squldron :: = Mi1cell1neou1 l600 Wt pay cub n : Elementary Piloting O>urles
mM EXF.C s.wfng Machines 1120 SPANISH Cabinet_ dark oak ./ Furniture I Appliances Every Monday, Starting 7
./ Antique• I Tool• PM, June 10, Newport Har· Afternoon • Eve. Clauet 1967 SINGER TOUC~·Matlc removable m1rble !09 -ON ITEM or _ LOW BUDGET TERMS zlgzait conaole. Serviceman beaullful decorator piece -COMPLETE HOUSEFUL. bor Y1cllt Club, m W. Bay
100'1 of auceesaful sradu-leu .. ••g area. ::; ye a r gold design on front -pvt Call ,,.7 .,.,.. .,,., .,,, Ave., Nt'Wl>Ort ~ach
.vu• ~ b H 67' 00 16 -==='"="'=-'w-=or="'='...,:::-:~71:---OR. for. your rorivenlence atea theee paat 5 years! g u a r a n t e e transferable. party -est 0 er ,,-,,., ----POLL y PRl.EST A.•ume payments of $4.88 CdM. Eve~ all day wkends Mlchinery, etc. 1700 Every Tuesd11y, st&rting 7
BUSINESS COU..EGE ~·m or SJ7,2S calh. Next NEW drtlX'ries • 111 sizes PM, June 11, En~ign School,
325 N. Newport Bl., N.8. paymmt due July 1, 1968. from modPI hom~. al90 FORKLIFT 4000 lb. Clark Irvine & Clill Dr · Newport
Phone 54&-9723 Buttonholes. overcasts. hhnd sheers. Carpeting • new 200 S475. 5000 lb. Towmotor S575. Beach, in C:t frlorlum. No
PlAl hema . alto fa.nc:)f stitches. yds heavy avocado shag. 6»-26!11, Eve 897-2433 advance rcgistnrion neces-
NO IHIODI, yOUDg, exp.. No attachment.a oeceuary. $4.00 yd. &16-3332 sary, Enroll at class: If any
Ch1rter1 9039
e CHARTER THE F1NE.5T
New 40' Krlch
67~2517 • 67&-2400
41rcraft ~100
BELLANCA demonstrators.
200-C .l Viking 300, low
time, full IFR panel It auto
pilot. Best of1tr next 2
wee.kJ. 714: 546-2474
Mobile Ho'"" 9200
DBLE wide 2 BR, 2 BA,
awnings, skirts. Adults. No
pets. 19361 Brookhur1t No.
80, 962--0317
VAGABOND 50'xl0', 1 BR.,
furn.; full mrtlll awn'it·
Adull Park. 5'1f>..671:i evr~.
Will Pl\Y ('llsh for a 10 x 40
Mobil!! Homr. Must be im-
maculatr 67~17fi2 F:vr
MERCEDES BENZ
681/2 MG
NOW HERE!
SEE THEM TODAY
~tM LlmiA
• IMPORTS
1966 Harbor, C,M.
PORSCHE
'fi6 PorschP 912 sport coupe,
Racing i:rern w/ ~orgcous
gold int., rdlr. AM/FM SW
radio), 5 spd forward, near
new! Sell • trade. Sl!JIJ
delivers. Old car OK on
down. Locally owned. CaU
a!t"r 4. 1!>1-9773
RENAULT
TRAVEi.iN\. Eurof)('?
a 1•ar & not thr cost? Used
'6R Renault 4. dark grern, 4
i.-pd shifl. seat bells, luggage
.It ski rar k. choini1 & cuslom
plall'S. Only 15,(XX) krn5.
Avail m i d · s 11 m m e r in
Europe S!m. 673-2344
TOYOTA
68'12 TOYOTA
NOW HEREI
SEE THEM TODAY
teacher.~ !JI area. Grad. qu 1· ho ""'oi374 Sherwood Music s c h o o I , Call anytime, ~16 ABSOLl!I'EL Y S a c r i f i c e es ions P nc ,,_ or
Me.mbfto Music Teachers white Fox stole. Cost S400. FREE TO YOU 673.1855. Motorcyclff 9300 1966 Harbor, C.M.
Auoc. Pri•. leasona for toti. Planot & Org1M 1130 Long. 2 skins, Private pty. CAPTAIN • Licensed. 20 yrs
ONLY OR COCKER-Beacle, needl Jov. n le .... dlru teena, Sue PentOll 367 .. .,.. Eves i wkendl Ing fenc-.1 .___ w .1 t b exper. aa power ya .. ,,ts. Mapolia, CM 541-MM Lowrey spt orgap .,.,.,. _3-83_1_6_Cd_M_____ ""' nvme Familiar W. Coast Including Wurlitzer piano l't''PO $499. children. Black • white, Gulf of Lower Calif. E.W.
SCHOOL children'• vacation Weber reblt i!'and $850. CARPET • Apta • Homea. long hair. 846-6409 5/21 Pacific Waters. Best of kklal
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS ntea. Chilcoat 10-1..ellon * ft.elllter now tor wmmer Quality installation. Free GERMAN Shepherd, male, • general references. Call
!)pq School. 50-D. 173 piano counes (ages 7-U>. estlmales. All Pr Ices. black Is ll"eY· Good with 646-2977 belore 0800 or after U~eq -felon -Havoc -
Del Mar, CM. idult organ classes. 546-4478 t'Yea. Lie. Con-chldm. Free to aood home. l.800. Cabana -CHEAP ONE
MEltCHANDISf FOR E-Z TERMS -u;-c-10-~----u---962--0792 5121 12 VOLT -"8-D" Marine Bat-10
1 ... w~n~~~r~ :~~~,a~~ . '•.I AND TRADI MUSIC ClTY, C.M. G LF 11ib1 l bag ke newt 3 ;;ui;;;:;, ,AL 1 --'-old wt. tttles • 200 Amp. hnl. New, ""J * ~2185 .. 4 wooda, !' Irons Is putter Ul"U»v w~ IU to the c~rk. ''Size la no ob-flurnltvre IOOO .miiiimlim--iiiililiiiiiiiiil cost $350. Seer: $175. OR ~ tms. 1 smokey, 1 IJ'IY and guarant~. name br1111d-Jtoct. Just give me 1 CHEAP
NOW HERE _ the new 8316. Eves. all day wkends white, 1 lorc·bat~ black reg. $107.10 • Special Sele • ONE."
._·nlsh u.-.11"--1-•n S _...,.. T""" DIAMO""" .,,di _. and white. ~1833 5/20 one week only • $49.50. -H-0-"'_D_A--,160..,..,-_=,....-m~U---. _,.. ,._ , .. ' ,..,. u.,..., ..,.....:.1ng """' ,,.,, Wcv ng rings, ·1• """' "" SHOWROOM SAMPLES Hammcnd Spinet orpn art carved ~. lilce FEMALE Cat. Nice pet for Merine & Battery Shoppe new paint, bett oan-.
I Ft wood cantd armed di-_ the flndt yet! new, mu•t tell! 1 2 00 , children. All ahott. Bladt ' 24.1> W. Co.st Hwy. N.B. • ~ •
...ctb •·-an'• ma~ w 11 It e ab ort ha Ired 642-9002 642.-4235 Yl.n .. , -•" m SCHMIDT·PHlLLIPS CO. ~ '66 Honda Scr11mbll'r :\ai Xlnt Inc chalr. beaut.itlll Medi>-1907 N, Main o 2l:llh 'lW_O_l_unps--w-ttb_l_pe_lr-of 54C).1220 5/:ll DESPERATE Bllre, Nu brak~ & t11M-111>,
'-"""'"" fallr1c• and col.-Santa Ana .. _d *'O .. t d FREE Pl.lpple1, .,.,.t-D.ima-MUST SELL Quick iale S475 675-63114 -5 Pc ......... -s--c.a.. !!!!!!~~!!l!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!l'I ..... et ., • • I 0 , h pion o--.. ..._ ..,.., ...,,. __ . v--h•..t .. __ ..,., _...._ han, c Im naoutlmer. 50' X 14' lftlVY crull1ng
dark oak-top dinln& Id WICh B3 Rarnond ,.___ nauga ""e COUCuai _, elM."U. 54&-8832 5121 adlooner roomv Lve. • abet.
blaca ot avocado tramtd wltll Lellle .;.t;. --~~7122,.,..,----...,:-----: 213 • m-010" alter 5 and Auto Service dWn; decorative vtnyt ct. Excel concf. f7S.Jll05 KIRBY .. cuum cleaner and 4 M A N X type kittens. •etkcnds. & Pertt 9400
TOYOTA
HEADQUARTERS
ELMORE
9625 CARDEN GROVE BLVD
CARDEN GROVE JE 1-663C
VOLKSWAGEN
'"'-, 5 ~ Medlmrueu attachment.a. Take o • e r UnUJUAI, l without talll.
-· paymen• d 16.50 or S49 '10 142-4148 5121 DRY Boat ston l?r for 10' to bedroom aet-t drawtf Mr. ,,.__,,, ~ 50' boat.JI. F1cilltlr~ to do 6 llrL ~. larp f.ram. cull. .....,...It dc!pt 535-'1-BROWN tweed carpet and
'ST CHEV 2 dr · '59 Pontiac 2 ·~ VW. Nevo• bntkt a. paint.
dr convert. for pertJ. mA Xlnt cond R&H. S975 or bt~
.. lllfmlr, tarp .... eom-NOW'S THE Surft.N~ ::!1~pp lM) aq )'dJ5....: :::. o;:~~1i':. ~: ..... -tcbllw paMI -. IW~l.L Ptnt.,. t't" ,_ '"" -Pf1' ft. 642-f'lO'l, ~
.._. bu A • d. TIME FOR Elal eond. $100. Mll-82ll9 3 Oarllnf kJttena, t WID. 34' LONESTAR Cnllur. Gal· $1'5 VA.LUI MDtC. Mark 11 outboard Short hm, t*ts. ~
P.et Meette)W $429.fS QUICK CASH mtr. + otru l '52 FOid alt 4:30 5/'lO ~·~~pl ~conipl w/ ca TEIUill ,.,. LOW Al plclcuJ>. MUI otftt. M2i-1'7Sl J'REE: Dvllnf kins ba1r kif. TI"·-E..W • •
Sl• PD Wl:IS ttna. ~ 5/20 ----·11-""""-..a...-......,.....--
(Wll .a Itel ............... -""') THROUGH . A f'ILL DlltT WANTID * 16' OfRJS • ~ hp elec _...._ Lacuna lcll, 111' kf. 10,000 2 Kl'T'l'ENS, bulth)o A h•P. b•lt .. k I wh1 trlr 0miet
MO DOWN py, ~· 5/'ltJ ... n • ra • U• Oar .... a.rte CY. TI4: 496-18«1 _ cand, mo. 831.{,6.'U ~~ "':sri>i:r DAILY PILOJ 1~~°;'~~ ~! RATB~~ 11%F.S 5/2J ~· 11~A,'~.~~~:ry ~
D PUDJITUltl WAllJ AD MO ar oiler 56-21r>l I CUC• tdtwnl.. calico mother. t'Oncf. New trtr 64-mo
21Jt Hert.r llM.. c.M. n 31" StoYe $3$ N.., dollbJe bed sn.-i 5121 a• CAbtn QWtr, Qryller I.
D11r N , JN landaJ l50 Cboctl '35 to-20'Tl 215 'JWO klttena. I "'Mb old. bel~t condition. rm> or e ,._ • \ M-. Or. Oii 545-GC sno bNt olJe.r. M-3'171
' \ .I
Del Mar AVf'· CM oll(lr. 497oll26
Trvcb tSOO
'81 cm:v. ~ton CafTYllll. v.
I, auto., $6.'lO firm.
'M CHEV. ~ tone Carryall.
811 S tnic .• lltr., stick ahltt,
ref, 6 Ply rubber SU" flnn ~Tqr6~:i
'tl Ford Econollne Pldcu;p
Good condlllon. new tlrr.a.
ntw br:lkira. OM ~r. c
962$ 81• Damoll St. 5*a~
ltB& FORD PIO<UP vs. JO<>d ronct,
$.125.
'SS v.w. &npl header. Good
oondJ lion S375 or bet.1 offer •
~/646--5650
'66 VW MUST SACRIFICE
Prioecl to Hll lm!Mdlateyl
'4M2168
'64 VW, VERY a..EAN Ori&
CNIN ER $9'10,
54().9856 alt 5
1967 vw Sl695
Xlnt rond, luw milts.
7.tnith blur P\1 pty "2..WO
11 VW SUNR60i'.~ E:rcel
c:ccd. 1 ov.-ntt S1400.
642-lS16
500 4-dr. HT Fully eq .• incl .---------
air. 392 VS eng., driven only 68 BRAND New. Cougar
4500 ml. $86.13 per mo. Call lease for S89.00 per mo.
Cort Fox Auto LHsi ng JoMson & Son. 642-0981
642-8440 or see al Tl+D W.
Coast Hwy btwn 10-3:30 pm. CONTINENTAL
Evea Ir: wknds 496--5695 ========= '67 Continental. leather in-
terior, climatrol, all pow-
er. Factory cond, 6,000 mil-
es. $500). 6424640 nights.
DODGE
'65 DODGE CUsL SJ>Ortsmsn,
170. auto, R&H. xi!a seats,
$1695. 67~5400 aft 6PM
FORD
ONE Owner. 1963 Ranchero.
36,(XX) orig. mi. 5 New Oble
Eagle tires. 1684 Whittier
No. 42. Orange Coa.M Tl1r
Park, CJ.:. alter 4 PM
60 Ford Sta Wagon $150
548-9613. 300 L11goni1,
Newport Beach
'64 GA '..AXIE 500 Xlnt cond.
2 dr, air, ps, R&.H. $995
542~384 aft 5
'60 Ford GaJaxie 4 Dr. Good
transportation car. Needs
!9!11,..ll!ll!!!P.!t!!IP "!W!Rlll brilkes. $250.00. Call 546-6370
LA SALLE
'40 La Salle, 331 Cadillac
en2lne. S600 or hest offer.
• 67J...676S •
MUSTANG
'68 BRAND new atatiOn
wagon. Air, etc., all service
free for 40,(XX) miles-. Leue
for Sll9 per month. Abo
available: e x c e p t i o n a 1
barpina oo our l t aw
tumlns. Lease D e pt ,
Johnson &: Son Lincoln ~
Mercury 642-09Sl
'62 Falcon Squire, sta waJ?, '6.5 Mercury convertible, xlnt
dl1. Uke new, radio, heater, condition. Lo m 11 ea gt .
auto. $75 Cai;h or trade. Premium tires. $1450. LI
r ymti; S29 mo. AltM' II, 11-1197. d:\YS only.
1!11-9773 '65 Mustang. Very dean.
';,fi Cad Coupe de Ville, 11\r 29,000 ectuaJ milrs
cond , ri I r . rxceplJOna.lly Rc>as. 640-3006
c·lran, top mechaniral rood. 1965 Red Mustang 2+2
Sl9 <'Rsh $19 mo. After 4• automatic transmission. ~3617 $1800 494-9'm
NEED A CAR?
CAN'T BE FINANCED! OLDSMOBILE
•Bankrupt? e RePosseaslonT •---------•
e Bad Credit? • Dlvorcedt GREATEST 'J'ran5portat.i00
e M.ilitary e New In AreaT $150 1953 Old"s Fine Motor.
Make Payday Payments Po\\•cr steering. OR 3-8316.
McCARTHY MOTORS Alt 5:l> aJI day "'kends
1420 So. Main i Edinaer
12 bloc:ka N. ol Sean.)
Santa Ana Pb 50-35C77 PONTIAC
T·llRD 1 ---------·~ '64 T.Blrd hardtop, full ~
powe-r. air, xlnt oond. !
cMtl dtll, !Mke low pymtt; ,
After 11, 494-9773 • ,
~==-=-.,.....,..~-=-___,,,,,.....,..._,..._ ; '60 T.Sltd bard1op1 V.S, Whl :
bucket 1e1t1, dlr, m113t l~l •
Take tn~. My pymma :
$29.116. CaU Sid 639-3617
-=======~~ T·BIRD 1 9 6 2 conve.rtiblt. ' '63 RIVIERA "Grand Sport", "111 pwr; •lr cond, new top1 :
$800 l!nd lllkt avtt. CU.tom new tlrt~. just tuned up. ~ •
built 5#-~T rtptlOMlly clean. Pbatlil ~
•57 Bt1l0C Spec.la). RUN, f7?>..342'7 after 5 p.m. !
ltood UM Body 1n fair con-'nlE QUlCKEJt YOU CALL,
dillOn noo. ~7263 • na: QUlCKER YOO
I •
....... .-...-......... -___ ....... ____ -~--~ .. ---o~~~~-1 --:i •
•
at Is A R ol or . WHAT THE REALTOR DoES
A Realtor is a professional in real estate who subscribes to a strict
code of ethics as a member of the local and state boards and of the
National Association of Real Estate Boards.
For The Buyer • • . For The Seller e e e
1 AdviMs you 11 to the highest end belt UM of your property.
l Helps you to decide on the type of property th•t ls best for you
through •n•lvsis of your individual nHds. 2 Advertises your property In such • w•y as to •ppHI to the uu
owner who wllf pay your price.
The term Realtor is not a synonym for "real estate agent." It is the 2 ffelps you to determine the price you can afford to p1y, depending 3 Gives your property listing muimum exposure by llstint in Mult·
on your in debtedness, how mucf'I you use your home for entertain-iple Listing Service and ,,-ying the processing ch•rges (including distinctive and exclusive designation for individuals who are mem-
bers of the National Asso ciation of Real Estate Boards. 3
4
ment, how much you tr1vel. photogr•phs to all p1rticipatin9 broken) for you.
lielps you finance your purchase, helps you to flll out a financial
statement. secures you the best loan available at the best terms. 4 Supervises the dr1win9 of all docunMnh, etcrow instructions,
notes ind trust deeds •nd follows throuth on •II the details of the
Nie until its completion. If a person is uncertain as to whether a real estate agent is a Realtor,
the local Board of Realtors should be .contacted. Saves you time by eliminating properties th•t do not meet your
requirements.
WHETHER YOU ARE BUYING OR SELLING, FOR YOUR OWN
·PROTECTION, DEAL WITH A REAL TORJ
Presented in the Public ·Interest by the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors
BERRY REALTY
H II E~ 11 Cout Hw'I .. Coro"• del llA~r
6JS.)HS
BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES
IOI McFeddon Pl1ee, Newport luch
67). 7420
PETE BARRETI REALTY
Ill Dover Dr., Suite 2. Newport Such
6-42-4153
BA y & BEACH REAL TY I INC.
2025 W. Selbo• 81vcl., Newport Buch
67).'1200
MADGE DAVIS REALTOR
lOOO Wt1I Coa,t Hwy., Nowporl Buch
642-7000
EAS1BLUFF REALTY
241-4 Vlote Del Oro, Newport Such
644-11 Jl
FITZM'ORRIS REALTY
3135 E. CoHt Hwy., Coro11e clel llA•r
67).9010
DON V. FRANKLIN REALTY
3250 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• .!el Mer
673-2222
CHESHIRE REAL ESTATE
271 I E. Coot Hwy., Coro"• .!el Mtr
'75-2501
HARBOR INVESTMENT COMPANY
2841 E. Cout Hwy., Coro11e .111 Mer
.7).4400
JUNE ENGLUND REAL EST ATE
) 11 Tltelle St., l epn• 1 .. c1,
04-109)
JONES REALTY, INC.
200 I W. l•IM• 11¥4., N•wperi .... h
671·6110 . .
COLDWELL, BANKER COMPANY
2200 I . Ceot Hwy .. N_,.rt ... ch
. 675-2000
JOHN MACNAB REALTOR
c
iL
H I Do••' Otl"•· Newpori k•ch
"4?·Uli
(
NEWPORT BEACH REALTY
4H l2nd Slr•el. Newport Buch
. 675.1642
NICHOLS REAL EST A TE
2025 So. Cout Hwy., letJune luch
.. , ... 7220
ORANGE COAST PROPERTY
332 Muguerite, Coron• .!el Mer
67).8550
RICHARD D. FORNEY
4001 Bircll, Suite A, Newport Buch
540.)862
HAL PINCHIN & ASSOCIATES.
HOO E. Cout Hwy., Corone cle1 Mer
675.4392
CLIF PRIEST REALTOR
lOH E. Cout Hwy., Coron• del Mer
675.3511
RICHARDSON /PURCELL. REALTY
•
2443 E. CoHI Hwy., Coron• clel Mer
675.403 1
RUTH SEELEY, REALTOR
I 306 '•rk Ave .. 8elboe lalend
673-4766
CLAUDE SHIFFER, REAL TOR
777 Avoceclo No. 17, Corona del Mer
675·0473
WELLS-McCARDLE REALTORS
1110 Newpott ll•tl .. Co,t1 Me,.
541-7729
LEON VIBERT REALTOR
08A Newpo•t -ulty I ln•ea+"'e111 Co.
1142 Newport llvd., Coate M .. e, 541.0511
RAY REALTY COMPANY
1 H E .. t 17tlt St., w it. 2A, Cott• Me"
MMt11
DONALD M. BIRD ASSOCIATES
5-47.70-41
JACK KISTLER REAL EST ATE
141 hat lltlt St~ Coit' Me1e
6"42·1CMO
FRANK KINGAARD REAL ESTATE
Hl hat I 7tlt St., Co•t1 Mese
Ml 2.2222
FREDERICK REALTY.
J ll E. 17~ St.. Corio Mt1•
5-41.5501
MESA VERDE REAL TY
2150 MH• Verde Dri••, Cetta Mesa
5-46-5'90
DAVIDSON REAL TY
2750 Heritor, 51, Cost• Mua so.suo
ED RIDDLE REAL TOR, INC.
201 Victoria Au., Costa Mesa
"46-1111
DELTA REAL ESTATE
J l) f;. I 7tl. Street, Costa Meu
6'46·'4'41-4
DOYLE & WOOD REAL EST ATE CO.
..
270 L 17tll St., Corie MH•
5-41-llH
PAUL WHITE 'CARNAHAN
1091 C laker, Coste M"•
5-46-5-440
HERITAGE REAL EST ATE
2' 1 t lriatol, Cost• Me ..
5-40-1 151
CHARLES ARNOLD -JERRY FREUD
311 E. I ?tit StrHt , Coate M"•
: ..... 1755
RUTH PARDOLL & ASSOCIATES
1605 We.tcllff D•lve, Newper+ l uch
"42-UOO
DELANCY REAL EST A TE
2121 E. Ceaat Hwy., Cor•n• .!el Mar
67J.3710
BAY & BEACH REALTY, INC.
2-407 E. Coe.+ Hwy,. Cete11• 4el ._,..,
'11·1!*
V06LE REAL TY
2667 E. C.•tt Hwy,. C.rou 4al ~r
67J.1675
CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS
JOU E. Ceut Hwy., Ce10111 4el Mu
671.•16•2
--·---........... , .... • -----..... ~~~'!'--.. .. ...........
CLAIRE VAN HORN, REALTOR
1600 W. Cou+ Hwy., Newport IHclt
5"4t·9l-49
''C'' THOMAS REALTOR
2821 I . COid Hwy,. Coren• def Mer
541.5527
FAREl WALKER, REALTOR
JOO M. N-p~ 11.d., Newp~· ... clt \ ..... ,.,.
BURR WHITE REALTY
2901 Newport llvd., Newport lt1ch
675--4630
GEORGE WILLIAMSON, REALTOR
3 I°' Newport lf.,d., Newpott luch
67J-4310
P.A. PALMER, INCORPORATED
J377 Vie Li.lo, lide lalend
67l·7l00
WALKER & LEE,. INC.
204J Westcliff Dri••· M-,...t ... ch
"46-7711
FARROW REALTY
20 E. 17tfi St., Cetta Mese ... .......
SPRING REAL TY
I tOI Wertcliff Dr., Hew,.rt IHcfi
6-42.n12
M. M. LaBORDE REALTOR no E. 11th s+ •• Cot+• M ...
M2·tlll
JEAN SMITH REALTOR
-400 E. 17tli St •. Catto Mete
646-UU
ROITMAN REALTY
21 tt Felr•lew •ti., C.tf1 Mote
M6-ml
QUO VADIS ,INVESTMENT COMPANY
47-4 Eett 17th St., Cet+• Me ..
"46-7000
F. M. TARBELL C6MPANY
2911 Har'-llw .. Caria MHe ...
M0.1710
LOUIS W. BRl6GS, ·REALTOR
71 -4 t. '•'"•• ... ,.. .., ... • '7J.tll0
1 ....
voi.:. 6f,
..
Ba~k
D
More thar
pe1·ty valu
Orange Cou
this morni
Supervisors
Newport B~
Last~
Bea•
Prol
City
Newport
1?etting n1
Newport bE
They insi
Monday ni1
· Corps of E ,,_1t inti
another ere
·city Mar
told counci
d ty's "as!
wo uld as!
restoring t
more swpe·
"But thi
staled," he
ten commt
issue.
QUESTIOl'<
The que~
up during
quest from
mount a t
foot pole .
Also sough
wave gau€
4107 Seash
newly buiJ·
the end of
Munkip~
projects, '
program t or the exp
stabilizer.
Counciln
the loss o
and 42nd
months. C
suggested
engineers
Corps' ma
query on
about the
Mcinnis
his neigh!>
224 feet v
now 65 fe•
HOMES 1
Prior ti
3andhaul c
beachfroni
;han a foo·
zgainst SE
(~
IROSI
city of
Joss fr1
ofupt Groin: ,