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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-06-04 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa} • . '
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Baby ·Doll~s. ~op less
Quit~. Business • ID Mesa
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE -4, 1968 . ' YOL 11, NO, 1M. I S•CTIONI, 14 l'AMI ..
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Nation .Watches California Primary
N o B.omb Halt
J ohhson Jlejects . ' '
Hanoi's Demands
PARIS (UPI) -/The Han~ delega-·
tion to tl1e Paa-is Vietnam talks gave a
sharp and fir·ffi "Jo" today to Presi-' dent Johnson's latest call for a
reciprocal gesture 'firoln the Com-
munists on de-escalating the war.
J-0hnson, in an1eddress at Glas6boro,
N.J ., tOOay :rejected Hanoi's demand
that 2.!ll Americali bombing be stoWed
in North Vietnam.
"An honorable peace requires some
gestures on the other side toward
peace," Johnson said. ''. •. We bave
met wltll little more than bellicose
statements and evasions."
Official Haooi delegation sources
taking note of the spee<:-h said, "The
United Staites alOne holds the key to_
breaking the deadlock" a the talks
which reswne Wednesday.
''Hanoi stands ,firm by its demarid
for an unconditional . cessation of
.>\merican bombing of North Vietllam
·and of all hoStile 'acts against it," th e
delegation. sources said.
Not until then will Hanoi open
negotiations on a political settlement,
they said.
The American negotiatoi-s here were
\Vaiti ng to ~e il H·anoi's new Vietnam
negotiator will be as tough as he in-
~ mcatect;·
Le Due Tho, the personal envoy of
))resident Ho Chi Minh of North Viet-
nam. arrived Monday i nd promptly
publicly took a !laird line.
He said tihere oan .. be-reat peace
Orange Coast
.
talks -the aim o! tihe current patbfin-
ding sessions -if the United States
uncollditionally halts bombing North
Vdetnam and other "acts of war."
U.S. diploonatis le<! by Ambassador·
at-Large W. Averell Harriman reserv-
ed comment. They wanted to sH if the
man from Hanoi might pull something
new from the sleeve of his high-necked
military tunic w~~day.
Tho today was consu:ting Xuan Thuy
and., other Hanoi delegates.
Tho clearly had more authority than
Thuy to begin give and take diplomacy
that the North Vietnamese. bave avoid-
~ here so far.
Jn public Tho was all smiles and
cow-tesy but as unyielding thus far as
Thuy.
But he bore a special importance.
Tho has been a Communist party
member fOr 40 years. He sits on
Hanoi's p~litburo. Not only Communist
officials met him at the airport Mon-
day but alsu their wives~ ·chiJdreTI,
a Red diplomatic ges ture extended on-
·1y to the more majestic proletari&n
pmentates.
Body of Youth
Found in Plowed
Huntington Field
'
'BOOKED IN SHOOTING
Actress Valeri& Solanas
License Dromd.
,.. _.,-.
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Pop Artist.
'
SllQt; Potice -
Hold Actress
NEW YORK (UPI) -In his faiout
world of soup can posters and in-
terminable underground films, Andy
Warhol's acquaintances inc 1 u de d
characters as bizarre as bis art.
Among them was actress Valerie
Solanas, who detests men in general
and had sorne spe<:ific grievances
against Warhol.
The silver haired Warhol, 37, was
shot by a woman visitor to his studio
Monday. Police held Miss SOlanas, 28,
star of \Varhol's newest film. "I, A
Man," on charges of feloniou s assault
and possession or a dangerous weapon
with intent to kill.
Doctors said today Warhol had a
~·50-50" chance of surviving. _
•
IN CRITICAL CONDITION
Pop ortlst Andy Worhol
Miss Solanas, who last year placed !De." She said she Jived .. nowhere." ~
an ad in a Greenwich Vlll. weekly, the Village Voice, announcing forma. "There are manY involved reasons••
tion of "The Society For Cutting Up for the shooting, she told newsmen at
Men" (SCUM ), said sh e shot Warhol a police station. "I have written a
because he "had too much ·control of manifes to of what I am 3Jld what I
my life." stand for." Warhol, famed for hls eight-hour, no . . aotiGn;-movies_and_hit_ giganti_c~n..:___ AGCO~di~g to ~ witness, W~r~ol wa_s
tings ol Campbell soup eans and Brillo 1alk:lng on the U!lepbone to another of
boxes, 'underwent surgery for 4VZ his female film stars when Miss
hours.. The bullet tore t h r o u g h SQlanas stepped from an elevator,
Warhol's chest, abdomen, spleen and walked into his sixth floor soundproof
both lungs before emerging through office, and shot him.
his right side. , Mario Amaya of London, .a visitor in
Miss Solanas, square-jawed, slender Warhol'$ office, was shot in the b~ck
and short haired, walked up to a but not sericiusly injured.
policeman in Times Square four hours Amaya, 34, said Miss Solanas "stood
after the shooting and said : "The very quietly while we were in·
police are looking for me and want . (See WARUOL, Page !)
-67 Percent
... Turnout .· ·--~-
Predicted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -California
Democrats decide between presiden·
tlal candidates Robert F. Kenne_dy and
Eugene J. McOarthy today while
Republicam were voting · on the
political future ol U.S. Sen. Thomas H.
Kuchel. )
This election in. the nation'• mos~
populous state was the final primary
test for Sens. Kennedy and McCarthy.
The winner is likely to offer the main
challenge to Vice President Hubert
Htlmphrey in the Democratic National
Convention.
Assistant Sec;retary of State H. P.
Sullivan predicted 67 percent of the
voterJ would turn out in mosUy fair
weather-.
Democrats. their interest stirred by
the increasingly fi~ McCarthy-Ken·
nedy race for Califomia's 174 national
convention votes, .were expected to
vote in .a greater ,percentage than the
Republicans. fl)ey outnumber. GOP
voters 4,347,406 to 3,197,815. .
Republicans, their choice limited to
favorite son Gov. Reagan on the
presidential ballot, weren't expected
to turn out as strongly, Sullivan said.
Kuchel's stra_tegJ.sts_ said.. that-could
hurt ttie senator, facing a strong·
challenge from Max RaHerty, the
state superintendent of public in·
str.uction.
Traditionally, they say, Ute 6on ..
(See PRIMARY ,-Page Z)
'On to Onondaga'
For OCC Rowers
After Fund Drive
Weather
A young man , clean.cut appearin&'
with a hippie·type medallion hung on a
chain from his neck, was found
sprawled in death early today in.. a
plowed field in Huntington Beach.
Police said the body, fully clothed
and face-up in the field, was
discovered by two men who were
on a daily one-mile jog around the
open area near Hamilton Avenue and
Brookhurst Street, not far from the
Costa Me sa city limits.
Mesa Topless Bar Closes It's "on to Onondaga."
The motto of the Orange Coast
College racing crew really meam:
something roday. .
Cloudy and cooler, but no
rain in sight, says forecaster
Dave Burt of Wednesday's
weather picture. High temps
will range around 65 here-
abouts, up to 75 inland.
INSIDE TODAY
The f irst lady of France,
llardly recognit.abh!' to most
r renchmeni seems to live quite
happily with "that man," and
has done so Jar many uears.
Society Page fr'.
Miii/kit " -· ' Mvtull ~·-11 HatltMI ...... W .._ .,_ '
s.cllt .... 1).ll '""'' , .. ,,
Sttck "'°'""'" l•il Ttlt'WI... ll -.. "'"""' . 01-w1111e u
WH'lill """' 4-1
Orange County coroner's deputies
tentatively identified the dead man as
Frank Smith, about 20 years old, from
PhoeniX, Ariz. The tentative iden·
tification was made only Crom 'two
Social Sec;:urity card'S wtlch were
found on tn.e body~
Huntington Beach detective Captain
Earle Robitaille told Ille DAILY
PILOT that '° far, no evidence of foul
play has been uncovered in the death.
County coroners have scheduled an
autopsy later today.
PoliCe hope to make a poaitive iden-
tification and determine the cause of
death late today.
· The body was dis_coyeA!d by Air
Force Major Russell Petrie of Dl62
SUrge Lane and his numlng compan·
Jon, Karl Lederor, a programming an·
alyst of 20902 Surge Lane, who noU·
lied police, 1
B1 AR'l'llUR R. VINSEL
Of ... .,...., l"llel Slltfl
The Costa · Mesa establishment
which once oaused bosoms to heave -
in elhibitkln, exultation or indignation
-depending on ,)'out involvement, is
no more.
Baby Doll's, the topless go-go bar
which introduced bare breasts to the
city and showed bare-behind movies
toward the end of·its tenure, has clos·
ed up for good.
Under terms Of a mutual agreement
wltb. city officials, owner Harry
Maoselll end«! his days in the C<lola
Mesa buslneas &immunity on Monday.
City AtAly. Roy E. Juoo U>ld the city
COW>Cl1 Monday-night tl1et M..,elll's
otKale beer'>llcmse was picked up at
10 e.m. byuie ~cobolfc"BeVerage Con~
trol Board.
Jwie bimoeU plclr«I up ~ llu•iueu
liceme, saying workmen were ca_s·
r)'Wg flU11ioblolros away from Ille bar
' . -------------------------~-----
at 2170 Harbor Blvd., shortly after
noon.
Acting on June's recommendation,
councilmen fmmally and unanimously
revoked the business licet11Se, as well
as an entertainment permi~ granted
after a ·!-alld bitter battle. June; however, did not plck up the
entertainment ~-t. ''Tbey a aid th y never received it,"
he tOld councilm n. Baby Doll's opened ,., 1<--c:.ruary or
1967 and, dating from about 30 · days
ltter, was embroiled ·in conftversy
which included ICOr<S of an-ests and Countless court appearances. ·
Decried from the fiffl1 ~of Colla
M .... , Civic C.nter all the way In
pulpits tl>rougboM the city, the toples<
bar nonetheless won man1 victories in
its legal warfare.
"I saw the Oolta Mesa city ftt(niey
and Ills -In Superior Court one
\}Y .'' Mid a lw:gtJme observer of the
situation, 1'and longer f~J yw never
saw ."
Repeated e!!om In shut down the
popular beer and breast sbop--wl!Jch
was do:~ exactly one year ago, while
awaiting an efttertaimnent ~t
ordered iMued by the courts -1alled,
but a comprom.lse Situation was finally
redched. . •
"''Wittl thanJts and <!Or!:tratulatlon&!",'
dl!clar«I Councilmao George A •
Tucker after Monday night's vote.
The' ~nd in sight. however, owner
Maseel1i inaugurated nude movies pro·
ject<tl Mto the wall of Baby Doll's,
·betweeoadaby·--•nd•
shipely alld well.precticed strippe<.
He hadn't rtlC'hed rock bottom,
howeY<f, lust cellu!old )>oltom<.
One wotild·be film critic made a
foray Into the lately Oourlshlng IJ>.vern
alld found tbe ltu!NnoUle·bull aboilt as
appealing as a mrohed potaw and <;~ BABY DOWS, Poge ZI
Community respoll6e to an appeal
for funds to send the West.eoast-.row-
ing champs t.o next w e e:k ' 1
Intercollegiate Rowing . AssoclaUon
championships at Syracuse, N.Y., (at
}4k"e Onondaga) was great enough to
assure the. team's participation.
Coach Don Gr'aot received. the green
light Monday aftemooo When tho.
Pirates' crew reach«! Its minimum
goal of $2,500.
Prior to Monday's mail call, the
Pizllites wexe SlOO shy of tbe minimum
goal, but contribuUoos from the com·
munlty enabled Gun! to aend tllo •100
enVlilllCe fee and make. reservationt
f<rr t1>e BUC3" fliilht ·ln S}'NCUM.
Jmt ln case YQU're wondering, any
donatSc:me received over the minhntna
· figuri-'Will be utillled by llJO Plra~
next mooth In ttwilt queot In 1\lht a berlh in tt>e 1988 O!Ylnpic Goaines.
'!'rials for the Mexicll City vmture
will be staged in late iu1y at Lone
Beac:b. ' • ...
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~ DAJl Y PILOT TllHd.IJ, •Jont 4, 19611 •
DAILY PILGT Ii.ft ......
HANDLE WITH CARE -Nurses and firemen r ace
through hallway of Children's Hospital of Orange
County with precious cargo, 10-day-old Russell
Julien, son of Russell and Beverly Julien of 7761
Liberty St., Huntington Beach, a hyaline mem-b~&ne patient who can stay alive during hospital
moving-day only by riding in liis special respirator.
Police Arrest
.Beach Man in
Girl's Kidnap
A Huntington Beach " man is being
held in Anaheim jail today on chatgei;
ol kidnaping an lB-year-oid Magnolia
High School girl.
Police said Joseph W. Dutra, 52, of
9782 OOOring Cross Drive drove to the
high school in Anaheim Monday morn-
ing' aod _ induced Karen JeaneU~
Ca.puto, 18, to get into his cac.
Officers 9aid Dutra told the girl that
her ·rather v•as iU and be was taking
her home. They said she hli!d no
reason to doubt him because he is the
lather 0( her boyfriend, Norman
Dutra, 19.
Instead of taking the girl ho1ne.
Dutra drove her to his home in Hun-
tir..gton Besch.
Police questioned classmates of Ute
girl who had seen her get into tlle
Dutra car and determined t:het the oar
could bave been one frequently used
by the boyfriend.
Children A~ong Cargo
In Big Hospital Move
It was no ordinary moving day.'
AJ~ng with the furniture, !.iling
Cs.btnets· and office equipment, the
precious cargo to be shifted from the
second floor of Children's Hospital of
Orooge County in Orange to the newly
completed third floor j n cl u de d
children.
They ranged from newborn infants
in their plastic isolette.s to youngsters
suffering from hyaline membrane
disease, a malady in which a cpating
inside the patient's lungs interferes
with the normal flow oi oxygen. The
young patient usually spends ab0u1.
two hours in a respirator alternated
with 40 minutes under an oxygen hood
<round the clock. And C H 0 C
speciaHzes in the treatment.
Hospittal officials knew where to get
• •
help witti their delicate moving opera-
tion. . ,
lt1onday morning 15 firemen fTom
the City of Or~gc Fire Department,
under tlle direction of Chief Floyd D.
tliggs, reported for duty.
Within an hour they had moved the
criticc:tlly ill youngsters and 1he life
support systems which kept them
allie. 'lltey jollied and joked with the
less critical p.atier:' -the tonsil
~ cases, appendectomy recovery pa-:-
. tlents and others.
And remodeling ol Ult. \"C..Cated se-
cocd floor got under way. Completion
is scheduled for early July.
Present overcrow<ling of ttie coun-
ty's only children's hospital will be
relieved when the current expansion
program brings the total number 'of
beds t.> 104.
FroM Page J
PRIMARY •..
Three Utility Towers·
Toppled· by Explosives
• OAKLAND ·(AP) -Three toemeu.
doua expiO..lons, latest tn a ·aeries of
attack.I against ut1llty company facil.
ltlel, rocked hUJ aecUons of Notth
Oakland and Berkel(y early today.
The blasts brought down three 70.
toot towers, cutting off service to 30,·
CM» Pacific Gas & Electric Co. resi-
dent1al and industrial Customers.
rtie exploaions followed one another
In spilt. seconds at 4:40 a.m. Thous-
andl of ~ons asleep were aroused
but. there were no cuualtlu.
Authorities said the charges w e r e
planted on two le gs of each to:wdr
about 15 feet above the ground.
As the steel Structures, standing
'Sea Diamond'
Available for
$375 per D~y.
about 24 feet apart, came down, they
fell. in almost perfect alignment Six
115,000.volt Uoes toppled with them.
' ~ reported t11at aa the. second
tower collapsed it took out a secondary
12,IXX>-volt line that carried both elec·
tric and telephone service to the im·
mediate area.
The 8":ing wires writhed and snap..
ped acrosi ·styline; Boulevard, leav-
ing scorch markl on the ground.
Oakland police closed about three
miles of Skyline and Grizzly Pea)t
boulevards for several'boun: on either
Side of the blast.
The routes were reopened before
the morning peak traffic got under
way.
•
InvestJgator1 said the charges ap.
petJ:.ed to be a type o(plasUc explosive
so inteDSfl that the tower legs melted.
There were no primary fuses typical
of ti\e dJDaDllte charges used In blasts
against the PG&E and Pacific Tele-
phone Co. In hte .same general area in
April and March.
FBI agents joJned loca1 police in an
investigation.
The University of California· Law-
rence RadJatlon Laboratory, blackW
out for almost 12 hours in ·March, was
affected brlelly today.
The power cut blacked out the" north
Oakland Hill area, the Berkeley in.
dustrial district and lJOmes in Oak·
land's Montclair section.
Cong Use W o{fnded GI
As Bait; Kill Rescuers
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. and South Saigon where other Viet Cong units
By EVELYN SHERWOOD Vietnamese forces today killed an have battled government troops for or !tie Dtltr l'lt.I 11111 She's back in port_ a little older, a estimated 250 Viet Cong troops trying nearly a week. Another battle came 22
little wiser, but still a knockout. to join the batUe of Saigon. In one bat· miles northwest of Saigon where a
And anyone can have her for $375 a tie the Viet· Cong used a wounded South Vietnamese army outpost aided
day. _ American soldier as bait for five by U.S. planes and artillery threw
'lbe 95--foot yDCht Sea Diamond, agonlz.ing hours. ba k ·
among the poshest vessels on the West U.S. Army 9th Infantry Division c .an assault by 400 North Viet.
Coast, bu returned to Newport soldiers killed "more than 200" guer· namese using flamethrowers.
llal'bo' from San Diego and is" rillas Monday nlgbt and today in one The battles raged .as the guerrillas
available oo charter. battle 38 miles southwest of the slammed 44 rockets and mortar shells
The $350,000 motorsailer was owned Capitial. It was in this action the Viet into the capit-al, wounding 12 South
by Newport Beach multi.millionalre O>ng held the captured American and Vietnam civilians. Scattere:d fighting
\Villiam Bartholomae until his death in shot every person who tried to rescue raged in blocks .of rubble in Saigon's
Jafluary, 1964.. : him. Cholon Sf!Ction and on the city 's
The charter rarte Wat; quoted...by a ~ The Americans lost 36 dea(i and 62 · northeast edge ..
spokesman for Ardell Marina, where wounded in this battle. The fighting cllih.axed a month-long
the yacht is berthed. UPI correspondent Nat Gibson said CommuniSt spring orrensive aimed at
"\Vbat about the crew?" asked the the fighting began whe_n a group of 00 Saigon., 'Allied intelligenee said the
DAILY PILOT. Americans landed by helicopter in a Reds sought a propaganda victory to
"111&t's extra,'' the spokesman bramble patch ju9t 10 feet from a Viet aid their cause in North Vietnam's
Teplied . "The boat needs about four at C.Ong bunker complex. 'The Com· talks with .tbe United States in Paris.
$25 a day. Each." munista held their fire till the troops But the North Vietnamese invaders
"Then there's the cap'8ini'' he con-landed then opened up \Vith small .Monday suttered a propaganda defeat
tinued. "A captain is $4-0 more, ood arms and automatic weapons fire. 380 miles up the coast from Saigon,
then there's i cook. SHOT IN HEAD near the city of Hue. A record 83 Com;
"A cook is fl5 and a steward, One American was wounded in the munist troops surrendered to U.S. and
another $25." 1eg, fi ve feet Jil front of a bunker. Maj. South Vietnamese forces.
The yacht is now ow.ped by trustees Zeb Bradford, 34, K·annapolis, N.C.. They did not give up at the point of
o{ the Sarajane Bartho!omae Hartling said "they either killed or wounded a gun but simply under the urging of. a
trust. Mn. Hartling, 21, ol. Udo Isle, is five or four men" trying to reach him. propaganda loudspeaker _airplane.
Banhokmae'a: daugbter. Finiilly, he said, they shot him in the But blood flowed elsewhere. In the
Trustees own the D'.iile ahip with ttie head just before dark. Mekong Delta fight, the 9th Division
provlS'o that Sara Bart b o 1 om a e Bradford said the wounded man lay units suffered 36 Americans killed and
La.under -wife ot the dead mllllon-in front of the bunker. for five hours 62 wounded in the fighting that miash·
a1re -can buy it back if abe wishes screapii.ng for help, and that every ed the Viet Cong battalion.
1ometlme later tbJJ year. time h,e tried to move1he Communists The allies' Closest call came at t.tie.
Meamrbile, the marina spokesman would shoot him again either in the outpost 22 miles northwest of Sa.Jgon
was a:tiH figwing up tbe charter eo&ts. arms or legs. when SO government troops aidell by
-l'rom Page 1
"Of course ttiere'1 an added sum for . The Communists were part of a 10 American advisers held oU the
percent of. the 'Votes caat. Thirty-three fnsurance and '° forth ... " force believed trying · to move into flamethrower attack.
of the state's 58 counties Dow have the r==========================================:;
' servatives wbo back Rafferty have a
•
WARHOL •..
troduced." lie said he then looked
away.
"When I first heard the gunfire J
thought it was coming through the
window," Amaya said. "Then I notic·
ed a revolver llke one oC those guns
you see in Dick Tracy in her hand. She
was going full blazes."
He said Warhol called her name and
shouted "Oh, no!" Amaya said Miss
Solanas then turned and fired at. him
but he ducked. The bullet just missed
his spine.
According to friends of Warhol, Miss
Solanas appeared at his office at
midafternoon but left when she found
he was out. She returned about 4:20
p.m. and shot him.
Paul Morrissey, a receptionist who
sho•.-ed Miss Solanas into Warhol's of-
fice, said he went into the offiee after
Ute woman left and found Warhol and
Amaya wounded on the floor.
A group of Warhol's friends, dressed
in leather, denJm, lace and beads,
waited at the hospital for news of. his
condition following the operation. The
artist's Czech-born mother, with whom
he lived, was given a sedative at the
hospital an(l later taken home by two
or Warhol's associates. •
DAILY PILOT
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CAUPOINlA '
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better record of. turning out than the
moderate and liberal Republicans who .
support Kuchel.
There'll be plenty of Calif()rni.a firsts
in this election.
The polls were open 'from 7 a.m. lo 8
p.m. in every county for the Ont time.
ln the j)a.s't, 'tounties with liss tJfan
<00,000 population closed their poU. at
7 p.m.
And Los Angeles c.ounty, for the
first time used voting machlnes, ex·
tending the electronic system to 93
F"°"' Patre J
BABY DOLL'S ...
n1arshmallow sandwich . on \\'hite
bread.
Police had already seized the file ,
but" -and thL1 is 1*1at all-lml)(rtant
but -111e; had already been judgod
neither pornographic nor obsceDe. and
county authorities declined to iS'sue
compla.int.s.
The several reels or u n r e a I
womanhood featured every(hil)g Jrom
a natural redhead who struggled to
rise from her Ieopud skin to a dozen
cuties waiting in the raw on a fat and
repuisive· monarch .
After a wlldly symbolic sequence,
the girls fin&lly began displaying a few
aestheUc angles to the cameraman.
with golden light and about 25 pairs of
eyes pleying over their curves.
Just at thot point, however, the eigbt
millimeter film parted, appanlnUy due
to heat and tension .
So did the reviewer, untroubled by
either one.
Jade Burglary
Suspect lmane
The only defendant to {ace Superior
Court in a $XI0,00> Laguna Beach jade
burglary cue, Gary Celli, Mooday
was found insane and ocdered com
mltted to ALascadero State Hoopillal.
.. Sqperlor Judge William Speirs, who
had previOU&ly ruled Celli w be sane
reve-sed himseli lftltr further study o!
pcyd\ialrlsta' reports.
Celli will be hospitalizOd until be Is
was found insane and ordered com·
defense. The 23-year-old man, who Uved at
3112 Mountain View Ave., in Lagun1, was: arrelted last November and
<barged with the April 23. 11167
birglary. Moro than lO pieces o!
valuable jado had been talten lrom the
home ot ll't appraiser James J. Bren-
nan, 935 G1vtot1 Drive, tasuna Beach. •
Mott o! tho mlHing jode bu been
recovered. •
machlnes.
MINOR PARTll:S
. !j!nor parties are back on the ballot
for the !int time since the Prohibi-~
tioMsts dropped out after 1964.
fofmer Alabama Gov. George
Wallace's .. Aiiiei-lCU Indepeodent par-
ty and the Peace and Freedom party
fielded candidates.
·Kennedy and McCarthy caPtured
most or the attention OD . the final day
of campaigning Monday -just as they
had tlroughout the election.
The Los Angeles Times poll made
Kennedy· a slight favorit.e, but showed
a gain in McCarthy support and said
that the undecided voters held the
balance.
The poll also predicted that a third
and uncommitted slate, headed by At·
ty. Gen. Thomas C. Lynch, would cap-
ture 15 percent or the vote. Once back·
ing President Johnson, the: slate now is
badly split, but most Of its leaders
favor Vice President Hubert H.
HlDllphrey.
KENNEDY FAVORED ,
On Monday night the National
.Broadcasting Co., reported that a poll
conducted for the network by the
Oliver Quayle: Co. showed Kennedy
getting 39 percent or the vote,
McCarthy 30, and the Lynch delegates
13. Eighteen pei'cent remained un·
decided. The poll was taken Sunday,
the day after the Times poll.
Kuchel, 57, was reported by the
Times poll to be only slightly ahead o!
Rafferty in a race 'Where the state
schools chief has moved up with a last
fllinute blitz of newspaper and
t!levislon advertising.
% CHALLENGERS
On the Democratic side, former
State: Controller Alan Cranston was
heavily favored to defeat his two main
challengers, State Sen. Anthony C.
Beilenson of Beverly Hills and William
Bennett, a member or the Public
UtiliUes Commission.
Also on UJ:e ballot are primary con·
tests for 80 Assembly seats, 38 con-
gressional seats and hall of the 40
spots in the State Senate.
Two bond la&ues -$200 mJlllon for
veteran fann and home loans and •
million ror junior college.construction
-alto wm befon the voten.
Ahsenle~ Vole Bill
Okayed by Senate
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate
bu given llnal congreulooal _.a1
to 1 blU urg!Qf tbl states lot their
residents travelinc over1eu vote by
ableotee ballot. ·
The adion MonillaJ wu OJI!. an
amendment to legl&lallon which gives
&enlctmen ableolft ballot privllefe1 •
'
•
only has it!
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than the old shampoo method • • • ·
However, the Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet Jlnd the carpet backing. 'Since no brushing or
scrubbing action is used, there is no ·distortion of th e carpet pile. The
powerful extraction action of the Deep Steam process lifts matted pile to
"like new" appearance. ·
The need for frequent professional cleaning is reduced because the deeply
imbedded abras ive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are removed, and
there is no deterg_ent residue left in the carpet ~ co llect dirt. During the
Deep Steam cleaning process all th e carpet fibers are coated with a special
soil retardant. .,
"It's simple logic ••• You profit in the long run when you use Deep Steam
Carpet Cleaning because your carpet will be cleaner than ever before
i>ossible; It will stay clean longer and wear longer because you used Deep
Steam Carpet Cleaning ••• "
WHEN YOU
WANT ntli
FINEST-' CALL
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Our 21st YHr of Service in Ot•nge County
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Call ZEnlth 7-0696 •
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Costa Mesa Today's Closing
:VOL 61, NO. '13~, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES CO.STA MESA, CAtlFORNI.( :TUESDAY, ~UNE ~. ·r 964 :TEN CENTS
Guest Home for _ Elderly 'Jeered by Neighbors
Orderly prote6t degenerated into a
chorus of jeering dissent Monday at
the climax d. an emotional bearing
before th~ Costa Mesa City Council, on
a permit for a boarding home which
houses iour· elderly women .
Mrs. Helen S'lezak, of 316 Bucknell
·"'Road, bad sought a conditional use
permit allowing five women to make
their home there, but one must go
elsewhere.
Bitter area property owners -
balanced out by another faction which
favored the quiet guest home -·made
their disple85UJ'e known as the perm.it
moved toward final approval.
"No ... no ... no ..• no," they
chanted following Councilman William
L. St . Clair's motion to grant the
pennit !Or five women, .alt.hough . lh.e
planning commission suggested a linut
of four.
"Go baclr. to barbering," one man
,
shouted at St. Oair during tte hooted
reaction.
St. Clair's motion d.led for lack or a
second and be withdrew jt, although it
appeared to have a chance of a 3-1
\IOte for approval.
The conditional use perni1t later
passed 40 on a motion by Council.plan
Ge.orge A. Tucker, to allow four
women until December, when the
lease on the property is. up.
A second motion calls for City Atty.
Roy E. June to review the ordinance
now governing establishment _and
operation of the ,county-licensed homes
within the city, for possible softening.
Monday night1s lengthy hearing in·
valved testirqony by representatives of
the county Department or Social
\Yelfare, irate residents who fear their
property values will drop and others
who praised Mrs. Slezak's operation.
De.raid Hunt, of 338 Bucknell Road,
led off the exchange as representative
or the dlssldent.s,'"'apparently afraid the
Sleu.k boarding borne would open the
way for further neighborhood en·
terprises.
lils delivery was calm and well-
organized, as he emphasized that the
group does not dislike Mrs. Sle;ak or
the boarding home concept, but that it
is literally not at home in their area.
Bill Dosta, of 317 Princeton Drive,
however, said he represented a group
which endorses tlbe Slezak home and
I
it. four elderly residents.
A stand-up show of 5\lpport indicated
about 35 persons opposed tet the home
and 18 to 20 who do not mind it.
A. contrwel'S.ial Yellow Sheet OOcu·
ment circulated in the neighborhood,
howevtt, aroused the anger or
chiropractor Dr. John P. Evers, an
area resident w1tti oCfices at 125
Broadway. Costa Mesa. .
The circular wa.s antl-board'in~
(See BOAIWING HOME, Page I)
Early Coast Vote Heavy
Costa Mesa Turnout Reaches 17 Percent at Noon
Fish Fry 'Dessert'
The deep fryers have been put away for another year and the carni-
val has' Jong since departed Costa Mesa City Park, but for 2-year·
old Kim Wilbur, helping her mother, Kit, of 109 23rd St., Newport
Beach, try keys in new Mustang the family won at Costa Mesa-New·
port Harbor Lions Club event, "dessert" is served. Enjoying the
scene (left to right) are Jim Phillips, outgoing Lions Club president;
Theo Robins, owner of Theodore Robins Ford agency; and Or. Ron
Craig. incoming Lions president.
Harbor PT A to Hold
Symposium on Drugs
1'he flarbor Council PTA will hold a
narcotics symposium for parents
~aturday at Estancia Itigh School.
DiscllSSion in groups will be tile fin£l
phase of the five-hour symposium and
it is ,hoped from these will evolve
plans for parental action.
Voting Jn Cali!ornia ... s primary elec-
t~on today appeared to be moderate to
heavy in ttie early going along the
Orange Coast.
Most coastal precincts w e r e
reporting turnouts of 17 percent or
bc.tter in the balloting prior to noon.
~ . In Newport-Beaeh, sample precincts
in the early check ,all indicated a
turnout above average. .
At Horace Ensign School by 11
a.m., 100 out of 500 registered voters
* * * Nation Watches
California's
Primary Today
LOS ANGELES (AP) -CallCornia
. Democrats decide between prelliden-
tial candidates Robert F, Kennecjy and
Eugene J. McCarthy today while
Republicans were voting on the
political future of U.S. Sen. Thomas H.
Kuchel.
This election in the naUon's most
populous state was the final primary
test for Sens. Kennedy ind McCarthy.
The winner is likely to offer the main
challenge to Vice President Hubert
Humphrey in the Democratic National
Convention.
Assistant Secretary of Stale H. P.
Sullivan predicted 67 percent of the
voters would turn out in mosUy fair
weather.
Democrats. their in~crest stirred by
th e increasingly fierce 1'1cCarthy-Ken·
nedy race for Califo111ia's 174 national
convention votes, were expected to
vote in a greater percentage than the
Republicans. They outnumber GOP
(See PRilllARY, Page 2)
* * Pilot to Carry
Voting Results
On Wednesday Eleven knowledgeable persons from
fields of medicine, law and the schools
'viii discuss various aspects of the
groViin-g drug problem a m on g
teenagers. A movie on marijuana will
be shown .
Speakers will be Dr. Barbara Jessen, neurologist; Dr. George Ho ff, \Yith heavy vcA turnout predjcted
clinical psychologist; Newport Beach in today's priqlary election in Orange
No Life in Mesa,
Says Boys Club
No Life Magazine subscription drive
is being conducted in cooperation with
the Boys Club of the Harbor ..Area, of-
ficials warned today.
Executive Director Lou Yantorn
says several persons have been ap-
proached on a subscription progra1n
verbally linked to benefitting the Boys
Club.
This is not true, according to Yan·
torn.
Police Chief B. James Glavas: Costa County, significant returns arc not ex-
Meisa Police Chlef Roger Neth: Dr. .. pected to be available tonight.
Nonnan Loats, Newport-Mesa Unified -The DAILY PILOT will not operate
assist.zn.t school superintendent; Mrs .
Robert Lilly. Newport-Mesa school
board member.
Also, Julian Cimbaluk, juvenile
i::owi referee; attorney Gordon Dale;
Dr. Michael Brown, lecturer at Cal
State ~lcrton; Dr. Maurice Kaplan,
director of South Coast Ch.ild Guidance
Clinlc. d Gerald Buck. delinquency
preven on coordinator wHh the county
Proba · n Department.
The symposium will begin at 9:Xl
a.m. and end at 3:30 p.m. in the
Forum at Estancia High, 2323 Placen-
tia Ave., Costa Mesa.
A sack lunch is suggested. Ad-
m ission of $1.per person will be charg·
ed to cover costs.
an "election central" for telephone
queries ton ight, but will report in Wed·
nesday's editions the latest available
reports fJS they are compiled by the
Coleman Vote Tally System and other
computerized equipment which will be
operated around the clock by the coun·
ty clerk's staff in Santa Ana .
Complete unofficial results
particufarly on "local" races, such as
congressmen, state assemblymen.
county supe-rvi6ors and propositions -
are not expected to be avaUtible until
late Wednesday afternoon.
The DAlLY PlLOT will cafry final
returns on how Orange County voted
as soon as they are available.
Plea-A11d SympathY.
Mesan Undecided on Hospital; Council Knows Feeling
Decisions, decltions.
A decision by the COsta Mesa City
Council Monday night. granting a con-
d itional uso pennit for a 112-bed con-
valescent hospital at 2570 Newport
Blvd., left an adjacent landowner wilh
his own decision to make.
"I'm at odds with myself;" said
Gene \Yaggoncr, of 2573 Elden Ave ..
while asking questions about the
Stabler and Associates project.
••
"I'm ·against it on principle," he
said, "but then It certainly won't hurt
me as a property owner either."
''Then you should be one or us." said
Vlec Mayor Robert M. W 11 ~ o n
cheerfully. noting that decisions af.
feeling Costa Mesa and its people are
sometimes agonizingly reached.
\Vaggoner'g moustache t w It c h.c d
with a slight smUe. •· r h~e considered being one of you
' I
at timos," he said dtlly.
The long term convalescent hospital
came up once before for a conditional
use permit, but was returned lo
developers after lengthy dlscussJon
before the city Planning Co~mlssion,
A re-design job on traffic flaw.
which wl.11 bring automobiles in from
Newport Bouteve.rd and have an exit
only onto adjacent DcS Mar Avenue!,
was later accepted.
had cast their ballots.
· A precinct worker 8¢ city hall
reported "it's .really good, we've never
had it so good."'She ~aid 85 out of 450
voters had voted there by 11 a.ln.
A heavy turnout. was reported at
22nd Street precinct with &l ballots
-cast out-ef 44.3 and a line there-of
about a doze·r. waiL-n g.
In Costa Mesa, early balloting was
also characterzied as heavy with the
range of turnout upward to l'/ percent..
In a double precinct at Harper
School, 113 had voted out of 700
registered at the time of the early
sam~ check. It was 73 of 496 at
Califorina School; 73 of «q,at Victoria
School ; ·61 of 419 at Canyon School; 73
of 366 at Mesa Verde School; 80 of 470
~at Costa l\fesa High Schoo1~-oo--of 375
at \Vilson School;· and 5.1 of 432 at the
Fire Station, 800 Baker St.· I
In Laguna Beach. the early tally ~
showed that at the precinct at 455
Linden St.. in the central section of
town, 99 of the 300 registered voters
had cast ballots, At the Pontiiie
dealership voting place, it was 131 of
600 registered; at the north end, 122 of
538; oouth end, 140 of· 600 ; and .a
precinct .at 1025 Hillcrest J?rive on the
nor.th end, 109 or 452. ·
Voting in fluntington Beach, Foun-
tain Valley and WestminSter. ranged
f~;om 11 to 17 percent in the early_
-·. (See VOTERS, Page 2)
No Dolls at -.,ahy Dot·1~s
Mesa's Topless Tavern Closes After License Yanked
By ARTHUR ll. VINSEL
Of tM D•!li' t'!ltl Sltlf
The COit:a ~es<r. .establishment
Yihlch onc.e caused bosoms to heave -
in eX.h.ibition, exultation or indignation
-depending on your involvement, is
no more.
Baby Doll 's, the topless go-go bar
which introduced bare breasts to U1e
city and showed bare-behind movie~
toward tttc end of its tenure, has clos·.
ed up for good.
Under terms of c: mutual agreement
wiU1 city ofCicials, owner Barry
Masselli ended" bis days· in the Costa
Mesa business community oa Monday.
City Atty. Roy E. June told the city
council ·Monday night t,bat Masselli's
on-sale beer license was picked up at
10 a.m. by the Alcoholic Beverage Con-
trol Board.
June himself picked up the busL1ess
license, saying workmen were car·
rying funtish.ings away Crom the bar
Mesa Youth Hospitalized
With Spinal Meningitis
Sieve Adains, an lB·year-oltJ Estan.
cia l·ligh School senior, was in the
Orange County Medical Center con·
lagious disease ward today wlth spinal
meningitis.
He was reported in improved con-
dition.
Ha11zler Plans
To Step Do,vn
From City Post
The first city employe hired by
Costa Mesa's original city manager
after tncorporatlon 15 years ago this
month announced his retirement Mon-
day.
Assistant City Manager Ray I.
Hartzler, 71, wilf soon be stepping
down for the second time in his
career, with the city he Initially serv·
ed as fiscal officer and director or
finance.
He retired in 1965 as fln~nce dire<:-
lor, but was summoned back in mid·
1966 to take over the $18,000-per-year
post as second in command to City
Manager Arthur R. McKenzie.
The two-year contract job !reed
McKenzie to work on major projects
such as the new Costa Mesa Civic
Center and a drive aimed at luring
new industry to broaden the city's taI
baRe.
llnrlzler was born In Oroville. Ohio,
and has spent a caraer tlpanning hair a
century in finance and accountlng,
comlng to California Iii 1944 with
,Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.1 as a
special auditor.
He stayed in the West, taking over a
job as finance director and city clerk
in Bell, moving· to Costa Mesa after
the city incorporated and advertised
for a fiscal officer.
The ris~al system put together by
Hartzler at that tlme has become a
model used by many other C11lifornia
clUe1 for municipal operaU011.
During his two year11 whlc;h wlU be
completed Aug. 115, Hartzler has been
primarily responslbl .. ~for supervl~lng
internal •operations of the city's
"-oal"lous departments.
Ada1ns, 295!l Mindanao St.. Costa
l\1esa, was admitted let county hospital
when the sometimes fatal disease was
detected Friday night.
Parents oi about 20 Estancia
students baVe been notified by Ule
school their )'OU.Dgsters were exposed
at a party attended by Adams Thurs-
day night
Gerald Wagner, county public health
officer, said the stu<k!nts are not in
jmminent danger. "l\1eningitis is
thought to be contagioos only in case
, of prolonged, intimate contact such as
with other members of the family," he
said.
Those in contact with Adams arc
being given sulfa drugs and penicillin
by their family doctors.
Meningiti.S is atr infection of the
covering of the 11pinal cG:rd.
Doctors on the County Medical
center sta!r could not be contacted
regarding Adams' chances for
recovery,· but a spokesman said his
condition is improved. He is being
given antibiotic treatment.
"Parents should not be particularly
alarmed. We are not recommending
exclusion of stude(B from school,"
E!stancia Princlpar"Floyd HarrymQn
said.
lie said, however, if parents are :ip·
prehensive and keep t.heir children out
the school will go along with it.
See Pavilion
Tlien a1id Now
Balboa Peninsula wa• Just a loog
spit of Rand In 1904: when the Balboa
Pavillon Was built end some property
or d,utilous value -Including a mud
fiat"" wb.tch later Vras filled in to
become Lido Isle -was ,given aic In-
centive to bring _the "~Car" trolleys
to the new resort.
The cupola-topped old Pavilion ill
aboilt to become .an offiqlal hlltorical
lBindmark. The story aod. some
delightful pictures of the Pavl.lioQ -
then a~ now-are on Page 8 todiy.
c:.t 2170 J1arbor Bl"d., shortly after
noon .
Acting on June's recommendation,
co"u.ncilmcn formally and u_,anJmously
revoked t::J business license, as well
as an entcrtajnment permi'. granted
after a long and bi~r battle.
June, however . did not pick up the
entertainment pcr1nit.
"They said·thr never received it,"
(Sec 9AHY DOLL'S, Page I)
'On to Onondaga'
' For OCC Rowers
After Fund Drive
ll's ''on to Onondaga."
The motto of the Orange Coast
College racing crew really n1eans
something today.
Commultity respon5e to an appeal
for funds to send the West Coast row·
.ing champs to next w e e k • 1
Intereollegiate Rowing Association
champion6b.ips at Syracuse, N.Y., (at
Lake Onondaga) was great enough to
assure the b!am's participation.
C.Oach Don Grant received the green .
light Monday afternoon when the.,
Pirates' crew reached its ntinimum
goal of $2,500.
Prior to Monday 's mail call, the
Pirates were SlOO shy of the minimum
goal, but contributions from the com-
muritty enabled Grant to send the Sl50
entrmice fee and make reservations
for the Bucs' flight to Syracuse.
Just in case you're wondering, any
donations received Over Ule minimum
figure will be utilized by the Pirates
next month in their quest to gain a
berth in the 1968 Olympie Games.
I
Oran:~~ast
Weather
Cloudy and cooler, but no
rain in sight, says forecaster
Dave Burt oC Wednesday's
weather picture. High temps
wUI range around 65 here-
abouts, up to 75 Inland.
INSIDE TODAY
The fir1i lady of Frantt,
llardly rccognizab~ to moit
Frmchmeti., 1etm1 to U»e q.Ute
happilt1 with "that man/' mid
hal dom 10 for manu 11tar1.
Socl•IJI Page 15.
'""' , ... _
" C•ll= • -' Cini i.-•u --"
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" ·--.. ,_ .. -'-" ' _...,_
' .... _ 1).IJ
ldltolriM ~-" ...... , .. ,, ·--" ·--1 .. 11 ,,,,.._ , .. ti ,. .... ,.-. " ,.,,.. CaOI ' ,,,,_ " lllrl °''*'"' " ...... , .: -" ai..wlrili. --~ u -·-..
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.1 DAILY PILOl
New .Battle
Breaks Out
In Mideast
By \JPI
Israel 1tt1cked Jordan along a '¥1·
mile front today 'and Jordanian dip-
lomats said the Jsraelll, uslng land·
based rockets for· the first Uine, }leav-
lly damaged tl>o city of lrbld and kill·
ed 30 persona and wounded 80.
An Israeli 1pokesm1n ln Jerusalem
said Israel sent il! alr force against
Jordan on the eve of Ule fira:t anni-
versary of the June, 1967, Arab-Isrteli
war to silence Jordanian artllJery bat· terles.
A Jordanian spokesman ln Amman
said Israeli artillery 1uPPOrted by jet
llgh(en and ""land·ID'!iud" rockets
attacked alon1 a 27-nille front below
the Sea of Galilee. The city of lrbld
was re~ In names.
-,
FLYING LOW -Five-year-old. Carol Walker tries out ll¥!ng 118ucer,
one of many amusement rides that will be sel up for llllh 81U1Ual
Corona de! Mar Youth Center Carnival. Event ls coming up June 15
and 16.
Youth Center Prepqres
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Allies _Slay ·250 Cong
•
Reds Use Wounded GI as Bait for Five J!ours
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. and SOu1h
Vietnamese forces today killed an
e1Umated 250 Viet Cong troops trying
to1oln~e ~tUe~f Saigon. ln one bat~
tle t.he · Viet CQng used a wounded
American soldier as bait for-five
agonWng how-.s . . ·
U.S. Army 9th Inf au try Di vision
111>ldier1 killed "nlore than 200" guer·
i'lllu Monday night and today ii;, one
batUe · 38 miles 1outhwe1t . of thQ,
capital. Jt was in this a ctlon the Viel
Cong het~ the captured American and
shot evety person who trred to rescue
him.
The Americans lo.!t 36 dead and 82
wounded in Utl.I batUti.
.. UPI correspondent Nat Gibson aaid
the fighting began When a group of 60
Americans landed by helicopter in a
bramble pa tch ju8t 10 feet from a Viet
Cong bunker complex. The Com-
munists held their fire. till the troops
landed then opened up with smilll
arms and automati'° weapons fire. ,.
One American wu wounded in the.
Jeg, fiv e fee t In front of a bunker. Maj.
Zeh Bradford, 34, Kannapolis, N.C ..
said "th ey either killed or wounded
live or lour men" trying to reach him .
Finally. he said, they shot him in the
head ju.st before dark.
Brad!ord aaid the wounded man lay
1n fr ont ol the bunker for five hours
i;creaming for beJ p, and that every
time he tried to move the Co1nmunlsts
would shoot him . again either in the
arms .or legs. ~ '
The Communists were part of a
force believed. trying to move into
S.igon where other Vi et Cong un1ts
have battled government troops for
nearly a week. Another battlt came 22
n1iles northwes.t of Saigon where a.
South Vjetnamese army outpost aided
by U.S. planes and artillery threw
back an assault by 400 North Viet·
namese using flamethrowers.
From Page 1
The battle11 faged as the guerrillas
slammed M rockets and mortar shells
into the capital, wounding 12 south
Vietnam civilians. Scattered-fighting
r aged in blocks of rubble in Saigon's
Cholon sect19n and on the city's
northeast edte. BOARDING HOME ... The fighting climaxed a.,.month-long
·communist spring offensive aimed at
absence, said he feels the current limit Saigon. Allied intellfgence 1aJd tho home and, Dr. Evers said: accused
him oj praoUctng his profession in his
resideJK:e. is too low also. Reds sought a propaganda victory to
"We au have ofte alternative to aid their cause in North Vletnam's
The uicident followed weeks of al-
most dally fbing acroe:1 the oease-fire
line by artillery, machlneguns, mor-
tars and tanks. Each side accused the
other oC starting the i{lcidents.
Harbor Trustees
Won't Up Taxes;
Ask Bu.dget Cuts
Fifth Annual Carnival "I hope that you never have an aged
mother or get old yourself," he
declared in grinl tones, adding, "you
~ should all be ~hamed qf yourselves.'' Community You.th Center leaders to-
day rea<lied plans for their fifth annual
carnival.
food for everyMe."
ProfJts will go toward improvements
at the center at 5th .Avenue and Iris '
Street In Corona del Mar. The site of
the carnival again \\'ill be adjacent to
the center.
growing old, and none of us are look· talks with the United States in Paris.
ing forward to that," Jordan told the· But the North Vietnamese invaders
Monday suffered a propaganda defeat qu.l'eted audience, telling of his 380 miles up the coast from Saigon,
boyhood visits to a home f-0r the aged. near the city of Hue. A record 83 Com·
• Newport-Mesa school trustees in a
special bud get session on Saturday
agreed to hold the line on taxes.
. They asked for more . cuts in the
school disttict budget which the ad-
ministration ha~ whacked at three
times alre.ady.
Trustees expressed a very deflnlte
preference not to increase the tax
rate, said Bui:tget Director Walter
Adrian.
Latest estimate Is that the budget
remains '228,000 out of balance with
$78,000 in additional cuts specified and
another $150,000 to find.
The school board next will look at
bud get recommendations in t_w o
weeks.Me :r n ti m.e. adm inisb'ators
have been asked to apply their red
pencils.
~ school tax rate undoubtedly will
go up 13 cents next year, but that hike
was approved by the voters. It is
against a.ny additional increase that
school boa.rd members are digging in
their heels.
Vote.rs in 1966 approved a three-
The event will be held Saturday and
Sunday, June 15 and 16.
"It will be bigger and better than
ever," promised Mason Wallace,
presldent oft.he Youth Center Board of
Directors. "There will be amusement
rides, booths for fun and games, and
WaUace noted that a $500 U.S. Sav-
ings Bond will be given as top prize.
Tickets oan t>e obtained from any boy
enrolled In .&he Harbor Area Summer
Baseball Program.
From l'age 1
PRIMARY •••
voters ..f,947 ,406 to 3,197 ,815. servatives w~o back Rafferty have a
Republicans, their cho!Ce limited to better record of turning out than the . ~ fav.orite son Gov. Reagan oil the moderate and liberal Republicans who
presidential ballot, weren't expected support Kuchel.
to .turn out as strongly, Sullivan said. There'll be plenty of California firsts
Kuc-hel's strategists said that could in this election.
hurt the se nator, facing a strong 1'he polls were open from 7 a.m. to 8
challenge from Max llafferty, the p.m. in every county for the first time.
state superintendent of public in· In the past, counties with Jess than
struction. 400,000 population closed their J>Olls at
Traditionally, they liay, the con-7 p.m.
From l'a9e l
BABY DOLL'S ...
And Los J\n!eles County, for the
first time dSed voting machines, ex-
tending the electronic system to 93
percent of the vOtes cast. Thirty-three
of the state's 58 coWlties now have the
machines.
step, three-year override to equalize he told councilmen. Minor partieli are back on the ballot
fcir the first tlme since the Prohibi-
tionists dropped out after 1964.
Former Alabama Gov. Ge or g e
.Wallace's American Independent par-
ty and the Peace and Freedom party
Jielded candidates.
educational opportunities between Baby Doll's or~':'led ~ · F, · :uary or
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach 1967 and, datln' from about XI daya
school&. The 13 cents Is the second in· ltter, was embroiled in cootroversy
crease of a total 41 cent package. which included scores of arrests and
Last year 24 cents was Tevied in counUess court r~-~qrances.
ovei:ride tax whil~ the basic operating Decried ;.om the fifth floo r of Co.st a
rate was cut six cents for a net in· l\fesa's Civic Center aJJ the way to ff *
lie praised the Slezak household an:I
said one elderly woman stroke victin1
who moved in there six months :igo
has begun to walk again, partly due to
the happy home environment.
"Don't think your property is being
devalued just because an old lady is
using the Sidewalk," he_ snapped.
. "This is tOD much," grumbled a
woman in the audience.
Pro-boarding home sentiments were
also echoed by Weston \Y"alk:er, deputy
director of licensing for the Orange
County Department of Social WeUare.
Mrs. Jaiie White, director of licens-
ing for the agency, praised the home,
one of about 20 in Costa Mesa, noting
that most other cowlty cities permit
five to six residents without city
permits.
Only three persons, nor immediately
related, can be paying guests in a
Costa Mesa home without a con-
diUonal use permit.
Councilman St. Clair finally began to
wind up the hearing, noting most or
the protesters were against the house
in th e neighborhood it.sell, not against
four. versus five elderly women.
After his IOudly protested motion to
allow five died.for lack of a second,
Tucker moved to grant it for four
residents and St. Clair seconded that
motion.
".J didn't second your motion,"
Jordan told Tucker~ "because I was
willlng to· give her the whole baU of
wax too." ,
in Dea Moines, Iowa. munist troops surrendered to U.S. and
"It was horrible," he said. South Vietnamese forces.
But, he added, the concept of limited They did not give up at the point of
h th a gun but simply under the urging of a care boarding homes auc as at run propaganda loudspeaker airplane.
by Mrs. Slezak ls good and should be But blood flowed elsewhere. Jn· the
encouraged both in the city and Mekong Delta fight, the 9tb Dlvialon
throughout Orange County. ls ul! I One reiident, a 66-year-old woman uni s ered 36 Amer cans killed and
whose partial disability requires her to 62 wounded in the fighting that smash·
sleep 1n alon~-must go because Mrs. ed the Viet Cong battalion.
Slezak was illegally sleeping in the The allies' closest call came at the
dining room to allow this. outpost 22 miles northwest of Saigon
Supporters of Mrs. Slezak said many -when 50 ~overnment troops aided by
per·sons did· not even koOw of the 10 Amlr1can adviserf held off the
operation, but became aroused When flamethrower attack.
notified by the city or other neighbor•.
Following. the lengthy hearing Mon·
day night two other conditional use
permits f0r county-licensed boar4in£
homes were approved without com-
ment.
Unattached Hand
Scares Housewife
A Newport Beach housewUe had to
hand it to someone early this mom·
ing for causing the fright of her llie.
Mrs. Martha Baird, 48, told police
she was asleep in her bedroom when
she was. awakened by a noise. She
climbed out of bed, and. went to peer
out the window .
There on the window sill was a hand
and forearm of what appeared to be a
Caucasian male.
"Who's there?" she shouted. The
hand and arm sUpped away into the
Burglary Susp~ct
Cauglit at Scene
Costa Mesa policemen responding to
a report of a burglary in progreaa ear ..
Iy today captured a man in a pro·
fesslonal b~dlng, although every door
had been opened as an eacape route.
William A. Rojas, 23, of 316 E. 21st
St., was booked on auspicion of
burglary after lnvesUgators found him
bidinC behind a closet 4oor.
Officer Ted Cuny wa1 first to arrive
at SatUer Mortgage Co., 336 E. 17th
St., and said he saw someone duck out
of sight and switch off the llgbts.
Police entered the building after Sgt.
John A. Moquin arrived and captured
Rojas, who had $2.46 worth of post.age
stamps In his pockeL
crease of 18 cents. pulpits throughout the city, the topless
nus year, at this point, it appears · , bar noi:iethelesa won many victories in
the rate will increMe 13 cents for the i~ legal warfare. •
override and llttie or no more. ·The "I saw the Costa Mesa city attorney
collective attitude of the board is that and his assistant in Superior Court one
cuts should be made or Ut8 1evel of dc:.y," said a lor·gtirne observer of .the
reserves lowered instead of Increasing situation, "and longer fa c• , You never
taxes an additional ~ !even cl!nt.s to saw."
Vice Mayor Robert M. \Yilson ,
presiding In Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley's night: • . _, -
A camera, desk lamp and other
items fn the realty loan company had
been disturbed, police 1aid. ~~~~~edsn.:r 020°percent in r-------:o~n~ly~~::i•Ci•a•Ci•aillcmi~~:~h~a~s:"iiit~l------1 some precincts spot-checked In • • • •
Newport Beach. Costa Mesa appeared
to be holding near a 17 percent and
there was a near 20 percent in some
selected Laguna Beach precincts.
balance the budget. Repeated effortil to shut down the
Further cuts will likely have to popular beel' arid breast shop -which
come from maintenance and building \\'as cl . -d ... xr.-tly one year ago, w~ile
improvements, Adrian said. awaiting -an entertainment permit
An alternative plan to hire fe\\'er ordered issued by the cou rts -failed,
teachers was dismissed by school but a compromise situation was finally
board members. ln addition, salary rec:<:hed.
schedules already have been set, put-"\Vith thanks And congratulations!",
ting a lock .on the largest portion of the declared Councilman Gi;orge A .
budget Tucker afttt: Monday night's vote.
Boys Club Sells .
Member Cards
New member6hip cards ere on sale
at .the Boye:• Club of the Harbor Area
at $1.50 for a full year.
All bOys who are currently members
of the Club must have their new cards
no later than July 1.
Boys may buy their new cards at
either the Central Br\anch, 594 Center
St., or the Upper Bay Branch, 2131
Twtin Ave., both in Costa Mesa.
DAILY PILOT
....,....... . c.... .... " ....... -. '--.... ¢Ph ......... ...,.
CAUJOINIA
••Mrt N. W11d --n •••• Kt•Yll .....
Th•"''' A. Murphlt1• -·-J1clr. i. C11rley P1ul N!Htfl
.....-.. Mlntwr' Mwl't'-lnt o'**' °"'''. Clllll MINI -.... .., tfrMt .....,.. 81ed11 nn w ....... 1ov1Mn1
Uc.-... ,., m P-f A"9W ,...,..... •••du :a • ttn.t
I . /.
The end in sight, however, owner
Masselli inaugurated nude movies pro-
jected onto the wall of Baby Doll'&;"'
between acts by go-go dancers and a
shapely and well-practiced stripper.
He hadn't re&ehed rock bottom,
however, just celluklid bottoms.
One would-be film critic made a
foray into the lately Oow1shlng tavern
andJOund the stuff-in· the-buff about as
appealing u a zµa.sl1ed potato and
marshmallow sandwich on white
bread.
Police had already seized the file,
but -and this is that all-import.am.
but -they had already been judged
neither pc>rn9(raphic nor obscene and
county authorities declined to issue
complaints.
Salesman's .Luck
Comes Up 'Short'
Fortune beckons hardest to those
'vho have nothing to lose but someone
else'a capital, and Costa Mesa police
today are studying one more such
case.
It involved a car salesman who took
1375 in cash and a cashier's check for
Sl,500 11 down payment on• car, then
ventured off to Las Vegas with tl,875
to tr8Jls!orm into more.
Un£ortunate1y, he turned It into
about Sl,875 less.
"Suspect did this with out permission
of the managers or his employer.'' the
police report drily not.es.
Mesa Councilmen
Okay Fireworks
Peaeeful coexiatenc. on a mortal
level is wonderful. A aplrlt ot
ecumenism 1eem1 to be. bridging thla vale of tears.
The Costa Mesa City Council Mon-
day nJgbl paased without comment "
permit for the Church or Jesus Christ
of LaUer-day Saints to sell flteworka.
They are the type u1ed for a 1ale
and 1ane Fourth or Jul)>.
\
Most election workers felt that the
early turnout was .indicative of a
heavy vote.
The Orange Coast traditionally has
lukewarm voter turnout in the early
hours and then the pace at the ballot
boxes begins to pick up to heavy levels !n the late afternoon and early even-ing.
Polls will remain open throughout
the atate for the first time in a
primary election, unw 8 p.m. tonight.
one hour past ~ usual closing lime.
Trustees Consider
Hiring Specialist
!·!iring of a specialist reading
teacher for each elementary school
and expulsion of two students caught
with narcotics on campus will be con-
sidered · tonight by Newport-Mesa
school trustees.
Also on the agenda is adoption of e1-
panded walking distan<:es to affect
l.100 students and save 24 bus trips
daily next fall. , ·
The board meeting in the Costa
Mesa High School Lyceum won 't begin
until 8:45 p.m. so board members can
attend an earlier student awards
ceremony.
The reading teachers' salaries would
be paid by the state up to $8,117, the
average statewlde teachers salary .
'I)1e district would t>ay any additionaJ
portion of the salaries.
Couple Injured
In 2-car Accident
One car slammed into the rear of
another at a Costa Mesa intersettfon
latfl Monday night, injuring one driver
and a pusenger in a sports car driven
by a Laguna Beach UCI coed.
Georgyanna Valencia, 46, of $71 E .
Joann St., Coit& Mesa, and Robert J.
Oliva, 11, of 1415 Woodland Drive,
Laguna Beach, were treated at Hoa1
Memorial Hospital and releued.
MISI Laury! J. Guparotu, IS, ol llCMI
Bluebird Canyon Drlve, escaped in-:
jury when the southbound ValtncJa
car smashed into her car, stopped on
Newport Boulevard at 18th Slreot,
Police said.
Mrs. Valencia suffered facial lacer•·
tiou1 and Oliva . wu knocked un
conscious in the 11:55 p.m. cruh.
" • • •
o££P <1iilmi Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning costs more
jil'"'UW'iiii than the old shampoo method • • •
However, the Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet and the ca rpet backing. Since no brushing or
scrubbiRg action is used, there is no distortion of th e carpet pile. The
powerful extraction action of the Deep Steam process lifts matted pile to
"'like new" appearance.
The need for frequent professional cleaning .is reduced because the deeply
imbedded abrasive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are removed, and
there is no detergent residue left In the carpet to collect dirt. During the
Deep Steam cleaning.process all the carpet f ibers are coated with a special
soil retardant. · '
''It's simple logic ... You profit in the long rim when you use Deep Steam
Carpet Cfeanin& because your carpet will be cleaner than ever before
possible. It will stay clean longer and wear longer because you used Deep
Steam Carpet Cleaning .•. "
WHIN YOU
WANT THE
flNEST-
CALL
RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
Our 21st•YHr of ·Serv ice io Or1n90 County •
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA
FltlE
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PHONE 546-3432 From Toll Area
Call Zlnllh 7-0696
I '
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.Newpor·t Harbor DAILY PILOT Today's Closing
EDITION N.Y. S~eks
•
VOL 61 , NO. '134, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CAl:IFORNr>: :TUESDAY, JUNE :f, 1968 TEN CENTS
New· Civie Center Site Choiees
Finalists: MacArt~ur Blvd., Pr~sent Citf Hall
By JEROME F. COLLINS
01 IM Dllll' ~lklt Sl•tf
Site possibilities for a new civic cen·
tcr !or Newport Beach today appear
narrowed down to two locations.
They are: '
-The present City Hall location on
the Newport-Balboa Peninsula at
~ Street and Newport Boulevard.
-A 2()...acre parcel of Irvine Com-
pany land at the noriheast oomer of
MacArthur Boulevard and E. Coast
New Battle
Breaks Out
In Mideast
By UPI
Israel attacked Jordan along a "ZT-
mile~froot today and Jordanian dip--
lo~ats. said the Israelis, using land-
• based' rockets for the first time, heav-
lly damaged the city of Irbid and kill-
ed 30 persoos and wounded 60.
Ail Israeli spokesman in Jerus~m
·-said l srael sent its air force against
Jordan on the eve of the first ami-
~·sary of the Jime, 1967, Arab-Israeli
war·to silence Jord3nian artillery llat-
teries.
A Jordanian spokesman in Amman
said Israeli artillery supported by jet,
fighters and "land-to-land" rocket.$
attacked along a 27-mile front below
the Sea of Galllee. The city of lrbid
was reported in flames.
The incident fol1owed '¥eeks of al-
most daily firing across the cease-fire
line by ~illery, machineguns, mor-
tars and tanks. Each side accused the
other of starting the incidents.
Jordanian Ambassador MOhammad
H. El-Farra, in a letter to U.S. Am·
bassador Arthur J. Goldberg, this
mooth's president of the Security Cowl·
cil, said the Israeli attack concentrat·
ed on the city of lrbid. He said the
attack was still going on.
'Newport Shores
Cleanup Drive
Geis Under Way
"It was quite a sight. You should've
seen the people out there working."
The sig!lt was Newport Shores,
where dozens-of neighbors turoed out
for the start of a 10-day neighborhood
cleanup campaign.
Peter Voge], chairman of the
Newport Shores Community Associa-
tion's improvement committee, said
the project. \Vhloh began Memorial
Day, so far has been a solid success.
It was inspired by the efforts of
Isabel Pease at city-tfide beautifica-
tion. Vogel said be hopes his com-
n1unity's spruce-up campaign will set
a pattern for other Newport Beach
neighborhoods.
He noted that Mrs. Pease has a sked
him tv address the women's division of
the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce, explaining how others can
launch similar clean-up efforts.
See Pavilion
Then a11d Now
Balboa Peninsula was just a long
spit of sand in 1904 when the Balboa
Pavilion was built and some property
o( dubious value -including a mud
flat wh.ich later was filled in to
become Lldo Isle -was giV1!fl as in·
centive to bring the "Red Car" trolleys
to the new resort.
The cupola-topped old Pavilion is 1about to become an official hJstoricaJ
landmark. The story and some
delightful pictures of the Pavilion -
then and now -are on Page 8 today.
SUH!lt Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mar-
ket continued to bull ahead this after·
noon in what. seem~ likely to be one
of the biggest volume days ln hist.cry.
(See quotations, Pages 10-11 ). .
Volume1 for the first four ~~ 1"..~.s
13.33 mJllion .15~1, cOmpal't<l~
10.9.l million for the IJk<l period Mon-
~ay.
Highway in Corona del Mar.
City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt
told the DAILY PILOT that the city
staff and civic center consultants
will ''zero in" on the two sites as a
result o! a decision reached by a City
Council-appointed citizens' advisory
conunitl<e Monday. night.
The 16-member group agreed that
the MacArthur Boulevard location
was Uie be5t oi two possible sites east
of the Upper Bay. The other site, also
on Irvine lands, was just north <:A the
Newporter Inn on Jamboree Road. It
was rejected.'
Purpose of the gathering at the
Versailles Restaurant, said Council·
man Howard Rogers, was to seek a
consensus on which of the two sug-
gested Irvine sites should be given
"in-depth" study a·t on g ·with the
present City Hall site. ·
Presentations on the Irvine loca-
tions ~ made by representiatives
DAILY ,.II.OT Stiff '""'r.
' Fish Fry ~Dessert'
The deep Cryers have been put away for another year and the carni-
val has long since departed Costa Mesa City Park, but for 2-year-
old Kim \Vilbur, helping her mother. Kit, of 109 23rd St.. Newport
Beach, try keys in new Mustang the family won at Costa Mesa-Ne\v-
port Harbor Lions Club event, "dessert" is served . Enjoying the
scene"(left to right} are Jim Phillips, outgoing Lions Club president ;
Theo Robins, owner of Theodore Robins Ford agency; and Dr. Ron
Craig, incoming Lions president.
Mesa Youth HospitaliZed
With Spinal Meningitis
Steve Adams, an 18-year-old Estan-
cia Hlgh School senior. was in the
Orange County Medical Ceiiter con-
tagious disease ward today with spinal
meningitis.
He was reported in improved con-
dition.
Adams, 2959 Mindanao St.. Costa
Mesa, was admitted to county hospital
when the sometimes fatal disease was.
detected Friday night.
Parents of about 20 Estancia
students have been notified by the
school their youngsters were exposed
at a party attended by Adams Thurs-
day nlght
Gerald Wagner, county public health
officer, said Ule students are not in
imminent danger. ''Meningitis is
thought to be contagious only in case
of prolongeO, intimate contact such as
\vith other members of the family," he
said.
Those in contact with Adams are
being given sulfa drugs and penicillin
by their family doctors.
Meningitis is an infection of the
covering of the Spina] cord.
Doctors on the County Medical
Center staff could not be contacted
regarding Adams' chances for
recovery, but a spokesman said his
condition is improved. }le is being
given antibiotic treatment.
"Parents should not be particularly
alarmed. We are not recommending
excluslon of students from school1"
Estancia Principal Floyd Harrymen
said.
He said, however, if parents are ap-
prehensive and keep their children out
the school will go along with it.
of Welton Becket & l.s.<oclateo, the
city's .c\vic center architectural con-
sultants, and ol Economic Re6earch
Associate. (ERA), hired by the city
to ~robe economic factors involved
in site se&ection.
Following a three-hour discussion,
committee members WEn plainly im·
pressed with the advantages of the
MacArthur Boulevard location. There
were no dissenters when it was aug·
gested the Jambonle Road sit8 be
' discarded from. further consldera~
ti on.
"We didn't feel they would move
ahead on this so rapidly," said Hurl-
burt later. -''But they did, so now it
looks like the staff and our consult-
ants can return with compartive data
on the City Hall aOO MacArthur Bou-
levard sites probably by mid.July."
At that time, the citizens' conunlt..
tee will be asked to make a re<:Om·
lll<lldation to the City Council oo the
two remaining sites.
Councilman Robert Sh~lton, who
attend(l(j. the Monday'a meeting aloog
with Councilmen Roger s and Ed
Hirth, summed. it up this way ;
"It appears everybody is uqanimous
that we should p!'oceed in-depth with
studies on site 'C' (MacArthur Boule-
vard) p d the City Hail location. But
we sOOuldn't lose sight of-the fact
that it problems develop we c:an
(See CIVIC CENTER, Pale I)
Coast Vote Heavy
Newport Reports 20 Percent at Noon
Vt>ting In Cali!ornla's primary eleci
lion today appeared-to be moderate to
hea9Y fb "ttiE eatly•·gotng'" alcffig~ the
Orange Coast,
Most coastal precincts we re
reporting turnouts of 17._perc.ent or
bc."tter in the balloting prior to noon.
Jn Newport Beach, sample precincts
iri the early check all indicated e
turnout above average.
· At Horace Ensign School by 11
a.m., 100 out ol SOO registered voters
Nation Watches
>
California's
Primary Today
· LOS ANGELES (AP) -.California
Democrats decide between presiden-
tial candidates Robert F:""Kefined}' and
Eugene J.,, MfCarthy today While
Republicans were voting on the
political future of U.S. Sen. Thomas H.
Kuchel.
·This election in the nation's .most
pepulous state was the final primary
test for Sens. Kennedy and McCarthy.
The winner is likely to offer the main
challenge to Vice President Hubert
Jlumphrey In the Democratic National
Convention.
Assistant Secretary of State 1-1. P.
Sullivan predicted 67 percent of the
voters would turn out in mostly fair
weather.
Democrats, their interest stirred by
th e-increasingly fierce McGarthy·Ken·
(See PRIMARY, Page 2)
* ~ *
Pilot to Carry
Voting Res ults
On Wednesday
\Vith heavy vol.-turnout ·predicted
in today's primary election in Orange
County, significant returns are not ex·
pected·to be available tonight. ·
The DAILY PILOT will not-OlJerate
an "election central" for telephone
queries tonight, but will report in Wed·
nesday's editions the latest available
report& &:s tiey are compiled by Ule
Coleman Vote Tally System and other
camputeiized equipment which will be
operated around the clock by the coun·
ty clerk's staff in Santa Ana.
Complete unofficial results
particularly on "local" races, such as
congressmen, state assemblymen,
county supervisors and propositions -
are not expected to be available until
late Wednesday afternoon.
The DAILY PILOT will carry final
returns on how Orange County voted
as soon as they are available.
llad cast their ballots.
A pr~inct worJ<e.r .aJ ~ city hall
reported "it's really good, we've never
had it so good." She i.aid 85 out of 450
voters had voted there by 11 a.m.
A heavy turnout was reported at
22nd Street pretinct with 94 ballots
cast out or 443 and a line there or
about a dozen waltmg.
In Laguna Beach, the early tally
showed that at the precinct at 455
Linden St., in the central section of
town, 99 of the 369 registered votm
had cast ballots. At the PootiaC
dealership votilig place, it was_-131 of
600 registered; at the north end, 122 of
538; south end, 14-0 or 600 ; and a
precinct at 1025 llillcrest Drive on the
north end, 109 o[ 452.
ln Costa. Mesa, early balloting was
also characterzied as heavy with the
range of turnout· upward to 17 percent.
In a double pr~cinct .a.t Harper
(See VOTERS, Page 2)
Mesa's Baby Doll's
Topless Tavern Through
As Beer License Yanked
Dy A~TIIUR R. VINSEL
Of !hi OlllY l'lltf Stitt
The Costa Mes:.. cs-tabUshmcnt
which once caiised bosoms to heave -
in exhibitioo, exultation or indignation
-depending on your involvement, is
no more.
Baby Doll's, the topless go.go bar
which Introduced bare bre~sts to the
city and showed bare·behind movies
toward the end of its tenure, has clos·
ed up for good.
Un<ter terms of & mutual .agreement
with city officials. owner Harry
Masselli en~ his days in the Costa
Mesp business com.munity on Monday.
City Atty. Roy E. June told the city
council Monday night that Masselli's
on-sale beer license was picked up at
10 a.m. by the Alcoholic Bevera~ Con·
trol Board. .
June himself picked up the business
license, saying workmen were car·
rying furnishings away from ~e bar
.r.t 2170 Harbor Blvd., shortly after
noon.
Acting on June's recommendation.
councilmen formally and u.:enirnously
revoked t!ie business license, as well
as an entertainment permi: granted
after a long and bit.t,er battle.
Jun.e. however, did not pick up the
entertainment permit. .
"They said thcJ riever received it,''
he told councilmen.
Raby Doll's c--ned =-Fe· ruary of
1967 and, datin~ from about :Ml days
later, was embroiled in controversy
which included. scores or arrests and
counUess court ;o .. -.... arances.
I Decried L om the fift!l fl oor of Costa
Mesa's CiVic Center all the way to
pulpits throughout the city, the topless
bar nonetheless won many victories in
itis legal warfare.
"I saw the Costa Mesa city attorney
and his ass istant in Superior Cow1 one
Tr11stee& C.Onsider
Hiring Specialist
dcy," sajd a lo:-grime observer of the
situation. "and longer !ac. yoa never .. saw. .
Repeated e!!orts to shut down the
pgpular beer and breas-t shop -which
was cl. -:d ,.x2_Uy ooe year ago, while
awaiting an entertainment permit
ordered issued by the courts -failed,
but a compromise situation was finally
reached:
"\Vith thanks and congratulations!",
declared Councilman Gt.-orge A .
Tucker after Monday night's vote.
The end in sight, however, owner
Masselli inaugurated nude movies pro-
jected onto the wall or Baby Doll's,
between acts by go-go dancers and a
shapely and .)l.'ell·practiced stripper.
He. hadn't reached .. rock bottom,
(See BABY DOLL'S, Page 2)
Bubbles Lead
Police to Bike
Telltale gasoline bubbles rising from
Upper Newport Bay led to the
recovery Monday of an apparently
stolen motorc;ycle.
' Steve Greyson of 1933 Santiago
Drive, Newport Beach, told pollce he
was riding a bicycle along a dike when
he noticed gasoline rising to the
water's surface.
He investigated, and fished out a
1968 Jlodak:a cycle. Police said the CY·
cle had been hot wired and apparently
stolen.
Orange Coast
Weather
Like to Rent a Diamond? !firing of a specialist reading
teacher tor each elementary school
and expulsion of.. two students caught
with narcotics on campus will be con-
siderad tonight by Newport-M,sa
school trustees.
Cloudy and cooler, but no
rain in sight, says forecaster
Dave Burt O( Wednesday's
weather picture. High temps
will range around 65 here-
abquts, up lo 75 inland.
INS(DE TODA l'
B7 EVELYN SHERWOOD January. 1964. °'a. "-llW ....... ''-" The charter rme was quoled by a
Sbe'1 bact tn port -a little older, a spokesm3ll for Ardell Marina, where
little wiser, but otlll a knockout. the )'1l<ht is berthed. .
And anyone can have her for $3?5 a "What about the crew?" asked the
cloy. DAILY PILOT.
The 95-4'oot yacht Sea Diamond, "That's extra." the spokesman
among the J)06best vCSffl& on Ule.West replied. "The boat heeds at-out four at Coas~ hat returned to N~ S25 a day~."
J1arbor from-San Diego andl .Is ''Then fhere'is the capt.ain ," he con-
' avalla~le oo cbamr~""' , __ r1 , tlnllf!d.j'~ t~ i! '40 m<>r<, •nd
The '350,000 'llq\orllalltl'. .,.., ow""° 'llw:n tMre'il"a cook.
by Newport ' Beach. rnulUmUliooairc "A cook is $'l5 and a steward,
WlllWD Birtholom&e unlil his deaUt in enotlier ~-" '
'lbo,1acbt is now owned by trnstees
o! the Sarajane Birtho'.omae Hartling
1rust. Mrs. H~, 21, of Lido Isle, is
Barthokrnae111 daughter.
Tru..tees own tile llltle ship with lh•
provllo that Sara Bartholoma·•
Lauilde< -wlfe o( Ibo dead million-.~ -ca 1bQ, it .back if sbe wishes
·aomettme liter this year.
Meanwhile, the martna:-$poke.s:man
was·stiil'ligur1ng u~111e daarttT costs. "ot course Ulen 1 an ld.\led sum foc
Jnsur.ance add '° lorth ••• ''
Also on the agenda ls adoption of ex.
pandcd walking distances to affect
1.100 students and save 24 bus trtpa
daily next tall.
The board meeting ln the Costa
Meta High School ~eum won't begin
untl! 8:45 p.m. so llatd members can
attlnd. an earlier stud,nt awards
ceremony. -
The read.Jng teacher•' salaries would be, paid by the Jlat8 up to '8,U7, '/'•·.
.ave.ragd stAtew1de teacher1 salary.
The district would w any additloriat
portion ol the &alariea.
~I
Tilt first ladu ·of Fra11ce,
hordtu recoanitablt to most
F'rench1M11, lttml to live quits
hopptl11 · with "tht1t man,'' a'ld
h.al dortd 10 for matlJ.1 uears.
Sodttll Par;it 15.
llrft!t 1
CaHff,.19 ' CleHlllM .,._U t'tftllu ,,
(,_...... It
Qut• JllllC*I • 1 llfilwltl ,.,. >t
1""'11IMIMI l t
t<l11mai '"" ic1re t1n1 1
'"' 0...ftl:tr 17 ......... lt
AM~ 1s
Mlllkt tf
M-7 M ... I~ It
N.t!IMI ....... 4J °'"" (IMfflfr 1 '9dll: .... 1)11 ,_,. """ S)Mll Mertitb 1•11
Tttt·rht... II T ... ,.,. U
... ""' 4 O'-"hltt 14 Wtnl Ntw .W -
. -Z OAIL V PILOT TUtsdty, J11111 '4, 1968
From Page l
CIVIC CENTER SITE ~ • • i -----
. l ,
··'
1l1'ay1 &o back to cob1ider1n1 1lte
08' (Jamboree Road) or another
Ille." .
Hurlburt not.cl U..l 'DlOll o1 lbe
coosu!W!ll' Ume betwo<n now and
mid.July will be spent OQ de~l0;plng
lnformaUon on tbe {easJbillty of
e~nd1ng go\rerrunent o!rlces af the
present 4.5-acre City Hall location,
"because It will be more complex.:·
Allo. llPIJ!:9&ehes will be made to
Jhe Irvine COmpaoy on the 'J)OfSsibil·
tty of pl11ctn~ in a ''land .. bank" more
acreage in the MacArthur Bou1evard-
Coast }ijghway area for use ~ other
public ageocies,. such as courtS, (i.
braries and a post office.
The potential of the ' !.-1acArthur
Boukvard site for. this purpose
weighed heavily In favor of it ever
the J amboree Road location, com·
mlttee members agreed.
Allo. it would lo all likelihood cost
considerably lets:s. Th e difference in
price could be more than $500,000,
ccnsultants suggntea.
II olber aa<llcli• in located In the
sante Ceoei'al '1'H of a now clvlc center, Hurlburt Pointed out, tha
ahorlnr of the coot of Jointly UHd
16Cl!IU.. auch u puJdn& Iota_ collld
save1 the clty tewral tbouaud dol·
lar1. -Here .,.. Ibo cll!Jonl' commllloe •
-members who participated in Mon·
day's meeting:
Private plannln& COasu.ttant Ted B.
Adsit, UC! Chancellor Dani<! G.
AldrlCh, retired Hoag Memorial Ros·
pllal administrator WlnUred Bat'Qfl ,
land deVi!loper Hancock "Bill" Ban·
nlng'Ill, UCI dean George W:-Brown:
Municipal Judge William Christensen
management con5u1tant Dick Clucas
and attorney Milan Dostal.
Also, systems management execu-
tive Bill Martin. school teacher Phil
Maurer, druggist Dean Reavie, archl·
tect Herb Riley, industrialist Ken
. Ross, teacher John Shea, DAILY
PILOT pubUsher Robert N. Weed
and banker ~rge Woodford. '
Fram Page l
PRIMARY ...
uedy race fof California's 174 national
convention votes, were expected to
vote in a greater percentage than the
Republicans. They outnwnber GOP
voters 4.347,4~ to 3,191,815.
Republicans, their choice limited to
favorite sou Gov. Reagan on the ~residential ballot, weren't expected
to turn out as strongly, Sullivan said.
Kuchel's strategists said that could
hurt the senator, facin g a strong
chaUenge from Max Rafferty, the
state superintendent of public in·
struction. '
Traditionally, they say, the ton·
servatives who back Rafferty have a
be~ter record of turning out than the .
n1oderate and liPeral Republicans who
* * * VOTER S .1
••
School, 113 had voted out or 700
registered at the time of t he early
sampl"e--check .• .Jt was 73 of 496 at
Callforina School; 13 of 440 at Victoria .
School: 61 of 419 at Canyon School; 73
of 366 at Me sa Verde School; 80 of 470
at Costa 'Mesa High School; 60 of 375
at Wilson School; and 53 of 432 at the
Fire Station, 800 Baker St.
Voting in Huntington Beach, Foun·
lain Valley and Westminster ranged
from 11 to 17 percent in the early
turnout. It ranged near 20 percent in
some precincts spot-checked in
Newport Beach. COsta Mesa appeared
to be holding near a 17 percent and
there was a near 2Q percent in some
selected Laguna Beach precincts.
Most election workers felt that the
early turnout 'vas indicative of a
heavy vote.
The Orange Coast traditionally has
lukewarm voter turnout in the early
hours and then the pace at the ballot
boxes begins to pick up to heavy levels
1n the ]ate afternoon and early even·
ing.
Polls will remain open throughout
the state for the first ti.me in a
primary election, until 8 p.m. tonight,
one hour past the usual closing time.
-
Burglary Suspect
Caught at Scene
Costa Mesa policemen responding to
a report or a burglary in progress ear·
Jy today captured a man in a pro-
fessiona1 building, although every door
had been opened as an escape route.
William A. Rojas, 23, of 316 E. 21st
SL, was booked OD suspicion of
burglary after investigators found him
hidlDg behind a closet door.
· Officer Ted Curry was first to arrive
at SatUer Mortgage Co., 336 E. 17th
St., and said he saw someone duck out
of sight and switch off the lights.
Police entered the building after Sgt.
John A. Moquin arrived and captured
Rojas, who had $2.46 worth of postage
statnps in his pocket.
A camera, desk · lamp and other
items ·in the realty loan company had
been disturbed. police said.
DAILY PILOT
.............. e.arw.11
R•INrt N. W•td .... ,_
Tllom::ii!••1il
Thom•• A. Murphi"' Mt1111M l!dltor
Jtrame F. Colli"' W""POrt fM(h (lty Elllllll"
J•ck R. C1rlty f'awl Ni11•1t •wMMlt M&Mw Monrt111r11 Plrtdor ---2211 W•1t ••llt•• l lvd.
M1llt111 AJCr•11: 1'.0.-11• 1171 tZ66J
0th• om, ••
tot1• Miut: no""'" l•r s11•u1 U911N IMCIU tt2 ,_, AVl-
'"l~fll!M!on INtl'li :IOf Ifft S!r•I
support Kuchel
There'll be plenty Of CaWornia firsts
in this election.
The polls were open from 1 a.m. to 8
p.m. in every county for the first Lime.
In the past, counties with less than
400,000 population closed their polls at
7 p.m.
And Los Angeles County, for the
first time used voting machines, ex·
tending the electronic system. to 93
percent ol the votes cast. Thirty-three
ol the state's 58 counties no\v have the
1nachines.
Minor parties are back on the ballot
for the first time since the Prohibi·
tionists dropped out after 1964.
Former Alabama Gov. .. G e o r g e
• \Vallace's American Independent par·
ty and the Peace and Freedom party
lielded candidates.
Kennedy and McCarthy captured .
most of the attention on the final day
or campaigni ng Monday -just as they
had throughout the election.
The Los Angeles Times poll made
Kennedy a slight favorite, but showed
a gai n in McCarthy support and said
that the undecided voters held the
balance.
The poll also predicted that a third
and uncommitted slate, headed by At·
ty. Gen. Thomas C. Lynch, wouJd cap·
ture 15 percent of the vote. Once back·
ing President Joh·nson, the slate now is
badly split, but most of its leaders
favor Vice ·President llubert JI.
Humphrey. .
Kuchel. 57, was reported by the
'fimes poll to be only slightly ahead of
Rafferty in a race where !he state
.schools chief has mo ved uo with a last
minute bli tz of newspaper and
te levision advertisin g.
Unattached Hand
Scares Housewife
A Newport Beach housewife had to
hand it to someone early this morn·
in g for causing the fright of her life.
Mrs. Martha Baird, 48, told police
she was asleep in her bedroom when
she 'vas awakened by a noise. She
climbed out of bed, and v.·ent to peer
ou t the windo'v.
There on the window sill was a hand
and forearm ol \\-"hat appeared to be a
Caucasian male.
"\Vho's th.ere?" she shouted. The
hand and arm slipped away into the
night.
SECONO VICTIM -London
art dealer Mario Al{laya, still
wearing bloodied shirt in which
he was shot in back in Andy
\Varhol 's office, walks unaided
to· waiting an;ibulance on NeYi
York street.
Warhol Fighting
For Life; Woman
Held in Sl1ootin g ·
N8W YORK .(.Uf-'I) ....:. In his !a1· out
wor ld 'Of soup can posters and in·
terminable undv.rground · films, Andy
\Varhol's acquaintances Inc I u de d
characters as bizarre as his art.
Among lhern was actress Valerie
So!anas, who detests men in general
and had some specific grievances
against Warhol.
The silver haired Warhol, 37, was
shot by a woman visitor to l1is studio
Monday. PoUce held Miss Solanas, 28,
star of Warhol's newest film, "I, A
?\1an," on charges of felonious assault
and possession of a dangerous weapon
\Vith inte;nt to kl\\. ·
Doctors said today \Varhol had :.i
''50·:.0" chan·cc of surviving.
~1iss SolaR.il.._ who last year placed
<.1n ad in a Grec1iv.:ich \'lllage wee.kly,
the VillaJ:e Voi ce. announcing forn\a·
lion of ·'The Society F'or Cutting Ur
Men" (SCUM), said she shot \Varhol
because he "had too much control of
my life."
\VarhoJ ; famed for his eight-hour, no
action movies and his gigantic pain·
tings of Campbell soup cans and Brillo
boxes, underwent surgery for 4'k
hours. The bu.'.let tore th r o u g h
Warhol's chest, abdomen, spleen and
both lungs before emerging through
his right side.
Miss Solanas, square-jawed, slender
and short haired. walked up to a
policeman in Times Square four hours
aft er the shooting and said: "The
police are looking for me and want
me." She said she lived "nowhere."
"There are n1ony involved reasons•·
for the shooting, she told newsmen at
a polire station. "I have written a
manifesto of what I am and what 1
stand for."
Youth Center Prepares
Fifth Annual Carnival
Community Youth Center leaders lo·
day readied plans for their fifth arinual
carnivaJ.
The event will be held Saturday and
Sunday, June 15 and 16.
"It will be bigger and better than
ever ," promised Mason Wallace.
president ol the Youth Center Board of
Directon. "Tilere will be amusement
rides, booths for fun and games, and
·~
food for eocryone."
r)ro!ils will go toward improvements
at the center at 5th Avenue and Iris
Street in Corona del Mar. The site of
the carnival again will be adjacent to
the center.
Wallace noted that a $.500 U.S. Sav·
lngs Bond will be given :i.J-tep-prtt'e.
Tickets can be obtained from any boy
enrolled in the Harbor Area Summer
Baseball Program.
FL YING LOW _::_ Five-yearo0ld Carol Walker tries out flying saucer.
one of many amusement rides that will be set up for fifth annual
Corona del Mar Youlh Center Carnival-Event ts coming up June 15
and 16. -·
~-----
I '
Allies Slay 250 Cong
Reda Use Wounded GI al Bait for Five Hyurs
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. and SOulh
Vietnamese 'forces today killed an
estimated 250 Viet Cong troops trylng
to Joip Vi~ battle of SU.lgon. In one bat·
Ue the ' Viet Cong used a wounded
Amertcan soldier as bait for five
agonizing hours.
U.S. Arm'y 9th Infantry Division
toldier5 killed "more than 200" guer·
rtllu Monday night and today in one
battle 38 miles southwest of the
capital. It was in this action the Viet
Cong held the captured American and
shot every person 'vho tried to rescue
bfrn.
The Americans lost 36 deaa and 62
Wounded in this batue .
.UPI correspondent Nat Gibson_ said
the fighting bcgar when a group of 60
Americans landed by helicopter in a
bramble patch just 10 feet from a Viet
Cong bunker complex. The Com·
munists held their fi.re till the troops
landed then opened up with small
arms and automatic weapons fire. ·
One American was wounded in the
'On to Onondaga'
For OCC Rowers
After Fund Drive
It's ''on to Onondaga."
The motto of the Orange Coast
College racing crew really means
something ·today.
Community response to an appeal
for funds to send the West Coast row·
ing champs to next w e e k ' 11
Intercollegiate Rowing Association
championships at Syracuse, N.Y., (at
Lake Onondaga) Wt8 great enough to
assuxe the team's participation ..
Coach Don Grant received the green
light .Monday afternoou when the
Pirates' crew reached its minimum
goal or $2 ,500.
Prior to Monday's mail call, the
Pirates were SIOO shy of the minimum
goal, but contributions from the com·
munity enabled Grant to send the $150
entrt'Ilce fee and make reservations
for the Bucs' llight to Syracuse.
Just in case you're wondering, any
donations reeelved over the mlnil'num
figure will be utilized by the Pirates
next month in their quest to gain a
berth in the 1968 Olympic Games.
Auto Production Up
DETROIT (UPI) -Spurred by a
155,353 unit increase in U.S. output in
May, auto prodw.ction for the first five
months of the year jumped more than
700,000 cars ahead of last year's pace,
the industry's big three announced
Monday. ·.
Jeg, five feet in front~,.{ bunker. Maj.
Zeb Bradford, 34, Kannapolis, N.C.,
said "they either killed or wounded
five or four men" trying to reach him.
1'.,inally, he said, tl1ey shot blm In the
head just before dark.
Bradford said the wounded iifan Jay
in front of the bunker for five hours
screaming for help, and that every
time he tried lo move the Communists
would shoot him again either in the
arms or legs·.
The Communists were part of a
force believed trying to move into
Saigon' where other Viet Cong units
have battled govtrnment troops for
nearly a week. Another battle came 22
miles northwest of Saigon where a
. South Vietnamese ~my outpost aided
by U.S. planes and artillery threw
back an assault by ,400 North Viet·
namese using flamethrowers.
The battllS raged as the guerrillas
slammed 4-nockets and moi'tar shells
into the capital, wounding 12 South'
Vietnam Civilians. Scattered fighting
raged in blocks of rubble in Saigon's ·
Cholon section and on . the city's
northeast-8dge.
The fighting cllma.xe4 a month·long
Communist spring offensive aimed at
Salgoo. Allied ·intelligence 1aid the
Reds sought a propaganda victory to
aid their cause ln North Vietnam's
talks with the United States in Paris.
But the North Vietnamese invaders
1.fJ>nday suffered a propaganda defeat
380 miles up the coast from Saigon,
near the c}ty of Hue. A record 83 Com·
munist trOops surrendered to U.S. and
Sou.th Vietnamese forces.
They did not JtiVe up at the point of
a gun but sim ply under the urging of. a
propaganda loudspeaker airplane.
But blood flowed elsewhere. In the
Mekong Delta fight, the 9th. Division
units suffered 36 Americans killed an"d
62 wounded in the fighting that smash·
ed the Viet Cong battalion.
The allles' closest call came at the
outpost 22 miles northwest of Sala:on
when 50 government troops aided by
10 American advisers held oU the
flamethrower .attack.
Harbor PT A to Hold
'
Symposium on Drugs
The Harbor C.ounctl PTA wW hold a
narcotics symposium for · parents
Saturday at Estancia High School.
Eleven knoWledgeable persons from
field$ of medicine, law and the schools
will d:l.&cuss various aspecta: of the
growing drug prdllem a m o n g
teenagers. A mOvie on marijuana will
be mown.
Discussion in groups will be the fintl
phase of the five-hour symposium and
it is hoped from ttiese will ·evolve
plans for parental action.
Speakers will be Dr. Bat'bara
Jessen, neurologist; Or. George Hoff,
clinical psychologist; Newport Beach
From Page l
BABY DOLL'S •.•
however, just cell\U_old bottoms.
One would·be film critic made a
foray into the lately flourishing tavern
and found the stuff·id'the·buff about as
appealing as a mashed potato and
marshmall<M' sandwich on white
bread.
P olice had already seized the file,
but -and th.is is t.hat all-important
but -they had already been judged
neither pornogr"aphic nor obscene and
county authorities declined to issue
complaints.
Pou·ce ·Chlef B. James Glava~~. ~ti
Mesa Police Chief Roger Net , Dr\
Norman Loats, Newport-Mesa · nilled,
assistt'llt school superintendent; Mrs.
Robert Ully, Newport-Mesa school
board member,
Also, Julian Ci.mbalu.k, juveniie
court referee; attorney Gordoo Dale:
.Qr. Michael Brown, lecturer at Cal
Sta:fe Fullerton; Dr. Maurice KapWi,
director of South Coast Child Guidance
Clinic. and Gerald Buck, delinquency
prevention coord!nator with the county
·Probation Department. . ..
The symposium will begin at 9:30
a.m . .cµid end at 3:30 p.m. in the
Forum at Estancia High, Z323 Placen·
tia Ave., Costa Mes.a.
A sack lunch is suggested. Ad·
'mis!rion or $1 per penon will be charg.
ed to cover costs.
'Bal Fire Destroys
Two Mattresses
Newport Beach firemen respanded
to a pre-dawn fire in a Balboa
Peninsula apartment today, snuffing
out two fl aming mattresses. There
were DO injuries.
The blaze was reported at 3:27 a.m.
at 1007 E. Balboa Blvd. Its probable
call6e was listed at a cigarette.
has it!
"We make no bones about it JI
• • •
•
Jiffs~ Deep Shteam
1
d Cahrpet Cleaninthgodcosts more
-· than t e o s ampoo me • • •
However, the Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the ca rpet and the carpet backi ng. Since no brushing ·or
sc rubbing action is used, there is no distortion of the carpet pile. The
powerful extraction action of the De~p Steam process lifts matted pile to
"like new" appearance.
The need for frequ ent professional cleaning is reduced because the deeply
imbedded abrasive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are removed, and
there is no detergent residue left in the carpet to collect dirt. During the
Deep Steam clea ning process all the carpet fibers are coated with a special
soil reta rdant.
"It's si mpl e logic ... You profit in th e long run when you use Deep Steam ·
Carpet Cleaning because your carpet wil l be cleaner than eve r before
possible. It will stay clean longer and wear longer because you used Deep
Steam Carpet Cleaning. . "
WHEN YOU
WANT THE
FINEST-
CAct.
FRll
!mMATE
RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
..
Our 21 at Y oar of Strv ict in Oran9t County
2950 RANDOLPH
PHONE 546-3432
'
COSTA MESA
From Toll Al'N
Call Zlnlth 7-0696
•
. . .. •
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuff111J, June C. lHI NI -CM 1'1it \J
Thea ter Gu ild
Slate Takes
·center Stage
Taking center stage during a noon 'Jucnheon Tuesday, .June 11,
'in the Versailles restaurant will he Mrs. Ladislaw Reday who will
receive the gavel of'the Children's Theater Guild of Ney,i.port Harbor.
Turning over the symbol of office and charging her With presi -
dential duties wilt be Mrs. Frank Gaines, retiring presi dent who will
se rve as installing officer.
Mrs. ·Reday is well qualified to lead these thespians. according
to Mrs. James R. Macy, publicity chairman. "Her long list of credits
include actress, writer, director and producer of children's pl ays,"
she said. The new presidfnt also has written original mnsic for so me
of the productions.
Rol,\ndipg out her new bo,rd will be the Mmes. Stuart Wtlson ,
first vice president; Garth Bergeson, second vice president : Jerrel
Ri~hards, recording secreta_ry; Mflrk Matthews , corresponding sec-
retary;' Clinton Hoose, treasurer, and George· Michaud, -parliamen·
tarian. ,
Others are th·e· Mmes. Don Paul, junior advisor: Willia'm Stain-
forth. Little Theater .production"; Franklin Goodenough Jr., wOrkshop
coordinator ; . Donald Carr, workshop registrar: Gai nes. community
relations chairITJan: M'acy, membership chairman; Kalman Spelle-
tich, publicity chairman. and Carl Neisser, production coordinator.
' • • •
l' • '
I
( f
• 4 • > " •'-"
i l ' f J. .,. --:
• . ,. , '
I ' ..
The first task to be undertaken by the new directors, will be
to select a script for the next production which is tentatively sched-
uled for presentation in mid-November.
Reservations for the installation luncheon are being taken by
Mrs. Richard Pauley. '
'[)E.CISiONS ,.DECISIONS, DECISIONS' -An appropriate title of '
an .or.iginal song written by Mrs. Ladislaw Reday (right), who, no
doubt, will be humming it constantly until the next script is select-
cd for Newport Harbor Children's Theater Guild's next produc-
tion. Assisting the incoming president are Mrs . Carl Neisser (left),
production coordinator and Mrs. Frank Gaines , retiling president.
PROUD MOTHERS -Sharlng moments of joy, filled with pride
<lre molherS of Las Campanas debutantes and their daugh'ters as
. · liev relax and chat over coffee cups during the traditional moth· . .
er-daughter coffe e. Coast debutanles and the ir mothers are (left
lo right ) Mrs. Leonard Dean Tubach. Miss Janet Patricia Holtz,
J\1rs. Andrew Leo Hollz and Miss Kathleen Janelle Tubach .
..
Las Campanas
Debs Circle Oat.es
For Parties, Parties
Caught. up in a u•hirlwind of parties. luncheons and lea s are Las
Campanas debuto1nles who will be presented to socie ty during the lifth
annual ball July 13 in the Di sneyland Hotel.
Of the 20 young women selected for this honor, one is from Costa
Mesa and another is from Huntington Beach.
They are Miss Kathleen .Janelle Tubach, da ughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Dean Tubach and Miss .Janet Patricia Holtz. da ughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Leo Holtz.
Future dates circled in red on their calendars include June 15, an
informal party for them and stags ; .June 22. another party: .June 27, the
traditional Medaltion Tea to be hosted by Mrs. Richard Heifner.
Informal parties will be staged the last weekend of June and the
first part of .July ; July 9 has been selected for the anriuaJ F'ather-Debu-
lante Waltz Party; .July 12. rehearsal and a dinner party for debutante5
and their escorts.
They have a lread y been entertained at a luncheon in the Anaheim
home of Mrs. Leslie I. Ferrell, great-aunt of a debutante, Mi ss Kaye Ellyn
Mason. Mrs Flo Brooks. presentation director. inst ructed the girls on the
fine r points o/ executing the curtsy.
On the next day escorts and stags wer.e welcomed at an informal
party in the Fred Beckham home in Fullerton . Also present \ve re Mrs.
Brooks and Mrs. Charles A. Peterson. ball chairman. plu s Miss Vicki Beck·
ham, a 1966 debutante. and Peter~on .
Other recent gatherings were a mother-dwghter coffee in the Santa
Ana ho·me of Mrs. John Bishop, and a fa shion show in BUffum's wliete
they were shown appropriate baJl gowns .
The ball is a benefit. and proceeds go to the ·symphony Association
of Orange County to continue its efforts in presenting concerts in the 1968-
69 season. DurinJ! the past four years 68 debutantes ha ve been presented,
Sponsoring orgt1nizations ;:ire the <l.~sociation and the women's ~roup,
Las Campanas.
ln~tead ·of Her Buryiflg Talents, She Really Dug for Them
\
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Are. people
<'razier today than el any time in the
his tory of man ? I believe the answer 1~ "yes." The item I just read in the
ntwspaper is pretty good evidence .
It seems a Mrs. P. Haverland of
Charleston , W. Va. has nothing better
to do with her time than to try to break
the record for being buried alive. The
record ls held by some fleabrain who
Jay in M-Undergrou.nd casket for 75
days. Mrs. Haverland is sure she can
set a new record.
ANN LANDERS
hnnest. Say . "I wish we could Invite
all nur dtRr frie nds tn tbt wedding but
It Is n't pnsslhle." Then ynu can add,
"\\'e hnpt you'll come hi see us "'hen
we're ~ettled "-lr you WANT them to.
that 11 .
imporl.anl business associa tes or my
husband . Those kids made a nervous
wreck out of me wit.h "more meat .
please , .. even before the adults had a
ch!lnce to fini sh their portions. I
though t sui-ely their mother would S'\Y
something bul she just sat there as if
the kids belonged to some·one else and
Jet them make pigs or themselves. For
dessert f baked a triple layer chocolate
cake (10-lnch tins ) with mocha Icing.
This is a pretty big cake. Ann . but ii
wasn't enough .
be ta11ghl nrver In ask fnr a secnnd
hl'lplng of nnylhln,; wht.n th ey are
.(uests. ff tht hnstess offers. fine: ~
otherwise they i;hould eAt what 11
S('rvl'd anit If lh cy are still hun &(J'.
nnothcr rolf or a slice of bread should satisfy lhcm , ·
I would like to suggest that anyone
wtto has 75,days to blow ought to go to
so'me hospital and volunteer to break a
record visiting the sick or writing let .
ltrs for the disabled or just cheerin.R
up the lonely people in the nursing
homes. Do you arree. Ann~
-CHICAGO READER .
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DEAR .CUJCAGO : renple usually
· enjny doing what they do· bett.
Pe rh•pt this 11 ~1rs. Haverland'•
greatest tal•t.
DEAR ANN LANDEHS : Paul and I
plan to be married in September. Paul
comes fr11m a large family an<I so do
I. We were both born and raised in
th is city and have a great ma ny
friends . Since my folk s can'l afford lo
give me a big wedding we have decid·
ed to have a simple ceremony with on·
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ly the immediate family present.
Now the problem : People "e know
have been asking us ll they can come
to the wedding . I think it's poor man·
ners to fish for an invitation , but these
folks feel very friendly and the y don 'I
lit'e it that way .
l'vt tried to be evasive and non ·
('ommittal but it's getting more dif·
ficull all the time. What do you SUI(·
gcst ~
-ON THE SPOT BRIDE
DEAR BRIDE ' S. dlreel · and
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please
print this letter. A million women will
love you .
Why don't the mothers of America
teach 'their-children when they go to
someone's home for dinner NOT to
ask for a fhlrd hel~g of meat or a ~e ·
co nd dessert? A family of eight (s ix
kltl11 '1 came lo dinner last night and I
wa,3 a nervous wreck from the begin ·
nlng 9f the meal to the end . There
were 12 at our table including some
If you've never bee n in a spot whcr P
.vnu've had to worry about runrtin,e
~hort of food . you hav en'r mis~r1
anythln~. Please. Ann Lan-:ters , be. <1
friend and prinl this lettfl:r.'
-{;LEANED OUT
DEAR CLEANED: Cw;cfren 1bould
When romantic glances turn to
warm embraces is it love or
chemistry! Send for the booklet ''LoV1
or Sex and How to Tell the nit.
ference ." by Ann Lande.rs. Enclose. a
long. stamped. self·addressed en-
velope and l5 ccnl.ll in coi n with yo~r
request.
.'\nn Land ers will be gl ad to help yOu
\vith yo ur problem s. Send them to her
in care ·or the DAlLY PILOT. encltfs-
ing ;. stamped . 1elf-addre11•ed en·
velope . •
I.
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. DAILY PILOT
Latest Techniques Examined
. ,Members of the Huntington Beach Police Wives Guild learned the most U.Jrto-
date techniq_ues and medication for the treatment of badly burned patients
when they visited the Orange County Medical Center to make a donation to the
Burn Unit yesterday. Among those learning some of the new concepts in the
treatments are (left to right) Mrs. Stephen Balloch, Mrs. James Mahan and
Mrs ... George Renek.
Nancy Middleton New
'
Mrs. James ·Mc Brien
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Mr. and Mrfl. Louis 0'(',cn. flowers sent ftun the
~11 of Newport Beach · an-beoed1ct'a parents.
· grandtnotner, and M r 1 .
Marg.aretta O'Connell Of
Sturgis. -nouoced the -maniege of her ~isa Loren RobiMon of
·daughter, N-ancy Lorena Huntington M.arina t b e ~eton ~ Jame s ['bride's eousi.rr, WM ~aid ot-
WUliam McBr1en, IKln ol Mr. ho ··""·;1 ~ ••~-~ .and Mtfi. J . w. McBrien of oor wi1..1..1e u1e JYU;)()es
The newlyweds ~Y·
mooned on Coronec:o kiand
and will make tbeir home in
Germany w h e r e the
b<nedicl is serving in the
Army.
,Hilo, Hawaii: Percy Batista of Honolulu;
The Rev. Roger T. Walke Karen App 1 em an of
officiated during the double Newport Bea<fh. Barbara
ring ceremony In Unitarian· T Co M -' Universalist Clhuroh, Costa owlt!, sta esa, auu
Mesa. Cathy McCallion, Anaheim, Fall Rites For her wedding. the
bride selected a full length
w!Hte gown with a bodice
anct hemline · trimmed in
daisies. Dai s i e s also
dec«.ated her s h o u l d e r
lengtJi veil .ind she oanied
an orchid bouquet with
Shapely
9069
~ZES
121h-241h
Dart shaping and tab-front
buttoning make this a
perfect choice for summer
days. Choose crisp Dacron
checks, nubby blend, shan-
.tung, J.i.nen.
''Printed Pattern 9069 : Hali
Sizes 121h, 14Y.i, 16lf.i. 18'h,
20\1 . 22\1, 24\1. Size 16\1
(bust 37) takes 3~ yds. 35·
in.
SIXTY·FIVE CENTS in
colt!.s for each pattern
add 15 cents for each pat·
tern for first~las's malling
and special bao,_dlinj ;
otherwise t bird-· c 1a11
doliYel')' will · taM three
weeb or more. Send to
Marian Marlill, tile PAIL Y
PILOT, 442 Patt.rn Dept.,
232 w .. t 18lh St., New-York,
N. Y. IOOll. Print NAME,
ADDRESS wit(\ ZIP, SIZE
_and STYLE NUMBER.
Cboo.e one pattern !rte -
clip coupon lo new Spring·
Sumrntr Pattern Catalog.
JOO .Vles, all ,1ze11. Sond cents. .
attended as bridesmaids.
They donned pink full
length gowns and held pink
carnation leis sent from
tt·awaii.
Best man was lhe bride's
brother, Douglas Middlet-On.
Candles were lit by the
bride's cousins, Geo r g e
Robinson III and Raymond
Sm~tb of Sturgis, S. D.
Large bouquets of pink,
white and red flowers mixed
with wh.ite gladioli adorned
the church.
The bride's parents home
was the setting for the
reception for 150 guests.
Assisting were Mr . arid
Mrs. Ge<>rge Robinl<in. the
bride's aunt and uncle from
Huntington Marina an d
Fl"a'llci& Wright of Newport
Beach. Special guests were
Miss Suzanne M c Br i e n ,
sister oI Ule benedict from
Hilo ; Mrs. Marg are t
Steinberger of Sant.a Ana,
·Jn Offing
WE'D LIKE TO INTRODUCE YOU TO
THREE BEAUTIFUL MODELS.
Each is named Glycln~
Each i1in1" k1r1t gold.
Round watch wtth faceted cryital.
~ Roetangularwith "tree bark'' textured
cue and band.
Rectangu\a~ with woven band.
Your choice, S175.
~1:1'~~~·~
11 FASHION ISLAND
64<4-lllO
N,EWPORT CENTER
•
Horoscope
Taurus:Cre~Jiv~
Efforts Favored
WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 5
By SYDNEY OMARR
"The wise man controls
his destiny. . . . Astrol9gy
points the way."
ARIES (March 21-April
19): What was ceases to ex·
isl. Act accordingly. Means
tod ay. a fre6h viewpoint ls a
necessity. Applies especially
to tegal agreements; con·
tracts an d partnerships.
Some openly oppose )iou.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Concentration on basic
Jssues. Among these iniludc
those whd work for or w;itb
you. Creative e ff or t &
favored. Specifically, cbec~
health indications. You find
out how best to begin a pro·
ject.
GEMINI (May 21.June
2{1): Good lunar a5pect to·
d,ay coincides with time tc
make changes, to welcome
affection. You may oot be
able to remain objective .
Day when you become in-
volved -and it may be a
good thing.
CANCER (June -21-July
22): Greater joy in the
home can become .a reality
toi:l.ay . Don't ask for tpo
much -you will receive
m-ore than anticipated. Your
opinion is solicited with
regard to real estate, pro-
perty values.
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22):.
Accent on study, writing,
relations witb brothers and
sisters. Lunar pqsi.ti9n coin·
cides with your ability . to
make quick adjustments .
It takes two · ~ "
to make a 9'
marriage!
14K Gold Oxidized
Wedding Bands
M•ny other styles to choose frorn-
•11 iri be•utiful aritique finishes thet will
1uit rffCJOrtt's t•1te.
ledie1' from $45.00
Men's from $55.00
• ........ "''" '""" BEJ .. ~, ....... U, .. 11 M•111th1 I• '•'1
NOW 2 GREAT STORES TO SERVI YOU
HA•to• HUNYINOTON C•1tTt•
IHO,•IMO ClNTt• ttAClt ~ ICllNOI.• 1* HA•&O• ILVCI. HUNTINOTOM llACH
CCllTA MlllA -tu.HU tn-Htl
Oflllll #llON .. THU•t .. ••1. fl'L t •.M.
~-----------------------------------
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MystiCism Captured
'
__,_Israel Offering
,Word on Style
IF YOU ARE A NEWCOMER TO TOWN
OR KNOW om; TO WHOM YOU WISH
TO DO A GOOD TURN , : •
PHOtilE THIS W,ONOERFUL COMMUNITY
SERVICE ANp A HOSTESS Will CALL
WITH GIFTS ANO INFORMATION.
Dottie Walters
Hospitality
Hoste ss
Q> "
•
We Welcome You
To The
ORANGE COAST AREA
PHONE ~·6925
.1
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f lR.. ... ~6' '."'••· . ~ ~ ... ·.,,:·,. . . . . . :-. ' .
>
•• '·· ~· ·~:
ASK PEG DENSMORE HOW TO HAVE
A BETTER FIGURE WITH A BALI •• ,
Spends m inutes in our fittingroom and all
you will feel is beautiful ••• in, the best Bali
bra fo r yeti . See the bras designed to
gently shape your new silhouette fo r summer.
Uet Peg Densmore, Bali representative,
help you with you r s election, tomorl"'OW and
Thursday, 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in
our F~ion Foundations.
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· Newport
r.
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Lag.una
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"'" EDITION
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'VOt:. 61', NO. ·13~, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES UiGUNA BEACH, t:ALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE·~. 1968
·: ea
Se1at to Atascadero
Laguna Jade Case
Suspect .. _Insane
1'he only def~ndant to face Superior
Cou11 in a $300,000 Laguna Beach j8de
burglary case, Gary Celli, Monday
1nitted to Atascaderv State Hospit.a.l.
Superior Judge \Villiam Speirs, who
had previously ruled Celli to be sane
reversed himself after further study of
p:;ychlatrists' reports.
Celli will be hospitalized until he is
was found insane and ordered com-
capable ol assisting in his own
defense. •
The 23-year-0\.d man, who lived at
3162 Mountain View Ave., in Laguna,
"''as arrested last November and
charged with the April 23, 1967
burglary. More ·than 50 pieces of
valuable jade had been taken from the
home of arf apprai~or JaJpes J. Bren-
nan, 935 Gaviota Drive, Laguna
Be'ach.
Most .of the missing jade has been
recovered.
~aguna Boys Club Votes
To-Sell Beaeh Prope-rty
Visiting · Actor
The Boys' Club of Lagun'a"Beach has.
agreed to sell its Main Beach property
to the city tor $50 ,000.
City Manager James D. Wheaton
said the matter will come before coun-
cilmen Wednesday·. .
It would be the first parcel acquired
. by the city in its plan to put together a
Main Beach Park extending from the
old clubhouse to the Hotel Laglina
along about 1,000 feeot of beaCh fron-
tage.
If the council agrees, said Wheaton,
the city would seek to enter an option
for purchase of, the prOperty.
Israel Attacks
Jordan Along
27-mile Front
By UPI
Israel attacked Jordan alOng a 27-
n1ile front today and Jordanian dip-
lomats said the Israelis, using land·
based rockets for the first time, heav-
ily damaged the city of Irbid and kill·
ed 30 persons and wounded 60.
An Israeli spokesn1an in Jerus3.lem
said Israel sent its air force against
Jordan on the eve of the first anni·
versary of the June, -1967, Arab-Israeli
war to silence Jordanian artillery bat-
teries. A Jorda1Lian spokesman in Amman
11Jid Israeli artillery supported by jet
fi ghters and "land-to·land'' rockets
attacked a.loog a 27-mile front below
the Sea of· Galilee. The city or Jrbid
was reported in flames.
The incident followed weeks of a!· ~ost Oaily firing across the oe:ase-fire
line by artillery, machineguns, mor-
tars and tanks. Each side accused the
other of starting the incidents.
Jordanian Ambassador Mohammad
H, El-Farra, in a Jetter to U.S. Am-
bassador Arthur J . Goldberg, this ·
month's president of the Security Coun.
cil. said the Israeli attack concentrat-
ed on the city of Irbid. He said the
attack was still going_ on. -
Options would be sought from other
pn;>perty owners who are willing to
sell, he said, and the escrows closed at
the san1e time, probably later this
year.
The city alteady has filed a con-
demnation suit to acquire 10 parcels of
other Main Beach property, nine of
which are owned by Consolidated
Mortgage Co.
Councihnen are also,_to consid~ a
request from the Boys' Club board for
permission to . use its new site in
Laguna Canyon for ·commercial park-
i_pg during the Festival or Arts.
Wheaton said the use probably
would be only for the Summer since
t:qe club boBf4 h~s to break ground
fur new buildings this year to replace
the old clubhouse near the foot of
Broadway.
Hospital Reaches
Half Way Point
In Fund Drive
South Coast Community Hospital
has nearly reached the half-way point
in its $2 million expansion fund drive
today as a 600-member team of
volunteers takes to Ute 'field to raise
$600,000 in 30 diays.
"We have in our files the names of
6,000 people who have not yet renewed
their pledges," Victor C. AndrewB ,
president Of the hospital said. ''This
represents a potential of at least
$600.0CIO which we need desperately to
meet our quota."
The hospital is asking fOr 600
volunteers to talk 'to JO people each,
urging them to contribute at Jeast $100
apiece to the fund. -/
The South Coast hospital needs $4
million to install an additional 126 beds
in a:n unfurm.ished wing added three
years ago, Andrews said. •
Federal.and state ho spital aid funds
are available on condition that the
hospital's patrons provide matching
JIJOOs by June 30.
Volunteers are asked to contact the
ca1npalgn headq·uarters next door to
the South Coast Theater in Laguna
Beach, or oaU 494--0727.
Actor Fred Clark and his wife, Gloria (center),
were . backstage visitors at the Laguna Playhouse
opening-night performance .of 0 Slow Dance on the
Killing Ground." Attentive listeners as Clark remi-
nisced with David Paul (right), 0 Slow Dance'' star,
about their old footlight days in summer stock with
the Gryphon Players at the ~laybouse in 1946-47-48,
were (from left) co-stars Francy Walsh and Robert
Franklin, and director John Ferzacca.
, I " ••
N t . ' a ions Ey~s bn ~late
,.
Kennedy-McCarthy Fight Highlights Voting
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Calilornia
Democrats decide between presiden·
ti al candidates Robert F. Kennedy and
Eugene J . M,cCarthy today while
Republicans were voting on the
political future of U.S. Sen. Thomas H.
Kuchel.
This election in the nation's most
populous state was the final primary
test for Sens. Kennedy and McCarthy.
The winner is likely to offer the main
challenge to Vice President Hubert
---
Credit Forgery
Hearing Delayed
Preliminary exanilnation o£ charges
that two Hun.tingtou Beach women us-
ed forged credit cards has been con-
tinued one month in municipal court of
Laguna Beach.
The scbeduled hearing for Adrianne
Jo Ballard, 36-year-old divorcee aid
mother of five, and Linda Sue Shaw,
• 21 , both or 15461 Capri Circle, wois con-
tinued until July 3 al the request or a
deputy district attorney Monday.
·Mrs. Ballard is free on her· own
recognizance and.Miss Shaw ,)s held in
Orange County jail in lieu of $2,500
bail. Police said Miss Shaw is wanted
in San Francisco on charges involving
prostitution, receiving stolen property
and illegal use of credit cards.
The two women were arrested in
Laguna Beach recently. Police said
they had been on a buying spree along
the Orange Coast with credit cards
stolen in the San Francisco area.
Humphrey in the Democratic National
Convention.
Assistant Secre~ary of State H. P.
Sullivan predicted 67 percent of the
vot.ers would turn out in mostly fair
weather.
Democrats, their interest stirred by
the increasingly fierce McCarthy-Ken-
nedy race' for California's 174 national
convention votes, 'vere expected to
vote in a greater percentage than the
Republicans. They, outnwnber GOP
voters 4,347,406 to 3,197,815.
Republicans, their choice limited to
favorite son Gov, Reagan on the
presidential ballot, weren't expected
to turn out as strongly, Sullivan said.
Kuchel's~strategists said tbat could
hurt the senator, facing a strong
challenge from Max Ra£ferty, the
State superintendent of public in-
struction.
Traditionally. they say, the con-
(Sce PRIMARY, Page 2)
Council in Murky View
Of Watery Plastic Dome
Laguna Beach councilmen Wed-
nesday may take a murky view o! the
request by two college students that
they be allowed to erect a plastic
dome on the ocean floor.
City Manager James D. Wheaton
said Jim Pamplin and Sue Wfl>ber,
students at FullertO)h-State College.
hOpe to submei-ge an observation
chamber off Woods Cove and anchor it
OTI' the bottom.
The city manager said the . in·
dependent oceanography might have a
wwthy goal but said the city attomey
thoug.ht it a risky venture from the
standpotnt of rnunicipai liability.
plication for the South Counties Am·
bulance Service which is under new
marl'&gement.
-Consider an appeal by JcOO Garau
of conditioos imposed by Ule planning
commission when it granted h:im a
conditional Wie permit !or a gourmet
delicatessen.
-cOnsider a letter from' the South
La·guna Disposal Co. asking io bid on
the city rubbistl dispOS'al contract. It is
now COlllb'a~ted to Laguna Beach
Disposal Serv'ice Inc. until Sept. 30,
1970. The present contractor has asked
a dime-per-month rate hike.
Planners Appease Sawdust
In other business. oouncllm:en will:
-Conside'r a OOOmber o£ Commerce
reque-st 0at a study session be set for
bmbte86 interests and other persons to
exipress themsietves ebout the hippie
situatioo. Questioooalree: ate to be
sent to Chamber members soliciting
~on hippies.
Summer Fun
Registration Set
Regis1ration !or Laguno Beach
Recreation Department classet in
swmi.ning, lennis and volleyball will
De held Saturday and again June 15. A rtists Given ~kay to Use Lagu1ia .Canyon Vacant Lot
Artists on both sides or the Sawdust
Festival fence wtre somewhat ap-
peased by a Laguna Beach city plan·
ning decision Monday night.
Laguna Arti6ts and Gallery Owners
Association received permission to use
facilities on a vaeoant Laguna Canyon
lot near the Boys' Club site and ad-
jacent to the car wash to erect booths
and display art from noon to midnight
July 12 to Aug. 24.
1-lowever, before giving way on. a
more controverslaJ part of the
variance request -permission to
erect a tent -planner& ins.isled they
want to know exactly wbat will go on
in that tent. ,
members, Edmund Van Deuscn told it was LaSt year when it got nothing
planners the tent would house a non-but good reports. It was a modest art
graphic art show and would help sales exhibit," said Fred Faulkner, an
·painters sell their works. .• , . t art1st with the original group, who
"We will be bringing·1ometnin.g ne}V claimed, "members have not voted on
to Laguna. The ,light sllow wW be a this. The boon! of directors arranged
small part of tlW: year's dfort. in ad-it without our knowledge."
d!Uon to painting wttb light, we will "Are you asking ua to legislate on
paint with music and sO\lnd. Dance different types of art?" planner
groups will do interpretive (lancing Wayne Hauser questioned him. "The
and actors will perform instant issue," he said, "is should we allow it
drama,'' he said enthusiastically. at this place at this time. You must
Not so enthusiastic about tlle non. resolve your ~ernal differences
gi:aphic segment were some artiste -yourselves.''
within the same group who bad come . James Schmitz, om ml s & I O'n
to .~mmissioners with their protests. chainnan, 'fii;ming applause, said "l
-Likely reject a '25,000 claim from
the Protective AssociatiOn ()f Go.vern-
ment Employes formed in Orange
County· to provide legal aid for
employes ln d1'pule will! t!ldr pOlitioal
sut>divi:sioos. Wheatoo &aid a similar
claim lo being made al ·au Orange
County cities and it .Gllleges oo action
oo Ille city's pert.
-Oonsider a bo1111n... y.,.... IP· •
Auto Production !J p
Norman Borucki, recreation direc·
tor, sai(t, regiS'b'ation will be held .at
the high school gymnasiums on those
days from 9 a.m. uaUl noon.
Fees for two week sessions are ten-
nis, 15: swimming, $2 ; and volleyball,
$2 .. Additi.OMI inlorm..ilo!vmoy be ob·
talmd lrom Bocu<ld at 4~.
Steck Morltt!ta .
NEW YOllK (AP) -The stock mar-
ket continded to bull ahead lhJs after-
noon in What seemed likely to be· one
-oi the biggest volume ~ys in history.
(See quotations, Pages 10-U).
Volume for the first four hours wa11
--
Today's Closing
N •Y. Stocks . . •,
TEN CENTS
una
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Early Vote
In Primary
Near20%
, Voting in California's primary elec-
tion today appeared to be moderate to
heavy in the early going along the
Orange Coast.
Most coastal precincts 'v c re
reporting turnouts of 17 percent ·or
better in the balloting prior to noon.
In Laguna· Beach, the early tally
showed that at the precinct at 4:>5
Linden St., in the ct!ntr& section of
town, 99 of the 369 registered voters
had cast baillo~. At-tbe P0nti&ic
dealenmip voting place, it_ was 131 of
600 registered; at the nofllh e-nd, 122 of
538; ;south end, 140 of 600; 'and a
preclhct at 1025 Hillcrest Drive on the
nortti end, 109 of 452. .
In "Newport Beach, sample precincts
in the early check all indicated a
turnoyt above average. -..
At Horace Ensign School by 11
a .. m., 100 out of 500 registered vciters
. had cc.isl their ballat5.
A precinct worker at city hall
reported "it's.really good, we've never
had it so good." She 11·8.id 85 out of 450
voters had voted there by 11 a .m. --
/\ heavy turnout was reported at
22nd 'Streci precinct with 94 ballots
cast out of 443 and a line there o!
about a dozen waiting.
In Costa Mesa, early balloting was
also characterzied as heavy with the
range of turnout upward to 17 perc-ent.
In a double precinct at Harper
School, 113 had voted out of 700
regls~red at· the time of the .earJr
sample check. tt was 7!) of 496 at
CaJUorina School; 73 of 440 at Vlctoria
School; 61 of 419 at Canyon sChodl; 73
or 366 at Mesa Verde School: 80 of 47o
at Costa'"Mesa High SChool ; 60 Of 375
at Wilson School; and 53~ of 432 at the
Fire Station. 800 Baker St.
Voting in Huntington Beach, Foun-
ts.bl Valley and Westmlnster ranged
fforit 11 to 17 pereent in the early
(5ee VOTERS, Page 2)
* * * Pilot to Ca1Ty
Voting Results
On Wednesday
With heavy voU: _ turnout predicted
jn today'll primary election in Orange
County, significant returns are not ex•
pected to be available tonight,
The DAILY PILOT will not Ol)erate
an "election central" for telephone
queries tonight, but will report in Wed-
nesday's edition& the latest available
reports m they are compiled by the
Coleman Vote Tally System and other
computerized equipment which will be
operated around the clock by the coun-
ty clerk's staff in Santa Ana.
Complete unolficial results
particularly on "local" races, such as
congressmen, state assemblymen,
county supervisors and propositions -
are not expected to De availQ'ble until
late Wednesday afternoon.
The DAILY PILOT Will carry final
returns on how Orange County voted
as soon as they are av~able.
Oran~~~ast
Weather
Cloudy and cooler, but no
rain Jn .sight, says forecaster
Dave Burt of Wednesday's
weather picture. Jligh temps
will range around 65 1 here·
abouts, up to 75 Inland.
INSIDE TODAY
The first lady of France,
llardly recognizable to most •
FrtMhftWft, 1e.m&.1 to l(ve Q.Uite
happilt1 with "that man," mid
Ms done 10 for manu "''"''· Society Page JS.
•111111 ' Mel ... M ceui.rme • -· ... ' CltHNIH • .. .. Mllllwf ...... " ..... .. " .. """' ..... ... (,.Hwenl " °' .. "" '""" ' DHltl Nlftat ' ...... _ ,,.,, ''" ......... " ·-·· 16-11
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Spealmlg1or-thtr association '1 board
We have nothing again!ft them. But am in favcr"lOO percent, but l cao't go
we wabt the SaWdust FesUval the w•y (5ee SAWDUST, Pace 2>
DETROIT (UPI) -Spurred by a
1:>5.353 unit increase in U.S. output in
May, auto production for the first five
nionthe ol the y:ear jumped more 'than
700,000 cart ahMd of laat year's pace,
the indllltry'I big thrte 8IUIOUllced
Monday.
· 13.33 millim 1hares, compared with
10.9S mtlllon !or the like pe<lod Moo· day. , ,_ __________ ...J
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! DAILY PILOT Tuetcl4y, June 4, 1968
-Pop Artist· Andf Warhol Shot;· Aetres~ · Held
IN CRITICAL CONDlflON
Pop ertist Andy W•rtiol
Nongraphic Art
Show Plans
Given Support
"\Ve are enthusiastically pursuin·
plans for the non-graphic art show,"
Deiores Ferrell, board member of the
Laguna Artists and Gallery Owners
Associaitoo. told the DAILY P ILOT
this moni.ng.
Mrs. Ferrell said the board came to
this decision after caucusing until 2
a.m. today, following the Laguna
Beach Planning Commission meeting.
"Top artists in Laguna \\.'ill exhibit
at the Sawdust Festival by virtue ~of
the non·graphic show and the ex-
citement of producing a total art
thing." she claimed.
These artL~. s'he sc.id, include
-Roger Armstt'oog, Ken Knutson , Lar-
ry Rink, May Riker, Herbert
Griswold, Jon Stokesbary and Richard
Brooks, a member of the board of
direotors of the Festival of Arts.
She said the association v.'ill present
a versioo of this show' during the~
ning commission study session,ni,xt
Monday night and urg~ "eveI)'ODe in
the tow?--to come an:i see -.11.at ""e are
going to do."
'tr
Fre., P .. e l
SAWDUST ..•
along with the show this time and this
year. It's in conflict with the existing
Festival ol Arts. Furthermore, it
sboUld have been brought to us in
January."
Hauser, winning even louder ap-
plause, suggested, "Let's send it to
study session and let the group resolve
the program content differences. It
would be a tragic mistake -voting
the audio art out."
'"I am not looking at the aesthetic
merits," protC4ited Schmitz. ''At this
t.in1e. until we find out what the sounds
are Coi!I&. to ~. I would not go along.
\Ve m.igbt have a lnOnltcr by the tail
in the miMle of ;July."
After conferring \\ith association
members, who said they needed a
partial go ahead to begin C911struction,
commissioners unanimously approved .
part oC the request and will study the
tent issue next Monday night.
U.S. Plane Cl'ashes
ROTA, Spain (UPI) - A twin-jet
U.S. Navy A3. plane crashed on take-
off at this naval base today. Four
persons were killed and two critically
injured.
·Names of the victims were withheld
pending notification of next of kin, •
DAILY PILOT --""'-Reltert N. W••• Pvlllllhff" Th•1t1 •• K•1vil •fG1tor
Them•• A, Mu,ph i111
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Rle~•r4 P. N1 l1 1.-NUM .. edl C1ty Etlllor
J 1ck R. C•rl•'t P•ul Niue11 auslnes• MIMW Amr111!n1 Dlrttlot
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NEW YORK (UPI) -Ill hil fer out
world of IOUp can .potter& and Jn·
terminable uodtt~uod filmt, Andy '
'Varbo1'1 acqualntancea l n c lu de d
characters as bizarre u his art.
Ariion& them ""•' actress ·Valerie
So1anas, who detests men tn •general
and had some apecilic grievances
against Warhol.
Uon.of "Tile Society For Cutlln1 Up
Men" (SCUM), said ohe Ibo\ Warhol
lleoo\ae be "hid too muchv control of
mu11111o al .What I am and whit r
JtaDd lor' 11
According to a wltn.ess, Warhol was
taJldn .. · on tbe telephone to another of mv life." • ., , his "female film stars wben M1ss
\Varhol, famed for hls elght·hour. no SOlanas stepped from an elevlltor.
act.ion movies and his gJ'gantic pain·, , :w•Ut:i:t.1 1into his sixth floor soundproof
tings of Campbell soup cans and Brillo office, and shot him. ,
boxes, underwent---surgery tor 4 ~ -Marjo..Amay,.a of LMQon, a visitor io
hours. The bu!let tore th rough -Wnrhol'a· office, was shot in the back
abou*I 0 0h-, nol'' Amaya aald M111
SOJanas then tvrned and fired at him
but he ducked. 'n!e bullet just milled
hla spine ..
According to friends of Warhol, Miss
Sofanas• appeared at his office at
midafternoon but left wben she found
he was out. .She returned about 4!20
p..m . .ad shot hlrn.
Paul Morrissey, a tecepUontst-wbo
sho\\o·ed Miss Solanas into Warhol's Of·
flee, said he went into the office after
the woman left and fou.od. Warhol and
Amaya wounded on thfi floor.
The sUver haired Warhol, 37, "'a!i
shot by p woman. visitor to •hls studio
Monday. Police held Mlss Solanas, 2.B,
star of \Varhol's newest film, "I, A
Man/' on charges ol' felonJous assault
and poss~'1slon o{ a dangerous weapon
with intent to \..111
Doctors said today Warhol had a
"SO.SO" chance ot survlvini.
Miss Solanas, who 1hst year placed
an ad in a Greenwich Villa~e weekly,
the Village Voice, announcmg !orr_na-
Standing :Firna
\l/arhol's chest, abdomen, spleen and but not sei'lously injured,
both lungs before emerging through . Amaya, 34, said Mi1s SO:Llnas •:stood
his right aide. very rquietly ·while we were in-
Miss Solanas, square·Jawed, slender troduced." IJe said he then looked
and short haired, walked up to a · away.
policeman in Times Square four hours "When 1 first heard the gunfire I
arter the shooting and said: "'I.Jle thought It was coming through the
poUce are looking for me and want .window,11 Amaya said. "Then I notic-
me ." She aid she lived "nowhere." ed• a~revolver like· one of' those' guns
•·There m ~olved reaso ns" you see in Dick Tracy in her hand. She
for the shoo , she told newsmen at was going full blazes."
a police station. "I have written a He said Warhol called her name and
. .
A group of· Warhol's friends, dressed
U1 leo.ther, denim, lace and beads,
waited at the hospital for news of hls
cond!Uon. following the operation. 11te
artist'1 Czech·~ moth4?r, with whom
he lived, was. given a sedative at the
hq.,pital and later taken home by two
of. Warhol's associates.
Hanoi Rebuffs New LBJ Prop~sal
. PARlS (UPI) -The Hanoi delega·
lion to the Paris Vietnam talks gENe a
sharp and firm "l,o" today to Presi-
dent Johnson '~ latest call for a
reciprocal gesture from tbe CQ:m-
munists on de-escalating tile war. ·
Johnson, in an address at Glassboto.
N.J., today rejected Hanoi's deman'.'.
that t~l American bombing be stoppe:!
iri North Vietnam.
"An honorable peace requires s"ome
gestures on the other side. t.oward
peace," Johnson said. ", .. We have
met with little inore than bellh .. ose
statements and" evasioM." ·
Ofiicial Hanoi delegation' sources
taking not~ of the speech said, ''The
United States alone holds the key to
breaking the deadloek" at the talks
which resume Wednesday.
·"Hanoi stands flrnl by its demand
for an unconditional cessation of
American borhbing of North Vietnam
and of all hostile aCt s against It," the
delegation sources said.
Not until -then will llanoi open
negotiations on a politicnl settlement,
they said.
The American negotiators here were
waiting to see· if Hanoi's new Vietnam
negotiator will be as tough as he in·
.·dicated.
From Page J
'COAST VOTING.
turnout. It ranged near 20 percent in
some precincts spot-checked i n
Ne"'J)Ort Beach. Costa Mesa appeared
to be holding near a 17 percent and
there "'as a near 20 percent in some
selected La guna Beach precincts.
~lost election "\\"Orkers felt that the
early turnout "'as indicati\"e of a
hea\'y vote. •
The Orange C(oast traditionally has
* I
PRIMARY. • •
sen ati\·es °''bo back Rafferty ha,·~ a
better record o{ turning out than the
moderate and liberal Republic.:l.!ls \lo·ho
support Kuchel.
There'U be plenty O{ California firsts
in this election.
The polls were open (rom 7 a.rn. to 8
p.m. in every county for the first time.
In the past, counties with less than
400,CM'.Xl population clOSed their polls at
7 p.m.
Laguna Building
Permits Double
Nearly half a 1nillion dollars \\'orth
of l\1ay building permits pushed
Laguna Beach to more than double the
permit valuation for the first five
months oC 1967.
Clyde Z. Springe, city building and
planning director, said the 47 permits
issued in May were for an estimated
construction cost of $495.441 .
This compared to a $130,811 valua·
tion total for 50 permits issued in May
1967.
Springe s&id the total valuation of
permits through May of this year ii
$2.384.730 compared to $1,009,080 du r·
ing the same period last year.
The permits included nine for ne\\'
one-family homes and one for a multi·
family · dwelling of five units. There
were also nine ~its issued for com-
mercial alterations wbiCh totaled
$ll3,755.
• • •••
lukewarm voler turnout in the early
hours and then lhe pace at the ballot
boxes begins to pick up to heavy levels
in the late afternoon and early even·
iilg.
Polls "i ll remain open throughout
the state for the first time ~ a
primary election. until 8 p.m. tonight,
one hour past the usual closing time.
Memorial Service
Set Wednesday
For· Mrs. Macl ver
;\ memorial runeral service for
1'-!argaret MacJver, a retired nurse
from South Laguna, "'ill begin at 3
p.m. \Yednesday in the parlor of Com-
munity Presbyterian Church o f
Laguna Beach.
1'-1iss Maciver, 31745 Fourth Ave .•
died Sunday_ at South Coast Com·
m unity Hospital following a brief il·
lness. She was 86. The service will be
conducted by Dr, Dallas Turner. Miss
1'.1aclver had been an active member
; of the church since 1953.
l\1iss Maciver was head nurse of the
Veteran's Administration hospitals
during the \var years and traveled
throughout 14 states visiting and
supervis ing hospitals.
In 1967, she was awarded a SO·year
pin in recognition of her work with the
American Red Cross.
In ..recent years. s he had worked
from 15 to 17 hours a \Veek in volun·
tary work at South Coast CommunitY
Hospital. Four weeks ago she respond·
ed to a call to jury duty.
Miss Maciver had been an active
member of the Business a n d
Professional Women's Club for 34
ye;::rs. She was honored recently for
continuous .service to the club.
Miss Maciver is survived by a
brother, Murdoch Maciver of Toronto,
Canada; a nephew and two grand-
nieces of Pico Rivera. Calli.
The \Vestminster l\1emorlal Park
Mortuary is in charge o{ the funeral
service.
/.
' Second in W ate1~color
Exhibition Due· Saturday
'The secorid in a series oi watercolor
demonstrations in coMectioo with the
IOlst exhibit by the A m e r i c a n
Watercolor Society vruJ be held Satur-
day et ttie Laguna Beach Art AiSOCia· ·
ti on .
Art~st Morris Shubin will
demoostrate jn water color In the
Main Gallery beginning et 7:Xl p.m.
The painting_ created in the session wm be auctioned to tne high bidder.
Shubin, wllo paints in transparent
and opaque w a t ercol ors, 111
repres:ented in mfllly private art col·
Jeotions.
A member ol the bOard oi directors ~
of the Alhambra. Art 'Assodation, hi s
most 1'8Cent award was for be5t
w.at.ercolor in tile La Mirada Fiesta cit
Arts last month.
II~ painting "r ish ond Chlj>s" was
selected by the Springfltld, MlssouM
Art Mustt1m to travel for a ye_ar with
tlM? exhibit.ion "Watercolor U.S.A.
1968."
Admission will be $2 for non-
members and $1.50 for members. ,...
READY TO DEMONSTRi\TE
W1ltrcolorl1t Morrl1 .Shubln ..
Le Due Tho, the personal envoy of
President Ho Chi Minh of North Viet-
nam, 'arrived Monday an<! promptly
pubUcly took .:.. hard line. ~
He said there can be. ret'l peace
talks -the aim of the current pathfin-
ding sessions -if the United States
uncondlti.onally halts bombing North
Vietnam and othe~ "acts of war."
Artist to Enter . .
Plea of Innocent
Laguna Beach wtist Andrew Staley
\Ving Jr. t.old the DA ILY PILOT today
that he will plead innocent Of astiault
-and battery charges brought against
him by another local man ..
WarrB;Dts against Wing, 36, of 1244
Victory Walk, ..nd Mary Myrkla
Marks of 13~ Lewellyn St., were ob·
tained after imurance consultant
Rorrald Kaufman , 31, of 432 P ark Ave ..
allegett he was beaten at the Lewellyn
Street address on May 13. _
\Ying said the altercat.io:' at tbe
Le\\•eYyn Stl'eet addn. :~ occurred
when he tittempted to st.op K.iufman
from moving Mrs . Marks' furniture
and personal possessions from the
home.
"I know of no blows struck by Mrs.
~arks or by me." he said.
"I am and will be more than bappy
to pr esent "'hat happened at ?11rs.
~1arks' home 1o Utis paper, the police.
court or anyone interestec: in learning
more about the matter," Wing said . 1 He· said be would plead innocent lo
the ch~ge in municipal court June 11
and seek a trial to clear himself.
U.5. diplomats le ... by Ambassador·
at-Large W. Averell Harriman reserv·
ed comment. They wanted to see if the
man from Hrmoi might pull something
new from the ~leeve o: his high·necked
military tunic Wednesday. • 'r.lo today was consu· ~ing Xuan Thuy
and other Hanoi del,egates.
Tho clearly j1.ad more autbority than
Thuy to begin give and take diplomacy
that the North Vietnamese bave avOii.d-
ed here so far.
1n public Tho was all smiles and
courtesy but a.s unyielding thus far as
Thuy. •
But he bore a special irnportan~_e.
Tho has been a Communist -patty
member for 40 years. He sits on
llanoi's politbufo. Not·only Communist
officials met him at the airJ>Ort Mon-
day but also tlieir wives and cliildren,
a Red diplomatic gesture extended on·
Jy to the more majestic proletarioo
potentates.
See Pavilion
Th-en and Now
Balboa Peninsula was just a long
spit of sand in 1904 when the Balboa
Pavilion was built and some property
of dubious value -including a mud
flat which later \\'as fiUed in to
become Lldo Isle -was given as in-
centive to bring the "Red Car" trolleys
to the new resort.
i:he cupola-topped old Pavilion is
about to become an official historical
landmark. The story and some
delightful pictures ol the Pavilion -
then and now - are on.Page 8 today.
Laguna Planners
Okay Restaurant
A restaurant and bar atop the ninth
floor of the SW'! and Sand Tower,
under construction next to the -Outrig-
ger Restaurant, received the Laguna
Beach Planning Commission's bless·
ings Monday night.
The applicant, Golden S t a t e
Properties, Inc., asked to amend a
previous variance so it might include
a 1,200·square-foot bar by reducing
space from 2,400 square feet to 1,150.
Speaking In behalf of the applicatioo,
Bernard Syfan said "we can get more
than the staff's evaluation of what
parking requirements oughf to be. In
our revised parking lot layout we can
get an additional nine spaces without
parking lot attendants ·and 17·more if
we do utilize parki•g attendants."
Planners unanimously agreed to go
along with the proposal however,
stipulated that a ne'v site plan showing
the required amount of parking spaces
be Submitted.
has it!
,,
• • •
Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning costs · more
than the old shampoo method •••
However, the Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet and the carpet backing. Since no brushing or
scrubbing action is used, there is no distortion of the carpet pile. Th e
powerful ext raction action of the Deep Steam process lifts matted pile to
"like new" appearance.
Th e need for frequent professional cleaning is reduced because the deepfy
imbedded .abrasi ve dirt particles (that cut carpjlt f ibers) are removed, and
there is no detergent residue left in the carpet to collect dirt. During the
Deep Steam cleaning process all the carpet fibe rs are coated with a special
soil retardant. '
"It's si mple logic ..• Yo u profit in the long ru n when you use Deep Steam
Carpet Cleaning because your carpet will be cleaner than ever before
possible. It will stay clean longer and wear longer because you used Deep
Steam Carpet Cleaninc •.. " .
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' •
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Explosions
Rock Parts
Of Oakland
· OAKLAND (AP) -Thfee tremen-
dom explosions, latest in a series or
attacks against utility company facil-
itles, .rocked hill sections of North
Oakland and Berkeley early today.
•The blasts brought down three 70-
foot towers cutting oU service to 30,·
00> Pacific Gas & Electric Co. resi·
dential and industrial customers.
The explosions followed one another
in split .seconds at 4:40 a.m. Thous-
ands of persons asleep were aroused
but there were no casualties.
Authorities said the charges w e r e
planted on two legs cf each i.ower
about 15 feet above the ground.
As the steel structures, standing
abou.t 24 feet apart, came down, they
fell 1n almost perfect alignment. Six
115,000-volt lines toppled with them.
---·,...,,.. -
TutSd11, J11111 4, 1968 'D.ULY ~!LOT
'HATS' THE WAY -Orange Fireman Gary Coniff
loans his hat to 31h-year-old Children's Hospital
of Orange County patient, Daniel Depue of GarP,en
Grove, to gain his confidence before moving both
bed and boy in massive shift Monday which is part
of hospital's expansion project.
PG&E reported that as the second
tower collapsed it took out a secondary
12,000-volt line that carried both elec·
tric and telephone service to the im·
mediate area.
Hunting ton Man
Faces Charge
Of Kidnaping
'l A liuntington Be-den man is being ·
he ld in Anaheim jail today on charges
'of kidnaping an 18-year-old MA:lgnolia
High School girl.
~olic~ said JosePh 'W . Dutra, 52, of
9782 Charing Cross Drive drove to the
hig:h school in Anaheim Monday morn-
ing and induced Karen Jeanette
Chputo, 18 , to get into his car.
Officers ooid Dutra told Ule girl that
her father W•as ill and he was taking
her Mme. They said she had no
reasion to doubt him because he is the
father "Of her boyfriend, Norman
Dutra. 19.
-Instead of taking the girl .home ,
Dutra drove her to his home in Hun-
tington Beach.
Police questioned classmates of the
girl who had seen her get into the
Dutra ear and determined that the oar
cou ld have been one frequently used
by the boyfriend.
Chief's T enn Okayed
\VA.S HINGTON (UPI/ -Congress
has approved and sent to the White
.House a bill to aUow Gen. Earle G.
\Vheeler to serve a fifth year as
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
r
•
Pre~ious Cargo
The arcing wires writhed and snap-
ped across Skyline Boulevard. leav-
ing scorch marks on the ground.
Oakland police closed about three
miles of Skyline and Griz:z)y ~Peak
boulevards for several hours on either
TELEPHOTO VIEW OF VALLEY OF DEATH IN RIVER BOTTOM
Huntington Beach Detectives Cluster Around De•d Youth
Kids Part of Hospital's Mo ve · side of the blast.
The routes were reopened before
the morning peak traffic got under
way.
~ r -
YoungMan'sBodyFound
r
And remodeling of tht. Y4cated se-
cond lloor got under way. Completion
is scheduled for early July.
It was no ordinary moving day.
A.long with the furniture, filing
~abinets and office equipment, the
precious cargo to be shifted Crom the
second floor of Children's Hospit..al of
Or_pnge County in Orange to the newly
cofnpleted third · lloor i n c l u d e d
childre,n. •
. Present overcrowding of the coun·
. ty's only ch}ldren's hospital will be
relieved wtfen the cWTent expansion
program brings the total number of
beds to 104.
Investigators said the cllarges. ap-
peared to be a type of plastic explosive
so intense that the tower legs melted.
There were no primary fuses typical
of the dynamite charges used in blasts
against the PG&E and Pacific Tele·
phone Co. in hte same general area in
April and March.
In Plowed Beach FieW
They ·ranged from newborn infants ·
in their p!Mtic isolettes to youngsters
suffering from hyaline membrane
disease, a malady in which a coating
infilde the patient's lungs interferes
\Yith the normal flow of oxygen. The
yowig patient usually spends about
two hours in a respirator alternated
with 4-0 minutes under an oxygen hood
around the clock. And CH 0 C
specializes in the treatment.
Hospital offiClals knew where to get
help with their· delicate moving opera-
tion.
Monday morning 15 firemen !r1 l
the city of Orange Fire Department.
under the direction of Chief Floyd D.
liiggs, reported for du~y.
Within an hour they had moved the
critically· ill youngsters and-the llie
support systems whfch kept them
alive. They jollied and joked with the
less critical patier. · -the tonsil
cases, appendectomy recovery pa-
tients and others .
•
Slayer Convicted
• I For Second Trme
LONG BEAC!i ·(UPI) -Robert
Leslie \Vebster was convicted by a
Superior Court jury Mond.ay of the
strangulation murder of a 38-year-old
Long Beach divorcee.
Judge Roy J . Brown sentenced
\Vebster, 51, to life imprisonment. The
judge set June 28 as the date for hear-
ing a motion for a new trial submitted
by Dennis Fredrickson, Webster's
defense attorney.
It was the sicond time \Veqster had
been found guilty of the slaying of
Diane Hwley in September, 196..1.
FBI agents joined local police in an
in ves tigation.
The University of California Law-
rence Radiation Laboratory, blacked
out-for almost 12 hours in March, \Vas
affected briefly today.
The power cut blacked out the north
Oakland Hill area. the Berkeley in-
dustrial district and homes in Oak·
land's-Montclair section.
Absentee Vote Bill
Qkay~d by Sen a te
•
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate
h3f given final congressional approval
to a "l:nD urging the states let their
residents traveling overseas vote by
absentee ballot.
The action Monday was on an
amendment to legislation which gives
servicemen absentee ballot privileges.
..
A yuung man, clean-cut appearing
with a hippie-type medallion hung on a
chai n from his neck. was found
sprawled In death early today in a
plowed field in l·luntington Beach.
Police said the body, fully clothed
and face-up in the field , was
discoverl!t.1 h¥ two men who were
on a daily one-mile jog around the
open area near Hamilton Avenue and
Brookhurst Street, not far Crom the
Costa Mesi city limits.
1• Orange County coroner's deputies
tentatively identified the dead man as
Frank Smith, about 20 years old, from
Phoenix, Ariz. The tentative iden-
tification was made only Crom l\l/O
Social Security cards which were
found on ihe bO<lt. · .-" ~luntington Beach detective Captain
Earle Robitaille told the DAILY
PILOT that so far, no evidence of foul
play has been uncovered in the death.
County coroners have scheduled .an
NOW SHINING ... ANTIQUED PATENT
~
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• 11 FASKIOl4 tsLANO
•
The new patent is antiqued. The toe is gently 1ounded. The heel is higher
and straighter. Antiqued brown or antiqued platinum with black patent tiim. Also
in black patent with matte calf trim. By De Liso Debs. See theil1 shine.
at Buffu111s', 21.00. Shoe Salon , an seven Slo!es
u umS'
' . '
..
--• 644°2200 . • llONOAY, lliURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 Till 9:30
------
I ~
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autopsy laier today.
Police hope to make a positive iden·
tification and determine the cause of
death late today .
The body was discovered by Air
Force Major Russell Petrie of ?D862
Surge Lane and his running compan·
kin, Karl Lederer, a programming an·
alyst or 20902 Surge Lane, who noti·
fied police.
Th~ body found today in the Santa
Ana •River bottomland field was about
two miles across toW-n froin the mud·
dy ditch alongside a field at the in-
tersection of Yorktown and Newhope
in which was foond the body of "Jane
Doe ."
The victim of .. the apparent murder
was lying face down in the ditch with
h€r throat cut wheri that body we.s
found less than three months ago. The
corpse, labeled "Jane Doe" by cor-
oner's deputies, has never been Iden-
tified.
•
OlliEli DATS 10:00 TllL 5:S
,
. -
• , •
4 DAll.Y 'f'ILOT Toesdl)'. June 4, 1%8
~--~ ....... ...,
San Rafael Sherill's deputies in-
formed a burglary suspect of his
consUtuUonal right. before they
arrested him, only to have him
answer "I know my rigbls. Get
me the' bell outta here." The dep-
uties found the suspect, Oon•ld
. edward Sml~. 32, wedged tict~~
eight feet from the top of a . •
ney he apparently entered to gem
access to a golf clubhouse . ••
• Singer Wayne Newton, 26, .married
former airline stt'1001'de&s Elaine Oka·
111ura, 23; in a quiet cl'-remony_ at the
Little Church of the West in Las
Vegas Saturday. The pair hosted
about 75 · fr'irnds at a breakfast re·
ception atl the Flamingo Hotel, where
· Newton wilt open an engagement
Jtilt1 ;4. The-pair has been dating
about three vears and were e11gaged ...
· last Christmas. The11 wilt reside tn
Las Vegas where Newton has a 48·
aCTe ranch. • Royaton Tilbury, 37, of Barking,
England, who left his wile and
eight children four years ago,
walked into court today and offer-
ed to repay all $6, 4llO which the
state paid to support his family. He-
said he was now a successful
scrap-metal dealer, a position he
would not have been able to attain
had he not left his family. He said
he was ready to "start our life all
over again." • Dr. R•lph B. Wiiiiams, still car-
rying five bullets in bis head, has
been released from St. Mary's Hos-
pital. Williams, 57, a biologist from
AJaska. was attacked by two men
May 12 while returning to his San
Francisco hotel from a theater.
Knocked unconscious before he
was shot, Williams didn't seek
medical aid until 15 hours later.
Doctors were astounded when X-
rays showed five small caliber bul-
lets lodged in his head. Deciding
an operation would -be dangerous,
doctors ruled to release him from
the hospital • Three sisters from \Vinslo\v,
Maine accuston1ed to doing things
together, Y1ere married ~n a trip_le
\vedding Saturday. Linda W1I·
tiams 20. married Army Pfc. Wil-
liam Johnson, 21, of Thorndike;
Dot, 19, married James Waterman,
19, of Belfast ; and Jan,, 18. was
the bride of Army Pfc. Elwood
Hubbard, 19, of Unity. • Michael Callan and Patricia Har-
ty, \.\'ho were co-starred in the tele-
vi sion series "Occasional \Vife,"
\Vere married Saturday. The wed·
ding took place in the r".cently pur-
chased home in Coldwater Canyon
nep.r Hollywood. • -.........
Residents of suburban Elk
Grove Village called police and
reported hearin g s hout I of
''T11ere are snipers in the vil-
lage," coming fro m a wooded
area. Heavil y a~d offi.c:er1
cre pt through the woods with
shotg un! «tut carbilies at tlie
ready and found Arm y reserve
units undergoing special week·
end riot training.
• Assemblyman Ken MacDona ld,
(0-0jai) who will be married to-
day to Leslie Hodge of Ojai Valley,
,.,.as congratulated Wednesday by
-Poor People
Hope to See
Clark TodaY.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Members
of the Pwr People'• Campaign eave
up Monday after an eight~hour walt to
see Attorney General :Ramsey Clark.
TJiey ·were going back to the JUltice
Department ·today.
Clark refused Monday to meet with
a delegation of 100 Iodlllll, Mexlcin-
Americans, Appalachian ~te. and
poor blacks. protestlng the UXUctment
Friday of 13 men by a LOs Angeles
grand jury.
Clark offered several times Monday
to me.et with a smaller group of 20 to
25 but the demonstrators turned hln\
do1wn. The attorney ieneral finally
agreed to discuss the grievances with
a delegation Of JOO today. and leaders
said they would bold him to his-word.
Although Clark refused to grant the
demonstrator& an audience, the poor
people claimed victory at the eod of
their Monday vigil when thelr leader,
Rodolio "Corky" Gonzales, announced
that bail for nine Of the 13 men in
custody in Los Angeles had been
reduced from $12,500 each to $315 for
eight of them and $1.250 for the other.
"That's power," he dec~ared.
The accused are members of a
gro4p called the Brown Berets. They
are accused of leading a Los Angeles
high school walkout.
The Washington demonstrators,
backed by 300 supporters from Resur-
rection City, home base for the Poor
People's March, came to Clark
demanding tbat he investigate the
case. .
H<>sea Williams, newly named chief
or direct action demonstrations for the
campaign. emerged from · a . long
session with Clark to say he was "tru.
ly hurt" by Clark's insistence on a
smaller group. ·
"We used every means of-dijllomacy
short of being Uncle Tom.s lo get Mr.
Clark not •to be m·ean. not to be evil.
not. to perpetrate another injustice on
poor people," said Williams.
A crowd estimated at 400 gave
\Villiams !Oud applause and followed
him in a process-ion around the block·
long Justice Department building.
More than 100 police looked on silently
and made no move.
During the demonstration s. Clark
quietly left his fifth floor office and '
went home .
State Indians
To Get $700
Land Pay1nent
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -The House
passed legislation Monday 'vhich
would give California's estiinated
40,00J Indians about $700 each for
lands taken from thei1· ancestors in
1852.
The bill, which authorizes distribu-
tion of more than $29 million av.·arded
to the Indians' by U1e Indian Claims
Commission in 1964, now goes to the
S2 nate.
The legislation by Rep. B. Jo'. Sisk
(D-Cali!.), was passed by ''unanimous
consent" -·meaning that even one
vote could h·ave blocked the bill. Rep.
Albert \V. Johnson (R-Pa.), did not
vote against the measure, but he ques-
tioned distribution of the money
"without strings attached."
Chairman \Vayne N. Aspinall (D·
Colo.). of the House Interior Com-
mittee said the money would go to the
individuals because the Indians are
scattered and there is no trlbal
organization to which it could be paid.
Johnson then pointed to demonstra-
tions ia the capital by Indians taking
part in the Poor Peoples Campaign
and asked whether the. $700 payments
were "going to satisfy at least the In-
dians in Calliornia."
"ThiS will not satisfy all !he Indians
in Cataornia, but it will have to do,'' Asp~ll replied .
The bill authorized expenditure of up
to '$350,000 .from the funds to pay 1or
preparing a roll of eligible Indians and
tor distributing the money. Attorney
fees and litigation tosts reduced the
$29.l million award to $26.S million.
but the dlfference has been more than r nid Up in interest.
Marine Corporal
Sues Landlord
-An Ex-officer
the Asserhbly in Sacramento. The SAN DIEGO fUPI) -Marine. CpL
lower house of the legislature sur-James R. Grandy. 22. sued h1s
prised him with a joking measure landlord, a former l\1arine officer.
which commended Jiim for hi s "ad-~fonda)" In a dispute which began
mlrable rionpartisanship where the wbeo the Jandlor.1 h~d the corporal ar-
opposite sex has been concerned." rested for disrespctt.
"tt also praised him for "finding The superior court suit alleged forci-
time to pursue such noble activities ble ei:atry, trespass and false im-
in the lace of an overwhelming prM:ooment and asked for dami!ges
leglslatun schedule.'' ""8ling ru,ooo. e Grandy'.s suit aUe&ed that the
landlord , former Marine Lt. Col. P,..ident Johnton served 'that Gordon HardwlekJ forced his way into
he cal1ed a "light lunch" lo visit-the two-room apartment the Marine
ing Prime Minister and Mr1. John ren(ed In Oceanside withO\lt previous
0 . Gorton of Australia and other written notice and removed 01e .(ront
ranch guests Thursday. T~e Mexj. door tind stove. The Marine allegedly
can-style midday meal included owed S6.5 rent at th e time.
cn.chilada1, ~. beans. tamaJes .. - -Hardwick took ove r os land1urd -a~
chile con.q\leso, guacamole salad. £P.w days before the incident. The day
and lortll111. It. was all tdllP.ecl off alter Hardwick took over the pro-
wilb strawberries and wttipped perty, the Marln-e'11 wife gave birth to
cream and cookies. • sfrl. 4'1 ......
-
.. -
. ... __ ,..,._ -. -
~,ff ,;...hot.
A bby Turtas Flabby
Hurricane Moves
'Meekly' Ashore
~ .
PUNTA GORDA Fla. (UPI)-Hur-
ricane Abby moved meekly ashore to-
day and swiftly degenerated into a
squall that farmers cilled a b~1slng
to their cltru.5 groves.
ru Abby quickly dropped from a
minimal hurricane to a minimal trop-·
teal storm. the :sf.foot-sloop Celerity,
missing in the .storm since Sunday,
sailed safely into Flamingo, Fla., with
four persons aboard.
But the storm had claimed one life
In the Florida Keys and another man
wu still missing at sea,
At midda~ the first hurri~ane of the
four-ctay~ld season was a tropical
storm with winds that reached only 40
miles an hour. 1be NaUonal Hurricane
Center at Miami said the dilfu.ed,
wide-spread center would reach the
AUantic, somewhere around Cape
Kenn<dy, lalAl tonight.
before Abby struck land.
AJ the storm ciwne ashore at Pun-
ta Gorda, a sberitf'a deputy reported
"There's no wlnd at all. The leaves are
barely !D•vlllg."
Squalls wltb winds clocked at 40 to
50 mJles an hour swept the Cape Ken-
nedy area, and a tornado was spotted
in the air near the space center there.
\Vinds up to 45 miles an hour were ex-
pected as far south as Miami .
But it appeared that a nlgbt spe nt
milling around off the coast left Abby
too weak and flabby to deal banhly
with the hWTicane-wise residents of
the ·FIO<ida peninsula.
At 9" a.m. the National Hurricane
Center at MlamJ. centered the storm ri~t atop Punta Gorda, about 100
miles south of Tampa. It was moving
northeast up the Peace River at about
10 1niles an hour. Authorities there
said there had been no severe weather
all morning.
'• i. -SENSE OF HUMOR -A St. Pete~s burg , Fla., s tore windo\v, taped
against flying glass in anticipation· o! Hurricane Abby, reflects a bit
o! humor by the store owner as he puts the name of the ,eared lady
in tape on the plate glass. At last report, Abby had moved meekly
ashore and degenerated into a small squall.
"Right now we do not expect Abby
to reintenslfy when it reaches the At-
lantic," sald Chief F'orecastt'r Dr. R.
H. Simpson. "It looks like Abby has
had her day in court."
!..(Jngrange forecasts, he ·said, indi -
cated elements of the storm mi ght
head northward in the Atlantic and re-
enter the coast near Savannah, Ga .,
"But rig'1t now its future movement is
quite uncertain. \Ve'll know better
sometime tomoITOw what the potential
The stonn was expected to spill out
into the Atlantic near Cape Kennedy
later today.
'
Y>nspiracy Trial
Hunt Near Azores Shows is." . .
Jiurricane warnings were lowered
along a 17_0-mlle section or the Gull
Coast.
• Defendant Feared
No . Trace of Missing Sub
"This is the best thing that could
happen tO citrus as Jong as the wind
stays away," said a citrus grower
ooar Tampa .. The weak storm carried torrential
rains but virtually no wind. Nearly
two hours after its center moved
ashore here, the highest winds record·
ed were guests of SO miles an hour at
Cape Kennedy. But the weather bu-
reau warned that the storm, fir st o!
the Tlt!W season. might spawn torna-
does.
World War Three
•
BOSTON IUP!)" -A defendant in
the antidrait conspiracy trial of Dr.
Benjamin Spock and four others
lesti:lied taj~y. he was against the
Vietnam WM' because President
Johnson "perpetrated a great Jraud
on the American people ."
. NORFQLK , Va . I UPll -Search
openations in three Atlantic.areas near
the Azores have ended without finding
a trace 0£ the missing atomic sub-
marine Scorpion, the Navy announced
today.
\Vhile other pinpoint search opera-
tions were in progress, Navy officials
prepared to initiate a formal inquiry
into the Scorpion's disappearance with
99 aboard. The court of inquity is ex·
peeled to convene \Vednesday.
The Navy said the nuclear sub-
marine Gato and the submarine
-{;{ -{;{ -{;{
Hunt Skipper
Tells of Sad
'False Alarm'
NORFOLK, \.'a. (UPI) -For U1e
crew of the nuclear attack subm~ne
Lapon. the faint radio signal pw·port·
Ing to be from the missing submarine
Scorpion ''Vt-as liKe an electric current
passing Uirough t!he ship ."
\\lithin seconds of the call last
\Vednesda y ~ hopeful ne,vs had
F.pread through the Lapon. whose cre\v
had many £riends aboard the Scorpion.
Then U1e radio message proved
spurious. and the Lapan r eturned
empty handed from it s storm-battered
search -"a tremendouslv sad e vent."
in the words of its skipper. Cmdr.
Chester M. Mack.
Monday, Gmdr. Ma::k docked the
Lapon here after being replaced by
the submarine Sturgeon in th e hunt for
l:lte Scorpion over 300.000 square miles
of ti.l e AtlanUc. •
E"cept for the brief moment '''hen it
. r.ppeared the radio signal might be
&uthenUc , the Lapan's seal'Ch "was a
\'Cry uneventful, hard, long, 1ough-luck
l'ffort t'hat pro\'.ed' to be completely
unsuccessful," Mack said.
M;ackwas a close friend of U1e Scor-
pion's skipper, Cmdr. Francis A. Slat.
tery. and he said many others of his
ere\v buddied with the Scorpion's 99
men .
Mack and his navigation and opera-
! ions officer. Lt. Cmdr. John H.
Macltinnon. descr1bei:l the event in a
wardro:>m interview,
TI1ere aetu.ally were two almost
identical v.o1 c e messages spaced
mere 1h3fl five n1inutes apart, they
t<Jld United Press Interootiona'l.
The votte said: "Any sttftion tihis net
-this is the Brandywine." "Bran.
dywine" v.>as the then-classified code .
name of the SC(lrpion <i~d net \vas
sll<>rt. for ,radio net\\o·ork .
The voice mes£ages were preceded
by week signals and were followed
some time later by weak keyboard
signals, the officers said. The Lapon
was able to · get a bearing on U1e
keyboard signals but bed not had time
to get 1 bearing on the voice
messages.
Mack said tile messages came on ~
radio frequency the Scorpion might
have U5ed and they originated at sea.
nol on the mainland. There was no
chance to get a poslUve fix on the
point 0( origin.
Although the Navy .00 the Federal
Commuolcatlons Commialon are iii·
vesUgating possible 1ouree1 of the
broadcast, the Navy now· 00Mider1 it
most unlikely that it actuetly came
from the Scorpion.
But .at ttie time the code word Bren·
dywine was flrtt heard In tl'le LapOn
radio room, M"aek safd. "It was like aq
electric current passing through t.lic
ship.
"'Phtre-b-no-qutslion thie.t scxneone
used tho call 'Brandywine' at an ex-
tremely UDaPl?':oJ"l•IO time," Mack
~aid \rith evidtnt bittemess. ;'And
tbat's an understatement." 1
J"cscue th{~, Kittiv.·ake had completed
their ~earch in the vicinity of ·the
Cruiser and Irving banks. moun-'
tainous underseas areas south of the
Azores, and were nioving to Hyeres
Bank 55 miles to the southwest..
VISUAL SEARCH
A French submarine, the Rcquin,
has al.so completed a search of the
Marsalla Bank without result and bas
resumed its normal eastward cruise
across the Atlantic, the Navy said.
The ammunition ship Shasta has
concluded a vis ual search of the Scor-
pion's projected track across 1he
Atlantic without results and is return-
ing to normal operations in the
Mediterranean. .
Another oceanographic ship, the
transport Bowditch, was scheduled to
leave today from Southhampton,
England. to join the Azores search.
The court of lnquiry will investigate
all available facts surrounding the
disappearance of the Scorpion .
A staff investigator for the Joint
Congressional Atomic Energy Com·
mittee also was on hand ,at Atlantic
. Fleet headquarters here as an
''obscr\'er. ''
!!,000 i\llLES
lie is Navy CapL Francesco
Castagaliola. The Navy said he was
prepared to fly to the scene il the sub
should be located and any salvage or
rescue operation \Vere ta. get under
\\'ay.
But an armada of rive destroyers
tracking UlC Scorpion's intended
course across the Atlantic had covered
nearly 2,00J miles Sunday \vithout fin -
ding any trace of the missing craft.
The destroyers, traveling at 13
knots, proceeded.from Norfolk toward
the Azores, covering the scheduled
route of the Scorpion in reverse.-
Other craft were searching an area
south of the Azores where the SC(lr-
pion was last heard from May 21 at
tlhe outset of a planned westward
journey to its Norfolk base.
In all, 22 ships are involved in the
search. In addition, 'l1 plahes flew
missions from bases at Norfolk, the
Azores and the Bahamas.
Nearly six inches of rain fell in 24
hours at Jo"ort Myers. Citrus farmer
Fletcher Lett said his gauge recorded
three inches of rain since Monday
"a:1d we can stand a lot more." Dry
weather in central Florida has ham-
pered tile citrus croP".
The Red Cross said It housed 455
persons in 17 emergency shelters
along the Gulf Coast Monday night,
but after serving the "refugees"
breakfast the shelters '4'ere closed-
FBI Insists
Search for Ray
Still 'Intense'
\VASHINGTON (UPI ) -No. 9 on
the FBI's ten most wanted lis-t has yet
to be Caught, but Justice Department
officials insist the search for James
Earl Ray is just as intense as ever.
Ray, a 40-year~Id escaped convict,
is being sought in connei!tion with the
slaying two tnonths ago today of civil
rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.
No new infor1nation about ·Ray. his
whereabouts, his 1notives or possible
conspirators has been issued by the
FBI since the first series of bulletins
for Ray's arrest.
But FBI spokesmen told United
Press International today the bureau
and' local law enforce1nent agencies
across the nation "are continuing an
intensive investigation and we have
every hope of producing positive
results."
The search for the accused slayer
became a point In the Poor People's
list of grievances Monday when about
400 demonslTators marched on the
Justice Department.
Mitchell Goodman, 44, of Temple,
Mair:.e, under ex'8lllin-ation by his .at-
torney, Edward G. Barshak, said he
· be~am_g "po_litically active" alter the·
1964 Gull of Tonkin resolution because
of "a great fear of a third world war."
Goodm<i.n, an author and travel
writer, was on the st.and for the se-
cond straight day in U.S. District
Court. He told the .12-man jury "Mr.
Johnson had no mandate from the peo-
ple to escalate the war and he
perpetrated a great fraud on the
American people because of the Gulf
of Tonkin resolution."
On trial with the noted baby doctor
and God man are Michaed Ferber, 23,
of BuffaJo. N.Y., a Harvard graduate
student; 1'he Rev. William Sloane Co£·
fin, Jr .. 43. dlaplain at Yale Universi·
ty : and Marcus Raskin, 33, codirector
of t h e Institute for Policy Studies in
Washington, D. C. ,
AJJ are accused of conspiring to
counsel young men to evade the draft.
"I felt I had to do every~hing I could
before this war destroyed th e
American people and the people or
Vietnam," G09dman told the crowded
12th noor courtroom.
Ai·genti11a Hea1t
Recipient Dies
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Antonio
Enrique Serrano. 54 , died today four
days after he became Argen tina's first
heart transplant patient.
Serrano died in Model Clini c in the
Buenos Aires suburb of Lanus of what
Dr. Hector Ruggiereo described as
"neurological" causes.
Serrano, a noodle salcs1nan, had
been in a coma sine~ shortly after the
operation Friday . lie received the
heart of Emilio Tomase tti. 47, presi·
dent of the Arge ntine Poultry and Egg
Uni on. Tomasetti died of a heart al·
tack.
Abby's Above Florida
Hurricane ~nd Gale Wind Warnings Posted
California Ten1perat11res
Soull>em C1ilt11n1I• w•• mollly •~,,.
"" lod•f t XCtDI f1)r l>'llfll1tem high
Clouds •n<I mornlllll co.•t•t lot. G~llv
wln<lt bulleted deserl 1re1s. 8lvtne•1
111 Mond•V WIS Ille n.iion·s h111he1I
teml>ll!rt lurl.
11 w11 mo11lv 111nnr In Lai Angeles
incl vJcln(ty titer !M sun bumed oll
morning low t loudS •n<I CMslel 109.
Tod~r·s "!11n w11 15, do~ tour dt·
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There .,.,s Hght 1moo In Ille Los
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., 1J>Clt(J, 11!110v11h mGrT1tn11 lot t totll•
""ta mo111 at N•W l!:miu"".
W1rm tov!M rlv ~ff~' brOllll!>I '°'"' noomt1 temotrllllffl to the P11l1>1 1rtc1 !ht Ml"ltt!Ol l Vtl!fy, ..... !fl
t!W ~rcvrv In !flt ~rt11 toil Of !OP>
1lnt1 11'9 'II d"rft fnlrk. Hat wtlthtf
w11 Ill 1111111 for "'1 arid *"""" ...
All)UOllfrQllf
Am;hor&ge
Al\1nl1
81ktrsflt ld
81$t!iltdt
8 0111
Boston
ChltlOO
Cim;lnr>al!
C!!'Yl'l•rlll
Denver
0ei Moil'IU
[)eU•olt
EU~8
Fort Wof!h
r~sl'lll
"''~ ... 1-<0f'Olvhl
llo11>1on
K1.,_,11 Cltv
L11 Ir,_•~
lM A"fflel ""'""""'ff' MlnnetPOll1
H•W Or1t1111
New York
o.~i.l'ld .......
1'1.a '°'"" Pllllttklltlllt
Plloeftlll
Plllibuttll
Porlltncl
lhokl Cfl'I'
Rtof SM I ••M Sitt;remrnto ... Lo.il1
$1!111.111
Silt LAI<• C!"'
'-n 01 .... 0
~n PrAlt(lltll
Sfnll A ...
'"" 11•"'-r• J.11tti.
-OM
Tllf""•I W111111 ..... ~
•
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--------------- - -
I
"
•
I
'
• • • t ,.JJ
_10 DAILY PILOT Tut~)', Junt 4, 1968
Your OVER THE COUNTER
full senice
banker
fl'lnk Zrebl.c,
IHDUSTJtlAl S Ml Corp
Al.E Pl!;ill~ Pak ~j:"!aliilK fk 14-
A 'llf~ F~~ltlhl :Jt..,~'~' '~ .3' AlllllllOi Eaulfiff 'I/ Id P•aoert!.n A Prap Ill J.OD A t~n & 8KOn • .C.. Am llfcla ,,,..Int .:IS ""'*' e-urn1 1.C AIMr Gt~lngs A .60 Am :'1:/ Enlero .10.
:::: .. llbr, i,~:w:: .:
Amico Pr-run . .a Arllidht Inc I
Vice PresiderU, Manapr
He's manager of our Costa
Meu office. He'll sea that you 11et the best, most' complet•
banking help available. After
an, that's what full service
banking is all about. Stop in
today and set acquainted with us.
.-.ncflot' Corp 1 . .0 ,._., 8!0WI. 1.lO A~flecl MfQ"'llCI Arden·M.lv!~(r AruerHt\a~lalr Pl le "lllOCr•I Trvl Prod Ar i A11ro Cn.m Arrow·fie!jl & ~19t ,,1(1 Lynn F. Butchet of COS· Arrowht Pur1t11 1.11 Al>dlotr~.!.." co ta l\i e s a has been !~'=:li;; l~~:' a °' AltK OU .. c;.1 1 named assis tant man-e1bc<>M e1m ro11k1 8amn. Hiiiei Ph1rm
ager of Security First t':r,'W c'::i!'.~ ·"°
N · I B nk' C 8 '11.1115 Ven .. s1 .60 ationa a s y-::~1·~~1111ow1y
1845 Newport Btvd.
T.,..PhorM: 646-3291,
from Santa Ana 545·3011
press Branch , which =~~~t:': ~tc1iirn
will be opened Thurs-81~ i~ne Unlrs day. He i·oined Security r::il)<I c111n11 .GJ IDWl ftr P-r , 164 Bank last yea r wh en he r klodord Foocb
4t Full S1t~/e1 011/ett Str¥inf Soufht rn C11//01nl1
m o v e d to California \'u~~~~ 1~'~1i 1' C~lblocMm ! from Toronto. c1u1 Pac ut 111111 i.12
UNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK ®
'-----------~-1 ''1'1 Portld '"" 1 JO 1 C1 I Wiler S.rvlu l .$0 amPVS (1,11111 .$0
M111btr hdt<t! 0.. .......... c.r,-..
ffl!I hdn l Rtww Sl'll•
Nelv Position
~1rs. Inge l'<elnig oi llun-
tington Beach has been pro-
moted to assistant cashier
jn oha rge of operatioos at
Bank of Am erica's Hun·
tir1gton liar~ branch.
The Men from Merrill Lynch
take.a look at
5 Emerging·f ndustries
Oceanography • New Medical Technology
Learning Aids • Nuclear Energy
Pollution Control
Make your forum reservations today
Our Research Department believes
these industries have unusual potential
for growth a'nd could at least triple their
present size within the next decade.
If you wou ld like to learn more about
these industries-and get specific infor·
mation on whi ch stocks we feel are at-
tractive with in them -come to our-
Emer9in9 Industries Forum
Tuesday Evenin9, June 11
Newporter Inn
1107 Jamboree Rd., Newport Beach
starling et 8:00 PM shorp
Y o_u~UlincLout about:
Oceanography-many experts believe it
will one day be as large as today's $7.·
billion space industry.
New Medical Technology-may well be
on its way to outstripping our current
giant Amer.i can drug industry.
Learning Aids -shows prom ise of
reaching a billion-dollar volum e insi de
of the next decade.
Nuclear Energy-already has a back log
of $6-billion in orders for util ities equip-
men t alone. ·
~:;nr~u1k,·'°
0111111 ll:"'rve C11 1sc1oe NII Gii'$ ·"' ~etnury Pr~rtJes c~lii:.. E...i:orr/111
Chfm Mll11•o lnfnl Ci!lr~s Util As filfzens Ulil 8 .t-o,utal Dynamic~
oc11Col1 u. 1 . ..0 ~m1n ErtUIM well Co s 1>11!er Eoull>!Tlt Cm1sa1 Rodi. P rtxll .IO Cornet Storn .~ C~l~I T«h DASA Cor1>
g1t1 04-~n LID o~111n'::rna111~~~r ,(,0 Delu• Ch«k Prlnr ,IO 0 111 FlllO'ICCf .$ Dlck><>n e1~c1rm11a OIQ!loll. Olvle!'SI Irie
3rd Quarter
Totals Told
By Collins
Chance ·of a Lifetime -
Perhaps YOUR Lifetime!
Pollution Control -expenditures show
a potential of $10-billion a year within
the next few years.
This could be it, because we're looking for a numlll!r of
men with some business_ eXperlence -preferably aaln -
lo jolh our steadily expanding i;taff of Account Execullvn
in Santa Ana. This experience may -or m-.y not -have been In the brokerage bw;ineu.
' Reserve your seats today. Th ere's
no charge or obligation, of course, but
space is limited. Simply call or mail in
the coupon shown bel ow.
These are the men we pay· to help people invest money u wisely as poulble.
To bee~ ~e, you v.·ork -and work hard.
their
-----------------------------------------------· ' ' ' '
U you havll!I l'.IO previous brokerage exeprlenee, you ;:o
through seven months of the most Intensive tniining, tn-
cludlnr Utre months of classroom R"S&ion.1 In New York City.
1 Pl'''' ,,,,,.., , .•• , .• , •••h for your E1111r9ln9 1nd1ulrl•1 Forum l on Tuttd1y, Jun• 11 ;" Ntwport !•tell.
' : Na""''-------------------
Addr·ess--------------~
City&Stat:"-----------'"'---
""°'"'-----------~---
You get pold whll!! you learn, of course -reoelve a sal-ary based on your bac kground, your experience and your pen1onal requlrtmcnta.
lI you're seriously Interested in a lifetime career with
us. to do work that JJ&YI in temu: ot both money• and &a.!.WacUon, \\o"e'd like lo hear from you.
Tell m tn writing about your back&'round. education, and experl(':nce; be sure to Include your address and tele-
phone number -then 1end your letter in cont.ldence to -,
Richard S. Thamsea
··~ ' . ' ' ' ' '
MERRIL'L LYNCH,.
PIERCE,
FENNER & SMITH INC
1001 NORTH BROADWAY, SANTA ANA 92702 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '
Telephone: 647-7272
For the convenienc e of inue$toT"I our off ice is open
daily 1 a.m. to ~ p.m. and Saturdays 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
1GOI NOR rH lltOADWAY, SANTA ANA f 2702
• For tmmple. afUr Jfv• ~ears as a 1eC1iMtit1 ialt.rrnan
in l P67 the overage Merrill Lynch accouni eucutive';
earning• pui him fn the top Z% of Amtricoru m urna of income.
ASSETS OVER
• ,S.25,oOo,Ooo.oo
Stop by Matual llrstand pick up
your FREE Vacation Atlas and
GukleBook.
MUTUAL SAVINGS
............ •te OCt•"O'"
2867 Eut U»Jt Highway • CottoNA DIL M.u, C.lir,9262)
TelephC'nc 67).)010
""' oma: • '""'°°" JI' [._tol.OftAOO t~vt. • 'ASAOOIA, c.tl". t11ot
INGS
• Gltfl!R BRANCH OFFICO -A-·eo.tNI q_ ..
•
·A·
-_,. -. ---·-----...
•
• •
-·
-
........ . . ; ... ir;. • .• • • ..... . ., • • • • .. -F ~ •
-'
All Open to Pnhllc
· UCI Lists Jun,e Calendar
ltere ls the calendar of ~ 11r1n11. 111 Finl ""'" 4 •.m.
•ventr for UCI for the sum· E>CTEMSIOH sE11:1Es : P11PUl111c:W1 Grvwlll: Ths H\1111<111 5'>Ktre "CllOk.e mer. All events are open to •nci o.c11i°":' c1auc11 A,....._, ec:°""
the public There la no ad-orn111, M<Donrw11·Dw1111 cor.. u. , . ' · indJ ~11'11 'Arts. , J.m. Tld<1t1 S2.1J, llCI
JlliSSIOD cbar&:e unless • llUOftllt/11111 11.:is.
cated. EXT ENSION SElllES: ltl encl F-
JUN• llY life Ill ftl\IClllDn, "A L,....,., ..
4 CTM.0.rJ 011..........i..et•I Ind l'l ... nc:lal llrOl>o
MATHl!MATICS COlLOQUIVM -lrlYlt 111 MlrTIQe ... Attomtys 0.vld
"Tlle 5-lrJ of Ol>tr1I0'1 wtll(ll 1n1 L, JKGOlohn 1nd Atioo. A. Ttf•
l!Ofll s.11 ... dJollll tnd Unll1rv." Dr. bnlll9hl 171 l'IM ... ,,.., P;IO "·'"· °"'"
&.m.r.i 11. Gel?Nlum. Pf'OfftMll DI to "''" 11e11;11 ttoMlen ontt.
IN ......... llc1 al'lll Al!oOC1Jl9 Dttn, UCI I (lllw .. YI
$1;110o1 of P"nlcal $(~, 160 Ntt· FEJIE•CE •·· urtl Stlll!US. • p.m., P"°c.ded bY EXTENSION CON : ,.,,,,.
'
tr1V In Orin" Co1mr..-. A ~1..-con-c:af1" llaur II l :l5 p,m. In I~ IC· ler""'I !or Ptt'Wlll lnllru 11'd In •~-111ty Club. lllYlNE FILM GllOU" "llEIENTA-.Plotln• Cl'i~tl.,. 11'Pf09tl!P lo ltft lll'I· '--ero1 prillltm. ~tr1 l.cl\Ollt: Or. TION-''Lt lonri.vr." Sc ........ lec!Ul'i O.nlel G. Aldrlcll, Jr., UCI Cll111Ul-
H1ll, 1 1nd .f::M 11.m. Adml11lon ll, 10,., Gr1nvllle c. People1, O!reclor, UCI 1lvcllnh/1ttff JOc. -' W ' EXTENSION ·Sl!ltlES: Olltoi Dew!-°''"''County Deparlmenl "' t i 1r1 r
-nf In An!trtc.ln Cull\lrt. ''Tl'lt Fr111el1 N. Ll lrd, coordlnelor, lndl.ll-
1'9";H o1 Envlnin,...,,t on • c11nd." •rv·Ecluc:1llon 1t1i.1ionl, A11l-Uc11
!NI... 51-. Clli.t ol Pi..-cholot'fo Jol'lll T. Jlm-1, PrlflClpal, MIPll
E.X'TENSIOH J£1tttl1 Ot.rr On.it
Sod1t.,-. "Alc-111111 -Current Prob-
ltm• 1nd Trtttmtnl "'°'''""·N Jotin II. PllllJI, Of"tnte C-ty He1tlll Ottl-
ctr. Or1no-C-IY Mtdlct l Center,
1::io 11.m. °"" to ttrlH 11u11 llolttf• Ol'llt.
lt(W ....... rj
ElCTEN$10H SElllES: $1K 11111
F1mu, Liit In EductllOll. "SHCltl
Pnlbltl!'ll In ,,.. Currlailum.H c. "''
Fowltr, mtrrlt" 111d ltmll'f COUf>.
Mlor. 111 1'1111 Arh, r:JO t.m. ltrlel
tlck1t lloldlr• onJ,.,
1S (ltflltU'fl C~ENCEMENl , Or. LOlllt T.
l•ner~. Prt•lcltl'lr, Clertmont eoi .... a.
prlncl1111 -iter. Cutm0n..-Mtin.
ti 2 p,m, Ill Ctmp111 Pttk,
1r fMtMIYI
-._.._.. •
Tuesdly, June 4, 1968
·-
-. ' -,. ~ (" ,,. -•
•
•
~AILY Pll:OT gc-----------,-...... ~-----==--==--=--
ly Phil lnterlandl
• '
They're dancing the Hula In the streets
by the thousands!
Here are just a few of the lat11t winners In this area: ........
Ml't. C. CrOlll
IC. 1111&.ll
It "-ltN L. l>flVlf
l .llH-W.H_,
A.I.Mk
C. 1tr111btf
A. ... lfldlf. r.. l rlp•
M, T•lfM
T .... nrot
I . C1rll
... Hltrll ..........
J. MtDll'l._IU
A.lr1111~
...LftM*I
GI, CttM '
llrL D. Atlltf ......... ........ ...._ ··-··-"·"'''""' L H-
Mre. I. """'fl! ..... ......
W.Ctmet ··-... ''"' T, MtC.i"'
-.. ...-~:.::.. ..-.. -........
Llltl.._ L,__ .......... ··-"·'!•••11 .. ... ........
""-0 .• --.... •• ,.
0 , '°"MJ D. T.,lof .. _ .. _...,.,.... ,._. __ •. ._ ··-•.M•Jw '"~"'
FtlN lew 51•1• N..,.llt t. 111 1''"9 Arts, Scflool, Futle rron r Hon. O.vkl 1:.. 111· ker, 5UHNllCJ!', Ortrive County, MN!· >4 1:311 P.m. Tldte!t H.1S, UCt 11udenh/ Int 111,11 11 t t .m. fn Cim-Htll.
•!•ff '1.2S. Picnic 1uncn 11 12•JCI (brine vour
EXTEH$10foC SEltllES: Ot.rr l'l•r
Et t lt!'" RtltllOPll, l'lfrlt 11'1 I 1trlt• ol
P*fbllc IC'Clllrft bf No Y-Ptrk:, lee·
turtr t l'MI writer, Nor1M11t MlHourl1 Sltlto Col1191. Mondt,., t rod W~
OtVI lllrlllOll J11(.,-2~. 1611 H1turtl
Scl111tt. 7 p,m. Strltt t~th .:P.
511\11.11 .-frnfHIM U .1!, UCI 11\ldenll/
tl•ff 11.25,
l!XTENSION SEllU:S: klencl 111111
P11blk PollQ'. "JCll!ltt •1'11 N1tf0NI
Yll.or." Finl ln 1 Ctll~!llllll Ltctur1
Stri.1 wit~ Or. I. I. ll1bl, Vice Prt'" Ide"'· ln1'm1t1ontr ConftrMCt °" ll'lt P11celul Ua.a ol Attorlllc Entl'I~ 11'11
J. Or""
I(. .ltoUlll
.......
.I. Ytft81 ,,c~
Cl ...
•. ~JI. .......
l,Wlll61-
Y, CUrtl1
EXTENSION SEA!E$; Our Orue S• own ,cr bl.of .,,,1). Afternoon wOf'llol!OI)..• ~ltty, "Akol>ol -TM M'flh ol S«ltl l::I0-4 11.m. ""°"'for reaerv1tlon1 m. Orlnkl"'.'' Ml'f Ht.,-!MI\. MO, At-111rdl Pt'tdllt trllt. Akellolllfll, At· JI .... f (S\llldl'I -rcr. Ctnler, UCLA Mtdlctl Ctntw.
Of"t,... County Mtcllul (l!flttr AWi·
totklm, 7:311 11.m. 0p.,. to serln lie-et
l'Oldl'1 .... 1,..
S IW .... Jllt'I
AFTEllNOON CONCERT. Tilt Mo·
11rl CJtrlMI OUlnttl t nd lllt Scllu~rt
OIHlrtet In d m11111r win be parfotmf!CI
bf Ctrolrn Arnowll!. ct1rlM11 t nd
member• of Ille U11lve1"11t,. Otcll•l1r1,
SUNDAY EVENING CONCERT .
WCll'lu by 8tcll, IHll>ov1n, Hlndel!'llll!,
PerJlchltU, Wtber, Wilde<. Alhlntl
Lolov, vlotln1 P1ul 1nor11111.,, tllbt1
Connie Ltlng, Ltrrv Gordo<>, Plt no. HI Fine Arl1, I p,m,
EXiENS IO~ ~~:'1~:~I Clllld Oevtl·
oPmtnt In Amtrlun Culture. "WllUh-
er CMtdllooc17" lrvlrt11 St.,,,., C~l•I ot
P1YCllOI09'f, F1lrv1tw Sttte HOt,1111.
111 Fine Arll, 1:30 P.rn, Tldlels U.1J,
UCI l!udtn!l/tltlf t l.U.
Nobtl Prlr1 Winner '" Phralct.. k!trKt bla
Lect11r1 H111, 7:JO P.m. Sule• 11c1t1r1 "See here Smythe are you going to finish t ~:i~,,~!1:~1.~m1111on u, uc1 11-r t\ebau; on Vle~am. or are you going to alt
,. 1t11\lf'IH,, there bug~yed all nighti?"
EXTENSION SElllES: Sdentt tl'ld --------~-----------------! Pllblk Pollq. "Sci.net ind Hurntn
Auilrtl1.,,,.." Or. I. r. llt bl (Sft J11111
17 tar d;t'l1ll1.)
21, !Sllurclt'f)
ORANGE· COUNTY l"OR HUMAN
EQUALITY CONFEltENCE. "5.ttr"t·
llon-Nortllern Sb-It.'' An tlklt~ Pl•
tri m lnc!udlnt 1P111ler. pin.el dl1c111·
''"" t!'OUPI I nd I movlt. Mff11no ~
t int 11 t t .m. In kltn<t LKl\lrt
Htll, Adm!HIM 12. ttuden!I 11.
24 (Mtrlclt'fl
EXTENSION SEllll!S: Sclenu tnd
Lv1wL1r.d In Antllelrn IOI"' dl11111r II
a p.m .. cocir.1111 llour ,,30 p.m. Tick·
eh M Ptr '"1''°"' l11Cludl119 111t di,.. ner t nd ·I Pol,.rtelilll 1100( U.-,
Pll-Nl~k Roth (~) IOI' rta-
erv1ll""•· Your
full service
banker
Minutemen Missile P11blk Polley, "kltnce 1nd Pe1ct.''
(S" JUllt · 17 ll1Uno Hit. dtltlft.)
U !Wtdn11d1yJ
~=-------
AlfV1rlllltM11I
FR.lEHDl OF U<;I ANNUAL MEET·
ING. SdlllCe Lec111r1 Hi ll •• R.m. More Comfort Wearing
JULY
tl ($WIMlty)
TWILIGHT CONCE RT. Tiie San 01· T o 0"1fCOn11 dlteomtort 'lll'blD Watchers Also Learn FALSE TEETH
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP)
1110 Sl'mt llorrf OrcNillrt . Pre11tnled dentut• 1llp, 1lld11 or IOOH11, jutt
b,. tllt 01'9f!ff County Plllllllrmonlc l prlllklt a llltlll l"MiTmn'B Oil rour educa tion """'a"am -AFIT. Soc!1ty, Ctm11u1 P1rk, l :XI p,m, plat.II. P.urn:r:TH 21o1aa denturet ~~ I AUOUIT fl.rm.er. You e~t':i~ teel Dl.ON S U h P r 0 g • a oomtortable. '1' k IUkaltne C & • m l I'""'' -1l'Oll't10ur.Heli-thtdcp1't.todor. guarantees a bachtlor's LUAU OINHE.R/OANC£. Tiii llCI DllltUf'N t.hlt at &lll ...nu.i '1o .
I. GrlM!ttl
H. Gantllt
D, c .. 11111
'· Ouwl•vy "· ,lll'lf
"· 1ti.t Mrt. A. Trt11111ln1
M, Irie~
'-IOrMlln v. l111d1
Q, Jon11
M .... D. J111klft1
L Cllt ndtlf'
I. Clt rk
K. Sclloll)'
H. Cl1ril, Jr.
fl. LllP191
J. lffftlTUUJ
J. Dunn
M. 'obrt
, ,/. llHMM w. llNllP '·L-.... V.A-
D. H1cti:
L IMllftt•
C. C1rtff
A. Ctuter I. Jlm1ttt1.1
W. KIHtn, Jr.
Y. l lt11H1 ,., ,11111
T. Wfn'9f
M. DobM
o.o~
D.LOjttl
It Krvlllcll
A, l11nfol1
II. Gv,Ull
It. Mllll: Lk-
L Wtlll .. 11111
1.M-
J,,.cfltntlft c ....
t .1{1111\tt
•.Hotl
L 8rw.111
D.fll-.,
IC. Clfll'"lt r H. Ytlftl
J. "'" ..... H.M-
M. Htltart
'· Lftlrlt W. C)'Jller 0.-
L lch"'IU:
O. C1r1 .. Ill., .. ..,
The men who are
_rrepared to ·launch the na-
tion's Minuteman misSlles
at·a seeood's ootice have a
lot cf time oo their hands
during a 24-hour shift in a
silo, 50 feet underground
and miles frmi th e i r
missile.
degree foi-'the <ificers who ::"~ ~J~~:Ui::n·~:~~t! &:rLe;.-mi:,~.=_:'=:
entered the· zniutary under·~~·~"''..'.'."~'"":'.'c~"..'C'"~''..'.'.~~m:_:•~'c~~·'_.'.:••~·~~:___:___~ ____ :___~------------=------------------~-----~--~ cadet programs. It appears
Lynn May,
Assistant Vice President, _
M1n1pr
He's m1nager of our
Hunt ington Be1ch office. He'll
see that you get the best, most
complete banking help
aval1ablt. After 111, that's what
full servlc1 banking Is all 1bo1Jt.
Stop In today and get
acquainted with us.
302 Fifth Avt"IHI Ttltphone: 5J6..9jgl
4f Full S1,..,1c1 omctt s1"'1"' Sovt1N111 C1111or1111
UNITED
S1J4.TBS
·NATIONAL
BANK @
W1'"M! llllo"I Dtilti1 1111110~ '*'I""
• 1nd<fri11ll ~ ..... $flit'"
But do the y waste it? Well
about 150 officers and men
at Warren Air F('.)!Ne Base
are working toward college
degrees as they sit aOO wait
for an Ol'der they hope never
comes.
Their military job is
sim ple . Should t.tie word be
give:b, they woold press the
button to launch the missiles
t o w a r d predetermined
targets in various sectors of
the world.
Two men at a time put in
24-hoor stints in their un-
derground homes, wlth one
constantly monitoring the
apparatus :aild both
participating in drills held
continually to keep the
operation alert. But time is
also available for study and
about 150 are currenUy
e:Dl'Olled in the Air Force
ln6titute o t Technology
to be a successful venture,
both !Or the men involved
and the Air F O'r c e .
Professors from the
University of Wyoming in
Laramie conduct classes on
the average of three times
evecy..two weeks aLW81Ten_
AFB, with the remainder of
the time devoted to private
study which is usually done
in the launch facility.
After enough con54!cutive
hours have been obtained to
bring the .rludent within one
year or gt"Qduetion, the final
times must be spent on a
college campus. The largest
number plan to cootlnue
their schooll111 at t h e
University of Wyomiflg, but
several will. go to San Diego
State in California and the
University d Oklahoma.
The ~most common
courses being studied are
general engineering, elec.
trical engineering ,
mathematlcs and industrial
manageq;ient.
DISCOVER A BONUS TREASURE!
INVEST $1000 or mon: (111 multipl" of $1,000) in Laauoa Federal'•
3-yt.ar Bonus Certi!cate.
EARN $.00~ per annum 'umnt dividend rate, payable to you
each quarter •.. PLUS-,...
~% PER ANNUM GUARANTEED BONUS,
payable to you in ooe lump 1um at lhe eod of J yem; thereafter, th• bonlU
ia paid to you each quarter toacther with your rcaular dividend.
REINVEST your BonUI Cettillcatc
eamiq.1 iJi Laauna Federal Pusbook Account,
and reteivo cam1a,p on euninp tbr' the
mulmum return on your investment.
CHART A BONUS COURSE
FOR WGBER EARNINGS l . .
...
•
We'll have to take part of the credit ... or
blame ... for modern music. The beat. The sound.
Electric guitars, electric banjos, electric organs,·
electric amplifiers.Who knows, maybe even
electric«azoos.
We're not necessarily endorsing the present
trend.We're just pointing out that none of it
could have happened without our produ ct.
There wouldn't be ,any hi-fi stereos, or
radios, or TV to bring you music, eithe·r. But
'. .
beca\1$8 of electricity, you can tune in the whole
world. Music, entertainment, sports, news,
everything.
What's it cost you? So little you probably
don't even think about it. Fractions of a penny
to play a record or watch a television show.
Only electricity can do 80 much for 80 little.
CE Southern Gal/forn/11 Edison + ~
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DAILY l'ILOT II
Tuesday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange' List ·-
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Senior Citi%ens Officers Installed
The Costa Mesa Senior Citizens Club recently held
installation ceremonies of new officers. From left
are Joe Lincoln, representing the o.utgoing officers;
Mrs. Wanda Wright, senior citizen's coordinator;
Mrs. Jessie Rider, president; Mrs. May Buckland,
vice president; Mrs. Angela Pesenti, secretary;
Mrs. Jean Molony, treasurer; Mrs. Rae Mammano,
historian; and George Pratt', auditor.
Congress Likes Trade Program-If
Rio Future in Tunnels
RIO DE JANEffiO (AP)
-. Nine tunnels cutting
through more than five
miles of solid rock have
dwe much to relieve traffic
congestion in this city of five
million persons.
Copacabana's estimated
one million residents move
in, out and about their area
through four tunnels, and
tbe city government is talk-
ing about building at least
one more.
The biggest headache of
all, however, i.was movement
between the north ·and south
wnes, lOQg possible only
throu&h Ute already con_.
gested downtown busine.ss
area.
Tbe newest tunnel is also ---------------------
the longest in any city of the
wqrld, and has cut travel
time between north and
south RIO by as mu.ch as an
hour.
Like a glistening jewel set
off by blue ocean waters
. llpplng on gleaming white
beaches, Rio is scattered
among steep green moun·
. talns and hills.
The ancient volcano
cones, today better known
as Sugar :t..oag and Corcova-
do with its towering Christ
statue, cr~ted some ~f
. Rio's worst headaches.
Corcovado slices between
the city's north and south
zones. The mountains trail-
ing off at the base or Sugar
Loaf isolate famed
Copacabana Heach.
The battle against these
natural barriers be g an
almost a century ago, when
horse-drawn carriages first
began clopping through the
Alice street tunnel in 1887.
Four years later another
Love the
<::; Colorful
Sound of
Orange ,
County
Music
WASHINGTON (UP!) -
Congress has greeted Presi-
dent Johnson's new world
trade pI'ogram as a fine pro-
gressive move -·provided,
ol course, that individual
American industries get the
pi'oteotim they want.
tunnel was completed, link-
gram one of the most dif-substantial U.S. trad e zre contingent on exports ing the city center with
ficult tasks of a five-year surplus has been the major than on imports; that a pastoral farmlands now
tenure shot through with sustaining element in the surplus trade nation stands covered by Copacabana's
myriad problems. b a lance~f-payment.s pie· to lose more than anyone shoulder-to-shoulder hi g b -
The President_ has pro-. ture; that more U:S. jobs else from a tariff war. • rise apartment buildings.
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
From Fashion lslana. Newport Beach
~ed a two-year ext.ensionl---~---~--------
The fact thal e a c h
member of Congress
represents a specific area,
with. its own specific in-
dustries, ls the real threat to
the President's outline of
proposed world trade 'ex·
tensions and reform.
Almost everyone -at
least, a 9izable majority -
agrees in theory that U.S.
· exports not only are a
mainsta')' of the economy
but ttia.t only the huge (and
favorable) volwne of trade
has kept tti.e American
dollar brealhing during the
past few years of in-
ternational monetary crises,
gold dN.1n and w or J d
deficits.
ln practioe, llowevU, tht.
s«>ry is dif1ereot. And
President Johnson couJd
find acqulling congression3l
approval ot bi& new pro-
ol the aathority to negotiate
tarilf reduofiom needed to
put into effect some of the
agreements negotiated dur·
ing ti!~ S<>Called Remedy
round of trade agreements
last year at Geneva.
He Dlso proposed t o
eliminate the so-ca 11 e d
American selling p r i c e
sy!tem. This allows tariffs
to be based on a percentag
of the manufacturer's sug-
gested price, which is in
soine cases far above the
actual competitive retail
price level;
In the current
agreements, only one pro-
duct so priced (bemenoid
cbemica!s) took a tariff cut
and Ulttefore would be o.f:
!ect!d. But otl!en could be
affected by future negotia-
tions should the fonnula be
dropped.
FlUn a theoretical view-
point, most members or
Congress are aware that.the
SeH-employed?
_ _,1.'"e_r_e,'s how to save taxes
while you save for --...
retirement
AJ • lelf'-employed. bwinm or pro(C!Mional maa ]'Ol.I can
deduct from yoor taxable income the money YoU put inlo
an Internal Revmuc Se'rvice a;proved Retirement PerWon Plan.
This PWl k known u the H.R. 10 or Xrozh Platt. Your
money and the intcral it earns is nol taxable until tetitw•t;
then only u the income ia rcc:civcd. The maximum
allowable contribution ct!!'.!r: or income or S2,~, whichever
n lcu. 13elow ii a con example or the tu savinp
with • Manufacturen Life Xtoth Ploii for a manicd mu
qcd 45 with lwo dtildml and 111 incoo. ofSl.5,000 in
Che 22Y. tu bracket.
tr you'd.like \o have Uw complete step-by-step fir.ires in
the example call the Man from Manufacturen Life. Be SW'9
to ask him about ManufKtwws Life'• ocw approved
Mula' Plan. You11 ftnd ii convenient-no trust ageement
ncx:aaary. 11•1 ftcxibll; contributiont can ao up and dowa
as income ftuctuaia, and it aiva you aa attractive rdu:nl m
)'OUI money, YOU Oft it to younelf to call him 100D.
~-"""" H.R. IOPllln
S.""1p Before Tu .•• --.... P · s 1,000 s 1.000 Annual Income Tu .• _ ... _ s 120 s 0
Net Amouat S.vod ••••• _ •••• ' 7!0 s 1,000
Aa:umulated Sa'rinJ! to Are 65. .SlJ,115 Sl0,335
(Anuminr ~ {includin! intcmt la.I tu. dividendSJ1 •
Net .... utase of I.. Mu -~ "-(after tuel: over JS )Un Ufo oitpectlnt:J). ' Au11111ea I) UClllTlul1tion1 aboYe are invnled In
Identical annuitiol uaint: the n.tea pracntly il'I 5",700 dl'ect. Thao rate. •re no1 1 au1n.nlee for fut\11'9
raul11, 2) reuon.tl»e 1inollllt or olher t&ublt incomci excllllive of SocW Securily.
••Acc:umulltcid diYidend1 or S4,Jl l are bated 011. p~t rates 1.11d
are DOt lo be con1id~ftld .. a auarutec of r111uni ruulti.
R. D. St"'t•
A1•ncy Astoclet.
COSTA MESA
T.t; 547-5621 ..
J, W, Turk, Jr.
Agency Assod•t•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Tel: .547·5621
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Manager
tie's manager of oor South
Coast Plaza offict In Costa
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the best, most complete
banking help available. Aftw
all, ttlat's what full service
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Tw.Uy, ~1111• •· !Kt \.I ..... 11
No 'Bs'-Sneak
1.n Coe·d' s Life
Not one blessed B has intruded itself onto the A-swarmed final report
cards of Susan Belinda Brown during her academic career al Laguna
Beach High School. ·
However the winsome brunette, chosen to be valedictorian at. com-
mencement ceremonies Thursday night, June 13, admits there have been
a few close calls.
"I thought I'd get a B in physics this year," the student, who also
maintained a straight A average at Thurston Junior High School , confided.
"Somehow f squeezed throu~h."
At least the valedictorian has seen what a B look s lik e. "I got. Bs on
quarter report cards in English during my freshman year. I don't kno"'•
somehow I always luck out in the end , though J can't figure out why,'' she
said modestly.
While getting good g.rades doesn't seem to have been a problem,
the· thought of giving her valedictorian speech in Irvine Bowl is perplex·
ing the talented teen-ager. ·
"It's scary_," s~e worried ... l've never written or given a speech ·be-
fore. Really, I'm frightened to death."
Audiences, however. are nO stranger to Susan : .,,or the past eight
years she has· played the harp and appeared with the Orange Coast Com·
munity Symphony and performed for three musicals in the Laguna Play-
house. In addition she has given solos at teas and luncheons throughout
the area. ·
Music ·and brains seem to run in the BJ'own fa 111ily. Two of Susan's
three order brothers play musical instruments. In addition the brothers, all
graCtuates of Laguna Beach High School, are doing graduate work at vari-
ous universities.
Like her mother, w~o iS a doctor al Long Beach General Hospital,
she plans to go .to Stanforll next year and sai d she will probably minor in
music and tentatively will start as a biology major.
Susan, who says her study habits are casual and relaxed. is not a
believer in all work and no play.
"T haven't really denied myself anything. I have my music and now
I'm teaching a 14-year-old girl to play the harp. Besides, I go out on dates
and do all the other things I like,'' she explained.
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VALEl;>ICTORIAN CONCENTRATES ON SPEECH
Laguna Student Susan Belinda ~Brown
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.Las Campana s
Debs Circle Dates
For Part-ies I Parties
(;aught. up in a whirlwind of parties. luncheons and teas
f~ampanas debutantes who will be pres~nted to society during
annual ball July 13 in the Di sneyland Hotel.
are La9
the fifth • •
Of the 20 young women selected £or thi s honor, one is from Costa
Mesa and another is from Huntington Beach.
They are Miss Kathleen Janelle Tubach, daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Leonard Dean Tubach and Mi ss Janet Patricia Holtz, d.aughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Andrew Leo Holtz .
Future dates circled in red ' on their calendars include .June 15, an
informal party for th em and stags: .June 22. another party; June 27, the
tradiJional Medallion Tea to be hosted by Mrs. Richard Heffner.
Informal parties will be staged the last weekend of June and the
first part of July; July 9 has been selected for the annual Father-Debu·
tante Waltz Party ; July 12, rehearsal and a dinner party for debutante1
and their escorts. ·
They have already been entertained al a luncheon in the Anaheim
home of Mrs. J.,eslie I. Ferrell, great-aunt or a debutante, Miss Kaye Ellyn
Mason . Mrs. Flo Brooks, presentation director. instructed the girls on the
liner points of executing the curtsy . • On the next day escorts and sllag s were welcomed at an informal
party in the Fred Beckham home in Fullerton. Also present were Mrs.
Bronk·s and Mrs. Gharles A. Peterson, ball chai rman, plus Miss Vicki Beck·
ham , a 1966 debutante. and Peterson. T
Other re cent gatherings were R mother-dau,1Zhter coffee in the Sant~
Ana home of Mrs. John Bishop. and a fashion show in Buffum's where
lhey were shown appropriate ball gowns.
"' .
PROUD MOTHERS !-Sharing moments of joy: filled with prid e
i re mothers of Las Campalias debulanles and their daughters ali
··ey relax and chat over coffee cups during the traditional moth·
er-daughter coffee. Coast debutantes and their mothers are tlefl
In right) Mrs. Leonard Dean Tubach. Miss .Janet Patricia Holtz,
Mrs. Andrew Leo Holtz and Miss Kathleen Janelle Tubach.
The ball is a benefit. and proc.eeds go to lhe Symphony Association
of Orange County to continue its effort s in presenting concerts in the 196&-
69 sea~on. During the past four years 68 debutantes have been p~esented.
Sponsoring organiza tions ate the association and lhe women 's group.
Las Campa na~.
Instead of Her Burying Talents, She Really Dug for Them
DEAR ANN LANDE>RS : Are peoplP
crazier today than at any time in the
history o{ man? I believe the answer
i~ "yes ." The item I just read in the
newspaper is pretty good evidimce.
It seems a Mrs. P. Haverland of
Charleston. W. Va. hall! nothJng better
tfl do with her time than to try to break
the record for being buried .alive. Tut
record is held by some fleabrain who
lay in an underground casket for 75
days. Mrs. Haverland Is sure she can
set a new record.
1 would like to suggest that anyone
who has 75 days to blow 8ugbt to go to
some hospital and volunteer to break a
record viJiting the glck or writing tel-
lers for I.he disabled or just cheerin2
.1;p the lonely peoph! tn the nursing
homts. On you agree. Ann ?
-Cll!CAGO READER
Ot:AR CRll'Alif): rr.nplt u~nRll!
rnjny . doh'IJ whal th'Y do bC'11t.
J1erhapR this 11 Mr1. Havr.rl1tnd'1
greatest talent. \
DEAR ANN LA'NDEltS : Paul and I
plan to be married in September. Paul
comes from a large family and !lo do
I. We were both born and raised in
this city and have a jlreat man,v
friend.~. Since my folk~ can't afford In
l(ive me a b\J!: wedd inS! WI'! have dcct(f.
eel to have a limple ceremony with on·
1y lh<' immed iate fam ily prPsent.
Now the problem : Poop le we kno~·
have been asking us if they can comp
to the wedding. r think it's poor man ·
ners to fish for an Invitation, but thei>e
folk! feel very rrtendty and they don 't
see it that way .
J've tried to be evasive and non·
eommlltal but it'11 getting mon dlf·
fic ult all the lime. Whal do you ~ng·
ll.eSl?
-ON THI:: SPOT BRIDE
Ot:AR BRIDE: 8t direct and
hone11I. Say . .!'I wish we could lnvltr
all our dear frlend1 I«? lht. wedding bul
It l1n't po11lble." Tht.n you can add ,
"We h.npe you'll come ta !let. us when
we're 1t.tUed"-tf you WANT them lo.
thAI 11 .
Dl'.:AR ANN I.ANnERS: Pl r~~f"
prlnl this letter. A million women will
love you .
Why don't the mother~ of Americ a
teach their children when they go to
l1omeone'1 home for dinner NOT to
ask for a third hel1'.9ng of meat or a se-
cond des!ert? A family of eight (si x
kids ) camr. to dinner la11t night .and I
wA~ A nervnu!J wreck h:om the bea:in·
.nin~ of the meat to the end . Thtrt
were 12 al our table including 1ome
important bu sinc3s asiiociates of my
husband. Those kid s made a nervous
wreck out of me with "more meat.
please ... even before the adults had a
chance l.o fini sh their por\ion!I. I
thought-surely their mother would say
~omttlling but shE: just sat there a!I if
the kla~ belonged to ~omeone else and
lei them make pigs of thet)'lselves. For
dessert I baked a triple layer chocolate
cake {10-inch tins) with mocha ic ing.
This is a pretty big cake , Ann. but II
wasn't enough.
If you 've never been in a spot wher e
you 've had to worry abQut running
short of food , you haven't mi!lsed
anythin2. Pleai;e, Arin t.andcrs. bf' a
frlf'nd 111nd: pri nt this IPtt~r.
-CLEANED tl~T
D[AR tLf:ANED• Cllllldre• th•uld '
ht taui;ht neve:r to 11k for a 11econrl
helpln1 nf anyttua1 wben they arl!
iuests. ff the ho1te11 effer1; flet :
olherwt1e they 1bould eat what 11
M'tved and If they are stlU haD&ry.
another roll or • slice of bread 1hould
!!1ttl11ry them. ,.----··-·
When romantic: plance!I furn to
.,,,arm t'mbface!I · is It love nr
eheml 11try? Send for the booklet "Lnvt:
or Sex and How to •Tell the DU·
ference." by Ann Lande.rs. Enclose a
loog, stamped, self·addre118<1 en·
velope and S5 ceota in coin with your
request.
Ann L11.nder11 wifl be glad to help you
with your prnblems. Send them to her
in care of the DAll .Y PILOT, enclo!I·
int ~ stamped, ttl.fdddressed en·
velctf,.!. f .
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TtJitSd.tJ, Jww 4, 1968
La test Techniques Exam ined
Members of the Huntington Beach Police Wives Guild learned the most uirto-
date techniques and medication for the treatment of badly burned patients
when they visited the Orange County Medica! Center to make a donation to the
Bum Unit yesterday. Among those· learning some of the new concepts in the
treatments are (left to .right) Mrs. Stephen Balloch, Mrs. James Mahan and
Mrs. George Renek.
Nancy Middleton New
'
Mrs. James· McBrien
Mr. and Mrs. Louis O'Coo· flower s sent from t h e
nell of Newport Bead\ an·
notmeed the marriage of her
daughter, Nancy LOrena
Middleton and J a m e.a •
William McBrien. son of Mr.
and Mr6. J. W. McBrien of
Hilo, Hawaii.
The Rev. Roger T. Walke
officiated during the dooble
ring ceremony in Unitarian·
Universalist Cliurdl, Costa
Mesa.
beniedict's parents.
Mills Loren Robinson of
Huntington Marina, the
bride's cousin, wa6 maid o(
honor while the Misses
Perey Batista oI Honolulu ;
Karen Appleman of
Newport Beach, Barbara
Towle, Costa Mesa, arid
Cathy McCallion, Anaheim,
attended as bridesmaids.
They donned pink full
length gowns and held pink
carnation leis sent fn.lm
Hawaii.
grandmother, and M r s .
Margaretta O'Cannell of
Sturgis.
The newlyweds honey-
mooned on Coronac:o Island
and will make their home in
German·y where the
benedict is serving in the
Army.
Fall Rites
In Offing
'
Heroscope
T aurus :Creative
Efforts. Favored
WEDNES DAY,
JUNE 5
By SYDNEY OMARR
Keep sight on reality, but
also perceive long-range
goal
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 221:
"Tht wise man controls Give attention to finances.
his destiny . . . Astrology You can improve financial
points the way." situation if perceptive.
Means listen and learn. A ARIES (March 21-April GEMINI individual could
19): What was ceases to ex· help you see values which
isl Act accordingly. Means are obvious. todar a fresh viewpoint is a necessity. Applies especially LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0ct. 22):
to legal agreements, con· Cycle high. Means get out
tracts and partnerships. today end m3ke yotir vie\VS
Some openly oppose you. known. Contact key persons.
TAURUS (April 20-May Many are attracted, willing
to be convinced. Y our. 20): Concentration on basic greatest weapon is sin-
issues. Among these include cerity. Act accordingly. those who work fo.r or with you. Creative e ff 0 rt s SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
' favored. Specifically. check 21): Look beyond the ob·
health indications. You find vious. A secret is revealed
out how best to begin a pro--be in on it. There is in·
ject. trigue today. If alert, this
GEMINI (May 21.June works to yo ur advantage. Fin"d out which way the
20): Good lunar aspect to-wind is blowing. Investigate. day coincides with time tc
make changes, to welcome SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
a!fection. You may 'not be Dec. 21): Powerful in·
able to remain objective. fluences are exerted by
Day when you become in-friends. Your best course is
volved _ and it may be a to re m e m be r promises.
good thing. responsibilities. Don't try to
CANCfR (June 21.July skip what is essential. Older person de se rve s con-
MRS. GRIF FIN
Missouri Hom e
Marriage
Announced
2'2): Greater joy in the sideration.
hi>me can become a reality CAPRICORN Married in Sacred Hearl
today. Don't .ask for too (Dec. 22· Catholic Church, St. Louis,
• --~---
Mysticism Captured
l.srael Offering
Word on Styl.e
• JEAN SPRAIN WILSON
NEW YORK (AP) -
After President Charlu de
Gaulle made bis famous
uoflatteri.ng comment about
Jew1, a prom in en t
personality in the garmerit
industry here quipped that
Israel "should use the nee·
dle."
By that he meant that
ttie country should wor.k
hard at be\:oming t h .e
fashion capital of the world ,
a position which has been -~ securely lbeld by France.
Indeed, some of t h e
American fashion industry's
most Important members -
Pauline Trigere, A n n e
Klein, Jerry Si 1 v er m a n
among them -have con-
tribtlted time, energies and
imagination to help put the
new country's industry in
the money and on ·the style
scene.
Though stealing the thun-
der (or sunshine) from
Paris is not likely to happen
over night, Israel ls
demonstrating the progress
U is making. More than 700
buyers from 20 counfl·ies
converged ort Te! . .o\viv
the last, it not the loudest,•
word on fashion.
Rattier than imitate what
the rest of the style \vorld
is doing, a dozen cf its
designers chose to inject the
influence of the often em·
battled land itseU into ilsi •
creaiions . Thus lhey
selected the kova tembel,
the Israeli farmer's tradi·
tional headgear, as a lhe1ne.
The hat is similar to' a
crew hat with its brim turn·
ed down , a s i I h o u e t t e
literally enlarged upon for
capes, dresses. pants, .suits.
gowns, · ensembles an d
loungewiar.
If the hat shape is n<>t
the inspiration for the entire
cDStume, it nevertheless ap·
pears as a sleeve, a p1Jcket
or a skirt shape.
Some designs are as
modern as mini. others cap_.
ture the mysticism of the
middle east.
recently to give Ule industry
There are culotte suits,
and Nehru jackets over
skinny pants, shirt waist.ef'5,
pantaloons. slinky things,
bare bikinis and Mack SPn·
nett swimmers. bushy furs
and sleek ones -in fact,
about all the sty~s tha t
Western orientated women
have come to appreciate. much -you will receive JCA'I . 19): You are on the
b l'nk r · r o.: Mo . were Necia Marie Jll(lfe than anticipated. Your . r o 1n onnaw.on re· "======================, opinion is solicited with quired. to press forward. But-Gelkei:_ of 'Balboa an d11
regard to real estate, pro-yo~ m u s t communi~ate, Willia~ Edward Timothy
perty values. write, make koown desu;es. GrifJil! IJI.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): nee.<J~· Fi~lsh one phase of The bride, daughter of Mr.
A t. tud .1_.".~' begin another. nd Mr B B E cce!1 on . s y. wr1 mg, Make up your mind. a s. ruce . .
relations with brothers and ARI11 Gelker of Balboa. attended
sisters. LUnar position coin· AQU S (Jan. 20-Feb. St. Stephen's College, Col-
cides with your ability to 18): G~ lun~ aspect to·
make quick adjustments. _day conc1des with chance to umbia where she affiliated
communicate with one who with Zeta Phi Delta.
appreciates your talents. Her husband , son of Mr.
Good for contacts, new and Mrs. William Griffin Jr.
starts, c.dded independenee. of St. Louis, is a· graduate of
Original approach works the University of Missouri
wooden;. · where he majored in
P ISCES (Feb. ~S-March biology· physiology a n d 20): Ypur questions about employment, basic chores pledged Delta Sigma Phi. The bridegroom plans to can be answered today. coach at a high school ~n
Associate who often appears Shelbyville, Mo. where they
eccenb'ic provides the ke7. ,vill make their h 0 m e .
Be analytical -then you Honeymoon plans include a
see tbe light. trip to Southern California
IF TODAY IS YOUR to visit friends and
IF YOIJ ARE A NEWCOMER. TO ToWN
OR KNOW ONE TO WHOM YOU WISH
TO DO A GOOD TURN •••
rHONt THIS WONDERFUL COMMUNITY
SE~VICE AND A HOSTESS WILL CALL
WITH GIFTS AND INFORMATION.
Dottie Wolters ·
Hospitolity
Hostess
W • Welcom• Yotl
To The
ORANGE cpAST AREA
PHONE 544-6925 BIRTHDAY you revere relatives.
knowledge . Teaching othersl~:.::::::.:.::::_ ______ '.:====================='
to understand ttiemselves
gives you great satisfaclion. i~-------------:::=::~-------------, Imporlarlt cUtTertt c y c 1 e ~
promi5es succes6.
For her wedding, the
bride selected a full length
wbite gown with a bodice
and hemline trimmed in
daisies11 Dai sies also·
decorated her s b o u I d e r
length veil and she carried
an orchid bouquet with
Best· man v.-as the bride's
brother, Dougt.as Middleton.
CMdles were lit by the
br~e's cousim, Ge o r g e
Robinson Ill a.nd Raymond
Smiit!h of Sturgis, S. D.
-1...arge bouquets of pink ,
white and red flowers mixed
with white gladioli adorned
the church.
Barbara Lynn Jordan and GENE R AL TEN·
-
Shapely
9069
~ns
12~24\li
Dart shaping and tab-front
buttooi.ng1 make this a
perfect choice fbr summer
"ys. Choose crirp Dacron
cbecb, nubby blend, shan·
tuna. linen.
Prifited Pattern 9069 : Half
Sises 12\l, 141,l, 161,l, 18ih,
20\!o, 22\!o, 24\!o. Size 16\!o
(btlst 171 talles 3% yd!. 35-
ID.
SIXTV·FIVE CENTS in
coins for uch pattern -
add 15 cents far each pat·
tern for fir1t-cla11 mailing
and aped.al handling ;
othttwise thtrd·cla1s
delivery wW take three
weeb F more. S.nd to
M.lrlan Martl.n, the DAILY
PILOT, 40 Pattorn Dept,
.u.t w .. 1 lllb St., N•w York,
N. Y. lDt)ll. Print NAME,
ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE
and STYLE NUMBER.
Oboo&e one peittern .tree -
clip Coupon Jn "new . Sprln1-" Summer httern Catalof.
100 stylol, all siuc. S.nd 50
centt.
Richard Oliver Careaga will DENCIES: Cycle high !or
exchange nuptial vows Sept. LIBRA, SCORPIO. Special
21 in the Herrick Memorial word to AR IE S : Con·
• ceDtrate on_P.l!blic ~a1oions . -•----Chapel, Occidental College;-----To tlrict out wh0'1 l\IOY tor VOii tn C•-KouH l'llat• ,.,,_., 11>d love, order Syd,.y On'Ytr'I News of the torthcoming booll.111, "SK,., Hinh fflf Men •nd
BARBARA JORDAN Women." s.flll bln!ldot!t •nd 50 c1nt1 event has been revealed by to om1rr ....ira1°" ~ .. ts. TM 0•1-Selects o t LY PILOT, 8ol< 32.AO. Gr•nd c.111r11
The br.ide's pa!'ents home
was the setting for the
reception for 150 guests.
her parents. Mr. and Mrs.1 _______ •_• _____ .,_.,_...__,_N_v_,_,._._•·-'-·-"'-'-'·--I
L. R. Jordan of Newport
Assisting were Mr. 2fld
Mrs. George Robin6on. the
bride's aunt and uncle from
Huntington Marina a n d
Franci6 Wright of Newport
Beach. Spe'*'l guests were
Miss Su2la11ne M c B r i en .
sister of the benedict ~om
Hilo; Mrs. Marg a re t
Steinberger of Santa Ana,
Beach.
Miss J ordan a t t e n d e d
Arizona State University
and was graduated cum
laude from Occidental.
Her fiance, son Of Al G.
Careaga and h-irs. Wayne \V.
Owens or San Fernando
Valley, will be a senior at
Occidental in the fall.
WE'D llKE TO INTRODUCE YOU TO
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14K Gold Oxidized
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Mo11ny other styl•s to choose from-
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. ' , I
I ,
I
• / -~ ..
Your ·BometeWJ1
EDITION Dally Paper
VOL. 61', NO. i34, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES TUES!rAY, :JUNE ~. "1968 • TEN CENT~
• an's 0 o _un
n
Two on Jog
Spot Corpse
In Field
A young man, clean-eut appearing
with .a 'hippie·type medallion hung on a
chain from his neck, was found
sprawled in death early ~ay in a
plowed fi~ld in Huntington Beach.
TELEPHOTO view OF VALLEY OF DEATH IN RIVER BOTTOM
Huntington Bee.ch Detectives Cluster Around Dead Youth
Po:Uce said the body, fully clothed
and face·up in the field, was
d.iscover<..od by two men who were
on a daily one-mile jog around the
open area n~ar Hamilton Avenue aild
Brookhurst Street, not far from the
Costa Mesa city limits.
Late Rush Expected .. Orange County coroner's deputies
tentatively identified the dead man as
Frank Smith, about 20 years old, from
Phoenix, Ariz. The tentative iden-
tification was made only from two
Social Security cards which were
found on the body~
Coast Precincts Report
Moderate to Heavy Vote Huntington Beach detective Captain
Earle Robitaille told tl)e DAILY
PILOT that so far, no evidence of foul
play has been uncovered. in the death.
Voting in California's p-irnary elec·
tion today appeared to be moderate to
heavy. in the early goip.g along the
Orange Coast.
* * *
Nation W atclies
Most coastal precincts w e r e County coroners ha"e scheduled an
reporting turnouts 0£ 17 percent or autopsy later toda)f,
better in the balloting prior to noon. Police hope to make a positive iden-
Voting in· Huntington Beach, Foun-tification and determine the cause ol
tain Valley and Westminster ranged \death late today.
from 11 to 17 percent in the early The body was discovered by Air
tlll'nout. It ranged near 20 percent in Force Ma]or Russell Petrie of 20862
.some precincts spot-checked in Surge Lane and his rwining compan·
-.--As Californians
Vote in Primary
Newport Beach. Costa Mesa appeared ion, Karl Lederer, a programming an·
to-be-holding-near--a 17 percent and~alyst-of--!0902-Surge-Lane, ·who noti·
there was a near 20 percent in some fied police.
selected Laguna Beach precincts.
~ost election workers fel.t that the
early turnout was indicative of a
heavy vote.
Chamber Rejects
Gty Pia~ for
I
LOS ANGELES (AP} -California
Democrats decide between presiden·
ti al candidates Robe.rt F . Kennedy and
Eugene J . McCarthy today while
Republicans were voting on the
political future of U.S. Sen . Thomas H.
Kuchel.
This election jn the nation's most
populous state was the final primary
test for Sens. Kennedy and McCarthy.
The winner is likely to ofter tbe main
challenge to Vice Presid~nt 1-l~bert
J-lumphrey in the Democratic National
Convention.
Assistant Secretary of State H. P .
Sullivan predicted 67 percent of the
voters would turn out in mostly fair
weather.
Democrats, their interest stirred by
the increasingly fierce McCarthy-Ken·
nedy race for California's 174 national
conventicin votes, were expected to
vote in a greater percentage than the
Republicans. They outnumber GOP
voters 4.347,406 to 3,197,815.
Republicans, their choice limited to
favorite son Gov. Reagan on the
presidential ballot. weren't expected
to turn out as strongly, Sullivan said.
Kuchel's strategists said that could
hurt the senator, facing j8. strong
challenge from ~lax Rafferty, the
state superintendent of public in-
struction.
Traditionally, they say, the con·
servatives who back Rafferty have a
better record ·of turning out than the
moderate and liberal Republicans who
support Kuchel.
There'll be plenty or California firsts
In this election.
The polls were open from 7 a.m .. to 8
p.m. in eve~y county for the first time.
Jn the past. counties with less than
400,000 population closed their polls at
7 p.m.
And Los An geles County, for the
lirst time used. voting maChines, ex·
tending the electronic system to W
percent of the votes cast. Thirty-three
of the state's 58 counties now have ttie
machines.
Minor parties nre back on the ballot
for the ftnt time since the Prohibi·
tilDsts dropped out after 1964.
Former Alabama Gov. George
Wallace's American lnc2epcndent par·
ty and the Peace and Freedom party
l.ielded cand.idatos. •
Kennedy and McCacthy . captured
(See PRIMARY, Port I)
I
The Orange Coast tra~itionally has
lllkewarm voter turnout in the early
hours and then the pace at the ballot
boxes begins to pick up to heavy levels
in the late afternoon and early even·
ing.
Polls will remain <Tpen throughout
lhe state for the first time in a
primary election, Wltil 8 p.m. tonight,
one hour past the usual closing time.
Early samples of turnout in West
Orange Cpunty shortly before noon to-
day indicated 64 of 559 registered had
voted in a key downtown precinct
where election workers said "this
amount.<; to a steady s t r e a m of
voters."
At the Fountain V..alley Fire Station,
75 of 449 had voted, 61 of 341 at Foun·
lain Valley High School and 65 of 375
at Fountain Valley City Hall. At
Anthony School in Westminster, 42 of
487 bad cast ballot.I.
* * * Pilot to Carry
Voting Results
011 Wednesday
With heaVy voteJ. turnout predicted
in today's primary election in Orange
County, significant returns are not ex·
pe<ted to be available tonight.
The DAILY PILOT will not operate
an "election central" for telephone
queries tonight, but will report in Wed·
nesday's editions the latest available
report:; as they are compiled by the
Coleman Vote Tally S¥stem and other
computerized equipment which will be
operated around Ule clock by the coun·
ty clerk's ataff in Santa Ana.
Coolplete uoolficlal results
particularly on "local" races, such aa
congresgmen, 1 tat e a6MSl'lblymen,
c2unty..supervisors and propositions -
are not expected to be availd>le until
late Wednesday afternoon.
The. DAILY PILOT will carry final
rcturnl on how Orange County voted
as soon 11s they are available.
/
Revie\v Board
The Huntington Beach Chamber of
Commerce Monday turned thumbs·
down on a proposed city ordinance
which would create a design review
board.
If established, the five-man board
would review all structures for
buildings on city land, and possibly all
new buildings in the~lty.
· Legislative Action C o m m i t t e e
Chairman Jerry Shea reported Mon-
day to the Chamber's Board or Direc-
tors that the proposed board would be
made up of a landscape architect, a
licensed architect and three citizens.
Shea said that as he understood the
ordinailce all build.in-gs-would be sub-
ject to review, citing as examples the
new Fisherman Restaurant and the
Sheraton-Beach Inn.
Directors, with the ab&tention ex-
coption or George McCracken,
unanimously approved a letter by
Shea asking council why there should
be a board, why it should be paid when
other1 like the Urban Land Institue
Citizens Steering Committee and
Recreation and Parks Commi1sion
are "nori-paid," and questionlng the
last paragraph in the ordinance that
implies all buildings would be review·
~d.
Huntington Man
Among Viet Dead
A Huntington Beach man was
among three Orange Countians Iden·
tllied by the U.S. Derense Department
Monday as killed in Vietnam.
Cpl. James D. Baker, 10n o( Mrs.
Virginia D. Burks, 17882 Forest Lane,
HunUngtoo Beach was killed ·In actJon.
Other Orange County residents were
Cpl. James P. Crawford, son of Mr,
and Mrs. Jam<o R. CrawfO!'d, SHlO N.
Mulberry, Fullerton; and Pfc. Rodney
A. Roddam. son of Mr. a.nd Mrs.
Marthlltr H. Roddam, !ID 0.1 Mar
La, Anaheim.
eac -
HANDLE WITH CARE -Nurses and firemen race-
through hallway of Children's Hospital of Orange
County with precious· cargo, lo.day-old Russell
· Julien, son ·Of Russell and Beverly Julien of 7761
DAR.Y f'M,01' ..... ,_
Liberty St., Huntington Beach, a byaline mem-
brane patieht"'Who can stay alive during hospital
moving day only by riding in his special respirator.
Children Among.J;_argo
In Big Hospital Move .
It was no ordinary moving day.
Along with the furniture. filin g
cabinets and office equipment, the
precious cargo to be shifted from the
second floor of Children's Hospital Gf
Orr.nge County in Oraoge,to the newly
completed thlrd fioor J n c I u d e d
children.
They ranged !tom newborn infants
Mt their plia&tic isolettes to youngsters
suffering from hyaline membrane
disease, a malady in which a coating
ins1de the patient's lungs intei'feres
wlth the normal now of oxygen. The
yoWlg patient usually spends about
two hours in a· respirator alternated
wit.h 40 minutes under an oxygen hood
around the clock. And C H 0 C
specializes in the treatment.
Hospital officials knew where to get
help with their tlelicate moving opera-
tion .
Monday morning 15 firemen frl 1
the city of Orange Fire Department~
under the direction of Chief Floyd D.
Higgs, reported for .ducy,
Wifhin an boor tllty had moved the
critically ill youngsters and the life
support .systems which kept them
alive, They jollied and joked with the
less critical pa.tier.· -the tonsil
cases, appendectomy recovery pa·
tients and others.
And remodeling of ttu. Y6Cated se-
cond floor got under way. Completion
is scheduled for early July. .
Present overcrowding of the coun·
ty's only children's bo.9pttal will be
relieved. when the current expansion
program brings t.he total number of
beds to 104. ..
Ocean View School Board
Picks-New Superintendent
Dr. Clarence Luther Hall was nam·
ed Monday as the new Ocean View
School Dl!Jtrlct superintendent.
Chosen rrom 46 applicants, Hall, 42,
Is currently .superintendent or the
Pacific Grove UnUied SchoolS. He will
take the reins or the local 19-school ,
12,CKX> student di1trict July 1.
Hall wUl replace 11..-old.. Pedenen
who has retired after 24. years as
Ocean View supertnteDdent. Pedersen
will remain with the district as
associate superintendent for a time.
The new superintendent brings a
br'*1 range of teaching and counsel·
Ing experiencc:i with him. He has
taught elementary and high school
classes, including the mentally retard·
ed.
IIall w&1 auistant supe~lendent
llOd superintendent of the Southern
Humboldt UnUJed DtsbicL
An ungraded primary program
developed by Hall ha. received na·
Uonal JttenUon.
He has Also worked out pUot pro.
grams bJ toam tt•chtng, and set ·UP an
educational program lor San Quentin
1
Honor Camp inmates 1'18nging from
liteTacy classes to · college level
courses.
A Stanford University graduate,
I-tall received his bachelor's and
master's degrees in psychology and
education Qt the University of the
Pacific and bis doctorate inreducation
at Stanford,
He Is married and has two cbUdren.
15-mile Chase Ends
In Crash; Boy Held
BURBANK (AP) -Pollet arrested
a Los Angeles youth early toOa.y after
a ~mile auto chase from Burbank to
Huntington Par.JI: whieb ended wbep
hls car crashed in an lptenectJon.
MidlaeJ C8mpero, 19, WU booked on
susp1clon or assault on a police OWcer
with a deadly weapon, crend theft
auto and robbery. A companion In the
car escaped on loot •fter the crnsh. •
1 ,
Huntington Man
Faces . Charge
Of Kidnaping
A Huntington Beach man is being
held in Anaheim jail today on charges
of kidMping an 18-year-old Magnolia
llig!J School girl.
Police said Joseph W. Dutra, 52, o{
9782 Cha!ing Cross Drive drove to tlie
hlg!I school in Anaheim Moo<lay mom-
ing and induced Karen Jeanette
~ Caputo, 18, to get into his c81'.
Officers said Dutra told the girl that
her father was ill and he was taking
her Mme. 11H?y said she bad no
reason to -doubt him becaus~ he is the
father Of her boyfriend, Norman
Dutra, 19, ·
Instead of t.a.klng the girl home,
Dutra drove her to his home in Hut-
W>gtoo Beach. ,
Police questioned classmates of the
girl who had sttn her get into the
_Dutra car and determined thGt the car
could h<ave been one frequently used
by th• boyfriend.
Oran11e Coast
Weat•er
Cloudy and cooler,' but no
rain in sight, says forecaster
Dave Burt of Wednesday's
weather picture. High temps
will range around 65 here-
abouts, up to 75 inland.
INSWE TODAY
The fir1t ladv of Fronce,
hardl~ recognitable to moit
Frenchtne1l, 1eem.a to Uve quite
happilv will!. Hthat man." and
hal done 10 for manv t1eM1.
Sod•tu Pag• 15. --,_ ..... ,_ --........ , ...
n1 .. 1••n• =-tlMI ... --· __ .__..
' • ..... " " ' M
" .. ..
' " ,.
"
l
•
t
. '
2 OAllV PILOT I \
POp Artist ·Andy WarhOT-Sh~t; Actress ·Held
IN CRITICAL CONDITION
Pop artist Andy Wartiol
Club, Council
Clash Again
Over Lawsuit
I
-nie owner ol teen-age 1d1htclub
.. Syndicate 3000•• and tllo HU11tington
Beach City Council clashed again
Monday nd.ght when councilmen re-
jec·ted-the club owner's $500,_000 claim
for damages. _
Ck.lb owner Gilbert · Covell, ap-
pe.ariog before the council, charged
that the only councilman "who bad
enough res~t for pis coostttuents to
view the club preniises" was George
McCracken.
Angered by the rejection of his
cl.aim, Covell said in a ~oice tinged
wt.th &arcasm, "l understand you
ge.U.men-denled-my cfaliii today , so
l'll aee you gentlemen in court."
-Earlier in the 1esslon, before Covell
showed: up, Councilman Jack Green
movod ID deny the !500,000 claim on
grounds that evidence was insufficieat
and it udld not state any cause." The
cooncil unafirnously s u p p 6 r t e d
Green's mOUoo for denial.
Moet claims, ~ver, are routinely
rejected by city cooncils, thll6 paving
1be Wfll1 for later le-gel action after the
complaintant bas exhausted a 1 I
remedies outslde of ttie CQur~s_,__ .
Earlier, the hassle between the ctty
and Covell erupted one week ag(l when
Covell made in the club a citizen's ar-
rest oC two police officers for alleged
possession of marijuana.
Officers Gilbert Veine and Bt'rtrand
Oladwick were later released when tlhe district attorney's office refused to
issue a complaint for "insufficient
evidenct."
From Page l
PRIMARY ...
most of the attention on the final day
of campaigning Monday -just as they
had tlv'oughout the election.
The Los Angeles Times poll made
Kennedy a llllight favorite, but showed
a gain in McCarthy support and said
that the undecided voters held the
balance.
1be poll also predicted that a third
and uncommitted slate, headed b)' At-
ty. Gen. lilomas C. Lynch, would cap-
ture 15 percent of the vote. Once back-
ing President Johnson, the slate now is
badly split, but most of its leaderf
favor' Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey. '
Kuchel, 57, was reported by lilt'
Times poll to be only slightly ahead of
Rafferty in a race where the state
schools chief has moved up with a last
minute blitz of newspaper and
television advertising.
DAILY PILOT "'"'--""'-RoHrt N. WeeJ
Plolbllv.tf
Thelfl•• Keewil
Editor
Thellltt A. Mwrphl11e
IMNllnt ECll!flr
Albert W. let•• WUli1111 Ried Ast.otlll" H1111llno~ lffdl
ECll!w City Edllor H_,._,. .. IMcll Offtee
J Of Ith Street
Melllitt "'ilres11 P.O. lex 790 t2641
Othw Office• ....,.,.. IMctl: 2211 w. &al!ICll ...,...,.
Ctltli MIMI a3i Wiit ley •tl'MI ,_..,..,. ... c~: t2' F-$1 ..,,.,_
NEW YORK (tlPI) -lo hll far out
world of IOUP' wt pocten 111d Ill,
termlnablt uador~Wld !Uml. Alld1
Watbol'• aequolnWl<tl Inc I u d • d
cha,racters as bizarre as his art.
Among them was actress Valerie
Solanas, who detests men in &tneral
and had some -apeclllc 11'ievance1
agains.t Warhol.
The silver haired Warhol, 37, was
shof by a woinan visitor to hla afud lo
Monday. Police held Miss Solanai, 28,
star of Warhol's newest film, '.'I; A
Man," on charges of felonious usault
ind pos1esalon of a dan&erous weapon
1 with intent to kill.
Doctan 1&kl today Warhol bad a
"50-50" chance of surviving.
MJss Solanas, who last year placed
an ad in a Greenwich Village weekly,
the Village Voice, announcing forma-
Stam,llnf Ji'irna
Uoo of .. Th• Socle\y Fot CuU!n1 Up .
Men" (SC\JM), llld aht abot Wubol
b!c&UH ht .. had too much coatrol ol
my llft."
Warhol, famed for his eigbt·hour, no
· aotioa movies and his giganUc pain·
Unga ot Campbell aoup cans and Brillo
boxes, underWent auraery for • ..,,
hours. The bullet tore th r o u g Jt
Warhol's cbe~t. abdopien, spleen and
both lungs before emerging through
his right aide.
, Mias Solanu, !!quare-jawed, slender
and short haired, walked up to a
police'man in Timel Square lour hours
after the 1bootmg and said: "The
pcllce are looking tor me ·and want
me." She saJd she lived "nowhere."
"There are many involved reasons"
for the shooting, she told newsmen at
a police station. "l have written a
mlllllMto al What I am ""1 what I
It.and for."
Ace~ to.a wltntas, Warhol wu
talldn~ on Ille tolephoee to another "of
bl.I female film stars when Miss
Solanas # stepped from . an elevator,
walked into nbi sixth floor soundpro:of
office; and shot him.
J.farJo Amaya of London; a visitor in
Warhol's of!Jce, was shot in Ute back
but not seriously injured. '
Amaya, 34, said Miss Solanas \•stoOd
very quietly while we were in-
troduced.'' He said be th•n J,ooked
away.
0 Wbeo I flnt heard the a:unfire I
thought ,it was coming through the
·window, ' Amaya ·••Id ... Tilen I notic·
ed a revolver like one of those guns
you see .in Dick Tracy, in her hand. She
was going full blazes."
He aaid Warhol called her name and
ahouted '10b, DOI" Amaya u1d Ml.la
SolMas then turned and !Ired at blm
but he ~ucked. T~e bullel just m!Jsed
his spine. ·
According tO friends of Warhol, Miss
Solanas appeared at his office at
midafternoon bub left wben she found
he was out. She returned about 4:20
p.m. and shot him.
Paul 1.1orriasey, a receptionist who
shov.·ed Miss Solana1 into Warhol's of-
fice, satd he went into the office after
the womanJeft.·and found Warhol and Amaya wounaed on Ute no0r.
A group of Warhol's fr-lends, dressed
ln leather, denim, lace and beads,
waited at the hospital for news of his
condition following the operation. The -
artist's Czech·born mother, with whom
he lived, was given a sedative at tht
hospital and later taken home by •two
of Warhol's associates.
Hanoi Rebuffs New LBJ Propo~al.
PARIS (UP I) -The Hanoi deltga·
lion to the Peris Vietnam talks gave a
sharp and finn "no" today to Prest·
dent Johnson'11 latest call for a
reciprocal gesture from the Com·
munists on de-escalating the war.
JohnsOn, in an address at Glassboro.
N.J., today rejected Hanoi's demand
tt'la1: di American bombing be stopped
in North Vlelnam.
Cong Use . Wounded Gl __
As Bait; Rescuers Slain
SAIGON (uP!) -U.S., and Soirth
Vietnamese forces today killed an
estimated 200 Viet C<mg troops trying
to join the battle of Saigon. In one bat-
Ue the Viet Cong used ·a wounded
American soldier as bait for five
agonliing hour s.
U.S. Army 9th Infantry Dlvlalon
1oldler1 Jdlled "more than 200" guer-
rillas Monday night ""1 today In one
battle 38 miles southweat of the
capital. It wu in this action the Viet
Cong held the captured American and
shot every person who tried to rescue ·him. . •
The Americana lost 36 dead and 82
wounded In this battie. UPI correspondent Nat Gibson said
the flgbUng began when a group of 60
Americans landed by helicopter tn a
bramble patch just 10 feet from a Viet
Cong bunker complex. The Com-
munists h~ld their fire till the troops
landed then opened up with small
arms and automatic weapons fire.
-sHOT IN HEAD
One American was wounde<I in the
leg, five feet in front of.a bun.ker. Maj.
Zeb Bradfcird, 34, Kannapolis, N.C.,
said "they either killed or wounded
five or four men" trying to reach him.
Finally, he .said, they shot blm lD the
head just before dark.
Bradford said the wounded man Jay . , •.
.
Planners Weigh
Application for
New Building
Coi:istruction of a 70,000 square foot
department store on Brookhlll'lt street
near Garfield Avenue may hinge on a
decision of Huntington Beach planners
tonight.
The applicant, Harold Harper of
8351 Laura Circle, HunUngton Beach ,
ls requesting a zone change from
residential-agricultural to community
business aQ.d office-professional.
Another agenda item is the reque st
of Dall C. Glllb: to remodel property at ,
201 and 203 Main St. in the downtown
area.
Gillis Wants to add a third store to
this busy corner, and needs a waivt,':'
of off-street parking requirements to
do it.
The planning commission meets at 7
p.m. in city council chambers.
Beach Seminar Asked
Huntington Beach Mayor Alvin Coen
Monday asked the Chamber of Com-
merce t1> "explore the possibility of a
seminar" Of rtpresentaUves Of major
insurance companies and tM city and
chamber concerning pr iv ate in-
vestment in renovation of t h e
do'WU'town area.
in front of the bunker tor · five hours ·
screaming for help, and tha~ every
time he tried to move tHe Communists
would sbOot him again either in the
arms ·or legs.
The Communists were part of a
force believed trying to move into
Saigon where other Viet Cone units
have battled government troop! for
nearly a week. Another baWe came 22
mlli!a . northwe_st gJ__ Saigon where a
Squth Vietnamese army outpost aided
bi U.S. planes and arWlery threw
back .an assault by 400 North Viet-
namese using flamethrowers·. ·
The battles raged as the ·guerrillas
slammed 44 rocket& and mortar shells
into the capital, woupdlng 12 South
Vlelnam clvlllana. S<attored figbUng
raged In biocka of rubble In Sligoo•s
Cholon section and · on the city's
northeast edge.
The fighUng climaxed a month-long
Communist spring offensive aimed at
Saigon. Allied lntel:llgence sald the
Reds sought a propaganda victory to
aid their "cause in North Vietnam 's
talks with the United States in Paris.
But the North Vietnamese invaders
"Monday suffered a propaganda defeat
380 miles up the eo1st from Saigon,
near the city of Hue. A record 83 Com-
munist troops surrendered to U.S. abd
South Vietnamese ·forces.
They did not give up at the point of
a gun but simply under the urging of a
propaganda loudspeaker airplane.
But blood flowed elsewhere. In the
Mekong Delta fight, the 9th Division
units suffered 36 Americans killed and
62 wounded in the fithting that smash·
ed the Viet Cong battalion.
The allies' closest call came at the
outpost 22 miles northwest of Saigon
when 50 government troops aided by
10 American advisers held oft the
flamethrower attack.
OV to Consider ·
Unity Proposal
Ocean View Distrjct trustees an·
nounced their intenUon Monday to
study the "feasibility of creating a
unified HunUngton Beach Cit)' School
District."
Their study will center on merging
the 19-school Ocean View district with
the: six-school Huntington Beach City
Elementiry District.
This propasal will be presented by
Trustee Ralph Bauer of the Ocean
View board at the unification meet·
ing Wednesday of the Orange County
Committee on School District Organ·
ization.
The meetlng set "for 8 p.m. in the
Garden Grove Unified School District
Board Room 500 will also consider
a unification plan prtsented by the
Fountain Valley Board of Trustees.
This plan would split the present
Huntington Beach Union High School
Distrlct Into three unified diltrlcl!.
.
On to Onondaga
OCC Crew fund Plea Successful
It's "on to Onondaga." goal of $2,500.
The motto ot the Orange C:0.'1 Prior to Mooday 's mall call, the
College raclni: crew rffily means Pirates were SlOO &hy of the minimum
oomethinl toc111.v. goal, but contributions from the com· ~ munlty -led Grant to send the $150
Community ?ffPODI• to an appul enCrmce '"' and mate reservations
for fundl to 1tnd the Wtsl Cout row· 10< the Buco• Oiiht to Syrocuse.
ln.g champs to next week' 1 Jmt tn cue you'rt wonder1n1, any
Intercollegiate Rowing Anoclation donatJons received over the m.Wmum
cllampioncblp1 at Syracuse~.Y., (at ·· figure will be utiii.ied ~Y tllo ~·~·
Lake Onoodaga) w11 great enough to next month in th.tr que1t-to a n a
''An honorable peace requires some
gestures on the other ·stde toward
peace," Johnron said. " ... We have
met with litUe more than bellit05e
statements and evWons."
Officlal Hanoi delegation sources
takinf note of the speech said, "The
United Sta>tes alone holds the key to
breaking the deadlock" at tile talks
which resume Wednesday,
"Hanoi stands firm by its demand
for an unconditional cessation of
American bombing of North Vietnam
and Qf all hostile acts against it," the
delegation sources said.
Not until then will Hanoi open
negotlatlori.s on a political settlement,
they said.
The A·merican negotiatol\S here were
waiting to see if Hanoi's neW Vietnam
negotiator will be as bough as he in·
dicated.
Le Due Tho, the personal envoy of
President Ho Chi Minh of North Viet·
nam, arrived Monday and promptly
publicly took 11. hard line.
He said there can be ref.d peace
talks -the aim of the current pat'hfin-
ding session,, -if the United States
unconditionally halts bombing North
Vietnam and othet "act5 of war.:•
U.S. diplomats le .. by Ambassador·
at-Large W. Averell Haniman reserv·
ed commeDt. They wanted to see if-the
man from Hanoi might pull something
new from the r,leeve o~ his high-necked
military tunic Wednesday.
Tho today was consu"llng Xuan Thuy
and other Hanoi delegates.
Tho clearly had more authority than
Thuy to begin give and take diplomacy
that the North Vietnamese laieve avoid · e\I here so far ..
In public Tho was au slfiiles and
courtesy but as unyielding thus far as
only
Thuy .
But he bore a special importance,
Tho has been a Communist party
member for 40 years. He sits on
Hanoi's politburo. Not only Communist
officials met him at tile airport Mon·
day but also their wives and children,
a Red diplomatic gesture extended on·
ly to the, more majestic proletari&o
potentates. .
Harriman continued his round of
consuitiatlons with American experts
and aides. Thus far tt.ey have ha<l lit-
Ue luck in getting Hanoi to agree to
show some restraint in its war effort
In return for any U.S. promise to hllt
the bombardment of N-Vi•lnam.
Han-imm remained in Paris.
'111.o was closeted with · the Thuy
delegation in ... a country house bor-
rowed from the French Communist
plll\ty. The house bolds ail 38 Han<ii
representatives, including a cook
brou~ fcom North Viet.Dam.
.See Pavilion
Then and Now
Balboa Peninsul'l-was just a long
spit of sand in 1904 when the Balboa
Pavilion was built and some property
of dubious value -including a mud
flat which . later was filled in to
become Lido Isle -was given as in-
centive to bring the "Red Car" trolleys
to the new resort.
The cupola-topped old Pavilion is
about to become an official historical
landmark. The story and some
delightful pictures of the Pavilion -
then and now -are on Page 8 today.
I HE llllC'
BOOKED li.f SHOOTING
Actress V1ltrlt Sol1n11
Slayer Convicted
For Second Time
LONG BEACH (UPI) -Robert
J,,eslie Webster was convicted by a
Superior Court jury. Mond·ay of the
strangulation murder of a 38-year-old
Long Beach divorcee.
Judge Roy J. Brown sentenced
Webster, 51, to life imprisonment. The
judge set June 28 as the date for hear·
lng a motion for a new trial mbrnitted
by Dennis Fredrickson, Webster 's
defense attorney.
It was the second time Webster had
been found guilty of the slaying of
Diane Harley in September, 1963.
has it!
" • • •
D££P~· Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning costs more ~'4' than the old shampoo method • • •
However, the Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet and the carpet backing. Since no brushing or
scrubbing action is used, there is no distortion of the carpet pile. The
powerful extraction action of tbe Deep Steam process lifts matted pile to
.. like new'' appearance.
The need for frequent professional clea ning is reduce~ because th e deeply
imbedded abrasive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are removed and
there is no detergent residue left in the carpet to collect dirt. During the
Deep Steam cleaning process all the carpet fibers are coated with a special
soil retardant. • .
"It's simple logic ••• You profit in the long run when you use Deep Steam
Carpet Cleaning because your carpet will be -cleaner than ever before
possible. It will stay clean longer ahd wear longer because you used Deep
Ste-am Carpet Cleanina: •.. " ·
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• • I
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'65 Plymouth '66 Riviera '61 Mercury '63 Plymouth
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oi\n;v· PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' I
Voter Needs Choice
.. .
' ' I
Dlsencbantme.nt may be lhe key word to dcscrjbe
fe.elln~1 among many Republicans and Democrat~ in
today s presidential pri1nary election.
The Democrats have such a plethora of choices
wiUt two committed and one uncommitted slate o{ de.le--
gates to choose amon~ lhat they're likely to e nd up
with no one really satisfied with the outcome.
The Republicans, on the other hand. don't have any
means of expressing a choice. Either they vote for the
Reagan.committed slate of 86 party-picked convention
delegates or they don't vote at all ..
Since writ&in votes don't count. and there's only
one GOP slate, there's no legal way to dissent. Na·
turally, a good many Republicans of indepe,ndent mind
will feel disfranchised -and no doubt wondering whc·
ther a good hard look at Californta's election laws might
not result in improvemeiit in the democratic process.
The "favorite son" stratagem isn't well under·
stood, especially by those voters who have never In·
lerest.ed themselves in the inner \\'Orkings of.American
political parties.
Window dressing for the gambit is that it makes
for party unity and avoids internecine warfare which
could result in loss of support for the party's nominee.
There are other reasons. however. Historically.
"favorite sons" have become party nominees out (1£
deadlock • br~aking. compromises in t h e legendary
"smoke-filled rooms" at convention hotels. But much
more often the commitment of a state's Clelegation to
a favorite son gives the group the convention "clout."
the maneuverability, the bargaining power in political
deals which may finally determine the nominee.
On this score, the Democratic Party is famed fo r
its ability to stage primary election don~ybrooks ;:ind
then close ranks behind the eventual nominee to bnng
him home a winner. The Republicans are better known
(1964 being a prime examplE'.-) for deep division along
icfeological lines and then being unable to close ranks
in support of the nominee. . . .
One of the things that make pot1t1cs, espec1allr.
presidential politics, the absorbing "specta~or sport• ..
FBI Continues
Wide Search ·
In King Death
WASHINGTON -The Feder.al
Bureall of Investigation's massive
probe o( the assassination of Dr. Mar-
lin Luther King is taking a possibly
sensational turn.
With James Earl Ray. the suspected
assassin, apparently either outside t.he
U.S. or now dead. FBI agents have 1n·
creased their surveillance of several
American CommunisU known to have
been closely associated with King, in-
cluding one who wrote speeches fqr
him in the past.
Thia new development was triggered
by evidence gathered by the more
than 1,000 agents who have. worked on
the mytiterious King shooting and by
several "tips" and letters sent to the
FBI.
One of the most interesting ol these
"tips" came lrom an alert TV viewer·
and concerns the now famous "Moun-
tairiTop" speech King made on April
~ the1 night be£ore his slaying. show-
'ii1g .a premonition of his impendiog
death.
, "IF THE SPEECH was truly made in· Memphis on April 3 as reported."
the letter poD!ted out. "then how can.
one account for King stating his age .as
36 (instead of 39) .and why d~s he
speak of demo'lstrating in Alabama
twice duriog the speech?"
After checking out the time <1nd
location of King's final speech. several
Of the crack FBI agents assigned to
the case decided to begin seeking
answers to a number of their own
questiOM , including:
"lf King had personally written that
speech, why wo~ld h_e ".'"ake misl~kes
like those contained 1n 1t -especially
the one involving his age?"
"If the speech was written b:v some·
one other than King. who was the
author and when was it written ?"
THE ANSWERS to these questions
are considered highly important to the
investigation. since. if another person
was concerned in the preparation of
that speech. the writer might be able
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
our ... ~on recently new ii.II the
way from Korea to Orange
County-Airport (practically at
our back door) on leave firom
the Army. It was a real delight
not to have to fight freeway
traffic to get him. Maybe those
ai rport dissenters should stop
and think. -M. B.
TM~ ltllltrl r1tle<h r11a1n.' ~llWI, fttl
MctHltllY llln.a ol "'' ftlW•,·--'"'' your "' 11nv1 If Oltfmr G_u._ DtHY ~u",
to shed new light on it -especially
those mistakes.
Also if Kiog had received help with
the s~ch, the passages deali~g-with
the civil rights leader's premonition of
death would probably have been fully
discussed. King's request to the
Detroit police department .ror pro-
tection when he visited that city a few
weeks before his death indicated he
feared for his life then.
Information gathered by the FBI on
King, prior to hls assassination, show·
eel that a secret member of the Com·
munist PartY's executive Committee
was one of King's closest advisers and
speech writers.
THIS GHOST WRITER for King
prepared many of his most famous
speeches, according to testimony
given by FBI Director J. Ed~a"
Hoover durin~ a closed door meeting
of a House Appropriations sub-
committee.
Since Ray during his trips prior to
King's assassination visited .the s.ame
city in which this ghost writer hves.
the FBI is now investigatln~ to
determine if the two met covertly.
Recent evidence gathered by f"BT
agents in one of the most massive
llrobes in the nation's history has
forced serious investigation of these
possibilities:
-Thal somebody close to King or
within his own organization tipped off
his assassin as to the civil rights
leader's routine on the day of his
slaying.
-Th.at Ray was hired d.irc·clly by
certain black nationalists who paid
him with money made available by
foreigli sources.
l'aul Scott
AndEverybodyls Wrong
The Germans are too square.
The French are too greedy.
nie Italians are too effusive.
The Scandinavians are too morose.
The Negroes are too shiftless.
The Jews are too pushy.
The British are too reserved.
-ISN'T IT GREAT thi!l lhe
Americans aren't too anything?
The Spanish •rt t.oo violent.
The Greeks are too quarrelsome.
The Japanese are too devious.
1'he Arabs are too fanatical.
The Mexlcens are too lazy.
The Hindus au too superstitious.
Tht Dutch er& too phlegmatic.
-ISN'T IT GREAT that th•
Americans aren t too anything!
The Swiss are too prissy. .....~
The Finns are tot. ,.dt.bdrawn.
The Rus1la.ns are too tem·
perament.al. The Chlaese: are too pass.ive.
The Turks are too ferocious .
The Pote1 are too primlUve,
Tbe Hungarlan1 are too slippery.
-ISN'T IT GREAT thal I h •
Amulcans aren't too anything?
Eve.a tboulb the Germ&ns fmd u1
.,
l
too anarchic.
And the l"rrnch find us too nai ve.
And the Italians find us loo repress·
PO.
And the BriUsh find us too flam ·
boy ant.
And the .Japanese find us too rude.
And the ~1exicans find us loo .ar·
rogant.
AnQ the Swiss fh1d us too dirty.
And the Spanish find us too
materialist.le. .
And the Scandinavians find us too
\'lolent.
And the Hindu5 find us lO()
hypocritical.
And the ll1.1ogarians find us too
joyless.
And Ufe Finns Und us too boisterous.
AND EVERYBODY finds everybody
clu: to be too much of what It Is not,
and everybody Is unaware or how he
could use some of fhe traits be dls11kH
In others, and tverybody thinks th:u
his own bad traits are really virtues,
and eve.r.ybod)' Is wron& a bout
• ...,~bod)!.
I
• it ts every four years i& whether, a& ln professional
sports, the losers of the past have learned bow to win.
If it were not for the Kuchel·Rafferty race for the
U.S. Senate, and some local matters, Orange Coast
RepUblican vOters would be just that -spectators -
for all the int~est and involvement the Republican
presidential ballot offers.
A bard look at California primary laws to see if
some way cannot be found to insure party primary
voters some reasonable expression of choice -at least
the opportunity to oppose the slate. if that is their feel·
· ing -or perhaps lo vote that the slate be uncommilted
-would seem clearly worthwhile.
· Protecting Our Children
This week has been designated "National School
Bus Safety Week." It is belng officially recognized
and supported at state and local levels, for California
uses inore than J0,000 buses to transport a million pu·
pils each school day.
Although Section 22454 of the California Vehicle
Code is clearly and simply worded, there a re still driv·
ers unfamiliar with it. or who become confused as to
exactly what they should do when approaching or over-
taking a stopped school bus.
It's simple. If the bus displays flashing 'fed lights,
s top -no matter which direction you may be traveling.
And don't move until the flashing red lights ar~ turned
off.
A highway with separate roadways is different. ll
isn't necessary to stop on meeting or passing a school
bus which is on the other roadway . .'\lso. the driver of
a vehicle need not stop on meeting or passing a school
bus when the bus is stopped at an intersection or place
where traffic is controlled by a trarfiC orficer or an of-
ficial traffic control signal.
The law is simple. Let's observe it to lhe letter
at all times. '
•..
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11: . ;·
I. •' ,i
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) ; • ... •• j ,.
Citi%ens Study Co1nmitteeman Vt•ges YES on Prop. 2
'Plain Case of Pocketbook Prudence~
To the F.dilor : 1 ~e . "P~ketbook Prudence." your
editorial of May 30 regarding Propo-
sition 2, the junior college bond issue
,-YOU ARE SO RIGH T!
. I. have been .serving on the special_
c1l1iens committee· studying the Ii·
nances, operation and future of the
Orange Coast Junior Co11ege Districl.
and ron.sequently I feel that J have a
much clearer picture of the financial
n~ds and problems of tAe district
than most citizens.
Yet It shouldn't take much or a
study to realize:
L TRAT THE NUMBER of stu-d~nts en~olled in .our junior colleges
will ronllnue to increase ·rapidly in
the foreseeable future ·(estimated at
15 percent per year increase).
2. That the assessed value (and
consequently the property tax income
based upon present rates) will COT)·
linue to increase at only about 5 per-
cent per year. The assessed value per
student in our di strict has decreased
from $228,(KX) (when it. was one of the
richest) to $94,000 (which is less than
the st.ate average).
3. During the next 10 years the
present plant size of this district will
have to be doubled to take care of
anticipated enrollment increas~s. The
cost of this would be roughly $..10 mil-
lion !both OCC and GWC will be oper·
ating beyond optimum ca1lacity dur-
ing the 1968-69 school year). . ~
4. THI': DISTRICT or state cosl per
<.~liege student, both in operation and
capital costs is much less for junior
colleges than for state colleges and
universities. Hence it is advanla·
geous to lhe taxpayer 10 provide
adequate junior colleges to t.ake care
of the first two years of higher edu-
cation.
5. 1'he cost for the student is also
much less in the junior colleges.
which i ncidentally are providing vital
cduc;:itional and vocational trainini::
tor those who cannot afford the four
years or state or private schools.
Under Proposition 2. half of the cost
of junior college expansion will co1ne
fro1n a statewide general tax base. as
JI, should, 1ns~ad of all of the cost hy
LOCAL PROPERTY TAXPAYER S.
A Yf,S vo te hefi! is a plain case of
"POCKETBOOK PRUDENCE."
DON HUDDLESTON
More Optimistic
To the Editor·
Your editorial. "Desalt Surces~
\'ital." in your May 20 edition came
,---a11 George---.
near George :
I ~ there any hof)f' for
matrimonia l happiness for mr? I
simply hate housekeepin.e, and
rather love Utter, but men u•ho
become interested in me back off
when they see my sink fu\ of dirly
dishes. unstraightened apart·
ment, etc.
What can J do? \Vher~ Is mv
Prince Charming who loves roni-
fort even if it is sloppy?
GEITING WORRIED
Dear Getting \Vorricd·
Don 't despair. We had .a girl
researcher like you. She left last
month, and the ashtrays on her
desk were still overflowing with
crumpled packs of Lucky Strikes
-the green packages, and they
haven't made those since World
War II . But she met her Ptinef!
Channing . She got a job and
married lier @dltor -he's thr..
boss at B&d Houliekeepin!?.
1 Even their Seal of Approval
1NYH a smudge.)
' '
l.ctters from readers are welconic.
Normally writers should convey tMir
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All let·
ters must include sig1tature a11d mail-
ing address, but names will be with·
held on request.
right to the heart of the matter con-
cerning the proposed Bolsa Island
Nuclear Power and Desalting Plant.
The twin objecti\·es of the project-
large scale desalting of ocean water
and island siting for nuclear power
plant~-are too important to l~t them
die for a lack of vision . •
AT TH IS i\'f0JllEN1', I am some·
what more optimistic 11bout the
chances for continuing the project
than I was a week ago. but we must .
realize there .are still so!"!'le impor-
tant hurdles lo be Crossed before the
fina l go-ahead is given.
\Vell reasoned and articulate sup-
port rro.i:n ~e pre_ss, as evidentro hy
your e~1tor1al. wllJ be an important
fact.or 1n the future success of this
project.
CRA IG HOSMER
Member of Congress
Du11ge ro11s lll11slo11
To the Editor:
The relationship between blacks and
whites is !he nation's chief domestic
problem. Our best interests require l~at, we detc.rminf: w~at's both prac-
llcal and Just in improving this
relationship.
Racial integration of residential
areas is impossible. W. H. "Ping"
f-'crry of the Center for the Study of
Democratic Institutions. Sa n t a
Barbara. explored this t. h em,-'
~ "Farewell to Integration" ~peech at
Stanford University. Nov. 8, 1967).
F'ifly of our largest cities will be
mainly black by 1970. The Negro's
material s ituation will steadily im-
prove. Blacktown and whitctown will
be separate cultural. social and
polilical communities.
INTEGRATION is a sentimental.
not a doctrinal idea. It disappears At
the first sign of indocility. at the first
showing of the rioter's torch.
\Vhitcs fear integration. The Pro-
position 14 vote was: strongly for
~egregation . When blacks streamed in -
fo En~land the LRbor government
abruptly narrowed the J?:ate~.
The va st fuss about improvemeol:t
in blackl own isn't aimC'd at in -
t!:!j?ratioo. Thf' aims are to prevent
civic co ni m n t 1 on :o;:, tn salvr
whi!elown's conscierice and to help !ht
blacks.
The whilf' attitude toward blacki; is
j!encrnlly bcnhi:n . Whiteg don't objrcl
ln bettering the Negro's condition as
lnn.£! ;is it doesn't cost too much . Or
intrude on tMir privileges of peace·of·
n1lnd .
TOD1\ \' \\'E'RE fostering the t.f'r·
rlbly dangerous illusinn that in-
tegration is a white goal that can be
achieved. This illusion is patheUc and
vicious in It! effects on blacks. It's
sinister for lhe whites since this il-
lusion leaves us. unprepared for reati·
ty. •
\V, mu~t leArn how tn run a
~rparate soc•ely without sacflficin~
fr('edom and justice for Any man.
I dii:;aJ?Tet' with many of lht' modf'rn·
lihcral tenet:i1. Rut I must tammend
Mr. Ferry for realisUcaUy facin& the
Integration issue.· I hope that other
liberals also will face reality and work
for practical ways to better the Negro.
LEONARD WRIGHT
•·The Busic Proble.n
To the Editor:
Th<! basic problem with the poor. It
seems to me. is pent-up envy, rivalry,
and hate because of their st·.atus in this
aif\ueot world.
The black race historically has the -
largest. richest continent on this globe.
Only God knows how Jong Negroes
have lived in Africa. (n all tile
th ousands or years, the black people
have never developed the land. made
use of its riches, or progressed beyond
the state of savagery. or the primitive.
Human nature is such that when one
receives help, financially or otherwise,
. he seldom feQls gr:-titude. but only
resentment that he was in a position
where he needed help.
THIS IS THE natural reaction of
many people. Thatlk God the vast ma-
jority of Negroes, especially the
won1en I have talked to , are grateful
they do not still live like animals in the
jungles-of Africa, barefooted;-witfl
rings in their noses. and where the life
expectancy rate is 30· years.
Thank God also. it has been a
minority of Caucasians who through
selfishness and greed have imposed a
cruel and ruthless set of living con·
ditions on black people. Thi~ is the
s<ivagery of the white race.
Through the centuries the vast ma-
jority of white people have sought to
better conditioll6 for all peoples
through better health. education. and
spiritual improvements.
• \VllAT IS l\IOST needed for all pco--
t>le is the opportunity to expand free
individual enterprise -the very
freedom that has made this ct1untry so
great. This con be acconuili.shed by a
be er. more intelligent and honest
means of distributing profits and
"know-how," the wealth of out land.
Socialism-communism is NOT the
answer. Education. proper eva~uation.
unselfishness. and love for .a 11
mankind, is the answer.
. MRS. LILLIAN W. RILEY
\/lcarlou• l'lueebo6
To the Editor:
In recent years there. ha~ been a
growing trend in education and society
to dii!parage athletics participation :
boys and girls -particularly young
men and women In hlgh school and
college -have been left nothing of
value to replace our nation's former
high degree of social encoura1?ement
of youth participation in physical
education activities. -
Social a cc e ll t a n c e and • en·
couragement of bodily developmen( by
fO'(>win, persons has been replaced by
goals Umited to the intellect . , . pride
in physic.al culture has been replaced
by a variety of questionablt mind
c:"ulturcs.
tnlelligence Is such that th_e «:mo·
lional stimulus to v3l11e·makina: can be
subverted in many (tnore or less in·
tellectuatJ ways. When this happens.
misplaced values usutlly result.
TELEVISION,, motion p I ct u re•,
magazines and rad.lo -the primary
vehicle1 to youth oommunJcat.lon -
9Uggest an individual's social ac-
ceptance as a smoker, drinker and
drug-user. •
Thii:; is how wr le"rn to cherish
t.hings we don 't nced and ne~lecl the
pur$uit of thinsts we d<'l require.
Whenever young perS<1n1 lose. thl"lr
nntural 1eose of pnydcal self-esteem
-when the correspondence between
animal needs and likes breaks down -
we t'ind our value systems no longer
offer reliable guides to living.
The family of contemporary youth
reenforce social acceptance of tobac·
co. alcohol and d;·ugs by adult
society's casual indulgence. and depen·
dence upon : cigarettes be 1 ore
breakfast; cocktails before lunch and
dinner and a multiplicity of drugs for
sickness. health and well-being.
SliPPLEl\1ENTING t h es e in-
ducements to body degeneration,
parents conspicuously avoid sport~
participation and. :nstead. become
psychologically addicled to t h e
vicarious placebos provide.:i by tv. the
movies and music ... the vicious.
Pavlovian social cycle has come full
circle.
Rather than oblige our natural,
animal requirements for sports ac·
tivities participation and experiencing
their accompanying, mental .and
physical euphoria. we have permitted
ourselves to be brain-washed inl.o
believing the same sense of well -being
may be attained through d r u g
escapes.
Re~arch by New Jersey-Foundation
physical education. psychology and
sports medicine authorities has con-
firmed the extraordinary contributions
of athletics to the growth and develop·
rnent of girls a.~ well as boys and
their vital requirements for self.
realization.
BRUCE HOPPING
Kennedy'• ~Jo11ey
To the Editor :
I am shocked any newspaper would
print an editorial .as you did tn your
May 29 issue.
Am only sorry I have no choice. but
to subscribe to the DAILY Pl.LOT il I
wiant local news . The ooly difference
Jn the money being spent in the cam·
paign is that Sen . Kennedy is spendin~
his own while a couple of our grease·
tongue 0 r a to r s are spend ing the
people 's,
YOU SPEAK OF him coming into
the rac;e after Sen. McCarthy had pav.
ed the way. !{ow abour our coy "White
Kni ght'" in Sacramento'.' lie is running
harder than anyone. And Gov.
Rockefeller reminds me of a yo yo. Af-
ter all. it is a free country.
Caiifornia Is fast approaching the
bottom in many ways. But I think it
would be very sad to nominate a man
for President of the United States who
can't run one state. !i-s for dignity. 1
wouldn't be afraid to pit Sen. Kennerly
agai nst a.ny of the candidates or non ·
candidate~.
•
MRS. E. 0 .
' ----1-... 1.1_
l'ucai:iay. June 4. 1968
The editorial page of the Dail~
Pilot seeks to tn.frnm and stim-
ulate readers by presenting thi.t.
newspaper's opinions and com·
menfml on topics of intereit
11nd significance, bt1 providing 11
forum for tM e.:z;pression of
our readers' .opinions. and b11
pr11entino the dftJcrsc view-
poinU t'lf i11jormed nbstrvrr.1
rrnd spnke.mc11 ort topu:s fl/ the
rfau.
Rohert N. "''ecrl. rubl111her
'·
·J __
BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the WinCI
"Notes and Quotes0 of the Hunt-
ington Beach Union High School
District points out that as th• end
of school nears, outstanding stu ..
dents are making news in many
different fields.
Bruce Saunders of Westminster
High won the $500 cash scholar-
~ship from the Huµtington Center
Merchants Association, while Su-
san Myrick was second with a $50
a\vard. She is from Marina High.
Patti Johnson, Fountain Valley
High, and Donna Mincks, Hunting-
ton Beach High, were In the $25
awards division.
* Calvin Hoff of WestmiJtster High,
Dean Morris of Huntington, and
Rick Waller of Marina each receiv-
~d .$150 in Bank of America awards.
Karen Schendel, Fountain. Valley,
was recognized as one of 145 out-
.standing students by the American
·Baptist Board of Education.
Vince Moll, of Marina, has been
selected Boys' state representative
as well as Al'l -Orange Coast
catcher. ..
Others on the team include Ed
Bane, Wayne Kiefer and Ron May-
eda all of Westminster High and
Bob Wickersham of Huntington
Beach. Vicky Bennett was the Vik-
ing girl selected to go to Girls'
State in Sacramento.
* Susanna McClarty, of Westmin-
ster High, is the 1968-69 "Little
Mermaid" of the Little Mermaid
Guild. Jeffye Blackard of Marina
High serves. as Miss Huntington
Beach.
Charlest' Golder of Huntington
High ·and Brit C. McLin of Marina
were recognized by the Signal Oil
Co., each receiving a four-year
scholarship.
They are a great group of young .
people and we join. with thE:; high
school administration in offering
to the students and their families
congiatula"tions for the r~ognition
received.
JiftPORT QM I El
I
.. -. . . ... .
• -.
futsday, Jlll'lf 4, 1968 DAILY PllAT :J
Grade Sehool-Makes Grades . -
WHAT DID WE FORGET? -Student government leaders of Ful-
ton School in Fountain Valley (left to right) David Grady, president;
Sheryl Catherman, vice president and Susan Flynt, secretary, finish
up work on the school constitution as instructor Robert Halley
looks on.
Coronet Awards Banquet
F etes Top Valley Students
Fountain Valley High·-·Sclwol's se-
C<>nd annual Coronet Awards Banquet
will be held Friday at 7 p.m. in the
200.To Receive ·
Degrees at GWC
More than :ZOO Golden West College
sophomores will receive t h e i r
associate in arts degree in com-
mencement ceremonies June 13, 7 to 8
p.m. in the College Center.
Twice as big as i.ast year's first
graduating class, the 1968 crop in-
cludes 31 Who will graduate with
honors.
Donald D. Shipley, biology professor
at California State College Long Beach
and a Huntington Reach city coun-
cilman, will make the commencement
address. Otlange Coast Junior College
District Superintendent Norm·an E.
Watson will present the "Outstanding
Citizen Award."
school gymnasium:
Banquet coordiliator Leo Iverson,
chairman of the business department,
announced that 33i students have been
nominated ' for the award in 22
categories.
Three certificates Of achievements
and one Coronet will ~ presented in
each of the categories. The "Prix
d'Honneur," or Pr.incipal's Trophy,
will be given to the boy an4 girl judged
by Principal P.aul Berger to be the
outstanding · Fountain Valley High
School students.
Presentations will be made in the
fields of arts and crafts, athletics,
business education, English, foreign
languages, Girls' Athletic Association,
home economics, industrial arts,
journalism and mathematics.
More a r e musical-instrumental,
music-vocal, boys' phys ical education,
girls' phy.!llcaJ education, scholarship,
science, boys' service, girls' service,
social studies, speech, student govern-
ment and theater art.
Fulton Gets Constitution
It's tun to be first, but It can mean
a lot of hard work, too.
The 61 elghUl graders graduating
from .Fountain V"&lley's n e w e s t
e.l~mentary· school, the Harry C.
JiUKon School, have met A real -
challenge this spring. ·
Together Jn thelr new buJlding just
&Ince March, the gradflates have
h84>ed pull togett.er a student g(/vern-
Better Business
Students Cited
At Golden West
• Outstanding business majors at
Golden West College have been
&elected for special recognition and
rec<1mmendation to future employers.
Cited by the busine5s division
faculty as "Golden West Man" and
"Golden West Woman" were:
Lillian BB.der, James C~er, Blanch
Jagosz, Kathy McElligott, Mrs. Ann
Spiegel, Donald Wlpstead And Karen
Zamansky, all of Huntington Beach.
Also Dianne Penhall, Midway City;
Christine Power, Fountain Valley: and
Victoria Taylor, Garden Grove.
The 10 majored in bookkeeping, ac·
counting, bus in e s s admin1stration,
, business education, uiedical, legal and
ge neral secretarial fields.
The honor places· students on a
preferred list malled to busineso; and
industries in Orange County with the
u n q u a 1 i f i e d recommendation of
division faculty.
Water Activities
Carded for Valley
Fountain Valle.Y's city recreation
staff has public swimming, lessons
and aquatic team activities set for the
Fountain Valley and Los Am igos High
Sch09ls pools.
Publlc ·swimming is set for 1 to 4:30
· p.m. dally and for 7 to 9 p.m. Monday
through Thursday.
Two-week sessions of lessons for
youngsters at $3.50 per session will
begin June 17 and at two-week in-
tervals thereafter. Adult swimming .
beginning diving and "mommie and
me" instruction are a!Bo scheduled.
Early registration will be held
Saturday, noon to 3 p.m., and next
Monday, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m . in front of
the Fount.ain Valley High School gym
at 17816 Bushard St. and in front of
Los Amigos High School, 16566
Newhope St.
Daily regist.ration will start June 15
from noon to 4 p.m. wjUt the pool
cashier. A parent must be present .at
the reglstratf'on.
ment, hold an election, write a COO.•
stitution, and adopt school colors (blue
and gold).
Choice.of an emblem and motto will
be finalized this week.
Other classes have contributed
greatly to these activities.
In an,· 18 class representatives,
three student council officers and two
monitors have met weekly with
Robert Halley, who coordinates stu~
dent government efforts when not
teaching eighth grade,
Students leaders have been David
GMd!Y, council president; Sheryl
Catherman, vice preslctent and Susan
Flynt, secretary.
Tbey'ri!. holding two and three
meetings a week now, trying to tta
everything down before the storm of
graduation events,
West County Artists
More tha~ 500 exhibits of Huntington Beach Art Le;gue and West..
minster Art Association members will be on display June 6, 7 and
8 in the Huntington Center Mall. All works will be m arked for sale.
Making plans for the three-day showing are (left to right) Mrs. Peg·
gy Frishholz, Mrs. Joan Petty, Mrs. Shirley Stebblngs and Mrs.
Charlotte Toth.
NOW SHINING ... ANTIQUED PATENT a
:,. )
• 11 FASHION ISLAND • •
The new patent is antiqued. The toe is gently roiinded. The heel is higher
ood straighter. Antiqued brown or antiqued platinum witfl black patent trim. Also
in black pa~nt witfl matte calf trim. By Deliso Debs. See tflem shine.
at Buffums', U.M •. Shoe Salon, all seven stores
u umS'
6'4-2200 . • MONDAY, TifURSDAY, FRID_AY 10:~ TILL 9:30
•
•
..
--OTHER DAYS Tn:OO Till 5:3'' • •
--~-----------
. '
. -·
""""'""~~~~~~~~~~----,~~~--,,--~~~~~~~~~,...--~~~~~~-=-~...-,-~
· I
. ... .. .. "' ·-· ... .. . . ' ' .. .. .. : .... .. '"' . ..
'~ ...... ,,,..,; .... ,...., :san ib1ae1 Sherill's depuues in-
'1onnec1 a bW'glary ouspect ol bis
OU1$Ututlooal rigbls belore Ibey
· arreslecl him~ ooly 14 have bim
'answer. "I know my rights. Get
me the bell out ta here." The dep-
·bties found the suspect, OoNld
Edward Smith, 32, wedged tightly
eight feet from lhe wp ol a cbim-
oey .be apparenUy entered ID gain
acce5s to a golf"clubhouse. •
Poo r Pe9 ple
~ope to .See
Oark TodaYi
Wh.SHINGTON (UPI! -Member.
of the Poor Pecs>le'• Campl.fgn &•V<
up Monday aflu an dght-hour wait to
see Attorney General Ramsey Clark.
They_ wer~ going_ back t.o the Justlce
Oeportmenl today.
Clark relllled Mond*1 to m .. 1 wltl!
a delegation of 100 Jhdlln•., Mexican.
Americans, Appalachian whites and
poor blacb protesting !bl lndldme!\I
Friday of 13 me.a by a LOI; Angeles
grand jury.
Clark ottered several times t.fonday
to meet with a smaller group or 20 to
25, but the demcmst:raton tumed him
down. The allomey general finally
agreed to ciiscusl the grievances with
a ckiegation ol 100 today, and leaders
said they would bmd him to his word.
,
. . .. .
\
.. t • ... • •• ~ ... .!. "' ·-........
A b g Tums FlcfJIJy ·
Hurricane Mo ves
'M·eekly' Ashore
.... I
PUNl'A GORDA Fla. (UPO-Hur·
rl,,_ Abby ;,;ow;i -1<11 asbcft to-
day aod nrill11 degeoentod mto a l'l!la1l tbal farmers called a ble1$illg
~Jo-OIOir dlnll grovu.
· • Al Abbr qulclcl)' d1'>pped from a
mlnb•I hurricane to .a minimal tJ:OP-
ical storm . Ille 34-!ool sloop Celerity.
mkl'ai m'. the storm since~s~y.
sailed ulely into Flamtogo, Fl&.' Wllh
four petJODS aboard.
8u1 tbe storm had claimed one life
in Ille Fl«lda Keys and anolher man
was still missing at sea.
beCore Abby st.ruck land.
As the storm came ashore at Pun.
ta Gorda, a sheriff's deputy reported
'·There'' no wind al all. Tbe l~aves are
barely moving.··
Squalls with wlnds ck>cked at 40 to
50 mHes an hour ti Wept the Cape. Kee.
nedy area, and a tornado wa'.s spotted
in the air near the space center there.
Winds up to 45 miles an bo11r were ex.
pected ali rar south as Miami.
But it appeared that a night spent
milliog aroood oil the roast lei! Abby
too weak and flabby to deal hai-shly
with the hurricane-wise residents of
the Florida peninsula.
Altbougb Clark reluU:Cl to grant the
demonstrators an .audience, the poor
people claimed victory al lite md of
their Mooday vigil when their leader.
Rodollo "Cocky.' Gonzales, announCW. 1
At mJddOY lhe,llnl hurricane of the
roUr._,-okl &eason was a tropical
storm wtt.h winds that reached oQly 40
miles an hour. The National Hurricane
Cent.er at Miami said the diUused.
wide-spreed center would n:acb the
Atlantic, somewhere around Cape
Keanedy, Lale tooighL
"Right now we do not expect Abby
to reintenslfy when It reaches the At-
lantic," tiaid Chief Fo~aster Dr. R.
H. Simpson. "It looks like Abby bas
had her day in court."
.<\t 9 a.m. the National .ffWTicane
Cellter at Miami centered the storm
right atop Punta Gorda, about 100
mil.es south or Tampa. It was moving
northeast up the Peace River at about
10 miles an hour. Authorities: there
said there had been no 1evere weathet'
all morning. 1
Sing~ w...,.. N<VIUnl, :/6, ,,..,.,;.d
tann<r airU11e 11<1f><mf<a Elam< Oka·
mvro.,. U · in a quiei UT~JI. at the.
Little church of CM Weit in La!
Vegas .sanin:tav. TM -pair -Mitt•
aboMt 15 friendl at a bTtaJcfa.t f'e-
ceptioa at the Flamingo Hot.ti, where
Nnoton toil! open an tnga.Qemtnt
Jul11 4. Tht pair. ha.s. been dating
!Jbout three years mu::l were t'n{1Gged
lait Chrf.itm<U. Thetl wiU rt.ride in
La.i Vegai where Newton ha.I a 48·
acre ranch. • Roy~latl Tiibury, 31,Jlf $!!!'king,
England, wbo left bis wife and
eight children four years ago,
walked into court ·today an~ offer·
cd w repay all '6, t80 which lhe
slale paid to support his family. Be
said he was now a successful
scrap-metal dealer, a position be
"-'Ould not have Seen able to attain
had he not left his family. He Said
he was ready to "start our We aU . " over aga1n. • Or. Ralph B. Williams, still car·
that ball for nine ol. the 13 men It
custady in Los An.,.i.. bad been
reduced from $12,500 eacb to $315 for
eight of them and $1.250 for the other.
•"lbat' s power," be declared.
The accused are members or a
group ciiled the Brown Berets. They
are accused ol luding a Los Angeles
high scbool walkout.
The WuhiAgton demonstrators.
bacbd by 300 ~ from Resur-
rection City. bolne 'base for the Poor
People's March, came to <;lark
demanding tlrat be illvestigate the
cue.
Hosea -Williams, newly'named.cbie(
Of direct actimrdemomtrations for the
campaign, 'emerged from a long
session with Qark to say be was •'tfu.
ly hurt" by Clark's insistence .oo a
· smaller group. ·
. ''We·used every means o( diplomacy
short or being Unde,.Toms to get Mr.
Clark not to be mean. not to be evil.
not to . perpetrate another injustice on
poor people," saJd Williams.
A crow~ estimated at 400 gave
Williams loud applause and followed
him in a procession around the block-
long Justice Department buildlng.
More than 100 police looked on sllenUy
aod made no move . -
During the demons"trations, qark
quietly left bis fifth floor office and
went home.
Smte Indians
-.
To Get $700
Land Payment rying five bullets in bis head, has
been released from St. Mary's Hos-
pital. Williams, 57, a biologist from
Alaska, \Vas attacked by two men \VASl-llNGTON (UPI) ...J The House
May 12 while returning to his San passed legislation Monday \\'hich
1' .. rancisco hotel from a theater. 11•oyl_d give California's esti1nated
Knocked unconscious before he 40,00J. Indians about $700 each for
was shot. \Villiams didn't seek lands taken from their ancestors in
medica l aid ·until 15 hours later. 1852.
Doc-tors were astounded when X-_ -Tht-.bill., \vhich auU1or_izcs dislcibu·
rays showed fi ve small c3.liber bu!-tion of more than fl9 million a"·arded
lets lodged in his head .. Deciding to the. J~dia~s by the Indian Clain1s
an operation would be .dangerous, Comm1ss1on 1n 1964 , now goes to the
doctors ruled to release ·him from Sc:nate.
the hospital. The ~egislation l.Jy 1iep. B. F .. Sisk
• ... ID-Cali!.), was passed by "unani mous
consent" -mea nin.i:: that even one Three s isters from \Vins\O\V. vote could have blocked the bill. Rep. ~faine. accustomed to doing things Albert \V, J ohnson IR-Pa.J. did not
together, \\•ere married in a triple vote against the meuure, but ~e ques·
'"edding Saturday. Linda Wil-lioned distribution of the money
Iiams 20. married Army Pfc. Wil-.. \vi thout strings' attached."
liam Johnson, 21 , of Thorndike ; Chairman \Vayne N. 1\spinall !D·
Dot, 19, married James Waterman, Colo.), or the 11ouse Interior Com-
19. or Belfast ; and J a n•, 18, was mlttee said the money \'-'OUld go to the
the bridet of Army Pfc. Elwood individuals because the JndiaQs are
Hubbard, 19, of Unity. scattered and there is no tribal e organization to which it co uld be paid.
Micha•I Callan and Patricia Har-Johnson then pointed to demonsti-a-
ty, who were co--starred in the tele-tions in the capital bY. lndillns taking
vision series "Occasional Wife," part in the Poor Peoples Campaign and asked whether the $700 payments were married Saturday. The V.'ed· were i'going to satisfy at least the In-
ding took place in the ·recently pur-dians in Calilornia."
chased home in Coldwater Canyon "ThJS-w:ill not satisfy all the Indian~
nea r Hollywood. in Cat:Iorrti"I, but. it wiU have to do." e Aspin'all replied..
.,.. ... "' •'w The bill authorized expenditurt' or up
Residenl.I of suburban Elk to $350,CXXI ·ftom the funds lo pay Jor
Grove Village called police and prepartnc~a rou.o( eligible Indians and
Teporttd hearing s It o u ta of for distributing the money. Attorney·
"" "There are s11iptrs iii tht trit-fees an.d litigation costs reduced the
lagt," conii11g from a tooodtd 129.l million award to S26.5 million.
area. Heovily armed officers but the di(fel'ence has been more than
crept througli the woods 10ith f:iid up in interest.
shotgun s and carbines at the
ready and found Army rt3trw
unit.I undergoing special wetk·
end riot troi11i11g .•
• Assemblyman Ken MacDonald,
(0-0jai) who will be married to-
day ID Leslie Hodge of Ojai Valley.
was congratulated Wednesday by
the Assembly in Sacramento. The
lower house of the legislature sur-
prised him with a joking meas ure
which commended him for his "ad-
mJrable nonpartisan!hip where the
opposite sex has been concerned."
Jt also praised him for "finding
time to ~sue such .noble activities
in the flice: of an overwhelming
legiJlalllre scb<dule."
v ••
Prn klent Johnaon served \11 hat
be called a "light lunch" to visit-
ing Prime Minister and Mrs. John o. Go....,. of AustralJa and othe r
ranclj guesll Thursday. Tli• Mexi·
can-style midday mea.I Included
enchiladas, tpco s, beans, tamales
chlle conquHO, guacamole aalad'.
and tortillas. ll was all topped of!
wllh strawberries and whipped
cream and l:°kies.
Marine Co I'poral
Sues Landlord
-Ail Ex-officer
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Marine Cp!
James R. Grandy, 22. sued his
land.lcrd, a former A1arine officer.
Monday in a dispute which began
when the landlord h.-:d the corporal ar·
l'f'Sted for d.isrMpcel
1be superior court suit alleged forci·
ble etltry, trespass and false im-
pdsonment Md asked for damtges
totaling 1:14,000.
Grandy's suit 0tlleg"ed that the
landlord, former 1i1arine Lt. Col.
Gordon Hardwick. rori:M his way inlO
the. two-roo:m apartment t.hfl Marin<!
rented in Oceanside without previous
written notice and removed the front
d'OOr .and stove. The Marin~ allegedly
ov.'ed S6.S rent.at the time.
lterdwlck took over ns lat1dlord a
rew days btrore the incident. The day
after Hardwlci took over the pro·
perty, the Martnc•s wife ~a ve birth to
• girl.
I
'
SENSE OF HUMOR -A St. Petersburg, Fla., store window, taped
against flying glass in anticipation of Hurricane Abby, reflects a bit
of humor by the store owner as he puts the name of the feared lady
in tape on the plate glass. At las t report, Abby had moved meekly
ashore and degenerated into a sm all squall.
Loogrange forecasts, he said, iDdi·
cated elements o{ the stonn might
head northward in lbe AUant.ic and re-
enter the coast near Savannah, Ga .•
''But right now its future movement is
quite uncertain. \Ve'll know better
sometime tomOITOW what tbe potential
is."
The storm was expected lo spill out
into the Atlantic near Cape Kennedy
later today.
Conspiracy Trial
Defendant Feared
World Wax Three
Hunt Near Azores Shows along a 170-mile section or Gull Iiunicane warnings were ~ered
Coast.
No rrace of Missing Sub
. .
"This is lhe best tiling that
happen to cftrus u long as t.be Wind
stays away," said a ·citrus grower
near Tampa.
The ....t storm carri>d torrential
rains but virtually no wind. Nearly
two hours after its center moved
ashore here, the highest winds record·
BOSTON (UPI) - A defendant in
the antidrol,Lcoospiracy.. trial-of-Dr.--
Benjamin Spock aod four .others
te$fied today he was against ttie
Vietnam .\Vat becauise Pres 1 dent
Johnson "perpetrated a great fraud
l\ORF'OLK . Va. j UPI l -Search
ope113tions in three Atlantic areas near
the Azores have ended without finding
a trace' of the missing atomic sub-
marine Scorpion, the Navy announced
t'!lay.
While other pinpoint search opera-
tions were in progress, Navy officials
p~epared to inijjaJe. a__ formal inquiry
into the Scorpioit's disappearance with
99 aboard. The court of inquiry is ex-
pected to C'Oll.vene Wednesday.
The Navy said the nuclear sub-
marine Gato and the submarine
-tr -tr -tr
Hunt Skipper
Tells of Sad
'Fals e A lar1n'
NOilFOLK, Va . I UPI ) -1··or the
cre\v or the-nuclear attack . submarine
Lapon. the faint radio signal purport-
ing to be from th e missing submarine
Scorpitin "\\·as like an electric current
passtng-tt:Tough---the-ship."'
\Vithin seconds of the call last
\Vednesday the hopeful ne\\o·s had
s,;read throogh the Lapon. \Vhose crew
t4."'d many friends aboard tbe Scorpion.
Then the radio n1essage proved
spurious. and the Lapon returned
empty h<illded from its storm-battered
search -"a tremendously sad event.··
ln the words of its skipper. Cmdr.
Chester M, M'3cic.
Mon:i.'.ly, Cm-:lr. Ma-ck dockl.'d lhe
Lapan here after being replaced by
the subml'lr ine SturgeO'Il in the hun t for
the Scorpion over 300.000 square mites
of the Atlantic.
Except for the brief mon1ent \11hen it
wppeared the radio sign-al might be
~uthentic,. the Lapon's search "was a
very uneventruJ, hard, long, tough.Ju:k
effort l':1at proved to be ccmpletely
unsuccessrUl," Mack soid.
Mack was a close friend of tl1c Seor·
pion1s skipper, Cmdr. Francis A. Slat-
tery. a:nd he said many others of his
crew buddied with the Scorpion·s 99
men.
Mack and Ills oavigaUon and opera·
lions officer . Lt . Cmdr. John H.
)1l:x:Kinnon .. described the event in a
\\'ardroom intervle"··
There actually were tw-o almost
identical v o i c e messages spal'ed
mere than live minutC!s apart, t!iey
told United Press International.
The \'oice said: ''Any station tJ1is net
-this is the Brandywine ." '·Bran-
dywine" Vi"as the then·classificd code
name! or the Scorpion and net \11as
st>ort for radio network.
The voice messages were preceded
by we-ak signal'> and were follo\'-·ed
some time later by weak ke yboard
signals,\the o(ficets said. The Lapon
\YaS able to get a bearing on the
keyboard signals but had not hiad lime
to get a bearing on the voice
messages.
Meek said the messages came on a
radio frequency the Scorpion might
have U6ed and they originated at sea.
not on !be mainland. There was no
chance to gel a positive rlx on the
point oC origin.
Although the Navy and t.bt Feder1l
Communications Commink>o are In-
vestigating J>OS$ible sources , of th.-
broadcast. the Navy now cor111iders It
n1cst unUkely that it actually came
from the Scorpion, ·
But at the time the code word Bnin·
dywlne 'wa• first heard in the LavOn
radio roomJ Mack said_, "It was like an
electric current passing th.rough Ole
ship.
··There is no q_u<!slion that someone
ll.ied tilt call ·Brandywine' al an ex-
tremely unappropriate lime," Mack
said with evideflt bittemess. "And
that's an understa.temtnl.''
I ' .
rescue snip K.ittiwake had-completed·
their search in the vicinity of the
Cruiser-antt-irv1n·g banks, moun-
tainous underseas areas south or the
Azores, and were moving to Hyeres
Bank 55 miles to the southwest.
VISUAL SEARCH
. A French submarine, the Requtn.
has also completed a search or the
Marsalla Bank without result and bas
resumed its normal east\Yard cruise
acr~ss the Atlantic, the Navy said.
The amn1unitlon ship Shasta has
concluded-a visual search ol tbe Scor-
pion's projected track across the
Atlantic without results and is return-
ing to normal operations in the
Mediterranean.
Another oceanographic ship. the
transport Bowditch,'was scheduled to
leave today from Southhamptou.
England, to join the Azores search.
The court of Inquiry will inVestigate
all available facts surrounding the
disappearanc~ of the Scorpion.
A staff investigator for the Joint
Congressional Atomic Energy Com·
mittee ,also \'-'as on hand at Atlantic
1''lcct headquarters here as an
"observer."
!,000 i\llLES
J-Le is Nayy Capt. Erancesco
Castagaliola. The Navy said he was
prepared to Oy to the scene if the sub
should be located and any salvage or
rescue operation were to get under
\~·ay .
But an arn1ada of live destroyers
t f. ~ c: k i n g the Scorpion's intended
.eourSC-across the Atlantic had covered
nearly 2,{Q) miles Sunday ">ithout lin-
ding any trace of the missing craft.
The destroyers, traveling at 1~
knots. proceeded from Norfolk toward
I.he Azores, covering the scheduled
route of the Scorpion in rever se.
Other craft were searching an area
south or the Azores where the Scor·
pion was last heard Crom !\-1ay 21 at
the outset . Of a planned "'est\\"ard
journey to its Norfolk base.
Jn all, 22 ships are invol ved in the
search. In addition. 27 planes flew
mtssions from bases at No rfolk. the
,\zores and the Bahamas.
ed ":ere guests of 50 miles an hour at
Cape Ke~. But the lftatber bu·
reau warned that the storm, first of
the new season, might .spawn torna-
does.
Nearly six inches of rain fell in 24
hours at Fort Myers. Citrus rarmer
Fletcher Lett said.his gauge recorded
three inches or ra.in since Monday
"and we can stand a lot more." Dry
Wf!ather in central Florida has ham·
pered the citrus crop. .
The Red Cross said it housed 45.5
persons in 17 emergency sbelters
along the Gull Coast Monday night, l
but after serving the "refugees"
breakf'ast the shelters Wi!!'e closed-
FBI I mists
Search . for Ray
Still .'Intense'
\VASH INGTON (1JPI) -No. 9 on
the FBl's ten most wanted list has yet
lo be caught, but Justice Department
officials insist the search for James
Earl Ray is just as intense as ever.
Ray, a 40-year-old escaped convict,
is being so ught in connection with the
slaying tVi'O months ago today or civil
rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.
No new information about Ray, his
whereabouts, his motives or possible
conspirators has been issued by the
FBI since the first series of bulletins
for Ray's arrest. l
But FBI spokesmen told United
Press International today the bureau
and local Jaw enforcement agencies
across the nation "are continuing an
intensive investigation and we have
every hope or producing pogltive
results."
The search for the accused slayer
became a point in the Poor People's
list of grievances Monday when about
400 demonstra.,rs marched on the
Justice Department.
on 1he American peoPle."
Mitchell Goodman, 4-4; or Temple,
ri1air.-e, un;:ler erazniootlon by his at-
torney. Edward G. Barshak, said he
became "politic-ally active" after the
1964 Gulf of Tonkin.resolution becoose or "a greet fear-<>r a third world war."
Goodman, an author aod travel
WT it er, was on the stand for the se-
cond straight day in U.S. District
Court. He told ltle 12-man jury "Mr.
Johnson had no mandate from the peo·
pie to escalate the war and he
perpetrated a great fraud oo the
American people because or the Gulf
of Tonkin resolution."
On trial v.-lth tile. noted baby doctor
and Godmau are Michaed Ferber, 23,
of Buffalo, N.Y., a Harvard graduate
student; The Rev. \Villiam Sloane Cor-
fin , Jr., 43, chaplain at Yale Unlversi·
ty ; and Marcus Rasldn, 33, codirect<M"
of t h e Institute ror Policy Studies in
\Vashington, D. C.
AU are accused of conspiring to
counsel young men to evade the draft.
··1 felt J had to do everything I could
before this war destroyed th e
,\merican people and U1e people of
Vietnam," Goodman told the CfO'\\·ded
12th neor courtroom.
Ar gentina Hea1t
Recipient Dies
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Antonio
Enrique Serrano. 54. died today four
days after he became Argentina's first
heart transplant patient.
Serrano died in 11odel Clinic in the
Buenos Ai1·es suburb of Lanus or \\/hat
Dr. llector Ru ggicreo described as
"neurological" causes.
Serrano, a noodle salesman. had
beer. in a coma since shortly after the
operation Friday. 11e received the
heart of En1ilio Tomase tti, 47, ptesi·
dent of the Argentine Poultry and Egg
Union. Tomasetti died of a heart at-
tack.
Abby's · 'Ab()ye Florida
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•
' ~ .. ~ -..!..., .. -.. -.. -• ·-
r Heritage of Courage
7 atherFreezes, ·~-
Saves Children
SEATTLE. Wash. (UPI)
-Sharon and David R-ed·
dick, 12 and 11, are without
;i father today. They ha'Ye
instead a heritage of
courage, self-sacrilice and a
faith big enough to sustain
them the rest of their lives.
It was giYen devoted1y by
their dad, Dr. James M.
"Mac" Reddick high on
· Mount .llainier against a
bac.kdrop of blinding snow
znd howling 50-60 mite per
hour winds.
The trio was al the 9,000·
foot level of the mountain
F'riday wtien cau,ght by the
violent, unheralded storm.
"Dad said we'd have to
dig in," David said . ''So I
got out my mess kit and
started scooping out sn<lw as
fast a.o; I could."
..
ven;es and helped them .__ -t
pray.
From time to time. Red·
diok put his hand into the
ch.ildren's sleeping bag to
squeeze and reassure them.
Someiime during the lonely
weekend, the big hand no ~ ~
longer squeezed and com-ti:
forted. 1 It
"When David knew his ~
dad wu dead," Mrs. Red· ' -'
dick said, "he put "'ac's , :
hand back and closed hls -.;_•
eyes. But he didn't want to
admit the fact to himself. 1· .. ''They were such pals." .. __
The children were found -
wet. cold and tired but · .
unharmed Sunday when the
weather broke for a few ¥ ·
hours and searchers spotted c
their packs set outside the .....-..
snow cave.
'
r
4' .• . ·~---,., . .
• ·-
~T--,. -· . . · . • ---..
•
•
. . -. --
•
futsday, Ju!'tt 4, 1%8 DAILY lllLOT 5 '
·France ·still . ~----
Strike hound
PARIS-(UPI) -FrM1ce
remained strik~ today.
Nine million oot of 10
million French w or k e r s
stayed off the job in the na -
tioo 's mo s t devastating-
tiE'llp in history that ex·
tended into its third week.
Rai lroads did not run.
Planes <tid not fly . Airport.~
were silent. Million~ of city
re&idents were w i r h o u t
subways, buses or taxis.
Efforts by P r e s id e n t
Charles de Giau\Je's govern-
ment to get FranCt's crip·
pied ecooomy rolling again
had met with only marginal
success. At most only about
one million of the 10 million
stri kers were ex-pected· to
return to work todey.
pay, shorter houn< and bet·
ter w«Jdng conditions.
There were gOOd pro-.
gpects I« ·.a return to work
by employes in banka. road
transport, clothing, hospital,
national defense .and ttlt
atomic energy commission.
But still unsettled were the
claims (I( worker• i n.
railroads, Paris city transit
aervices. coat mines, metals
and eqgineering, buildin£
the ohemical ·and rubber in-
dUstrie11 and automQtive
plants.
Rank·and-file striken re·
jected :as· inadequate an
agreement m.ie a week a10
that would have given 15
million French w<irkers an
across·tbe·board IO per cent
wage. increase, boolted the
legal minimum wage by 35 "
~nt, and provided frinJe.
benefits.
Reddick, SI, a Seattle den -
tist, put Sharon and David
into one sleeping bc:g at the
reat of their snow cave but
there was no room for hlm
to get into his.
Instead, he lay near the
entrance to the snow cave.
absorbing the brutal wint;i
anti C<lld.
"It was by the g1•ac:e of
God thcA. the weather bi·oke
so we could search the
area." said John Townslev,
Mt. Rainier National Pafk
superinrendent.
The chlid:ren knew it
would happen because they
had prayed for it.
NO GREATER SACRIFICE Mountaineer Lou
Whittaker. center, and other members of a rescue
Reddick survived the ordeal becaus e of the efforts
of their father, Seattle dentist James Reddick (in-
set), who -died covering the freezing entrance to
the cave. They were forced into the snow cave dur-
ing the" weekend climb because of bad weather.
T.here was no more violen-
ce. Ufliversity Mudents who
s.parked the eris.is remained
quiet. The threat of blood·
shed appeared to have evap..
orated.
Negotii·atioos between the
bi,g labor unions and ttie
·government and private in·
dLI.Ytry remained deadlocked
in ma~ fields. In a com·
munique Monday ni~t tM
C-OmmlUlist-led G e n e r a I
Confeder.ation of L a b o r
I CGT) aCC"Used tbe govern.
ment and private industry ol.
"irrtl'ansigence" in meeting
worker dem'allds for hi·gher
C.ullist. ancl the l•flwin«
parties continued prepore •
tions OOday tor the June 23-
30 national p&rliamftl()ary
electioos. The De • Gaulit
government his aoutht tn
make the bailoting .a e«t--lotioo-.... Geulllmt
and a c.ommunh:t-don\imtied
left. Premier 6-Pont·
pidou wd Mml<lay die dee·
lion1 will decide whether~
mtim is "fOr' ar apinst
totalltarNtn Communism.'' __..,..,,.,
He led Uie chlldren in
songs , joined them in Bible
. "They love God." ~aid
Mrs. Reddick. "They kne\\'
He would take cart of
~m."
party carry two Seattle children from the slppes of
Mt. Rainer, Wash., Sunday after the children had
spent two days in a snow cave. Sharon and David
Saier ·in
-,-churcli -N.o'1laven for Draft Dodgers-
NEW YORK (AP) -A
campaign by U.S. clergymen
to grant Vietn~m war di s·
senters church sanctuary
from federal Jaw is off to a
sputtering start.
On t!ie basis of the prelim-
jnary evidence. the idea,
while long on tradition. is
short of official acctiptance
in the ~h century. In Wash-
in gton, a Department o( Jus-
tice spokesman con:imented
today: "There is no basis in
law for such claims of im-
m unity or asylum ."
Youths who want to es·
cape military service. it
seems clear, will continue
to be much safer in Canada
than in the chl!fch buildings
of their choice. It was dif-
ferent in ancient Greece
and the Europe of the Mi('.1-
dle Ages.
The test of modern religi-
ous sanctuary came in late
May. Robert A. Talmanson.
21 , under three-year prison
sentence for failing to re-
port for Army induction,
a nd William Chase. 19. an
AWOL Army man man, took
refuge in the Arlington
Street Church of the Utiilar·
ian • Universalist order in
Boston.
U.S. marshals carried Tal-
manson out of the church
the same day. Chase stayed
inside for 10 days but final·
ly surrendered and was tak·
en to Ft. Meade, Md., to face
Army discipline.
1'he interdenominational
movement to make church-
es sanctuaries for Vietnam
war objectors is 'loosely or-
ganized into a group calling
Itself "The Resistance,"
which has surfaced in De-
troit. Boston, Cleveland and
some other cities.
Last Tuesday the ~eneral
assembly of the Unitarian
Uni versa list Association
ad<lpted a resolution encour·
aging. its pastOrs to offer
"symbOlic sanctuary" to
draft evade-rs. Association
churches. however. hive the
right to disregcird the reso-
lution.
Two dralt resisters follow -
ed up the assembly's action
by entefing the Unitarian -
Universalist Church of the
Mediator in Providence.
R.T.. last Saturday.
Ronald P . Moyer, 23, of
White. Plains. N.Y .. assert-
ed that "We stand for ·some-
thing higher than civil law."
His companion. Anthony
Ramos, 24:. recently return-
ed fr<>m Canada, declared
that jail for draft evaders ill
_ "a puitishment that derives
from the state and therefore
inconsequential.''
They wire carried from
the church Monday by FBI
agents and were taken to
state prison for lack of b2il
after appearances before
federal authorities.
H. Salt, esq.
Fish and Chips Shoppe . 1n
Authentic English
Costa Mesa
Move oyer, hamburger. Make way, hot dog.
Great Britain'• great national dish sini::e 1886 conquers the Ameri,mm
palate ... deliciously. And these fish aDd chips are supremely diff~t
from the domestic variety. The succulent secret is the batter, created
and zealously guarded by H. Salt, Esq ., himself an Englishman
removed but five yean from SkegneM, in the Old Country.
Nourishing and tasty, H. Salt, Esq. Authentic E'nglieh Fish and Chips
is champion eating.
British and American currency cheerfully accepted.
•
•
Opttt 4 ;.m. te t p.m.
T10lffy lllN Sunday
H. SALT, esq .
AUTNl•TIC E•all•M
Gfisfi &
Cfijps
SHOPPE
COLLEGE CENTER o,; HAUOR, CORNER ADAMS
'
COSTA MESA
The Great
No.
Orange .Coast's
'
l Paper!
·~. ·-
S.HAPE UP!
.,
.
J_oin ·our Spring
Fiscal Fitness· Program •. ,
Russ Litch, our Fiscal Fitness Director in Newport Beach
Here's a plan that's guaranteed to make you feet fiscally better In Just 90 days •• ,
or your money back,
Our Regul1r Program: Earns you the nation's highest rate on insured savings. Wiii matce
you fiscally fit at the end of your first quarter.
Our lonut Progr1m : Earns you more than a regular savings account anywhere fn town.
Builds stronger assets for you in 36-months.
Our Month-O·M•tlc Program: Helps you save money every,month .•• withoul ellort;Wl!hout
fall. ,l(flectionately ca lled MOMS, this program has helped thousands gel more out of Ifft.
Get a fr~e fiscal fitness checkup at
Newport Beach Office: 2333 E. Pacific Coast Highway at MacArthur Blvd. :
Glendal.!!~.~!sf~!~~avings
• n. N_atlon'a Second Largest Federal Savings As>0cl1tion where your nionoy Mmalltt natlon'shiglmt,. .•
\J
•
< i
•• 1 ~
-------~'-· . '
--~ -------~----~--
•
•
.., · . •
f DAILY '1LOT TW:ldlJ, Junt 4, lM
Face _Selaool Boycott Clafirgu
Brown Bail-SI-ashed ·for
' Berets
L06 ANGELES IAP)
!)line Mtzlooll·Ammcom'il>-
dlcted on felony charges
stemmlng from m a 1 1
dauroom boycotu at four
h igh ICho<j.s were free today
alUr a Superior Court judge
drastically "3shed t h e
'12.:!00 boil under wbicli,
-bad betn beld.
All nime, lllooc wi!h tour
olllen -remained at lar&e. w«e i.ndkted by a
~ Gnni Jury fot COil·
splrillc .. -the puct. A ..,....,,,... f<r lht dimid
Biography
On Hughes
dt.omey'1 office a;aJd &ome
of those indicted Mn: con-
nected with thf: Brown
Berets. a militant ~1exican·
American group.
Police ~ed seven, in·
eluding the publisher of a
Mexican American
newspaper and a teacher at
one of tilt boycotted scbooh,
Friday nigbt and Saturday.
Two o t be r 1 surrendered
voluo.Urily before their ar-
raigmneots Monday.
'Ibe cnesta drew na-
tionwide interest Monday
when a Mexican-American l250 plus t6S in penalty picketed the city'• police
cootingent ol the Poor assessment&. for at except beadquartm Saturday aod
People'1 Campaign J n John David Sancl)e:t. 19. Sunday. '
Washington, D.C., marched Sanchez' bond was cut to oa the Just.Ice Department SI .o:xt. In addition to Sanchez,
seeking federal interventioo. All nine were released by tbose liee on bond were
In California, Sm. Eugene eveniog; Tbey are scheduled SalvOOO!'e B. "'Sal" Casb'o,
J . Mc Cart h y ('D-Minn.). to~ in court June 21 to 34, a teacher at U11coln
paused in bis ~Unary cam-enter pleas. Hlg'b : Ellezer Lazado Risco.
paign to decry tM amount ~ • the proceedings. .Sl, publisher ot "LI Rua;"
oC bail required for those about 30 persons. IO¥Je Gilberto Cruz Olmeda. 23 ;
hekl. · wearing brown and gold bit-Ja&e Angel Razo. 29; Carlos
During arraignment pr~ lonif proclaiming "Mexka)l· Muoot Jr., 1.8; Mootezuma
ceediJt&s Monday, Judge Amer j can Libt-ration," Espana. 19: Ji' r I! d :or 1,.
George M. Deil Jowtftd the' marched outside the court. Lopez, 19, and Henry N.
bail. lint to '500, ttiea to Ma-chtts a 1 s o bad Go~ 20. • 1r=----------=-----;;;;;;;;;;;;,1
S. Viet~m Minist€r I See by Today's
Want Ads .
Supports NLF Talks
STANFORD (UPI) tive1 Of the Viet Cong. and
South Vietnam's newly ap-guaranteeing them 1 coali-
pointed. mini.ster of st.ate tion government.
says be favon starting talks '"lbe NLF should 1 tan d
between bil government and election like anyone elae,"
the National Llberation he said.
Front. Dan toot a 11,p at those
· "The South Vietnamese who say democrac,:y is a
should take the initiative luxury· for an underveloped
with respect to the V i e t nation .. "Tliere is a drong
Cong, and not wait for t h e tradition of village ~emocra
Paris talks to succeed," Dr. cy in Vietnam,'' he said.
e H~'1 a '&I Volvo. Ideal
-~-wm1r car ... ~ oHtr by ~t:J.;j/"""9> •ttkend tlket!
e Attention housewives! .
have span time on your
h.1~1. here's a part time
pickup & d~ivery for. a
Omtal U!.b!
• Here·1.a neat busines.<; ~r
vice ... Painting & Paper.
in&. ext'!lu.rive but not ex·
pensive!
Phan Quang Dan said Mon-Dan said he believes the
day in·an address to the .south Vietnamese Army • Thett'• an bceantron1
Hoover lnstitufion at Stan-should do more of the fight-Vacation ren!al in Playa
ford University. ing ·in the war and should del Ray wttkly. tnonthly
However. Dan ad~ed he · "begin to get ready to hand-Of" yearly ratea!
believed ··the chances for 1e" the Viet Cong and North e Here's a 32. Twin Diesel
ptace in Vietnam "are good Vietnamese in about a year. Locked U , .. ready to go AnY\\·l'lere
P. ~eg~e~~ of what happens allowing American troops to ... Sacrifk:e!
• ' '
£ALIFORNIA IS ON THE
MOVE IN NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT BEACH -FIRST CALIFORNIA coMp'ANY -
ONE OF THE LEADING WESTERN HEADQUARTE RED
INVESTMENT .SE.CURIT I ES FIRMS WITH OFF ICES
IN CALIFORNIA OREGON ANO NEVADA -ANNOUNCED
TODAY A S~GNIFICANT EXP ANSION MOVE IN
NEWPORT BEACH
NEW AND LARGER OFFICES HAVE BEEN !JPENED
AT 3355 VIA LIDO ACCORDING to EXECUTIVE
VICE PRESIDENT NORMAN T. ROTHSCHILD
ADD -BETTER SERVICE THAN EVER
PREDICTED BY ~CCLENDON
"' MANAGER WILLIAM E. MCCLENDON SAID THAT
THESE NEW MODERN FACI L-fT IES AT 3355 VIA
LI DO WILL ENABLE FIRST CALIFORNIA TO OFFER
ITS LARGE FAMILY OF INVESTORS BETTER SERVICE
THAN EVER JN THE GROWING NEWPORT BEACH AREA
•
FIRST CALIFORNIA COMPANY
3355 VlA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH• 67.5·3940 1Heo11:~olt.t.T'•&
41 Hometown Offices in California, Oregon and Nevada
Where the invealor always comes &nt
. . mPans. ~ ·--=be~g;i;n~a~p~h;ased~~w;ith;;;dr;•;w;•;l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jii;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~i;;;;;;o;;;;;~~::;;;j~~iiiiiil~. _LOS...AN.GE.LES....!AfJ _ The 4~year11ld official. I-I\----A ...-... tial thre t to the-:-once bnpt J.SOned-by-the~ . ...,....n 8 . gime of former South Viet-
I
I
Jealously guanied pnvacy · n-'d N Di h f billi . industriali t namese r-1 es1 ent go n o ooaare s Diem, said the south's lead-
Howard Hughes has . wound ers should be ''more liberal" up, f1>r the time bemg at · · · ·th th least, behind kicked vault _ 1n. agreeing to talks w1 e
doors Viet Cong. -
ln ~ judgment filed Mon-"Either you ~ them ~II
day, Supet'ior Court Jud~ ~r talk. t? them, he sa1~.
Ralph H. Nutter ordered-jtt . and ~Din~ all of them 1s
manuscripts of a bi1>graphy impossible. . . .
once authorized by Hughes Dan made_a ~~tion he-
be sealed and locked away. tween neg?~ating with the
He a1&o ordered writer NLF, political representa-
Ezra Goodman to pe)' $18,-
0XI in legal costs to Rose-
mont Enberpl'ises lnc., one
of the defendants in a two-
year, $250,CXX> breach of con-
tract suit brought by Good·
man.
1be bi1>grapher contended
that in 1964, when he was
doing approved research on
Hughes' life, the industrial-
ist established Rosemont
and assigned it all biograph·
ical rights to prevent publi·
callon of Goodman'it efforts.
The suit added that Good-
man was told he wou1d be
allOwed to continue with his
proj~t. if the manusaipt
went to Hughes and Rose-
mont ror approval. Good-
man said the man"uscript
was submitted, then reject-
ed .
Brown Opts
For 'Gene'
LOS ANGELES IAP)
Former Gov. Edmuild G.
Brown sald he would vote
fur Sen . Eugene J.
McCarthy . in today's
presidential primary.
Brown, a supporter of
Vice President Jiubert H.
Humphrey, said Democrats
who support Humphre y
should vote for e i t h e r
McCarthy or Sen. Robert F .
Kennedy in the primary.
Fifth Trial
Denied; Man
Given Life ·
LOS ANGELES (UPll -
A gas station handyman
twice sentenced to death for
the slaying of his common
law wife was seM.enced to
life in prison Monday after a
judge denied a m otion for a
fifth trial
Eddie Dean Griffin. 55,
was charged wth the fat.al
beating of Essie M a e
Hodson. 49, in 1961.
The U.S. Supreme C.ourt
revened his fiict conviction
and death sentence on
grounds tbe prosecution and
trial judge had specifically
told the jury that Griffin had
· not testified. A second trial
ended in a hung jury.
The Supreme C o u r t
reversed the guilty verdict
and death sentence of the
third trial on grounds the
jury was told Griffin bad
been charged with rape ln
MeJdco but not that he was
acquitted.
The fourth jury found
Griffin guilty and fixed the
penalty at life im-
prisonment. Superior Court
Judge H. Eugene Breiten.
back pronounced senience
after denying Griffin a fifth
trial.
The former governor. who
Is on the Lynch delegation.
said a vote for· the Lynch
delegation "is not voting for ---------
any candidate" because the Kids like to
delegation "hasn't taken any
position on who they are 'Ask Andy;
for."
HARBOR AREA REFORM TEMPLE
'
' IA l •feft111 J•wi1li Ce119r .. •tie~I
SABBATH SERVICE
Senior Citii•nJ Recreetion C•nfer
21 10 15th St., N•wport l eec;h
Fridey
Jun• 7, f9U
a,10 P.M.
Rebbi Irwin Herman
Oneg Shabbat
Program
for lnform1tion cell M-4-01-40
For riew accounts and present depositors of
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK
Elegant 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
CAREFREE STAINLESS
Stunning contemporary design
with bol d rhythmic lines and
smooth surfaces ... all beauti·
fully interpreted to create a bal·
anced place setting.
or
•
SPECIAL
for new accounts only!.
Your choice of the flatware , or,
one of these three silver acces·
series in Original Rogers Silver.
plate. (These 3 items only avail-
able until Aueust 1, 1968) .
.__ ___ _,~ L
HERE'S HOW YOU GET' YOUR FREE GIFT!
New Accounts: Open a $100 account. checking or savings. and ADD TO THE TABLEWARE OF YOUR CHOICE:
select a five piece place setting in Original .Rogers Silverplate, Each time you deposi t $25 or more to your savings account. you
or in St ainless by International. or a Paul Revere Bowl, an exquis. may purchase a place setting of your choice for only $2.50. Build ~~i;i~:i· Ro:g:rsc~~=~p:::~ bowl with silver servers ... all in your tableware service while we build your savings!
Present Deposif0t1: Add $100 to your present savings acc.ounl. Comple ting units. (extra teaspoons. storaa:e chest. 4·pc . kostess
and select your FREE five piece place setting in Original Rogers set and more) are also available with.each $26 deposit to your
Reinforced Sitverplate or Stainless by International. savings account. Open or add at Newport National Bank today.
Join the celebration in honor of our three new offices: SUPE RIOR , UNIVERSITY and SUNNY HILLS ----_;-t lltWPORt
·~NATIONAL .
•
BANK
,.,...., ·-" ' I ' -
• I
SEE OUR BEAUTIFUL DISPLAY OF SILVER!
Select your FREE gift at any of our 7 offices
AIRPORT OFFICE ........ Ctmpus 11 MttMhut, Newport htdi ... StWlll
8AYSIO£ OfFK:C ......•.. llayskl1 II Jlfl'lbo!'tt, Newport INdl'. .• '42·1141
COWG£ PARK OfFICE .•.. Nutwood at C«nntOflWllllh, Allttrton .. 111,.aoo
SUNNY HILLS OfFICE .• , ....•...... H1rbot •1 llrtt, f111ierto. ••• 171-72IO
SUPERIOR OFFICE .•• ,, ... PIM".tntla II Super!Ot, Hl'Wfll)lt .. tdt .•• '42·1511
UNIVERSITY OFFICE •• \, .Eal! ChlfH!'llft •I~·" Coll .... r ........ 11'MMO
WESTCllff OfflCE •••••••••• w .. tcliff •I Doftt, "flllPNl hedl .•• Mt-3111
., • I
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.. ---, __ ...,
-• -, .. fllfsd~Y. Junt 4, 1968. DAILY PILOT l
Major Expansion . --Murder Attempt Trial
-~--
Catnlina Plans
Turbo Jet Line
Catalina AJr Lines, Jn a
major expanston, will begin
turt>o jet service between
tm Angeles International
Airpoct, L<>ot! Beed! Alrp«"t
and Cat>allna's Alrport in the
Si:y Wednesday, according
to Fred AU6tln, the airline's
president. ·
' ~'.With the chances good
that the SS Catalina wW not
:sail trus summer." Austin
said, "we thi.'* there is a
great Med fvr Oillbtl fo tllo
islaNt from Los lnterna.
tional." -.
The flights will be with U-
Passenger DeH&Wland
Twin Otters, a abort take ol1
and laodinc~. delign-
ed for ccniuiiaer U11: 'lbe ·
aicline will u.se Western
Airlines terminal at Loi
Angeles.
1be one wNJ fare to
Catalina will be $7.14 from
Loe Anples and '5.40 from
LongBeedl.
•
$6 ,000 in Donations
• Checks t o Build S c laool · ·R eceived .by Goodwill Checks for '850 h•ld up by four Costa Mesa student body presidents (left to
right) Denny Cline, Ensign; Beckie Kendall, Davis ; Steve Bulla, Rea, and Jeff
Industries of Orange County Littell. TeWinkle, will build school in Bolivia through. Peace Corps' School
at its monthly meeting. Partne_rsbip Program. Students at four schools raised money by a smile con·
SANTA ANA -Donations
totaling $ 6 , 0 0 0 were
reported to th e board of
director11 of the Goodwill
For The
Reco r d
BS ..
· ltleet itags
'Fire Calls
DEATH NOTICES
Donor of $4 ,000 in slock11 test, car wash, school dance, recreation night, pickle sale and lollipop sale.
was an elderly Whittier --'---------------=--''-------....:.-=-----!
woman, who indicated
fµrtb~r stocks would be
forthcoming,. G a y l o r d
Ricks, executive vice presi·
dent of Goodwill said.
The second dona ti on,
totaling some $2,000 was a
~uest from the estate of
the late Carl Benning.
Also at the meeting. Hicks
and George Tobias. past
president, of Costa Mesa.
were named as delegates to
the national assembly or
Goodwill Industries i n
Denver. Colo. the week of
June 24.
Buena Park
Child, 5,
~~~A7~d-A' J
year.old Buena Park boy
was found drowned at the -
bottom of a neighbor's
swimming pool early thU
morning after police had
conducted an i gh t ·Ion c
search.
David Miller , son of Mr.
and Mrs. -Kenneth Miller,
8161 Maple St .. was foWld in
what officers described u
Fight Set
On Measles
SANTA ANA -Orange
County schoolt are joining
in the fight to eliminate
measle1 by .carrying out the
law requirinl measles im·
munizatiom.
Dr. Robert Peterson .
countr, superintendeot of
schoo , said today.
"lire Red measles or
seven-day measlea.is .a most
contagious disease," h e
said. "It isn't generally
known but me.asles can
cause s I e e P. i n g sickness,
mental retard'ati<1n,
blindm!ss or even de.ath."
..
"a very dirty pool" at the , u
8132 Maple St. home of Mr1.
Mary Fields.
Mrs. Fields' son·in·law
David Meissner, came hoine
from work at 2:~ a.m . and
learning or the search decid·
ed to explore the pool. He is
a skin diver.
The boy had been missing
since 1 ·p.m. Monday and
more than 35 police officers
were engaged in the search.
The body was found about 4
a.m.
Insura1ce
Women Meet
•
•
•
Speech Topics Se t
For Forum at OCC .
Topics for the major
dresses .of the seventh
•
ad-
an·
nual Purchasing Forum.
Saturday at Orange Coast
College h~ve b e e n an·
nounced by the speakers.
according to F o r u m
Chairman C. D. Ayres.
Spons·ored by the
Pu rchasitJg Management
Association of Orange Coun·
ty in cooperation w i t h
Oranie Coast College, the
forum will begin a~ 7: 30
a.m.
Keynote speaker will be
E. F. Andrews. yice presi-
dent purchases, Allegheny
L~um Steel Cofl>Oration,
whose title will be "Ma.nag~
ing Thmorroii'1 Purehaslni:
FW1ction."
Carl R. Terzian, director
of public · affairs, Charles
Luckman Associates, ·will
close the morning con-
ference with "Is America's
Information may be ob-
Future Worth Buying?"
,.
-teeDef ense-Loses Plea
SANTA ANA -A defense
moUon to quash evidence
was denied Monday in the
tangled Robert E. Lee at.
tempted :murder e as e .
Sui>e.rior Judge Claude M.
Owens indicated that he
would rule bn two other
defense motions later today.
Lee, 46., of Montebello.
was indicted April 17 by the
Grana Jury ror the March 9
assault of'Mrs. Maria Siuro.
44. of La Habra.
Before the Grand Jury in·
dictment. · Superior Court
Judge William Speirs had
signed a searcti warrant for
tbe district Attorney's office
to obtain evidence -three dictment on grounds that In·
pairs of thoes. one blood sufficient evidenct1 w a s
splattered from a presented to the Grand
municipal eourt Jud g e 's Jury.
chambers. Lee i:ii being held in
Th~t acti9n resulted in a Orange County jail in lleu·of
long legal hassle anally $30.000 baU and Mr1. Sluro
resolved when S 11 p e r i o r is io a coma at Oran1t1
Judge Raymond Thompson County Medical Center. She
ruled lhe evidence legal. has been unconscious slnce
Lee's atturoey. Ron Owen tl1e March 9 atta~k. or Santa Ana, argued last ;:==========:::::;
Friday that the search war·
rant was illegally obtained
and issued. .
The other motions Judge
Owens will rule on .are one
to suppress evidence and
another to quash .the io·
PENETRATION
N•erly '"''Y•fl• ''''' ffit DAIL V PILOT, liomttow11 "'w ..
p1p1r for tht F1!t<.ilou1 Ortnft
C11st.
NIGHT and DAY SERVICE .
9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
•
Impala Convtrlibl•
ANAHEIM -More than
800 insurance women from
tbroughout the nation will be
in attendance JWJe 8 to 13
here at the Disneyland
Hotel, as the National
Association of Insurarice
Women h o st s its national
convention.
• Chevrolet gives you big savings
on the big ticket items... ·
• BALTZ MORTIJARIES
Conn del Mar OR J.H5I
Ctlta Heu Ml l-!424
' BELL BROADWAY
MORTIJARY
lit Bro1dn1, Cetta Meu . Llwal
PAL1FIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Ctmt1tery e Mtrhary
Cllopel
ISM P1c1Dc View ·Drive
Newport Beac•, CaUforUI
144-1!11
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
11tl e.Ja A.Ye. w .. 1 .. 1o-111 :ms
BMITll'S MORTVARY
117 lllalll II&.
Ballastn Beadl
LEMm
1'Elft'CLIFP' MORTVARY GT 11. 17111 II&., C.W M.,. ···-llUTMIHBT!ll
IUMOlllAL PAU
~olerJ
Hlil -II, 1fellmloller
Al·l'!L•~
I
LU'S BE FRIEKDL Y
Hunfinaton Beac~
Visitor
147..5152
Costa Mesa Visitor
'42·2472.
So . ColSI Visitor
. 4f4.0S7'
Harllor Visitor
64NSJS -
U you have DtW nelfbbor1
or tnow ol anyone movtnt
to our~ area, plM11 tell m '° that ,,. ma; extend a
lrltlldl1 nicom• olld help
them to become acquainted
In th~lr aew 1urroundlna1.
...
•
VB eflgines, autor:natic transrl1issions, power
steering, povver disc brakes and more.
You con go to most ony outomobile dtaler these days ond get sovings on the little
things. You know, extra trim, mirror1, ond iuch_ But your Chevrolet dealer i1 giving
you iaving1 on !ht big items-things you raoMy went. And it'1 arr explosion of IOV·
ingsl Right.-iow during '68 Savings fxplo tim•.
To help you pick ortd choose befMe you buy, we've listed the Bonus Sc .. ings Plans
on the right. (Consider, for example, the 2·' combination.} SimPly make y01Jr choice,
coupl• it wilh the Chevrolet or Chevell• you like, and hlJl'ry on down to your Chev·
role! deoler's for big Explo 90ving1.
Yes, do hurry.
Nothino Ml good losh forever.
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r -, 8 nus S.vln91 ,Ian•
1. Any Chevrolet OT Ch.vell• with 200·hp rurOo-Fire VS, Powerglide (Jtl(j whittwalla.
2. Any Chevrolet OI' Chevelle wilh 250-hp Turbo.fire VS, Power glide ond while'Wol/L
3. Any big Chevrolel wilh 250-hp T urbo·fire V8, T llf0o Hydra.Motic and whilewo/11.
4, Now, ond lor lh• first time, big savings on power disc brakes and power slHring
wh1tn you buy any (he.-rolel °' Chevelle wilh VB engine.
5. 8uy o~y (hevrolel or Ch9v1/le VB fWo.dOOf or lcwr-doar hcvd/op model-save
Oii vinyl top, ~lttlric clock, wh-.11 covet1 and opf*Jfonct guord ;,tml.
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• D~lY PILOT Tuesday, Junt 4, 1968
Balboa Pav.ilion Talies Its Plaee in History
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Building-Becomes Official Landmark
Ry BRUCE HENSON
OI 1111 0.111' ~UM lltff
The' Balboa Pavilion, surviving more
th.an six decades JlS the. cherished
waterfront restaurant of Newport
Harbor. will be rewarded for its
longevity with a plaque declaring.it an
official historical landmark.
Ceremooies will be held Wednesday
evening at the Pavtlion. presided over
by J . u!sl.ie Steffensen. president of
the Newport Beach Histnrical Society.
The plaque will be turned over to
Alan Ducommun. president Of the
realty firm which owns the cupola-
domed building.
BUILT IN HKM
Ducommun and fellow ownets have
already chosen a place on the exterior
'4;Jlere the plaque will bang.
Built in 1004 . when the Balboa
tjl!ninsula wa s an almost unbroken
s;tretch Of sand, lhe Pavilion was
d~signed to beckon recreation seekers.
From the start, ii was a show place
of the community, its tower visible for
miles.
In all likelihood. 1 he Pavilion i1s the
only structure to protrude beyond the
hafbor's bulkhead line under the sane·
tioo of the Uriited States War Depart-
ment.
The now-defunct department issued
a building permit in 1904. Secretary of
W11.r Week! sil(ned the documenL anli
210 feel of waler fronta2e was deeded
to the Newport Bay In vestment Co.
RA ILJ\OAO DEAL
Building the P~vilion was one thing,
but getting customers there in l904
was another. Sr a deal was struck
with · the Southern Paeific and the . . Pacific Electric, to run their cars
·down the Peninsula.
In ap acCou nt by chronicler Sam A.
Meyer , published in his Newport
history. ''Fifty Golden vears," the
railroad Compan y was given a con-
sideration fo1 building tracks to the
Pavilion:
''The cnnsideration was said to be a
100-foot right of way from 9th Street to
Fifteenth Street, of land that now com.
prises Bay A~enue and Balboa
BouleVard. plus a piece of mud flat in
the bay, consi dered of little value.
"This mud nat was later filled and
became kinown as Licfo Isle ."
The Pavilion was so ld to the Ducom·
muns for $315.000 in 1962, after months
of legal action 0:ver whether the
Newport say lnves!ment Co. was to
be dissolved . '
AUCTION ORDERED
Some of . the investment company
p~tners favored selling and others did
not. Ultimate1y, a judge ordered auo·
'
lion of the property and the Ducom·
mun firm entered the &uccessful bid.
The Pavilion evokM s t r o n g
memories for many oldtimers.
Balboa's Capt. Jack Summers
recalls the turbulent twel)ties. when
Hollywood stars rubbed shoulders with
al'i sorted rum runners and tourists.
"It got kind of rough sometimes,"
Captain Jack reflected, "but folks
really knew tiow to live >t up.''
Captain Jack , a Balboan s.ince 1922,
freque11tly wo rked as a police "officer
at the Pavilion during its heyday. He
saved many bankrolls for visitors lull·
ed by knockout drops and bathtub gin.
ROLLICKING SYMBOL
!·le recalls the jazz bands and rou·
Jette wh Cels that made the Pavilion a·
rollicking symbol of the era, and the
gradual decline that led it to near ex·
tincti on in Uie years of World War II.
· The Ducommun purchase a n d
restoration in 1962 amounted to a total
$515,000 investment, months of work
and an appreciation of the piece of
history they had bought.
The remodeling called for restoring
the Pavilion's orrginal blue shingled
roof, weather grayed paneled wall!!
and shiniJlg cupola, wh ich guides
boatsmen home today as it did at the
turn of the century .
OAIL. Y JllLOT AaNI J'Mfe
AERIAL VIEW OF TODAY'S PAVILION ZEROES JN ON FAMOUS CUPOLA
Its Spire Hal Guided Mariners to Ha rbor for More Than ·60 Years
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PRIVATE COLLECTION
These two photographs, laden
wi th historic significance. be-
long to Mrs. Angus Rich ard-
son. The top shot was taken in
1927 from Pavilion balcony and
shows Balboa Island Ferry
Landing with sign advertisin~
lots for sale "$300 and up.'
The lower photo shows t.he Pa-
vilion sometime in its early
days. Date the picture was
made is unknown.
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'RAPID TRANS IT' IN 1908 MEANT TROLLEY S ON OLD PACIFI C ELECTRIC RAILWAY ; END OF f HE LINE FOR 'RED CARS' WAS THE PAVILION
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Tuesday, June 4, 1968 \ DAILY PILOT 9.----------------------------
All Orn to Public. • '0y Phil lnterlandl Queenie
• '' :UCI LiStsJllne_Calenda~ ' , I ,
llere Is the calendar of
eventa for UCI for the sum-
1ner. All events are open to
the public. There i.s no ad·
mission charge unless indi-
cated.
JU Ne
4 Cl'll9'61rl
MATHEMATICS COLL.OQUIUM -"™ Spec!r• fll 0Ptr1tors Whkll •rt
DGlti 5e!l-1dlolnt •NI Unlt1ry," Dr,
&emanl R:. Gfl!Uum, Pro!"'°" al
M1!rie,,..lk1 Ind AIMKllhll Deen, UCI
School Of Phnlttl sci.ncn. IH N•I· ur1t k l-'IGt" • 1.m.. prtudMI llr
c:allH llaur II a: IS 11.m. "' IM Fac-ulty CIVIi.
lllVINE FILM GROUP PllliSliNTA·
TIOM-"L.1 8onht!Jr." Sc.ierq LKiw.
Hill, 7 ll'ld t ;lll P,m. Adnili.MM ti,
UCI lludeflls/llaff ~-"
EXTEHSIOff SEll:IEJ: Cl!lltl °""91-
0Ptl'lenl In ~ C111!1H'I, "T"41
Fon:n ol Envll'l:lll!rlf'~I O.l I Clllld."
'"'""' SI-. Clllfl ol Pil'CtlolotY, F1!n ltW St111 Houolt1L 111 Flnt """·
7::11 P.11'1. l ld;1t1 ft.7J, UCI 11111Mnlal
•l•ff ll.:t$.
EXTENSION SEllll!'.S: Our Drue So-
ti91Y. "Ak'lhal-TN lij\t1h fll Sotlel
Or1nlllll9." /Mr IM"l'!Nll. MD, It•
IMrdl P1'(dllalrll!, Akllholt5"'1. II•
oeo rd'I Ctnter, UCU. l,1,td;al Cloltr.
0<"1-County Medlul CtnNr AIMii·
torlum, 1:30 ,.m. Ol>tn to lf(ln tldttl l!okler1 only.
J CW"*'eld11J
AFTl!RNOON CONCE RT. lite Mo-
r1rl C.11rlllt!I Quln1tl •nd the Schutlel'I
Qu.,1el In d mln1tr will bf "rtO!'med
b'I' CtllllYn AT1*11l!, <ll rlMll •nd
membtr1 or 1"'8 Unfverilty Otch11tr1,
Your
full service
banker
'1riottl. 11' Fins "'1a.> ~ p.m. JikTl!NSIOtl Sll!l:tf': Our Orw
EXTEN510N lEl:lES:_ P!lflllltll911 klc:ltty, "A~lttn -C11rrfill P ......
Growtto: Ths Hwflell SP«tre "Cllolce i.ms •nd Tr.1•mtnJ '•wr1m1." J-
•M DK111on.~ Cllude An0tnon.. t<O'I-I:, ""U•, Or11t1t1 c-tv Hulth 0Hl-
oml11, Mt.Oonnt11·Dautl•• COf11. tM '81', °''"" c-tv ~1~1 c...w. Fine .vta, 1 11',m. Tkktll 12.7lo, U(I 7:• 1.m. 0Mti to .eri. \ICMI l'lolclen
ll\ldmls/1t11t 11.25. °""· .
EXTENSION SERIES: St• Ind Ft"" lt ( .............. ,,
Uy L!l1 Ill EduUKon. "A L1...,.r'1 _.likTl!N$10N SEl:ll!S: Se~ Mid 011~1'9&1 tfld Flntl\Cltl l"rob-• l'a<TlllV Liit In Ed1K1tl&i. "$"'9<1M
ltm• IR fMrrll M... Al!Ornt\'1 Ocivld • ~· In """ CUtrlCUlum ... c . l:•Y L. JKObiohft •nd Rhode Ai y1,. FOWltr. m1r111t11 Ind ft mlty coun-
browl11 111 Fine Art&. 7::1D 11.1'1\. Open .. iw, 111 Fine Arh, 7;>0 P.11'1. ltrlta
10 .. rles 11~11 .,.IOeri onl\I. I/diet hokters onlv. , • C$lhlt'M'I CW.W.ENc1:M':~~~r:: Laul1 T. EXT~NSION COMl'El:ENCE: POV· 9-1.i. Prnll)ent, ClltWn:Ont CotlltM. erty In Onntl (Ol.lnlY. A _..:l1y con-"1!1<IP11 1"1klr. Ctrltnony btllM fef"911CI for Plrsoni lntemr.d Ill l lf• et 2 1.nt. In Clmpui p1rtr;,
Pfotirla C,..0 ... 1-Clldlff lG In Ul'9' '' ·-e<it PnllllttTl. SHlklB lll(luft: Dr. VI
Dlnlll G. Aklrldl, Jr., UCI Clltll(tl-EXTINSION SEl:IEl: Ou r Fer 10!'1 Gr1nvHll c, PKllllll. Olrector, E11tem Rel1I~. F!,_I It! I t«IM ol
an,.., Caunty 0e,..rtrnen1 of w1111re i P<olllllc lldur• IW ·N1 YOlll Pertr;, lee:·
F.....c:ll N. Lllrtl. coonllnelw. lnd!Ao "'"" Ind wrtl«, Nwtne.t Mlu.aurl
ll"Y·Educetlon Rel1t111111. Mot.wHUI Slllt c:.otleM, MfnOln end ........
Jolln T. Jkntrler. PrlftCll'll. Mapll dlon 111,_h J utv 24. 169 Nel\lrtl
scr-i. Fulllrton; Hon. 01vld L •• Science, 1 '·"'· Slrt.t. lldull• t.31, ter SuP1n11Jor °'"'"" c-tv Mttt· $1ntlt ldmlulon a .n. uc1 1!\IGl11tsf ' ' ' 1!1tr SI.IS. I"" 111r11 11 t l .ll'l. In c..m-Hill. lkTENSION Sl!,,ES· k-Pknlc llinctl I I 12:30 011'1 .. Yflllr ' • ll'ld
-or b1rr -l After._ wott""°" P\l!Wk Polley, 'kleftQ 11'111 Nll .... I
l :IM p.11'1. "*"' for rnervetlmlt. ~ V19or." ''"' In • Glftletwllll LKlllr• 516'. S..lff with Or. I. I. l:1bl. Vk1 Pres-"
Idell!, ln~rrwollonal '"""'-on !Iii <Cl x.-. r..i-~t ....... 1961 ..... I.I Tit .... -...L . , .... ,,
SUNOAY EVl!NING CON(EllT.
Warit1 bl 81Ch. •t1et1r-.., tOndtmllll.
~IU, Weber, Wiider. Allllntl
Lolov, Ylolln1 f>IUI IMrllMm. IUOll Connll l.•ln,, llrrlf Gof"do;in,. ,i.no. 11• Flnt Arts, l •·"'·
11 ITv .... rJ
EXTENSION SERIES: Clllld DIVl'I·
CIPlftMI tn Amtrlcen CUllutl. ''Whith-
er (hlldhoodl" INIM S._, Cht'1 ol'
P$vchology, F1rn11ew Sl•le Howlt•L
11'1 Fine Am, 7:» p,m, Tldtet• 12.7',
UCI l!uderill/lllff ll.U.
PHCefl.il I.IMS of AllQl'Jllc Ellt!Tf 1!111 '----..::::..-~.:::.;;:;;;;;;;;;;"."-"."'-:::::'.:"".:::.! Nobtl Prlu WlnMr lft '?hnla. Selene:•
Lectur1 H111, 1:>0 p.m. s.rtn lkktb ''See here, Smythe, are you going t;o finis~ this ~~11~';:'~1.:-i•1on "" ucr 11"" '1.eba~ on Vietnam, or are you going to mt
a 1n-...11 there bug~yed all night!" EXTENSION SEl:IES: k lence 1nd
Public Polley. "Science •nd Hunt•n ----------------,;----------! 11.Wlr.il•I.'' Or. I. I. R1bl (511 J~M 17 for 61!11!1.)
b !Sl....,...f)
ORANGE COUNTY FOi: HUMAN
EQUALITY CONFERENCE. "Stir~
11-Nortntm S1y11:· An 1lkl11 Pn>
trim llleludlnt 511elk,r, PIMI d!ltU~
111111 trollPI 111<1 • movie, Mec:H"9 be-
•lnl 11 f 1.m. In Science Le<:l~rt
H•ll. Admln lon $2, .iudtnll II.
24 !Mofl<l•rl
EXTENSION SERIES: Scltl>(t 111<1
Lul11L1nd In An1helm tor dlMtr 11
I 1.m., roclu111 ~aur •=~ P.m. TICk·
t!l '" Ptr i>erson, lncludlM Ille dln-~r 1nd I PolYflM lln floor ,l\Qw,
Phone NKK Ro!h (UJ."34) lac' l'ti•
en11rlon1.
Minutemen Missile Public Pollcv. "Science •nd Peeu." -------------
ISie June 11 ll5ll011 for d~l1ll1.J
l( fWfdnt.Url
Ftl!IENDS OF UCI ANNVAL MEET·
ING. kleoice l..eciure Hill. • P.m.
Advtr1IHm1111
MoreComfortW.iirlng
JULY
21 ISUMl1I
TWILIGHT CONCERT. The S"" 01· To overcom• dll(IOmfort 'll'hen Watchers Also Learn FALSE TEETH
.... SYRU>honr ~tr1. Pr.wnted dtntUl'H 1llp, tllde or IOOHI!., JUI~
toy the Or•"9• c ... nll PllllMrmonlc 1prt.nkl• a 11tUe J'AS'l'nTB on JOW' CHEYENNE, w~. (AP) -•ucation ~am -AF..... s.odelr. ~m1u111 Pert, ~;30 p.m. plat.el. PA8TUTB hol~ deQtunlll J~ ..... !"".._ ..... AUGllST Armer. You ea,.1,~~ feel Ill.Ore The men who ~ S u c h a p r o gr e m 2 fPrW.lrl r:omtortable. P 11 alll:altne -~n·i IOUt . Hf.IJ19 check plat.I odor. prepared to launch the Ml-guaran~s a badlelor's LUAU DINNER/DANCE. Tiie UCI l)Ql\ur• wi flt u. --U.&l '° ' .. ~. mJs N-c1demlc AdVll«l' Council lnvltt1 .. _,lob-... .... .. -t ulu1
They're dancing the Hula In the streets .
by the thousands! '
Here are just a few of the latest winners In thla 1rea:
A. Ywgllft
Mrw. C, CrOlll
H.&rlul
It, ~1111 ... .1
L Orfvtr
l .RMmw-
W,H-11
A. IAck
C, JtnJUltlt
A. lqvender •
II. Btlttt
M, Ton11
T. ll•nroa 8. Clrll
M, M1rrl1
11 ....... 1111
.J. McOonll
A. 8tMCh
.J. Gt'""
K • .Jtllllft
I!, Clrvmll
H. QerdM
0.ClllllH
... Dll'lllV)'
P. P1011
.J. S.ltlt
Mrt. A. T1t11111ltl•
M. Brock -
I". lor1n1tn •
V.len~
G:Jon11
Mrt. D. J1nkl111
L Chlndl1t
I , Cl1rt
K. 9Chollr
N. Clerk, Jr.
R. LIP191
J, lnnrn1n
J. Dur1n
M. Pob11
•. ..-.. _
1Jtr1.D,MMr \• .. _
M. Wtttc
K. XMlltM ··-Y.,,._ ··-c•-Mn.I . ..,...
J.une ....... w.eu,,. •. ...._ ... , ....
T. llloc.lltr .......
J.v .. .-
'·°"" C-J.II-W.k~
P.L-i..
V. AllWM ··-L lelllnear '·"""' A, C.l.IM_1 e:. Jlrn111u
W.H .... ,Jr.
Y. lllWI
P. Flnll
T, Wln'9f ··-0 . Oe(lcll
D.Lop.a
I(. krvtsilll
A. lurdorl
111 Guptill
.. _ .. ..., ... ~ ··-i= L-~:== ··-J.C '"I' G.Lw ··-c-o.o_._••n
..~,JI. ··-... -V. CvtUI • .....
f!K•tMt
L. We lflgiltttn
1.111-
J. F1lhlrtliln
L Rude
T. Klllnll' a. Holt
L. O"'lleM D.11.nner
K.Ctlplnl* "·"' .... J. N1ndeRMI ··-... N1lt111
P. Lntne
W. CJPl!w ··-L l~rnlt1
0 . C1rl1w ... , ......
... -... _
~~ ··-............ :""..::.a. Clel!' ........ ... -.
........ 0. ,.,.., ........... ..... ., ...... ··-··-•. •r.n.~ ··-R. Ot~a111a •
tioo s l,iluut.eman siies degree for tbe <tficers who .._.11en; °' 1~ Q....us commun111 ;..,C\.~ ..u ~ ~.,.::
at a second's notice have a entered the nUlitary under_:''"=.':": .. :::·~•0:.::'":"~....,,::::::_:•~':"":.:'~':'•:•:_ _______________ :_~----------------------..,-----------Iot o( time m their bands cadet programs. It appears
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Lynn M1y, --
Auist1nt V'ict President_,
M1n1pr •
He's manager of our
Huntington Beach office. H•'tl
see that you 1et the best. most
complet• banking help
available. Attar all, that's what
full 1arv1ce banking ls all about.
Stop In today and get
acquainted with us. ,
!02 Flfth Avenue
Telephone: 536-9361
41 F11// Senlce 0 11/CN S.,.,1..,
Sollflletn C1Jltont11
UNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
· BANK e
...... ftdtl91 0.-'-'-C..."!111
.,. f*'I """" 5"1t11
during a 24-hour ·sbJft in ,a to be a suceesslul venture,
silo;-i0-4-lldeTground-both-for----v.d
and miles frun their and tile Air Force.
missile. , Professors from the
But do they \Vaste it? Well University flt Wyoming ib
about 150 officers and men Laramie conduct classes on
-at Warren · Air Force Base tbe average ot. three times
are working towanl college every two weeks •l Warien
degrees as they sit end wait AFB, with the remainder of
for an order they hope never the time devoted to private
comes. study which is usu.ally done
Their military job i& in the launch facility.
simple. Should the word be After enough consecutive
given, they would press ttle hours have been obtained to
button to la~ tbe missiles bring the student within one
t o w a rd predetermined year ol graduation, the final
targets in vaious sect.ors ol times must be spent on a
t.be world. college campus. 'lbe largest
Two mf'n at.a time put in number plan to cootinue
2~ stints in their un-their schooling at t h e
derground homes, with one University of Wyoming, but
constantly mooitoring the several will go to San Diego
a p p a r a t u s and both St.ate in California and the
participating in drills held University <i Oklahoma.
cootinuelly to keep the 'Ille most c o tn m o n
operation alert. But time is ·courses being studied are
also available for study and g«leT8l engineering, elec-
a.bout 150 are currently tl"ical e n g i n e e r I n g ,
enrolled in the Air Force mathematics and industrial
Institute o f Technology management.
DISCOVEJt A BONUS TREASURE!
I
JNVEST'$1000 or more (in multipl" of $1,000) in Laawia Federal'•
J•yW Bonus Certift<ate,
EARN ·s.oo~ per annum c:urrcnt dividend me. payable to you
.,cl. quart« ... PLUS-
~% PER ANNUM GUARANTEED BONUS,
pty_~le to 100 in oDc lump sum al the cod of 3 yean; thereafter, the bonus
is );il'd to· yon each quarter to~r with your rcautar dividend.
C• NVEST REI your BonU. Certmcate
carninp ih ata,una Federal Pasabook Account,
and rtceive wninp OD eamin&S for the
maximum return on your investment.
REMEMBER -you can always borrow
Oil your BODUI Ccrtj.5cate.
CHART A BONUS COURSE
FOR mGBER EARNINGS I
----------------
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We'll have to take part of the credit ... or
blame ... for modern music. Th e beat. The sound.
Electric guitars, electric banjos, electric organs,
electric amplifiers. Who knows, maybe-even
e1ectric kazoos. ' We're not necessarily endorsing the present
trend.We're just'pointing ou t that non e of it
could have happened without our product.
· There wouldn't be any hi-fi stereos, or
radios, or TV to bring you mu sic, either. But
·\ '
• •
-~----because qf electricity, you can tune in the whole··
world. Music, entertainment, spor.ts, news ,
everything.
What's it cost you? So little you probably
don't even think about it. Fractions of a penny
to play a record or watcli a t.e!evision ·show.
Only electricity can do so ~uch for so little.
Southern California Edison
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T*itldlJ', J11nt 4, 1968 T
OtER-'rHE-COUNTER
•
Fr1nk Zrtbitc,
Vico-Mllo,.011-w
He's nwn111:er of our co.ta
Mesa office. He'll SM that to"
set th• best. most compt«e blnklflJ' help 1v1Uable. Mtr
•ti, tt11r1 whit tun Mt'Vlol
blnkln& Is 11l 1bout. Stop In
tOdty •nd 1et ac:qu1lnttd
with us.
IMS "-poit Btvd • .......... , """"''· fnlim S.nt. An11 545-3011
.fO f~I/ ~,...It• Ollie., S.1Yln1
Soullt1rn C1//fornla
UNITED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK ~
111.,.. FtHrt! n.m 111wnt• ~·
Nh1111""--Sm•
New Position
The Men from Merrill Lynch
take a look at
5 Emerging ·lndustr~es
Oceanography • New Medical TeehnOlog
. Learning Aids ., Nuclear Enero
Pollution Control
Make your forum reservations today
•
Our Research• Department believes
these industries have unusual potential
fo r growth and could at least-triple their
present size within th~ next decade.
Ii you would I ike to learn more about
these industries-and get specific infor-
mation on which stocl<s we feel are at-
tractive within them-come to our-'
Emerging Industries Forum
Tuesday Evening, Juno 11
Newporter Inn
1107 Jamboree Rd., Newport Beach
starting at 8:00 PM sharp
-If ou'll fin"il out a6out:
Oceanography-many experts believe if
will one day be as large as today's $7.-
billion space industry.
New Medical Technology-may well be
on its way to outstripping our current
giant American drug industry.
Learning Aids-shows promi se ot
reaching a billion-dollar volume inside
of the next decade.
Nuclear Energy -already has a backlog
of $6-billion in orders for utilities equip-
ment alone.
Pollution Control-expe nditures show
a potential of $10-billion a year within
the next few years.
Reserve you r seats today. There's
no charge or obligation, of course, but
space is limited. Simply call or mail in
the ·coupon shqwn below.
·----------------------------------------------· ' ' • ' • I Pleiit• ''''"'' •. , • , ... ttt l1 fer your Etntrgin9 lndudrl11 Forufft
011 Tutttfay, Jul'lt 11 in ·N1....,.orf le'tth.
N•""'----------------Add'8S'----------------
Clty&StatlL.----------"~---
MERRILL LYNCH,
PIERCE, '
FENNER & SMITH INC
1001 NORTH BROADW>,Y, SANTA ANA 92702
Tolophoot' 547-7271 . .
For tht convenience of investors our Office u ope:n
dcilt1 7 a.m. to S p.m. and Saturdat11 9 a.m. to J~ noon.
3rd Quarte_r
Totals Told
'
By Collins
Chance of a lifetime -
Perhaps YOUR Ufetime!
Th.ls could be it, bfcause we're-lookin& for a numbtr cf
men with •om~ busineu ~xperlence -preferably 1ale1 -
to Joln our steadily expandinf ataff ol Account EXecuUvH
In Santa Ana. Thi:i uperienc:e may -or -may not -have
been 1n the bi'okerqe bu&inn.s.
Thett are lht mm we pay
money u wilely u poulble, to help people invest their
To become one, )'OU work -tJJd work hard.
You set paid while you learn, ~ COW'S! -rtttlve a u.J.
ary butd on your backfr'OUnd, your experience and )'our pcraonal requirement&.
If yoU'H 1erloualy interested in a lifetime ttrttr wtth
US. to do work that .~ in tmnl of both money• and aatisf.actlon, we'd llllt to ~ ftom )'OU.
Ttll us ln wrltlnr about )'OUl' bl.cklround, education, and oii-rleftct; be 1ure to include your addttu and i.•
phone number -then ttnd :vour letter in confidmce to -
Richard S. Tbunsen
5 JYIBAAIL.1,.tLYNCH,
Pl BA CE,.
F•NNBA a 8MITH INC.
,l llttll R "'' llffl fl"MN •• 11111 "'I(._ Sito• 111 IMIHlll tHIHllll
1001 NOltTH tltOADWAY, SANTA ANA 92702
• For e-%0.mplt, afUr fit,1c ~tan ar a .ttcuritit.t saitimcm,
i'n 1g57 tht GWTGgt Mtmu L~h a«otnit tueutivt'I
'tarning1 pt4f him i" lhf.top 2" of AmerlcoM in Urm.s of ir&comt. •
ASSETS OVER
$429,000,0bO.OO
HEAD OFACE 315~~--"'* ,.. .. ,.,..., c.ttfomla e11c»
1
Stop b7 Matual lint and plek ap
your FREE Vaeatlon Atlu and
Gulde Book.
MUTUAL SAVINGS ........ ., A•••c•"'~'•"
2867 East Coast Highw1y •CORONA D1L·~{Alt, Calif.9262)
1 Tclc:phonc675·5010 .. omca .,.......
311 (, t<ll.OU.00 l l'ftt. • PAIAOf"'-CAUJ. tllOt
1N•;As
•
I I
•
·A·
·•
• ~· ' """ .. 1'61 DAILY 1'11.d'r
Monday's Cloeing Price~ ~ Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Exchange Closing
J
-~ ----~-_,, ~-·---------_...._ -~ ·-------------------~------------------------------------
•
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I -. ••, 1 -°' -· '• ._., •. -•-• ' _ _,__,....,,..._ . ·._ .. .. ' ..
• •
l • .... • r: ..... """_ ...... • • ---• . . -• • . . -... . . .. ·~ . ---•• . . .
Rio Fu ture in Tunnels
. .
.RIO DE J,.\NEffiO (AP) COIY!_Cabana's estimated The blj_@st headache of Your -Nine tunnel! cutting one million residents move a11. however, was movement
through more than five in, out and about their area between the north and south
miles of solid rC)Ck: have through four tunnel!, and zones , long possible only f II •
done much to relieve traffic the city government is talk· through the already COD· u , service
congestion in this city o! five ing about building at lea&t gested downtown business
million penons. one more. area. b k
The newest tunnel Is also -~--------------I an er.
the longest ln any city of the
world, and has cut travel
time between north and
south Rio by as much as an
_ Senior (;iti.:ens Officers Installed
The Costa Mesa Senior Citizens Club recently held
installation ceremonies of new officers. From left
are Joe Lincoln. representing the outgoing officers;
Mrs. Wanda Wright, senior citizen's coordinator;
Mrs. Jessie Rider, president; Mrs. May Bucklar,id,
vice president; .Mrs. Angela Pesenti, secretary;
Mrs. Jean Molony, treasurer;~Mrs. Rae Mammano,
historian; and George Pratt, auditor.
hour.
Llke a gijstening jewel set
off by blue ocean waters
lapping on gleaming white
beaches; Rio is scattered
among steep green moun-
tains and hills.
The ancient volcano
cones, today better known
as Sugar Loag and Corcova-
do with its towering Christ
statue, created some of
Rio's wOrst headaches.
Corcovado slices between
the city's north and south
zones. nie mountains trail-
ing off at the base of Sugar
Loaf isolate famed
Copacabana Beach.
The battle against these
natural barriers be g an
almost "a century ago, when
horse-drawn carriages first
began clopping through the
Alice Street tunnel in 1887.
Four years later another Congress Likes Trade P~ogram--If
tunnel was completed, link-
gram one or the most di£-substantial U.S. tr ad e <a"e contingent on exports ing t:he city center with
ficult tasks of a five-y ear surplus has--been the major than on imports; that a pastoral farmlands n o w
Love the
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music
Jamel W. Verrall,
Nsistant Vice President,
Manager
He'1 manager of our South
coast Plaza office Jn Cost.
Me58. He'll see that you &et
the best. most complete
bankln1 help 1v1ll1ble. Aft•
ell, that's what full servlc.
banklnl Is 111 1bout. Stop ht
today and aet 1equalntld
with us.
3333 Bristol StrHt, Sutte 121
Telephone: M0-5211
41 Full S•rvkM OfllCN S•"'°' Soutlr1r11 C•ll/or~f•
UNI TED
STATES
NATIONAL
BANK 9
111.,kl Ftff,.I ~ ..._ C.....-
..,. Ftdsll Ra.-5'tM WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Congress ~as greeted Presi-
dent Jolmson's new world
trade program as a fine pro-
gressive move -provided,
of course, that individual
American industries get the
protection they want.
tenure shot through with sustaining element in the surplus trade nation stands covered by Copacaba.na's RADIO KOCM--103.1 FM
myriad problems. b a lance-of-payments pie-to lose more th~an~~·n=y~o~n~e _i'~ho_:ul~d~e~r.fu~·s_:h~o~ul~d~er~h!l ~g~h--~--F:r:o~m~F=a:s:h~J~o~n~l~s~la:n~d~,~N.::ew:_:p:o~r~t ~B:e:a:c~h'.__J:::::========~ The · President has pro-ture; that more U.S. jobs else from a tariff war. rise apartment buildings.
posed a two-year extensionl--------------~-
The fact Urat e a c h member of ·congres s
·-*' reJfresents a specific area,
with its own specific 41·
--.;d.e-ustriei.-lrS-thereal"t.hrellt tQ
the President'l!I outline of ·
proposed world trade ex -
--unsions-and"'l"eform, -
Almost · -everyone ·-at
lea.st, a sl2able majority -
agrees in theory that U.S.
exports not only are -a
mainslz'Y of the economy
but ttiat only the huge (and
favorable) volume of b"'ade
has kept tbe American
dollar breathing during the
past few years of. in-
ternational monetary crises,
gold drain and w o r l d
deficits.
.In practice, however, U1t
story is different. And
President Johnson could
find acquiring cong;ression3l
approvtt ?f his new pro-
of the authority to negotiate
tariff reductions needed to
put into effect some of the
agreements negotiated dur-
ing the. so-call.ed Kennedy
round of trade agreements
last year at Gcrn;_va. _
He ~~ proposed o
eliminate the -s o • c a 11 t d
Amer.ican selling RJ i _c e _
systeJll. This allows tarftis
to be based on a percentage
of the manufacturer's s~
gested price, which is in
some cases far above the
actual compet1tive retail
price level.
Jn the current
agreements , only one pro-
duct so priced (benzenold
chemicals) too]c a tariff cut
and therefore would be &f-
, rected. But others could be
affected by future negotia-
tions should the fonnula be
dropped.
From a theoretical view·
point , most members of
Congress are aware that the
Self-employed?
Here's how to save taxes
while you save for
retirement
As a self~plQ)'f.d, business or professional man you can
deduct from your taxable income the money you put into
an Internal Revenue Service approved Retirement Pension Plan.
Thil Plan is known u the H.R. 10 or Kwgli P/Qlf. Your
money and the interest it earns is not taxable until retinment;
then only as the il\Qme is recei\·ed. 'The maximum ~
\
..
offers all of these features:
1. Automatic deposits of extra money to checking accounts when needed •••
2. No charge for transferring the money ...
3. No interest charge if the money is repaid within 25 days ...
4. Optional controlled advances (It is possible to borrow money without
-
allowable contribution is IOX of.income or $2,500. whichever
is less. Below is a condensed example of the tax u.vinp
with a Manufacturer:\ Life Xtog/i Plan for a married man
aged 45 with two children 'and an income of SIS,000 in touching the checking account balance.)... · I '
the 22x 1u bracket.
If )'Ou'd like to hive the complete ste~h)--slep figures in
the example call the Man from Manufacturers Lire. Bo sure
'to uk him 1bou1 Manur1ctum'I Life's new approved
Mister Plan. You'll find it convenient-no trust agreement
neoessary. It's flmiblc; contribuliona can go up and down
as income Oucluates, ind it gives you an attractive return on
your money. You owe it to yourself to call hlm soon.
Or · u·y Sa
0
viop Keo1h
1-:--:---,.--------I Pia R.R. IOPlan
Savlnp Before Tu .•• - -• , ~. S 1,000 S 1,000
Annual Income Ta:ii:--....... S 220 S 0
NctAmountS..ved ... ~-··.. S 710 S 1,000
Aoi;umulated Sarinp 10 Ap 65 . '21,115 S10,3J5
(Aauminc 5Y. (incllKlinl interest las tu divKlmds •
Net ..tT.91ap ol l.eop Pisa ·-OnllMrJ Piu
(11\cr \l.\ea: ovu 15 )'e&B life u.pceWIC)'). Au~ I) aca.mulationl above are invnteid Jn
kk-ntx:ml annuitin U1inl the n tes ptekfttfy in SS,700 d'ta. Thae nta are not a IUITJintee for futua rC111lta. 2) re.alOn&ble 1moun1 of othu llllble
inromc ad1Riv. or Social kuri1y.
••Aoi;umul11ed dhidend1 or $4,933 are ba-i on p~nl TJilct ud
1111 not to M consldend u a 1uarantcie oC fww:e reau.116.
R.D.StMt1e
Agency Associate
COSTA MESA I
Tel; 547-5621
J . W. furl, Jr.
Agency Alsoclate
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Tel: 547·5621
MAIUFACTURERS LIFE
INlilJMNCB COMPANY
5. A Check Guarantee Card that guarantees personal checks for goods, cash
and services in all 50 states ...
·in one package.
• Security Bank's
Ready ReservAccount
•
• SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK • v
,J I
,
·~-
,
... -------------~--------------~----~·---·---------------·--------------------------------,
.
't•tMy, Jllllt t, l MI HS l'ltt II
Green Grow
•
The Benefits
How delightful - a day in the brisk California sunshine and fresh
air and the knowledge that at the same time you are helping the Children·s
Home Society, the largest private adoption agency in the state.
All thi s will take place the weekend of June 8 and 9, Saturday and
Sunday, on area golf courses when Tiara de Ni nos Auxiliary spon so rs its
annual Golf-a-thon.
Participating clubs will be Meadowlark Country Clu b a nd Hunting-
ton Beach Coun try Cl ub . Huntington Beach. and Cos.ta Mesa and Mesa
Ve rde Count ry ·club. Costa Mesa and Rancho San Joaquin.
Players on these courses wiil be given an opportunity to place their
baU within a 15-foot ci rcl e marked at a specific hole for a minimum price.
Ther"e will be a charge ol 50 cents for one ball or $1 for three balls, with
a $25 cash prize fo~ a hole-in-one.
Auxiliary members will work each shift of four hours b~tween 7:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. ·
Proceeds o( the benefit will a_id Children·s Home Societ}', a lice nsed
a~ency which~ aids children and parents regardle!ls--Of race or creed. ·More
thpn 1,596 children we·re placed for adOption last year. .
-:--o. This will -be-the-fin3l:=activityimdertaken by-the-officers ,pttfl e-group,
the Mmes .. Robert Qhland~ president,.an·d Robert W. Vernon, ,Ja mes Marsh
and .J. E. Bfaikie, viCe presidents ; Victor Malzahn and Joseph E. Ribal ,
secretaries, anii Carl E. Karn, treasurer.
.,
·•
•\
•
• • •
-~ .. •
• , • • • • ' ·~ .j
f¥; l •
In addition to directing the_Golf-a·-thon the board has been in charge of
the Tiara Ball , a major fund-raising event. a nd a Christmas layette shower
to replenish the supply of equipment used for new-born infants and chi!Qren
until they are placed in permanent homes ..
Officers and members al"so serve as aides in. the well-baby clinic and
provide transportation to and from the clinic for placement or showing 1
of children.
SWINGING INTO ACTION -Members of Tiara de Ni nos Auxil·
iary .or the ·c hildren's Home Society will be sponsoring their third
annual Golf-a-thon on five courses throughout the area this week-
end. Amo ng the auxiliary members who will be staffing the
courses during the benefit are {left to right) Miss L'Ucille Drau-
cher, Mrs. Kenneth F. Baustian and Mrs. Ira ~pparport. All pro-
ceeds will be used for the society, la rgest private adoption agen·
cy in the state. •
-. .-
\_
.fl.
'
'
(~% Componos
Debs Circle Dates
For Parties, Parties
r.;iug ht up in a whirlwi nd of parlies. lu'ncheons and leas are Lal
Campanas dcbutantes who \viii he presented to society during the fifth
annual ball .July 13 in the Di sneyland Hotel.
Of the 20 .Young wome n selected for this honor. one is from Costa
Mesa and ano ther is from Huntington Beach.
They are Miss Kathleen Janelle Tubach. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Dean Tubach and Miss .Janet Patricia Holt z, daughte r of Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Leo Holtz.
Future dates ci!\:led in red on their calendars include June 15, an
informal party for them an d stags; .June 22. another party; .June 27, the
traditional Medallion Tea to be hosted by Mrs. Richard Heffner.
Informal parties will be staged the last weekend of June and lhe
first part of July: July 9 has been selected for the annual Father-Debu·
tante Waltz Party ; July 12. rehearsal a nd a dinner party ror debutantes
and their escorts.
Th ey have already heen ent.crt.aincd at a luncheon in the Ana:heim
hn1ne of Mrs. Leslie /. F'errcll, great-aunt or a debuta nt.e, Miss Kaye Ellyn
Mason . Mrs . Flo Brooks, presentation director. instructed the girls on the
finer points of executing the curtsy.
On the next day escorts and stags v.1ere wel comed at an informa.1
party in the Fred Beckham home in Fullerton. Also present were Mrs.
Brooks and Mrs. Charles A. Peterson. ball chairman. plus Miss Vicki Beck·
ham, a 1966 debutcinte. and Peterson.
Other recent gatherings were a mother-daughter coffe~ in the Sa nta
1\na home of Mrs . John Bishop, and a fashion shov.• in Buffum's where
they were shown appropriate ball gowns.
PROUD MOTHERS -Sha ring moments of joy. filled with pride
:i re mothers of Las Campanas debuta nt es and their daughters as
1hey relax and chat ove r coffee cups duri ng th e traditional moth-
er-daughter coffee. Coast debula ntes and their mothers <ire (left
to right) Mrs. Leonard Dean Tuba ch. Mis s Janet Patricia Holtz,
Mrs. Andrew Leo Holtz and Miss Kathleen Janelle Tubach.
The ball is a benefit. and proceeds go lo the Symphony Associa tion
nf Orange Coun ty to continue its efforts in presenting concerts in the 1968--
69 season. During the past four years 68 debutantes have been presented.
Sponsoring organiza tion s are the association and the v.1omen·s group,
Las Campanas.
Instead-of--Her Burying Talents, She R.eally Dug for Th~m
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Are people
crazier today than at. any tirTJ,e in the
history (){ man? I belleve the answer
ls "yes." The it.em I just read in the
newspaper is pretty good evidence.
It seem!! a Mrs. P . Haverland nf
Charlestoo , W. Va . has nothing better
to do with her time than to try lo b~ak
the record for being buried a live. The
record Is held by some neabrain who
Jay in an under ground cas ket for 75
days. Mrs. Haverland Is !lure she can
set a new record.
t would like to !IUggest that anyone
who has 75 day!l to blow ought to go to
i;ome hospital and volunteer to break a
reCflrd visiting the s;Jck or writing let·
lers for the disabled or just cheerinjl! i.;p ll'ie lonely people ln the nursing
homes. Do you agree . Ann~
-CHICAGO READER
I• •
ANN LANDERS
DEAR CHICAGO : Penple usuall~·
t"njoy doing what they do be t1t.
Perhaps lhl11 11 !'ttr1. Haverl11,nd.:.1
gre1te1t talent
DEAR ANN t.ANDEHS: Paul and I
plan to l?:f! married in September. Paul
comes from a large family and 10 do
I. We were both bor n and raised in
thi!l city and have -a great many
friendii . Since my folk s can 't afford to
give me a big wedding we have decid -
ed to llAY.e a simple.c:ertmOJl)' wilh_on.
" .
'
\~'t he immediate fam ily present.
Now the problem : People we know
have been asking us if they can come
to the wadding. I think il'!l poor man·
ner& to fish for an invitation, but these
fol ks feel very friendly and they don't
see it that way. ·
I've tried to be evasive and non-
committal but it's getting more dlf·
ficult aU the time. What do you IUI•
gest ?
J,>EAR
~N lllE SPOT BRIO~
BRIDE: & direct and
honel't. Say . ''I wish we could lnv ltr.
all nur dear friends t" the wedding but
It l•n't possible.'' Then you can 1dd,
"We hope you'll cnme tn see us when
we're settled'"-lf ynu WANT them tn.
lh81 IR.
OJo;AR ANN LANDERS: Plrai<e
print this lett.er . A million women will
love \'ou .
Why don't the mothers of America
-teach 'their children when they go to
:someone's home for dinner NOT In
ask for a third helping of meat or a se-
cond dessert? A family of eitht (six
kid.I) came Lo dinner last night an.d I
was a nervou1 , wreck from the begin-
ning of the mea l to the end . There
were 12 at our tiblt lncluaiiig 16fil•
~-~------~-~------------·-··----... -------~--------------------~-
lm1>0rtant business as'sociates of my
husband. Those kids made a nervous
wreck out of me with '"more meat.
please," even before the adults had a
chance to finish their portion s. I
thought surely their mother would say
iiomelhin~ but she just sat th('re as if
the kids belonged to someone else and
let them make pigs or themselves. F'or
dessert I baked a triple layer chocolate
cake (10-inch tins\ with mocha icing.
Thia Is a pretty big cake. Ann. but it
wasn't enough .
I! you've never bee.n in a spot where
you 've had to Wf1rry about running
short of food. you hsven't mi Sl'iied
11nything. Please. Ann Lander!!. be a
friend and prinl this letter.
-CLEAN~D OUT
DEAR CLEANED• Cblldren 1b .. ld -
ht. taught never tn aak for • second
helping of anything wben tbey are
guests. If the hn1te111 nffer1, flne:
nthrrwlse they should eal what 11
~rved and tr thry are stlll hunfry,
another rttll or 111 11itt or bread 1hould
1alli'iify them.
When romantic glances turn to
warm embraces is it love or
chemistry? Send for the booklet "Love
or Sex and How to Tell the Dif·
ference.'' by Ann Landers. Enclose a
long. st.amped, !lelf·addre!lsed en4
velope and 35 cents in coin with your.._
reque sl.
Ann Landers will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send them to her
In care of lhe DAILY PILOT. eoclt\s4
lnR a stamped, 1el1-addresaed ea4
veJope .
I,
.. --------
(
-... ,.
14 DAILY PILOT llltldlY, JIH'lt 4, 1968
Latest_ Techniques Examined
" Horoscope
.aurus:Creatj"-e
•
Efforts Favored
WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 5
By ~VDNEY OMARR
"The wise man. controls
his destiny "'. . . Astrology
Point:s tbe way."
ARIES (March 21-Aprll
19): What was ceases to ex·
ist. .Act accordingly. Means
lod.2.y a fresh viewpoint is a
necessity. Applies especially
to legal agreements, con-
tracts and partnerships.
Some openly oppose you.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Concentration on basic
issues. Among these include
those who work for or with
you. Creative #efforts
favored. Specifically. check
heaJth indications. You find
Out bow best to begin a pro-
ject.
Keep sight on reality, 'but
also perceive Jong~range
goal
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Give attention to finances.
You caD improve fln~ial
situation j r perceptive.
Means listen and learn. A
GEMINI individual could
help you see values which
are obvious.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Cycle high. Means gel .out
today and make your views
known. Contact key persons.
Many are attracted, willing
to be COil vinced. Y 0 U r
greatest weapon is sin·
cerity. Act accordingly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov,
21): Look beyond the o~
viOus . A secret is revealed
-be in on it There is in·
trigue today. U alert, this
works to your advantage.
Find out which way the
wind is blowing. Investigate.
MRS. GRIFFIN
Mi110Uri Home
Mysticis'fl Captured
Israel Offering
':Nord on Styl'e
,-JEAN SPRAIN WIUON the last, ii not the loudest.
word on fashion.
Rather than imitate what
the rest of the style world
is doing, a dozen of its
designers chose to inject. the
influence of the often em-
battled. land itseU into its
NEW YORK (AP) -
Attei-President Charles de
Gaulle made his famous
unflattering comment about
Jews, a prom in e n t
personality in the gannent
industry here quipped that
Israel "should use the nee-c r .e a ti on s . Thus tbey
di " a selected. the kova tembel,
e. the Israeli farmer's tradl~
l!iy that he meant that tional headgear, as a tbeme.
the country should wori: " The hat i.! similar to a
hard at be...."'Onting th e erew--hat with ~ brim turn-. . ed down, a silhouette fas~. capital_ ol the world, literally enlarged upon for
• position which has been capes, dresses, pants, suiLs.
securely held by France. gowns. ensembles a n d
Indeed, some of the loungewear.
American fashion industry's If the hat shape I& not
most important members -the inspiration for the er.tire
Pauline Trigere, A n n e costume, it nevertheless ap-
Klein, Jerry S I 1 v e r m a n pears as a sleeve, a pocket
among· them -have con-or a skirt shape.
tribuled time, energies and Some desigrui are as
imagination to help put the modern· as mini , others cap·
new country's industry in ture the mysticism oC the
the money and on the style middle east.
scene. There are culotte suits,
•
Members of the Huntington Beach Police Wives Guild learned the most up--to-
date techniques and medication for the treatment of badly burned patients
when they visited the Orange County Medical Center to make a donation to the
Burn Unit yesterday. Among those learning some of the new concepts in the
treatments are (left to right) Mrs. Stephen Balloch, Mrs. James ~fahan and
Mrs. George Renek ...
GEMINI (May 21.June
20): Good lunar aspect to-
day coincides with time tc
make changes, to welcome
affection. You may oot be
able to remain obje~tive.
Day when you become in-
volved -and it may be a
good thing.
CANCER (June 21-July
22): Greater joy in the
home can become a reality
today. -Don 't ask for too
much -you will receive·
more than anticipated. Your
opinion is solicited with
regard to real .estate, pro-
perty values.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Powerful in·
nuences are exerted by
friends. Your best course is
to remember, promises.
respon&tbilities. Don't try to
skip what· is essential. Older
person deservl!s con·
Marriage
Announced
Though stealing the thun· and Nehru jackets over
der (or sunshine) Crom skinny pants, shirt waisters,
Paris is not likely ta happen pabtaloons, slinky things,
over night, Israel i s bare bikinis and Mack Sf>n-.
demonstrating tile progress nett swimrr,.ers, bushy furs
sideral.ion. · · it iS"malUDg. More t.han 700 and sleek ooes -in fact,.
Nancy Middleton New
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22·
Jm. 19):' You are on. the
brink of information re-
quired to press forward. But
you m u s t communicate,
write, make known desires.
need&. Finish one phase of
activity, begin an o t .h er.
Make-up-yC}ur ml_nd.
~1arried in Sacred Heart buyers from 2Q countries i!obout all the styles that
Catholic Church, St. Louis. converged · on Tel A.viv We stern orientated women
Mo. we.re Necia Marie recently to give the industry have come to ippreciate.
Gel.ker of Balboa an dl ir===="=====~======~===:;:;,
William Edward Timothy
Griffin III.
The bride, daughter of ~.
and Mrs. Bruce B. E .
Ge!k&--of Balboa, aitend&d
St. Stephen's College,· Col-
umbia wher& she affiliated
with Zeta Phi Delta ..
IF YOU ARE A NEWCOMER TO TOWN
OR KNOW ONE TO WHOM YOU WISH
TO DO A GOOD TURN • • •
'Mr. and Mrs. Louis O'Con-
nell of Newport Beacb an·
nounced the marriage of her
daughte!', Nancy Lorena
Middleton and J a m e s
William McBrien, son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. McBrlen of
Hilo. Hawaii.
The Rev. Roger T. Walke
officiated during the double
ring ceremony in Unitarian-
Universalist Cliurch, Costa
Mesa.
For her wedding. the
bride selected a full Jength
\\1lite gown with a bodice
and hemline trimmed in
daisies. D a i s i e s also
decorated her s ho u I de r
length veil and she carried
an orchid bouquet with
Shapely
.•
9069
SIZES 12~2,,,,
Dart shaping and tab-front
buttoning make this a
perfect choice for summer
days. Choose crisp Dacron
checks, nubby blend, shan-
tung, linen.
Printed Pattern 9069 : Half
Sizes 12~, 141h, 161.h, 181h,
2011. ;!II. 2411. Siu I6\I
(bust 37) takes 3¥,1 yds. 35--
in.
SIXTY-FIVE CENTS In
coins for each pattern -
add 15 cents for each p.at·
tern for first-class mailing
and special handling ;
otherwise t h 1 rd · c I as s
delivery will take three
weeks or more. Send to
Marian Martln, the DAIL V
Pll.oT, 442 Pattern Dept.,
232 Well llllb St .. New York ,
N. Y. IOO!l. Print NAME.
ADDRESS wlih ZIP, SIZE
and STYLE NUMBER.
Chooae one pattern free -
clip coupoa 1n new SprlDi·
Sil!!llfler Plttenr CaUiog.
100 1tyk1, all lizei. Send 50
cent.I.
flowers sent frmi. t h e
benedict<s parents. ·
Miss Loren Robin5ob of
Huntington Marina, t h e
bride's cousin, was maid ot
honor while the Misses
Percy Batista of Honolulu;
Karen Appleman of
Newport Beach. Barbara
·Towle, Costa Mesa. and
Cathy McCallion, Anaheim,
attended. as bridesmaids.
They donned pink full
length gowns and held pink
carnation leis sent frllm
Hawaii.
grandmother, and M· r s .
Margaretta O'C<lnnell of
Sturgis.
'Vhe newlyweds hooey-
mooned on CoronaC'O lslaind
and will make their home in
Germany w he re the
benedict is serving in the
Army.
Fall Rites
In Offing
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Accent on Study, writing,
relations witb~·brothers and
sisters. Lunar position coin-
cides with your ability to
make · quick adjustments.
AQUARIUS (Jan.' 20-Feb.
18): GOod lunar ~ to-
day conctdes with chance to
communicate with one who
appreciates your taleW.
Good for contacts, new
starts, OOded independence.
Original approach works
Her husband, son of Mr.
and Mrs: William Griffin Jr.
of St. Louis, is a graduate· of
the University of Missouri wonders.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March ~here he . majored in
20) :· Your questions about~1.Q.l9gy • QhySlo~.SgY.: a!' d
employment, basic chores pleai:JI?elta S1gm815lll.
'ca be answered tOday. The-br1degr~m plans ~
~-. -·' • _ PHONLU:US WONOERFUL_C.OMMJJtll'LL. ___ j_ --·
SERVICE ANO A HOSTESS )li'1LL CALL
WITH GIFTS AND INFORMATION.
Dottie Walters
Hospitality
Hostess
n . coach at a high school in
Associa_te who ?ften appears Shelbyville, Mo. where they We Welcome You
eccentric ~ovtdes the ke7. will make their h 0 m e .
Be anal~cal -then you Honeymoon plans include a T 0 Th•
see the light. trip to Southern California ORANGE COAST AREA
IF TODAY IS YOUR to visit friends and PHONE ~t2S
BffiTRDAY you re v ere , _:r.:e.'.'.la'.'.ti'..'.·v.:•::'· ______ _'.'.::,====================I knowledge. Teaching others1·
to understand themselves
gives you great sath:-acuon.
· lmport&nt current c y c 1 e
prO'Jnjses succeH. Best man was t.he bride's
brother. Douglas Middleto n.
Candles were lit by the
bride's cousins. Geo r g e
Robinson IJ.11 and Raymond
Smith of !l'urgis. S. D.
Barbara Lynn Jordan and G E N E R A L T E N·
Richard Oliver Careaga will DENCIES: Cycle high for
exchange nuptial vows Sept. LIBRA, SCORPIO. Special
21 in , the Herrick Memorial word to AR IE S: Con-centrate on public relations.
Large bouqllds of pink,
white and red flowers mixed
with white gladioli adorned
the C'hurch.
Chapel, Occidental Co llege. Tei find O!lt wtio'• 111C1r.v f« wu 1n
C&mto H-l'llato m_, &nd Jove, order SvdMl' 6"'11rr's _i'jews of the forthcoming tlo<*l11, "Sei:rel. Hinh '°' Men 1nd
BARBARA JORDAN women." Send blrtl'ldll• •nd .50 c:tnt• event has been revealed by 1o om1rr Attr111oev *,.."' The DAI-
i Selects Date LY PILOT. !IOll :nAO. G"na cen1r11 her parents. W.r. and Mrs. --------'-----'''""'"""~:.·::"~::..:Ye:"::::'· ":::·..:Y.:.. ::"'::"::.· __
L. R. Jordan of Newport1
Beach.
· The bride's parents home
was the setting for the
reception for 150 guests.
. .\ssisting "'ere ?\o1r. and
Mrs. George Robinson. the
bride's aunt and uncle from
Huntington Marina a n d
Francis Wright or Newport
Beacti. Special guests were
Miss Suzanne M c B r i en .
·sister of Ule benedict from
Hilo ; Mrs. M a r gar e t
Steinberger of Santa Ana,
Mjss Jordan a t le n d e d
Arizona State University
and was graduated cum
laude from Occidental.
r .,
l
t " I)
lier fiance , son of Al G.
Careaga and ?\oirs. Wayne W.
0.wens of San Fernando
Valley, will be a senior al
Occidental in the fall .
' 'OD!J
•
'
GLYCINE
,
"
WE'D LIKE TO INTAODUCEYOU TO
THREE BEAUTIFUL MODELS.
Each is named Glycine.
~ach is in 14 karat gold.
Round watch with fa ceted crystal.
Rectangular with "tree bark" textured
case and hand,
Rectangula~ with woven band.
Your choice, $175.
s1?~~·~
18 FASHION ISLAND
644-1380 .
NEWPORT CENTER
•
1
I 1·
It takes two
to make a
marriage!
14K Gold Oxidized
Wedding Bands
Many other 1tyles to choose from-
.II in beautiful •ntique finishes thet will
suit eve ryone's teste.
ledie1 ' from $45.00
Me11 's from $5S.OO
NOW 2 GREAT STORES TO snvt YOU
MA•eO• NUHTIHOTOH CIMTI•
SHOl"l"INO CIMTI• •tACH a IDINOI•
DOI ""•so• eLvO. HVNTINOTOM llACll
COSTA MUA-MS-• lfM~
01"1..-MOtrl:.-nni•t='i"1t11'1, TIL ' '"-""·
ASK P EG DENSMORE HOW TO HAVE
A BETIER FIGURE WITH A BALI .,.
S pend 5 minutes in our fitti ngroom and all
you will feel is beautiful ••• in the best Bali
bra for you . S ee the bras designed to
gently shape your new silhouette for summer,
Let Peg Densmore, Bali representative,
h elp you with your selection, tomorrow and
Thursday, 11 :00 a. m. to 4 :00 p. r:i. in
our F ashion Foundations .
Newport
• ------.. --------------~_..~._.. ...... .._~~-~~~-----~------------._ __________________________________ _
-----~------------------_..,..-·----..---------·--------------' '
Convention Coll to 'Big D' Answered
Off to '(big D" (Dallas and the Delta Gamma nation-
al convention) is Mrs. Donald M. Sutherland, presi-
dent of the Santa Ana-Newport Harbor Alumnae
Chapter who also will represent Fullerton-Anaheim
· and Whittier groups. Waving goodbye are (left to
Peering
Around
MISS NANCY RIEMER,
junior at Newport Harbor
High School is off on a ·
European adventure the day
after school is out. Sh~ will
spend a week in London
and then will proceed to
Ludwigsburg, Germany, site
of one of the oldest baroque
castles in the world, located
30 miles from Stuttgart. -
This is not the first such
adventure for the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Riemer of Ne\vport Beach.
In 1961 she spent a similar
year in Australia and New
Zealand.
Miss Riemer ·will be liv-
ing with a German family,
which will help improve her
German, and will be at-
tending an American high
school.
A GROUP OF travelers
from Lido Isle Woman's
Club just returned from a
trip to the Orient.
Among those participating ~ .1
in µte globe:trotting which
took them to Tokyo, Ha-+;
kone, Kyoto, Taipei, Manila,
Ba.ugkok , Penang, Singa-
pore and Hong Kong were
the Messrs. and Mmes. Bob
Pinkerton, John Hill, Roy
Woolsey and Bud Johnson,
•
the Mmes. Ethel Mayes, --,,.
Rita Kincaid, Joanne Palm-
quist, Gee Gee Righter,
Betty Brown, Miss Betsy .-·: \
Brown and ·or. and Mrs. *Ll:J< ·
Milton Lorenz: Mrs. Fr.in·
ces McCurdy was tour con-
ductor. ":~i:...,...;.,,;,· ,...,.,..~
right) husband Donald, daughter Brooke, 8 and
Scott, 10. The session will take place,from June 16
to 2~ •. JVhen ttie Costa Mesan presents the outstand-
ing collegiate chapter award . and scholarship
awards to Southern California chapters.
'
FOUR HARBORITES are -
on the invitation list to the
w e s t e r n barbecue and
s4uare dance at the Fritz B.
Burns San Fernando ranch
Back to Scho9/ Days
tomorrow.
Invited are the Mmes.
Harold T. Devick and Max-
well A. Sturges. Newport
Beach and Ethridge Borden
ancf. William H. Farwell,
Balboa.
The event is planned for
the Nine O'Clock Players of
Southern California Assist-
ance League.
NO CRYSTAL BALL is
needed to predict a trip for
Mrs. C. N. McEathron of
Costa Mesa, Southern
California chairman of the
California Committee for
the Reading Reform Foun-
dation.
She will attend the foun-
dation's seventh annual con-
ference in the San Francisco
Hnton Hotel , just outside
New York City on July 31-
Aug. 1.
Swnmer school will be exciting in this suede jumper and turtle neck sweater.
Any coed will be chic when she appears on campus in this new style by Ardee.
The accent appears in the z.ip front, double seaming · and hip belt. The colors
are fresh for fall : rouge, nickel, choco late and golden buckskin. This ensemble
may be purchased at Joseph Magnin's in South Coast Plaza.
Area Fathers
Bei ng Saluted
By League
Members of the Costa
Mesa chapter of the La 1
Leche League will honor
fathers at their fourth and
final meeting . in a serie.s
covering the subject Nutri-
tio n and Weaning of the
Baby.
The 'informal discussion
will take place at 7:45 p.m.
Tuesday. June 11, in U1e
home of Mrs. Don al d
Secretai-ies Walker of Huntington
Beach.
Al 6:30 p.m. every second The league is an in·
Thursday women of Bahia ternr tional, nonprof i t ,
Chapter of National Secre· nonsectarian qrganization
taries' Association Interna-formed especially for nurs· FASHION
futSday, June 4, 1968
Mrs. d'ia;,£;? de Gaulle
First Lady Reco·gnized
•
By JOAN DEPPA
PARIS (UPI) An
A·merioan. woman tourist in
Parts, SOelng a ptc<ure of.
Pres-ident and Mrs, Charles
de Gaulle in a newspaper,
remarked to her husband,
"poor woman, I wonder how
she can live with that
men!"
when she and htr husbond
ca.me to-live in Ute Elysee
Palace; a' comfortable bed
fer her husband and two
rooms facing ttte r o s e
garden for their private
J>o.n:lpklou a c e r t a 1 n
famillarlty that she does not
tolerate trom other
member& of the govern·
ment. -
quarters. When other financial dif.
From .the P r e s i d e, n t ficultles arose for the in·
himself she Mked only that stitution, Madame de Gaulle
they reiurn for One weekend pel"\S\laded her husband to
a montti. to the ieCluded sell h!J: memoirS.
'lbe quiet litt1.e woman borne she found during a The president po longer
DAILY. PILOT J$.
Parents Fling
Yearl y Fiesta
HolyFamlly A dop ti••
Parent.I of Orange Coun~r's lourth-annual=-LliTiesta--wlll---~1
take place on tbe Bagnell
Ranch. Placentia Saturday, Ju.ne 22, beginning at 7 p.m.
An authentic Mexican dJ.n ..
ner: to be servii at I, ~
be followed !Ir danelnt to
live music ,.rtt the al ardlng
of door priies,
Ticketa are flO per couple.
Further informatic;>n and
reservations may be •h-
tained by calling M r 1 ~
Wesley Stephens, 772-737a.t ~ has been the first lady walk through the country. has time to visit the Anne-
of Fr.a.nee 1or the last 10 side in 1943, la Bolliserie _ de-Gaulle b O_JD..§ , .but ---------~ years seems to "live wfth near the tiny village of Co-M2dame de Gaulle goes Kids Like to
ttiat-"'tnan" q ll it e com-lombey·les-Deux-Eglises. once a week. Jt U: her ~
fort.ably, and tbe role she The 18-room house, sur-favorite charity but not her 'Ask .Andy'
plays in the a u s t e r e rounded by trees and set only ooe.
general's life was more or lib ck fr th d h 1-~'--------------------
bti hed ~-· 1. st we a om e roa , as less 4:Sta S at wri;;U' J' been the scene of tjOme 0
meeting. their happiest, mo.st relaxed
They-wen having tea with . moments as ·well as the
friends who had arranged great personal tragedy of
their introduction 'v hen the.if lives.
young Capt. de Gau 11 e lt was there while i~post·
became so excited talking war retirement that de
about military ~fairs that Gaulle used to play, every
he accidentally spilled a cup evening witb ttieir de.ughter
of tea on pretty Yvonne Anne their favorite child Vendrou~--s . ~s. wt.o ~.as mentally retard~'.
The diminuitive 2q..year· It-was tbere that &he died at·
old, whose chief WOJTY was the age ot 20 th~t the tall captain might In her ~emory ~ she was too sihort. founded t h e
smiled. That was nearly ~ Anne-de-Gaulle, a home
years ago .and she has smil·. for mentally retarded girls
ed ever smce when dttiers in an ancient chateau in the
frowned. , Ohevrel.ise Valley t b a t Mad~e de Gaulle s un-belonged to Madame de
wavering loyalty to her bu~-Gaulle's family. The cost of
b.and . has . kep~ her . at his the project almost was too s1~e m . situations 0 f t e n much for the de Gaulles,
diametrically opposed to her __ .1 ·"t ~e ~'"t th · 1 ._... ·r 1y · <GIN ~ ""' l'Y"'' ey were s ~rm P e • """"ewi e m-nearly forced to sell their
clinati_ons. . country h9me. D~g ~ir.Worid War 11 It was Uien that the future
years m exile m London, for premier, Georges P om.
exampie, she. had to serve pidou, at the time a director
as . his _Engli6h ~ns.~tor oi. tte Rothschild · Bank,
d!ll'mg . unpOrlant political 5'1.epped in and discreetly
fil6CU&S1ons even ~ougb, left found the necessary doria·
to J.ler. ?WD _de Vice~.. she_ tions . to keep the-..foundation -seldom-discusses .politics. going. This i5 the reas
Her countrymen refer to s th · cl 00•
))er llS. ·~-~te (_AUn~) Yvo~_-_-_ ~~Ga~-.:~~~=="
ne," a ruckname t h a t 1i";;:·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;• mingles m uch the same II
mixture of admiration and
sarcas-m implicit in her
hu6band's Sratirical label,
"Le Grand Charles."
Qri.g.i.nally Coined by a
humorist, the nickname has
-come tODe a symDOl. Ofnef
bourgeois virtues -which
not all Ffeilclt coosi.dir a
compliment.
CARPET
FASHIONS
BY
BIGELOW
GIFT YOUR GRADUATE
with a .-oVADO
(A) 14k yellow gold .•... ,$1SO
,14k yellow gold filled , .$100
Stainless Steel ••.•.• , . $ 89.50
Without calendar from S 79.50 in stainless steel.
(B) 14k yellow or white gold with face1ed oysUI of
~parklin11 syn. sapphife. $110.
. '
She sti.11 is a 11lrllty
bargain-hunter,· devoted to
her charltie5 and church-
going. She is inclined to a
somewhat Victorian
pri.mne5$, and, has made it
clear that low cut gowill'!i and
gossip-P.JYVoking behavior
are· Ii« .. weicorile at the
presidential paiace.
at
Down-to·
Earth Prices!
CHARLES H. BARR
Her scale of values can be
measW'ed' by her requests
Wffldilf P!UI,
Newpon Bt:aeb, Callf.,...
Buffums' has the romantic curly wiggyl
It stet.ches t.o fit, stays curled • , • just 25.00 ., .. ,,. ...... ,., .............. ...
211 Marine Avenue,
Dalbo. bland, C.a!lf.
A great cover-up ••• a complete cap of wonder fu ll y bouncy CHrls. It's fashionabl.e!
It's fun\ It slretches to coveryou_r OW!! hair complete ly. Won't sli p. And, it's
wash and wear. Drips dry, never needs setting. Of \i ghlweigftl Q~\9modacry\ic
ti al bl · different Bullock'• Fuhion Squatt Santa Ana SQUARE
on assem em l-~i~n~g~m~o~thieir'~·~F~o~r~m~o~r~e~i~n~· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~i~i~I locations to attend meet-formation .call Mrs. H. w. Santa Ana Frttway at Main Street
ings. Mrs. Sally Fleming at M 54• "'9
h ed oore, .....,....., . 673-6300 may be telep on
for information.
in ~II natu ral shades. A marvelous way to make a quick switch !Oilamour. 21.0I
Millinery,
E:l ore , m u6ic
STUDIOS.
Headquarters for
beginners on all
instruments.
Summer claS&es
now funning.
17'4 thwport ...... c......... Ml M 60l
ENROU. NOW ..• LEARN TO PLAY-BEGINNER GROUP PIANO LES.SONs'
Pl~NO LESSONS Only $2!~L'""
CtllkfN" I betiln...,-Ol'OUP l•NOl'I~-eftd totally dtff11'911t •• • OM Hour 1'111'1 l'lllld Wurlltzff Etectl"Ol'llc M11•lo L1t10t1tory ••IMCl•Ny fOI' betlnn1,... ~ .-..., ' 19 11
WALLICH'S MUSIC CITY-SOUTH COAST PLAZA
!!'!!!!!!!!!!!P°" l 1hfef '""'~.,Ille,_.,.. .. "".....,· C.tta Mt-.-$40.2165
u umS'
~eWjlDlt Cenlel •l FashilXl Island e 644-2200 • llDo., Thuis_, fli.10:00 ti ll 9:30 O\her days 10:00 till 5:311
-
. . -_____ .._ ... ___ ...._~ ______ ...... ------· ------·
0 -----------------· -------
fursctaY, June 4, 1968 DAILY P!LDT ,', -.
If Yon Snrvive!J Yon Get Paid ~
LIKES HEIGHTS
Rick Lanvcfon
By EARL GVSTKEY ot .. 0.lly ..... , ...
You're ttanding atop a 100-foot
tower 1 looking down at one ol tbose 25-
loot portable nilfuDilng pools and It
looks as big as a quarter.
Your aasignment is to dive lnto the
pool without kl1lin& yourself, or' you.
won't get paid. •
Risky bUJkte$1? Yes, but then don't
knock tt unless you've tried ft.
"It's pretty dangerous, but the pay
ls pretty good aDd it's not very hard
work," says 25->:ear-Old Rlck Langdon,
who,-aniOng bk -many claim.s to f8me,
waa the first American to dive off the
famed Acapulco cliffs.
He also dives from 50 feet into a
sponge, but that comes later.
Langdon, a Gazden Gl'OV6 lligb
Sd>ool graduate, Lt working l<ir ·~sa
Verdo ()ouDITy Chlb swimmlng dlrec,
IDr Ray Reyes.
He's making Reyes nervous these
days by .!hinklng of Installing a IO-foot
tower at the Mesa Verde pOol so be can practice. ·
"There're only two permanent high
diving towers in Ult United St.ates,"
Langdon says.
!'One's in Chicago.and the other ii in
Miami." ·
Langdon was a CIF diving champion
at Garden Grove High ~ cOmPtted
in national AAU championship meets
while in the Air Force but became
bored with the amateur side of diving.
A friend ti,pped him oil as to the
monetarf benefits of prOfessional bigb
diving and Langdon1 not disposed
'Big D_' Gµnning for
Dodger Ace Seeks Marks ·
In Outing With Pirates
•
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The eyes of
the nation's baseball fans will be
focuSlt'Jd on Dodg« Stadium tonight u
veteran Los Angeles right-bamler Don
Drysdale tries to break -ol the
sport's most hallowed records.
. The 3l~yeer old veteran will be gun-
ning for his sixth straight shutout
1hlnl lh<n ol the National League
record ..t by the Gianta' Carl Hubbell
in 1933.
Monday, Dryldale received a wire
from the 89-year-old White, who lives
in Silver Spring11 Md •
.. Congratulations on winning your
fifth stiatgtit shutout," White wired. "I
Dodger Slat. am very happy that you equalled the .
-~ --=.iuifi-r-i'Daii :1 .... '-''!""' ..,, r:Jif-1J."'·'"' KFt:--record~and.'<'Will-b& rOotiJlg fqr yo~.:c .
f6olor • _, break it.
June 4 °'"'"' w ,.~ 7:15 -.,,., KJll "!•will,~ I ti ( ti lo ("'40J ,~ v.:: a grea sa: s ac on me
toward lliocl\IDI In the lace of a little
danger, was booked.
That was four yoar• ago. Since then,
he's been leaping off towers, scef·
foldipgs Mid l)ther rickety structures
for fun and profit.
.In four years, Langdon h a s
displayed· bis dare-deviltry at places
like'Stockton, Milwaukee, Minneal):Olis, De(i-o;t, Utica, Bulfalo, M i a in I ,
Nashville, Reno, Montreal, TOronto,
Boston and mafty other-stops •.
La.st summer, for_instance, he w~_s
picking up $175 a week for diving oU a
70-foot rower five times a day at the
Atlantic City Aqua Show. That was 'a
three-monlb job.
Then it was off to Buenos Aires last
Jantury where, for six weeks, be was
perlormlnf 111).fool«s lo • llamlnl pool. .
"They'd pOur gasoline over the top
or the pool and light It," Langdon ex-
plains.
"That helps you in a night abow
because you can see the pool be&ter.
But in Buenos Aires they bad
spoWghts on me and I had trouble
seeing the pool. "And 'there'& the tire denier. Most
Of the time •tile splash will put out the
fire, but not always. Sometimes they
put too much gas in the water. I
remember the fir.st time my splash
dido't douse the fire. .
"I went under the water, looked up
and 1taw the fire still burning. Great, I
thought, what do I do now? Well, I
surfaced feet..first and kicked like
cruv and ·managed to put the !Ire Out~;t
What'• tt like to peer down at a 2$..
loot pool lrom 100 feet!
"Pretty scary. It seems like an you
b•ve to do b step off the platform and
you'll go 30 feet past the po01."
Normally, the pool contains about
seven feet of water. Technically, Langdoli doesn't dive. He does a full
gainer, landing on bis fe.et. -
"The skillful part of it is preparing
to Bboot dU at an_ @lgle once_ you_hit
the water. U you went straight down,
you'd go six 'feet.into the ground."
Amazingly, Langdon has suffered
only one injury in hundreds of dives in
the last four .years. In Milwaukee, be
mil-judged his entry into the water
(See SURVIVE, Page 17)
Big 0 Tonight Everyone's
~, Pic~g
1 ~ On, Angels
"" BALTIM'ORE -Things are going so
bad f'or the Angels that even the botel-
thieves are picking on 'em.
Jiut hours aft!x the Baltimore
Orioles applied a 2-0 blanking to the
Orange Countians, a robber slipped in-
to · the hotel room of catcher Ed ·
Kirkpatrick and pitcher Ji m
McGIQthlin and, while they slept,
relieved them of $900 in cash and
valuables.·
The Angels wil1 attempt to shrug off
~~-brazen l.>urglacy ~ to~gbt wten
Sammy Ellis (3-5) duels the Orioles•
Dave Leonhard (3-2).
.,_.__. --· -.,-=<::-::-~ ·' .. ...--_,___.,-~..,....~ · ·-""""'i:o-bave'someont'Wboisa:·credittothe.,,.....,,.·
The Angels need a win or two. -_,_M~nday-~niihf'SdeFeaf -was-tlie---..
'
•
•
when be ~el the m~ ag~ game ~ my record. Best wishes
Pittsburgh ngbtbander Jun BunniDg, fer continued. success." ,
3-5. · Drysdale will take a 6-3 season
DrYsdale's 3-0 victory over San record and a l.32 earned run average
Franciseo Friday night was bis fifth into tonight's game-and all six of bis
straight shutout, ~ea.king tbe National victories have been shutouts.
League record and tying the major Dodger Manager Walter Alston said
l~agtle mart eet tn 1904 by Guy White he gave no thought to giving Drysdale
of the Chicago White Sox. .an extra day's rest and letting him
Drysdale has hurled: 45 consecutive -pitch Wednesday instead of Tuesday
~~oreless innings, only one and ooe-night.
J
I ])r. Wayne Crawford
Late VCI Sports Chief
W~ Influence to All
?rlends and famtly ct Dr. Wayne
·awford bade a mortal farewell to
ie kindly UC Irvine ~letJc director
: special memorial services Monday
l.ght in Santa Ana.
Howover, the legacy of morality,
ml wwk, loyalty and sincerity he
·ft to th~ whom he knew and asso-
iated with is an intangible.
One of the men most cloaely
ssociated with Dr. Crawford was Al
rwin, wtio took over as acting UCI
thletic director when his boss was
·rst stricken by cancer.
Irwin Offers his experiences With
7ayne as a eulogy to a man who cap-
t.red his respect and friendship.
"Wayne's influence baJ bad many
"JllllllllJIJlllJIA
WHITE.
WA.SH
llJlllllllltlllllJ
OUfCfC WHIT•
positive effect5 on the university,"
Irwin says.
"Even before construction began, he
came down fro-m UC Riverside and
helped with the planning on the layout
of our athletic plant. The swimming
pool, gymnasium, handball and tennis
c<1urts were all the result of his plan-
nihg and they are splendid facilities.
"'Up till the day he died, he was
working on plans for the new baseball
iield and track which will get under
construction sometime this fall,"
Inrin continues. ·;
flrst admtnfstrator I ever had who
looked out for me, giving help and
being available when 1 needed him.
"I don't know how much Wayne
knew about his illness _ • • I never
heard him mention it. He a:lways was
making plana f<r the tuture."
Inrill'• Ille bas ti..n guided by the
late Amo1 Alonzo Stagg - a
gentleman he always referred to as
"Mr. Stagg" even when Al was 40
years old.
He rates Dr. Wayne Crawford in the
same class with Stagg:-'They Were
different inasmuch as Mr. Stagg was a
CO<l(:b and Wayne was not. But they
came from the 18Jlle mold,'' Irwin
coocludes.
So the unlvet'Bity loses a cornerstone
of its athletic foundation with the
death or Its kindly a11hletic director,
Dr. Wayne Crawford.
Dodgers Win, 2-0
PSTTSIURGK LOS AfCGlLIS allr llrM •~rllrbl
P•ltll. 11 4 0 0 0 W.DIY!f, (1 3 I I 0
WUll, lb 4 O 2 O P1r•er, " 3 O 1 I St1111ell, If ' 0 0 0 A:.B•lle'f, 3b 3 I 0 0
C'-!e, f'f 3 0 I 0 F•!r1~" II 0 0 0 0 Clel'ldrflon, lb 3 0 I t K.lkro«", lb 2 0 2 I
McBe1n. 11r O O O o Col~lto._rf 2 o l l
M0!1, Cf 4 t 1 o F•lrlv, rf O o o o Ml!lf'~-l, 20 3 0 0 0 PollOYkh, 2b 4 0 0 0
C.T•YIOI'", C 3 O 2 0 Vtri•tln, '* 3 0 0 0 Ve•le. p 2 o o I Torborg. t 3 I o o
JM1y,1>11 !OOOtwll1r,c 1000
Wlekt1'1tlllm, p 0 0 0 I C Oltwn, p 3 0 1 0
Tollt1 31 f 1 o lo1111 2' ,2 • 2 PlfUblJroh . . . . . . . . • • . . .. . . ooo 000 000 - o
LOS Anoe1tt . . . . . .. . . .. . 200 0J0 00. -2
E -v.r .. lln. OP -Pln•btl'llh .,, LOI """'f'S
4. LOB -PIH1bur1h 6, Lot Anoeln '· 28 -W.
D•vl1, K. eov .... sa -w. D1vls'"'1:. 11' H R l!R •t SO
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C.OSI"""' 1w,o1-n ' 1 0 0 1 6 PB - c . T1'flOr, T!mt -2:2'. Atr.ncl1nct -
14,561.
THE CANDIDATE -Gagslers in the Dodger lock-
er room put this politically.:Oriented po&t.er in front
of Don Drysdale's locker the othe!' day, suggesting
his fame for pitching five straight shutouts might
be surpassing Senators Kennedy and McCarthy. He
goes for No. 6 tonight.
USAC Votes
To Outlaw
Turbo Cars
INDIANAPOLlS, lod. (AP) -The
rules committee of the U. S. Auto Club
voted Monday to ban turbine engines
from USAC racing events.
Final action now is up to the USAC
board of directors. Thomas Binford,
USAC president, said he lltight call a
meeting of the board aroulld July 1 to
consider the. ·proposal.
The rules committee recommended
that the ban on turbines take effect
Jan. 1, 1969.
Two years ago the rules group asked
that turbine engines 'be outlawed but
the directors refused to ratify the sue·
gestion.
They sent back a proposal under
which a formula would be drawn up
that would equl!liZe turbine and piston
engines.
In 1967,..Parnelli Jones' STP turbine
car ran away from the Indian;:;polis
5QO:.mile ract field before a bearing
failure stopped it with only a few laps
nmaining.
Jn last Thursday's 500, two turbines
lleld the top two starting positions a nd
driver Joe Leonard was leading the
field with eight laps to go when bis
engine conked out.
The committee recommendation
was that powerplants for all USAC
events be restricted to internal com-
bustion, reciprocating, piston engines.
Sports In Brief
UmpAdmitsHe's Wrong;
•
-Rattler Bites ·Promoter
SAN FRANCISCO -Umpire Tom
Gorman did an unusual thing Monday.
He admjtted he was wrong.
Twenty-Nine Palms on Friday when a
rattler blt him on the left thigh.'
After six boufs hospitaUzation the
boxing official was released in good
condition but wiser.
"He didn't rattle, juJt bit," said
Davies.
In the last of the ninth inning of
Philadelphia's 1-0 victory over San
Fr.ancisco, Gorman, the plate umpire,
halted proceedings to visit Phillies'
pitcher Chris Short, who was finishing
up a five-hitter. " " ..,..
"Gorman told me both feet had to be Fred Eastwood of Gardena a ~ouchU:ig~ .rubber_ when -you're tak--veteran of several West Coast M~tch
1ng ttie sign from the catcti~r," Short Game Eliminations. climbed tQ the top
related afterwards. -of the ladder in Monday night's action
An unusual conference of all foul\ at Co6ta Mesa's Kona Lanes with a
umpires ensued with Ed Sudol, Lee. 1,694 score for his eight games.
Weyer and Bill Williams all discussing He was only three games ahead of
the matter with Gorman. John Haveles o( Anaheim.
Their collective wisdom was that on-Highest standing Orange Coast area
ly one foot had to be on the· rubber. bowler is Clyde Lacher of Dana Point
Gorman concWTed and S h or t He stands-fifth among the--120 bowlers
<tispatched the Giants without further
incident.
LOS ANGELES -l\latchmaker
Mickey Davies of t h e Los Angeles
Olympic Auditorium says be knows
first hand whether a rattlesnake rat·
ties bcfOre it-strikes.
Davies, 49. "'as biking in the Na·
Uonal Monument l\tountalns near
BOSTON Tony C-Onigllaro, the
Boston Red Sox' sldellned -slugger, ls
feeling fine and enjoying bimseU
despite vision trouble which ended his
baseball career as an outfielder.
Conigliaro emphatirally d e n I e d
Monday a report that headache& have
forced him to curtail a new career as
a nlghl club singer. "Wayne also wanted UCl to be suc-
~ful in all sport&. He could hardly
wait till we had a national champion,
but he never favored one sport over
another.
"Be did everytblng ln hit pOWer to
.ee that we would have food adtletlc
&eama. Be went 011 recrultinf trips
ad I'm sure be Dew ~very Va
llllllete by aame berore they ever
tlh'Olled here.
occ Crew Rows 15 Miles Daily
"Tbe kld1 resperted him ror that.
"Wayae .attended all our evenQ un·
\
ti bit lllae11 finally made tha& lm-
.... lbfe. Tbe 111~ 1ame he dld talle lo
WIJ om ba1keUiall wla over Nevada
8"tllen I• •vertime.
"Bllt be bad me call him alter eadl
.._,,aeat event and he w a 1 -6all1 l•bllanl wh .. lbe baoke~
llaD team woa tta Ord game ta the
NCAA nflooall al SU Dtefo.
"Wayne was the kind of person you
jlllt enjoyed being ammd," Irwin
points out. ,
"'He Wiii Oil! of. thou 100 percenters
~·i;e llWlll'I looklac for. He was Ille
By RAY PLUTKO
ol "" Dlllt' 1'1 .. 1 Sttff
\Vho was it that said, "It's not the
shell and oars ttlat make the dif·
rerence, but the people rowing the
boat?" _
Confucius never wh: one to com·
ment 'on ttie art of crew racing, but
Orange Coast College coach Dave
GJ'lllt appareotty comes from the old
scbool Of thouebt u evidtnced by bi&.,.
statement above.
In fact Grant thinks 10 much of his
talented-Orange Coast College entry,
he's not even taking the Pirates' eight·
oar shell back to Syracuse for next
""ek's tercolleglate R o w I A g
Assoda!lon cbamplooshlJ>1,
.'
Actually Grant's turning to the
uioan department" by choice. It's cos-
ting a minimum $2,fiOO to send the
OCC entry back east nex,t week and
the cost of shipping a shell would be
out or ttie question.
The Pirates completed their money
quota f-or the journey Monday, thanks
to public Contribution.
"We're borrowing our shelJ from__
Syracuse University tor the race/'
conllded Grant. "Schools like Cal and
Washington are able to send their
shells back, but the cost for us would
be protdbitive."
Grant says It will rJlake little dil·
ference with hit entry though as the
Bucs have been looking sharp over the
last week and have seven days of
practice remaining before taking off
next Tuesday for Syracuse.
"The workouts are coming along
very well. We had some great sessions
with UCLA last week at M~rina de!
Rey and they really taught us a lot. .
"We've been working very. very
hard at it and have been getting in 15
miles each day. Sunday night we-
d.ldn't hit the boat house at Newport
Harbor until arter dark," said Grant.
While the Dues are; utilizing their
time on the practice course. Grant
also has an eye on the mail room as
he.'s awaiting the pairings fOr the June ,
13 heats. ·
ONnge Cout College will be com-
peting in the JV diVision of the cham.
pionships -the first and only junior
college entered -with three heats
slated June 13.
S l X teams will be entered in each
heat, the winner automatically quali·
fying for SatW'day's finals (June 15).
However, teams not winning one of
the three he-ts in•the June 13 prellms
will receive a second chance Friday
(June 14) when a special repecharge,._
is staged.
'Ibis will be the initial year for the
repecharge -three heats also being
steged and the winners of.. the three
runs adva.nclng to the finals, thus set~
ting up a &ix-loam flt>ale.
Angel Slate
Jvnt • Andis ~I Salllmcrt 4:55 p,m. KMPC (7l0l
June s Arl901l II B•l!lmcre 4:~5 p.rri. KMPC 17!0)
Jun. 6 An~el1 •I Baltimore 4:55 p.rri. KMPC (710l
171gre 7 Allllell at Nt'W York UJ 1 :SS P.rn. KMPC
club's third in a row and sixth in their
last seven games.
'I'he pitching has_n't been responsi·
hie, it's the batsmen. In the recent
three game series at Oakland, the
Angels collected only 13 hits.
It was more of the same Monday
when the O's Dave McNally limited
the Angel offense t-0 five hits. He
struck out 12.
Rick Clark was tagged for his fifth
defeat.
. The Angels appecµed to be cooking
up some sort of rally in the sixth-in.
ning when newcomer Bobby Trevino
opened with a single.
An out later, Bubba Morton Was hit
by a pitch and both were advanced a
base when a balk was called on
McNally.
But Chuck Hinton stroked an: infield
grounder and Trevino was cut down
attempting to score.
Don Mincher walked to load the
bases but Paul Schaal grounded into
an inning·ending force play.
The Angels have two more night
games io Baltimore Wednesday and
Thursday evenings before flying to
New York late Thursday night for a
three game series there.
CALIP'ORHIA tALTJMORE
.,, 111111 ''~hrbl
Trevino, cf ' O 2 O llalr, d ' 'II o o
frfttl')ll,11 •OI081elaf'f1 '1'f 4000 Merton, 11 J o 1 o MDl1on, !! J 1 1 o
HlntC11, tf ' o l o D.M.!'f, rt o o a o Mlr>eher. lb 3 o o o Powell, lb J 1 1 2
Schul, lb • o o o a .Robinson, Jb l o 1 o
Roo91rs, cc J o o o D.Jollnson, 2b 3 o o o
KnOOP, 2b l O 0 O Hendrlc~s. c 2 O 1 o
A:.Cllrk, P 2 0 0 0 Eichl!barren, c O O O O
Relch•rdt, ptl 1 O 0 0 Bel•n;er, u J O 1 o
Rol•s,p OOOOMCNllll'f,P 3000
TOlali 31 o S o Totals 21 2 5 2 Ct!lfcrniB 000 000 000 -O
Bal limo re , , . . . 000 700 OOlr -2
A:.Cl1rk (L,0.Sl Ro las McNalty (W,$-5)
IP' H It Ell I• SO
''22 15 2100 11 ' s • ,o a M
Chapman Nine
Faces Nation's
No. 1 Team
SPRINGFIELD. Mo. (AP) -Lang
Island U. was voted No. 1 nationally
among small colleges by the nation's
coaches. But the Blackbirds will have
to prove· it in the first annual NCAA
college division baseball tournament,
stru:-ting with No. 4-:ranked Chapman of
Orange, Calif., \Vednesday.
LIY( isn't a small college, with an
enrollment of 5.380 and a basketball
team that played in· the National In·
vitation Tournament. but chose at the
start 'Of the school year to compete in
the coUege division .
Chap1nan is, with an enrollment or
just 923, but Ute Panthers looked big
in belting PorUand State 7..fi, Sacra-
mento State 7-3 and Seattle Pacific 6-0
in an unbeate_g sw_~ o{ the Pacific
Coast regiooa1 May 23-25.
John Young, a left-handed Crellhman
outfielder. hit .615 in the three games
including a trtple and a homer, while
second baseman Dave Restig batted
.S71 .
Chapman's record is 38-18 tor the
year, LIU :!lh"!. 'l'h<ly wiU meet al 10:30
a.m., Wednesday.
In the other first round game,
Arkansas State of J-.boro, 21-20,
meet& Delta State of Oleveland; Miss.,
18·9, at 8.
lt iS a double-elimination meet, en·
ding Frkiay if tt>e: champ is unbeaten.
Otherwise, the finall are Friday nighL
--·--------------·---------------------···---------------------·------------------------------·-----
•
'
lutM111, June 4. 1968
, Despite the fact that ·Los Alamitos Race Course ls po1~ed on the starting grid for its 76 night racing dates ~eg1nnlng July 23, the California Angels remain calm
10 the face of night horse racing in Orange County.
"Nobody around here is very excited about it,"
says Harold, Parrott, director of sales and promotions
for th e Angels. -
A!Utough Ute Angels are officially pooh-poohing
the possible detrimental effects the night dates might
ha.ve on ,~h~ir already s~gging attendance, a Los Ala·
1n1tos official sees it the other way.
"It's got to hurt 'em a little," says George Main,
Los Alamitos puOlic relations director.
"One thing's for su re -it won't help them."
Los Alamitos will turn on the lights July 23 and
\von't shut 'em oU until September 9. Post times will
be 7:30.
Th~ race track's officials are billing themselves
as having "the brightest stadium in America."
''It cost us $1.5 million to install the lights" Main
told the DAILY PILOT. ,
"We've got 72 light poles in the parking lot and 45
on the track. Altogether, we've got 2,100 1,500-watt
bulbs. Anaheim Stad\um onJy has 1,995 bulbs."
Add_ed Parrott: "The baseball people got real con-
cerned in New York when they brought in night racing
but it never hurt their attendance.
"The thing is, people know what they're going to
spend when they go to a ball game but at the race
track it's a different proposition.
''Race track types are just ~ different clientele."
* * * N.EWPORT DEPT. -The construction of a new
veterina ry hospital on Tu stin Ave. in Costa Mes•
was a tejlm effort by members of the Newport Har-
bor High football team of 1952.
Ow ner of the hospital is Dr. Rod LaShelle, half-
back on the '52 Tar eleven, the archit~ct was quar·
• terback Rolly-Pulaski and the electrical contractor
was guard Bob Briggs. ,
-·~ .e ulaskl s~_y_s_moJt of the members of that team
•
•
-Ex-Oiler Showing
Major League Form
!ly EARL GUSTKEY
OI Tiit O.Hy r 11t1 Si.ft
Jack Brohamer, baseball·
basketball star ~at Hun·
tlngton Beach High School
last year, is showing major
league potential in the
Western Carolina League.
Brohamer. who signed a
contract with the Cl~veland
l.ndians last summer, was
a ssigned to the Rock Hill
SjJinners, a class A club in
Southern' Carolina.
Brohamer, the Spinners'
starting shortstop, is hitting
.300 and has two homers and
25 runs batted in. }le's mad~
a favorable impression on
his manager, Pinky May,
"Jack has e,xceeded our
exµectations," May told the
DAILY PILOT in a phone
interview.
'"This is a tough league for
an 18-year-old boy with oaly
high school experience. He's
doing so well. that at this
stage of his development I'd
HOT START
Jack 8 roham1r
have to say he's a major
league prospect.
"He's doing the job at
shortstop and be always
Area Sports Briefs
Deadline Slated
. ,
F o_r· Net Tourney
Tennis Play;rs ha~ u.nti1 -tea~ announced te<hiy. --
seems to get a piece of ttia
ball up at fl!e plate."
May ployed with 1111
Philadelphia Phillies from
1939 to 1943. He's been a
We~tern CaroUna League
manager since 1947, where
he's deveJ.oped suc""b .stars as -
Sonny Siebert, Rocky Col·
avito, Mudcat Grant and
Max Alvis.
Rock Hill ls a milling tawn
of some 25,cm people. Onl;'
300 or 350 turn out for the
Spinners' games. BrohamU
makes the ~ong bus trips to
the other league cities -
Greenville, Spartansburg,
Greed Wood , Gastonia and
Salisbury.
May said the former Oiler
probably wouldn't be ad·
vanced to a higher league by
the Indians.
"He's still young and has
a lot to learn. He'll finisb
out the season with us."
--.-·=--•re-"lfilLOr.aftge.:CoUntia.ns.----__,__.:,.--....., ---------'-..:..,.~
Here's an alumni report: End Dick Stevens, ·-·~~~-~ • .-:-...;...~---~~~---·~·~>·--~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~i;,,,~·tw~;ge~t:.~e~~":r! ·~~ds"'.'9s
H ll k Mon.archs 'l'oumament held af Santa:" . · ..,.;,i 0 ypar . -High School. shortstop John l.<>wenstein
•
Costa Mesa upholsterer; fullback Denny Mason,
Tustin pai nting contra~tor; end Gary Rodgers,
Newport Beach boat dealer; fullback Bob Ibbot-
son, Harbor Department employee; fullback Austin
Smith, Costa-Mesa policeman, and center Ken
Nack, Orange County Sheriff's officer.
* *
Entries
Marina High School's traveling b asketball stars, 1e===-----""'""'""'""'...,""'!""'""'""'""",...,
Mark SOderberg and Bill Moore, probably have the l'or w1tc1nau,, 1-s. 1~ o., "•!Ian. •
most scuffed.up suitcases in Orange County these days. ""'' • ,,,,_,1 .. 1 ""' 1:11 "·"" Kel'• ee1 1J L•"lrier11
P GOCd Menneri co Pierce! ractically by themselves, they'-re keeping the air· l'1•ST · •1.c•. ' 1ur1ot111•. 1 ve•• Luc1ty F1"' IA Pirw:c111 Jine industry Ofi its feet. old's. C11lmln11. Pilrw MSOG, C!1lmlne Sln~lt Point (W H1rl•<-! pri(e S:SOOO. Malor GICl"\I CM V1l1n.rve!1) Since basketball season ended, Soderberg has been ll:enoYan"" tJ s.11e .. 1 1u Greek v1,1on (L P1n~1 1n
a guest at the following institutions: Calliornia, San r~·~~~I (L Gntl9•nl l!: Flee! Surprise (J Selltrlj
J ose State, Oregon State, Oregon, Seattle, Wichita, Ne-The Word 11 Gon.l•1er1 ~,Got
bra ska, Utah, Utah· State, Brigham Young, Arizona ~~i°'elA !Jc.~ru,::~~1 :~ •
State, \Vestem KentuG,ky and Florida. out 0n e.11 1M v11tnruei.) 11,
N Solid Eddie IA M"'5t!l 114 ext stop : Kentucky, this c!iming weekend. Oa•h• w 1nd tJ A•!erburnJ 11,
Here's Bill Moore's discarded itineraries: Fresno Prince Ju11•n 11.-s.11n Never (0 Vl!lllOWtll lot. State, San Jose, 1daho, Utah State, BYU, Arizona and L1n•1 cheru,b IL Pt~y JrJ 1ot
Artzona State. "'•• Et11111i.
Soderberg still has no 'idea where he'll wind up,
although he's registered at Golden West in case he
doesn't make up his mind. Moore, insiders say. is set
for UC I~e, as is_ Huntington Beach's Greg Snyder.
* *' * NOW-JT.CAN -BE-TOLO.DEPT. -Tho ro w11 •
time when the Denver Broncos were seriously con-
sidering moving their Am•rican Football League
franchise to Anaheim Stadium but you can forg•t
It now.
The BroncoS" had the wanderlust when the turn-
stiles weren't clicking as recently as two seasons
ago but the new general manager and coach, Lou
Saban, has rekindled Denver fans.
Saban announced. last week that the club had
sold 25,890 se~son seats for next season.
Fountain V 2,1lley. Cai:ds
In Home Debut Sunday
Scof!llh Jmp (H Jlmenet) '" SECOND •ACli:. 6 lurlonts. 3 I. 4
Ytlr old m1iMn colts & nldln11s.
Pur:oie '550I),
sun In Tht Mud (A Pll!ed•I
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Cl•UY Kid !R ClmNi\
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JyrnfY9 (W H•rm11r)
Mcdren (J L1rnbert IJ
Blue EYKI John {J Gonr1le1)
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Rcvll Sc•mP (J Sellers)
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Forlhwifh IJ Limbert 21
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THl•O ~ACE. 5 rurt,,,.,91_ ' W•r
old m1!d!\n flllle1 bred In C1lllC>rnl1.
Purw $5010. •
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v~111n S.nds nt
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l'OU•TM •ACE. I IUrl-1. ) Ytl•
olds. C!1lmln11. PurH "500. C111mlng
price U250. A1rOSP1c1 ~1ve1 Club of
P•!ot Vercte1.
SIXTH •ACI!. a turlonel.' ,_.., olctl
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Mlny Vellt tJ Gonute1!
G•tv Crltlctl {J Trullltgl
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EIGHTH •ACE. 6 l11r1Dn9s, J WI'
eldl .. UP. CllulllKI 1li-1nceL
Pune 110.000. Chlldrt~'• lit•rl Fou,,.
d•tlan.
Unquench:ablt IJ c;.,.,altrl
Broad ShtdOWI (J Ltm'"'rtl
CanlKterue !R C1m1>ei1
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THI Morr-(l Pln<IY Jr)
OIUY B•be co Pl~rcel
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NINTH •ACE. 7 lu•l-s. • Ytlf
okh & Ull. C!1lmln11. P11r1t MOOO.
Cltlmlne price M2.SO.
Sky Counlrv (M Yentl\
Rlno Ftee fJ Limbert)
More Of Mori (J P1lom!no!
Ska!ll!CI Facl fJ kl1enl
Oe<:cr•ICI' Kini fA Plflld1) El Labo {E Arloundll
Cht lldllltr 8oY (J Ar!trbum)
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...
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Flag Footba ll
Set for County
The event. spooSored by as co-most valuable plaYers.
ttle Santa Ana Tennis Club, Another Chapman pitcher,
Set Sprm• g is scheduled for June 15, 16, Steve Davis, was also nam-
2l, 22 and 23. ed to thE all-conference
There will be two dlvisions team. Second"' ba s e m an
G •d CJ h of men's singles end rl as doubles, one division of Mark Carlson. shortstop
women's singles and doubles Bob Zamora and ootfielders
along with a mixed doobleii Defi.n~6 Veltz end John
Mater De.i 's emu.al Red
and White spring football
event and a fa.tiler-son Young made Ule club.
doubles. The · utility all-star was
game will get under way at Junior events In c I u d e Rich McHale.
7:30 Thursday night af San· singles aru:i d<>ubles for boys Tar Boosters ta Ana Municipal Bowl. and girls Ut. and under,
The Whites .will be cap-singles arid ddubles for boys Newport Harbor H i g h
tiained by Torn Gtthls while 16 and under and a siprgles School's athletic department
the opposition -the Reds -eve~ fur girls 16 and under. added $2,657 of eguipment
will be.. led by Spencer Boys .and gi.nls 14 and last week and it didn't dent
RAY ALLEN
Takes Baseball Reins
Allen New
Marina
Coach
~zier. under will have a singles the Tars' athletic budget one
ast year the 'NhJtes event while t:he 12-year olds ootoh. Ray Allen, a 26-year~Jd
oo.tscored ttie Reds, 54-42, in will have the &&me event Solll'tt of I.he equipment Ken~uckian, has been nam-
ttie touch football game. · was the Newport Harbor ed Marina High School'•
b go mg.
W lte Ro1ter For fur'ther Information, Booster Club, w h i ch new varsity baseball road!,
Offense call S42-8954. strengthened the baseball, the DAILY PrLOT learned
BOO W i 11 i am s , Bob gymnastic and wrestling exclusively today. ~Gucking, Ray ;r'oelkes, Panther Pick• programs. Allen r~liaces Doug Fritz,
Billy BroWfl. Stan Jackson wh(J te5igned recently to
White Myers, Tom ~rkls, Chapman C:Ollege landed Bull Fights become baseball coach at
Marie Egan, Pat Hernandez: seven of nine .!.1M)ts on the Sadd!eback College.
Ron Dickson, Mike Rey, A I I S outllern California TIJUANA-Mexico's No. ln one season d.. eoachin.d
John Grisso Bill Arr.Jetoo · Alhl~'c Conference baseball 1 m a t ad 0 r • M a on o I t M · ··• · ' rr • 't:'u Mral'tinez, logs his initial ap· a arm.a High, Allen is J·un Bleecker, Ji-m Loog, h undefeated. His frosh-~.....k Da1e Bu..-.e. pearance oft e year Sunday b k •-...,,., ..,,,. N• h l R hl when he performs at Ute as •t~u team recdnled a
Defense IC 0 S, ee Plaza El Toreo Bullring. 20-0 record last seasoo.
Sal Pem. Jack Gentile, Martinez topped all other A graduate of Morehead
'6nie Dominguez, Carl De Sliioe in CJF performers wi th 30 ap· State Uni versity in
Piet.I;:o, Jim Blackburn, Bob peaN:lnces last summer and Morehead, Ky., Allen played
Galvin, Bob Milton Ray came away with 42 corridas. baseball in college and then
J'·menez Ken Mill..-Mar;" M i k e N i c h o Is or , pla•-" ,,,. a K~tu'cky semi·· • • "' However a case o f ; o;u ~·· Mell. Ml.ke Montez Westminster High and Mike pro league wi·•• Woody ' · h~t1.tis and an 1"ni·ury has "' R d R •-Reeh! of Corona del Mar ~r--F ~ "t h wh e 0•~r kept the ace oot of action in ryman, "'e P1 c er 0
Offense fired 77's Monday ill the CIF bhe .68 camn:.ign.. currently ~ e.6-4 record
Bob H a up er t , Ted indivJdual golf tournament r--with the Philadelphia Phi.ls.
Hamilton. Tom Greczka, at ij:acienOO Country Club in Div ing llonors Allen's first coac h in g
Ron Gardea, Mark Dunn La Habra to lead the Orange a ssignment was at Lewis
Dennis Wojtkiewiez Robert Coast area contingent. Br)'al'lt f\ v er t , Jan Cou nty High SChool Jn
Judith, Mark Morgan, Don Other scorers from · the Schwarz and RotMn Robert.is Vanceburg, Ky. With no
l:lelloo, JOOn Glaab, Hvvey area were Randy Karcher picked o(f tirst p I a c e field to practice on , he pr°"
Supernoot Randy Phillips of Hu.ntln.gton Beach with an trophies in diving com· duced a win11ipg team at the
John Magner, Spencer 82 and tea>mmat.e Steve petition in the Newport 55Ckitudent school.
Frazier, R<>n Muniz, Jim Hayes witll 83. Bob Abbey of Beach Tennis Club Invita-After two years at Lewi•
Nan:ry. Marina alsro shot en 83. tional Novice Diving Meet County, Allen moved on to
Defense . Esllancia's CIF team Saturday. Fraser High in Detroit
Dennis Bethune, M l k e champions didn't fare as Avert won t.tie 15-17 boys where he was varsi t y
Blackford, Ch u c k Chris-well as expected. W·alter division w.iUl 132.80 points. basketball and Cl"OS6 coon-
W.anager Bob Chavarria
and his Fountain Valley .
Cardinals make their '68
home debut .at 1:30 p.m.
Su nday when they take
on ttie La Fonda Stars in an
Orange County Semi-Pro
League outing.
slx frames and fanned 14
while yielding the lone hit.
Peters mopped up with. five
Ks.
Slagle also tipped his hat
in the ofrensive department
as he collected a home run,
triple and fJve RBis.
Jldt's Alol\1 (J Ar!uburnl
Retnablu 10 Vtl••-rl
1111uer.1one CJ Ooru.1ltr l
llrl•r Vl1t1 {W H1nn1lz)
E1lodo•(W H1f11dtl
'" "' .. ~ ...
'" "'
Although somewhat out ol tiansen, Brian Trunk, Mark Brown of the Eaogles led Schwarz took ttte 15-17 girls try coach for two years.
season, plans are now being Gattin Art Alvarez, Tony Estancia with a 79 followed class and Robert.i s was first He joined the Merine staff
formulated for the Orange Paino, Gil Sc.arneeohia, Ron ~y Don Hoskins (82) and in 1fle 8 and under division last .September. He also
County Flag Football Mendez, Bob Kroger. Gary Schult (8t). for girls. teaches English.
Fountain Va 11 e y ex·
perienced little in the way of
jitters in its season inaugur-
al over the weekend, the
Cardinals romping to an 8·1
win over the host Placentia
l\1erchants.
Rounding out the attack
were Dick Hefler's two
singles, Dave Spiller's triple
and a one-bagger by Barry
Wallace.
Miss Tineo !A 1'~1),.
Farflt'd L•.,1nrno (M V•lerm.-.I•) 11~
Cllttrlf90er IJ Trullllo) lot
League that's slated to open __ ..:..:_:.:.._c:.. ___ _:...c..:_.: _ _.: ______ _::_ _______ -'-'C.:.-=:::..---
l'IF'TN •ACE. S lu1lan111. 1 ve1r
olds. Allow1~1. Pu•i.e 17000. 0!11·
ctn' Wive. Clue Long &e•ch NIYl l
its season June 25.
Interested teams and in-
d!viduals can obtain detailed
information. by writing P .O.
Box 51. Balboa Island, Calir.
Baseball Standings
Pitchers Jim Slagle and
Gary Peters shared the
spotlight in the opener as
they combined for a one-hit·
ter while striking out 19.
W1ll1c1
Siill!l!'I'
P"' C1rctl~11t CIJ ,,. • H ••1
• 0 1 0 :5 t 1 ~
• I ' I 3 l 0 ,
Fish Report The league will consist of National League
six-man teams in both Open , W L Pel.
and High School divisions, St. Lows .28 21 .571
Slagle worked the initial
"'"'''' Ell~r
G!.11 Peli'ri
:SJ191t-
C..mPtNll
Ac11ml0fl
Tel1!•
:5 0 0 • 3 1 I I
j I ' S J • • 0 , , . .
M I 6 I
SU RVIVE AND YOU GET PAID • • •
(Condnued from Page ti) •
and tore loose some musdes in his \~ft
-knee.
But six weeks later he tOS6ed away
his crutches and was at it again.
back or stomaoll and you have to land
FLAT."
Sooner or later. Langdon had to
wind up in Acapulco.
"It was for a televi.sicm show -they
invited six of the the best ,American
divers to dive against six of the best
Aoa.polco divers.
. with games being played Atlanta . . .. 27 22 .55 1
Tuesday, Thursday and~ Franc1.sco .. 'll 23 .540
Saturday at various high Philadelphia 2.1 21 .52.1
school sites in the county. Chicago ....... 25 ~ 2.1 .521
• •
has come in. If you don't, it's curtains.
High divers like to talk of some of
the epic performances in their 51>0rt.
just like fi shermen discuss record
catches.
"Dave Casper. a1riend of mine, was
paid Sl.500 by Jackie Gleason to dive
·from 142 feet into seven feet of water
on his 1'V show. He did it but told me
he wouldn't do it again for $100,000.
Los Angeles ... 26 26 .500
Cincinnati .. , .. 23 24 .48S
Hou9ton ....... 21 27 .438
Pittsburgh .... 19 25 .43'2
New York ..... 20 Tl .426
GB
I
l \\
2\\
2\\
3\\
' 6\\
6\\
7
American League
W L Pct.
Detroit ........ JO 18 .625
Baltimore ..... 28 20 .583
Cleveland . . . . 28 22 .560
Minnesota ..... 25 24 .510
Boston ........ 24 24 .500
Oakland ....... 23 24 . 489
New York ..... 22 ·TT .449
Chicago ....... 21 26 .447
California . , ... 22 28 .440
Washi~if,on ... il9 29 .496
MO!ldtf'I •ff11ttt ~=..,.~ !?"J~ ~art:. J gll!llTIOL"• l. C11!lor1111 t ~tl•nd 3, Clllc•llCI 2, 14 ln11ln.t1 nlr Nl!'l41 schelhi!fd.
GB
2
3 ,s11
6
6\\
6\\
8\\
• 9
11
Chic.no (Peters l~~ri:y~~ (Tll-l)l 7·4), nlatol 01kl1ild lKun!1t i-31 9t W11htn1ton IC6i1mtn f•JI. nl9'11 C1llfonola fENh •SI 11 l11!lmore IL ...... 1rct }4), "'"' MkwMtot• 1~1'111 J.•J 11 New Yori! 18•hn..., J..ll. lllG'\f
Oe"OI! (l61~> !"' ~0.0) 11 lot!Oll lhll 4-1 l!'ld W1•ftw l·• l~.!w~n t ....,... ,., ll!M.1
-" '~~::i..: ·~ 1'~1wl;Jt1W.O.'". :r=:;:I_
• 11 'Ji1W T«'C, ntJN ,, .. ..,.,flftl'I,
DIAN IUl•tN
C1...ii.. ,_ ..... , ,....,.. . ,
let ~ c•Mr ttt. fMlk wftti '" lllr -.
•H ef e1r w111al111f ,,... ....
I it & JM .. D"'"9 eM Atlaml
The highest paying st<ady w..-k
l..angdon has round tn h'igti diving was
at a shopping center in New Jersey
where the manufacturer of a foam
pole vaulting pit firm paid him $400 . .a
week· to jump from 50 feet onto the pit,
which measw-ed 10 by six feet.
fie likes to call that act "diving into.
a sponge."
"That's a rough dive. The rocks go
out toward the water and it doesn't·
seem like you 'll clear the rocks on the
way down."
Langdon says one Just doesn't dive
off the 173-foot cliff rfght eWay.
"The highest successful dive ever
recorded was by a. guy named Raul Garcia who dived -off the Brooklyn ,_ _________________________ ,.. •
Bridge, J50 feet." • JOHNSON & SON "That's more dangerous than diving
into water. I hold the record at 50 feet.
The only thing.that would make me co
higher would be if someone did 51.
'Then I'd do 52 feet.
"You have lb hind eJther on your
''They start those divert down there
when they're little kids. They start
them from one foot above the water
and slowly work them ~ the face of
the clHf until they reach the top.'' ..
The trick, Of course, is to tJme your
dive 10 you-hit the water-when-a wav
It would seem that Langdon has set-
tled down at Mesa Verde, turning to
the less-dangerou'.I taak of teaching
kids .to swim,
"Oh, not at all, '1 he says. "'M'le
world champioNhlps are in Mezlco Ci·
l;)'..in...De<:embtr. I'll be there."
ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDm UTAIUSHID LINCOLN • MIRCU RY • COU•AI HAUi
900 WEST COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH 141-nSl '41.ml
OP IN SUNDA Y
-----. ......!--------------·----·-·----------__ ...___._ __ - -...... ---• --Me= -e · e '•·-a . -• t ----• • = •• e·n -.. _.
-
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DAlLV PltOf
TUE~DAY
JUN£'
... "" ... -IQ {tO) ..... ""' ·ee: T111 .~ ,.._,, ..
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,.,,. tht doaklc " ~ ,oll&. wldl
ftlUltt ti 111fW7S of lllfJ kllOl]q, ""' ...............
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lef Gm-. M•11l• Mee.,, htt:het
1114 T M1WL a.d li)'llllJ Boab SUtsl
D 111 ra.e. 111111: .,. .....
... ....... (d-fi) ·eo---.. Cl•rk.
M~I It.lb!. m..._·.., ,ci 1io1
Ill""' -(JO)
8 IWW'• ....i "IMIM Witt(·
.. , ... bn• of wild~f• ''°"' !111
1nb'1co1slt! WaltfWIJ ttuo111h soutfl
C.roliM .... fllridl, llD•-
•:10 D XNIC """ s.mc. (Cl (60)
CJ Al t....., It• (Cl ~
• Mu.I (30)
OJ llldtllt'• ""' (30)
fl!) M .. JD1 ait Molt ti M.tlllitr.
"St 1 Friendly Vilitor." M1rion
111111'1111 and tw suats UM fllmi
11111 tldtl .. *"' how llllillr citi· __ ..
,.,. •• --. m 1301
........ '61: }JM! C.tifoniil PJI.
fMt'f." ....... C..kh rwports •·
tioftll .... ""'""11-1 ..... .,
..a a •·tM-• ...._ nsolb..
TlltSdl.J, J11nt •. 1968
111-m l"'1 . ._ .........
l :lll II C.11pelp 'M: (C) IZ',i hr}
"'tM C.lffornla l'JimaJY.'' KMXT ,,...
ltlllpb •• t'IC\lllf ~"""~' tD pr..m • t.omprthtftslw rtPOlt •nd
I~ el tM •i.dlon •nd
• ., issua Tbt ~oadcnt wm ca-
tiltlll until wlnnn hwt been lltlb·
listled. Wlltw CfoM!tl: MckN "1
Mlkt Wtll1et, Erie S..1rt" 11111
-..,. knti, nports holn Mew
YOl'l Jlil1J ~ llld lllR Amis .
•IChor "" Los """"' full. .. moll f'IPCJfb wit! M b~ fro111
~ ICMdidttlS' lludqu.1rt1K1.
D ll7JCil ._ " .. -..... (q "Cltilonll1 Primaly," ___ ...... CC) (10)
111•-m <JOJ
IEl u -.... """.
IMU@(J)lt TU 1 nw: (C)
(SO) "Whu 80)' IHeb Girl,,. Altl·
1ndtr Mundy is faced witll ltlt ,_..
ltm of wtdiia& 1 womel'l--dtfKf.
in2 British xlentiat Mt!!nd• Broo~t
-1nd · 1n1uufln1 her out of 1n
Iron curtain a>11ntry. (R)
t:OO 1D Alllfkl11 WMI (Cl (30)
fD 811Ck Pll'IPldM: In • "MHI
!ht Prut" fonTlll, lllWll!lfl Rat
Rosers mode11te1 1 discussion with
three joumalists •nd 1 Ne110 family
on stietto problems.
Ill N Mnic.I hNlt
1:30 0 NYMJ: (C) (30) "W1lkin1 Tar·
c-t." A hish·r1nkl111 lronlan police
elfidal is "''"""' 111bad bf • tttlpt!"s ~unet n ht ptltidpatu II
In IWlnl ClftmDflJ' at City Hiii. (R)
ID P...,.rt .. TrMI (C) (lO)
fii) I* lelt Kost Robert Cm"'MI
talb with •utlior lbbert Theab1ld
8U@ !ftCW! ~ • llC'I · about Ills MW book, '1Sotla1 Policies
F------...._fQ .,..,.... ••. 1nc11 ,•• ·-for Anltrlti-11-lhe 10·1."
........ ttit ..:.on ...w ·ClllOr· m...,... 1 1u n;JG
Ult " .. lar1ll 0..... tlolttd t--·-r-__t_,.... ........... 1w.e.i.-a, ..... I f'll-4C)..aa)
;,.... ~ fllDOUI PIC'INt •nd g ..... rm111 " ... (C) (60)
their c»nilll hllflda--lk T~1, D @ (}) n 1 lll'lidlri: (C') (60)
Kim Nmk, Prllldlllt JohntOll, Rich· "Vall of the Slllidow .. Thi In·
•d •ilOft. BlnY "°'dwft, •nd ht'oh.f'f..._ -• .__ •· of the sOcihia Linn. Nw Mlftltnb Include ~ "' • ..,... ""
Ml ....-el • llqlllllOI •· iflvuio1t wt!M •n.llien bums up on
Mill Stred. (R) voted to wttrillti• 11111 1 portion • ... n iac • ••!Uln Ill tht or..,. (C) {60)
hunL 'Ci .1 m.1.t ~ .... (Cl (60)
l'J f ·1..., (Cl (30) Ill"""" ....... , i<1 (60) S.llr la~er, better known n "Hobo
KelJy, .. pub •II I •riollS hit Ind
CoYef'S itit Cllifo1ni1 Pri1111ry lrt1m
• wom.1n's point ol Yitw.
• I .... ""' (30)
ID Clllipl's llllM (30)
fD Eqlllll fad _, F-=r: Ill·
ltructw •-Balli• llYiln the
series spptyms COfllll!Oft·ttn• Nies
to nvisin1 1pokl11 communlution.
Oil.II C.1 YA
&;00 CJ c.ut•n1I• P'r111WJ 11t1t1111 tcl
(2 ht)
II ROUER GAMEHIVE (C) * T-BIROS vs. NEW YORK
01111« C•11t1: ICI IZ hr) T·
Iii .. "" ,._ Yorl BolDbetL
W EDNESDAY
DAmME MOVIES
ED 1oAt1 S,.,iitny: Elicb Leins·
OOrf leads tllt fuft symphony with
11'11 Hartin! lilee Club Ind tllt Rid·
cliff• Chorll Socilty u dlor111.
.,, ..... c.n•
D 111w DH11n 1c1
0..... ........ °""°"" (•cl·
nnture)· '54-Rod C.mnf\, Joan
Ltslit.
M1ts."
m Atll•1 Th11lr1: "Btlllrt,
Spooks!'"
1:00 0 No'lit: ''lh1e«tal1 Clillj' (ad·
venture) '44 -(nvl Flynn, P1ul ,_....._
T111t Jtntr Sleepl" (4r•m•l '53-
Gil Youne.
12:30 m "T1M W.11 ·~ !111 Hnttf"
(d1am1) '57-Ann Sh1rld1n. "'Ch•·
ltr PIDr (•dventure) '40-Lloyd
No11n.
l :lO CD "CftJ el Mlllllll: Cirl•" (mp-
ftry) '41-Jofln Mhtr, G1l1 Stofm.
4:30 II "FM Aallntt Ille .._.. (dr•·
111;1) '55---40111 M1dbon, Briln Klilh.
O "TM D.I." (dr1m1) 'S7-J1d
WeWI, Don DubblnL
· SERVING THE
Public and Trade
COMPl.ETE
PRINTING SERVICE
='48'''"''11-642-4321
----_._. ... 11 W.01 llYd. N~rt Botch
-~· .. -< ' .... -'f <
&ME'S COMIH6 1t> SEE ·,;;e ! Ul.A'S CO#.ING
TO SU-MEtl
DR. KILDARE
YOU'Re I~ TI1E WRONG
PEW, AREN'T '1t>U1
DOCTOR?
.GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
SHEILA?'.. MOTHS: ANP I ARE OM Ollt
WHERE ME WA.V TO NINT r.a"H'S FUNEAAI.!
'
'llOll?' WE'VE sroPPEP ON THE WA.Y
FOR GAS •• A.NP I . THOUGHT
.J'P CA~-~,-~N17!~
I [),ABBL.EO
\ IN WORt>S, iOO,
' ,.... J.OCK• ·• .'>-'lod:•
l SCIENTIFIC
F P/\Pe'R~' . MOSTL.Y ...
TUMBLEWEEDS
HI THERE!
IS YER DAUGHTER
AT HOME?
MISS PEACH
•••
lll(t/ll~R// WK<\T PO '/t>lJ toK1N
ABOUT HIM?
•
WHAT ARE Y<:XI GOING TO SING ABGUT, IRA~ l AM 00111& 10 SING
' TCEL t 'l' Sciloot
Co11 N'ffl.Y
A~I
WESWb"
1tius1c
C.oNca.r . ,. ~.
DEBBIE DEERE
' AaOUT THe F.l<AIRIES ANO
DOGleS ANDH~ANO
OW CORAA<.5 AND TLlM&Lli-
weeD AND DeseRT ANO
SUN/WOSKY.,. -----
•
NOTH !HG-EXCEPT "THAT
HE'S Gar UENMIFER
DE LON HALF SCARED
TO DEATlt ,
By Gus Al'l'iola
1llESZE AIO!E.
IX>:Z:liNS!
PR1MARIES -Frank MeGee is anchorman for
coverage of the California electio_ns on "California
Primary," tonight in color at 8 p.m. on Channel 4.
Chet Huntley and David Brinkley will pr~vide proj-
ections· and analysis of the recent elections.
TELEVISION VIEWS
TV Baseball
--Fans Happy
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -For the viewer who did
not feel like watching NBC's broadcas~ ~of ~ b~se
ball game 1'tonday night, ~ere were sbm P.1ckings
on the networks -everything else was a twice-told
tale.
• THE..SJ:f.UAUON will become even more.com-.
rnonplace the closer summer comes as the meager •
backlog or special programs is exhausted: . ~\ti.~~· .::.:.:,:iJul.'. .. .,,..., .. lwwe.vu,~wJµm_lll.~XOLJ!l;--
.search of light ehte.rtainment could rove arou~d
By Tom K. Ryan
I AIN'T
GOT NO
DAUGHTER
ty Men
ANO WHAT AMI
SUPPOSeO TO SING
A50UT, A BUNCH
OF Ml.DNl!Y ?
By Frank Boll•
·fu channels, occasionally finding a repeat of special
interest.
ON ABC , {or instance, there was the soon-to--
depart "R{lt Patrol" with its brave quarte~ of fight·
ing men busily nlaking boobs of the Nazis on the
North' AfriCan desert.
Thi~ time it was afl escape story which, be-
cause Jack Jones was the guest star, had been cus·
iOrl'r:itailored to P,ennit him to burst into song. The
amazing part of the episode was that when Jon~s
raised· his voice to entertain the eRemy officers m
a desert hut he was accompanied by a full orchestra. . . -
#'FAMll Y AFFAIR" on CBS was a rerun of a
show with a s~ory line that seems .to be close to all
TV writers? hearts~ That poverty 1s really fun and
all the nice people are poor. 1
. That poor little rich kid, Buffy, "lade ~ends
with some happy youngsters on the wrong side of
the tracks, learning to love b~ead and. su~ar, ~nd
persuading her affluent guardian to d1sgu1se him·
self as a down-and-outer so Ilo one would suspect
the horrible truth.
THE IDEA iS such· 3 tired, trite theme that it is
a tribute to the talents of the cast -Brian Keith,
Sebastian Cabot and two kids, Anissa Jones and
Johnny .\Vhittaker -that they could make the show
warm and almost unbelievable.
"The Carol Burnett Show," also on CBS, was
a rerun of the first program in the series, of special
interest because in it Carol appeared on stage for
her first question-and-answer session with the studio
audience.
THE BIT became the standard opening for the
shows, but was an emergency fill-in the first time.
A planned sketch failed to work and had to be drop-
ped at the last minute. The por~ that had been
designed to warm. up the audience was substituted.
A flip of the dial carried this viewer to NBC
and "I Spy," now, like "Rat Patrol'' on its way out.
That episode was a rather silly and bizarre story
that had hero Robert Culp mysteriously drugged by
an enemy agent.
BUT 'THE SHOW'S exteriors were filmed
against some gorgeous scenery in Greece. and there
was the added enjoyment of watching the creator
of the show, Sheldon Leonard, in one of his increas-
ingly rare appearances as an actor.
Jlecommended tonight: "Rehea rsal for D-Day,11
ABC, 7:30-8 :30 PDT, documentary ab"out the Alli ed
nid on the Nazi:held port of Diepp~; "llill 943,''
CBS, 10-11. filmed account of action by one corn·
pany of U.S. sold iers in Vietnam: California pri-
mary election returns, NBC, 11-12, ABC and CBS
11 :30-12.
Dennis the Menace
I • t I ' • ''.· • @I
I
-
•"''"''"'-~-~ -• --.. --r-........--• -~·~·"·····~···~·=-· •·-="'·""'"'~-,,-..,,. ....... -·•-•=""'""'•'""""""=·.-·= .. ••o==•..,=-·.--~--·-·~-··-~-···---~~--.. .--------·------------. . . . ---. --··-- ---. ---~ .... -__ .,._,, ..... , .----.. ·---~----------...... ______ _
-BINISPBELBY
STAY .AWAY. JDE ••••11 ,.._.. -
.... ._.,._" ____ _
EXCLUSIVE AREA RUN
GrluW ftn.wh.
A lllluJlrl4R.
__ l"lffllPimn¥"1 --· SECOND TOP HIT ,
Glenn Ford
-i Dayofthe
ivil 'JUlllr
f'.T.A. M11ln.te SIJ. -10 1-.M.
"SI!. De1dllffCI'' ... 11 Hiii He
All E.-W.nll Clneftlas cwlH bf
R.af1i9W1l1'11
• 0 eRACH 9 VO. AT •1.U• • O
HUNTl1tlOTON •aai;:H. M 7·••o•
F1 1nil·1. Fun . for. Ev1ryon1
MATINEE DAILY
E.:c+pt. W1d.-Mon .• Tu11. .............. , .............. .
"' ... a zinging, heel-thumping
musical made of the magical
• stuff of 'Mary Poppins'!. f .9'
• •GOOO HOOSCKlE.P!NG ') J
-~-.-~--'/ •.~ ,~· . I .
t.~-,,-::3r . -.. ' . -·-.·:· .. · ...
FRED MacMURRAY
GERALDINE PAGE
GREER GARSON
TOMMY STEELE
2nd FEATURE
"BATTLE BENEATH
THE EARTH",
THllATftB.
MMIOl•MWlll-((llt4MU.\. PIP«,. .. ,.
MAY 29 ·.KINE 4
MORE CH ILLING
·THAN THE BOOK!
Truman Capote's
IN
COLD
BLOOD
Starring
ROBERT BLAKE
SCO'M' WILSON
JOHN FORSYTB.E --11'1
.,. ·L
~-.
ALSO
"BAmE
BENEATH
THE EARTH"
,
Tuesday, June 4, 1968 DAILY PILOT Jt
First of Three Articles ' ..
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
l"·lhM SUPlltlOll (OUlltT Oii TH• MOTl!;I Pf\llTINO l lDI THE WXURIOUS
llWIA~
THEATRE-.Life in S otlight T a,kes CllltTll'ICAl'I' 0111 IUSIMUI llAT• 01' CALll'OIUllA !IOI Noll«'',_,..., th•t11 !lltl If-.~
PICTITMWS """'' TMC COUMT'V 01' 0~01 1r1111ff1 01 111t Ort"" Cotd JlllllW C t --.,... ~"!fl!--...., lll't " .... ---.,. ...,_0-IJIP~ .....= , .... 01Mde14-0r .. c-ty, C.11 ~IM • b\ltlw ., ~ &lrdl St.. SUMMONS wm'-rw ... ..., llldl .. ,. '::~ "--1 11..ell, C..lllotM, ullllltr ..,. tk· 19-'lll ~1• J\1111 U. 1•. 11 lllt
• INDS TONt6HT
"Bonni• & Clyde'1 ...
"A Big Hind For
A little ltdy"
STAITS \Y_IDNUD~Y
J1lUI! <DISl1! ~ST.UIP ..... ,. ....
"' ..........
1\Kf~O\l IH• 11\lllJl'.l,llili\\ll
.~.
"THI JOlllS"
Cllartt.11 Hftte.ii
Joa H.cbtt
"Will PENNY"
Al111
Le11N11c• H.....,
"SPY WITH THE
COLD NOSE"
ST.Am WED.
'
ttttw. _.,,, ,.._ II CA"-YAl.IT Of' MEllOfTM AS!flt!Y COC..IMAN 'ill.• 1M 0.t. of-.Ulo tc11001 ~ ... _
S04JTHERN CAl.l'°ltNIA 111111 lllfl MM 1111 VS. OAYIO FltEOEIUCK COL!'M.l.N, tlOI !'ti~ .._., C.lt Mt.-. '
Jlfll'I II OW-.. Of 1hl lolluwfN --a. 0.f.t.Mt"'. C1lllof11J1, 11 wtlldl time Mid IMdt .... ""'°" 111mt1 In f\,IH Incl PltUll of THE.,PEOPLE OF lH& flATI OF Miki!' OHflld 111d '"" tw Jt~i..ef ~. ltt .. flollowt: • 0.LIFORHIA. Ull:I"""'-1W ....,.._..,. Mt ), '"' Rltt'l<I~ O. ll1rr1n, 3117 Md(tnlf't To lllt 1b0n lla{Jllid °"'"°'"': throuell Junt :xi. lfn w1v. Co111 MtM, e.1"11r11l1. Vov '" htftlW dl1.Ctfd lo_, llllt i'!I llftll art' to ...,-,,. ~.tlti f/I, W, l1ultt, lllM W. hlllol 11'111., t11111111r the -l•ll'lt of mt' tbo_.. 111mtcl (OfldlllOl'lt, lftll~I fld ~ N-1 l tl d\. C11110t11l1. •t.lnlltl llltd !II 1111 •tlo ... tntltlld CO\lrt whit!\ 1r1 now on !Ill 1M m.Y bt M<W.d
Dtmt Mrt t7, '"' ln-lbe alloliot 11\Jillld ll:tlci lltwthl 1n 1111 .i:tla-o1 1tw PurdlM!ne A.-1 ..,,___
Its Toll on -Jf!dy Garland
--Fir't of Three Article1 on
· Jud11 GaYland
By VERNON SCO'l'f
HOLLYWOOD !UPI) -.
Judy Garland Is geUing
ready to go to court again.
It figures. Jucfy is a 'gal who
almost always is in a ruckus.
No one in show buslnus
memory has had more
• plague-ridden Pf"Obletn$ than
the doe-eyed singer who can
break your heart wU.h 1
song or crack you up wStb a
one-line' gag.
I asked her why
divorced her fourth
slle
hus·
band , Mark Herron, a cou·
pie of years ago.
"Because I n e v c r. aaw
Mrwt'Ott SU.CH -e11k enln..0.
i. 1.i.. .... Liff lole -Ot. M 1M
INDS TONIGoHT
IM Stelter
'" "NO WAY TO
TREAT A LADY"
Al10
JoM .......
Si.ttey WIRten
"ENTER LAUGHING"
ST.Am WID.
TROUBLE AGAIN
Judy Garlond
him," Judy ,r eplied . "He'd
call once in a while, but I
RICHARO 0 . aAARi:TT 11111111 VOii Ill Ula coun. w'll!'llll l EN ..... otl'lool eltlrlt;!.
trl hi P, w. IAA.REn dll'l lllt r thl Mtvltt Oii \l'OU ol tr.11 Wfl\> E.oio.,....... ,,_. 11111111111 ..... !Nt llH'.
ed to convince m he had _., .. ., c1t11ot1111, °''""' cau11tv· ll'IOlll. ti ..._. wl1?>111 111t 111oY• ~ c111111n ~ ""111'1H dleQ. ..,, .,..
thrown "· b••• g ;__. u. On IMv 21, ~ _,.,. mt. 1 HOt1,.,. counlV. or wltlll11 THUtTY din ti --ffr'I btoW ftltolll ........ tt .............
•uti ~ a •~ 1.1•e ,. .. lk 1n 1nc1 tw Mid $11tt. ",..,...,,~ llMWhe•t. t °''• coeu J11111or t.o1111M 01..mt
nightsiand. Anyhow , t h e ~k:=-~ ~ .. 1,:•r:_" ,:._11<1 ,:r!.c.~ "° "'~;: ';;'tz,,.':!~:~1~1~1~':: ::t ..:'n11111.!'! !::::-1:;.r111 •;:u:,., noi'11111 i.:!
dear man had a broken nose '""'°"' ,..,.,.. •• lllbtcrlbtd 1o 111. w11M11 111t1 hld11mt111 1or .nv _.,, 0t °""'"'' 1 •111t•111tt ,,,., .,,. llldder win "'iw 1,.. ~ l111lnomtnl incl 1dll'IOWllOIK ltllY P · de!Nlldftl 111 11'11 comPltlnt II ltb!M 1111 Prwoted COll!rtd If IM Mmf It a-• b•• \O 'wear & runny t<Uhld Ille 'lmt. VPOn «ontr<KI, or Wiit t PPIV lo II•• courl 1.,.•l'lltd fo ll!m. ,111 .. tvft of f1llure to 11\1 ...,. (OFFICIAL SEAL} lot Yother 1111111 clemli.Mo In 1111 wn-.nltr Into llllCJI COftlrKf, tM Proi:etdir. et band~e on it for a week. ~~r,.~ ~~~11111om11 •1 .ieci Oct. 10. 1tt1. :I' .~-:'1~ "',ur:i.:O·i::.,:,, ":1r=;
Later be moved into a new Pr1nc'"1 OH1tt In fEAL> 1or1.i1..:1 1o Mid Kl'IMI dt11rrc1. -. · Or11111• ~IV W, E. IT JOHN, ~111'1! Ha blddtt in.-, Wlllldrl" l'lls bld'°'11f
wing O( tbe house"-· Mv C-h.slllfl EaplrN BY FREO .... BINGH""' II I period of flort .... IW. («I) dll'I etttr ....
' JUnl 21, 1t1f Df9ut'I' (11111; tllle WI f« !flt -" l'w9of. -Judy's bllmor can quicldy ,1,1b1l1111d Or•~ c""" 0111-t f/lllat. OURTl!A. CAlt,.l!MTllt AND BAltMll The Solnll Of T•1111-,.. .. ""' ,tll9 M.lv n i ncl J\1111 J, U. 11, lffl t?UI Tlllnwl1 w, ,,......,_, Jr. t rlvllell• of r1ltctl11t env 1nc1 111 bldi or
turn to anger The """Son "1 oa_. Dtl\'t 1a ••IY• '"" •~ui.rttlft or \fto • r-LEGAL NOTICE MtwPOrl l•ldl, C.lltfinill !or .... ~llft fn 1ny bid or In Ills llNd!M.
nearest her usually is the T••= '42·ttff DHni June 11. 1'61 111oa 1.m • l--------------1Anor111v1 .... ,. .. llltlfl S~l'IN; NORMAN I!. WAl!.OH. one to fee1 the blast SAit "' Pub!lilled Or11191 Coat 011lY Piiot, Sedy, 80lrd of TIVl!fli . NOTICE TO CIEDITOltS MIY 1, 14, JI, 2' 11\d Jvne J, 11, 11, 2S, PubU1Md Of"11191 Colll 0.1,., fllllet ••
Recellily the individual was SUPEltlOR COURT OF THIE 1NI 77MI MIY n Ind JUM .. 1... «JHI STAY!! OF CAl.IFORN IA FOR. Tb om as Green, 29, 1 TH• couMTY oF oRANo• LEGAL NOTICE
sometime fiance and .com· E111i. or Z..R~'"JlNE M•t:LE1t, LEGAL NOTICE '"'-· fi~412>t '!-fll..JIDI panion"of Judy's. NOTICE IS HEREl!Y Gl\/EN '° the CE• Tl! OF IUSIMESS Cl!ltTll"ltATI 01" IVllNlll erltllllors II !he I~ Mmed ~I ITIOUS HAMI! l"ICTfl'IOVS NAM•
tn April this year Judy 1t11t 111 ""c'" 11av11111 c111m1 1e111111 "'' Thi ulllktiltl'lld "'-• c•r1•1V tie 11 _,. Th• 11ndt,.1ene11 don cfrlllY Ill 11 ~ Mid de<;edelll ere r1<1ulrlld ID Ill• thtm, dUclln~ 1 blililltf,I 11 1190 Htrtlor alvd ducting I bi.tines.. 11 1711 Wllllll•r An., charged G reen with steallng wnh The ntcn"rv v01Ktier&. 111 1111 ollltt COiia Mftl Cilllarnt• under the uC: Co.la MKf, C1!1'1:1rr111, vll<ltr IN th> . ot 1111 c~rlr. ol the lbovt enlllled eotirl, or tltloui lftm' llilmt 01' PROGRESSIVE Ullou1 , ll"" 111me ot 8.Llt. :and pa wrung t wo of her '° p...-.1 ltlern, With Ille lllOIHrv Ml.RKETI NG IN s y 'T u TE OF ENTl!:Rf'l!ISES 111<1 lhlt' tlld """ I•
• YCUC!w'I.' lo lt>e vndenltl'rd II 1111 crlflU TECHNOLOG'f" Ind lhll Hid flm> Is COl'l'IJIOlftl of Ille ll)llfWllWI Mnon, Wf!WI
nngs, but the cbarge wasn't o1 M1 1t1<:1mn" STEPHEN A. PACI! JR .• c-~ o1 1111 101iow1,.. "'"°" whose 111rne 1n 1u11 ~ '"" ., n.t1lll11U " .. 141 E. Tll!rd SI., L~nt 8Ndl, l;IHfar11l1 name 111 fvil 1..cl PIKI of resfdenc?,. Ii 11 lot ..... ;
p Nssed, J udy, apparently, 9Ctln • .,.h1c11 11 111e Pila of 11u11neu of tolk>wl: P1u1 It. lt•IMird, "" Anlhtl'" .,,.
.. _ "" vndff'1l9Md Ill •II '"''~ Ptf1lllll"9 Mlcl'lffl LM 8.orllt" :ICl) lrvlnt C«I• ~ uud made her point and she to 1111 u11i. o1 11111 c1ec1C11111. •llhl11 •IK cooia ~ c1111 ' ' 01i.c1 Mn 13 ,,..
ot ~ ' ba lllO<l"'I Iller 11\t llfst PUbllClllon of 11111 Otled MIY ·,,, 1"8 f/11ul It. ltll11l'la ... g u1e rmgs ck. nollu. MICl\MI Ltt aartl•tt Stitt af c11;1on111, °''"" eeunm 01trd MIY 7.t. 1,61, Sll!e ol C1111ornl1, Orlrl!lt CounrY; On Ml¥ 13, lNI, btfcrt .... , I Ndll'Y
PENDING SUIT ~;d~i11~;~~j~, ol tilt Etl••• On M•~ ll, 1961, befor• m~. • Nol•rv Pllblk 111 •nd tor 11111 S!111!, ",_,..,
never knew where he was. I al '"' abave named dll'Cidtnl Pvbl!c In 11\d fer 11ld Sia!!!, 11en111111iy tPPtlred P1ut IL R1l11h1rd known to ''"
Now there is .a pending STl!,llt:H A ,.ACE' Jlt •Plll'••fd MlchHI LN Berllelf known to lo bl 1111 Ptl'l«I ~1 "'"'' ll ..,.,r1i,. think be lived_in a telephone • ui 1 TH IRD STltl!ET," me la be 1111 person .,.hose name 11 td 10 the within 1n11,,,.tn1111 •nd .ckllllW-
booth On CBS•-." Sult 8 g.a.insit New York's LDNo'. I EACH, CALIFORNIA '°'II svt:>scrlbf<I lo Ille within lmlrvrnenl .,.. ledffd lie t•«uttd Ille w1111.
""'1G ""--': Tl!L· UU) 4ll·SU5 1d<n.,...ledted ti. t~KVlff lfll Mmt. {Offlcltt SHU
From childhood into the ''!dUISOD Square Garden. It Attor·111.,, 1.,. .umlntelriter tor11c111 ~.,, 1tose111 c. KllOI[ ~ fr J d ' p bllv.td Of'll\P Coa•t D1JIY Piiat. Rouli. c. K11111: Nolll'Y ,.ubllt • Cttlflorftl• 40's -she's now 45 -Judy •• ems om U Y I ap... Mi~ 21 •M Ju,,. ~ 11 11 1,.. n1.a No11rv Public· c.111oorr>11 PdnclHI Oltke 111 ' ' •. Prlnc!Ptl Office In Or1111H1 C1111nty has been in the ~ght all p e a r a n c e U:iere last LEGAL NOTICE Oren" c.,.,nl'I Mv Camn'!tu1a11 hll'I,..
he lif '"'h ' ~--ber · ' ~ f MY CcmmlulOl'I Eit1>lru July 1, 11611 r e W1i= er on a mov1e J.Aa-,;;m in a Soe11es o Jull' 1. ,... Putoll•ht'd o"'n" c.,.1_1 o.r1v fttlvf,
sound stage, in court, in the performances that didn't go n4'ttt PublllMl:I Or11111e c ... ,, D111-t Plln!, M6v 14 21, a 1n11 J'"".., IHI ~
hospital or simply in a w e ll. ~ suit alleges the NOTltE OP TRusr•••s SAL• M•Y u, 21. a 111d June 4, 19611 kl-41 -T. Cl. NO. TS 41"9 LEGAL NOTICE
street brawl with one of her gar~en didn't do ri.ght , by IN~u~'.:'tl'c~' ~:· :~~~f'::tM~•AJ~~L,'; LEGAL NOTICE
husbands. bet' 111 the matter of lighting, d11lv 1PQO!nlftl frvslft under •nd '.am
S h th g h .. ~ et PIH"llUtnl hi Deed ol Trlltl dlll!d p,:wn11 Cl!RTlf'ICATI! 01' IUSIH•ss 0 me 0 w r 0 u acow.ucs. c. No~m~r 4, 1Kl u«llllCI bv FRANCIS CERTll'ICATE OF BUSINESS FICTtTIOYS •AM•
tragedy illness &lld triumph Such u " dot H REOEWLLL AND SALLV c . Fldllltul Finn N•-l!-.t l/lldenloned ~ Olrtltv I ltn -' • comp Ca\.IODS Ri:DEWILL, hutblncl 1..cl wilt Ind Tl'lf: ull<ler1l11111!d da lier~ ce-rllfV lhtl f l/C:ll1111 I bu1lneS1 &IP. 0. llOJI 1934 (oa;t1 she has survived. Judy's c areer More of'ten rt<Oriltd De'tmber '· ltd!, In baoll.: ""· lhev ••• ccndur;!l1111 • N!~I•! lnval!Tlenl MKI, C1Nrornl1, uncltr 11\t llclltlovs firm
Some say she has·s--.. as than not th ha. in 1-d p181 95 or on1c111Record•111 ~ a1nce bu11~eis (11 Co-P1rtrierl) 11vnChic>-111me of 'W£STEltN JAN.I TOlt -• , .. ~ --....!"''" _ ey Ve VO Ve of 1111 COl.lnt'I' Rll'Corder o1 Or11111t Co11n1V, mtn Boulevard, Gtrden Grove, C1ll!Ofnl1, SERVICE" I nd 11111 atld ftl'TTI 11 -~much-time-m eollrt-as~udge-·u.e nien..:iii-hel--life _ _ c 1111atnr£1: ..YtJ.i,~1'45.fLL-A·T -PUBLI .undu~ll\8-_11cut1o1.ia._J1rm---111<111-01 ~--~1 1111_l!)J1ow11111 "'""'·-""""' __ Learned H d ""'""'-' • • AUCYION TO HI Sl"IJIOOEltr Olt ·ECH~ IN't'l!STMt:NT-CO~r 111me•-fllll-&n<1=~~ ......... _ an • ~n::rs agree There .is for instance the C.ASM <1>1v•b1t ,, time o1 Mtt· 111 i.wflll wld r1rm 11· aim~a)ftl of "'e faltoWlriv fallawt: · •
-"MADIGAN"
-Hard ..
Al10
"Will PENNY"
BARGAIN MATINEE
WED. 1 P.M.
~ l.M1h1M11h
Marl ... .Ad111lulo11
.Ad11lh 1.00
Worlini
Co{>!
RICltlllD HDIRY HISEi
WUllUIRI ·FONDA· SlmNS
'MADIGAN' ·--
EEMAivll
-B~rii11t ::-..
RYKER"llll
F iii~SOUTH COAST
PLAZA THEATRE
San Dia10 frHWay at Bristol • 546-2711
e.i Ofllw o __ w.._
Mon.·TUH,
6:41 '·'"· Thu,,.-Frl.·S.I
Su•.-12:M
RICHARD . HENRY INGER
WIDMARK·FONDA·STEVENS
"" Co·H•. MADIGAN'
1 1.EEMAIMN ·~ .... Rt-WWW
LA UNIVERSAL Pl_PTURE In COLO
.... PIChlm IR ColOf
SUNDAY
JUNE 9
4:00 P.M.
£L TOREO DE TUUAllA
Mexico's 11111titul
tllllft •tld•
MANOLO MARTINU!
NOW
EXCLUSIVE
ht RUN
l'iOWING
--COMI AS YOU ADI rou WON'T WYI TH.AT WATI
-----------------~--~----
she is the greatest feminine •• . • • • monev o1 "'' unne11 s11'"1 In "'~ IDl!bY Pf~Ol'ls. w11aM n1rnn In' iuu 1nc1 Pl•on O..rtes o. ~ "s JMM
,..0 ,.0 ;... "' _,_ ti CDmPlication of her third o1 the we•• tP1rkln9 loll •ntr•n~ al TUii of resldeflcl •re 11 toltow., 10-... n: Sfrtel. Cost• Mtst, c1111orn11. e~~.--=..!!!.~ .. -husband:--Sid~ith l~I.!oca .Jt~lldt~ locllfll Oii_ IM ·Ml• Flnem1n, 1:16 Soulh Cl&~ Drt-.., Otll!d Mav 77, 1'61. ...., ___ _ Then th-e are those who • • 11or1t1w11fC01i'ier·or-!'latmr""" ll"""'t'"'Hlll'ln:111""r111."' .__.._ .....--c,_..._.........., .. .,.
"'" .. L • wbom she has battled in s1r1t11. s.n11 A111, c.111or1111 • ..i1 rtont, l!'1111me 11. Schf.Q1119ff, 4031 country s11h! at c111tom11, er.,.., C-IV:
only shake mell' heads and 11111 incl 1n1eru1 t;0".....,ec1 to 111<1 1111.,. Club Ori~. L•t.wccct, c1u1oni11. oa M1Y 21, IHI, ~. """' • """"' run fo th ne"~• e 't Court and 00 Street corners . t>eld b'I' 11 undtr nld Defd ol Trust I" ll'le Otltd ••DI Mln~ll U, 1961. f'vbl!c In 11\d for Hid 51111, .1••raot11l1Y
_ r e "''"'" XI· Luft ~"' nionagers her P<OPerlV 1111111"' 1n , ... tllv cl 11a-1 Max F1...,,..., u•1>n•ed c1iar1e1 o. G1tM11>11 k-to ~ • ;,uu BtlCll In Mld (QU!O!y 1r.d S111e delC{ibed Euot~e 8. Schles!~eer rM lo tit ll>e penon ""'°"' nl"" I•
VOICE, HUMOR career from7 time to time. 11: '. • STATE OF c.o.LIFORNIA, 1ubsu11>t<1 to the: ... 111!111 1n1trumt"t. 1fld
Lik I . . -The Sculllt••I 2'IO le.I o! the COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, SS •dlllC""ltdvtd he PK"'-d th• ........ Judy has ::; u r vive d e ongtime nng com-NOl'lllweit 51_'° Itel Ot Lal, of Yr'1~1 on AP•ll s. 1m. ~me, t Nota•v tOFFICIAL SEAL/
because• of t W 0 eX· batants ttJey have a d eep No 11S In !ht dly al N_.,I 8MCh. Pvbllc In llld lor Hid Counno' Ind Slah!, Jaseoh E. Dt'lk
• • • IS 'per m.P redM'dld 111 look 26, PHet D1rscn1liY 1ppe1red M•• Flnem1n I nd Holl,.,. Publlc.C.~tcr"'-
traordinary gifts -her uni-affection for ooe another 0 ,nc1 j.j o1 Mlacot111..-n /Mpi, tn IN flllfl'll! e. Sc111e11,,_. •-ta me 1e bf Pr!nc:IP•I O!fla 1~ ' in -d whil ' th f otfl of Ille COUllt'I' nc:order of w ld "" 1>erson1 WllOH llll1MS ,,. IUllKllbed Or-· Coul!IY q ue sing g voice 00 an un· even e m e process o ~~ !II 11>e ...-1111111 1n11rumen1, •M adnowled9· Mv ecmmJHICll'I E.01""
paralleled, if Unusual, Sense ping•pongiflg laWSUits back Seid .'..te Wiii bl madl, IN! Wlttlaul t<l la me lhll llltV •xecuted IN MmL JUl'le 11, 191'0 -• f rth cove111nl er w1rr1rr!Y enrns 0t lrn11lled, Wlll'leu "'" hand •!Id ••L Publlsheod Or•nH Clltl Oii,., fllllot. of humor. au\l o.u • . tQlfdln• 11111, .;.soe1slon. or .... (OFFICIAL SEAL! MtY ?I Incl June"· 11, II, Jffl ..... Htt health suffered, she Say What you will of Judy c11mb•111cn. to ~aY ""' r..-n111"1n1 pr1... £ve s~11•d, ' clptl 1um of IN nate SH;vred bv 11ld Not1rv Pvbllc C•llfornl• ooce t old me, during her se-sbl! is n e v er dull. She also Dft'CI 01 Trvtt. 10-wu: u,6't.'9, wllh 1... Prrnc:11>111 on1c• 111
cond marriage when hus· has the strength o r Godzilla. tern!, •• In H id "Die PrCVldftl. 1d¥l11Cel, ~°: ~~~~fo!11~tolll!I •AR-'ff
LEGAL NOTICE -
d ll 'gh k -h Ti and , h h II 111y, 1111cler lhe lerm1 ot Slid [)M'd ot JV IY 4 lt1l JUPERIO• COURT 01' TH• snore a m t eep1ng er me again s e as Tru11. 1et1. c.11arve5 •nd e•IM!nin at 't;: SIDNl!T J. oUNITL AtlY. STATE OI" CAL1tr01tNJA
awake. Because Judy had to hovered near death only to Tnnte. •nd o1 !ht ,,,,,,._ ue•hld "" 111 n1 sou111 1tvertv 0r1v1 F01t THI! cou•n DI' ou.,...
arise at dawn for movie come back bigger a n d ~of .::~~·11rv 11nc1er 1111d Deed 111 .. ,.,.,. 4~~ Cillf. "211 NOTICE OF :::·A~'' o,. Pl!TtTION k t GM ~ soon Ir th Trust. bv ,.. ...... al I brNcll Of dt!ti.111 !n f'ubU\l'led Or1ftlt• Cont tlllll' Piiat. FOR ,..09ATI! 01" WILL ANIJ fllO• W'Or a ~ue s onger an ever. IN oblle111..... secur..:t 1 ht r' b Y • ""'" 1~ 11 71 M J 4 lff& 1 _.. LEnE•s TESTAMlNTARY
developed a case or the jit· Now s'he is a mite of a llerel'cfa•• l l!K\lled and dtH~rftl !<I "" • ' • VM l1 E1t1t1 ot Ktll'lertne FiaYd, 11IO ·-undltll1lned 1 ... r111er1 Dll'Ci.r1tlon of 11 Kalll.erlne M. L•ne. Oec•-·
ter s. ...._._w.oJD.P.,-Welghlng no more Del1ull ind [)em1nd fDt ~la, and ... rlllen LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREIV GIVEN Tll.t
"One Jtight it g ot to be too thd 1iw:-unds but she still nallcw 01 b•e•cn Mid ct election ta c•vse Walhl• J1mn Flrrfd lln flltcl tieNtn 1 vu!"' ' 1t11 u11der1l1nrd IO .ell u ld Pr!IPl!rt'I' lo NOTIC• TO CREOITI)RS !>i!llthln for pra~I• ol Wiii 11\d lcf' much," Judy r e I a te d • falls the passions of her 1111111v 1111<1 o11111at1on1, 1nc1 11>er11tter, on SUP1ER101t couRT op: THIE • ruu1nce at Ltfteu Tnt1mtm1ry to "-* "V. te ' ' ll I wh FeDr'll1rv \l, 1'69, Ille 11n<1er1l1Md c1usl!d STATE 01" CALIFORNIA FOR 11-r. ~r~ lo wtlldl 11 ,..... fl:ir lllcen was snormg so legendary fo ow n g en Mid 111111,, 01 tw'tldl '""of ett<tlan 10.,.., THE couNTT OF ORANGE 111r111er P1rtla.ol•r1. •rid l!Mt 11'1111me 11\d
l oud she shook tbe windows. she belts out "Swanee" or rKD•dl!d 1n i:-11. 1511, PIP 4'5, o1 wld Esta11 a1. Mvta w. Brown. 1r.o •-1111ce a1 11e1rt"" llM! wme 1111 !IHn .., Otllclal RKO•d1 II Mr1 H•...., M Brown, Decuotd for J-)1, 1961, ,, ,,30 '·"'·· In """"
I sat up in bed and punched "Over the Rainbow." Otlt: MIY 21: '"'· NOT1'ce Iii HE REBY GIVE N "' '"' CW-rlroom ol DtHrtrnenl No. 1 ol Nl4
him as hard as I could in the ' !1,'v',E.. '~o'•"'•'•~c,I! AND crl!dltcrs a1 tilt 111aw nlmrd dt<tdrnt ~. ''IOI """" lrooldw•l'• 1" 111t c ir, .....
"HI! woke up hollering and
holding his bloody noise. I
• • "' " Illar 111 11trMJ111 h1vl111 ct1lm1 1e1IMI IN of Slnt1 A111., C.l!tor1111. {Next: Judy's early life OS It "Id Trv1tff, nfd decfdenl 1re reqvlrl!d hi flit lhtm, Oaled June J, 1961 . llv Elmer W. He!ntrr with 11>1 nt<'"t•rv wud1.rs, 1n ~ cnlcw W. E. ST JOHN a perniorm.tr and movie Authllrll!!d oniter a1 lhe clerk of rn. •ban mtrtled eotirt, or C.avnt'I' Cl\><~ ta J Pub\lshe<I Hewperl Harbor 1Qew1 Pru1 lo pretenl lhem, with the necen1ry YOllftl• P'Nl'ltllf' 1111111 ,._ S r. combined wllll Otlll' Pilot, Newoort voucher1, 1o Ille vnclerilvlled 11 Ille O(lkt Jl5 Wpl T1'tlnl StTtlt ----------------------------IBe1,h. C1 lllor11l1, Moy 1' I ncl JUM ~.II, al her Athl•lll!iYI· L/PQOld, Mcc..rll~ I nd SI"'' An1, C1H10t11l1
1'61 t?l.U D!namoor, 1755 Orange Avenue, Suite c, Ttlttlt.cu•1: 54"1_,I !~"---------.,,,.,,,---Cosll Mew, C1lllornl1 t?621, wllicll 11 ltl Alllf'ftltl !Or f'11tllt""' LEGAL NOTICE Piece 01 butlM.H of the undf'rsloMd In 111 PvbNlhtcl °"''* C:-1 OtllV Plllf, milters PtNtln!"' IO tilt nlllt al llfd JlnlCI •, J, 1!, lMI N\"'8
NOTICE 01' INTENTION TO ctecedmt, within 11• rnonltls lf'ter 11!C llf'll Crossword Puzzle LEGAL NOTICE
ACROSS
I Titl! or
rtsptct
6 SkilHul 11 Map-maker's
abbrtvl· atlon
14 Man of
Tthtran
15 Glv!r
16 Range
sound
17 Kllch!n appt1111ce 18 Antagonls• 20 Roof structure
22" Card game
23 Nuisance
2S Fumlshtd
with w!apcins
28 Gcilf club
29 Self 30 -1P11aglned
In sleep 32 Metallic
sheathlnp
34 Everlasting
)9 Sharpest 42 Fcidder grass 43 Went ~let!)'
4S Labor ,,.,,
46 Surglcal lnslrum enl 49 Mountain: Comb. fcirm
SO Eicpress
tXC!SSIYI
fondntss
l
•
7
2 ll
J9
"'
54--
servltude 55 Left !ht
scene
''''"! S6 Parto a cake SS .. _ 8)'
Starlight"
60 Yard:
2 words
61 TrenCh!r· m"' 66 Golf course: pvt 67 Ri ch 11111
68 Pl ace of
action
69 Ordn1r1c1:
Abbr,
70 1959 Nobel ptlZ!
winner
71 Abciundlng In shrub
ftnC!S
•
QOWN
1See1 Across 2 Macaw
3 Bftter look Ing
4 Piece
of metil
S Coffin stand 6 Cltavt 7 Hous!hold
accessory I Ens!gu:
Abbr.
• Uttnsll
' 7
.JO Kind of haircut
11 Ch!l!llcal
prefix
12 Game of chan tt
13 ACl!d fdl)' 19 Neil aloft
21 Da11111e thr
surfatt
23 Robson and
Ra inier
24 Bird
2fi Uller, as
oplnloos 27 Half:
Prelhr
30 Terror 31 Object
33 Number
35 Mr. Chaney
36 Bleached
37 Waterfront
38 Chu1ch ass!mbly
40 Leave out
•l British TY
"
6/4/68
44 Ballet
c e1111pany
mrmber
47 Let CIUt
StCftlS 48 Kind of cheer SO The 1fe1resald 51 Ccilor
52 Wcitn ou t
S3 comf"' poln SS Spread
gradually
outward
57 Oi1111ond1,
e.g.
59 J1ce1b's
wife
61 Adversary 6Z BreaJr:fast
""' 64 Engln1er:
Abbr.
65 Narrow b!am
of tight
12
li NOAGI: IN THE SALi 1>11bllc1tlOl'I of 11111 natl«.
01" ALCOHOLIC aEYl!RAOllS D&tl!d MIV 20, lNI.
MIV 111, 1'6& Herry L. Wl1Hln'll NOTKll! 01" f/lutl.IC SI.Lii!
To Wllorn JI M.IY Conctrll: f•Kulor 011 J11111 10, 1f611 II 2:0D "·"'· .. f1W
Subled to IHUtnc• ol the 1T'e1111 BO· 01 11'1• Win at llW Plattn1!1 Avenue, In Ca1t1 Mn&,
Plll!d tor, notice i1 nere~' given !hat 1he AbQ.ve n1med d«ed•nl C11ifcr111t, f'lll11P 1t11t,111ber, HCVrld Pit•
vllderslint<I pr"'°'" tc nil 1lcohallc L!1t101G, McC1.,IR lllCI Dl11tm00r 1"I' ullder I S.ecurily A.llrtem•nt wlll'I £•nl be¥1-ri~e1 11 Ille preml1t1, dtacr!bed ll I' R. Ktlfll DIMlftlOI', Ford Addl11tle" Ind Jl11lnla P/il!I" to!lewa· HJJ 0!"1n11 Av•rw., sun• C Pro¥t11tt1no ...c:llinl! 1t>lv -• ltbe
511 • Eli! Stlbal lllvd., l1lbDI, Cotti M1n, C..tlllrllla n•» Monarcll llldu1trjtf,, 11 dtblori. 0.1911 c..morn!1 Ttl: J.41-llU "'°"embf!o' JO, IKI, k.lllM of• ft11ulf
Purwin! 111 tuch lnttntlon, 1l>e un-Antmfy1 for l!•tcUler ullder 11\e 1or"8fTler'I .,.Ht Mii 1t Mlle dltJl1Md II IOPIYlno ta Ille Oep1rtmenl Pltblhntd Or1r19e c ... ,t O•llV Plkll, IVtliGn to Ille llltllHI bldclet' for Oii'!
a1 Atcohl>tlc lev1Ta1e Conlrol for 111u1nce M&v 71, :Ill 1nd Jurie 4, 11, 1961 19s..I. H Vtble 11 !tu! lime of nit, wllllo\lf w.r-an orltlMI M>Pllc1tl011 of 1n 1lco1>0llc r1 nt!n at !Ille, flt1111.1, or ll'llrWnl.iillll't',
beV11rlH 11,.,,.. (D( llctnw11 lor !hell LEGAL NOTICE and 1" IC(Dfdanct wlltl Sedlon t»i ol 11\e oremlut 11 lollOIOlt: talltornl1 Commtttlll COdt, !hi fotil'lllll'l9
ON !AL£ 1£ER AND WINE: coll1l1r11: caoNA FIDE ,.UILIC l!ATIHO ,.LAC£l f/l.JllJM V1r!C11N wood wcrklllf toot. 111d Anvane dnlrlnv' to orotes! !Ill l»lllnt! CEltlll'ICATI! DI' IUSINESS IQU)Pmtnl: lll1dt Ind 0Kket ltffl1I ot ti/Ch Uce~I! miy tile 1 verllled prolf11 UNDE• l'ICTITIOUS FIRM NAM2" S1w 7"; Crtftl!Mfl Ttb .. S.w IO"I
... 1111 lnY ofllcf ot tilt: Del>trlTMllt (II Tht unoeral9Md. AVCO FINANCE Bend s.w 10" 5Pflll'ltlll"I c:..m-1
Akahatlc """""'" Conlrol, within )0 COMPANV OF YAN HUVS, 1 eoo>or1lkln 0!111 Prn1 f'floMtt Cr11!1 lt AllOr1ed
d•Y• of mt' dlhl lhe prwosecl orrrnl.et Ot1Mlllied 1nd •xl1ll11e under ltle l1W1 of s..w l !adH1 81K.k 11'111 Dtc:•er •l>Olot' we•• nrst -led. 11~111111 1roulld1 tar Ille Stah! ot C11!1aml1. '1".:1 dol111 bull"'"' ~ H.P.; llltCll •llCI l>ldllf' ltoolor. 'II
dtnllt es -ICllM W llW. Tiie pnml:tn ll>erfln, hetltnl C.rtlll" b'I' lf>CI 11!,_ii H.P.; 811! Slllller l" 5.enll'YI Skll SIW ,,. 11111 naw llctnsed far the atlt of Its dlliY 111ltlor'litd ofllc:«a. lhll II 11 I" Biid 111d Otcltw: a.net! Grinder
tlcchollc tiwerien. Tl'lt form of lrtl'llllclln~ a Pe•IOflal lcln Ind 9•ntr•I Cr"""""' H•ncl Jiii Sew 1Jt!Mf11 2 OW v11tl!IC1llon may be oti!tlnftl lrorn 1ny finance bullne11 In IN C-IY DI 0rUlll'I, F11f Wldr CrOWl'I Stap1t GUMI ~ Oue ,111u of the [)epar!ment s111e of C11!!0t11l1, under 11\e """"! of F••' Sm1n St1p1tru J ,.ntum11lc. )Ht
Jamei [) 1,..j AVCO FINANCE COMPANY 11 tl'le Gun' Moll; 2 Or!N Molllf'I 'A l! \OJ
Sharon o' HUI tollcwlng loc1llOl'I: 1160 Soult. M1ln Street, Cra!lsm111; Mlttr lex $1WJ 2 (tlTlfllif
Publlllled 0r1119e' COllll 0111-t Pilot. Santa Ant, C11Uarnl11 that II Is lh• SG1t J1c~t; IWncl TMlll, wnnc:l\H, "'""lo Jlll'll 1 lKI t5'41 owntr O! 11>11 bu1Jnn1 llCI condudftl, •ncl ll1mmer1. KrlW drivers. 1111111 -"""' ' Illa! na cllle• perlCll Ot ,.,,_.. ire In· mt~. tcall, C Cl•ml'I 10, Hein fllrl,
tern lftl !llf"elll; Illa! lh Plfc.! of f•l<i'nolOl'I Qllrdt Ind ll"'nn. Wfrtl
rts!dtnct ancl II• prlnclP&I ... ,, of bfl!Clln 1..cl llbltl, ldd med'llnt dltdll 1,,,,,,.,,,--;;;:--=:::::::::;:;:--;;:-:::::-:-::-lbu•IMll It 6.5511 \/1n NllY• 8oulev1rd, V1n rn•-·'· desfl: Incl cf\11,, .... ctobl""' NOTICE 01" INTENTION TO •NOAOI! Nws. Cafllornll . LO PIY oblloatlons Incl .. wfut ·---
IN THE IALl 01" ALCOHOLIC OATED: This J1tt. div cl M1v lHI. f!111'IU1111 ta the llCllrltv "'""*"'· li'll lllVl!ltAGl!S A\/CO FINANCE COMPANY ulldf,,11ntc1'"""'"11\t rl;"I,. bllf.-
Mlv 'Jt, lHI OF YAN HUVS D&lldl Jvne J, 1HI
LEGAL NOTICE
TO WHOM 1T MAY CONCERN: BY~ P1trltk Kmnelll McCllvlt, PHILIP RATHGAIElt
Sllblt<I la IQUlllCf of Ille llClflll .... Vic• Plll'llllent ltft' •. W11111Y
JllllCI fOt, notice It llereb'!' olv•~ 1n11 tne H!ilcn Miry O'COl'lr>or 1111 Wtf,tclltl Ori"" fUH• 214
IHKle.,l,nrd pf'OPClfS lo t.etl 1tcchotlc SH:rtlary Nt:wPort .. .ct. C.llflllnll n4't o.-.-.~,_ ,, JM PmooJ-OHcrlo.d .. STATE OF HE81tA.$KA Allame' fOl"•l'lllM" bltlSllW .. -'°''°'"'' COUHTY OF DOUGLAS , II Pllblltfted or-COii! o.nv lit MOO WHl COii! Hkll'IWI' On 11\lt ""' div of Mty, lNI. Mfolll J1,1119 J, 19" ,.,..... H-f1 a...:11 (Ill) ~. H1rl'Y I . Col\lll, 1 lloflrv Public lft
Purwin! to t!Kl'I 1nttnlloll, IM Ull· llld tor H id COll!'llV Incl Sl1tfi, rnldlng LEGAL N011CE
oter1l1Md ll tPlllVI"' 1c 1111 OePlrlmtnt ltlereln, duly commlulorttd Ind 1-...orn, 1 ------~===-=c--~ 01 Alcolloll< l evereve Conlrol tor lllUlnct ,,.,,.,...11y •-!'Id PATRICK KENNETH IUP'l!RIOR. COUitT o~ TH•
b'I' tr1n1f.,.. OI an 1lcohllllc bever11e McCAULEY, -..own lo mt !o be 1111 Vic• STATE OF CALll'ORNIA 'Oil llCll'l1fl (ar llcan1eiJ f« !!'lest pr.,.,.IMI 11 "'Hldenl, Ind HELEN MARV O'CON· Tlf• COUNTY OP OltANO•
lollaws: NOR. ~ la me to bl 1t1t Secm1ry of c.ek HumW D-lntt 0 N·!.AL£ BEER t. WINE AVCO FINANCI!:: COMPANY OF VAN SUMMONS
lllon1 Fldt Pub\I~ E111"9 Pllctl NUVS, 1111 CarPCt"ll!on ""'1Cl'I tieculNI , RICHARD G GUNST, PltWlft YI.
Anr-11t1!rl111 fo prolt'll 1111 l11u1nce "" ... 1111111 ln1rr11rn1n1, bal!'I befnt known f/IATRICIA A. GUNST Oofrrw!iflf
Ill Midi l!ttnM!(I) ITllY Ill•. Vtrl!~ P<O-to -ta bl Ill• Pfrsons wl'to "'~lilt "EDf'L£ OF THt: aTAiE Oflll
1"1 with t nY office of ltlt Dlotrtmtnl of wllllln lntl'rvml'lll on bel\111 ol !tie CALIFORNIA to 11\eo 8t10ft 111mtd 0.. Alcchctlc Btvffl~ Control, .,..lll'lln llO (orpor1liOll lltr,lft ...,..ft!, end llllY fendtnl·
11o1v1 of "" dlhl lllt 1>~ prem!Mt •dl,_ledeld ta ,,.. "'•' wld CarJ10r1llon You iri l't«ltrv dlrecftd to fti. " ,,,,,_ _,.. nm pes!fd, •t111n; 1rau11<1s w •Jo:K11'"" nw: Mme. 11 i..n Jn 19 ,,.. _....,
1Xft(41 11 P<IVkled b'I' llW. Tlll P"""IHI IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I ll1n 11 • ne -l'lt ero -lltef'illtl far Ille 111le ot •lcollollc llt.-.v"lo Ml mv ll•ncl 111<1 .e11 ori 11'1• di' ~II~ or'!:"'.=-'~~;:'~ ftie tltvW-. The lotm ot v1rttle1tlon mev •ncl YHr nnt 1ba-.. wrl!Mn. •bow enltllf<t KTICll'I brWtlr1 "leirllf .,,..,
ol)t1lntd lrom 1nv ofllct ol 1h• Ill HfrrY B. CoMn I 1d r1 w!thll'! TEN 41\1'9 1f19t fie o-rtmem. · Nol1rv Publlc In 11\d for ;,: cou ' of 111" "'"'"'°"" It *""'"
NEWf'ORY FOOOS. INC. 111!0 C!11,1"1V Ind Sl81t 11111~ .. ~ ~-·-(lllllb' • Wltlllll l"!Jbt(lfled Orlr\111 Colll Dlllv ,.llal; 4111.0C W II ....,.,.. • .......... +-t--lr--1 Ju111 I, 1... · m4 J>ub11tMll <>rar111 O..st -o.11't' fll!lel, THIRTY din If wYOcl~!1~rt ... < 1---==~-cc;c:=°"=-~·--JuM J 11 11 7S. lt61 t524 You •I'll lltr.W fltllll .. lhlt 11111 ...., . . ' '° flit • Wrllttfl ~ ..........
-6/W
L EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE nld •I•'""" wnt '"'' ....,,_, JW ,,,, 1 -----,~..-------l---~~~"...~".'.~~---I"""'.,, Gf °""""" dllnllldtd 111 ,,.. -"•'UM1 Plll11t .. ll1illfll -Olntt'1CI; W ... IP".: c •RTll"ICATli Oft au11111•ss f/1"1'm .,., lo 1111 <Ml ltM' ,,.., °""' ~
l"ICTITIOUS NAM• Cl!ltTlf'ICAT• Of/I au11N•SS demlllOICI Ill"" ellftl>llMI, 4'--~
l'\'11 undtrtltned OOH ctrtl!V llt II ~ ,ICTITIOUS MAME Y• lllll'f ..... _..Cf ti•~
dl.odlllll I b\tSlMSI ,, m1 Gr~ Line, n.. undlralQrlfd fof'i Cff!!f'Y flt It ~ .. 1111' """" _.., ...........
Co.I• Mts1. Clllltcr1!11, Vlldtr 1111 fl(• dllctlnD I lluthtl If )JllO N-.1 a1vo .. J4tlllf .. .., .. -hO .......
111 1ev1 firm n11n1 of Tltl·MAN ""'-" 8'1cll, C1lllar11l1, undlt IN lie-1111Ulll M _.,. .......,. ..... W
CLEANING SEIWICE!·Tltl>MAH CAltPl!T !ll!oul fJrm lllmt ot INSTANT (ltEOIT 1t1!9f Ill ltltl __.. ftr ..... I ~
CLE:ANING-CARfllE'T MAM Intl ltllt nld OF OltANGI!: COUNTY Incl lflal Slk:l l'lnn 1ltdlltt tfi lfle r~. ",.,,.
llrm II ~ of the torro...-1,,. tNrlOl'I· It ~ of lhl llltlowl11t ""'°"' Oil" Mir Jf. lHI
w11oH 111me lft fUll t f>CI 111tot If ""ldenn wllost -Ill fllll ..,,., !!llift el ""IW!la W. E • .IT JOtlN 11 .. fallDwt : 11 111 !Olla'lll1; Cr...t • • Delllld M. KortOfl, 101'9 AtC01 Clt<lf. Mlcl'latl J. Powe(, S1M M"lvnt Iv M«ll Y. ~
Huntf1111111'1 811dl, CllllWflll , A_, N-9 a.ad\, Clllornlt. DIHtr Cltttl
O.IH Ju111 :a. 1'61 _ DIMl:I M11 11, lHI. U ... 6 McC#tl•
[)ocolW!ld M. Kordl Mlcllltl J, fltw1f' HQ °'"'"-Sllltfi C
11•19 til ClllforFll.e. OtlllOI COYtttr: '''"' °' CllllOITti.. Or-CollMVf ~ ..... c.tf.
•
°" JLllll 3, lfff. btfOl1t not •• Nal1ry Oii MllY 11, ''"'· bllor• "''• I NOii'.¥ Tlh 14f.17N .... fllubnc In llld tor Mid st111 • .,..._Ill' f/lubllc Ill Ind "" ... Id Milt. _.,.,..,,,., Alttnim .., f'Mllttff 1 ..... , .. Df!Mkl M. Kortan 1U10Wn lo 11'11 -red Mlclllel J. POW« kllOWT! lo "II fllutlo~ ONiWt CtMlt Dlllp :'llliili!
lo bl 11\t f/111'-wllctl Mlfll 11 111btct'lb-to M IN ..,._ wlloM Mmt ll ..aulr> J-4 II, 11. U. INI -..;
tel i. n.. wt1t1111 1111trvmeftt .,... Id to ltll wllflln 11111"""""'1 '"'L============;;;;:; teto•lldllll ,.. ~ 1111 M(M. l(bleWledftd he 111 ....... IN ..,,..,
(Clf'l"tC•AL tPLJ 10FF1c1AL se::ALJ • PENETRA 00 ... ,,..,. I!. O....lt °""'"" M. llvfttY ...
Netllrr fllllbllc.Qllf'Om111 "'°"''"' l"vbllc • <•'"'"'II flll'lllUNI Off!O Ill fllrlMIHI Olflc. Ill
or11111 C:-IY Otll'lll'I CacmtY
""' c-1'\IHllll'I IQll1'11 Mv CammtHIOfl EICllrH
Ju"9 fl, "" J-lS. ,,..
M11.+y _,,,,.,. NH!I {ttt
DAILY PILOT, "--,.._ -
"'''' fw th1 F•~11IMt Or•• Co1d. fllubH"*I 0r...,. '*' D•llY "llo!. fllutn~td Or•'lfll c:o.11 0111)1 f~kt~ JUN J, 11, 11, 2S, 1• tsHI. MIY 14, JI, 211 tflll J-I, ..... ,._ ____________ _, -.-1•---'------
•
-• • • • -e - --. -• hr ... e ts t E • m • • tr -e. ee a .. t tr tt a O DD 0 0 0 t Rt 9 5 t O • D p
H ... LY l'ILOT
Everyone H .. ,
~thing Tho!
fuadaf, Junt 4, 1968
•
'
•
S-1 Eke Want.-THE BIGGEST SINGLE MARKETPLACE ON THE ORANGE COAST-PHONE DIRECT 84Zo5678
You Can Sell It,
Find It, T .. de It
Wifh 1 Wont Ad
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
-·• 1000 Gonetol 1000
~tf{¥('
2414 Vista Dd Oro
Newport ].Poch
4-UNITS
P'ull.7 rertted tOwned ~ Loan
Co.) ~ in, iood location,
exee~t ta x fkduction,
Small down wlll do if )'Oll
desire. Monthly payment of
$231 • monthly Income of
$430. Lendtt said MUSI' liq·
uklate thla uaeL Fu:ll price
on!)' 1311.500.
Ph. 644-1133
CONVENIBICE PLUS
TRIP!ll Y(ilh
OWNER'S UNIT
We have lwo outstanding trl·
plexes that are located In
ltle top Mesa Ve~ area,
bullt·inl, dining areal, Jaun·
dry room, 1~ baths In stu.
dio & the third bedroom in
front units. Llve in one unit
for leu than S55 per month
or rent all 3 &: make OVt'r
10% on Your money. If
you've got a littil' money
this CM't be beat. SJ9,SOO. •
•
COATS l &
WALLACE
REALTORS
---546-4141-
(0pen EveningtJ
To IChool.s, WESTCl...lFF l::::i~~~~~~~~
SH(>PPING CEl'ITER • " d HARDWOOD FLOORS publlc transportation. CU•
tom """' bedrnom, two $Z l 995 baths, hardwood !loon:· fore-1 ·
eo<I air heat, shake roof and
breezeway to dooble garage. Si0/o Govt. Loan
Large comer lo~ -Priced 3 BR 2 be.th home with near
to Sell at $29,950. ne"W 501 Nylon c a r p e t s
throughout. Built • in gas
kitchen, shake shingle roof,
r--~• i big yard with l5x20 patio.·
$119 month pays all.
HOU!jS FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
GentrAI 1~ Gin1r1I 1000 Costa Mesi 1100
OWNERS MOVED
Need just 1 buy('r 101· 'this
terrific Mesa Vrde home. 4
BR 3 bath, IK'J>Gr•le 18x23
family room, seporate din-
ing room. huge yard with
large hee.ted I tillered pool.
Drive by 2837 Elle5mere &
c::aJI to see inside. Consider
ail oUers.
Newport
at
Victori1
646-8811
{Open
Evenings} COSTA MESA OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
B WI h p I >15-9491 °"" tUI 9 PM ~ycrest t 00 Investors
$52,500 Looking for good investment
Mammoth 4 bedroom, J ~th at a sensible ptic::e? Check
Custom Ba)'(:l'l'!St home with these 12 units located in ex·
16' X 26' heated. and filtered ce!Jent rental area. Adult
POOL. One bedroom and occupied furnished 1 bed·
bath is on the C>pposlte side room units built around
ol the house Irom the ot!tcrs large pool. Well maintained,
and would make good situ&· can only increase jn value
tion for maid's quarters. Ex· $127 OOO '
cellenl assumable loan, and •
owner flexible on down pay.
ment. Submit yoor sma\Jer
borne for traif".
20i3 WESTC.'LIFF DRfVE
293 E. 17th St. 6464494
Eve. 646-5752
Harbor View Hills
Coron• del Mar
Assume
5 'I• 0/o Loan
On lhls outstahdlng 3 Bdrm
2 bath Co.liege Park home,
with18xJ6H&FPool ·
and pay onlj $169 mOl'llh.
646-7171 • 546-2313
OPEN EVES.
THEQEAL
'ESTATERS
College Perk 111S
4 BDRM, 2 bath, trpl, cpts
thruout, xlnl cond, con-
venient toe very I h Ing .
$25,789.44 BY' 0 W N ER
5'6-53Z!
Newport Beac_h __ 1_200_
DUPLEX
Excel loeation on peninsula.
2 BR & 3 BR. Remod<!led.
$43,950
OWNER.
\Vkdys & eves 673-2950
REDUCED To price of lots!
Low dn., E-Z terms Lovely
:i BR 2 Ba home on 2 lot!! nr.
bay & ocean. Can use as 2
apts, rm. to bid. Prk. rear
121 4lst 01vner 673-m9
BY Owner. Har bo r
Highland&. J Bdrm, 2 ba,
loyely patio. lJ,000 under
mkl value for quick &ale.
$29,CO>. 64&-0647 or 646-5118
HOUSES FOR SALE
Huntington Bt•ch 1400
"Hippies"
Wouldn't appreciate th la
sharp, clean 5 bedroorfi
home. Features Include
Bullt·lns • Dishwasher • fa:n·
ily room • king site master
bedroom • cabinets &.-stor-
age everywhere' • VET$ •
move In with no down pny-
niertt. $29,950 makea it lhe
lowest priced S bedroon1 In
l(j~. -
S46-:i313 o.,.n Eves
.
HOUSES FO,R SALE
Fountain Valley 1410
ASSUME GI Loan
Low doWl'I 5% % Vet loan. 2
)'e&l'I new. 5 Bdrm home,
fully earpeted. An ex«llen!
bey for lara;e family deair-
tng lovely borne.
LISTER REALTY 342.fi633
L19u,.;a Beach 1705
. ..:t• r ALS
Houses Unfurnlthed
General 3000
B/B
RE N TA L PROPERTIES
WANTED for Sununer &
Yearly. We are rapidly
getting booked up for sum·
mer and sliLI have many r_e-que~ts from our repeat cli·
ents. ALSO we a.re desper·
•tely 1n need. of Yearly Renl·
at•. Bay & Beach Realty, ltlC.
20Zi W. Balboa Blvd.
RENTAL DEPT .
673-3663
RENTALS
Houses Unfurnished
Condominium 3950
WATEJU"RONT Dlx 2 br,
prlv boat dip, deck, Hun·
ting1on r.tarina, $325 847-Q\)U
Summer Rental• 3995
DELUXE WatcrlrOnt Lrg
Duplex. Npt Island. bool
dock, Jndry, garage. l\-1ln 2
1·1ks June and July or 1vlnter
season. 673-7861 wknds. or
805:96s.-3174 col\.
'"'L. .)
Apts. Furnish.d
General 4000 THE~EAL
ESTATERS
ntE BIG ONE
Dramatic Lagwia Bch home,
estate aUe cor. Jot. 4 BR &
den, 2 levels. Sunday Pie·
torlal Llv rm; Spanish type
frplc, blt-in range & oven,
$31,950 • On. Pmt open to I ~~~~~~~~~~ offff. 1 · HOLIDAY PLAZA
DELUXE, Spacious l·BR.
Furn. apt. $135 + utll.
Htd pool, ample park~
No chlldren. No pC'IS.
--~~--=~-!Mission Rlty 494-0731 Cotti Mesi Bankrupt?? ~E~.-,.~1~1,-n~t ~F~ln_•_n_c~ln-g
3100
Paying rent! Own for fl.35 Channin&; 3 BR, 2 bn home
per month. 2 bedroom &. lge level lot, walk to school,
famlly room, Built-ins · Dou· Only $31,CO>
ble ({arage • large yard • Los Padres Realty
low • low down payment. 895 Glenneyre St., Laguna
Why fight high rents when Beach. Ph. 494-8833
you can own so easily? OCEAN VIEW 3 BR. 2 Ba.
Open Eves 546-2313 fpl. Decks, patio. Recuced
THE~EAL
ESTATERS
·KEEP COOL
$29,800. 494-5678, 833-5441
Riverside County 1800 * $8,000 * BARGAIN HOME
Sparkling New. Secluded
3 Bdrm, carpeted, adult.s
Only. 642-6200
ll5. 2 Bdrm, garage, leoced
yard, range. 178 E. \Vilson.
1965 Pomona, CM 642-5858
Costa Mesa 4100
CM ..,_,.,. . $25, Wk. Up
Newport Beach 3200 • Studio & Bach apll. • ltacl Utiill & Phone R'l'V.
• Maid Service · TV avail. Exclusive Townhouses • New Cafe & Bar
Kitchen bit/ins. Community 2376 Newport B!vd. 5'1&.9'/'ffi
Pool -Yard Maintenance.
3 bdrms, 2~ baths $25/Mo. fi.rRN. Bachelor Apt. $85
mo. Compl pvt, fenced yard,
3 bdnns, 2'h ba · · S28.5/l\-10· util pd. Ideal for one ivork-673-3663' Eves: 548-6966
Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. ing adult. &JS..642S
2Q25' W. Balboa Blvd. •LARGE 1 Br, quiet. New
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 I cpts, and paint. A.dults. No ::: pets. 2452 Elden. 640-2768
Newport Shores 3220
Out of State owner amcious to
WALK to the beach this sum-seU small home on lge
mer. Also enjoy sharp 3.BR (50X168J fenced cor lot in
home, huge living room, Rubidoux fW. Riverside) 5
carpets, drapes, heaV)" mi to Univ., 2 mi to dntwn,
shake roof. $3000 dow-n & as-close to bus 2 Br, gm !iv
sume loan • ;J.63 mo pays rm, family style kit, 12 x 24 NEWPORT SHORES
$75. Gar Apt., 1 BR, util
pail. 274 E. 19th St. C.l\-1.
Call 646-3734
Newport ..
Victorll
641).rn.t · Open Eves. Lusk • built homes located
BACK BAY in the Southland's most de-
siratile &· fascinating area.
Schools & Calif. Irvine
all. Can't beat the price • scmd &: gla.ssed all-purpose 2 BR & Den on years lease
OCEAN VIEW, i;•ee Simple only $20,500. rm, ba, covered carpon Sl.90 mo 642·3430 S©-$65 Small trailer
Custom borne, 3 bl', lrg den, Paul Jones Realty w/lge tool ihed & in. bii Ulil pd. 1 man. No pet.I. Evenings Call 6'6-t579
NEW CUSTOM HOME lovely ganien. ~.900 For 847-12!i6 Eves. 842·5844 attchd. Chicken pen & fruit Coron• del Mar '3250 S.1!).1551 alter 8 p.m.
appt call TilE OWNER 4Br.,2%BA,2sto!'¥.i_.Beach tr~5-!_.'!'_axe~_a.1'!_1}~ yr. -N · t 8e h '200 ---~ .-john inacna B.rancL .J]e~-cont~ Campns-jUst. m o:in e.a t-c
with stone front. • 3 large away. Sensibly priced lrom
MZ-3004--Evee.-&· wee~s. "'"Norlh'ile\ietoP. ~ Yfll.-oid. Sinl fciii1 S5fm. pymts 3 BR-R'Ou!e. Lease no<tmo. -ewpor -IC _ ""
BEST BUY -OWNER fcrmer model, well cared $60 mo. $8,000 or best oUei:. Scenic Properties • •• • 1-·--<·-lil>VE!f'SROR..C--i
Contemporary Spanish Bay-
lront Home, 4 BR, 4 bllths,
dining rm, Activity rm,
magnificent entry ball with
sweeping open ~ to
2n~ floor, enonnoua kitch·
en, Pier A Slip. Owner mll51:
sell!
bedrooms -2~ baths • E?C· S34.900 to $48,900
~JllOOl .wlil>-~USK-HGMES
fireplace.· Dining room and Directions: MacArthur Blvd.
a kitchen -that wiU delight trom Pacific Coast Hwy. or
mother· S35,500 -10% down. Newport Fwy. Turn on San
546-231? 646-7171 Joaquin Hills Rd.. then
3 B~ Ba.~11 bltns; lrplc., for, mo~~ in _,~itio~~49~ .. :§""6't':.'=':;:;=:;-~=:;=:> 675-
5725
• ~ _ .. I .. W.JlL-lWE--__ -··-~w C'prg., di=apes'. ... S'2J;9(i). ··:re n c ea Dl 0 c K w a I 11 . y
420 Colton, 642-3273 backyard; coo.iered patio, Condominium 1950 Balboa • · 33oo ADULTS ONLY ·
•
""""" -F67.SOO Submit offers
333 Mornlnt1t1r Lane
Call for ApPt.
642.t235
lnterestlllCJ Interest
5~ '7o finandng available to
an)'one. Owuming, roomy
and vacant 4 bedroom 2%
battl H a r b or Hl.ghlands
home. Dining •rw. and fam. BUY VA or FHA
Open Eves follow signs to model area.
THE~EAL I
ESTATERS
Newport Hgts. 1210
lly room or dm with book Low, low down payment on
shelv@S plore. Large COV· this charming 3 BR wHh
er"«! patio. Euy to assume dining room, 1% baths stall
high existing loan. $212 pet' shl1.oter, hardwood floors, AVAIL lmmed. Cliff Haven 3
month covers all step-saver kitchen with built· Br, 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean Vu
Colesworlhy & Co. ins, lovely deep pile w/w FH.I\ """ A Sweetheart Inc Apt S49,500. 548-724S
carpets & drapes, lovely $2200 clown, $2U1 per month
642.7777
including taxes. 4 b\o-'e11~. Chaz·ming furnished home Univers1ty Park 1237 stone fireplace. Only $23,950 "' ». ,. 1 u th be h · th • call now. 1% b<ilhs, lgc kitchen with us o e ac in e
1004 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Open Eves.
extra cupboards, blt·in R&O rr:os~advantag~~s ;~a:n 7 Mo. New-By Owner
'_·•C li~llll t dble ov~;·1i~·l!I scpar~I~ ~eor;;~.~:iiam~. Ritr. 31geB~/r~. 120 f~:;ill~~~i~~h Wiiiing To
Oo Some Work?
am rm, x iv. ~m wit 673-4350 OPEN EVES. C""ts, custom wood tile firs.
lrplc, upgraded quaLity w/wl !!!!!''!1!1!1!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!J'~~!!!'~ "' · 1,; d ood mirror doors, master BR
This 2 bedroom, 1 bath home 1003 Baker C.M. 546·5440 <.'1l \\'rps, w shingled VACANT $21 ,95(), $1 .000 On. Is in need of paint and small ' roof. nlk to school!!. J BR 2 b th t • & entry. Nr. UCI, many
l'
, a s, carpe s, xtr as, S26.CO>. 833-0:»i
rcpain, but well worth Fireplace, blL-ins. Goo d I==========
SlS,9.lO. HU@:e comer lot that Bay & O,eean North Costa Mesa localion, Corona del Mar
bas a future value. Put your Vi"ews 9~-. near OratigC' Coast College.
money to work. Larger 2-BR home, fucplacc, r.11ZELL REALTY 5-18-2'108
1 BR, 2~ ba v.~th huge Fam open beamed ceilings, dou-
rm, Din rm, and large wall. hie car garage. R-2 lot. Close Costa Mesa 1100
ed patio. One short block to to markets & transportation.
""" Bay and ao.a, s,.,,,. $I B, 750 Victoria Mesa
7682 EDINGER I!! • • · •• • • • • • • • • • • · • • S59,500
642-4455 OPEN~ Walt-Haase Wells·McCardle Rltrs. Homes
WANTED 54&.7729 Eves. 644-0684 Low dn . 6'i'.. o/o JO-yr loan
. ~ 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 16 NEW HOMES
Real Estate Sale1 ~le. ·~ From $23,950
WHY NOT GET ON nIE Coldwell, Banker & Co. Valley Road at Victoria
BAND WAGON? nt1 E. c .. ,, H11t1w•r WANTED (Just E. of Brookhurst
Ovef 25 Yea.rs in H_,. •••di, c111temi. AGGRESSIVE up on bluff!
"'' f.Wl OR 5"2tM SALES Oranga County MAN Lido size lots, fee simple e Full page advertisin& p I H Liberal Contract land · High above sea Jevel
e Inter office teletype 00 ome Contact: Gene NoA-eU @ Built · in electric
• Trlinln1 Pftllf'8.JD $22,500 Orange Coast Property kitchen. Conveni-
• Insurance Better see this today. Three. 3.12 t.1arguerite, CdM 673-.8550 ent to shopping
• Many other benefits bedrooms, 2 baths, cloS(' to center, near new
Call 6464t94 -Fot 1nterriew &flopping and best of all • NEGLECTED schools.
WESTCUFF
only S750 down. Call Novo. ;'\ BR, 2 B.A, covered patio, 3 and 4 BDRMS • 1 & 2 sty
fruil trees, many shrub~ F ireplaces, auto garage op.
Ntt<!s pelnt, clean up. Trr· erat?r. carpeting, draperies,
Immiaoolate 3 BR in 'Move rific Eastside locatio•• A-.'·. fencing, landst"apiog. In' coodition. ' .. _ living .• --...•"' ing S22,500. CALL Glen Michael Kay, Builder rm. 2% batha, cowred P8· Queen 540-1151 Heritage Phone 642-2821 Eves 642·5106
tlo. ee.t. '--· ln town fol' a>43 WESTCLIFF DRIVE R I E I U\q ea sate. COr-.JE ONE -COl\U: AU..
1250
Cameo Highlands, spacious 4
br, 2 ba. On canyon, $36,500,
O\VNER 67J.4.t23
Lido Isle 1351 -------Bayfront Lido Isle
2 Story, 4 BR, 3 BA, 2 kitch·
ens, best side of bay. Could
be converted to duplex.
\Vatch the boots come with-
in 20' o( front windo\v. SP..:c·
tacular vi cw~ DirccUy
across from Balboa Bay
Club.
BY OWNER
Phone for appointment
67J.!Hl2
JUST LISTED!
2·story Koll CUSIOOI qua1it.y
features thruout. 3 BR,
tam/dining rm. 3 baths. 2
rireptaces · $69,500
LIDO REALTY
3400 Vifl Lido 673-RS.lO
$34,500. 646-m1 Open Evr! -====~= LIDO REALTY · NEWPORT WEST-Everyone g u a 1 i I i cs to Builders Home
• Don 't n1iss this sharp exec assume this 5% 7' loan with 3tOO Via Udo 673#1(1 Br•nd New Listing ho . P'ym""'' of '"'" ~,,.,. ... ,·n_ 5CXXJ !fQ·ft. 4 BR & maid's '""':!!!"!!"!'!'!!~!'!~!'!!!!!•I me JUst offered bv own. ~" ~ """"" " ; b 3 ' 4 & family room in Mesa er. •I BR, 2 BA. comPr 18nd· cludin~ laXC'S & insurance. a, car gnr. 111 ·101s.
with many extras These · I I d II to apprf'cinte. Brokers we l· I 'TRANSFERRED Verde Highlands ultra-sharp scapcd, f<'nl~I. otany ,,. &aut!ful 3 BR Mme on Unt1~ual fC'a1urrs. ?>1ust Sl'C
And anxlow: to sell; large 4 , , . lra11. Assume 5% % loan. No quie cu . e. I a r , "' beckoom, 2~ baths. Cathed-don t last long. Excdlent qualifying. No l'OSts. Savr built-ins, remily r 0 0 m , come. 520 Via Lido Soud
rat miina livina' room fep. 5'4.% loan may be &5Sllmcd. thoosands ! S2S,!l00. 962 _9981 service po1"th etc. CA.LL l --"'='·~16_1~5.~E-'~":....:615-;:_1~1';~9:_ iai-ate dlninr & famlly ~ms Ca.II noow for further details. 540-11!;1 (open eves} 75• on Lldo Soud + extn. large rumput room College ReaJty 546-S&IO S•lesman or Woman Heri1agt' Real E.statt' '2 separa1r Iola • each hall
Best loeetion, neAr llChool. WANTED BY OV"NER Pier It Sllp. 3 Br hOme on
Delta Real F..aute 646-4414 BALBOA ISLAND lhvl'IY. new ultra modern 45'. Guest house & pool
CUTIE Dup1 "X Jllneu forces sale of lhla Du· Grah R f 2-story 4 bdrm. 12 30' lots. $250.00J · ~ubmit ~ plex near Bay. 2 BR l bath am ea ty king-s1U'I, 2 bat&, {twiu R. C. GREER, Realty
Sfatp 1 BR uni ta. 8e&utifWly + J BR I bath. Good l'E'nta1 {near Po11t Office I sinks). Fireplllcl': I a r g e 3416 Via Lido 6i~9300
Jancbc8ped e)CI rerq:es, &ft'•. Owner lives OUI of 149 RiVC'rside Ave., NB yard. quier street near Atay * SACRIFICE!
._ lot. exceptiorlal buy, ~ • wry 81lXious to sell. FOR Sale. F'allbrook area Co. " Catholic Ii ALL F'or qu.irk sale. Vacant lg 3
OtD for appt. to see. $21 ,500 RJtr. 646-3928 Eve. 64Ul18S 11,! Al" w/vit'W, 6 rm ranch fhool~_6S~ ~· 614,.~ ,):Jr on 50' lot. ~tt1 b\Jy on
PERRON REALTY co. *LACHENMYER ""'+ 5"" ''"" o• ..,,,,\. ~'®' ""' 1-8..-338'1 UDO. 14.IXXI '"· 157.IXX\. lltb A Oranae 642.1771 Avoc•do ~ fl'\Jif trtts, Lrg or Q\t.•nl'r 642-Gni, 675-2447
DAVIDSON R lty Mew Verct.-$24 000 pool, patio $.54,00J. Bkrs. BY 0 w n f"" • transferred Completely Rcd~att'd
M 4 Bedr~Rumpus' Rrii. OK, Ph! 714: '128-8ll2 or East.side, l bid< Cilliol.ic Ol.a.nning 3 BR. custom-bit
TWO ACRES t baths. Luxurious paneling 213: 38&&Jo O\YNER 11ehl, sp11c 3 BR v.·/fam rm., formal din nn, lgf' cor lot
Prtme prop. nr SouttrCoaat Fittpia~. DWng room. VACANT -S21 !M S1 (XX) l\i BA, bll·ins. S'24,!MJJ. 302 ()y,:ner/Agt. 673-5166
Plaza A~ PWatie Q>vcred pado. Butlt·in ldlcb-3 BR, 2 'bathz, ~~· Wlllnut St.'~1931 ~!)-7602
YUienoe Ir O:lrnmndal. en· much • mudl mottl Firepia~, Ut-inl.. G 0 od. SllARP Oean 3 BR close to Huntington Beach 1400
Fdtr., nso H.mr 58, Ot1: 540-1720 North Cos!• Mesa loeatton au. Assume 5'4 '% lOfln. Onzy
5*6111) EYe1. !HSS!G TARSEU. 2!fJ6 JWiK>r • near Orange Coe.at Collegt. S19,:n:J. Kennedy k_Asaoc. No Down to Vets
DUl'LliX SITE IRVINE VILLAGE I MlZELL REALTY 5'8-:mB &12-9730 """· 54H23S Sha'1' 3 BR 2 b1ilt ockllt ""
SCARCE LOT • Npt. ZO' to By Olovner SpanlM 2 br on MESA VER.DE 4 BR, 3 .Batb 3 BR. 2 Ba .. hltl\ll; hdwd. eupfed home near shopplna.
OcNnfrvnt bdt. Try otftt, Jrttn belt, nett pools. 1hc,p. Dining. Family nn. Po0I. •n>1., lge, kitch. &: din. ~Is Ir DouJl.aa. FHA bK
p::l,(Q) Balboa Real Elhlte pinf. $24.500. 442.27(1 ()pen. S43,950. * 5(9-2042 area. Patio. Nr. sthool!I. sit.500.
Co. 100 & 81ll>oo Blvd. . 177.500. 0wn<r 54&-7837 PERRON REAL TY CO,
'1Ml40 White eJl!phanta! D11ne:1 .. l.ltW Whfte elepbantJT Dlme-.a·llne Dial 642-5678 fOl' RESULTS 642-lm '--------
' •
crptli, drps, bit-ins (elec), 2 YRLY Lse. nrocean & bay, 2 J I A r
frp!cs; liv rift; din rm; fant. $153/Mo. BR, 2 BA, dblt gar ., waJll'd UY• Ug. • Jepf.
rm.; 2200 sq. ft. Cement Heart of Newport Hartior patio. sun deck, no pets.
driveway. Nicely landscaped area INO..UDES prin., int. 673-1269
$35,900. Call owner 847-fMO AND TAXES with only 10% I.,,=========
Eves & wknds. down to 1st TD, Spacious J Huntington Beach 3400
MERfDITH GARDENS
5 BR 2 Story 3 ba, lovely
cpts/drps, like new cond.
2500 sq. ft., many extras &
owner trans. -any offe~
considered or will lease/
option.
BRASHEAR REALTY
847-8531 Eves. 839--1537
Br with AU. extras includ·
ing private Club and-pools. 4 BR 2 baths large yird 2
SEE MONTICELLO. patios, alley access. Vacant.
$20,950 $185 month. Rltr. 847-1266
Walker & Lee, Inc. 546-1210 eves. 842-5844
t<~NTALS 3 BK., paneled den. din. rm.
HouHs Furnished Screened patio, car P . ,
----------1 drapes, bltns. $250 Mo.
Rent1l1 to Shere 2005 1 ~""~-"-'-'----~~ 3 Bdrm, elec bllns, 2 ba, 2
COlLEGE Or work'g man frplcs. cpts, fenced yd, S25Cl
Apt. lo shr. Pool. pvt. gar, mo. 842-2276
$70 mo. 642-lal2 aft 6 pm 2 BR. nr. bch, crpti;. drps. &·
WTD: Single g1rl In 20's to stove. Patio. $150 mo. tm.
share studto Apt in CM. me~:!. Occupancy. &16--2880 540-2918 eves.
FURNISHED APT.
2 BEDROOMS -2 BATHS
Waterfron'f/Loc
BOAT SLIPS
Channel Reef
2525 Ocean Blvd., CdM
673·1788
CUTE 'bayfront Apt suitable
for single girl who Jike-s
swimming & boating. $135
hlr . Util pd. Ll 8-1202 or LI
8-30'24
Newport Hgts. 4210
J & 'l BR ft ro!~ f"o,p., '· UnI.
No chldrn or pets.
2·!05¥.i E. 16th Sr. ,,. • ..-4664
ATI'ENTION! It's the yard
that needs the attention, but
here's a Shnrp Glen Mar
home orf VA no down or
FHA terms. 4 BR & family
room, freshly p a i n t e d •
Shows exceptionally well.
Asking $23.500.
Costa Mes•
Huntington Beach 3400 East Bluff 4242'
2100 ---------"
College Realty
Garden Oasis
A 4 bedroom dream home~
Rear yard is a garden spot
to bC'hold. Near Douglas,
scOOols and freeways. Pric·
ed at FHA appraisal of
$26,650. Hurry~
LISTER REALTY
Now also in Hunt. Beach
16612 Beach Blvd. 842-6633
-------5 Bedroom. 2 baths, avail
June 17 to Se.pt. 1, $250 mo.
Ph. 540J7gt
Newp.ort Beach 2200
OCEAN front duplex, seclud-
ed quiet. Summer from $115.
wk or Sept winter lease Sl50
mo. incl all ut ilit i es.
538-323'2 or 637-2777
B1olboe 2300
FOR Rent. Furn Bayfront. POOL TIME Pi" & flo'1. 5 BR. 4 ••·
Sharp home on largl' lot with l=J=u="='='="'=S='!>\=· ="="-=2039=== lovely heated and filtered
pool. Expensive carpeting Huntineton Be1och 2400
throughout. 4 lrg bdrms, MODERN G u e s I House,
$28,000. Near Brookhursr and Adams. prefer gentleman, $75 mo
LISTER REAL TY 842-6633 ind util. 536-7870 all 6
SUMMER Only -3 bdrm., 2 Income or lnlaws? tith., 19341 Qiana Lane H.B.
A delightful J BR 2 bath 962-9677
home + a 2 BR unit. BU.in
Oven & Range, w/w carpet.
ing, 2 car garage. Value &
terms lo please. $27,900.
R. D. Slates Realty
Laguna Beach
Rare bargain
For school year.
494-4474
2705
R47·3519 ";;::;i:i::r.:::;o::-.,~-1 Vacation Rent1ls Double Family Living 2900
2 homes back to back on se~
arate lots, CCimmon gate, J
&4BRs. ~
HA VE Beaut. furn. Ocean·
front studio Apt. Playa de!
Rey. $20() wkly, Ju T\ e
15/Sept 15. Also t.to. & yrly
rates. si3-4370
CHOICE RENTALS! * Lovely Surfside Town·
houses from $139 month * ctean 3 BR 13' bath !two)
$175 & $185 month. * Corner location Pacific
Sands lmpertal, cpts/drps
& all elect kitchen. $225
month.
Pacilic Shores Realty
536-8894. Open eves. 847.8586
for Lease
Large 2 story home. 4 bdrm,
3 baths, Prestige area, lT.'5
mo. Available July l .
LISTER REALTY 842-66~3
Lagun1 Beach 3705
New Home - 4 BR
2 ba, crpts, drps, Fp!c, love·
ly patio, centrel loc, sm
mo. lease. Corbin·Martin
Realtors 675-16.52
MONARCH BAY AREA
8 1'.:AU Goll & Min View
3 BR & den, 1 'Ai ba. cpts,
Orps, !rpl, pool. S250 mo.
Adults. 49&-U43 betw lt>-5 pm
Laguna Niguel 3707
NE\Y Unlived in. 3 Bdrm.
View Jot. $205 month,
• 546-1459 •
SUBLEI'. 2 mos. Furn 2 BR,
2 ba, Apt. Patio, ,pool, S..100
mo. Start June 15. 644-1352
Balboa 4300
2 Bdrm Oceanfront Penn. 1~
blk to bay. $15() yrly. 11..'>9 E.
Balboa. Rel 962-2868
Huntington Beach 4400
3 Bedrooms
Available June 15. l Block to
5 Pts stores. $140. Call 01vn-
er 642·2835 or ke)I. at 7701
Ellis Apt. D.
Laguna Beach 4705 ~~----
F1JRNISHED bachelor apt.
Priv. bath, walk to town &
beach, no cooking. $75 per
mo. including TV cable &
utiliHes. 494-2©1
.• , 1ALS .
Apts. Unfurnished
General 5000
RENT
3 Rooms Furniture
$25 Month
FULL OPI'ION' TO BUY
No deposit o.a,c.
H.F.R.C.
Furniture Rentals
517 \V. 19th, C.~t. 54$-1454
1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 77~
HAFFOAL REAL TY
"Home to Match Income"
874() Wamer 842-4400
S45J DOWN. Anyone .
TOWNHOUSE. 2 bdrm .. 2
Costa Mesa .51 OOCost1 Mna 5100 Costa Mesa 5100
baths, blllls, ctps, patio,
pool. Clubhse, $14,500. HAR·
RIS RLTY. Asgf'r JC'nsen :ws-1 ,uo, 002-1141 eve$.
3 BR, I ~ BA, newly-,~,-,.-.-,-,_
cant Vil'w home. By Owner
S2U.900 conventional'
968-3005
~fain V•l!!r 1410
Open House
Nov.• selling mode\ home. See
1!1471 Linden, Fountain Val.
l~y. 4 and 5 Bdrm trvm
$25,875 FHA · VA te r ms
Builder will help on your
closing costs. See at above ·
address or ca11
LISTER REAL TY IHU633
LARGE 5 bdrm home with
famU)' room . Carpeting.
dro.l)E'a. built Ins. fenced and
landscaped. Close to gram-
mar &chool and Fountain
V•U@y High. Great home
buy $27,900 842·2342
BEAUT, 3 BR. 2 Ba. house;
xlnt oond. Owner ~ flex·
ible on financing 531~
lS YOUR AD IN CLASSI·
flEDf Soml!One will be
looking far It. Dial 642..s678
lor qulek .. efficient results
O J!eorrange l-etter1 of the
rour tcrombltd W1Jrds bit-
low lo fo1m four .iimp!e words.
IWIDMEL
I I r I r
INIBER '-I' I I
IRA KAM
I I I I I'
I I' I' I I I
Gossips ore like blo1ters.
Tliey obsorb a lot of dirt but
u'uolly get ii -.
t)~pl.ie !tie clnxkle qoottd
by lilting In the missing word
you d ..... lop from il•P No. 3 below.
8 PRINT NUMBERED Ii LETTERS • l' I' I' I' I' I' 1·· I' I
(j UNSCRAMSl.f.FO.I
.ANSWfR . I I I I I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 8600
I
--
-.,,.... . ._...,...--. -F· ... f ••• • +
TUHdly, Jun! 4, 1968
RENTALS -
Aph. Unfurnlah•d
R_l;_!ITAL$_
Apta. Unfurnllhed --'---·---
REAL_ ESTATE BUSINESS ond • ANNOUNCEMENTS
Gonorol FINANCIAL • 1nd NOTICES
Corti Motl SlOO Lido Ille 5351 Bullnou Prof.!rty ~,!> Bu•. OpporMlltlff 63!>0 Loot 6401
LARGE Baylront APT. S WANI'ED T6 LEASE CANDY AU. Chrome Seara Spider Jl-ARJOR -Bdrm.-2 ba., .1.1-r r.,pJ a.c t. _f AMQt.!a.JDJE ADAM'.$ __ );_QPPI. '( ROUTE Marie: l Blr.)'cit v.·/r«J, k ~$.ti() • lse .Avall July 1. beauty uton1 nee<rahlipptnf --Patt or ll'u1l Ttme wb'.lrtiea1; vtc. or 40tti S .,&
GREENS &n.-2911' c:trloctltiQp:MJn1200lt. M.ui or Woman •to refill k ruvtr. NB,....l.Q....U.IJ &Aler
Agent TlG-1070 Collect money from new & desperately -needl tor -p~r
Huntington S.ich 5400 ==""""=''===='I unique coin o Per ate d rout~. Call wkdayg Ml-9449
Buslnes1 R•ntll 6060 dllpenaers. tC!JldY llld Nf-~"·· 6'r.h3319. Reward! BACHELOR • UNFURN.
from $ 100 SAC! Low down • 1100. sm.i1
cl til ba.lanee, good terms. Rent tn • u · .... "BR 1" l. 2 6 1 BDRM. w/()ption to uuY• r. • .,.
ba, Condo. Wuher I dryer,
----------donat Brand &iiacks1. EX-LOST: Siamese cat. Vic. ci
• PRIME Retall L«atlon • cellent Jncome for tew Hri. Victoria and Harbor, CM.
STORE l'f x 40 \\•eekly work {0.'lly or EvtJ). Motel TahlU Inn. Child
18'73 }larbor, CM 646-6G5t No sell!~, $875 To $3400 grieving. RewBrd . 6484129
* * * *
J'URN, • UNFURN. bl ,_, ~ ~. Heated Pooll, Cli!ld Can tns, u v-<:, ._1,,_s, ... l""•
Avail immed. $134. pn-mo. Dater, Adj. to Shopplna -rent incl interest & taxe5.
No pets allowed &1s.fi000
2700 Peteraoo Wl.J, at ffar. I ;iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii
bor 6 Ada.ma, Co8t& Mesa. , MOvlng June 7th
-··---= Cash requtrcd. For persontll,::=="=======
Office Rental 6070 intcNiew, ·gerui name. ttd-Porsonol .. "5 ----· --··-dress & pbooe number lo: 1;..o..;.;.;;.;;;.;•c._ ___ ~~-'-'
LAGUNA BEACH TitANS.WE'lTERN Froo
Desk ~aces available tn DISTRIBUTING CO. Baile 'Boiting Cl111n
newest office building at 500 N. AZUSA A VE. Off l't'd bU b
Wh•ddy• W•nt? Wh•ddy1 Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFIS:ATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAP~ERS
Special R•t._
!St6-03'lG Large 2 Bdnn w/garage. prim!! location 1n downtown COVINA CAlJF. 91722 e to pu c Y .S lines -.S t imet -5 bucks
Lai:una Beach. Air cond1-' Balboa Power Squadron •uL«;t. -•D MUS1 IHCl uOli
------. SILVER
GATE
$105.
Disposal, -Wttlet' paid. mo Delaware Ave., #C
537-03al
tloned, carpeted1 beautif'Ul PROVEN, Sure, m o d e r n f;lementary PUqUng Counca
. T method o! t ~a c b t n g Eveii Monda,y, Sl.llrtlng T
l-Wn.1 ..... N.... 10 tr-. ...Wll.fl rev ... !fl .,.. •• ._vou11 iNIOl'lt .rio1• .aaNu. • ..._) 11...., 01 ..,.,.,.1111111-
~0TMINa l'Olt S"'t l! -tfl: ... O!S ONI 'l'I
paneled partitioning. w o permanent . b~11 conl_I'ol. Pf.I, June 10 Newport Har-
en'trances; rear leads · to (E.G. Eat111g for wei.gbt bor Yacht Club 721) w an.
Municipal parking Iota. $50 control) with new low cost ' ' -.,
PHONE 6-42.5678
To Place Your Treder'• P1r•dlu Ad
Apartments
Deluxe Bachelor Apt
IJv nn. br, kltch & be.
1 & 2 Bdrm Apts
3 BR Apll
with 3 beths.
Near schools, freeways
Walking distanet? to DCC
988 El Camino
Apt. # 1 Cost1 Me11
Adults Only
Discriminative Tenants
ror Prestige AddreS! ·
MARTINl(j)UE
GARDEN APTS.
Parklike surroundings
FURNISHED BACHEUJRS
UNFURN 1BR·2 BR · 3 BR
2 baths available
Carpets, drapes, garage
18th & Santa Ana, C.M.
646-4233 64&.5542
2 BORM -2 BATH
HEATED POOL • Kids OK
$125 mo • cpts/drps, bit.ins
'PEltio. Partly furnished.
Deleware Studio Apts.
&42-2'l'll. anytime 536-1816
FllONT Triplex, 2 Bdnn,
slave, ~trig. Older Adult
No pets:. $95. 847-2341
w .. tmlnster 5612
LARGE 2 br, cpts, drpa:, blt-
in--Lndry, gar, $110 -$115.
847-2413
Laguna Be1ch 5705
per month tor apace. Add to public. Now t.eeking Ave., NewP?rt Beach mM eq in 4 BR fam rn\
$5 lot< desk and chall'S. Add a.ssoelate offices in So. o.c. OR~' !or your convenience home Panorama City, S.F.
$10 for .business hours an. Moderal,e. investment re. Every T\J.esday,_ starting T Valley. Fol-0111.ng6 Cow1ty
swering service. All utilities quired. Phone for inquley P~. June~· Ensign School Comm or office bldg, tn-
pald except telephone. appt. 714: TI4-n50 Irvine '· Oiff Dr .. Newport veat-Rlte (7°4) 'M>-7565
DAILY PILOT ~:.,...-==-.,,.-----1 Bmlch, m Catetprium. Noi----~-----
222 FOREST A~ TV Store .adyance reglstratl<in neces-Palm Dt"Sert; lsd. 4 BR,,
LAGUNA BEA1'1 Good location, Harbor Blvd, sary. Enroll at class: iJ any 3 Ba., .Fam rm.~ pool. H~h
-_ _,,:·:.,...~•!H-9466o.;,:=--c..,-~= _Gooc;LoJiportunlly for TV questions phone 54$!1374 or:;-sld~ ~,700 ~~ For
MODERN Offices from $75 Service also. $1200 full prict! 673-1855 me. · rM~e Y· or
per ·mo n t b. Secretarial tor stock & equip .. Call . X-ITEMENT Corona area n4: 346-6701
service. Executive suite. 548-8511. IS THE GROUP! ~pt Bch Oceanfront charm·
0 C \y Bank Bldg 0 . ' . . In Cpl & S 1 1 mg home on board walk.
range oun ., Bus. Wanted 6305 iscr~mat g s. g.s. Trade tor Pasadt>nrt''area 3
230 E. 17th St., CM. 642-1485 -------~--~arties,1 Trips, Outmgs with BR & den Bkr. 673-'1420
FOR RENT Business wanted, Up to intere.st. Plus -Exel. svc. EVes: 642-3561 Or 673-9L'Yt
Approx. 450 Sq. Ft. carpeted $10,000 down. Good net for girls, too! 714: 776-6941 1'°"-oo~-oc-~--~..,
& drapes, air-cond. business. Newport or vlcinl-3-9 pm. 213: OL. 7-6844 2-1' Cabin Cruiser, n<'w V·8
MARINER'S BLDG. fy. Ph: 642-7210 Franchise Now Available enr:.: sle...ps 3; value $2500:
-==========I Take "Ll's, ski boa t or clear 1515 \Vestcliff Dr., N.B. -NE\\'S~APERS, out or state Florida lot.
URGE 2 bedrm, 2 ba un-Contact l\1rs. Rainlo 642-4000 Real Estate Loans 6340 & foreign; magazines, Eng., , ~7616 !u-;•"~apt.complete\y'" 1741 Wostclo"ff Or PRIVATE MONEY G<"rm., Ital, Span, French,\=~~----~--"" ,......, · • China Russian· also adult 25 View 'Acres Laguna decorated, has large deck Prime toe for store or oHices. 1323 N. Broadway, Sant~ Ana maga~ines & 'paperbacks. Be6clt, Some improve-
·with v1ew. walk tu town and 2000 sq It @ 25c. Wal/pan'l. Broker 543-8381 anytime 1875 N. Harbor CM 646-8S83 merits, income $7700. $243,·
beach. $115 on lease. No Ctpts, Drps, air-cond. Cc:H>p ' ooo · • 11>' '"--N b k • BBC F ·1y M b h. equity .... or. ii or 7 <.tl.i....i.-.:n or pets. o ro -Bkrs. Owner-548-$86. Mortg•ges, T.D.'s 6345 . an11 em ers ip. Owner. 4!M-465.l 494-4!X57 er.o1. 4M-2604 ==,..:--"'~--~~-Will pay transfer fee. l\tov-'
""========= j2 c:im'\., 1 indust., 1 \V/llve $85,100 seasoned Trust Deed ing. Fee increased June t-BEAUTY Salon.'6 stations,
R I W led 5990 qtrs. Costa Mesa. behind $150M on 200 Ocean Must s e 11 immediately-estab IO.yrs Lido area. \Viii
'
BR-I" BA Split-I•·'''· enta s an Owner. 64fr.Z130 • I ~ Ir and I $ 0000 1~ • Vlew lots. $600 per mo inc . Make ofter. Wtite Box M 139 .. .._ ee c car 1 ,
Carpets, drapes, bit-ins, Exec. Seeking 6200 6o/o due 2 years, Active Daily Pilot eq. for R.E. or what-have.
dishwasher. Fireplace. Pool. HOUSE for 9 member fami-Acreige sales at $7~ each. Million WILL .ck 1 }'tlu. Bkr. 548-Till
Rrerea'tian room, laundry 9 · ""' Acres. '"Land of Lakes," equity. 20% di 4 c o.u n t . h . pi . upEcar 0 Y1"" StJ 000 EQ .. ho, ... , 0 ,. •• ,·~ ..
S _11 1 _.., ,.,. \y tor wmter mos ea. year. oo •=3844 c 01ce 111 urol):f', or . ., " .. ~· ,._,.
room. m ..... enc 06ini Ifs""' Beginning . Sept. 1968. Can Newberry Calif. (S i I v e r "~ privilege of driving this 3 BR 2 _BA, all elec. 2-!lly
SlSJ. Avail.about June th. turri hse all year. Call Valley) 18 mi E. of Bai-stow. $45,!XXI 2nd Trust Deed 7% summ<'r, ship in fall, Pvt. Z,000' deeded to.wnhousc, for 64S-7otz _James_J{elfricb n1_:m~ m.an-made lakes in area. _4Jte~t. Will d~unt 25%-.PJ~.D~H3.16. . ~te. car,· TD's, lot, boat,
BA'C'H. 2 &-"--3 BR:"" t:rg Apts. f.XF m --.. ----fuh raisirl&;-alfatfa grow-Ow-ed b k'i--~673-4356--
DLX Balbo& dplx 1 br, bltn
1<. furn a:lmosl nu, cpU,
drpi;, frpl, patio, lncd yd,
Dlk ocean. Trd Up Orangef
LA Co. units. 213: 698-6012
Tu'nhsc. 1·sly. 1 BR. Bltra
e:cc ki1ch, cpts, dl'ps, p1.1tlo,
IJOOI. $13,500. Trd f(ll. .. hn1 or
dupl. ASCER JENSEN,
Harris Realty. 546-1440, 902·
1141 eves.
WATERFRONT &: dock: 3
BR. J Baths. Equity $50,000
FOR: TD's. Condomin .. or
• ? , or !ease/option. # 2 Bal·
boa Coves, 675-4331.
400 A<"rcs {clear). Trade
$.1,0CKJ,IXXl equity (or lge
Comm'I or Apts (11n,y areal
Ask tor M/Pui>t":ell, IUtrs.
6'5-ol031 EV{IS: 646-4131 -
13' X 60' EXPANDO 1\1~
BILE H0t.1E, 2 hr, plus
cash. Tr1:1de for improved
or unimproved income prop
961-4600
Ha.ve 80 acres unin1pr. farm
land across · lrom opcr.
ranches. \Vater & l'lect
avail. $20,(100 r~&C. Want
units or cl<'ar home. c>.vn/
Agt 847·3444
JOBS & EMPLOYMtN I
Job Wa~·ted, L~_!'y 7~20
SECRETARY W .. 1'11• exlro
l)'J)lil&:, IBM ~C'C. Da>·a
~. '*'·. t48-'33fl7-
DAY WC:t'k wa.nltd. ~
cnced tady;-own-transp. •
Refc~a. • M1•9'.M
HoUsi-.."CLEANING, depelll
· dable and hooe!!I. Ow• car.
$16. -64>-7$!)
c AR p ET Cl.eanina. F11iol
strippinll· Waxing, Walls,
WindOt.'fJ" waaned. 531-0567
J~b. w-;;.1.;.
Mon.II '41omon fl>30
EXPERIENCED Mn.nage-
ment olapts. !{ave referenc-
es. Prelcl"-Laguna ~
area. Will be available Aug
1st. 540-9936
Domestic Help 7035
LIVE· INS
Employer payi. lees
George BylanU Agency
1re B E. 16th, S.A. 547-t1395
Help W•nted, Men 7200
POUa OFFICER ..
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
$3.16.-$773. Proposed for
7-1~ $$84-$831. Ex,·cllent
benef.it progran1. T e s t
June 7 offers opportunity
to compete for appoint·
nient to career positions
In prof<'l!Si()nal law en-
forcen1ent. Requir<'s high
s eh o o I diplon1a, min.
5'9", 150 lbs, 20-:-;o uncor-
rected vi~lon, U.S. citi·
"Lcnship. F"or further de-
tails contact
Persdnnel Offic8
CITY HALL
3300 Newport Blvd.
Newport Be1ch, Calif.
. (714) 673-2110
DAILY PILOT J!J
~OJilS & iiMPLDTM~" "
SKILLED -·!E---1 AND
UNSKIWD
MEN NEEDED NOW
TO FILL V1\CANCJES
NEW DEPAftTMEN
OPENINGS DUE TO
PANSlON lN oun 0
ANCE COUNT\' DMSJO .. ,
STARTING $ALAR'( 0~ $120 '
per wMk, & up .
fl\lMED1ATE EM Pt. 0 li· · M Em' F'OR TI-IOSE WJ-14> ~
QUA L 1 FY, COMPLET~
JOB THAlNTNG AND RAP.·
ID ADV AN CEMENT.
REXAIR INC.
ORANGE COUNTY DIV.
r~or tntormatlon cnll
Monday & Tuesday
774-7251 . :
~---''' BRANCH •;
REPRESENTATIVE , :
'\'.oung person who Ms 5001.fl I
college treining can pro· '
grep• an "his own ability ' :
a management p6sllion. :
will assist this person witl1 ;
our Jonna\ training pro. ;
grnm, group· benefits & an :
eou itablf' si11arv. . 1
PACIFIC FINANCE : : 1~&9 WESTMINSTER : :
WESTMINSTER ;
Equal n ... !X)rtunlty 1•mtl loyt'f': ----· Chemical Trainee l
B1i.i;ht <tmbitiOU$, young 1nuh
~·anlcd to work in procluC.
t1on. No t>X'pel'irncc r~·11ulti:: '
ed. 1 year college cl1<'mistr~ 1
pr{'ferred. Chun1:e fol" ad' ,
vancement. ~X{'clle.nt benC: ~
fits. Call Mr. Sw1as tor .
appl. 5T,rfl48 . '
HARLECO DIVISION
AMERlCAN
HOSPITAL SUPPi.Y
Irvine lndustrial Comple
.--. --Y'"~ NTER"ESTING OIO pictures e ' -' · • -r-; Florida: Have l ge 2 BR Cy. A-·• j~f 'U---..-
W/cpt" d,.,,,, bltn». ., QUIET rl<in I 1 ing, •ki lak•, """'""°"'. ""'" p-rty. w•lh $400,000 & . ~ f J d DEAR RE B PART TIME S!IS an l'ianager ' 2S8.'i l\fcndoz~.· · !)15-542! ,_..,___ 00 wo1, .... g __ """'..,.__.'·..,.H0ft't-i~hing, ,lakes, reslaw¥t ,_n4· 682--3189or pO Bo.x _,.·pnv,a;;,.~pen ~\-tu !!7· ¥ ~·..,,· ~·OJ><ointf--c-·1-~P~'""'n· ,-(;Garden Bt'l.'a across -c=..:=-1---,,,-----::-:-0----l·'-·--I
... -i:nr-... -b dg. sites, all H'APPEfyrN ?452 rr·-·-!de Cal rom-: O<!T""V•M.r-ear ¥ A -OU-v.,.·gut It pointf alct &; patlr."$16:000'" R ... ""'°'d • 2 BR Townhou~ 1% baths. house/apt. ~Yust be elre -ivers ' . Dodge City, Gunnison, Colo. Horace Blanco clear, Want unit• o·, ·m' ~11 " e'1"' neeue.: new Country Club
b · I d $1•"/ _.. _.., in area? This parcel great TD T • a <lU · d · lt·tns cpts rps. "f\1 mo. kitcuen, [ireplace prclen·ru. Bring your s lo rust 'Salt Lake City 673-8316 CdM Classified Manager home h"'-. own/•M 841-~A•• I eal part 11 me job
d I 0003 bl for a trailer park. level __ .., b h I '"" -· ........ · A u ts 54....-.io 2 \I/ill lease U ace>Epla e, Dl:t'U Center w ere t e EXCITEMENT1 working 5 nights a week Food & beverage manage~ '.
2 BR, Gdrn, <1pt, [l'plc, w/w Newport Bead!, CdfM6, Lag. 1~~·:~~~·:e~ ~':1~~~ed buyers are. Jack Smith Co. GO-GO GlRL'i BEER & * * * * * * from 6,to 9:3Q p.m. Pay ment. Experience r<"quired ..
crpts, bltns, lg pvt patio, Bch area. 842-3TI8 at Pl\1 on main E/\I/ road. Route 1323 N Broadway, SA Open 9 POOL. at the QuEEN BEE, ranges Slart fr o m Local references. Age 25 tb '
pool. $145 mo. 54S:-5163 \VANTED lo Ren I un-!i6 Freeway just completed lo 6 Sat. Ph. 543-8381 1562 Newport Blvd, CM L .li@Ji AN'* $228 per month 3:'i yrs. Restaurant manngC.: :
$130. LGE 2 BR. Studio Apt. fmnished house July .1 lo wulb of valiey. Gas stations 90o/0 loans to$60,000 ALCO@U Anonvmous SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY No elq)('rience neces-mcnt degr<"e prercn·~ L~;
E (. '" d Sept 1 Ne~ Beach. 3 I · · c-•1 ~INGLE-FAMILY = W _.. · twi·al salary. F'L•go •n~ ~. nc pa io, cp...,, rps, gar. bednns or more. Re ......... nsi-easing in area. n.i owner or more . ., Harbor Area. Phone 673-8724 Cement, Concrete 6600 Haulin·g , 6730 aary·. e nc.:u nine ex-" .. "
Nr. Ba~r & Fairvw. 546-0689 ..,,_, 8474i640 eves & wknds. Bay J\fortgage ~o. 646-46~ P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. _ tra men now. Must have fits .. Send r<"sume pr.rsone :
ble, neat family waiting On CEMENT \V k LI U liv!'d in this area t w 0 direetor, Box 432 lluntiilgton REAL Nice l Br apt. All
xtras adults, no pets. See 539
1-Iamihon btwn 5:3().7 pm
ne\v hollS(I being built. Call Meet Dynamic Friend• . or • a types:. LITILE GIANT TR CK Be h 92~ S 632-63-15 or 646-1550, ogent. Wholesale Land M w led 6350 'th 1 ILn I"" No job too small. Free est. Hauling. fi' hcighth, 10' bed. years or longer. Call for ac · ·~ ·
NEED double garage for
yearly storage; p re t e r
East.side Costa Mesa. $15
Per month. 613-2549
oney an wi s er g qua iues. H STUFLlCK ~8-$15 You name it I haul. Reas. appointmenl.
OfferinCJ INTERESTING old pictoco• =~·~83~!14~991l~-"'·'-~11==·======1 Big Johnli42-4030 ,." BUS BOYS
40 acre ra.nch sites now be-& private papers of Judge. YOUNG, Responsible cple., ~tractors 6620 CL~E~AN=-Lo~ts-.-.-.,-,-.-,.-.-ct~c. t,fr • N~. n Newport Beach 5200
JUST Completed 2 BR, ·2 ba
sngle-sty. Frpl, chndellers,
lush cpts, dri>s, iron gated
pvt patios, cement walls
btwn units. Medallion kltch,
FA h"cat. Across fm. Coco's,
Wstcll Plaza, 1665 Irvine.
$200 mo. 642-0239
2 Bdr apt -ocean view.
U75 mo. Yrly. No children
or pets. 642·3978 eves.
4 BR, 2 BA, crptd, drpd,
Across street from beach.
$300. * 642<!.535
5240
ROOM Wanted in Corona 11\el
Mar for working man. Call
after 6 PM 671'2512
ing offered at $1500 pet From 1867 thro early 1900's will '"housesit" your home & Tree removal, dump, skip,
acre. Beautiful view prop. Dodge City, Gunnison. Colo. pets: for summer. 6-t2-15&3 • ROOM ADDITI?NS • backhoe, fill, grade. 962-81 45 ·774.7251
erty in the country, con-Salt Lake City 67~16 MEMBERSHCP In Newport . L.T. Constrti<;tion
Rooms for Rent 599S
$15. UP wk \V /kitchen $25
'up Studio Apts. 2316 New-
port Blvd., C.M. 548-975.5
veniently located, and min-CdM, Beach Tennis Club for sale. Family rooms, kitchen or
utes to metropolitian areas. ==~~-~~~~~1 $G80 673--9566 Eves units. Single !>'tory or 2;
For more inio please call $25.~ for 6 month15 at 10 and . I . . plans custom destgtied. For
Glenn Thompson with; 10 with $100,000 trust deed FOR Sae. charter mem-estimates: & layout phone· on 200 Oceanview lots as bership in Newport Beach e 847-1511 9 ·
Eckhoff & Assoc. Inc. collateral, 4M-1137 Tennis Club 644-0739 Licensed Contractor 1818 W. Chapman Ave.
Orange, Calli.•
W-~, Eves-wknds ~721
ANNOUNCEMENTS Re8idential • Commcl'cial
d NOTICES Anno11ncements 6410 Ma.int & Repairs. Free Est
Motels, Tclr. Crts. 5997 I ~~~~~~~~ In i • ti73-2129
6210 Found (FrH Ads) 6-400 Coast Health Club Additions • Remodeling IMo~~u~n~t.~&~O~e~se~rt!._.~~'.l~~;:;;:;:---;:-;:;;;-;:::;:-:;:;:I $5 per night on W€ekly basis al Hospitality is Our Motto Fred H. Gerwick, Lie.
and up. 2384% Newport FOUND: Light brown m e FREE SAUNA WITH 673-6041 * 549-2170 ~UNK beds, antique lce-00:< P4J. White male part BaSBet SWED SH E Blvd., C.M. 5J8.9755 + odds & .ends, and will hound. Vic 20th & Tuslin, I MAS.SAG •
Housecleening 6735
*APT. cl.EANING •
Fast & thorough J fUrnish
everything 642-8164
Interior Decorating 6737
One Call Covers All
COMPL. DECORATING
• Painting, int. & ext.
• custom Drapery
e CUstom CarpctiJ1g
YOUNG MEN 18 to 25
Experierlced or not. •Learn '
sales with a guarantee. If
--you can qualify J can offer
you : e $15Sper w,eek 1al•ry· e A new C•dill1c e Man19.ment
Training
\Ve furnish everything except
desire to mal<<' money. Ap-
ply 1500 Adams, Suite 303,
Costa Mesa 11-4 p.m. daily. Back Bay th{'ow in rather qnaint cot· CM. 646-8432 Open wkdys 10 am-11 pm C•rpet Laying &
VIE\Y 2 Bdrm .• Cpts, drps, 1 M~is_c_._R_e_n_t_al_• ___ 5_99_9 ~e~!~ ~take it, plus WHITE poodle type frma1e iJ2 ~~~{;,s ~~ am-8 :i~50901 _____ R_•~P-•_l,_66_2_6
bltns, {l~~ $145. OUTDOOR STORA(;E space BR.ErK NOTI' RLTY 54&6464 puppy. Freedom home area. CARPET Apts • Homes
• Walt CQver\rigs___
• Color Coordination
20 Yrs. Exper. FREE Est.
Samples to YOUR Door. Day
OJshwaslter OR 3-3690 available f.or rent. Up to 2 or residence. &il!-6355 F1ea collar & 1 blk spot. Funerils 6412 Quality in.<.1allalion. Free and 1/3 A. ~Isa Ave. S.A. 646-4047 eslimate-11. All prices. Lie. & Ins. Res. -Comm.
Corona del Mar 525a
rB6
ON TEN ACRES
l & 2 BR. Fu111 & Unfurn
Frplcs I Pri/Patios I Pools
Tennis - Contnfl Bkfst. 9
hole Putt/Green.
900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2fill
~M1l'Arthur nr. Coast Hwy)
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
Cj)UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
•
542-9533 2-R-3 TOWN lots, Morongo COCK-A-Poo approx 7 mo. R 5464478 eves. Lie. Contractor
__ G_A_R_A_G~E~fo-,-R~e-n_I_., Valley, Calif. Building f.a.st-white & tan -darling. Vic WESTMINSTE
$20. fi.16.364.5 ~:;a B?:d.~r,Sp~~~·: Ha1·bor View Hills. CdM MEMORIAL PARK,E_l•.;.•c.•rc.i.;.C•c.1 ____ 6640_
MODERN
DECORATORS
536-9513
Full Time
Excellent SalBry
& company benefits.
Apply betw. 2.;5 p.m. 644-2560 ' -REAL ESTATE Valley, Cal. FOUND I .ured bl nd Mortu•ry & Cemetery ELECTRICIAN, Licensed &
General SEEAdv.undcrcla~620080 C k S-.n1J cha· 1~ k Complete funerals bonded. Small jobs,
Landacaping 6810 SNACK SHOP
3444 E. Coest Hwy. ----------1 acres -"Land of Lakes" c:::Ia:~ nop:;s: 2856inCo~o from $245 mainten . .i repairs. ~520.1 GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING
Income Property 6000 847-6640 owner, eves & Place, C.M. 545-3855 Cemetery lots & GARDENING SERVICE Corona del Mar
wknds I $130 G d · 6680 State licensed contrctr, 16 Lovely 1 BR Apts. LITTLE Blk short·haird pu~ rom 1-•-r_•_n_o_ng"-----.--Residential. Commercial REAL ESTATE
1 Furn, beaut lge lot, perfect BUSINESS ind PY· Approx. 3 mos. Vic, Include~ E~dowment Care ANTHONY'S rree est • No job too big-
rental area Anaheim. Nr FINANCIAL Driftwool Bea<'h Club, li'B . Everything in one beautiful Garden Service 893-l58l lndepcndmt friendly office
everything. A p p r o x Inc. Dys, 536-2962 536-9532 eves. place means less cost. ha11 opening for associate
Sl9.ro::i yrly. Asking $1 36,000 Bus. Opportunlti .. 6300 I ===~~~----I No traffic problems. 646-1948 Paperhanging with some knowledge in land
RiC'hirdson/Purcell SIAMESE Kltten approx 14801 Beach Westminster COMPLETE CLEANUP p • • 6850 & income property. Top
PARTNER With $15 ' 0 00 l. ~onths vie Colle~e Park 531-1725 ' 893-2421 LAWNS REPLACED 11nt1ng Commissions. Panla ~ally Realty 675-4031, 646-4331 Eves needed. 2 new patented (Princeton&-Colwnb1aJ C
I-IOME & INCOME by Ch\'!1r mechanical machines now 549.1371 _ . . .. Reas, monthly care. Prun-WAU. Coverinis & in-Co., .M. 642-6660
-odyfo'm"rketing. Pol•"· 5t:l(YILC OIW:t:C:IOK'Y ing. Landscaping. Exp. hor· sta!lations. See Samples at COLLEGE Student Exe deprea:/invest. oppty. 4 ..... .. FOUND F 1 k"tt tiaJ unl imited. 545-4412 eves. ema e 1 en, grey, . tlculturia:I. home. F1od<s -Foil • Vinyl permanent position, f u II BR, res. &· 10-2 br Apts. Y:earing small red collar; B1bysitt1n9 65501--J----G~rd----....... 11 c•7 tG59 bef-• 8 om ,, .• ,. •·mm-,,, P''' to'm•
pool, 2-yr old. Es id e . FRANOllSE-Famous Edie vie. of 18th St., Costa Mesa . ipan•se I ener Schw';'rt~. "' . ., d;;;re ""school, at Chevron
6i,j.-.t393 :xpd:~~ CUg .t ~ ~~ ~o sa;xpon 64&-6515 Bb~B~~1;!~r ~[ °ly w=~ =:~: ~:pl:!~;:t: INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Station on beach in La gun A. \VE Are seeking conservative YOUNG .. A'M I bl k No hlppJet: Must be --JS investors: who are satisfied nee. Xlnt profits. 776-7070 pal, '·"a e, ac playmates. Fncd yd., hot e 548-7958 a Painting. Free estimate, · · col Jar, fou n d Coast lunches:. 548,2308 . licenaed & Insured. Salary + Commission wl to earn 1870 after income DRIVE-In restaurant in Highway, Corona de! Mar. LAWN & Garden mrunten-rnlSCll. 4M-9oo.1
taxes on a fully SK'Ure l.nvst-beach city doing high gross. 675-2440 days ~ILL BABYSIT by the week ance. Cleanup. Spray. Fer-Call CHUCK 548-5•314
mnt. Agt. 642.5495 or 673-7645 Asking low down. 7:30-9AM LADIES 1 . blk 1J1 my home. Good refa. tilize Com'! & Resl. 962-7349 • PAINTING • Interior & Boys Wanted aft 5 PM 673-65111 .--g as.~es m ca:se 962-3151 -Exterior. Free estimates. ages 12 lo 14 evenings and
-15 units, 2 BR,, hardwood, or er · Vic 22nd St. & Npt-Blvd. CUt & Edge.Lawn Reai;onable rates. 646-30I5 Satu.rdeys. Apply now for
floors, garages, laundry, GARDENING ROUTE 646-1949 BABYSITl'ING In my home. lttaintenance, Ucen.!.ed. rummer work. ~ot•k 'with
$1;435--mo. income. 548-3846 NB & CM area. Reasonable ANS S "" NEW ·-' Hot lunches, fenced yard. 54S.4lm, 545-5870 a.It 4 PM Plumbo·ng 6890 circulation fi.eld manag;,r_ 642-4400 M ' uit ""'g • vie. Weekdays, eves. 496-3636 '"
574 Hamilton, Cosla Mesa. tC~o~o~st~·;P~lo~m~, ;c~.M~-~84~6~-7928~~1 ;~~";:~:'.::;''::'='°I * MOWING, edging, & clean Will train. Transportation Need a Garbenat1ngle1 THE QUICKER YOU CAU., ;:::: • up. ltfonthly rates. ljee LEAKS? Gag OI' water elec-furnished. Phone 546-86'97
Find tt with 0 wont ad! THE QU1Ch'ER YOU SEIL 6401 Brick, M•sonry, etc.6560 estimate. Call 968-19U * tronlcally located under ce-
. '
•
Lost WANTED Boy s for after JAPANESE G!ROENER ment, blacktop, ilQUnd, sthool work and Saturdays
BLACK altered cal with S. BRICK, c;oncrete, Carpentry EXPER. Reliable main!. walls, r.howera. any place. We will train right boys for
toed front feet. Friday night Custom Cabinet.I. Small job5 Reas. mo rates. 892-3219 Repaired. \Yater lines clean-circulation fie Id sales.
from 1974 Federal Ave., OK. Free Est 96:Hi9<15 CUt &: Edge Lawn ~Af.r~~~.A~~~:iio34B • ~vlous training·h(!lpful but
COflll\ Mesa. Please call -• Maintenance. Licensed. not necei.sa.ry. For fuU in-
548-1003 Business Service 6562 548-4808 _ 54~70 aft 4 PM BankAmerica.rd OK fol'mation phone ~
LADIES mi.all blk, leather LAWN SE"'"CE 115 MO PLUMBING • SERVJCE_ -SLalion, N"..-.,. purse; contained glaases, PAINTING and PaP!rinf. U "'-•• . , REPAIRS REMODEL .....
billfold, etc.: vie. River St. you call me we both ben~nt. Dependable, Professional 642-312& :i~ ~~~~ne•,"',.'"H',';'!,· nr, 40th, NB or N'pt Blvd., Exclusive but not exptnSJve. Weeklv SeNlce. 9£2...6.119 oeo•" ...,,
CM. Reward 537-SlCM Try me and see. 541-3151 MOWING, Edging, vacalawn. S.wlnp 69,60 Texaco, l4CM N. Coast Hw)'.,
G 'I I H ··" Laguna &ach. 494.3000
REWARD Re1urn/info Irish BuUders 6570 Od~nJo~:.anup.* auu~8-s9.35 Alter1tion~2-.5US MARINE MECHANIC
Setter, Fem. "Amber" vic '----------·!'=::::'..::;:::::'.:""'",..;;.....='~:;:; N 211 1 1 -eat, accurate, yrs. exp. Engine & Mech 1na:ta lalions. S. Magnolla Ave. Newport REM 0 DEL, rep alt 1 e JAPANESE GARDENING
West area H• .. Bch 536-4473 plurnb'g., painting, elcc., Service Cleanup, Landteap-custom yacbtil: Excellent ,... TILE, Cer•mlc 6974 PflY, Willard Miit Worka, , ,.......-Mal 818,.,,.,se 1 3 carpentry, resid., commerc., ing. 531-7034 aft '1 p.m. __ :.,..._______ ,_ Bak -;
.....,..,, e ...... ca' room .additions. Re a•. *Verne, the Tile Man * "~""~""""'~··~· ~C~.M:::.,. ~-~ >'f9; of •ge, near Edwards It 675--3038 Generel S.rvlcet 6612 0.1~t. work. ln51all & repaJn. WHO~ UghtiJ'la-Fix-·
Edingtt. H.B. Rew 1 rd . · No job too t.naaU. Plaster tur.e Showroom ncec4 man
842·7373 C•rpenterfng 6$90 CRYSTAL WINOO\V patch. Leaking 5 h 0 we r who can bani:. and rewire ~tEN·s Reading' cla&Ses in Cleaning, Proft'Slional, Free rep&ir. 84T·l9Sf/&16-0'lOO ll&:hlln.g fix1ure1 also some
ca."t?. Vic NB. John Alex-REPAIRS * ALTERA'I'lONS en, buslneM, ret.i.denttal l JOBS & EMPLOYMENl stock rootn wrk, FELO-
a.nder. 64i-0262 CABINETS. Any ~7.1' Job. construction. 548--8131 MAN COMP~Y. 547~1
LA.DfES White gold watcti on 23 Yr• expcr. 548--Gnl Paintlng, Pti.hnbln1, CAr-Job Wanted, Men 7000 DELlVDtY· Coela Mesa
Foreat Ave. C C 6600 pentry. Reds! Rel. Insured. • ll'Vft", Full Ir JNU1 tfmt,. 18 A Rewan.t. 494-1439 ement, oncrete BankAmericard OK D,f.SPERATE Oft:r'. With own ctr and in.
l.OSJ': Men's glasses, dtk CUSTOM PA'?TOS It Call "Mike" 6G-0343 l.,._ )'tar CoUege ttudent 1urance. ·Apply at: 1920
nctds ~ • h8' OWJt Bl .• CM altcr..2-R.m. frames. Vtc of N'pt Pier. Block wall1. Alao -ooncret11 Hauling 6730 trans., rtlllblt, h onest. " .. ·~~s~ di h
5/26. * KI S--8860 sawing .l: ~movnl. s.ti.1010 VArled exp. Drllret poir!Uon ~. ~""a me, .ear
BLACK MJnlatur• poOdle, Floora-Walb-.Patios & Ex-I ltAUlJNG. Trash "P'drup. a.i. clcrll, ctock aM/or about the beat deal in town.
s.hngy. Vic 20th &: Orange. poled Rocke. Ex p • r I 'l'rtmm.hw. Al\Ylhlnl .. we do delhrCYY boy ~tc. Ca 11 --,.--,==;.,=--
S1t S-25. Reward 54H13 workmaNhlp. 14).85Jj tt ao. ExDft' work. ~ 833-20'1J after 4 p.m. CHARGE m
-
18 & OVER
PART TIME
fRY COOK '
Huntington Seacliff
Country Club
3000 P•lm Ave.
Huntington Beach " •
10 AM to 2 PM * 53&.8866' :
Assistan1
ATTENTION t
summer employment for a:ev·
cral coUegc studrpls who
need employment untll-&!i>
tember 1st. Prefer men ma·
,ioring In business, law, or
psychology, Enjayable and
intert'&ting work. and invalj
ua:ble experience for m<'D
majoring in the above fieldi
$115 per week ;
For preliminary intervieVf,
call 539-1183, 9 -2 p.m.
Busboy _&
Dishwasfiers
Full and Part ·Tltne
Day and Night Shifts 1 ,
Over 18. -,,
Apply in peraon ~
BOB'S BIG BOY-• '
154 E, 17th St,
Costa Mesa
Career Opportunity
Join todays fastest growing .
profession-Mutual Fund sale
No experience necessary·
Wr train -full or pnrt time 1
Mutual Fund Advisors; -i
Inc. ,
Npt B. 1600 Wc:stt.Wf, 642-6422 ;
S.fi.. 1212 N. Broadway, .;
547-83JJ '.' I:
SERVICE Station Meehan· '
l"ull time. Experienced in
tuneups, brakcs & wb
alignment. Top wa~ &:
commission ror qualifl : l
man. Apply Laguna Chevro · ·:
~ S. Cll 'HW}',-Lag{ina Bch: '
./ YOUNG MAN to work 40 l
hours week $175 "'eek. 20 t -~1
30 car necessary. F o j. i
personal interview c-a-1
weekdays Mr Shakoor Sa I dleback Inn 541·3311 '
ASSISTANT bookkeeper -~ ·~
Jice mannger for medicfll of.. :1 r
Oce. Must be able to work •
weekMds. Salary open. ,
111 LI ~7711 '
SERVICE Sta Attend.an -
over 21, light mech expet;
Union Statioo, 377 ~ •
1 NB 1, 1
SERV Sta. Att. Sal+ comm I
673--3320. 2'lOl E, Cst U ;;~:m ::• :;:: ··1,
Exper., fllll time. 1699: ·
Placentia can-W. 1'1) C.M. !l
Auto Parts <bunter Mu ... ~per. at;. Aulo Parts 'j
20i'J Placentia. CM ..,
P/TlME MaimenlU\Ce Ma i
Gcn'I ctesn-UP, UtC ~ 1 req. 543--7158 ~ •
1. l _,
f
1
------. ---------..__ ~----~ ----~ -__ ..__ ______ ....._____ -• ..., -• - -+. -• e .. -= ·c n • e e • e = e ·· - -= ---n n e a tt o o·· 0 + e a • e
~ . ......... '
="'' .. ,:-. _,, • --.... ' . . ., . • • • • !• -., . . . .. . -. : .. ~ .... . -' "
I
.
•
, ~'tA>NLY PILOT · Tlltld11, Juno 4, 1968
'"""" l:Ml'LOYM&NI Joas·a IMPLOYMENI JOBS a EMl'LOYMENT JOBS a EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT JOBS a EMPLOYMENT MgRCHANDISE FOR
•
MERCHANDISE FOii
SALE AND TRADE
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE ~------· -SALE AND TRADE
'-lalo Wanted, -7200 Halp W111Nd1 Mon 7200 Halp Wan!Od Halp Wanrod 7<400 /2 Halp Wantad -aooo·
Wom.tit 7400 WCHMn Women 7400 Furniture M J1cellal'eou1 8600 MIKtll•n~us ' 1600
:,;.;;"'-------. .. . )----------( t Robinson's ---':..f'emie11--- -KING-Sia-Don"" Mcd•m. • arpen ers -PWOllllH ProductiOn · Hostess ;:;,, ~~.! .::•
MOVING EAST·MUST SELL 1,_Q'{_U!_F GOODIES ,_ _
'56 p.ty~ $100· K,in&:-st bed to cttoose trom, 2 tentl, l~
1..'0mplcte .,.. I sheets, blan-10 and 9 x 9, other campJD&
)tctt, spread, pillows $200 supplies, ill lrl iood &h•.P!
{only 2 mo oldl Antique gr. and cheap! 14 n . aluminum : • Elettrlcians . NEWPORT . CLfRK _J Typist -~:~~~~:~.. l'uJI tim• ' n1ih1 w .. • .. 1 ""'" u""-SJ• .::
Trailer or mobile home: ,.,,, M... Brunch Waitress Garage Sile cricket chr, nu cushions & boat, jig saw, vacuum
uphls. $15. Batlery operated cleaners, Honda 55, mlnt
tape recorder SlO. Para-t.."Onditlon 1959 Cadillac, 4 dr. k~t & cage J!O. 3 hol,!Se hardtop, MANY more mis·
planters v.·/p\ants $10 for Ct'llaneous items. l<Xfil Lo6
flll. Zig-Zig sewing mach· caballos, Fountain Valley.
in antique gr .. treadle cah-
experlence ·preferrcd. Ex-Hn optnlnt for Rf'IJIOfl'lble woman for , For intere11ting ottlce. 646--0531 Sunday ·only 4 hours. MOVING! aothts, JW1lilure,'
ctllenl benefits. l'ront Office polit.lon In-Shorthand not necessary, l I04 1· IJth St. bicydet. motor c y c I e 1
'
lnterVlews STARTING
MONDAY 8-12 noon
Appl.y ln pcnion
EXPLORER
· MOTORHOJ4E CORP.
~ -
4000 C1mpus Drlv•
Newport 8e1ch
~JR. SECRETA~
Young woman with minimum
, l years general olf.i~ V<·
perlence. Type 60 wpm, tran-
·: scribing experleoce a n d
'" shorthand deairable. Posi-
: lion involves correspondence
typing. answering telephon-
# es and general receptionist
~ duties. /
; Clark Typl.t
• , Minimum 1 year genenl cfl·
•, ice experience. Type mini-
(. mum 50 wpm. Varied duties.
' ' .• .
' ..
'
HARLECO DMSION
AMERICAN
HOSPITAL SUPPLY
Irvine Industrla/ Complex
NEW
Mfg. & Dl•tribull"I
Fl rm
We need 20 men to train
1: in all de~enls In an-
~ positions. No experience
necelll8ry.
Starting Sal1ry
S495 a month
MAIU'IDI AMCE -Volivtng payroll, typln;, Speed, accuracy and de-5,S;;~,7~~· Age"'21 to 35, me 14 or b.scliold items, oddJ & ends.
lnlln flllni: etc. Per110nnel ex-pendabllity are required. .. .... LE under. Experienced only. 549-2628 1241 Conway, CM
E"GllllR perlence pretetTed. '""" Apply in lll'fl()n f.ftor J. --
Apply ANNE HAUSER Dlvi1fonal Mnaaner • 1100
IN h II I I ~ Appbanc.n o p one ca a P eeae lroln•• fiv1 Crowns 1'-'"'---------lnet, nu paint $50. Singer I ...".002::;.000:;;•'--===--;-;""""
"' luprighl) $!5. Toy box SCR·AM-LETS Perm1rwnt 1'..ttlon
Excellent leMf1tt
APPI.Y
Newport Stare
10 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
An equal opportunity
employer
Local manufacturer h11
lmmedl1te openings for:
• Electronic
Assemblers
• Wiremen
We are an est1bll1hecl
commercl1I firm with
liberal fringe benefits.
Oftfy paopla wllh al
le11t six months ex·
perlence should 1pply
lo
PARAMElRl(S
Apply Personnel
lM Mon Uu-u Fri
ROBllSON'S
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPO_RT BEACH
An equal opportunity
employer
EXPERIENCED
PART-TIME
TELLER
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
4525 MacArthur Blvd.
N•wport B••ch
540-4424
An equal opportunity
employer
600 + Conunlulon Restaurant Like new KenmOrt
Ambitious go -getter with 3801 E. Coaat HW)'. dryer,
some college who must make corMa del Mar Used 2 mos .• 115.
lots of money. Able lo super-No phone eal\s please , l"'==~•,,.-892-5403.,-..,,-•-.:;;;;:;
vise and traln. Strong direct \VASHERS $29.95; dryers
w/toys s10. Magazine rack.
knlck-kna.cks, pictures, waU ERS
plates, plaques, all for $10 ANSW William Pereira
elec
& Associalos
sales background. ----------1 $35; Freezers $75; Rettig.,
MacArthur & Ford Rd. Chtm Lab Tech , cOPl)ertone & Avoc.: Guar.
Cororia d•I Mar Trainee HOSlf.SS 540-1095
or sell sep. cheap! '68 t.tor-
ris stereo Am-Fm radio &
record player walnut finish,
w/blt·in bar $200. Magnus
chol'd or.Kan $15. (15 keys)
19" Silvertone TV w/stand
$50. Child's set of 16 Gold-
en Treasury Ency. all for
$5. Iron w/board $10. Waste
can swing top $1. X-mas om~ments & stand $3. Pic-
nic jug & bssket $3· Toaster
Mildew -Brine -Kartna-
Caster -BACKWARDS
Gossips are like blotters.
YOUNG THINKING?
FASHION ORIENTED
CAREER MINDED
Join the HOWie of Nine,
one ot the fastest grow-
ing businesea In the
U.S. We are looking for
a sharp Store Manager
w.I th p1·eviou1 ladies
C'eady -10 • wear experi-
ence.
HOUSE OF NINE
South Coast Plaza
Costa Mtsa
For appointment call
Mrs. Spratler
546.9403 or 546--0'lO'l
H.S. grad, military comi;!lete, GE FriiieF · SSS:-1~ eu ft
so m e tab experience in APPLY IN PERSON Good Condition .. 64+os66
school. Excellent opportunity AFTER 3 P.M.
ror young man, just out ot
service. S•a Shanty
Cl k lshl • & I l Resta urant INTERESTING old pictures er P CJ K. & privatC" papers of Judge.
Antiques 8110
They absorb a lot of dirt but
ususlly get it BACKWARDS.
KIRBY Vacuum cleaner &
a t tachments. Pay off
balance of $53.40 or small
payments. Credit d e p t -
535-7289 "76 630 Lido Park Drive '" From 1867 thru early 1900's HS d ·'11a I J Ne"""'rl Beach .. gra, nu ry co1npee, ffJ'V Dodge City, Gunnison, Colo., $5. Hand mixer $5. table Misc. Winted 8610 mixer no. G.E. carving I :;;:,:;:;_:,;,,;.c;,;;,::. ___ _
50me knowledge of electron-=·========= Salt Lake City 673-8316 CdM
ics parts. -7500 ANTIQUE SALE Dotties An-
T I Prod II Job$-M•n, Wom. d
knife $15. 863 Center St.,
Apl. 9 Costa Mesa. 642-6790 ron cs uc ot1 tiques, 15116 Beach Blv .,
Supervisor Midway Ory. 893-2535 SWIMMING POOL
s14s Hostesses -1s Fl Pool, Filter. surl•'."' Fee Nttotfable -· Sewing M'achlnes 8120 Skimmer. Maintenance Kit.
Experience all phases elec-B REPOSSESSED • SINGER FREE Ground Pad.
tronk .... mbly '""'""'''"· -Day usboys "Tooch ""'Sew." Opportu-$149.88
R«Aurn;j R l 'nity for cash buyer to save SECARD POOL
PP ance epa rman _ Dishwashers on this "top-of-the-line" au-323 s. Main. Orange
WANTED
Furniture-Appli1ncn
Color TV'~-.Stereo•
-TOOLS-
531-1212 or 893.05SS
$$CASH SS
Applicants considered on l-------·---EMERGENCY! tomatic zig azg machine. 532-1992
frOm $3.25 Hr. APPLY IN PERSON Pay off account balance I ~~'"."'~~~=';"'J::;;;;:; We pay1cash for: •
J Fumi!Ure J Appilanc:u
Need appliance repairmen-8-6 Mon. thru Fri. and it is yours. For home 1 DECORATOR -type cahinP.t J Antiques ./ Tooll merit regardleu of race,
religious creed, color, na-
tional origin or 111cestry.
ALTERATIONS
MEN'S TAILOR TV, refrigeration, generaJ etc. trial and instruction phone approx 3· x 2' deep. Dark
-
__________ 1Q .. ·"·~ to wo• ,. high 'Ihil!l company needs 2""""'' REUBEN E LEE 499-3828, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. oak car.-ed doors -Ideal for
..,llUl.n:U • .... men with minimum years • ,p & J Agency, el)trance hall or \a1np ta~le
grade fashion s . Ahle to experience. Overtime avail-f'tC. VeI"J unusual, Sparush CHlLDS Chliferobe wanted.
ON ITEM or -
COMPLETE HOUSEFUL can 547-6'748 or 827-8271
Accounts do both men women's, able. Xlnt benefits. . 151 E. Pacific Cst Hwy Musical Inst. 8l25 or Mediterranean appear-Suitable tor s n ti qui n g.
C OHers perm nt tull time Administrator New pert Beach ance. Leaving country -must Phone_642-4980 if no ans. try
929 Biker Street Payable · lerk work. Plea&1 t envlrooment $750 MUSICIANS & G ro ups -sacrifice S75. OR 3-8316 CdM again.
Cotti Mui Part time. Experienced and good ~pany benefits, Fee Paid • Waitresses r.ehearsal room, Npt Bch. 8316 CdM ~S'-'======= I ••9 2221 ooly Apply· ~---'l d D•y or nite, hOUrly rat('S. --M h' I 8700 ~ • . . ~,..., years .. ..,.. ege an ex-• Cooks OR 3--4370 • FABRIC SALE • ac inery, e c. ~=~·=--,:-::;:::-,:=. Buffum'• d perien~ as administrator/ •Dishwashers Mon.lo F·•·.9-u·.30,U:J0-4 '-"""""M O•··-S75·, 300 .=. it E 1 Apply in person • Fashion lslan 'buyer I supervisor of office . • ~·~ ''"'" PART Tim~ Jan Ol' • ar y Starting Monda_v . . Day shifts, pleasant Pianos & Organs 8130 Sat. 1A.M. to2 P.M. Ampgaspoweredwe-lder on ~~.~~for right -- -_ _ _r. RL.S~-· -!'fu-:ii:~· supph~~ __ atmosphere....AppJ.y_ ---+-\4t51--&eleetioo.~ .4._w.heet...tr!li.!fi._$300; 82~ _:__ ~aPrh · EXPLORER-Attractive girl 18 to 30 to dis-·TI ft · Richard's Coffee Shop * PIANOS & ORG-(\NS * Open DAILY to publlc, .llm--Towne, cr-.1. 645-1257
~----'. FOR . rm:ERVIEW CALL. -l.1 . Gi l ·-·
S47.0607 Dorymea Restaurant, 2100 . pla:ii., neW proclucts, Trim m eeper 508 oCeiin, Htg. Bch. *Largest stock in So. Calif. ited tinie only during in-I ~=='=======:I _ w. Oce-an Front, NB. • 1 T...,;;.. i. .... ~ior.Dec· •'"r"" $478 _ . * 20%-40% oil-Player pianos :!:': Tl"\ v"' I l=-p,;;;;.,.;r.u;,,..--:1~~~=:::====~+11 M£10R-p:-~~~ e-.11~~-· ~women to ·etf'eU-r-1000'-1ts1 -h-·-rrom-~_entary.,.£!e@!JID~e;. -..,,..,1··1--FRE-£-t;l --f-VV -.~ EXPERIENCED 1110JllllllQ in local area. Must above • . ~ . popular petition. Must be ro o c oose Costa Mesa Knitting Mi a
. A-nci•, Women 7300 Ut1:n1 • averaie personality poise Sain Trainee . ed f Ora * Terms • Terms -Terms * 929 Baker St., Costa Mesa 2 BEATUIFUL Tabby kit-
.-& •hann No •• ,.; nece; $532 + Commission Cregister r..':'...~ter 0 In n_ge cash for your piano or trade
' • '
Auto l'am Man
Apply Fred Rihs
' STANSBURY BUICK
,, .234 E. 17, St.
' , Costa Mesa
PART OR FULL TIME
)>06.itlons now avail. for sev-
' era.l ambitious men, 26-40.
~lexible hrs., some eves.
; pref. Car nee. Prestige work
with above average earn-
ings. Oppty for Manager pos.
We train. For lntrod. inter-
view call Mr. Whitney.
""'550
'
Hi Fi Technician
For store in Costa Mesa. Op-
portunity to advance to ser-
vice manager. Must be fa-
miliar with solid state equi~
ment. Xlnt fringe benefits.
646-8895
No Experience
Necessary!
Must have clean California
driving recortl. Apply
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St.
Costa Men
Part Time Work
Add to yaur !amily income.
Re present Avon. Call col-
lect 53()..5860
BOYS 10. 14
Good routes! • Good pruflt!
BALBOA PENINSULA
DAILY PILOT
• 642-4371 •
TRAINEES For c 0 0 k •
busboy, fountain & dish
mlich. operators I: gorilla.
Full A pt time for summer.
THE ZOO Drive-In, Codt
• Hwy at MacArthur, CdM
~ CARRIER BOYS
~ GOOD ROUTES
• AVAILABLE ~ HUN1'1NUTON BEACH
'· DAILY PILOT
' • 642-4311 •
;· --Dishwashers -
~ Over 18. Day or night.
/ Good pay. See Bob
! K•n's Coff" Shop
4$'. Z!73 Harbor Bl., CM
4000 Campus Drive .... · '"" . . O'Jm.y. vvvu pay. quire . DRESSER -French Provin-tens, 1 tx>rtoise colored, 2 Secretaries, many • • to $6M ·sary. 4 hrs dsily. Excellent N~ to advan~e. Ambitious al 19(6 E. 17th St.. Room g~and piano for De'_V spinet cial originally boUJ!'.ht at Russian blue colored, 1
Escrow UJ!stant . , to S600 Newport Bt1ch salary. cau for appt (213) family man with some col-212, Santa Ana or phone. Field's Wholesale Piano Co. Sloans. Sacrifice $50. Record white weaned & tmed. To
F.C. Bookkeeper ••••· • $525 375-6648. Ask tor Wendy, lege who mu!rt get ahead. 8ls-6336 89"2-9587 12072 Brookhurst at Olapman player/radio $15. Wet suits loving homes 545-1878 6/4
Medical Reept •••• to $3lk> S~ETAR.Y Shortland 80 Attractlva Wo-n Assemblers W !TRESSES. 0 . h h Garden Grove (714l 638-2770 & surfboard. Kitchen ware. _,,,, Cl-~ $375 typ 80 "-T $4 00 Hr A & is was -HANDSOME B\sck & tan
l lllLl.lte ~" ·•········ wpM m, mg w Pm • Amblti'o"'• good ...,.....,,.,,ality. 0 • • -•1 h" '/:< nl I S ' S I I Muny hou sehold item~· Mo-.... f' " ~-··t ·~ lnlm tw ,., " .. ~·~' n...11.y-·-lf Jype•. MA....t..a..._ ers, ... s ulll. '"· r 0 y • pr1n9 a e • 708. I . German Shepheiu emiue, •;,.,.,,,I •••••••••••••••• """' um o years o uce U 1 71 So .....,. ~ ""'''"',... __ _. 1 0 C fl ving. ?liUST SELL rts, M 1 d' . Trainee Cashier,,,,,, $312 experle~. Girl required Ill se 0 car, over ' me ical aptitude. Experience ne= appy. IJtrulYS 0 ee Used Baldwin Spinet $695. 6 l'h yrs. arvcous ISPOSl-
Tme FUe Cieri< ......... $310 take charge. With initultlve, eves .. preferred. Average with small electric rnotor1 Shop, 1600 ~Cst Hwy., Used Baldwin, Thomas, CdM, OR 3.831 ti':lu, small -loves children
Tme General Ofc •••. $300 typing customer cor-parttl ",'!1!', $59N. a week .. FuU and drill press. Laguna Bch. No phone ca.Us Hammond Organs n95 up. 7 *· AUCTION * 644--0837. 6/5
Collection Ok ........ $300 respondence, purchase re-me u-o. 0 experien.ce Painter plse. Spinet, Console, Studio· & u yQU will sell or bUY HEALTHY Trained kittens '
Tme Dental Aasist , , , • $281 qulaition1, 1ale1 orders etc. ~_::_.essary .. For ?romp~; To $175 Week SHOULDN'T you be ~elling Upright pi~nos, specially re-give Windy a try free to good home. One shy
AU.SET ,AGENCY Good opportunity Io r the uvu.uctory mternew ca Heavy production experience. the hottest area -Hunlington duced . $195 up. Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m. blk ft m; 2 frisky males, 1
431 W. 19th, C.M. 642-6752 ri,ght air!. Call 642-2400, or Whitney 544-8550 Counsellor Beach? Call Phil McNamee WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO Windy's Auction Barn b\k, 1 blk & -w ht ·
WORK IN eveS. S46-0319, ask for Jim p I for appt. Villaf:!e Re a I 1801 Newport, CM 642-8484 644-1253 6/6
H Se . o· . . f WAITRESS ersonne Estate Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'l 2 YR. old Female Burmese NEWPORT BEACH yams. rvoruc ivision ° This oHk:e, Needed lo join ex-962-4471 546-8100 2tn5'h Newport, CM 646~ E c Secy ta $575 Culton Industries, Inc. 1644 Graveyard Shift perienced. professional em-NO\V HERE -the new cat to a good home. Also
A ~ seU-starter! Type Whittler Ave., Col~ Mesa. CoHtt shop, experienced ployment agency. Aggressive, TEACHERS Supersoundlng T-200 INTERESTING -Old private part Burfiiese kittens.
80 wp.ql,,~ lOO wpm-.A Jo.. An equal opportun1l;y em-~er Zl. Apply gOoct on phones and·have an SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Hammond Spinet organ ~rs e~r\~ud~~.:~m 18:! 548-1416 6/6
··' ,...,....,..__. ""-m off•n plOyer. KONA LANES l intefest in •orldng with pro. Phone Mrs, Hobkirk -the finest yet! G PART Dalmation JM.tWies:
........ "Y'" .... •'"" 111· '39-4""" o""" •nA• SCHMIDT-PHILLIPS CO. phol06· Dodge CitY. .un-· di the A · real job .se<:Uril;,Y. 26WJ Harbor, Costa Mesa pie. Sales background belp-~· or~.,.... 1907 N. Main 0 20th nison, Colo., Salt Lake City_ Cha.mp gran a r, cci-
NEWPORT WAITftrl:C'f ful ' Sa"la Ana 673--8316 , dent in !arnily. Male and fe-
P•rtOr\MI Ag•ncy IKW FEMALE GUEST Home for amusing " male 9 wi<s. 548-8832 6/6 833 Dover Dr., N.B. Poodle whose fam ily takes =KS. J~~ se~ ~;~aJ KJTrENS _ MaJe, pure
642-3870 Good opportunity Clertc Typist Secy/Sleno ',""",ent wort !rip•. 12 per Decorator's Delight W/<>>St<>m bk'""· Al'° ... blaok, Joog ha•od; '""""
• .................... 1Must have good appearance. To $476 ay. 94-mO grey & white long haired. 7 prox 50 hard cover beit Newport Beach Celebrities don't scare th.is ,.. E LEPHONE canvassers, GRAND PIANO -Insides sellers. 642_7358 eves. Ask weeks 54(}...2(@7 616 See Betty Bruce at mtu Cxec
Agency for Career Glrll
410 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
By appoint. 646-3939
Help W1nted
Women 7400 --=----
Sales~oman
Lxperienced in better wom-
an' a ready-ti>wear. Quali-
fied to sell in high grade
fashion ston'!. Offers pleas-
ant f'nvlronment and good
company benefits. Apply :
BUFFUM'S
Fashion Island
FACTORY
TRAINEES
for Plastic Molding, Z5 yrs.
& over, 850 W. 18th, Costa
Mesa.
Fem1le Cl•rk * APPLY JN PERSON *
DRIVE-IN LIQUORS •
706 ~n Avenue
Huntington Beaeh
APPLY fN PERSON
3-5 P.M. DAILY Stock Brokerage girl! Mature, poised, attrac· full or part time. 275 A-1, outside needs your for Gordon 2 Domestic American
673-8380 between 2-4 pm tive. WiU be working with in-Broadway, Laguna Bf'ach. help~ S500. Shorthair kittens. 7 wks.
Snack Shop No. 11 't~AD~Y~av-,-, ~,,~.,,~F,~. ,,~.N
2305 E. Co11t Hwy. CblPI restaurant managing
. Coron1 del Mar, C1. ability preferred. Must be
able to work eves, Sat &
Sun. Apply 10:30-111.m or
Manicurist
Qualified to work in high
grade Beauty Studio, Of-
fers full time work,
pleasant environment and
company benefits. Apply:
BUFPUMS'
fashion Island
2 pm -4 pm, 507 w. 19th
Costa Mesa in the Coma
Mesa Plaza
COUNTER GIRL
Neat. attractive ma.med PN!-
ferred f« 10 AM to 2 PM
shlli, GoOO job excel pey,
Immediate openings. Apply
!<Xla.y at Th' Dorymen 2100
W. Ocean Front, N.B.
I b · · 4"• 0 "16 MUSIC CITY c""• FOAM RUBBER, cut to size. temationa cele n hes. '1't-OV -, .1v1. Oran.e:e Tabby &:. 1 blk &
General Office * 540-QlSS * Uph supplies. 1 ab r i cs, wht. 962-6825 6?6
$476 Schools-Instruction 7600 naugahyde. Fact.. outlet. Knabe Grand Piano. 8 yrs Low pre. A-1 Tham Fabric <21, 8 wk old kittens, white
Presidential aid. Front office Are You Planning old. Like new. Fully guar. & Upholstery Supply Co., 311 male & multi. colored
appearance, attractive, lots to R'e-enttir SAVE $1000! E. Sth St., s .A. 835-1181 female. Wonderful with
of poise. General duties., the Job World? ~~~~ M~~~IiA~~~ SO'!>JY 4 .. TV, $85., Sony 5.. children. 646-2739 6/6
Comptometer Tra.inee Talk to Nona Hollman about . . . TV with battery charger TOUCHE Desiree, loving &
$346 th r t 1 -• o'1 efl""· Practice Piano. Refin. 195., .. ~i. .... table, $25. All lovable registered 4 yr. old "··'"· PBX t Ith . e as es auu m =--n·••1 '-w •• 11~. ~···. ~,., =t:t\.J.Hg opera or w hod b -L """ ....... ..., "" .. ~... "OW', ·--•'th "'"' -······ 3 blk Min' poodle .~ ~·2 f. 'tud t ._.. . __. t1ve met . to ru"u up on GOULD MUSIC CCMPANY " ...,., ""'" .... . . . •.rav..i igure apti e o ll'C train,_...., d/ ho mos old. $65. Soprano sax eves. 6/6 to run comptometer. Good your typing . an or s rl· 2045 N. Main, S.A. 547--0681 .... 75., 64&-Z174 opportunity. _ hd•,.,",,d. You will be glad you 9< 5 PiaYt:ul kittens. Pure blk,
Claims Glrl w~ ~~f;d__,~':rs MOVING m u s t sell • ~~~-.& .,%h~rey5323& bRlk,·v' ,2 · NEWPORT "'"· gorgeous light, blue quilted ,......, '1'fO"'V'"' '"
Start $400 School of Business Excel cond. 675-3606 &Ofa -lamps, beds, leather Ave., N.B. 6/6
rught hand assistant, xlnt 833 ~ D N 8 BABY GRAND PIANO top tables • many, many DARLING K' t l . Jun·1y r -L __ .. vvVer r.. . . 1t ens to OVlllg
oppor 1 or a "''811> •1.uu 646-0153 $350 or Best dfer other items· •. See at 708 home. Hsehrkn. Fr.e e
amUitloua claims girl. 54&-9977 a.It s Iris Cd·M, OR 3-8316 ch?livery. Aft 6 pm . ==~-~---~~)DRAPERY Workroon1, ex-Recept/Typlst PIANO lessons, young, exp., SPANISH Cabinet-dark oak 67:H107 616
NEAT Appearing woman for perienced or trainees; any To $400 teacher, new in area. Grad. Tel • • 8205 part time office work. operstions: Permanent. lm-Front office .appearance, ex-~1h~~ MMusi1o ST' h oho I , evision :~uot~u~Jed~°!~: P1:e :
Permanent position, not a mediate openings. Beach cellent speller. Type 60. "emu~:r us c eac ers Consoles, Portables & Hi-Fi 0 ~ W 17th s S 9 II C ASS(]('. Pr iv. lc,,ons tor tots. • gold design on frOnt -pvt aummer job. P 1 ea s ant rapery. """ · t., teno ao ty ontrol $29 95 b " 673-8316 telephone m a n n e r , con-Costa Mesa ~ ' thru teens, Sue Denton 367 1 party -est ouer To $424 lt1agnolia, CM 543-84!)4 CdM. Eves sll day wkends
struction experience prefer-SALESGIRL Wanted: top ex-Will be t)l'ping reports, use AND UP MAPLE hntch, Hide a bed, red. Quick think!!!', typing, perience, ,...., salary. Better di.-. .. ...1. B f"-n... SCliOOL Children's vacation " i.,. """' '""°*"'one. usy o , ... e . .,,,,,. c ·1 lt>-Le No Money Down de•k, book"ase, li_vina room, some ~ .. t bookkeeping. Call re'idy-to-wear, Lillian's, 3333 · uf cturln b ..... _ rntes. hi coat sson ~ -·~ SIN! man a g aL .... -0 85 p11tio furn. Washer, dryer, betwem 8:30 a.m. and 10 &istol St., So. Coast Plaza, d Typing School. 54<>-2 9. 173 OAC
KI'ITENS To good home on-
ly. Part Persian. good
personality. \Vee.ned &.
hsebroken. ~7997 6/4
GERMAN Shepherd Male
Blk & gray 2 yrs old, Good
w/children, watchdog .
962--079'1 616 ,,...,, """'1 ,...__ groun · O 1 M c 1\1 TV, dbl bed, pr twin beds, 11.m. ~ ......... ta Mesa. 549.-0369 Payroft Cleric: e ar. · · $1 .00 per wk. buys lease plan. &12-12S8 FREE Fertilizer U -ha u I
HOSPITAUTY Ho ate s s DENTAL lllb needs 2 To $424-MERCHANDISE FOR Newporter TV Sales
Service needs woman with hotl9ewive1 tor pick-up & Figure and extend tiniecards, SALE ANO ·TRADE Open 'HI 8 P.r.t.
gift oJ gab able to post bond, delivery, 4 hrs. per day labor cards, Use 10 key. ~~~;====~~~2027~~H~•~r~bo~<~B~l~v~d~C~M~54&-;85!~1 have car, t,wewriter and G4&-Qo68 Light typing, but accurnte, ~urniture 8
enthusls51111br se\lin~. Work WAITRF.SsES. Exper only Manufacturing background Spanish Mediterran•an Hi-Fi & Stereo 8210
CARPET -Apts -Homes.
Quality installation. Free
estimates. All p r i c e s .
546-4478 eves. Llc. Con-
tractor
cmsista of wel.co?11ng new need apply. Denny's Coffee desired. SHOWROOM SAMPLES ADMIRAL RN n-7 Full time, !-11 part residents for fine loet.l Shop, 1600 s . Cst Hwy.. PIX T I t Ste reo com·
time. LVN l-11 full time, merchants . ~ . ~ssl.sUng Laguna Bch. No phone calls Y/' 8 Ft wood carved armed di· bination. Radio & reeord
horse manure, o do r 1 e s s
clean. 20311 Cypress, S.A.
Heights. 6/4
FREE Male 1h Terrier, ~'2
German Shepherd, 1 yr old.
Good pat !or children. All
shots. 968-tllll 614
and part time. Salaries merchants m obt111n1ng new plse. $38 van with large man's match-player. ~auliful maple con-
customers. Call 544--6925 -Experience on PBX hoard Ing chair; beautiful Medi· sole S2" x .17" x 31" with
•• 2 Service Station attendants ~~· ~~~e=:itsCe~~:~ Cl k S 11 OUSEKEEPER, Mature, and goo<!, fast, accurate typ-terranean fabrics and col-port11:bll! spe11:ker5, 1 in gar.
, with exper .. full al" part er • ecretary part-time; 4:3(),-6:00, Mon: ist. ors. 5 Pc hexagon Spanish $175. Eves, aft 6. 2237 Santa
HOUSEFUL of furniture,
some antiques, very reason-
able. 1112 Csrson, C.M.
545-2'201
UPHOLSI'ERING -$79.50, 2
pc. (European ctaltsmen)
Free est, del, pickup, 215
Main, HB "Berny" 5J6.6405
ADORABLE sml. bred blk &
tan tel'# mL'< pups. 5 .,.,iuJ.
to good homes. 633-6576
•: time. Ray Carey Chevron, 6-42--Z4lO Hrs t2-9, Mon-Thllrs. Sat lQ.6 to Fri., N'pt. Bch. 548-8281 Service CJerk dark oak-top dining set wlth Ana Ave., CM
_ 604 So. Coast Hwy, Laguna •WANTED A.M, workers, 2 yrs college. $400 mo. Eves. $320 ••
• Sch. Donut shop. No experience f.tuht. Beach Public Llbr•ry blai;k or a\•oc.ado .rra1m'"" 1968 Solid state stereo lil!e • -===c-:-=""'==-525 Main Street 536-9327 8 A B Y S I TT E R & Good phone voice and per-c~am;: decomtive: vmy d~ new console model. Take ~ ROUTES AVAJLABLE necyssary. Apply be f 0 re Housekeeper, H.B. near sonallty, Personal initiative sign. 5 Pc Mediterranean 0 v er small payment or
, in noon, MR OONlfT, l3S E. PART-TIME jOb tor ladies Five Polnta. 6 AM to 4:30 to advance. Will be trained to bedroom set-9drawerMr. $7T.6.1 -cash. Credit de t.
-Wunntnlter for boPs Il).14 17th St-, C.0.t« Mes• • 18 to SO who have 30 hrs. PM, s dys, 847-4984 alt 5. take over part of &u(>tt\'is-~ Mrs. dreitser, lsrge fram-535-72S9 P
WHEEL.CHAIR, Artificial
legs,. bed trapeze, etc. 8f'st
offer. Asl! Jor Roy Foote,
~. 847-7004 Good Profits • No SUnda,Y MOTEL MAIO per wk in exchange for SECRETARY ~ 20 30 Ol"I jot>. w~ ed min-or, large nite com-
Dtliwry 612-4321 located Peninrula •rt• $60. Outdoor work. can • ...,...,., to · FC lookknpet' modes, matching panel de-COLONIAL 1V Stereo com. ROYAL Portable ~writer •, MA-CDON--A-LDS-, ~=~~*-67$-,.c._18'1_*.,..~~ i-"'~'·~"'-"-''~•t~646-8607=~-for aircraft executive, From $500 signed headhoanl bo. Excel cond .• AM/FM like new. standard size 1: Orarce ():>. airport . Call r--. d" 847 """" • k d • • LADY With car, ror child LEGAL SF.CRE'l'ARY ariyume &40-8636 or 673-9335 Be able to take thMJ trial hal-~...., $895 VALUE ra 10, • ...__, eyboar . $.iO. 646-5485
, P~mume:nt crewma.n poaiUon . Catt during 1 um mer Min •• I yr. experience ance. Working familiarity of Full Price NOW $429.95 ADMIRAL AMI FM Danish GREAT RlDING SURF-
6561 Edln=~-ve., H.B. montht; Udo Isle.~ IBM Exec-Stenorette. Operators-trimmers-special taxes. Sharp; good appear-OR TERMS AS LO\V AS modern Coo90le. BOARD -9' 8", perfect coo-
PIIIA COOK
WAITRESS $1.80. Experienc-CdM Office. 67~2677 mach, Garment Mfa., E~. ance • mus1! Xlnt opportun-Sl.00 PER WEEK 536-8335 ditioo. $50. 675-0238
Good pe.y. 1580 Monrovia, IJy here. (Will ··'I ·1 ( di 'd llyJ \========="' ed, graveyard. Phonf' M.r · CUTE GIRLS age 18 up to NB 642--2666 ""' 1 ems n Vl ua E L EC T R I C Portshle
Full and part time. e•ea. No Zimmer 67M0()4 wortc ln Bikini ahop. LOVE Fil• & Mqll Girl NO DOWN Sporting_~• 8500 typ('Wl"lter 10 key adder,
exper fl('(. Apcil;y aftl!r 2 pm: MASSEUSE 30'* Marl!le, Balboa !alt Ptr $2 hr par. customer $312 Use Our Slore Charge GUN __ S_H_O_W___ c)leck p¥rotector 64'1-1269
1m Harbor Bl-, CM. 673-9685 st.rvice tor estab Co. Mn. Light typing and mail gtrl. No fancy front BUT •.
It. E. Salesman part timf' Pn!lu member ol A.M.T.A; OFFICE GIRL Li,;bt book· Brown $40-1932, H.B. WIU be tn.ined on "''itch· QUALITY VALUES INSIDE! Fri &. Sat. Junt 7 l 8 3 1'VIN bros. 'Good cond,
tnct work. Exct"Ptional q>· Call 60-2950 kffP!ng bondable approx. BABYSITI'ER needed. live boa.rd. APROVl:D FURNITURE F'ree drs~g for Ri!le Press, compt. $10 ea. dbl box gprg
portunity! Call 968-3251 Mr MAKE f}>ds roeet. Part time l'Ai. 2 bouN per day. Morn-In or out. Re.ls req. CM aNa Girt ,.,Jday 2159 Harbor Blvd., C.M. =· & Rttl, Colt man Ian-& mat S8 ~29ffi
McKinnon wk. ffrB optional. Mn. tnp call 540-2991 64&-1029 from '$406 Daily !}.9, 10-5 Sunday r5ave 's Sporting Goods SOF"I'-\\!ater Tank, TV .. BR.
6/5
LOVEABLE bm & hlk Shep.
herd mix pup. 10 wl!s. Needs
goo:! borne w/children.
897-4276 6/5
YOUNG adult !land blk
male Doxie purehred, Loves
chldm, good watchdg.
638-(tj38 aft . 5. 6/5
BEAUTIFULLY Marked
calico kitten to GOOD borne
Ml 6-2032 6/4
% Dalmatian .puppy male 8
weeks. Free. One left!
5'18-3832 6/4
KI11'ENS Various co Io rs
well tralned & arud~s to
·find homes 546-!913 6/4
2 KITTENS -Tabtiy male &
C•hco female to good home.
642-8043 614 RY COOK. Dcper. Al11 •1e. 1 _Ba_D~ey_50-__ 1932 __ 962--37M~---EXPERIENCED Hotel (or • HAIR.STYLIST Pbonr, writr Lc:1ter1, invoic· e 543-~ e 8091 Bolli!., MM:lwa,y City :~Ir~~~~ ~m;e'· Ott.
Art'• l.Andil'll'.-fiOS £,:f.ldte-SALESG'D' C' B e I w e e n motel) maids· fUU -Les CoWures 67J..4186 t'I, kffP fle:ll)etual f't'COrdt. Furniture returned from dis· °"'a..... I ::;=,;---;=,.,-~-...---13 PuJIPles hall Poodle/Beagle ... _ , . •IJatit bootckttptng ~ 20 Gal le: 'ni &al aqu«riums, 3 7 water, 0.100.. 6'l!t«m ~; aper. only, Ap'OpOI Call tor "flll'l., fm-&UO 3:n5 Newport Blv,, N'pt ~. L ... s.q pla)' studi03, model .homes, FR E IGHT DAMAGED punips, ~ra accessories. \\'kll. Weaned. 646-0163 6/6
ARKING lDJ' Attn'ldant. Shop.~ For app'l EXPERIENCED Sbl&)e nee-* FLORIST $500 Sd~~t:-~:incellnhon. 1 SURFBOARDS, Factory $60. &Q-.9246 30 Ft. boat hull; you baul.
Men. Omo JJ. Apply at thf Part 1\me COOK Apply in dfe oper1tor, GOOD PAY, Expeor .. Opportunity fee rt.mbuned, 90 d8.Yl paRnD ""'R'N"Tlr'"'u'R"Er c. Diroct. Used boarda also. ""'"us"•"'"-"'=-m-c-.,.7keti>~l-aoe-~tn 6-12-3.164 616
-Reubtn E. Ltt Palkint Lot, pet'IOn: MES.A IAND,.170.1 NB, f73-96R.'5 CllU Mr. F.UX..6C-4103 -CtMrtlallll-o-vll 1-·At .-. rw . . All cheap. We W1all new town. The DAlLY PILOT GATE 7 ft 7 io v.1de -6 f1
e;ER.V. STA. Attend. \Ne!' 21. --...;.~°'.·:-CM--.,_,..--,--I QE.\NTNC Woman, 1 day• Ml.ID WORK -Motel, 6 to 7 least 1 YMr Calif. la.:.w. 1844 Newport Blvd., CM =Vl~i= in )'OUl' old 0.usllled leC'ticn Save h!gti. 'l'ffi Delawtrt, H.B. 6/6
APPb; 4i0 t . 17b St. Maid for motel 1"f'k. week, M : BaD:I09 k!&nd-$2 hrs e.di Sal. • Sun. $1.15 Ake f w.... every nlaht tll .9 · money, Sme I tUOit, Lool: FREf: Calfr.o &. tiger striped
-----..:;==°"'=:•=M:""===:..'..-:==·=5'3<=91511==:::=:.'..: Per Hr. fB..3528 per hr. 54&-5001, 548-2431 # " .--Wed., Silt. A Sun. 'Iii 6 While cl~rsf OimH.·UM nowtlt kitten•· F1ufry ~'10 6/4
T I • 1r 't
I
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ifiCRANDISI FOil -,TltAHSl'OllTATION -ilmp;e;tiil 'Ai'Mi -HOO TltANSPoltTATION -TltANSl'ORTATION -SALE AND TRADE -
FREE TO YOU S1llllN11 -~ ~JAGUAR -UMd·Cara Uaiil cars -9900
LIKE SAILING? •c 1,._ 3.1 Solan. MK n , NEID A CAii? MUSTANCii
Miniature J>Oodle puppies DISLIKE ntESE. Chrm IPOke whJJ. Auto. I ~'T BE ~ANCED? _
6 wtt1ta.Qld. 548--2336 6/4 e Pa)'mentl, b.l&h in~ n-.nt. Radk> A fftat. Xlnt ~pt? e Rtpw•ioat '61 MUSTANG CT. , + 2,
3 ntJEpipa k>okiha; for a;<>Od depN!clatioo, .Up rent.ala, Cond. P!IOO MO--lt'l9 •Bad o-.dit? • t>ivornd! a,lr, tun PWl', Ina than 6,fm
hoole: Have blue eyea. cletWni, ~. etc. •Millt.v)o •New bl .V..f miles. BELOW B.L U'E
S4&'<7198. Ill St. Cl•fr, -PREFE!t TllESE!t ·MERCEDES IENZ ...... "'Y'l"' _.. BOOK. 64>-1899 •It.
C.M. 61< e Low coot. no work McCARTHY MOTORS 1'65 Rod MU.<lall& i+i
'3 adora~le OU.PPlft 5 wkl old. Care free Aillnc in • WO So. Main A Edinau automatic transmiuion
Mother Dailey doc.· Father Cal 25, u little •• $20, l2 blockt N. of Sun) $1tm ~s:in
57 va.rietit1. Both pa.rent• • day. tvail IOOn cat 34, _;;S>nta~~!'!!"'!.!1'11~-!!::~'-.. I"--;;;;;;;;;~;--· I
.xcelt<•>t with childttn. 2 Tly °"' Club Pt.an MERCURY
1emale1. t maJe S48-M48 6/6 NEWPORT=G a..u:B
ADORABLE Haebricn. ldt· sr # mw, 1 Calleo, t all 1Tey I AR 2932, dacron sails,
.-wht. Long.hair. Plus calico like new, all a:ear A .trlr.
1molber. % Siamese all blk -,;-,,;.,;il800T-ii~*"°"'S'6-""2985,:;:;;--\:=== male. 646-7317 6/6 HOURLY RENTALS
FLUFFY Golden kittens & RHOO~ 19'1 *
fiufty black kittens. Seek Fun Zone Bott Co., Balboa 1---------
--,.,.,m -a board ;,,-io.,;ns »' Sloop, rody to ,.ll, ~ .. -681/J MG
homes. Will serve a 1 6. $3500. At yard: Bl N~. NEW SHIPMENT
delightful pe~, 546!oo6s 61< -Bd: 646-8559 JUST ARRIVED
PETS and LIVESTOCK 11% rr. Penguin Sailboat, GET OUR DEAL TODAY
GERMA~US~SEPHERD Power CrulHra 9020 IMPORTS
-------= ***Wholo10I• to You
1963 M~rttiry Monterey Spt
Q:>e. 'I'hl9 Is the' SSS Model
Flni!bed In bee..utlful ermine
white with red vinyl bucket
aeata and plush red carpets.
Full •Price $950
kt£!r Jg~.90..Ha__J\!2r Blvd.
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln-Mercury
Costa Meaa Branch
1~ Harbor mvd. 642-7050
1964 Mercury Colon)' Park
Station WaiOfl· Full pow~.
AM/'FM, excel eond, pvt.
·owner. 64&Ql.'i'
Doga -.. 2~ ~ ::~'~f"'·' • "'fQll LflDiA
AKC REGISTERED '62 MERCURY 26': sleeps 6
O.ampion Blood""'' gall•y, head & bait ltnk On-tllti6 Hubor CM -. OLDSMOBILE
Bred for b' 10 hrs. on new 225 HP ' · · · '66 LaSabre 4-0 SC Rh ps I---------· I
Quality & Temperament Gnly Martne eng. New can-'66 MGB. White. AM·FM· pb xlnt tire CJn .. Pvt' pty'. *** Mile•g• M•k•r Shots Ir Worming vu. Needs varnish. Onl,y SPoke wheels. Auto .. over· u7oo or bst. otr. 540-5648. ,
Pedigree with each PUP $3,<nl. May trade f o t drive. Tonneau cover. MG 64fr!l94!t with Luxury
S11Jaller bol.t. Slip sp~ No. mitten $2300. f>46-6S39 , 1963 Olds 0..tlf!'SS Cpe. Auto 8372."~t Evl ma,, ''att' '. 6''..:.'.>lP•M ~· Hun,, tingtm Marin a '63 MG MIDGET Xlnt BUICK 63 Skylark, Buckel trans, power steering. R.Gse
w;kenda aft~ 9 m "Sean . 838-7598 or Tl6-692.0 ditlon It 4 new ~ be;: stets ps, RH. WSW, $795. exterior with white leather-
' TS Sed Crus '56 Wed 675-4391 aft 5:30 p.m. 673.6469 ette bucket seats and con-
MINIATURE LASSIE h JI telTltl li . ~ '66 BUICK Special: very low 90le. Absolutely showroom
AKC Sh.~~ ~. epdog ~e~. Min:ey v 5•4~ _ 41 ;rj PORSCHE mileage, xlnt ooncl.; $1,750 condition. Full Price
.-uvvlf!S 548-S039 Orig. owner. 642-&t37 $1195
F1ufly, beautiful. '58 Good Motor. $75 cash. 1st ·car tot on Harbor Blvd.
16" t.U •t most, when grown '59 PORSCH• 1600 ""''" "0 ~~ JOHNSON & SON · ed like new, competition ..........,.,,,.
Champ sir · 1 female, 1 Boat Mainten•nce 9033 Ora.nae paint (new). 4 Speed 24.1 E. llsl St., CM UOCQJn·Mercury
male. 54().00lO · trans. Will take trade. Must Costa Mesa Branch
BEAUT. Black 4: tan female, MASTS need refinihhing'! see this car to believe the CADILLAC 1941 Harbor blvd. 642-7050
Russian Wolfhound. 5 Mos., Vamlih, paint, rigging! care it has had! 494-'JTIJ orl----------.~=~=~~-~--
AKC. shots; hew;ebroken. Call Jim Ziegler 63S-36l7 •67 Cad Sed de Ville, air '65 Olds 911 Holklay sedan·~·
Wonderful disposition 494-646-4(ti3 or 9&2-0603 eve , 1..'C'>nd., Venetian blue, white fuU power, .must sell ~s
2376 EXPERT Varnish work 1: 66 9ll, S Spd., lmmac. cond., padd'ttl roof, AM/FM radio, BEAUTIFUL CAR I h 1 II
.. •··t alnt many extras. S 5 , 0 0 0 . 6756 .1 11 known ac· week! 548-5200
C 0 CK A P 0 0 PY ft!l\e!' ........, m enance. Origi' 1 673 5833 m1 es, we '7=· ~~~--~~ --pup. ' $3 _,. hr. Contact Kirk na ·owner · tress' car. 499-2373 · '53 Olds Fine transportation f ale· had shots· asking .,... , ~m ' ' E1Uott at 675-2347 TO'(O'T .. A '67 El Dorado. Air, low mJ).. good motor -Make offer.
' 842-5725 es wa?Tanty MuSt sell sac-Pvt Pty Eves & all day ii~L>!AiJOiNP.,.;:l~M!!1'.!:rl~n~oc_E~q!u~i!P~·-~903~~5 I · nfice, $6495.'&l2-5688 '· Wkencb 673-8316 DALMATl.ON Pup " 681/~ TOYOTA 1966 Old F"S cha.m,p/stook, male & THIS WFEK ONLY! '67 CAD. Coupe; full power; ' I '-o
females, 12 wks, &hots. NEW 72 AMP HR MARINE NEW .SHIPMENT tact. air. Must sell! Best m. Ext::el 'c.uxl: 646-5158 aft. 5 •
iiva1 best·~93'i' .BAT'l'ERY,....Reta~51l~..::: JU$'.f-ARRIVED--:::fer.:W!;ea.Jt!:§~~ ..,....;;:._-----· -
ADORABLE '""""'• ' °"' ''""' """·.1 Y•. un-GET OUR DEAL TODAY . ·cHEVROLET PlYM"O_UTH" -
wKS. old Dachshunds, stan-cond. guar. M~e & Ba~ ----L-~.-~~ ~t:·~-P;-~· -k~~~2430 w nut Le.wia 1'·~6t~Cm:vY~-~-~--1MP-.~~.,.L.\~~~itAR=~D--i-~ 11Y!:~~ 4 DR.
All Marine electronics I ·. TOP, BIG V-8, 3 speed. Red VB engine power steering
BEAUTIFUL White Samoyed sold at a nice discoo.nt. NPORTS exterior, red interior. Runs factory air <.'Ond. A reei
puppies. Make genUe pets. See us before yoo buy! like a clock! $75. dels., will nice car for yotn' vacaticin.
$25 & up. 962-5989 aft 5 Marine & Batte"' Shnnne """ bo 64" n......, finance balanct!. Private Reduced To
•J ....,... 1~ Har r, C.M. """"""' ll 6~3617
SPRINGER Spaniel Pup, 4 2430 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. TOYOTA party. Call after ' $129S
mos, all shots. Male. Liver 494-9773 1st car Jot on Harbor Blvd,
& white AKC. Reas. 646-3734 Bo•t·Y•cht '62 Chev Super Sport, new JOHNSON ·&-·SON
!! MO Old female minia,ture Ch•rters 9039 HEADQUARTERS complete rebuilt 327 eng., .
da1.-h.!.tiund. Has. papers. itc. . ELMQR E dual quad11, Isky cam & Lincoln·Mercury S...S. 496-3636 • CHARTER THE FINE.ST . lifters & slicks. Son in Viet Co!ita Mesa Branch
New 46' Ketch nam have $1800 in car will 1941 Harbor mvd. 642·7ill0
0 GERMAN SHEPHERD e 67J.-25li e 675-2400 15300 Beach Blvd .. Wstmnstr i.'ell for $850. 646-15!!8 or
PuppiES· AKC Re~istered l "'.~~~~;;=~~l~=~Pho~"'~.,._~3322~==1.;"~6-~24~86~~;.~;;:; PONTIAC & guaranteed. 546-3890 I ;r .. raft 9100 ---------
BLACK Coc-a-Poo Puppie" TRIUMPH '63 Impala, on. own"' 4 SPEEDS 6 wks $10 BELI.ANCA Demonstratora, .beautiful co n d · , air,
°" .,,;,, aft J;>l 2'0-C • Viking »O tow · PS/PB, "'"'· 49 • • 28 54 SPECIALIST .,.....~........, ' 1961 Triumph TR-3, recent after 5
tl_me, full IFR panel & auto overhaul. $700. or best oiler. , HIGH PERFORMANCE
Horses 1830 pilot. Best offer 714 : 536-1676 after 4 pm. 96 MALIBU HT Yellow/blk . CUSTOM CARS :.._______ 546-2474 int. RfH, ps, 4 spd. $2250.
HORSES BOARDED '63 TRI -Tiger.Tub Call 642-ml LARGEST SELECTJON,lN·
Back Bay area -1746 Or-Mobile Homes 9200 ~~ ~-·ss Chevy Malibu Sta Wag, s=r:.:~:do~O .~
chard -off Santa Ana. Pad· 10,....,,,,, ""'---•· 2 b Ex Blue, Xlnt cond. 516$
dock. Sh•ltm.155 P'· mo . .;;;;; cif,OO'~"mS::' . VOLKSWAGEN . 6#-15'8 Center
Cali 642-09!!l days or 540-9S2S or ? 0Dtck 548-ioot . mo. '66 EL Camino, loaded I: 130:t2 Harbor Blvd. 537-4646
Eves. * '66 Vol.ksw•oen radio and clean. By Oriiinal Owner. =~~-~~-~~1 BA y MARE -.. '67 Pontiac Le Mans, hll.fd · Motorcycles · 9300 heater, 2 dr sedan' 1300 646-2606 top, beatJttrul black vinyl Excel wfchldrn. SlOO. .,,.n·e, A-1 · -.. ,......... Will 673--0629 ""' "v '""'' COMET roof, bucket seats, exoUc ~ Call 650 TRIUMPH -$300 help finance or accept trade gold exterior, special V-8
TRANSPORTATION 823 To":&.~ta Mesa in. Hours daily after 6:301 ·,64--C-~Cy--t--P-Sl-PB-I eng .. 4 spd., under war-
caJI 837·3865 Sat or Sun omet c one, ' ranty, dlr, speedometer
.B.;:oa::.lc:sc..&:.:-Yc.•c.'c.h_ts'---9000-'67 Suzuki 80 CC after 9 am LI 8--1805 after 8 •~r cond., btJCket seats, read& 13,000 miles. $150 .dels -u-~ 1000 -•. Xlnt -d. vinyl top. $1150. 6~7848 -•·-F '""" "" '""" pm or t ...... trade. Low pymnts. re• $350. * 673-0439 . Basic Boating Classes 1965 VW new braket.'. tuneup CORVETIE After 1, 494-9773 or 639-3617
Offered to public by Tr•iler, Travel 9425 & paint. Excel shape. $l050, ROY CARVER
Balboa Power Squadron Lynn . 642-!511 67~2396 eves '57 cOR.VETI'E PO
Elementary Piloting Course~ FLAMINGO 1871', XJ;Nf. &. weekends. MAKE OFFER NTIAC
Every r.londay, Starting -7 like new. Self contained, '65 VW 120 Diamond, Bal. Isl. 2925 Hutu-m., CDta Mea
PM, June 10, Newport Har-twin beds. $1595. S47-74!16 or $1200 Cash Kl 64444
00, Y"ht Club, rn w. Bay 8'7-5355 646-0076 alt" 5 PM CONnNENTAL O...p County's """""'"
Ave., Newport Beach . 1936 Travel Trailer. 12' '65 vw Station wagon, model ---Dealer tor 1'\olll • llol~ and
OR, for your $!0l'JVer'uence Sleeps. four, stove. icebox, lSOlS: low ml., xlnt oond. *** T·Bird 81r9•in Bently.
'Every Tuesday, starting 1 clean. Cost $1350. Sell $850. $:1.495. 774-1492 (Anaheim). 1962 T·BIRD .. ~66;-;:Pon'-,ti,-><-,Le-M.,,....,,-,-=Pb,..--.,-1
PM .. June":• Ensign School, 646-7616 '66 vw, red. wtlle vinyl int. Power stttrin&'. k brakea pwr windows, al~ ~ond:
Irvme &. Cliff Dr ... Newport Zl' KENCRAFT, self contain-11,000 mi. Xlnt cond. $1395. factory air cond. Beautiful auto, bucket seals, 18,000
Beach, in ~et~num. No ed, sell or trd for house aft 5:30 PM 962-1851 turquois exterior with white miles. Mint cond. $2395.
advance registration neces-trJr. 25511 Fairway Dr .. CM MUST SELL lmmed, ,60 leatherette interior. A very 540-2550 ex! Z15. Aft 6:30
sary. Enroll at class; If any 18, SC extras excel VW Sunroof $&lil 'Excel well kept car. 646-2733 q~estions phone 548-1374 or cond·. $i::~8--372Z ' cond .. S43-0ljl · ~ull _Price _$1095 l~'"61"P"'"""t"1a",--.-Le'°'M"°.•"o-c,.-o:Cc-on-,· .. I
613-1855. · , tst carlot on HarborlJlvd. Good cond. $950. 642-01.62
1937 18' Ch"""" 00" Trucks 9500 59 VW Bus 5350• JOHNSON & SON """"",._.,.,PM original shore bOat for yacht Must Se-II! 675-1076 I · d Uncoln-Mercury inboards. 4 c Y t n er '62 FOR O ECONOLINE Costa Mesa Branch RAMBLER
univt?rsal engine. perfect van, <!!tJ L1lir:vy re b t t. ___ V_O_L_V_O ___ 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642-?05CI ---------1
runabou1 t for ba~boa.tp. Onlb Y engine, mags. $!Kl0 64.~·~ ,56 Un 1 Con 4 d *** Flneat Rambler one ike it .,.,.,.,. , one . ., '681/ VOLVO con t r conv I T 54S-5294 ask for Joe for DODGE ~ Wheel drive. "' · 2 -{'actory air, co',,,pl.ete pow~ n own
demonstration. ton. $300. 823 Towne. Costa NEW SHIPMENT . er, beige with full leather In-1963 Rambler VS 2 Dr ~ed.
BARIENT WINCHES ~M="'=·=646-==125=7====~ I JUST ARRIVEDI terior. $2300 firm. 494460t Au~ tran.11, power steeru:i11:.
-GET OUR DEAL TODAY ,66 EVERYTHING! < nu orliinal upholstry & carpets. See us before YoU buy! I -" Aut • 9600 Al k ~ Full
Marine & Battery Shoppe 1...cm.;:po_r_•----°'----1 ~ l••tM 1 tires &: bat. Ste r eo. ;;;.ys ept cover ......
Z430 W. Ct'>ut Hwy., N.B. e Spot Caah tor Imporh. fQll uuw' YELLOW w/BLACK Lan· $89S
*642-9'201 * We pay more for any import dau lop &. Int. 642--0335 1st Mr lot on Harbor Blvd.
Licensed Skipper ~:·~":,~~on'.".,,;.•a.;; i:;r~: IMPORTS '68 BRAND now Contin<0"'1. JOHNSON & SON
WANTS SUMMER JOB you 1eJt . ELMORE Leue tor Sl5S pr. month. Llneoln-Mercury
Full or ·P•rt Time MOTORS,, 9625 G •rd e n 1996 Harbor, C.M. 646-9.1,0J Johnson"' Son. 642--0!tlll Costa Meaa Branch
__ .;646-;;;;29'17~,:':;·'~"7· --l.=G="":'=:Bl:vdO:JE'=T-<i630===1'64 Volvo 54+B18, 26 mP&, COUGAR 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642-7050
STEAL IT I EO best otter by wee-kend takes. '&t RAMBLER • station
'.!6' Double~er WhaJe Boat. __ A_LF--:A::-::R::O::::M::--~;:;:l=';:":':'="°="'=·='="=·=67J.=U89==l'68 BR.AND New. Couaar · wa&on, 330 lilt, rad to, hull in good shape. $125. ,58 ALFA ROMEO, RED lease for $89.00 per mo. beater. 1utomaHc. White ex· * 642--42.IJ • roo.d!ter, rood cond, Rac:e C•n, Rods 9620 JoMson &: Sari. 642-0!m. ter!or, fawn &reen interior.
n -·--Just lpeflt $.."90. on engine. \VANTED Boy 19 to • $700 536-678"l 'S'i' Nardi Rdstr. H·Mod. 800 FORD Car in perfect shape! Take
s.lnglc, 'tor deck hand. 5eTld cc FuU-Race ena-. Spare trade or $150 ca a. h .
all particuJars c/o Daily ~A TSUN part.a w/traller. $ 13 0 0 . 967 FORD C S Ir Payments $29. mo. Call
Pilot Box Pl.42 67U734 Olt ~ lw 390 vo,untryt "Pise after 11. 494-9773 or 639-3617
SAOUF1CE! '" aw .... '" DATSUN · .,.,, . '"o., , =:c=--,--.---~
EQUIPPED TO GO! Must Autol Wented• 9700 P/B, R&H, air cond. 6 pus '61 Ramber 4 door sedan. 6
17,000 miler. in warranty. cyl. Rebuild c~ine New 3
See! Prlv Prty, $4450. or NEW "'T --S46-3825 speed auto. trarwnluion. make d.fer 962-43'70 BRANO ,, WE PAY ...
Ba I k H d SH '58 Ford Fairlane 2 dr, auto., Interior likl new ssoo. 1503
16' Ocean Skiff, 75 hp rw c ay en CA E. Fairmont. Sanla Ana
Enmude, ~ec. it " t. $199 Cash or Trade good .,,nd. MUJ! sell lmm<d. 542-3864 "
Raytheon OE· 726 · F•m· $200. 540-5090
ll>om<t•• .. 673-4370 36 Pymlt @ $S4.U mo 1or u.od can • """" just '6! G,>!f.><Y, lull ..,....,.. ''" STUDEBAKEl
• .SACRJF? * 32' Twin 4
7
9im3m*I 0 :;9'3'6'71 call ua for tree dtlmate. owner. xlnt cond. ssoo. Ph.1 ---------
"'-!. a .. dy -1o---.~1 ;;~.=:£::::::==1 GROTH CH""""''n 642-497! 1957 S"ruDEJIAKER. Low anywtiert. Price $13.DI ORI; JA,,._U-AR l:lllVLll '60 GALAXY; R/H, F•c air ml-lea.re. classic lines, excel
3-5Cll w Aak lot Sales Manapr lood c;:ond.; auto. tranl. S299 oond, Leaving area, car
11211 8-c:h Bl,. 536-na can't iO: saxi 673-3179
DRY Boat St~. lO'...tl'J', '631*1Mark10. 4 cir sedan, Hunttnaticm 8eecb '63 Stude~er GT Hawk 4
leiced ,.rd, on "" .,.,.,, dlr .,,_. In-(p,.,. • KI W3ll MUSTANG ~. AM• FM. Excel. cond. Newport Beach. 40c per ft. • beanldn teatl a ~
64M312 ...,... -l!OOl, -Will Buy' ·~ .,._. vtr/ c1.... 1=======1 * SAC SALE! =· TWin Dietel whit~ uterior, !II' cond., 29 000 actual m.Uet
Reedy to ro anywhere power atHridf, all~attc, Your Votawacen or Ponchl Reu. ' • • 6*-3006 + Price -$13,500. OR 3-5822 * n4io, helter. ~aion•eta ·I: PV tap dbl1an. Paid for · I~--------I
l-7 ~-• ~-<O ?8dl zi.cm ml. U99 &It. or .. .-. ,..an Ral..., '67 MUSTANG Convt, 390 '60 T-BIRD. T«I; hardtop,
. Day~~"" -~•-" w1ll -b<ol. aft 11, ·-,~73 11.-90 "''· 4 spd, 2 + 2. tow mil .. , ldeol 2nd cu. 1345 CUh hp Evii.'rud. extra. nit. 4M-81'13. ~11 • $2500. 6'B-n18 6t6-7&t2 Afler 6 PM -·-
T0 llRD
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1968 Valiant
'206_5
.... , .. , trod9 111 .11 ...... c.
011ly $45.H ,... MOllttl for )6 molttk
I /l dow11 tu ctMI ll11tnM Tncl11ded. N•. "'
W•'rt •II •llr Wey .. Meo,,...
l11t tM 11-i.r -Chrysler ,.,_.,.. ,.,..,.., '"' ... ,. f 0;_..9' Cnwty.
' '' '
2471
All ~lted ,..1us ore pl111 tu •d IJunt.
SAVINGS
'65 Plymouth '66 Riviera '61 Mercury '63 Plymouth
•ury Hf111. v•. auttm .. lc, ••· VI, aut""al!c. radlt, l'lt•tl'r, Miii! Pf le .. ,rKl118, VI. '"" l1lvfdlre J !>I'. VI, autem111c,
!flt.-"""'' _., 11_.1n1. ........ , 1tflrln1 & ..,,11;ft., Alll tomlllc, _, 118tr:1n1, racllt, r1dl1, llt91•r, "°"' •I-In• l'ACTOlllY Allll CONDITIONING.
''"' CONDITIONING. ;d15 lltlllr. 1•441 #4171
$1395 $2999 $495 $795
'66 Mercury '68 Chev. '64 Plymouth '65 Dodge
Clllllnlf. VI, ilifi'mi!IC. 1ilD, "'"''· 11•1 •• mrr•H. 11ctwv ·~· AU!fii'iilfC lf1111111i. 01rt 1'1t 1 DMI' ll1r111NJ. Aull-
..,..._, •-dffrl111, Alll w1rAo11"1', eult!Mnc, r1111f, "'•I• •lfll· , ..... ,...,.,. ,....,, matk. r1cwe, 11111•r, ....,
C0frtfl1TIO/rt1NG. h lH ... ,,,,, *'"rl111. 16401
52222 52499 $1222 $1488
" '67 Olds. '65 Imperial '64 Chev. Service-Parts
ond Body Shop
Cwl\Mt ·--•Or. lfll, VI, trfWl'I, I DI'. frt,T, Vl, l~IMllllC. ''"'·"· v.. """"'le· ""' Open tulfnllllt. 111fit, llfflff", .1111 ,._ 11Mr .. tr1U., win .......
''"''"'• , ... '"" """'' 1640:2 -1. l".ICTOllY Alll, lit N/C.
CONIJITIOHINO, "'"' •• ,,. ... iy. , .. ,. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Mon. 52666~ $2666 $1477. 7:30.5:30 ·p.m.
Tues. thru Frf, ·
All .... prfcas •f!-'llw ffir. f!Mm,, ..hi• 6~ 1961
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DA.D.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE --Voter Needs .Choice
Disenchantment may be th• key word to describe
feeling• among many Republicans and Democrats In
today's presidential prime.ry election._
The Democrats have s uch a plethora of choices
wit.b two committed and one uncommitted slate of dele.
gates to choOse among that they're likely to end up_
with no one really satisfied. with the outcome.
The Republicans. on the other hand,,.d pn't have any
means of expressing a choice. Either theyVoti for tht
Reagan-committed slate of 86 party.picked convention
delegates Or they don't vote at all. Since write-10 votes don't count. and there's only
one GOP .slate, there's no legal way to dissent. Na·
turaJJ,y , a good manf ~epublicans of independent mind
will feel disfranchised -and no doubt wondering whe-
ther a good hard look at California's election laws might
not result in improvement in the democratic process.
The "favorite son" stratagem isn't well under·
stood, especially by those voters who have never in·
tere.sted themselves in the inner.. workings of American
political parties. . . .
It ls every four years IS Whether. as in professional
sports, the losers of the past have learned how to win.
If it were not for the Kuchel~Rafferty race for the
U.S. Senate, and some local matters, Orange Coast
RepubUcari voters would be just that -spectators -tor all thf: interest and Involvement the RepubUcan
presidential ballot offers.
A hard look at California primary laws to see if
some way cannot be tound ·to insure partY primary
voters some reasonable expressioi:-i of c hoice -@t least
the opportunity to oppose the slate. if that js thelr feel·
ing -or perhaps to vote that the state be uncommitted
-would seem clearly worthwhile.
....
' Protecting Our Children
Window dressing for the gambit 1s that 1t ma~es
for party unity and avoids internecine warfare which
could result in loss of support for the pa r ty's .nominee.
This week has been designated "National School
Bus Safety Week1" It is being officially recognized
and supported at s tate and local levels, for California
uses more Lbah 10,000 buses to transport a million pu·
""J>ils each school day. ·
There are other retii son s, however. Historically.
"favorite sons" have become party nominees out of
deadlock. breaking compromises in t h e legendary
''smoke--filled rooms" a't convention hotels. But much
more often the commitment of a state's delegation to
a favorite son gives the group the convention "clout,"
the maneuverability, the bargaining power in political
deals which may finally d etermine the nominee.
On this score, the Democratic P arty is famed for
if.! ability to stage primary election don~ybrooks '!-"d
then close ranks behind the eventual nominee to bnng
him home a winner. The R epublicans are better known
(1964 being a prime example) for deep division along
ideological lines and then being unable to close ranks
in support of .the nominee. . . .
One of the thil)gs that make poht1cs, espec1ailX
preSidential politics, the ab5orbing "spectator sport'
W ASHING1'.0N -The Federal
Bureau of Investigation'& massive
probe of the assassination of Dr. Mar·
tin Luther King is t.aking a possibly
sensational turn.
Witb James Ead Ray, the suspected
.assassin, appanntly either outsid~ t!'e
U. S. or now dead, FBI agents have 1n·
creased their awveillance of several
American Communists known to havr
been closely aS60ciated with King, in-
cluding me who wrote !peeches for
him ln the past.
This new development was trlgge!ed
by evidence gattiered by the more
than 1,000 agents who have. worked on
the mysterious King shQOting and by
several "tips" arid letters sent to the
FBI.
One of the most Interesting of these
"ti.pg" came from an alert TV .viewer
and concerns the now famous "Moun·
tain Top" speech King made on April
3,· the night before his slaying, sh~
ing a premonition of his impending
death.
''1F THE SPEECH was truly made
in Memphis on April 3 as reported."
the Jett.er poiinted: out. "then how can
one account for King stating his age as
36 (instead of 39) and why does he
speak of demonstrating in Alabama
twice during the speech?"
After checking out the time ;ind
location of King's final speech, several
Of the crack FBI agent6 a&signed to
the case decided to begin seekin~
an1wers to a number of their own
questiQll«, including:
"If King had personally written that
speech, why would tie make mistakes .
like those contained in it -especially
the one involving his age?"
"U the gpeech was written by some·
one other than King, who was the
.author and when was it written'.'"
THE ANSWERS to these questioni;
are considered highly important to the
invt.Sti&ation, since,. if another person
was concerned in the preparation of
that speech, the writer might be. able
-M. B.
· n.11 ftl!Yr• r..,._tt rtaft,.,' Wltwt. Ml
111uU1rU1 lt!DH ol lt!t n-•••-· UM
Y•Yr "' ...... " QIOO ... , Qua. 01111 P'lltl.
tn shed new light on ii -especially
those mistakes.
Also. if King had received help with
the speech, the passages dealing wit)1
the civil rights leader's premonition nr
death would probably have been fully
discussed. Kjng's request to the
Detroit police department for 'prn·
tection when he visited that city a fe w
weeks before his death indicated he
teared for his life the(I.
Information gathered by the FBI on
King. prior to his assassination. show·
ed that a secret member ·of the Com·
munist Party's executive committee
was one of King's clOsest advisers and
speech writers.
THIS GilOST WRITER for King
prepared many of his most famous
i;peeches. according lo testimony
given by fBI Director .I. Ed~ar
Hnover duri nJ:! a closed door meeting
of a l~ouse Appropriations sub·
committee.
Since Ray during his trips prior to
King's assassination visited the same
city In which this ghost writer Uvl!!s,
the FBI is now investigating to
determine if the two met covertly.
Recent evidence gathered by FBl
agents in one of the most massive
probes in t~e nation's history has
forced seriou's investigation of these
possibilities:
-That somebody close to King or
within his own organization tipped nff
his assassi n as to the civil rights
lea<ler's routine on 1he day of hi.s
slaying .
-That Ray v.·as hired direclly hy
cC'rtain hlack nationalists whn paid
him with money made a\·ailable by
foreign sources.
PAul Senti
And Everybody ls Wrong
The Germans are. too square.
The French Sii!! too greedy.
The Italians are too effusive.
The Scandinavians are too morose.
The Negroe1 are too shiftless.
The Jews: axe too pushy.
The British are too reserved.
-ISN'T IT GREAT that the
Americans aren't tOo anything?
The Spanish are too violent.
The Greeks are too quarrelsome.
The Japanese are too devi0t16.
Thie Arabs are too fanaUcal.
The Mexicans are too lazy.
The Hindu! are too superstitious.
The Dutdl are too J)hlegmatlc.
-ISN'T IT GREAT lh•I l he
Americans aren't too anythlng?
Thi SWias are too prissy.
The Finns are tot wlthd.rciwn .
The Rus1ian1 are t o o tern·
peromentol.
'l1M Chlnek are too passive.
'lbt Tm'b •e too ferocioU1.
Tho Pole• are too primltiV<.
The H1mgarlln• are too 1Uppery.
-IBN"I' IT GREAT !hit I h e
American& aren't too anything!
Even tboufb the Germans find ua
f t;.' -.• ..._.,
t:-,S,.dney Barri• L; .. ', =· ....... ,_· '
too anarchic.
And the French find us too naivl!!.
And the Italians rind us too repress-
Pd,
And the British find us loo fl am·
boy ant.
And the Japanesl! fi nd U$i too rude.
And !ht' Mf'x icans find us too ar·
roganl.
And the Swiss fir1d us loo dirty.
1\nd !he Spanish find us IO('I
materialistic.
And the Scandinavians find us loo
\•iolent.
And the Hindu'! find us loo
hypocritical.
And tht Hungarians find us loo
joylus.
And the l"inns find us ~boisterous.
.\N'J t.>'ERYBODY finds e>erybody
else to be too much of what it ii not.
and everybody is unaware of how ht
could u3e some of the tr.aits he dislikes
In others. a nd everybody thinks that
his own bad traita: ~ real!)'. virtues.
and everybody ls wrong a b o u t
everybody.
l
Alt.hough Section 22454 of the California Vehicle
Code is clearly and simply worded, there are still driv·
ers unfamiliar with it, or who become. confused as to
exactly what they should do when approaching or over·
taking a stopped school bus.
It's simple. If the bus d ispiays flashing red lights,
stop -no matter which direction you may be traveli ng.
And don't move until the flashing red lights are turned off. ·
A liighway with separate roadways is different. It
isn't necessary to stop on meeting or passing a school
bus which is on the other roadway. Also; the driver of
a vehicle need not stop on meeting or passing a school
bus when the bus is stopped at an intersection or place
where traffic is controlled by ·a traffic officer or an oi-
ficial traffic control signal.
The law is simple. Let's observe it lo the Jetter,
at au times.
I have been serving on the special
citizens committee studying the fi·
nances, operation and future o( the
Orange Coast Junior College District.
and consequenUy I f'eel that r have a
much clearer picture o( the financial
need! and problems of the district
than most citizens.
Yet it shouldn't take much of a
study to realize:
I. THAT TllE NUMBER nf slu· d~nts enr.olied in .our junior colleges
w11J continue to increase rapidly in
the foreseeable future (estimated al
15 percent per year increase).
2. That the assessed value land
conseqtiently the property tax income
based upon present rates) will con-
tinue to increase at only about 5 per·
cent per year. The assessed value per
student in our district has decreased
from $228,000 (When ii was one of the
richest ) to $94,000 Cwhich is less than
the stat.e average).
3. During the next 10 years the
pr("Sent plant size of this district will
have to be doubled to take care of
anticipated enrollment Increases. The
cost of this would be roughly $30 mil-
lion (both OCC and GWC will be opcr·
ating beyond optimum capacity dur-
ing the 1968-69 school year ).
4. THE DISTRICT or slate C()Sl pea
college student, both in operation and
capital costs is much less for junior
colleges than for state coUeges and
universities. Hence it is advanta·
geous to !he taxpayer to provide
adequate junior colleges to take care
of the first two years of higher edu-
cation .
5. The cost for tile student is also
much less in the junior colleges.
which incidentally are providing vital
educational and vocational trainini!
tor those who cannot afford the four
years of state or private schools.
Linder Proposition 2, half of the cost
of junior college expansion will cornc
fro1n a statewi<M! general tax base, as
it should. instead of all of the cost b)
LOCAL PROPERTY TAXPAYERS.
A YF.S vote here is a plain case of
POCKETBOOK PRUDENCE ...
DON HUDDLESTON
1'10,.e Optimistic .
To the Editor·
Y-our editor ial, "Desalt Success
\"ital." in your l\1ay 20 edition camf'
B11 Geor11e---.
Dear George :
Is ther~ any hope f n r
matrimonial happiness for me ? I
simply hate housekeeping and
rather love Utter. but men \vho
become interested in me back off
wben they see my sinkful of dirly
dishes. unstraightened apart·
ment, etc.
What can I do? Where is my
Prince Charming who loves com·
fort even if ii is sloppy?
GET'l'ING WORRIED
Dear Getting Worried :
Don't despair. We had a girl
researcher like you. Sh~ left last
montti. and the ·ashtrays on her
desk were still overflowing with
crumpled packs Of Lucky Strikes
-the green packages . .and they
havtn't made those since World
War II. But she ~1 her Prince
Channing. She got a job and
manied her editor -he's the
boss .at Bad Housekeftj)ing.
l Even their Seal of ApprovaJ
luves a smudge.)
Letter.! from -readers are welconie.
Normally write rs sh-Ould. convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense letters to fit sp<1Cfl-
nr eli"tiJlate libel i.! reserved. All let·
ters must include signature and mo.U-
ittg address, but 11ames will be with·
held O)t request.
right to the heart of the matter con-
cerning the proposed.. Bolsa Island
Nuclear Power and Desalting Plant.
The twin objectives of the projeel-
large scale desalting of ocean water
and island si ting for nuclear power
plants-are too important to let them
die for s lack of vision.
-... AT THIS ;\10Mt-:NT, I ~ A"m some·
what more optimistic about the
chances for continuing the projecl
than I was a wee+: ago, but we must
realize there are still sor.-ie impor·
\ant hurdles to be crossed before the
fi nal go-ahead is given.
Wert reasoned and articu late sup·
port irom the press. as evidenced hv
your editorial. will be an importarit
fac~or in 'the future success of this
pro1ect.
CRAIG HOSMER
Member Qf Co ngress
Ou11ge~ou.• llhulon
To the Editor :
The relationship between blacks and
whites is the nation's chief domestic
problem. Our best interests require t~at we determine what's both prac-
tical and just in improving this
relationship.
Racial integration of residential
::ireas: is in1possiblc. "'· II. "Ping"
Ferry of the Center for the Study of
Democratic Institutions. Sa n I a
Barbara. explored lhi!' th e m e
{"Farewell to In tegration" speech al
Stanford Universi ty. Nov. 8. 1967\.
Fifty of our largest cities will hf'
mainly black by 1970. The Negro·.~
mall"rial situation will steadilv im·
prove. Blacktown and whitetow·n will
be separate cultural. social and
political communities.
INTEGRATION is a sentimental.
not a doctrinal idea. It disapptars al
the fi rst sign of indocilily, at the fir st
showing of the rioter's torch.
\\'hit.es fear integration. Thi!! Pro.
rnsjlion 14 vote wai; strongly for
segregati on. \Vhcn blacks streamed in-
1.n EnJt\and the .l.abor government
abruptly narrowed the gates.
The vast fuss about improvementi;
in blacktown isn't aimed at in·
tcj?ration. The ai ms are to preve nt
<'ivic co m m o I I o n s . to salve
whiletown's conscienc e and lo help !hf'
blacks.
The whil.t attitude toward blacks ii;
gen<?ra\\y"'beflign. Whll.ef; don't object
tn bettering the Negro's condition as
long ai; It doesn't 0061 too much. Or
intrude on their prlvil~ca of peace·of-
mind. '
TOOA ,. \Vf~'RJo: fostcrin~ lhr Irr·
ribly dangerous illusion that in·
te,aatlon is a white goal that can bf'
achieved. This illusion is pathetic and
vicious in its, effl!!ct.~ on blacks. Il's
sinlsll!!r for the whites since this ii·
lusion leaves us unprepared for reaU-
ly,
We must learn how lo run a
!leparate society without s•crlficlng
freedom 'Bnd justice for any mAn . r dh11grt_e wJlh ntany of thfl: modern-
libl!:ral reocts. But I mu11t COTT'U"Qend
Mr . Ferry for rt-alisticaUy facing the
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---.·--= integration issue. t hope that other
liberals also will face reality and work
for practical ways t"o better the Negro.
LEONARD WRIGHT
The Buslr P.-obleJn
To the Editor :
The basic problem with the poor. it
seems to me, is penl·up envy, rivalry,
and hate because of their status in this
affluent world.
The black race historically has the
largest. richest continent on this globe.
Only God knows how long Negroes
have Jived in Africa. In a:ll the
thousands of years. the black people
have never developed the land. made
use of its riches, or progressed beyond
the state of savagery, or the primitive.
Human nature is such that when one
receives tielp. financially or otherwise,
he seldom feel.a gr~titude, but only
resentment that he was in a position
where he need.ed help.
• THIS IS THE natural reaction of
many people. Thank God the vast ma-
jorit y of Negroes, especially the
women I have talked to, are grateful
they do not still li ve like animals in the
jungles o( Africa. barefooted. with
rings in their noses, and where the life
expectancy rate is 30 years.
Thank God also, it has been a
minority of Caucasians who through
selfishness and greed 'have imposed a
cruel and ruthless set of living con·
ditions oil' black people. This is the
~avagery of the white race.
Through the centuries the vast" ma·
jority of white people have soui!:ht In
better conditio05 for all peoples
through better health. education. and
spiritual improve ments.
\VHAT IS ft10ST needed for at\ pe(l-
ple is the opportunity to expand free
individual enterprise -the very
freedom that has made this country so
Rreat. This can be accomplished by a
better. more intelligent and honest
means of distributing pn>fits and
"know-how." the wealth of our land.
Socialism-communism is NOT the
answer. Education, proper evaluation.
unselfishness. and love for a I l
mankind, is the answer.
MRS. LILLIAN W, RILEY
v1.,ariou1 l'lac=e bo•
To thi!! Editor:
ln recent years there has been ;i
grov.·ing trend in education and soc.iety
to disp arage athletics parUcipation :
boys a~ girls -particularly young
men and women in high school and
coUege -have been left nothing of
value to replace our nation's former
high degree of social encoura~ement
or yo uth participation in physical
education activities.
Social a c c e pt a n c e and en-
couragement of bodily development by
.izrowi ng persons has been replaced by
,l!'.oals limJted to the intellect ... pridl!!
In physical culture has been replaced
by a variety of questionable mind
cu ltur~.
lntelligence is ~uch that the emo·
Ilona! 5Umulus to value-making can be
~ubverted in many {more or less in·
lellectu~ll wa ys. When this happens
misplaced value~ usually result. '
TELEVISJON. motion p i c I u re s ,
magazines and rad.lo .... the primary
vehicles to yoolh communJcatlon -
suggest an individual's social ac·
ceptance as a smoker, drlnker and
drug·u¥r.
This is how we learn lo chcri~h
things wi don't netd and negli!!cl the
purtuit o( lhing5 we do require.
~MneV'tr young persons lo15e l.heir
natural 1e.n1e of phyllcal self.f!s-teem
,. i • t , : • ·t . "" ~ I . , ... -, '·• . ~· . ·\ (-, ... ·.:i.•·-'·~·· :,..· 't' ' . ; ' .· .. •, •' ,.... ·' 1•: .. , . i
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-wh;'j; the cor;espondence between
animal needs and likes breaks down -;
we find our value systems no longer
offer reliable guides to living.
The family O{ contemporary youth.
reenforce social acceptance Of tobac·
co. alcohol and drugs by adult
society's casual indulgence and depen-
dence upon : cigarettes be! ore
breakfast; cocktails before lunch and
dinner and a multiplicity of drugs for
sickness, healllh af)d well-being.
SUPPLEJ\1ENTING t h e s e in·
ducerrients to body degeneration,
parents conspicuously avoid sporti;
participation and. :nsiead, become
l>SY.chologicelly addicted to •th e
vicarious placebos provided by tv, the
n1ovles and mu.sic ... the vicious,
Pavlovian social cycle has come full
circle. \ _
Rather than oblige our natural,
animal req11irements fo r sports ac·
tivities participation and experiencing
thei r accompanying. mentnl and
physical euphoria, we have permitted
ourselves to be brain.washed into
believing the same sense or well-being
may be att!l'ined through d r u g
escapes.
Research by New Jersey f'oundation
physical education . psychology and
sports medicine authorities has con-
firmed the extraordinary co ntributions
of atlhletics t6 the growth and develop·
ment of girls a.~ well as boys and
their vital requirements for self·
realization.
BRUCE HOPPING
llenned11'• ~1011ey
To the Editor :
J am shocked any newspaper would
print an editorial as you did in your
May 29 issue.
Am only sorry I have no choice. bu t
to subscribe to the DAfLY PILOT if I
want local ne\Vs. The only difference
in the money bein~ spent in the cam·
paign is that Sen. Kennedy is spending
his own while a couple of our grease·
tongue o r a I o r s are spending the
people's.
\10 U SPEAK OF him coming Into
the rate after Sen . McCarthy had pav ·
ed the way. How abour our coy "White
Knight" in Sacramento? He is rurming
har4er than anyone. And Gov .
Rockefeller ren'linds me of a yo yo. Af·
!Pr all. it is a free country.
CaUfornia is fa st approaching the
bottom in many ways. But I think it
'-''Ould be very sad to nominate a man
for President of the United States whn
can't run one state. ·As for di gnity . I
would n't be afraid to pit Sen . Kennedy
against any of the candidates or non -
ca ndidates;.
MRS. E. O.
---W-
1'ueroar. June 4. 1968 '
The editoriol pogr. o/ lht Dai/11
PU01 seek.! to itt}orm and stim·
ulau rcarl.ers by presenting th13
11ewspaper's opinion& and com-
mc~ttar!) on -topi~ of inttre.!t
and significance, l>y prcwiding n
forum for the expression of
our readtrs' opinion&, and bt1
pre$entin11 the d iverse viin.o-
point.t of informed. nhserver1
l'J'nrl rpoktimtn qn topics of tht
(lay.
Robftrt N. \lleed. J:'ubUsh~er
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