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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-06-12 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesai > ALMOST TOGETHER -Except for expanse of conference table in Cablnel Rooom of tbe White House, Sen. Eugene McCarthy (left) and President Jobn&o~ got together Tuesday. '.fhe President met with the .·DAILY PILOT WEDN_ESDAY. AFTERNOON, JUNE ·12, :19'68 I VOL. '1, MO. 141, 1 l•Cl'IONI, M P'AliU Dad Dis1raught Crashes Studio for Son's Pictures A Costa Mesa father •. tormente~ by the Vietnam combat death of his only son, is free on ball today, after break- :iong into a San Diego photo shop to get pictures of the youth's military f'\llleral. Anthony Gerome, 51, of 240 16th Place, was arr~ on ~suspicion or at- tempted burglary after witnesses call- ed police, but was released oo $2,500 bail Tuesday. Victor Gonzalez, owner of Victor's Custom Photography Studio, has not decided wh.ether to prosecute the anguished real estate salesman, who sma5tled the fancy glass door with a tire iron. "The gentleman has already had quite a loss," Gonzales told the DAILY PILOT today, "He must be suffering a great deal or sorrow. Why add to it?" Gonzalez, however. said he feels it is only fair that someone shOuld replace the ornate, $100 door which he destroyed oo Monday. The suspect -who could not be reached at his home for comment to- day -told San Diego police he visited ovel' the weekend in the hope of get- ting pictures taken at the May 18 funeral, He went to the closed shop on Sun· Qay, .then returned on Monday, shorUy before Gonzalez arrJved from a weekend business trip, and reportedly went into a frenzy when he fOUDd it closed again. Ironically, Gonzalez said today, his studio handles weddings and other happy occasions, but he sent a photographer to the Fort Rosecrans fuperal of Sgt. Michael A. Gerome, 21, as a favor to a Lions Club associate. Friends of the Gerome family bad ordered proofs of photographs of the young Gl's flag-draped casket and the rifle squad as it gave the eountry's final salute to him. "I have never met Mr, Gerome or had any dealings with him over the photos ," Gonzalez said today. Gonzalez said friends of the Gerome family purchased proofs of the funeral pictures Tuesday and will presumably order some to help the Gl's family honor their grief and loss. Yotmg Sgt. Gerome was killed May 7 in Vietnam and il\e funeral was May 18, according to reports. Police Seek Marine, 17, As CdM Slaying Suspect By JEROME F . COLLINS Of.I.Ill D11ty P'li.t Stitt A 17-year-old AWOL C amp P endleton Marine is being S<lugbt as prime suspect In the slaying or Corona del Mar in6urance man George F. Lyorui, Newport Beach police disd06- ed today. - Pfc. Edwin William Oiott Ill of Per· McCarthy to Suh . For President WASHINGTON (UPl)-Future col-' lege professor Lyndon B. J ohnson is lining up lecturers like Sen. Eugerae J. ~tcCarthy and longshoreman- philosopher Eric Hoffer to spell him at the college podium. IR a jovial mood at a state dioner far the Shah of lran,-on revealed Chtt at a meetli;g with McCartlly at the White House Tuesday he told the presldiential hooelul he expected to teach at the Unfvenlty of Texas. McCarthy told him, "save a spat for me," Jobrwon reported. The President also told newswomen that be hod tllJ!POd Holler to ln1trucl (See JOHNSON, P11< I) ' I ryville, Mo., ls named in a murder wan-aot issUed by Newport Harbor Municipal Court. The warrant, car· rying no bell, was issued secretly several days ago . Newport Beach Police Capt. llouls Heere&, said the search for Chott, pro- nounced Cot, is centered en tlhe St. Louis, Mo., area. "M our requeet. the FBI ha8 en- tered the case ood has obtained a federal warrant charging the suspect with unlawful flight to avoid pro- !8Clltion fur murder," Heeres 9add. He ~ that "flome lelds" on aiott~ whef'eeboubl had !&lied to develop in reced days. Chott w.-M described as a youth of medium build, five feet, ten inches tall, with a tight brown crewcut and brown eyes. He enurted in the Marines five months ego. He was last seen at Camp Pend\eton on May 20, the morning m Lyons' rnurder. The young •uopect l< reporUdly from a family o( modest circumstances. Capt. Heeres said Chott was reported seen µi Springfieta, Mo., at about the time Lyons' mlsslng 1961 Thunderbird was found there in a (See MARINE, Pat• %) Will Tiley Ever Get • . ................ YflU•1 Any ~loser? ' Democratic presidential candidate· alone. White Hou!e ··news sources later said they talked aboQt politics and· policy, including the Paris peace .talks and V10"r" war, "" .H . ! "" ,,.., s .sem • un • :;..: ·'" ·~ men NK.1 ,,l.01' .......... BRAVE 'GIRLS' -Mrs. James Camey, a brave mother, talks things oVer. with, Laur& Camey before the 3-year..ald "queen obbearts" underwent fir1t ot two major cardiac operaUon-s and befote she was selected as Memorial Day Gift Girl · of the Orange County Heart Association. Things look bright ' for tiny patient now, if she can only get help from blood donors clurtng Friday's bloodmobile stop at Hoag Memorial Hospital. · • Heart Works OK Now Laura It's been a rtugh 15 U)'I for !lie James Carneys of Huntlngtoo Beach, but the worst l! over. Tiny 3-year--0ld hurt patte• Laura Carney underwent a 11).hoiiJu:r. closed heart operation on_ Ma,,y at St. Bernardlne'• Hospital In Son Benutrdlno to partially relieve her Survives breathlnc problem• c1UI04 by • l!a<ll.Y de!onned b11rt. Her parents ond the 'team .of heart 1ura:eon1 who performed the Qperatton · though at fltft Jt "'' a success. The flr1t clue that It wam't what they hoped ' cafne when one 1uri19n 1ald be wUil't cetllnf !lie espOcled 'Scare' "bl01111" 10unds wllkh the new opening in tlil heart cbiJ>lber should moire. s~r,:om• d.Ve1opec1 with i.aur•'• brea g becoming' more and more dlfficult imW abe had convu11lon1. , The 1ur$:irformed a 1econd operation , three ttour1 tbl• (Boe . GIRL,'P• !l • • 1. -· '· For Lack of GOP Votes SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Asserbblf CrlmiDal Procedure Com• mittee early today killed a tough gun control bill, almost a week to the minute alter Sen. Robert F. ,J<•nn•df was fatally wounded. · · 'Mlfl voice vote by , the tl).m«nber committee came minutes after mid· night on the measure by Assemblyman Robert W. Crown (I). Alameda), a member of the delegation pledged to Kennedy at the Democratic Nationill Convention · · ·Crown said ·none of the live Republicans · on the committee· v&ted for thi:r bill. Ke said all fj.ve Democrat. · favored the measure, but ·six votea were needed for approval. .However, he ·Indicated' there wi.1 a possibility another measure might be sponsored by some other laWmaker and sent .to a different .committee. · Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh, Kennedy's California c.ampaJgn chairman, told newsmen Tuesday he favored swift acUon on a gun control law. Crown aald Unrul! 1upported hit (See GUN LAW, Pap !l Orange Cea&" Weatlter ' ' U you don1 eee the sun to-- morrow morning, wait a 'while; it'll be a little late. That's the word from. forec11ter Gordie • Shields who tees a continued> cooling trend along the' co11t . INSmE TODA. Y Tht m111tmoui man toi&h the my.sterious life Gt the nondt· tcriPt London Hot.ti WOJ the obo ject of one of oreo.ttrt ma• huntr in hilt01y. Page 9. ' " • -• .. --' ............... ............. , .. ,. ...... ,.,. .... c... , -" AMl..-n 11 -· . ==" ~ ,..... ,_ " ~-... :::::'.:" ~ ....... ,,.. _,, . -;:.:-. , .. r. -. .............. ... """ . .. • - ,, ' -. e OAll Y I'll.OT 1Con_g · Shell Air . . b 'ef ender's Office Gets 1 Harriµian Raps Attack Sirhan :Case . SAIGON (UPI) -The Viet Cong shelled tlle Tan Son Nhut Air Base to- day and killed fOJlr Vietnam•,. children and •· U .. S. ·•man, tlrat . American victim of U days of terror attick.s. The Utilled Stales stepped up its air attackl against the north. The tenor attacks became the sub- ject of the Vietnam lllkl In Parla to- day when U. S. Ambi.ssador W. Averell Haniman delivered a strong protest. There was an impllcatlon of U. S. reprisal attacks against the north. (See l'Ulry, Page 5) . · A mlllwy spoteeman said, U. s. fig!Ur-bombers took advantAge of hn· lJn)ved weather and launched 137 rnll1lon1 against the aouthern panhan- dle Tuesday in on& of the heaviest raids of the year. one pilot fired a rocket with deadly accuracy Into the mouth ot a storage cave; another snapped a bridge rn U1e middle with a single missile. In today's attacks on Saigon the euenillas fired 14 six-foot rockets into tbe suburban air bal'le, hitting military areu ~ the hoU&es of South Viet- namese soldier lamWes. They wound- ed. 24 Vietnamese ,plus two U •. S. servicemen and two U. S. civilians. 1n the capital's 12 days or agony, hundreds of Vietnamese have been ki lt ed ar wounded in the · indiscriminate terror 1belling. But previously the only A m e r 1 c a n casualties were two m i 1 l t a r y policemen who were wowided. In Paris, American dip 1 om at s returned to the Vietnam w a r negoUating table today and warned North Vietnamese delegates that the shelling of Saigon is seriously hin· dering their attempt to cool down the war, Diplomatic observers in Paris said the United State! might CO!lSider re1umlng air raids against all of North Vietnam U the tenor shelling of Saigon goes on. Today for the first time in 12 days all the fire fell on military base areas, Hundreds of .Pages Ray Extradition Papers Given to Foreign Office LONDON (AP) -A formal request for the extradlUon of James Earl Ray, accuaed assassin of Dr. MarUii Luther -. Kini Jr., wa. handed to the British Foreign Office today by U.S. oJOcials. The docwnents were handed to the Foreign Office'• treaties and na- tionalities section by U.S. Ccnsul General Jacf'Herfurt. The U.S. Embassy declined details of the petition. It merely described it as "documents required for the ex· tradition proceedings."· Stressing the urgency with which the U.S. Justice Department regards the case, officlals managed to collect the necessary documents a day ahead of their own deadline. · IDENTITY INFORMATION The documents rwi several hundred pages and contain information on Ray's identity and the cases against him -both in connection with K1ng's murder and Ray's escape from the Missouri State Prison while serving an armed robbery .e.nteoce. The Foreign OUJce now must certify that the request satisfies the terms of the extradition treaty with the United States. The Home Office then rules on the v'alidity of the murder case under British aa well as U.S. law. Then the file goes to a judge for a court hear- ing. The formal ex·tradition request came as ScoUand Yard delved into the UXYSteries of Ray's stay in Britain. Ray has been traced to two London hotels between May 28 and his arrest Saturday, but there is an unexplained gap of about 10 days, starting May l'l i when he ·1ert Lisbon. FBI agents were understood to be working with ScoUand Yard detec· tives, but British police are doing the spadework since the FBI has no legal authority in foreign countries. Police on both sides of the Atlantic are trying to untangle Ray's travels, which took him to Canada, Britain and Portugal after King was shot April 4. Ray was transferred Tuesday to a maximum security cell in Wandsworth Prison because Brixton Jail on Lon- don's South Side, was not considered secure enough. ·Extradition proceedings could last two months if the 40.year-old escaped convict fights all the way through the British courts. LISTED AS SNEYD The British police are holding Ray ' on charges of using a forged passport and carryjng a loaded gun. On Scotland Yard's records he Is officially listed as Ramon George Sneyd, the name on his Canadian pa!sport. U.S. officials have not tried to ques- tion Ray to aVold legal complications resulting from Supreme C o u r t decisions in recent years. And now that he has been charged under Britia'h law, ScoUand Yard cannot in- terrogate him outside a courtroom. Airport Board Demanding Meeting With Supervisors 87 JACK BROBACK ~ Of 11111 0.llJ PINI S .. ft Fuming Orange County airport com- mi.sdonera blew their tops Tuesday night and demanded a showdown meeting with the Board o f Supervlsora, charging their advisory role is being usurped by County Adminiatratlve Officer Robert E . Thomas. A sublease to Cable Commuter Airlines, an air tui firm, for space In the tennlnal building caused the uproar. DAILY PILOT ....... ..... C....M• " ................. ..... .... n IW ...... ,..,. CMll'OllHA a.Wt N. w,ff --n •••• K•••U -111•"''' A. M11...hl11• -·· .,Juk ll. om., P1•l Hhtn ---~ ~llllntDINdlt Ofllno °"" #11111 -.... ..., """ ...... lllOll #11 w ............ ........ utllM.._.,m,.......•- ........... a.di! .... """' The com.mission earlier had deferred action on Cable Commuter's request for the sµb lease approval two weeks ago. Cable Commuters started Oying out of the airport Saturday, June 1 as the firm had widely adverUsed. Thomas at the .suggestion of County Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan approved the sublease of space from Pacific Southwest Airlines so Cable would have some place to sell tickets. Commissioner James Gillmore of Santa Ana touched off the fireworks Tuesday by moving that the Cable Commuter sublease be denied. "My understanding Is that we recommend action to the Board of Supervisors -not the cou'iity ad· mintstrative officer," Gillmore charg· t!d. "In this case, a decision has... alrea~y been· made. Aie our actions only valid If we do what the .ad· mlnistrative starf wants?" From Pqe J HEART GIRL • • Tbe rockets atruck the Tan Son Nbut flight Une and heliport. damaelng al least three A.metjcan aircraft. ·American military offlclah: bave said there is virtually no way to atamp out the terror shelllng because t.be rockets are eully portable, easily fired and are sited in rolling, watery 'ground perfect for guerrillas: ; In other actloo: · -About 200 Nee-th Vlfitnamese stormed Tuesday against U.S. Marine outposts in the hills seven miles south of the Leatherneck fort <i Khe Sanll on South Vietnam'• northern border. The attackers hurled 15atchel charges and grenades, killing 14 Americans and wounding 115 in the two hour fight. At least 28 North Vietnamese were killed before their unit retreated under U. S. artillery, jet bomber. and helicopter gunship fire. -At Gio Unh, farther east along the northern border line, South Viet· namese troops Tuesday killed at least 93 North Vietnamese troops. W~rld's Only Battleship In Long Beach . . Reverence for Worn Flags • Huntington Beach Elks Lodge ruler Tony Darrigo (at right) joins with (left to right) Otis Rumsey, also of Elks, and Huntington Beach Battalion Chief William Anson and Fire Chief Ray Picard to demon- strate burning of tom and worn American fla~s. The local Elks lodge members help promote respect for flags m their American- ism program. Frau<1£Sabotage Cries Mar OCC Student Vote LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Sirhan B. Sirhan will be defended aca1na1 the charge of slaying Sen. Robert F. Ken. oedy by a public defender, although h' .would prefer that private attorneys handle bJs case. Wllbur Littlefield, chief trial deputy in the <:<>unty public defeDder's office was appointed to represent Sirharl when the suspect wu arralgDed Iaat Friday. Presiding Judge Donald R. Wright · of the Superior Court placed Littlefield in permanent charge of the case Tues- day after a meeting with repr:,esen. tatives of the Los Angeles County Bar AssociaUon and the public defender's office. Sirhan said at his arraignment he could · not afford to hire private counsel. He .asked the American Civil Liberties Union to help him find two private attorneys to take his cue, although he said he was not dissatisfied with Littlefield. A. L. Wirin, head of the Southern California ACLU, asked the bar association to choose attorneys to represent Sirhan and said the defen- dant would accept the choice. Wirin revealed Tuesday lhat the defendant bas rejected offers from f\.telvin Belli, wbo defended Jack Ruby, and F. Lee Bailey, wbo represented Dr, Sam Sheppard. Leonard Janofsky, piesident of the bar associatioo, met with Wlrlil. Tuea- dlay, and then announced the u1ocia· tion ''has no power to designate counsel." "Big J" has returned from UM!' dead. That was the cry of Navy officials and shipping buffs today as the USS New Jersey, only surviving battleship in the war.Id, was mugged .alongside Elections were held -fri p;airS at charge and C01:1Dtercharge to fly·on the Pjer E in Long Beach. Orange Coast College this spring when Costa Mesa College campus, but the Wirin said Sirhan has asked him three times to represent him, but the Jawyer declined because at the present time he could see "no tonstitutJonal civU'liberties issue iii the tnil" He said be does not expect the ACLU to be Involved In the trial. The 55,000 ton battle wagon arrived fr.aud and sabotage spoiled original culprits bave not been caught From Pqe J in Long Beach after a non-stop voyage balloting. In the latest repeat election, Al from Philadelphia where she has undergone a '5 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 recom· One election bad to be repeated Porco was elected studeiit body presi· JOHNSON. • • • missioning. because of ballot box stuffing. A Ee-dent for next year. Accusat1on1 were She is enroute to Vietnam where her cond had to be rerun because can-leveled against biJ backers by can. tremendous firepower _ nine 16-inch didates campaign posters we.re torn dldate Bob Nuttman and supporters, guns __ will be brought to bear on down and a campaign booth ripped but couldn't be subltantiated. hil students when bis new school c:if enemy forces fr om the Gulf of Tonkin. apart. Three candidates' campaign posters public affairJ is established at the The New Jersey was recom· The election tampering has caused disappeared overnight and Nuttman's University in Austin. missioned after 11 years in the booth was wrecked. JohnBon chuckled. when he recalled motllball fleet. Th~ student judicial board found in· that last Sunday he had called Hoffer From Page I sufficient evidence to support ac-on the West CQast and invited him to Large as she is, the last of the big cusa.tions and Elections Commissioner spend the night at the White House baWe wagons played Eecond fiddle in MARINE Tom Lankard ordettd a new election prior to the Monday meeting of his Long Beach to the Queen Mary, last ot • • • .. to clear the air." new commission on violenee, of which the big luxury liners. The New Jersey Porco won by a greater plurality "the, longshoreman ll!i a member. was moored at right angles to the motel parking lo t. than he had the first time. Other student body officers ele(:ted, Queen Mary at Pier E wlth the stern Lyons, 48, was bludgeoned to death Earlier in the semester a vote on be$ides Porco, were Kathy Frater, of th eBig J turned to the Queen's in his· small apartment at 7201h revisions to the student constitution vice president; Beverly Johnson, towering stern. The Queen Ls being Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar. was repeated because, as Lankard ex-women studeQts' ptesident, and converted into a hotel, restaurant and Cap.t. Heeres declined to discuss plained, "a large num·ber of ballots senators Tom Boland, Carolyn Foss, convention complex. what evidence allegedly linked Chott were very obviously m arked by the Ken P-'ianko, Charles Phenix and Joe Nearly 10,000 penons gaw the New to the slaying. same pero$on." Womack. Jeney a noisy welcome comparable I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-to that g i v e n 1he Queen Mary - last December. Both ships will now can Long Beac11 home port -although PLAY IT COOL! GIVE DAD A GIFT llie New Jersey will depart soon for HE'LL ENJOY • • • FOR MONTHS 'n MONTHS t:~ grim role in Vietnam. 1'We are mindful of the fact that the recommissioning of the USS New Jersey and ber presence here b really grim, serious business," declared Adm. Thomas Ruden in an address during the welcoming ceremonies. Commanded by Capl. J. Edward Snyder, the New Jersey leaves Long Beach Monday for six weeks of maneuvers off San Diego before . relurDlng to Long Beach !0< further outfitting. She is 'expected to sail for Vietnam in late August or early Sept.ember. Action In Vletna'm will mark 1he 1tUrd war ttle big battleship bu been involved in in her lifetime, She saw service in World War Il and Korea. The New Jersey ended her 5,000 mile shakedown cruise f r o m Philadelphia escorted. to Long Beach Harbor by Coast Guard cutters, a mine-sweeper and fireboats spouting plumes of water. The ship is manned by some 1,500 crewmen and 70 officers. Open hoose is scheduled tbls weekend aboard the New Jersey. From Pqe J GUN LAW ••. I I ·Wintuk Orlon® DRESS-UP SPORTSHIRT •Links texture richness-soft, springy kni t I• Mock turtle fash ion-the no-tie look •Colors bright or soft-fashion right t h' • Easy washing by han d or mac 1ne ~izes M-L-XL ----··· _ $I 0.00 llOul"onl T.M, Of course, we 'll gift wrap his gift! PLAY IT COOL U9hlwtl9ht "1•rid tf Dec,on polyott-tr ortd r•y•n thot'1 por111ort•fltly prtuoG PLUS Z.11ol froofMOrtf t, ttlill lloln1. w,., th1111 •• tti. ,.If , •• ,, •.•. •t "" ,.,., •• , . Ju1t Al11:ln9 onywhoA. StylN with htlf·"•lf In fi n, lthro, gold, ollvt. ' I I' I ] - ] 1· JBJ but 1 Cai he• !lei Be1 bre def I sur E 1' F T ear ~ by • Ir Bea tnu Tue the Fra T: 1lle ol • firs· Tl . ' 111 " B ao .. pie 0 ting and Eug Dwi and Sch• war Bo exe< ned: shit pal~ 0 1 Ugh· Ed.ii furn Ano was tllat wilt Do pot. ed f "' and tir" D p H Dist Sup ct us iacti wtn1 uni< reac A. the the the Hal 'Lt trus five ma1 1taf A• ed I 1' • In parl ting par! ayst s. muc com .... bas 11 am ~ • C< parl nm kb< ~nntington Bea~h EDITION _ VOL ~I. NO. 141', 7 SECTIONS, 86 PAGES Laura's Ordeal Over;: Breathing Problem Causes Concern It's been a rough 15 days for the James Carneys of Huntington Beach, but the worst ls over. Tiny 3-year-old heart patient Laura Carney underwent a 1().bour closed heart operation on May 29 at St. Bernardine's Hosp l ta l in San Bernardino to partially relieve her breathing problems· caused by a badly defonned heart. Her parents and the team of heart surgeons who performed the operation Edison High Name Stays For 90 Days By JAMES McNABB, Jr. Of tllle D•llY l"ltMSt.fll Thomas Alve Edison was deaf in one ear. The inventor is alleged to have tuned out uninteresting conversations by turning off his-heariilg aid. · In Edison-like fashion, ·Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees turned off their hearing ai~ Tuesday to citizen demands to change the name of Edison High to Robert Francis kennedy High School. Trustee Joseph Ribal's motion for the name change was tabled by a VQte of 4-1 .for 90 days, until the board's first meeting in September. The school is scheduled for-opening in September, 1969. · Before shelving the proposal, a dozen emotion-charged Kennedy peo- ple spoke in favor of the· name shiit. One man, George Reinhard of Hun· tington Beach, opposed the renaming and offered as possible alternates Sen. Eugene McCarthy, Herbert Hoover, Dwight D. Eiseflhowec, Max Rafferty and the first Huntington Beach High School graduate killed in the ViMnam war. Besides Ribal, who recited lengthy excerpts from the Sen. Edward Ken· nedy eulogy, other supporters of the shift included students, teachers, cam· paign Workers and private crtizens. One Edison critic declared, "The lig'ht furnished the world by Thomas Edison does not match the !ight furnished by Robert K e n n e d y , ' ' Another, W.orton Baum who said he was a Seal Beach cubmaster, charged that "Edison was a name associated with industrial air pollution." Deflecting the 1>0t.ntial political hot potato, trustee Mathew Weyuker mov- ed for the 90-day postponement. "AU I've heard sounds very political and very emotional. Th.is will give us t1r-.. to cool oil,'~ he said. District Drops Probe of Teacher Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees accepted Tuesday Superintendent Max Forney's con- clusion that no further investigative action is necessary on alleged left· wing indoctrination al students by an unidentified Marina High S c h o o I teacher. Allegation& about the teacher and the placement of anti-draft leaflets in the sdlool library were brought before the board last Marcb. by Mrs. Wanda Haynes of 14471 Danes Circle. 'Librarian William Brooks to 1 d trustees, "At DO time during the past five years was placeme"nt of anti-draft material brought before the library 1taff." • Administrator Scott Flanagan back· ed up Brooks' 1tatement. · though at first lt was a success. The first clue thtit it wasn't what they, hoped came when one surgeon said he wasn't getting the expected "blurp" sounds which the new opening in the heart chamber should make. Symptoms ·developed with Laura's breathing becomirig more and· more difficult until she had convulsions. The surgeons performed a second operation Tuesday, three hours this time, to reopen the original opening * * * Blood Donors Can Aid Laura Blood donors who would like to help replace quantities of blood used for Laura Carney's two closed heart operations will h'ave their chance this week. The Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at the Hoag Hospital Conference Center in"Newport Beach Friday. Thls will be the only time scheduled for June in the beach area. The Red Cross will schedule a time for donors who call their headquarters at 714-3782. Cong Shell Base As U.S. Assails Terror Attacks wb,l.ch bad closed. Today Laura can breathe. Her lunp are clear. She's alert and brigbteyed, but she "hurta." She will be watched closely by Ille intensive care staff of St. Bernadine'• another day or eo, then transferred to the pediatrics ward. Her homecoming to Hunttngton Beach will make her folks and three sisters mighty happy. Debbie, 13; (See HEART GffiL, Pafe ZJ LA Defender's Office Gets . Sirhan Case LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Sirhan B. Sirhan will be defended against the charge of slaying Sen. Robert F. Ken- IK!dy by a public defender, although he would preier that private attorne11 handle his case. Wilbur Littlefield, chief trial deputy in the county public defender's office, was appointed to represent Sirhan when the suspect was arraigned last Friday. Presiding Judge Donald R. Wright of the Superior Court placed Littlefield in permanent charge of the case Tues· day after a meeting with represen· tatives of the Los Angeles County Bar AssociaUon and the public defender's office. .SAIGON (UPI) -The Viet Cong Sirhan said at bis arraignment he coUld not afford to hire priva~ shelled the Tan Son Nhut Air Base to-counsel. He asked the American Civil day and killed four Vietnamese Liberties Union to help him find two children and a U. S. airman, first priv,ate attorneys t(J take hia case, American victim of 12 days of terror although be said he wu not attacks The United states stepped up dissatisfied ~ith IJ.ttlefield. _ • A. L. Wlrln, head ol tile SoillbOl'JI its air attacks again.st the north. •._California ACLU, uked tbe bar The terror attacks became the sub-ass~iatiOn to choose attorneys to ject of the Vietnam talks in Paris to-represent Sirhan and said the defen- day when u. s. Ambassador w. dant would accept tile choice. Wirin revealed Tuesday that the Averell Harriman delivered a strong defendant bas rejected offers from protest. There was an implication of Melvin Belli,· who defeil.ded Jack U. S. reprisal attacks against the Ruby, and F . Lee Bailey, who north. (See story, Page S) represented Dr. Sam Sheppard. _ · Leonard Janofsky, president of the A military spokesman said U · ,,S. bar association, met with Wirin Tues~ fighter·bombers took advantage of im-day, and then announced. the assocla.. proved weather and lalDlched 137 tion "has no power to designate counsel." missions against the southern panhan-Wirln said Sirhan has asked him die Tuesday in one of the heaviest three times to represent him, but the . raids of. the year. One pilot fired a Jawyer declined because at the present rocket with deadly accuracy into the time he could see "no constitutional mouth of a storage cave; another civil liberties issue in the trial " He snap.peel a bridge In the middle with a said he does not expect the ACLU to be involved in the trial. single missile. In today's attacks on Saigon the guerrillas fired 14 six·foot rockets into the suburban air base, hitting military areas and the hou ses of South Viet- namese soldler families. They wound· ed 24 Vietnamese plus two U. S. servicemen and two U. S. civilians. In the capital's 12 days of agony, hundreds of Vietnamese have been killed or wounded in the indiscriminate terror shelling. But previously the only American casualties were two m i 1 i t a r y policemen who were wounded. In Paris, American d i p l o m a t s returned to the Vietnam w a r negotiating table tod ay and warned North Vietnamese delegates that the shelling of Saigon is seriously hin- deaing their attempt to cool down the war. Diplomatic obs!'!rvers in Paris said the United States might consider resuming air raids against all of North Vietnam JI Ille terror shelling of Saigon goes on. Today for the first time in 12 days all t.he fire fell on military base areas, Lucy Alloway Rites Friday • Services for Lucy Alloway, resident of Huntington Beach. for 32 years, will be held 2 p.m. Friday at Smith'• Mortuary. Mrs. Alloway, 9U1 Alabama St., died Tuesday at the Garfield Convalescent Home after a lengthy illness. She was 68. She Is survived by nine children, John of Huntington Beach, William F. of San Bernardino, William S. of Arizona, Claric:e Gilcrest of Anaheim, Laur.a Anderson of Huntington Beach, Viola Jean Miller of Kentucky, Dolly Anna Bower of San Diego, Lorraine Ballatine of Rosemount, Lucy May Farber of San Bernardino; four sisters; 33 grandchildren and 10 grea~ grandchildren. Interment will follow at Harbor Rest Memorial Park, Costa. Mesa. More Beach Parks Planned Commission Says Another ·52 Acres Needed Jn addition to small neighborbood parks adjacent to schoolJ in Hun- tington Beach, the recreetlon and parks commission is proposing a 1ystem of community parka. Setting a goal of 1.25 acres of com- munity pork per 1,000 resident., Ille cor:nml.uion has determined a need DOW for 125 acres. Presently the city ha• 73 acres of community park.s. The ulUmote goal should be 312 acres to 1upply the need.I of an ex- pected population of 2$0,CXX>, ~rdln.C io the commil1ionera. · Commlsllonen said tlle community perk plan btglna witll euJugtnc pork• next to hldl 1chooll 10 that the entJr• ltbool-park. complex become• a com· >. r munity park. Next to Marina High School is the flve-acre Marina Park, w111ch is undeveloped as yet. The commission proposed obtaialng enotller five acres adjacent to the park for development into a community park with full ac- ce1s to the high school facilities. Hwrtlogton Beach ffigh School It ad· jacent to the Huntington Beach co. golf course •hich is to be subdivided · for homes. The commi11Joo says it will need 10 acres Mzt to the school for a community park. Edison High School, now under con- struction at Magnolia Street and Hamilton Avenue. 11 across the ltreet from a future 28-acre community park J (county stump dump) ancl adjacent to 10 acres of utility line easement. Yor.ktown High School site 11 ad· jacent to 10 acres of utility line ease. ment. Willtersburg Higb School 11 within a quarter mile of the 17-«cre Murdy Park end 10 acres of laod would be needed next to the future Bolsa Chica High Scbool. The deparlineut recommends a larga central city part to car• for deficiende1 ln park acre1. The pro- posal Includes • large park, colf course, drivinc range and library com- plex near tlle center o! tlle city, Telbert Avenue and Golden Wen Street. )'oar Bomete...._ Dally Paper WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, '1968 JEN CENTS Heart Working Fine DAILY. Pll..OT Stiff~ BRAVE 'GIRLS' -Mrs. James Carney, a brave mother, talks things over with Laura Carney before the 3-yeaM>ld "queen of hearts" underwent first of two ~ajor cardiac operations and before she was selected as Memorial' Day Gift Girl of the Oran&• County Heart A.ssoctation. Things look bright for tiny, patient now, if ihe 'can only·get help from blood dono~s during ·Friday's bloodmobile atop at Hoag Memorial Hoapital.,. . . ' · . . . .• .6 World's Last Battleship Joins Last Luxury Liner 118ig J" has returned· from the dead. 'Ibat was the cry of Navy officials and stripping buffs today as the USS NeW Jersey, only SUTvivitig battleship in ttie world, was snugged alongside Pier E in Long Beach. The 55,000 ton battle wagon arrived in Long Beach after a non-stop voyage from Philadelphia where rbe has undergone a $50,000,000 recom- missioning. She ls emoute to Vietnam where her. tremendous firepower -nine l~incb gun.a -will be brought to bear on ~my forces from the Gulf of Tonkin. The New Jersey was recom· missioned after 11 years in the mothbaU fie<!. Large as she Is, t!le last of the big battle wagons played second fiddle ln Long Beach to the Queen Mary, last of the big luxuiy linel'f. The New Jersey was moored at right angle1 to ,.the Queen Mary at Pier E with the stern of tll eBlg J turned to tlle Queet>'s towering stern. The Queen ii being conve:i:ted into a hotel, mtaurant and convtmUon complex. Nearly 10,ro:> persoD1 gave the New Jeney a noi11 welcome comparable · to that g i v e n the Queen Mary lalt December. Both shJp1 will now call Long Beach home port -although the New Jeraey will depart soon for l:~ grim role in VJetnaTI). "We are mindful ol the fact that the recommlsrioning of the USS New Jersey and her presence.here is really grlm, serious buline1s," declared Adm. Thomaa Ruden in an address durlnc the welcoming ceremonies. Commanded b7 capt. J. Edward seyder, tile New Jersex,, leaves Long RIGHT CAPTION, WRONG PICTURE The Dally Pilot regrela IU enw of publlsbirlg the """"' picQn TueodAy OV« a· oeption titled "Graad Prix Pair'' wbkil aho!Jd have lhaw!l Foun- Uln Valley ~ Scilool'• two top -., The picture, 11 It lhO\id have ap. pe""'1 Tu~, Is )l<lbllthed Wd6y on Pace2. Beach Monday for six weeks ot maneuvers ofi San . Die_go before returning to Long Beach for further <See. NEW JERSEY, Page !) 6,000 Students ' Return to Class Monday in Beuch 1 Thundey may be tile laot day ol hlib l!Chool in West Orange COOMy !0< many l!tudenl<, but a lot ol tile ~ wiH be right ileck In Ille c1818room on Mondray. That's the day summer IChoot begins ill the Huntington Beach Union High Scllool DisU'lot. More tllmi 6,000 -.S are e;q>ected to bOgin clasees tat 8 a.m. Nonnal sc:hool enrollment is about J.1,000. Two sessions will be~ held, the first from·a to 10 a .m. lfl.lld the second from 10 e.m. to 12:10 p.m. Cla$!es run to July 26, a tota1 of 29 school days. ClaSSles w11l not be in session on July 4, but it will be «hoot as usual on July 5. Forty.four coones will be laugbt by 148 teachen. Space ls available in all clas8es except Marine Biology. Claseel will be held at each of. the four hlgh schools in the district and at McG<iugh 1-medklte School in Seal Beech. Students may ett.eoo any ooe ol tile schools. StWentis who have not enrolled and wWt to.J,ttend summer clsmes should report tt> tile sdtool they wish to ·~ tend at 7:45 a.m. Monday to enroll. In- fcrmatdon on the 1wnm.-of!erlnga may be obtained by callln1i the otllce ol Dr. Looren MoU at the high ICbool -olllc<O, 538-9331. U.N. Assembly Votes • Africa Condemnation UN1TED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - The U.N. General Assembly apprdved overwhelmingly today a w~terid down resolution on South Welt Africa - condemntaa: South Africa for holding onto the territory, but 'making no specific reque1t for sanctioDJ by the Sec11rlty Comcil to compel the Sou1h Afrlcana to yield control Johnson Asks McCarthy . Aid Teaching Joh WASHING'roN (UPl)-Fullln! cot.' lege professor Lyndqn B. Johnson is lining up lecturers like Sen. Eugene 'J. McCarthy and longshoreman· philosopher Erle Ho'ffer to spell bUn at the college podium. In a jovial mood at a state dinner ror the sh3h of lrm, Johnson revealed that at a meeting with M~artby at the Whit.e House Tu~sday be told the presidential hopeflll he expected to teac:h at tiie trmversify of lfexu. .l4'.cCai:thy told hi~, "save a •Pot for 'me," J.ohnso; reported.· ' The PresJdent also told newnromen that· he lfid tapped .Hofier1to instruct ·ht. students1 wheo his new school of p~b~c affalrl Is established at tbe ·University in Austin .. · Johnson chuckled w~ he , recalled thit last· Sunda:y· be had <:alled.1Hoffer on the ·West Coast and invited bbia. tcJ ·apend the nlght ·at the WbJte House prior to the Monday meeting of. hla new commlss.lm on violl!hce, of whkll the longshoreman is a member. ~ said Hp~r ~litilly declined on grollnds that he ''.could not sleep at the White House." · He said thM. Hoffer chose instead to be a breakfast guest,. and arrived • 7 a.m. while the President was still shaving. They had a two-hour talk over breakf~t. Orange Weather If you don't see the sun to- morrow morninl:, watt a while: It'll be 1 lltUe late. That's the word from forecaster Gordie shields who , sees 1 continued cooling trend along the coast. INSIDE TODAY The my1tmoM1. man with tM m111terioul lf/c ot the nonde· · 1cript LondOft Hoc.I woa the ob- ject of one of greate1& man.- , hunts in htslorV. Pag• 9. ' •• . . • • • • • 2 DAH.V PILOT Wcdntsday, Junt 12, 1968 l\11.xed by GOP I U.S. Asks Tough State Gun .. I . Britain. Measure Killed For Ray SACRAMENTO (UPI) -T b e Assembly .Criminal Procedure Com· mlttee early today killed a tough gun control bill, almost a week to · the minute alter Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was fatally wounded. Tbe voice vote by the JO-member committee came 'minutes after mid· nJgbt on the mea1ure by A11emblyman Robert W. Crown (!). Alameda). a member of the delegation pledged to Kennedy at the Democratic ~atlonal Convention Crown said none of the five Republicans on the committee voted for the bill. He said all five Democrats favored the measure, but slz. votes were needed for approval. However, be indicated there was a possibility another measure mJgbt be sponsored by some other lawmaker and sent to a dilferent committee. Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh, Kennedy's California camp a 1 g n chairman, told newsmen Tuesday_ he fa~ swift action on a gun control law. Crown said Unruh supported his bill after amendments were added Tuesday to make it tougher. Gov. Ronald Rea~an told hi.I weekly news conference Tuesday· California now has probably the best gun control laws of any state. However, he said s o m e im- provements could be made, including better control of mail order weapons, although he said he did not favor ban- ning mall order sales. Crown's measure, regulating the mail order and retail sales of rifles, shot ~s and smaller flI'earms, was ·first heard by the committee about three weeks ago. The bill would have prohibited the sale of rifles and shotguns to aliens, felons and narcotics addictll. Those persons currenUy are pro- hibited from owning smaller, 11con- cealable" weapons. Mall order sales within California also would be prohibited. To obtain a gun, a person would have to apply to the dealer in person. Then the buyer. would.have to fill out a form to be sent to local Jaw enforcement agencies and the state's BtD"eau of Criminal Iden- tification and Investigation. The buyet' wtluld not be allowed to take the gun from the dealer for 15 day1 while the Cll checked the purchaser's background. Mail order purchases from out-of- state would require notification to the police five days before the order was mailed. When the gun was received, the purchaser would have had 14 days to report Jts receipt. The measure would not have re- quired the registration of guns purchased before the legislation went into effect. In Washington today Sen. Joseph Tydings introducea legislation to re- quire registra'Uon and licensing of all firearms in the United states. The Maryland Democrat proposed to ouuaw possession of ~ny type of gun by persona under 21, ali~DJ, anyone Boys Club Given · Grant From Sears Tools and craft equipment will be p.irdlued with a '2,000 grant to the Huntington Beadl Boys Club from ~ Sem, Roebuck Co., director Pat Downey bat 8llllOWlCed. The grant is one of mmy made by Sears to Boys Clubl for equipment us- ed in crafts. Downey &aid be will buy pow<r end bar. i tools with the m011ey. M:ore ttian 480 boyc are now enrolled in the club programs which are con- ducted at the clulilouse at 319 Yorktown Ave. Art average of 140 boys use the club daily, according to Downey. DAllY PILOT , ' • convicted of a felony or misdemeanor involving violence, or anyone ever committed as an alcoholic, narcoU.Ca addict or mental incompetent. Tydings, predicting his bill would trigger a "campaign of nrlsrel'fesen- tation," also told newsmen be hail Ut .. ed. tbe Internal Revenue Service to review the National Rifle Astocla· Uon'1 iu .. zempl 1latua, Rocky in LA, Pledges to Call 'S11mmit' Talk ' LONDON (AP) - A formal request for the extradJtion of James Earl Ray, accu.sed assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was banded to the British Firelgn Office today by U.S. officials. The documents were' handed to the Foreign Office's treaties anQ na- tionalities sectlon by U.S. Consul ' .General-Jack-Herfurt. The U.S. Embassy declined details of the petition. It merely' described it as "documents required for · the ex- tradition proceedings." Stressing the urgency with which the U.S. Justice Department regards the case, officials managed to collect the necessary documents a day ahead of their own deadline. IDENTITY INFORMATION LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller pledged today to call a summit meet.inf. of Western beads of state to create 'a true Atlan- lic partnership," if eleded pruldent. NEW LADY IN TOWN -Fireboats and flotilla of small private 'Vessels escort USS New Jersey ont of f6g as she steams into Long Beach Tuesday. The only active batUeship iii the world, .she·will make urr T1lellfl ... her "home" in: Long Beach, but is scheduled for Vietnam duty as soon as she finishes a training tour off the California coast. The documents run several hundred pages and contai,n information on Ray's identity and the cases against him -both in connection with King's murder and Ray's escape from the Missouri State Prison while serving an armed robbery sentence. The Foreign Office now must certify that the request satisfies the terms of the extradition treaty with the United States. The Home Office then rules on the validity of the murder case under British as well as U.S. law. Then the file goes to a judge for a court hear- ing. Looking for support to overeome tbe Republican delegate Jeed of Richard M. Nixon, the New Yorter offered sweeping foreign policy proposals In the opening of two cloys ol public speecbei and private ta.lb i D Calilornia. Secret Service apnta, New York state troopers . and two Los Angeles polloe department inteJllleooe olficen guarded Rockefeller -the first an· nouneed presidential· candidate to come to California since Robert F . Kemedy was shot ·to deatb in Los Angeles last Wednesday. Fraud, Sabotage Cries Mar OCC Student Vote From Page I NEW JERSEY •• outfitting. She is expected to sail for Vietnam in late August or early September. Action in Vietnam will mark the third war the big battleship has been involved in in her lifetime. She saw service in World War II and Korea. The formal extradition request came as Scotland Yard delved into the mysteries of Ray's stay in Britain. He plmoed private meetings with a few top Republicans wbo-v ... pl<ldgejl to vote for Oalifornia Gov. -ROiiald Reagan as a favorite son at the con- vention. Concentrating on foreign affairs, RoCtefeller called for closer United States cooperation with Western Europe, illcludlng giving the supreme command of NATO to a European in- stead ol an American. In a speech prepared for delivery at Town Hall in Los Angeles, Rockefeller referred to Senator Kennedy's death in a hotel just a few miles away. "He died here last week because he dared -he was determined -to speak out on the great problems before our people," Rockefeller said. But most of Rockefeller's attention in the talk before the city's business leadP.rs was directed to building "a a new world structure, a new international order." Meeting Planned By Women's Club The Huntington Be'ach Republican Women's Club will meet Wednesday, JWle 19, at 11:30 a.m. at the Lake Park Clubhouse. A member of the local club and President of the Orange County Federation 'of Republican Women's Clubs, Mrs. Robert Shupe will present a program entitled, "Youth ..• 1968 .. " Electiom were held in pairs at Orange Coast College this spring when fraud and sabotage spoiled original balli>llng. One election bad to be repeated ' Playhouse Gives $100 Scholarships ToMarinaSeniors Huntington Beach Playhouse this week announced the award of $1~ scholarships to two Marina High School stud<nts , The recipients are Frances Van Hom and Pamila Reed. Miss Van Horn plans to attend Golden West College one year and then a university to study directing and stagecraft. Miss Reed will major in acting and minor in directing at Golden West College. The girts will be presented preceding a perfo'rmance of the "Petrified Forest" by Robert E. Sherwood and directed by Ron Albemon, opening this weekend at the Huntington Beach Playbouse. All first nighters are invited to at- tend the gala, no-host party this Fri" day at the SeacliH Country Club. For reservations call Greta Smith at 89'U638 or Bobbi Murphy at S36-8861. curtain time is 8 :30 p.m. Tickets are $2 for adults and fl.50 for student&. 'Grand Prix' Pair ~ause of ballot box ' stuffin,gJ _ Se· cond had to be rerun because can- didates campaign posters were torn down and a· campaign booth ripped apart. The election tampering has caused charge and counrercharge to fly on the Costa Mesa College campus, but the culprits have not been caught Jn the latest repeat election, AJ Porco was elected studeot body presi· dent for next year. Accusations were leveled against his backers by can- didate Bob Nµttman and supporters, but couldn't be substantiated. Three candidates' campaign posters disappeared overnight and Nuttman's booth was wrecked. The, student judicial board found in· sufficient evi<rence to support ac- cusations and Elecllons Commls.sioner Tom Lankard ordered a new electioh "t.o clear the air." Porco won by a greater plurality than he had the first time. The New Jersey ended her 5,000 mile shakedown cruise · f r o m Pbilade~phi' ·escorted to Long Beach Harbor by Coast Guard cutters, a mine·sweeper and fireboats spouting plumes of water. The ship is manned by some 1,500 crewmen and 70 officers. Open house is scheduled this weekend aboard the New Jer&ey. From Page 1 HEART GIRL • • Be~da, 11 an~ Terry Lee, 7, are waiting at thelI' Delaware Studio apartment with their grandmother. The Carneys asked the DAILY PILOT to convey their thanks and ap- p-reciation for the contributions and letters they have received from neighbors, friends and total strangers. Many had heard of Laura after she ' was chosen by the county Heart Association as their "Memorial Day Gilt Girl." Ray has been traced to two London hotels between May 28 and his arrest Saturday, but there is an unexplained gap of about 10 days, starting May 17 when he left Lisbon. FBI agents were understood to be working with Scotland Yard detec~ tives, but British police are doing the spadework since the FBI has no legal authority in foreign countries. Police on both sides of the Atlantic are trying to untangle Ray's travels, which took him to Canada, Britain and Portugal after King was shot April 4. Ray was transferred Tuesday to a maximum security cell in Wandsworth Prison because Brixton Jail on Lon-' don's South Side, was not considered secure enough. Extradition proceedings could last two months il the 40-year-old escaped convict fights all the way through the British collrts. LISTED AS SNEYD The British police are holding Ray on charges of using a forged passport and carrying a loaded gun. On SCotland Yard's re<:ords he is officially listed as Ramon George Sneyd, the name on his Canadian passport. , PLAY IT COOL! GIVE DAD A GIFT HE'LL ENJOY • • • FOR MONTHS 'n MONTHS Wintuk Orlon® DRESS-UP SPORTSHIRT • Unks· texture rictlness-soft, sprln1Y knit • Mock turtle loshlon -the no·fl• look • Colors brlgtlt or soft-fashion right • E8sy washing by hand or machine Sizes M-L-XL -·--· $10.00. ~T.M. Of course, we'll gift wrap his gift! PLAY IT COOL ll9htw1l9ht ltl111d ef 01cre11 polyeitef e11d fl)'•ll t+i1t'i ,,_,1111111ntly 11'f1111d PLUS Z1Jt*I tr1•t111111t t1 •11!.t it•i111. W11r th1111 011 tti1 9011 tlU"I • • • ef tf.i1 911111 OI" !11.t .-l1.i119 •rtyWh1f1. S+yl1d wltt. h11f.helt 111 t111. 111111, ,.,,, .11.1. MllMll ti.tw ~ oJU1 ~I ~ l!!!!i HAYTHORNE'S ~ iiiiiii CHARGE ACCOUNT Dll'ARTMINT ITOltl »'11 COAST HWY. e CORONA DEL MAR 111 AVI!. DEL MAR e SAN CLEMENTE Manha Tutton! and Ron Myers, Fountain Valley High School seniors, were reciplents of their alma mater's "prtx d'bonneur" pre- sented at cer:emonles Friday. Between the two of them they have been ~sldent and Ice president of the student body girl of the month and boy of the year1 members of Interact or Les bemoiselles, cerUftcate winners in GAA, Music-Instrumental, Girls' Service, Student Government and Coronet prize-winners in Boys' Service andGovenunenL • ~~ .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-" ,_ )I l I vc s As~ mil con mir wa• T con nigl Ass Ala plec Nat c ReI for fav1 wer H pos: spo1 and A Ken cha: favc Jaw. bill Tu< G· new now lawi H• prO\ bett al th ning Ct mar shot first lhre Tl D< Lag Alic be h to Supt Tt to b t'he Reg: squ::: par• com snor Pr will E. A i5 lo Ot It I La gt: Wille fa ell Lin ti Co r BuTh Sava stru< To 2 La "'ill ~ Bowl arch• of 19 Th• grad1 be . rr: the s Susa1 straii valed cliss sen lo recei Chi prese uti liz• • • .,.. a s ............ ~·· Lag·nn~ B~eaeh • Dally Paper VOL 6f, NO. 'f4f, 8 SECTIONS, 96 PAGES t:AG UNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1968 TEN CENT.S • • ar1ne 1e ur er Ni xed by GOP Tough State .Gun Measure Killed SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Assembly Criminal Procedure Com- mittee early today killed a tough gun control bill; almost a week to the minute after Se n. Robert F. Kennedy was fatally wounded. 'l'he voice vote by r 10-memb_er committee came minutes after mid· night on the measure by Assemblyman Robert W. Crown (D- Alameda), a member of the delegation pledged to l<ennedy at the Democratic National Convention · Crown said none or the five Republicans on the committee voted for the bill. He said all five Democrats favored the measure, but six votes were needed for approval. However, he indicated there was a possibility another measure might be sponsored by some other lawmaker and sent to a different committee. Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Un_ruh. · Kennedy's California c a mp a 1 g n chairman, told newsmen Tuesday he favored swilt action on a gun contr~I Jaw. Crown said Unruh supported his bill after amendments were added Tuesday to make it tougher. Gov Ronald Reagan told his weekly news 'conference Tuesday California now has probably the best gun control laws of any state. However he said s o m e im· provemen~ could be made, including better control of mail order weapons, although he said he did not favor ban· ning mail order sales. Crown's measure. regulating the mail order and retail sales of rifles, shot guns and smaller firearms, was first heard by the committee about three weeks ago. The bill would have prohibited the Laguna Niguel Fire Statio11 Dedication Set DedicaUon ceremonies for the new Laguna Niguel fire stiabion at 30141 Alicia Parkwccy-in Laguna Ni:guel ~ be held Thurs4ay at 2 p.m., according to the OrU1ge County Board of Supervisors. , The single story Etrtlcture, the first to be completed in the first phase of the planned South Coast County Regional Ci\lic Center, contains 4,332 square feet of space with the ap· paratus room ca.pable . of ac- comn1odatring two ftre engines, one snorkel and a rescue unit. Principal speaker for the occasion will be Fifth Dist:rict Supervisor Alton E. Allen, in whose district the facility is located .• Other spemters will include William H. Beck, executive vice pres1dent of Laguna Niguel Corp.; architect, \Villard T. Jordan, who designed the facility; Douglas Wimer and H. \V. Linton of North Americ<m Rockwell c o r p.: J . J. Smisek, dire<: tor or Building Services; and contractor Savatorc Ambrogio, o! AM-Pell Con-nruroon Company. Total construction cost was $98,961. sale of rifles and shotguns to aliens, felons and narcotics addicts. Those pei'sons currently are pro. hibited from owning smaller, "con- cealable" weapons. Mail order sales within California also would be prohibited. To· obtain a gun , a person would have to apply to the dealer in person. Then the buyer would have to fill out a form to be sent to local law enforcement agencies and the state's Bureau of Criminal Iden- tification and Investigation. Board R ejects , Tram Service For Sawdust Festival of Arts directors Tuesday llll'ned thumbs down on a request that they extend tram service to the neighboring Sawdust Festival. Directors gave various reasons fo r the action including the $8 per hour cost of an extra tram which they pro- jected to $4,200 for the season. Dr. Harold Burton, transportation chairman, said th€Laguna Artists and Gallery Owners Association, sponsor- ing the Sawdust Festival, h ad neglected to obtain authorization fron1 the city or state. He spoke of the risk of crossing Broadway with the trams, and of tbe need for a flagman to stop traffic. Director Marshall Clark said, ;'it's like asking \Valt Disney to use his trams to run over to Melodyland." Director David Young said the Sawdust Festival was not the board's business, that it had enough problems with' its own transportation. Young said he felt the board should neither rletract from nor foster the Sawdust J<'cstival. "Because we don 't sit as a board for the Sawdust Festival." lie added, "I don't like the idea of putting on a tent show at the Sawdust Jo'estival, but it's not any or my business and I don't intend to make it any or my business." By a tent show, Young referred to combination of performing arts which the Sawdust backers hope to stage dai· ly in a large tent. Robert Bestor, manager of the Venice Tram Co .. said his firm would not for safety reasons run trams up and down Broadway to the Sawdust Festival. lie said such an ar- rangement might be worked out on an access road beside Broadway but said it would require an additional tram at $8 per hour. The board denied the request for tram service and then declined to bear Delores Ferrell and Edmund Van Deusen r representatives of the Laguna Artist.$ and Gallery Owners Associa- tion. Mrs. Ferrell told the DAILY PILOT today the group has been negotiating lo have its own tr.am to operate along the access road and through town. She said there would be either a tram or some alternate form of transportation to the Sawdust Festival which runs during the same period as the FesUval of Arts. Crea1n of the Crop Like cream they rose to the top at the recent La- guna Beach High School honors assembly honoring students in various fields of achievement. From left to right are Will Hitchcock, Ann Shattuck and Bob Kawaratani. Each had four or more awards. Hitchcock had more awards than any other student. • • Ci ty A lso · Studies Lagunans' Co1nplaints A bout R ats Laguna Beach City Manager James D. Wheaton said today he expects to have a recommtindiltion fo'r coun· cilmen next week on Greyhound bus routing which has been protested by the Black Unity Committee. Wheaton said also that he has asked the health department to survey the alleged rat problem in the residences along Ocean A venue. "The health department has been asked to make an investigation Thief Gets Rifle In Lag una Heist Burglars carried off a .22-caliber automatic rifle and a motel television set in separate thefts reported to Laguna Beach police Monday. Police Lt. Robert McMurray said a $125 television had been taken from an empty room at the Coast Inn, 1401 S. Coast Highway, according to owner, Karl H. Smith. Grant Sheldon, 1298 Anacapa Way, reported the theft of the $30 rifle [rom his home. Method of entry was un· 4etermined. U.N. Scores Africa UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) The U.N. General Assembly approved overwhelmingly today a watered down resolution on South \Vest Africa - condemning South Africa for holdirig onto the territory, but making no specific request for sanctions by the Security Council to compel the South Africans to yield control. between Beach Street and Forest A venue on OOth sides of Ocean Avenue," Wheaton said. lie said the health department has agreed to male the investigation. Dr. Duran Bell, UCI instructor, last week told councilmen that rats breed in the nearby lumber yard and are a problem in the area. He ~aid a small child was bitten by a rat last year but the father did not report the bite because of fear of losing !tis job. \.\:'heaton said lie has asked that a traffic engineer or the state Division of Highways survey the existing bus rotiting from the depot on Broadway. The buses nOw come d o w n Broadway to the depot .and on leaving the depot go along Broadway to Forest, rl·ght on Forest to Ocean and along Ocean ta Coast Highw8.y. The Black Unity Committee had maintained that the buses moving (St•e NEGRO, Page 2) Ray ~xtradition Papers Given to Foreign Office LONDON (AP) - A formal request for the extradJtion of James Earl Ray, accused assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was handed to the British Foreign Office today by U.S. officials. The documents were handed to the Foreign Office's treaties and na· tionalities secUon by U.S. Consul General Jack Her!urt. The U.S. Embassy declined details of the petition. It merely described it as "documents required for the ex- tradlUon proceedings." Stressing the urgency with which the U.S. Justice Department regards the case, officials managed to colle(t the necessary documents a day ahead of their own deadline. The· docuoients run several hundred pages and contain infonnation on Ray's identity and the cases against him -both in connection with King's mw·der and Ray's escape from tbc Missouri State Prison while serving an armed robbery .sentence. The 1'"'orelgn Office now must certify that U1e request satisfies the terms of the extradition treaty with the United States. The H_ome Office then rules on the valldlty of the murder case under British as well as U.S. law. ·~n the file goes to a judge for a court hear- ing. The formal extr0dition ...-request came as Scotland Yard delved into the mysteries or Ray's slay in Britain. Ray has been traced to two Landon hotels between May 28 and his arrest Saturday, but there ls an unexplained gap of about 10 days, starting May 17 when he left Lisbon. 202 Laguna Seniors to Get .Diplomas Thursday Laguna Beach High School seniors will slowly descend the aisles of Irvine Bowl Thursday night beneath Dower arches held by junUir girb as the class of 1968 begins its commencement. The pomp and circumstance of graduation in the amphitheater will begin at 8' p.m. Principal Frank Mattas will preS'i!nt the senior class of 202 in an address. SUBan Belinda Brown, four years a straight A student, will give the valedictory ·address. The graduaUon cliss will be seated in the bowl and ~niors will walk to the stage to receive their diplomas. Charlotte lllner will again direct presentation of an art production that utilizes silhouettes and "Uving pie· " ' ' ~ turcs," a highlight of the graduation. The graduating seniora are: Mary Dana Tompkins, Susan Jo Tompkins, Michael Price Totten, Nobuo T&ukatani, Karen Maebelle Vandeman, Pamela Helen Vandeman, Peter Steven Vob:, Karen Ann Watkins, Kathleen Marie White, Diane Sue Wicciorek, Halsey Leon a rd Williams. Russell Lewellyn Wiiliams, Karen Alarie \Vilson . Denise fi.1arie DeFrancesca, Linda Marie De Lacey, Randy Lee Devore, Craig Robert Doughty, Kim Anna Ounlap1 Denise Ann Durst, Kathrine DJane Dwyer, Roberta .Jean Fagan, Pauline Gail Favoor, Rick Lee French, Robert Alan Frast, Benjamin Thomas Glid- den, Jr., Jay Arthur McAllister, Kirk ~· ' ' Ruppert l\1cCarter, Pamela h1cCartney, John Keith McCauley, Mindy Melissa McDermott. Cynthia Sanea Nitta, Tom Edward Nofziger, • Charles Phillip Norris, Richard. Edward O'Connell, Paul Donald Oberhatt.zer, Heather Ann Oliphan~ Gregory Ralph Oliva, John Fredric Onlsko, Victoria J e a n n e Onstott. Nancy Gail Paddock. Carl Edward Panter, Paul Lance Pardo, Thomas Vail Parker, Markus: Raphael GrCiidttak, Jill Elena Greenwald, Shet· ry Rose Grindle, Jantt Margaret Guinther, JetTold Tbomai Hagstrom, ctuistopher Martin llansen, Annette .lane Jlanson. Daniel Denn~ Harper, Nancy Kathleen llarrisan, Geoffrey Dean llarrowby, Mellbda Le J g b lfnwkins, John Henry Held , Jr., Robert Douglas Wilson, C r a i g Wolosbyn, Roger Kennelh Wood, ·Louise Catherine Yoder. Rachelle Marle Bernardo, Russell Charles Blackman, Dianne, BUss, Lance ·Edmu.nsl Bonnet. Pamela Diane Bowers, Hetbort Henry Bayer, Bonnie Leslie Bray, Douglu Lynn Brookbank, Suaan Belinda Brown, Denise Maureen Bushmlaer, Jobn llardie Buswell, Usa Annette Calac, Richard Cr a I g Petersen, Gary Douglas Pierson, George Thomas Purdy, W 111 l a m Donald Regan, Jr., Rebecca Reich, Stephen' . Walter Rening, George ~ward Ric~, Michael.Don Richard.$, Caren NatliHe rutchle,' J o n a th a n Jourdan Robertson, Susan Gall ROss, i, t Jennie Jey Jensen, ~amela Dee Jan83, Robert Unton Jorden, Jean Jacques Jura, Robert Kolchi Kawarat.anl, Patricia Ann M~on, Robln Joan McNetly, Roland Thompson McReynoJds, Clay Andrew Merrill, Mered.1th Ann Meyers, Jean Pierre Michel. Sandra Lee Mikels. Stephen Wllllam Mikkelsen, Marg u er It e Morgan. Julia Ruth Morrill, Henry Richard Adams, Howard Ra Ip h Adams, Ronald Bruce Agat. Gary Steven Armstrong. Suaan M:elrod, James Palrlck Ayres, Kut',t Jerrery Baker. Stuart Edward Baker, Andrew Scott Ball, 'ITbomas Jttfery Banks, Catberlne Ann Behrendt, Ted Haward Benion, Joa.n Kathryn BerJer, Eric (Sff GRADUATES, P11t !) • • FBI Hunts A.WOLMan In Mis souri By JEROME F. COLLINS ot ,.. D•llr ~.,.. s .. " A · 17-year-old AWOL camp Pendleton Marine is being sought as prime suspect in the slaying of COrona del Mar insurance man George F. Lyons, Newport Beach police disclos- ed today. Pfc. Edwin William Chott Ill of Per- ryville, Mo., is named .in a murder wmTant issued by Newport Harbor Municipal. Court. The warrant, car- rying no bail, was issued secretly several days ago. Newport Beach Police Capt. Louis Heeres, said the search !or Chott, pro- nounced Cot, is centered on the St. Louis, Mo., area. ".At our request, .the FBI has en- tered the case and has obtained a federal warrant charging the suspect with unlawful flight ~to avoid pro-- secution for murder,".Heeres said. He noted that "some leads" oo Olott's wbereabouta bad failed to develop in recent days. Chott W85 described as a youth of medium build, five feet, ten inches tall, with a light brown crewcut and brown eyes. He eDlisted in the Marines five m·onths ago. He was last Sttn at Ca.mp Pendleton on May 20, the morning of Lyons' murder. The young suspect is reportedly from a family of m ad eat cire~tances. Capt. Heeres saJd Chott wu reported seen in Sprlngfleld, Mo., at about the time Lyons' mt.sing 19151 ~~~~:~g ~~~-lound there fn a Lyons, 48, was bludgeoned to death In his small apartment" a't 720'1.i Marigold Ave., Corona de! Mar. Capt. .Heeres declined to discuss what evidence allegedly linked Chott to the slaying. Neg ro Defector To Cuba Sa ved KEY WEST. F la. (UPI) -WUliam }lenry NeisOn.~ a 24.year-old Negro who defected to Cuba ln 1963 "because this country never did anything for me," wu rescued by the Coast Guard Tuesday night on a makesblR: r aft with two other refugees. Nelson, a native of Philadelphia. was brought here fur questiohing bl FBI agents and U.S. immigration o • flcers. He and his companJons were picked up off the Cal Sal banks in the southern Bahamas. He defected to the Communist Island in July of 196.1 alter complaining tp shrimp1 fishermen in Key West that · "this country never did anything for me." Sheriff Reace Thompson said Nelson worked on a shrimp boat here for . about a month before defecting. In Jilly, he took the 48-foot shrimp boat "Euna Mae" from Its Key West dock and set off for Cuba alone, the sheriff said. He apparently wrecked the craft near the Cuban coast. ' Orange Weather If you don't see the sun to- morrow morning, wait a whlJe; It'll be a little late. That's the word from forecaster Gord.le Shields who Aee& a continued cooling trend along the coast. INSWE TODAY The m11sttriou, men with the m111terioU1 life at the nonde- script London Hoitl tDCI tht ol>- ject of one of oreate1i man- hunts in ""ioru. Paa• g_ ,. ; s - -·-----= ·-·· ' . J DAILY PILOT " Called lJ1t1rper ' . ,. Airport Boa;rd Lashes -Tliomas • By JACK BROBACK • Of tM DellY ..... 11111 .• Fuming Or~ge County airport com- mls&ioners blew the.Ir tops Tuesday nlibt and demanded a showdown meeting with the Board o I . supervisors, charclng the.Ir advisory role 11 being usurped by County · Adminhtrative Officer Robert' E. ··Thomas. A sublease to Cable Commuter Airlines, an air taxl firm1 for space in the t.rmlnal building caused the . uproar. Laguna Water Rates Go Up On July Bill Rates for Laguna Beach water users are going up and South Lagunans may not be far behind. Directors of the Laguna Beach County Water District have agreed to a hike in rates that wiU be refiected in July water bill&. The district presently charges water users a $5.40 minimum for two months and 18~ cents per 100 cubic feet of water used in excess at 1,500 cubic feel The new raise will be a $6.40 mJnlmum for two months with a 19~· cent charge made for each 100 cubic feet used in excess of 1,200 cubic feet. Questioned by the DAU.. Y PILOT to- day, William Moorhead, genera I manager, said about one-third of all users use less than 1,500. cubic feet. The remainder use more. The last. rate hike was four years ago, he said. Moorhead said water purchased ~Y Ille district baa risen tnore thaD 7 percent each year. 1 He .said the rate bike ls strictly for a.iy.-y operaUOllB and not for ad- ctltional transportation or storage faoilities. John ''Tex" Smith, manager of the Saulll Coast County Wate'r Dlstrl<L Said his board also ia talking aboul net'f:Sa)ty Qf a rate ~· 'J'he ·last one was In 1961, he said. · ' Smith said the costi or· water 'purdaa.sed by the district has risen 72 percent aioce 1960. - He aald it cost the district $25 per acre foot t.o buy water .In 1961 and the cost wW be $43 ln July. . The district charges $2 per month m1nf.mum and charges 25 cent! per each 100 cubic feet ol water used in ezcess of 200 cubic feet. · This diminishes for volume use to 18 cents per 100. Smith estimated that the average famHy uses about 2,000 cubic feet per month. Fl'Olll P .. e l NEGRO ••• al.on& Ocean were a serious huard to YOUllll•ten ¢ayinS in or crosstns the street. 'lbe lttter to the mayor aaJd it was only by lncredl'ble good fortune that a aerious lnjury has not occurred. The letter sald also that the buses frequenUy awaken residents at night. Wheaton said he hu yet to see children playing in the street a1ong Ocean but said he wants to hear a traffic engineer's opinion. Wheaton said the Greyhound "'people" were willlDg to cooperate in developlng a solution but were con- cerned about the language of a Black Unity letter which threatened the use or force. The commJsslon earlier hid d~errtd acUon on Cable Commuter's request for Ute sublea.se approval two weeks ago. Cable Commuters started Oylnc out of the airport Saturday, June 1 81 the firm had widely advertised. Thomas at the suggesUon of County Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan approved the sublease of space from Pacific Southwest Airlines so Cable would have some place to sell tickets. Com.missioner James Gillmore of Santa Ana touched off the fireworks Tuesday by moving that the Cable Commuter sublease be denied. "My understanding ls that we retilmmend action to the Board Of Supervisors -not the county ad· ministnttive officer," Gillmore charg. ed. "ln this case, a decision has already been made. Are our actions on ly valid U we do what the ad· mlnlstratlve staff wants?" Com.misslOn Chairman Dennis E. Carpenter of Newport Beach agreed, "Uthe admlnh:trator ls going to make the decisions, perhaps we should abolish this commission." · Commissioner Roger Slates of Hun· tlngton Beach angrily challenged a previous move by the Board of Supervisors for an administrative study for a commission recom· mendation to waive fuel flow fees for Air California and other airlines using the airport. "We held an extensive hearing on this and the recornmendatlons we sent to the board were complete and well documented," said Slates. "Now we rind they have asked the CAO to study the matter some more." C&I'p!lnter tried to calm things down with !'sit tight until we get a hearing on the ,whole problem. We'll g9 to ilil'.I board and find out what they want us to · do. If it's nothing, fine, I have enougli work to do anyway." The commission was also upset Tuesday night over a letter from the Grand Jury requesting that all leases and ezpamkln of facilities at the airport be delayed until the Pereira report on the airport is completed. Slates charged the jury was "out of order." Tbe commission ordered that a list of action taken since last March be forwarded to the Grand Jury. Festival E yes Underpriv ileged Free Tickets A request from the Los Angeles COunty Probation Department to enrich the lives of 20 girls by showing them the Pageant of the Masters and Festival of Arts Is belng studied by the FesUval board. Board president Edward Fernsten Tue.5day read the probation dcpart- n1ent plea for tree admittance. It said the girls, 13 to 16 years old, have had little opportunity to e x p e r i e n c e anything o u t s i d e their own neighborhoods. The letter said there v;ould be adult supervision with them. Don Williamson, Pageant producer· director, &Uggested that 17 seats are available near his direction booth at the top of Irvine Bowl. Dr. Harold Burton said. "I would be inclined to give them better seats." Willlamson said, "We have had a lot of VlP's up there." Director David Young said, "I'm .,.,·ondering if we would be deluged by requests from other organizations." Director Marshall said the only slmilar free Pageant admittance now allowed by the board Is to paraplegics from Long Beach Veterans Hospital. Fernsten referred the request to Clark's box office committee for reeommendatiOn. SEASCAPE EXPERT lltnnott Bradbury Seaseape, 3·D - 3-D DESIGNER J im Giibert • Different Art Methods Presented in Laguna Two different approaches to art will be presented in the Laguna Beach School pf Art and Design's summer program, according to Alexandra Churchill, Board Chairman. Bennett Bradbury, representational Late Afternoon Continuation Prog1·am Slated seascape paint.tr, will teach by demonstration and discussion during a two-week workshop starting Monday. Bradbury will share w l t h his classes hls knowledge and technique gathered throtigh years of painting the sea in all its moods along the Pacific Coastline. The two large painting studios of the School have been made available for the June workshop, Mrs. Churchill said. From July 8 to 19, Jim Gilbert of Santa Fe, N.M., will offer a workshop in two and three dimensional design. Mr. GUbert plans a concentrated learning process including exposures to principles of color and form in in· vestigation and exploration f o r A revised late afternoon program development of perpetual and con. for cootinuaUon school 8Wdent6 is oo ceptual abilities. the dra•-'•g board, Robert L. Reeves, Students may choose their . own ""' !pal media and also will learn how to Laguna Beach High School princ ' prepare a plastic base paint from raw told the school board Tuesday night. material!. Group tasks and hap. Board members 1 i 6 t e n e d ap-penings, envirortmental work and }X"OviDgly· to Reeves' PfoP!>6al which research into improbable media will calls for 3 to 6 p.m. d·aily clf.66e'S involve the class in new directions. Whi~ -"" .. _ to get tile studenQ; in· ~· ..-1.1.1 w.:t Other workshops and courses are tere&ted." scheduled for this summer at the "I'm not entirely satisfied with our School, Including instruction by Robert present program," he explained. "Lo6-Frame, David Schnabel. Ro ge r Kuntz, ir-g them is what we're ~<ring now." Ruth Osgood, Roger Armstrong. Jon Presently, cOntiLuai'.ion ~J.a.sses take stokesbary, Donna Sbarkey, Dion place !our hours a day, five .days a 'Vright and Sue Wilson. \\'eek. Ho\\'ever, by law a working stu·_ Registration is open at the School. dent need only attend cJesseti four 630 Laguna Canyon Road, next to the hours per week, Fr~ Matt.as, outgo-Fe~tival of Arts grounds. For further ing high school pciDcipill explained. information and free brochure, call Call Rocky • Ill Eor, .Summit Talk LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gov. Nelson A. RoclceleU.r pled(ed today to call a summit meeting .OJ: We.llet'lf headJ of at.ate to create "a true Atlan· tic partnership,'' If elected president: Looking for support to overcome the Republican delegate lead of Richard M. Nixon, the New Yorker offered 1weepina: foreign policy proposals ln the opening of two days of public speeches and private tallu 1 n Calllomla. Secret Servltil agents, New York state tJ:oopers and two Los Angeles pollce department intelligence 0Uicer1 guarded Rockefeller -the first an· nounced presidMtiaJ candidate to come to Calilornla· 1ince Robert F. Kennedy was shot to death in Los .. Angeles. last Wednesday. He planned j>rivate meetings with a few top Republicans who are pledged to vot6 for Callfornla Gov. Ronald Reagan as .a ttivorlte son at thf!I con· 'VebtlOn. ~ • . . -: ' . . ConCentraUng on ,orelgn afiatr1, RotxerilJer caned 1'or closer Untted States cooperation with Western Europe, including giviag the 1upreme command of NATO to a European in- stead of an American. Jn a speech prepared !or dollvery at Town Hall .in Los Angeles, Roclr.tfeller referred to Senator Kennedy's death 1n a hotel just a few miles away. "He die!\ here last week because he dared -he was determined -to speak out on the great problems before our peaple," Rockefeller said. But most ol Rockefeller's attention in the talk before the city's business JeadfU's was directed to building !1a a new world structure, a new intern.ational order." New GWC Leader " Lagunan Heads Student Body Phillip R. Mogle, 19, of Laguna Beach took office today as Golden West College student body president, vowing to work for greater student in· volvement in commooity life. Only one of three Laguna Beach stud-ants at Golden West, Mogle, son of Mrs. A)ma Mogle, 407 Emerald Bay, won tne top Qllice in student elections last week. He succeeded Robert Enz or Huntington Beach, a two-term president. Elected with him were John O'Dell or Westminster, vice president, and constituent senators Russell Berry, Steven King , Dan Long, Kathy Splkerman, Peggy Whitiog, Robert Kennedy, William Carpenter ahd Kan Silva. Representing GWC 's s e v en in· structional divisions as senators will be Bill Lamb, business; Ed Chilcott, communications; Yvonne Hamilton, fine and applied arts; T e r r y Johnstone; math -science; Bruce Halvarson, technology: John Owens, physical and recreation education, and Gail Altimarl, social science. A native o( Orange, Mo g le graduated last year from Laguna Beach HJgh School with a 3.2 grade average and letters in football , basket- tall 211'1 baseball. A 6-foot-3, 215-pounder, Mogle as a freshman started at right defensive tackle on the RU&tler football team Utls last season. He became active in student government, and was elected constituent senator. GWC STUDENT PREXY Laguna's Phillip M081• During the summer he will head a special student council committee to look at the college's present con- stitution and suggest changes. He also will appoint fiVe judicial board members and s i x com· m~sioners to form a new student cabinet. students attending continua~oo 49"-1520. school fall Into two broad categories. :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ They include teen.agen, who for one re&l90l1 or another camot attend regular sd!ool. PLAY IT COOL! GIVE DAD A GIFI' According to Mdtas, there are many occasions when a "fine girl or boy" has to support his family. and therefore must continue his educat~on through continuation classes. The second category embraces students who are suspended from regular classes for ~ days or more during a school year. Dr. William Ullom, sch o o l superintendent, said they had been talking about combining continuation classes ~tb Capistrano Hlgb School. Leisure World Band Sets Saturday Show The Laguna Beach r.-Iasonic Temple Association will present the Leisure World Kitchen Symphony Band Satw'- day, J une 29 at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Beach ffigh School Auditorium. The performance is open to the pubUc and the $1.50 donatlon will go to the Masonic Temple Buildin& Fund. HE'LL ENJOY • • • FOR MONTHS 'n MONTHS From Page l PLAY IT COOL DAILY PILOT ---hMrt N. W..4 -Titet1111 IC•nll Editor Ttl1•11 /I.. M11!Pht11• --JM adltw a.-.r4 P. H&ll .._ ... (lty ElllWr J11lr .. C."'1 P11l Nf1H ll 1¥1"-MIMiMI' ,lfwrtllllrll Dl...ctw ---....... ~1 P.o .... ''' t2•s1 m ,.,..A_ Otliw Offl,11 c..11 Mitte: -.wnt ••• Stl'ffl """"" hMfll !Ill W ... , .. lol*Vf"I ~ t.cfl; -"" ''"" r--, GRADU ATES .. Carl Berman, Shannon Lee Kennedy, Gregory George Kent, Mary Elizabeth Kimak, Robert Christopher Kindel, Linda Elaine King, Stephen Gregory Kinney, Dorothy Campbell Klass. John Llle Campbell, Katherine Bar· ry Cannon, JucUth Ann Chiba, Corinna Dickey Coffin, Mary Prlacllla Collin•, Katchen Ann Cook, Kathy Ann Copeland, Patrick Callan Cory, David James Cowell. Marc Cllf!ord Sophlan, Craig Alan Springe, Mary Lynne Stephanou. JUI Drayson Stephens. Thomas Swartwout, Jr., Jam es Stevens S"'·eeney, Jr .. Patricia Louise Tartaglia, Stephen Ra1ph Tarzian. ChriaU Lee Tew, Craig Thompson, Jane EV&DI Thorsdale, Shelli Lea Tttreadgold, Deborah Tilton, Peter Morse Tiner, Patrick Donovan Tobin, Carl Anthony Cray, Jr., Susan Marie Crucillla, Marglrita Patt1 Cutler, Lar· ry AJan D'Annond, Roger Alan Daugherty, Brandt Leng Davil, Su11n Mlrie O.vil. Samuel How-Cllong Ko, Richard John Krantz, Robtn. Patrlck Lam· bera. Kathryn LouJse L a m b e r t , Russell .John Langdahl, J effrey Allan Larrabee. Dennla Rl.gner Llnon, Kathleen Elaine Lewis, COieen Roo ney Lighthall, John Price L o c k w a y • llelllton Craig Lonpell JI , Allan Sol Chhm Lum, Theodore GMrge Lyttle, E'llen Warburton Mace, Augustine Jrlarti.Det, Vtctoril Anne M~, Brett ' - Eric Heizer, Cyndee Jo Hendrickson, Vincent Shepard Henry, Willlam Con· ley Hitchcock, Carol Brady Hoffer, Mary Catherine Houseman, Mictiae1 SCott Jackson, Howard Ran d a 11 Jacobson, Jeffery Fuller Jago, Jen- nifer Jami1on, Wllliam Selby Janes • Hope's Property Under Assessed? LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A t.acher whose proteste: resulted iD higher 8Mie5Smenta on Malibu land owned by Gov. R..-i ilftgOll bM now cliarged lllat land owned by comedtUI Bob Hope ID the 1am<.,... ·11 under .-ed. Bryon W, SC.vetll, 1 San Marino higl1 sd!ool teocher, sald Hop< WU selling 2,<XXJ lo 3.000 acres in ttle Malibu Mountain! for '34 million tiut that the county &ile5$or11 offi.ce hsd listed Its fair market volue H only $7.a milliloo . A&l!KSTDentl general}J are made at 2S peroeot ol market value, whld! woWd mean the-levy m Hope's pro- pai'J would be Oil • -ol len tllan '12 millloa. ( .. ·-· --------- Wintuk Orlon~ DRESS-UP SPORTSHIRT • Links texture richness-soft, springy knit • Mock turtle fashion-the no· tie look • Colors bright or soft -fashion rl&ht • Easy washing by hand or mach ine Sizes M-L-XL ---.. ·--·--·-.• $I 0.00 "011,_,,_T.M. Of course, we 'H gi# wrep ~is 9i#! OI PAltTMINT STOlll Llthtw•ltht ~1•114 ef D•r.r•• poly•i'11r •114 r•yon th1t .. p1r111111111l1y ,,,,,,4 ll'LUS ?1,11 tr11l111111t te r11ilt tt1l111. W•1r th1111 111 fflt f Olf 1••rt• -•. at tt.1 111111 er l•K ,.1 •• 1~ 1...,.ti•"'· StytH wlfti ••lf-Mtt hi ''"· LI••· ,.w, ....... Maw!~ J.a.Jw oJu1 rJ.otl ~. HAYTHORNE'S taC2I CHARGI! ACCOUNT 3321 COAST HWY. e COllONA DtL MAit 111 AVE. DEL MAit e IAN CLIMINn ' • .. ----........ - - ' ' ' I ·- • . ' --";'" ·~~" --........--~----_.--.-;::-,,..-,· ...... ---------------=-.,_...., .... ..,..-,-.,.. ... -..,. ...... --.......... -................ -.. _ ' , Wtdntsday; Junt 12, 1968 OAll Y PILOT 3 ~-----~-~--~---- Last Battleship ln .. iong ~Bea~_h 1 "Big J" has returned from the dead. That was Ule cry of Navy officials and shipping butra today as the USS New Jersey, only surviving battleship in the world, was snugged alongside Pier E in Long Beach. last December. Both ships will now call Long B,!lacb bome port-although the New Jertey will depart soon for l. )t ~im role in Vietnam. ALMOST TOGETHER -Except for expanse of conference table in Democrati'C presidential candidate alone. White House news sources Cabinet Rooom of the White House, Sen. Eugene McCarthy {left) and later said they talked about politics and policy, including the Paris The 55,<KX> ton battle wagon arrived in Long Beach after a non-stop VQyage from Philadelphia where sbe has undergone a $50,000 ,000 recom· missioning, "We are mindful of the fact that the recommissioning of the USS New Jersey and her presence here is really grim, serious business," declared Adm. 'Ibomas Ruden in an address during the welcoming ceremonies. President Johnson got together Tuesday. The Presiden~ met with the peace talks and Vietpam war. . COmm8rlded by Capt. J. Edwa,rd Snyder, the New Jersey leaves Lobg Beach Monday for six weeks ot maneuvers off San Diego before ' returning to Long Beach for further :LA Defender's Office Gets Sirhan Case LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Sirhan B. Sirhan will be defended against the charge of slaying Sen. Robert F. Ken· nedy by a public defender, although he ' would prefer that private attorneys l~andle bis case. : \Vilbur Litttepe~d, -chief trial deputy .in the_ collllfy' public ·defender's office, was . ap~inted to represent Sirhan When the suspect was arraigned last 1Friday. · · 1 ·Presiding Judge Donald R. Wright , or the Superior Court placed Littlefield ;in perm8.nerlt charge oflhe ca'se·Tlles· day alter a meeting with represen· :tatives of the Los· Angeles County Bar, Association and the public defender's office. , Sirhan said at his arraignmetit he 1could not afford to hif'&· -private counsel. He asked the American Civil ILil:ierties· Union to 'help him find two :private attorneys to take his case, \although he said he was n o t ~dissatisfied with Littlefield. .! ·A. L. Wirin , head of the South ern :caucornia ACLU. asked the bar association to choose attorneys to 'represent Sirhan and said the defen- ·dant would accept t:he choice. ·. Wirin revealed Tuesday that the .idefendant has rejected offers from 1Melvin Belli, who defended Jack Ruby, and F. Lee Bailey, who represented Dr. Sam Sheppard. Leonard Janofsky, president or the bar association, met with Wirin Tues- day, and then announced the associa- tion "has no power to designate counsel." ' Wirin said Sirhan has asked him three times to rflpresent him, but, the lawyer declined because at the present time he could see "no constitutional civil liberties issue in the trial." He said he does not exoect the ACLU to be involved in the trial. I ' I I McCarthy .LB) Substitute She ls enroute to Vietnam where her tremendous firepower -nine 16·incb guns -wl11 be brOught to bear on enemy forces from the Gull of Tonk.in. outfirtlng. · WASHINGTON (UPl)-Future col.' lege prof~ssor Lyndon B. Johnson is lining up lecturers Uke Sen . Eugene J. McCarthy and lon gshoreman· philosopher Eric Hoffer to spell him at the college· podium: In a jOvial mood at a state dinner for the Shah of Iran, Johnson revealed that a~ a meeting with McCarthy at the White Hollse Tuesday he told the presidential hopeful he expected to teach at the Un1versity of Texas. McCarthy told him, "save a spot for me," Johnson reported. • The President also told newswomen that he had tapped Hoffer to instruct his students when his new school of public affairs is established at. the University in Austin. Johnson chuckled when he recalled that last Sunday he had called Holler on the West Coast and invited him to spend the night at the White House prior to the Monday meeting of his new commission on violence, of which the longshoreman is a member. Cor_ig Shell Air Base; Harriman Files Protest SAIGON (UPI) -The Viet Cong shelled the Tan Son Nhut Air Base to- day and killed four Vietnamese cllil<ffen: -and a U. S. airman, first American victim of 12 days of terror attacks. The United States stepped up its air attacks against the north. The terror attacks became the sub- ject of the Vietnam talks in Paris to· day \Vhen U. S. Ambassador W. Averell llaiTiman delivered a strong protest. There was an implication of U. S, rep1isal attacks against the north. (See story, Page 5) A military spokesman said U. S. fighter-bombers took advantage of im- proved weaUler and launched 137 missions against the southern panhan- dle Tuesday in one of the heaviest raids of the year. One pilot fired a rocket with deadly accuracy into the mouth of a storage . cave; another snapped a bridge in the midale with a single missile. In today 's attacks on Saigon the guerrillas fired 14 six-foot rockets into '.i'; . ~ fl F .ASlllOH ISL.A~ areas and the houses of South Viet- namese soldier families. They wound- ed 24 Vietnamese plus two U. S. servicemen and two U. S. civilians. ln. the capital's 12 days of agony, hundreds of Vietnamese have been killed or wou.n-ded in the indiscriminate terror shelling. But previously the only America rr'" casualties were two m i lit a r y Policemen who were wounded. In Paris, American dip Io m at s returned to the Vietnam w a r negotiating table today and warned North Vietnamese delegates that the shelling of Saigon is seriously hin- dering their attempt to cool down the war. Diplomatic observers in Paris said the United States might consider resuming air raids against all of North Vietnam if U1e terror shelling 'of Saigon goes on. Today for the first time in. 12 days all the fire fell on military base areas. American military officials have said there is virtually no way to stamp out the terror shelling because the rockets are easily portable, easi,ly fired and are sited in rolling, watery ground perfect for guen:illas. • • • 644-2200 . • He said Hoffer politely declined on grounds 'that he "Could not sleep at the White House." He said that Hoffer chose instead to be a breakfast guest, and arrived at 7 a.m. while the President wa s still shaving. They had a two-hour talk over brea~ast. The President's dinner in hOoor of the Shah was IOw-key in deference to public mourning for Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. The usual entertainment was skipped. 1 • . . . I The New Jersey was recom· missioned after 11 years , in tlie mothball fleet. Large as she ls, the last of the big battle wagons played second fiddle in Long Beach to the Queen Mary, last of the big luxury liners. The'New Jersey was moored at right angles to the Queen Mary at Pier E with the stern of th eBig J turned to the Queen's towering stern. The Quee.n is being 'converted into a hotel, restaurant and convention complex. Nearly 10,000 persons gave the New Jersey a noisy welcome ,comparable to that g l v e n the ' Queen ~ary She is expected t~ sail for Vietnam in late August or early September. Action in Vietnam will mark the third war t!le big batUeship bas be<n involved in in her lifetime. SM saw service in World Wai II and Korea. The New Jersey ended hei" 5,<KXl mile shakedown 1 cruise fr o m Philadelphia escorted to Long Beach Harbor by Coast Guar~ 'ciltteri, I• mine-sweeper and fireboats spoutihg plumes of water. The ship is manned by SOQle ,J,500 crewmeo .. d 70 officers. 0par, house is scheduled this weekend aboard the New Jersey. NEW LADY IN TOWN -Fireboats and flotiJ!a of, small private vessels escort USS New Jersey out of .fog as she steams into Long Beach Tuesday. The only ·active baW.eship in the world, she will ~ake UJIJ.T....., .her, ''.hcime": in Long Beach, but is scheduled for: Vietnam duty as soon as sbe finishes a trainiJJg tour oH the California coast. · WIN A HONDA re gis ter now at any Buffums' store ~\ Mighty Mac Code Flag jackets ..•• 'If',~ from A to Z, Buffums' has them all Rugged combed cotton jackets are lined with tight woven nylon. They're sea-proofed for water repellency. And each jacket reproduces one of the 26 letters of the International Code Flag alphabet. Choose your letter! • Men's jacket, sizes S, M, L, XL, 25.00 Burgee Son style; S, M, L(S-18), U.• Burgee Small Fry style; S, M, l (5 to 7), 11,00 ----Slore fo r Boys and Store for Men u ~ MOHDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 • ' , . r .. . • • r ~ .... ...,,...,,,.. ;.ltfttl' ''Jake~ 11ntn, 31, of Mount Proapect, W., wu about 24 J¥,urs loo early when he holed In ope Mondey durlnf prac!lce round ftr th• Harrah'• lnv!talional 1o1t teumament. Harrah's, a caaln~re­ .Ort, la offering ao ,11,000 Roll•· 1loye9 :for aoy'. bol•ll>one scored cluinl wurna.ment ploy. 1be tour· namelit ·besao Tuesday. . ' ' • Nat111 Capt WllllaM L. 11.a-z. of Ooadlclla, Calif. ,.,,,.., """""""' of U.. U.S. l!IU~ 11llp Libft1r, wi!'fl f!orl fNflt Jill fllCI aJJ4T N ,,_ eritl<d tM lll!fal of Hontif TaeldoJ ttom N.,,, s .... tarit Pal II. IQllGlltil ;J thl W111hlnQ\OIO N""ll Yan!. lll .. cicmagZ. Nedved tM ckcoralloft for '1avin.g the Uw1 of man11 of Ml crtto aiid for _, 1111·•"'1>" durlftg • .. ,.. · pri.!e OUG<1c bt1 l'""IH>ooll laal voor. • · 'lbreo hundred AmWan tour· iits, 1aved lrom a •llkUD pleu-ure steamer MAJ ... 11a .. thanked their Wellh reocueh -II)' P""lllt- i$g them checkl worth aver fl,000. 'lilie Amerlcau wen 11\randed aboard the steamer· St. Trillo, which fouled a ~ u 1he ferried them from uandudllo to the ~.000.ton Swedllb cllue llDtr ~uneaholm. ;lack Wll..,,. of the trawler 'Kllnlvoclt an4 Illa crew of five, who ~the'. lllili'il* Ill tow, Jtcelvod' ... 4ili. The crews of llf .. "'all wlio ·a11o helped hi the rescue fl a checl: tor '3,582. ' . CClti in tr11& are corning off tht Uat of things tht Hutytoum. Ala. ·Fire Department will handlt. Ffrt Chit/ John BradUy aai.is tMt too man11 emeroencu call! hoot come in while fire- men were out on a limb after · cat!. "Wt atiU oet children out of 'trees," BTGCUQ ICdd, "'but ~ don't IDGlt limf ot1 eall. 2'1lfv'll come don toAn tMv gel hungrv."' • Now the "hearlnf...a?" u well a'.s the •• seoln1-eye' doe ls a tax deductible Item. 1be Internal Re- ~nue Service so ruled Monday in tie case of a man who requelted a '*edical-ei:pense deduction for the training and upkeep al a guide dog for hiS daughter, who auffered a severe bearing los.s. The mling was based on ·a previous one giving a tax break to blind persons using gµide doe•· . . ,-........ • ~pe• P~blblled . .. . .... l . . Cons Surrend·er, . . . . . ~ , ' ATLANTA (IJPI) -Four conv!cll, . ........ Nici Willllm C. Janr, a 1atldle4 by pubUcaUoa . ot thtlr fldal'ti==1lo1o ·opoblmui; . . Thi 1111 -t!le CJfeV .. ceo, nlaalld :U ~oots1t1 today .,un iray ~ bulldlnJ 10 and dropped their plltoll out a win-· be ireetsd )>)' their Wnllloo. one dow, •ncllnai 1 27-bour ordeal in the guard, Samutl McCallillor, 4t, bulled bleakAllJiotsFtdtrtlP1nlloaUary. · .h!J wtf1 and oald "I wu IClrtd to .The te men and D.v.e women held aln-death." co .. uc1pe alllmpt wu foiled Tues· But he said durln& the nillbt "I just day _, ,...,.. unharmed. Four lay down on a bencll" and slept in the others hid~ rele.ued pteviOUJly. .office where the convicts held their The convicts -1hne blnlt .-,, liootaf11; and~ rplirderer -were ~ for ~-TbeJ were treated "actllutb','' he ttmns with prilon olfld"• and t11en •aid. to 11clole aecurtt:f' ·c1lll. · Al the holta&es walked out ot the 'Prllon _olllcltls ~ th1 Atlanll prtopn, conv1c11 in -coll b1ocU JGunW, wllicll publlabtd tho COllvicll' ... -tho ............. yelllnc -nine &rievancu in a copyrifhted "1li40ll' 1muhlnl bt -. out .t.ry. '"1111 outcome of 12111 entire o1r111r -tM ol•r• JUcllod ltl :Nth cue rested on i-they (the tm..te1) hour. Tblre were reporll that -of felt the Alianll.Journal handled thtlr tbowlndOwo-. llla_ln_eoll grievances, I tllink the journtl did a . bloc!<. • Nixon Gains Dekgates In Illinois, Se Carolina IJ THE All80CIATED PllESS JlepnN!can ~I] cndldlte JUd>llll . ll. Nixon bu salM4 a ., ..... bbi: et dtlepta ln llllnoil ...r 5oalb c...u.a prlmarleo a.at -·-a hoot of incumhellt ..... 11'9'meD ,. rM1ecticm. · llNDwhoe, Tull party eaavllltlou Tulldl1 1ave Demcic:ratlc Gov. John c=je;a, llld llopulillcu l!ell. Jobn G. 1ftw fav«ite IOll control Ofer tho Slala'• •-eonv...U. deltpteo. CmnoJ11 hu nat -1tted binlltlf but II beloved to favor Vice Pruldent Hubert H. lla,mpllre)>. Mott of the GOP ~··;nra r~ leaninf toward Nlmi. -...... at lout 27 Of the 41 llllncU delepte Hits at otaU Tue1· day. On tho Demcic:ratlc 1lde, Hum· pbreJ ...... at 1--al tho 41, and Sen. Euaene J. 'McCarthy at least on1 -28 olber winner• lllted u ..,. -A major ezceptlon to the ,_,ti rerwntnatlCll! of 1 n cum bent con· areoimm Wu Rep. Barratt O'Hara Blaiberg Shows Improvement CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - Doctors reported a s l i I h t im - provement today in the condition of Pbllip BlaJberg, the world's lon&est surviving heart transplant Patient who Js stricken with bepatiUs. A bulletin issued by Groote Schuur . H!'IJ)ltal 1ald: "There has beta a 1ll11rt Improvement ln Dr. Blalbe<(s coDc11Won, Hil blood pressure and drculat1on are &atid'aotory. The pa- tilllt remains under close iiqmrvillon." .._.. A·bolpllal apokesman said Blliberg is conadoi11. The spokesman did not say bow Blalb.!rg is feellne. A com- mon 11de effect in liver ailments is deireasion. In London, the condJUon o f Frederick West, Britain's fir1t heart transplant patient, "remained ltable throughout the night," the Natl.aria! Heart Hospital reported. -West, who received his new hurt · May 3, developed a che1t infection over the weekend, and Mooclay trouble wttb bis kidneys was repartee!. (D-Dl.) -al N tllt-man Ill lb• H---loat to fanner -Jlep. --"'~ ·Bet ~ ~ leader Eft!'Olt M. Dlrbm al~ -.tod "'. ·---for • fomth torm. Five bonmabeul ._-.. in· cludlnc O'Hara had oppoc1u.m &lid tho other four nre J)OD1!n1tect for rHl• Uon. Anotbir 19 lncumbtnts were UllCll>P<'lld· • In lhl Soatll Carolina DlmocraUc Primary, lilcumblnt 811. Emtot F. Holllnp defeated chll1enpr Jolm Bolt CUlberllOll al Greenvfile for rerwnlna- Ucm &lid veteran Jlep. L. -I JUvw1, lffkinl re.eltctlon dtfuted Glar.J: A. Payton, • N•sro lewyer in a. -.. * * * McCarthy Says . Support of HHH Very Difficult J'r9 Wire 8enlea WASHINq'JPN -San. Euf ... J. McCartby aalcl today It would be "very dlfllallt" tor' him to rupport Vice Prelident Hubert H. Humphrey u tho Democraue . presidential nomlnie If Huinphrey hotda to his present views. McCarth y, reopening his own cam- paign for the Democratic presidential nomination after the moratorium for the du.th of Robert F. KeMedy, told a new1 conference that he would at- temft to sell party leaders and dele1ates on the idea that he is the l>elt man to carry the party banner in November. Meanwhile, Gov. Nelson A. Rocteftlltr, in an all-out campaign to wre1t the Republican presidential nominaUon from front nmner Richard M. Nb:on today iD&UfW'ated a na- tionwide newJpaptr and televUion advertiling cimpaip. Rockeftller't b1adquarter1 h e r e aald an ad t1tled "Why I Run'' ap- peared in 40 new1paper1 in 35 market areu. '11l11 meant the ad appeared in two newrpapir1 in five ctUes. One mfnule television commtrciala b-Oii tho.tut o! t!le new-ads allo were llaNd today in the 35 market areu. Southwest Record Lows Set Midwest Suffers From Hail, Rain, Thunderstorms ~· ·r-..,....area ·-~ ~ .. ..... Mlllfl .... ,,., .. .. .... .. " .. " ... u " .Od .. " " .. ... " " .. " .. " .. .. .. ., " • • " " .. .. ,, .. H " .. .. " • • .. .. .. .. n .. n. .. .. '" • .. .. "' .. • ..... " " .. .. . ~ " .. " .. .. .. " ... .. .. .. .a " " • .. n .. ., .. .12 ... .• , .. n .. " .. .• .. .. .. .. " .. 41 ·'' " N .a -........ -• ( . • Sen ,.Franebcau m ........ Police Officer Reno Rapagnanl inspects a Czechoslovakian machine gun belllnd • table covered with hand guns and rillts surrendered by San Francllco citizens on ao appeal by MllJ'or-Joseph Alioto. So far n Ctllaens 11a .. turned In lllelr arm.s in the c1111palen which runs through July 11. Are you still ' J.... @~ you hate your old ove~ ~ All covered with grime, That old-fashioned oven You scrub all the time? f You start in the morning 'Til the sun does decline, Grease to your elbows At oven·cleaning time f But there's a new flameless oven For you and for me. Cleans itself spotless ' With electricity. f Just a push of a button Saves work and saves time . Cleans up the whole oven For less than a dime • ! No more oven clMnln1 when you own a ftameleea, electric ranp with a Mlf-cl•ninr oven. Fllp a awltch, and the oven cleana itaelf, automatlcall,.. S.. your d•l•r toclaJ'. France Bans Protests .... In Streets P A:lllS (VPI) -The fOVOl'llllltDt t.. day announced drutlc oteps to ban dam-llGal a Dd Jnak up Com· muDill 1tud,nt orsan!RllcM. Workers throughout France staged a one-bo\D" work atoppage to protest stu .. ...._ dent and worker deaths in France's second crlais in a month. 0 At 3 p.!p. electric powerl WAI cut. trains, subW~s and buses stor>ped running and protest demonstrations were beld in factories and other place1 of work throughout the couptry . The stoppage was ordered by the Communist-led Confederation of Labpr and other labor unions. No street demon1tratloal toot place durlnl the one.hour 1tand1ttlt and the government's new ban on meetings was nOt infringed. The government had Jmt banned alt demonstrations throughout France and ordered the immedlate dissolution of a number of leftist organizations and private militia groups. The step was short of declaring a full state of emer1ency .. The drutic 1tep1 were announced as new tights broke out between polic e using te4?' gu and students who burl- ed Molotov cocktalla: in a new wave of vi olence that swept 2 ,000 demODf(rators into jalll in Paris alone.· Hundreds were injured and ar- n1ted in other cJtier. Five perlOlll have died. Prflldent Charlel de Gaulle called h1I cabinet into 1e1don today to con- sider the """ · threat to bis fifth republic-. • Sa'I' by Houicwiuu Unanimou1 . · P,.nted by Southern C11/lforn/11 Edison.-.. • , ... t • " ' " ' l I .. ' I L •• • • • • • ' I : I . ' ' ' • ' • ~ ~ ' ' ' . • • ' . : l ' I ' . . ' • •• : ' • ' ' . ' ' ' " . ... • • : a ' , ••• Oq I • • ' • • ' • ' • • • • ' • • • • • ' I ' ' I ' I .. I ~~~----..-.------:--·--,~~~.,.-.,.--~~~~~~~~-.,.-,-.~~~""""'..:-'""'.":~~~~~~~~~:--~~~~'""."~""."""".""~~ ................ _ ......... _~~~.~~~------........ _~"! Many Do- • • illave Bee _:~;:_For Pills ... '~ ~PETER J, STEINcRoBN ~ ' SWnaelll: , look a pill~--·• , · ! rPm 72 ·year1 -~ .... t • tome kind of~?-.. :·t. ~ ~ ebt: u .,_, JJm'e in ~ ~f.'· r~p you a • 'E·m If ...... .,.eer· t&< ! ·'' ,.1. POe iniitit baff,written I ·~"-PoeJD calJed "Pill! Pills! : ~I Instead of. or in ad• t ~ '° . "BeJ11!· Belbl . : -.-·~ells!"' ' ·,, • .... • Drug housel are turninl t ::;~·• detiige ,r all· kinds er • . ~-Got • btadacbe? : • .. ~~ for a pill. Afe, you 1 ~~-r:u:ti.pated! Reach _f~ a 1 1 J?llIJ. Hiv~ heartbUrn! A t '"Jioigie plll'will clear jt up In ~ Ito time • an.. SUffering · , ::trom Wilmnla? A p 111 .' *1 guarantillea -..-bl·J11-ful 1 • ~in slumber. • ~·let 111 be thankfiJl:for ! .. 19. Although, u a natiOb • ~4e have a tendency to pop : pills into .our mouthJ' u ' .......chalantly as we do l\iai11 : -c~. ,they ,ara .~Often ' gElliWne Ille-savers. : . ..iiiCftt0NG. uPE 1 =:r-patient who ti k_e & · : !!!!!IMitali1 pills prescribed by 1 ~ doctor may prolong bis ' ~ : !.,~~ for years because this · 1 .v .pparently ordinary p i 11 : ~ttng11 strength and life to • • • • • ' ' • ' • • • • • ' ,, the heart muscle. Cortisone pills may not _ onl!r relieve arthritis, but can, actually save the lives of people who have in· sufficiency o! the adrenal ~lands (above tlie kidneys). Presi<tent John Kennedy was said to suffer from this ailment. Mrs. A. ts a diabetic, but not severely enough to re· quire insulin. Special pills . talle its pl .... and prolong her life. ·Mr. B. suf[en from tuberculosis. Pills will help hai-ness it and bring it under cd?ltrol. So. let us be thankful for the pills which drug houses manufacture. Mountains of them may be unnecessary. lftlls of them may tem- porarily re 1 i e v e patients who have headaches . nerv.ousness, insomnia ...and ~es Ot o th e·r non· ;:threatening c<implaints . i}mall piles of t h e m , ~owever, may spell the dif. ;Jerence betwt;en life and ~eath. ., · , • Or. $1elncroltn 11 _,..... ·ti. <•'"* '*""r ... i1e,...· lette,..., Neverttlele~•, .. ~tkMt.-ol .-.eNr•I l!IMrml •r• 1, ~ '" 1at.r colurn.,1. • "' '" ... '" "' "'y ::: our . ' . .. ' rn arand of 'Ill rn:orange tit· :::county ltl• !i!Muslc! Ill' Ill ::: The "' :::: Colorful ,,, ii!Sound of t i!• -!:: RADIO '" :::1.KOCM " . :!:103.1 FM , .. , .llJ·F :::. rom ,,.. ~ . ::::Fashion 111 • liHsland ,.,.N ::: ewport ... ::: Beach "' "' , ,, ~II· Ill· !'" '" J •• • Beiuti.lul IUbjec&I Ja hnd-lom~ wood framea. · 2fbM• JlorizOntala er 3SX45" ve~als. lottlo of 60 Ta•lots 99c Buff erin 14.01. A•fi1eptic $1.15 Listerine ... 7fc l'ox of'30 Taltlet1 79c , Di-Gel ....... 49' P1C.: ~70 A11orttcl .58' ~-01.~ ..... 1 s,...., . . $1.49 .Bactine •••• Pack. of 5 Deu•lt 11 ... 11 ... 1 79c :;WiJ inson :~:.:.-. 2:s1 .. ~ . ' . ·. . .. :Mb. S'l'fHll Spo'Wy Dtoilorollf $1_ .. Mennen · $pray •• 68' Qulc~. Eilsy, (OR•enient $2 6'· ··a·· :·LILT Pushbutto• o · , · . ! I :Ho•• Permanent $1.00 Value! Flower Plas Bloasoru · bri1ht po1ie1 to 'liven up . )'our summer out· fill! At cavines or over half 47c 10!. Cup·O·Gold Caady Ban ~'"""'""" 3'19C Wh ip ed mar1hm1l· 0 . low 'fondant cream I , t center coated with chOCGlate. l•y I ••ti•••• 11t ii4.'"ti:l., MLUJU lceCre.•ll1 _c.,. ltoek •J th Wlfh F...L.e ,r-reeier •Ith . ~ thue 3~oa. Ice .9 ... ·t~abl cup1. BtaY 12 f 6 C , '•m by the dozen o and aave. 7c eaclil I ' r • • • 2300 Harlior llYil. at Wilson Sf.- Harbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa • '827 Westminster .at tiokl• West • w .. tm1nster $s~s.t1•s Val. Chenllle . Bed Spreads •full& '3" Twl• WSllH Ass t. 1tyler, 1tripes. soli.d.s. Theratl ri rerul•r cbenjlle, Cotton• and blend• or Rayon Acetate A: Cotton that an machine wlsbable, aeed no ironin1. 23c ea. S·Year Light Bulbs .. .. lMWott Stockupfortheyur at this 'l'hrifl1 OU~ atandln1 dl1coant ••'rill.Ill! 6;,,~,1°•: HI-Lo Loop ' Ett.~ deep hi·lo pile with 1r11art raised pat· tern. Lafex coated fOr safety. Mac1ii e wash· ;.-: able! IS popular or1! $2~.2 .. •1 so Walnut Fl•l•h . '' ""-.... Desk Accessories "°'· . ,, .... ,, ... a· 8' ··c· ' :--• All•rff• look · • lltfftr. '" . Walnut &rain , . . ti vinyl items for Dad's desk. I ; ' ' Women's Zippered Nylon T"tfeta J~acket• -.. Sizes S-M·l · Comfortable nylon taffeta '$198 jackets with front zipper- in new "bot" colon! Elu· ticited wrist, drawstrin1 w1ist, 2 pocket!. ·· • With Twl• H•"tlle1 Trylon chest k•<P• . rood or •164 drlnb .told lonf· ' er. B,uy for sum- Nel'tkne picnics '•·camptlft,trip1! . " · •a,• R6tcta.,.ular ' ,, Osdllatlag ·•prlakler 'Watu1upto1:175 · , • . ••·reel Sel •n '2'' 1pray .. utomatic control. 1 year · tuaranteel · · ' 'J" Val. 24•1ft. •2• Skol Ta•l11t1 •·•·O Grills "'"" $577 PrlcM 1'' alumlnumfoldint Jep, chrome plated arid wUb ·-ant1'el. , . ' ' I j :, Crea•· . •i;-o.. 77c For 1un·1e11sitlve ,1ltin-1Jve1 1dded Pr.ote;ctioa, , ~ For Dlds who ftsb! With lo 11ctlo• lure bo"- . - weo-.,1 JUnt 1z, 1"8 • OAJL 'f l'!LO'T J ·a 1406 W. Edlng1t alitl frlstol St~ Ecllnger Center, Santa Ana i • IJ9,04 Mag111lla St. at Talbelt, l lloailtal11 Valley "'1ih>'" 11•11'1 • . 'V PllCI lftCJKllAI! . . Me•'• Short Sl .. v. Courtley· Parma Pr••• . . . Dress· Shirt •211 In D!> iron, "Soil Re- . leise" blend or 859' Polyerter .t 35* Cot· ton Broadcloth, re1v · ular collar .•. and Sanforized Cotton Oxford With button· : down ~ar. Co.IOra. 1tripe1, chffl! . Mers Che•ett• IMd.11 ..... DMlltla -K•it , . ;' s~:·:~·~ ·. """'""'""-'"d ·•"'''2''. Cotto11 double knit sport' 1hirtl wllb, : ,. mock turtle 11.er ~ · , collar, L!J.!t¥ look· • ·. ib 1olicLeolar1 and lrfide1cent 1tripe1. . S to~ . ·~ .,) • ' I TOPS ON DAD'S LIST ,. ;1 •2 .. YalHI Men'• :• C~urtley . Ties .:· • • ~ I Hand1onie tie1 fa regular. $159. .o~ ~ady·tied 1tyJes.. :i 1 • " •1 00 Men's:' Stret~h .· Socks '"' Orlon 5·7 ACJ>Uc • 25" . . C 1tretc.h nylon •. ~ Ab1orbo ·loll · · so.ck• of 509<. Nylon and:IO'IODurene· mercanized Cotton lined, or 4-·Plr Banlon Nylon 1ocb in rib or cable de1i111. · • •11.~· Lisi· Pricei *•••• •t•iulard autca•• Lighter Hond•ome "Studord"•·59• butane liabter f\lell tn · • 1econds. LlPta .tor • montha on a 1ina:lefill. Leathei' covered. · · , .. ~ . . '11" l••t•~-· . ea._.ra l(lt:' Complete Imperial • outfit include• col"$888 or film bJ Kodak,~ batteriu 1Dd G.E. Flash-cube. •3 .. Yaluel Me•'• Leatll.e~.illltfo111• ' ; ·Stitchleu ., 68 ~on1tr11c· tion, wide ··selection or . c.olors.i;, EXCLUSIVl AT THRlml Full Quad· Harkoff VOdk• New prieM eTea lower l'han o~r .. el'Jf., Jow ~t:• of fl•. Stock up nor tor COOi au• a1t1Um• refft1hers ... aave at Tln1tb1 . I\ .~3·!{ - I I . . • -- T1·avel $Keeps· -O n Move 87 JOllN °C'IJN1'"1J'F NEW YORK !AP) Adminbtr•tkin ~Nor1s to keep doUlrl at home by curtailln& OVU$«S JP'D(ling for pleulll'e are rtmaing head on mto ob.\tKlM that 1eem llkel)' now to redU« cban~s for any dramatic success. -. . -.~--.· We4nudu. Junt 12, 1.S r ·- Smne Plumber The objective is tn rtduct by $500 million the annual travel deficit, which in 1967 soared t.o '2 billion, the net result of Americans spen· ding nearly $4 billion .abroad A comely mermaid checks the plumbing in this demonstJ;ation for the neW Am- while foreicners speut $2 phenol Corp'. at.Broadview, Ill. The purpose of the aqua~ati~s is to dr~w~tten­ billion here. tion to the firms new plug for special underwater applications. Jt 1s water- Lessening the prospects proof. in both "plµgged in" and unplugged" positions. for substantial help in balan· -~-----------------------------­ cing the travel outgo and in· come are these factors: Your Money's Worth -Measures t h a t wouJd impose taxer; on foreign travel a nd Until spending abroad are still b e i n g argued in the Senate and may not, therefore, be sign - ed into law in time to have much effect on summer travel. New Incentives NecessarY, TRAVEL SEASON The peak travel sea5on, !be time when students, educators and sighUeeing secretaries head for Europe, began in late May and will extend to Sept. 28. A good ~ of the season will have passed before any bill. To Check Hospital Costs -Americans have plenty or money to spend-on travel regardless of whether a travel tax is passed, and they seem also to have the ·desire to UMI this money. -The ease and glamor o[ .airline travel is making trips to foreign I an d s, particularly to Europe, en a Im o s t lrreslstible at· traction to people o f moderate incomes. These people also are get· ting some encouragement from tM airlines. As one of them puts it: "We can still wrap you up In any one or hundreds of complete tour packages. Say the word. We'll give you the Europe you a1ways wanted -Starting as soon as tomorrow." FOR PLEASURE Whatever the motivation, new and renewed passport applications for the first two months of 1968.rose sharply over a year earlier. with the great majority of them com- ing from persons intending to travel primarily for reasons of pleasure. By SYLVIA PORTER Jn Some of our big city hospitals. charges are up to $100 a day, end still rising. Just since 1965, U.S. hospital cos~ to us have shot up more than 35 percent, and we are· in for another in- crease in these costs of 15 percent this year .. Just since 1965, doctors' fees 1iave risen a full 14 percent and these rosts, too, are still climbing. Today. our nation.al health bill totals about l50 billion a year and this figure may nearly double by 1975. THE BIGGEST single fac- tor is the ballooning hospital wage bill. This trend has been spurred by the 1966 nurses' strikes leading to raise11; the new minimum big and long -overdue pay raises; the new minimum wage covering lower-pald hospital workers: big wage increases in many ho\Spitals for grossly underpaid in- terns and residents. A second factor is the soaring cost to hospitals for new equipment r a n g i n g from comput.ers to heart- Jung machines. The new equipment requires not only huge outJ..aiys but also the hiring of specialized person- nel to operate it. services of doctors and nurse11 il!1 far outrunning the supply of t h e 1 e pro- fessional11 . FINALLY, a fourth faclor is the zooming cost of · hospital wnstruction. It now coste up· to $35,000 to "build" a single n e w hospital bed. To slow the rise. doctors are moving toward less cos- tly group practice in wh.ich t.wo or more doctor11 share office facilities, diagn<>stic equipment and secretaries. Since 1959 the number of group practices has tripled. Even greater economies are being made under preparid group practice in which the patient or his health insurer pays a flat fee for all doc- tors' services. Increasingly, pre-surgery tests· are being done outside the hospital. In Des Moines. Iowa, a citywide experiment is underway in w h i c h 1urgical patients receive tests outside the hospital before their operations, with priV'llte health in s u re r s paying the costs. Yearly savings thri>ugh s ho rte r hospital stays can mount in· to the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The H e a 1 t h. Insurance' Institute estimates that one in lO hospital patients today does not actually need to receive A study by the National Industrial Conference Board, and reported in the Conference Board Record, a monthly publication of the n o n p r o f i t organization, showed passports w e r e being handed out early this year at a rate 30 percent higher than a year ago. Less than 10 percent were ob- tained for business. A third factor Is that to- d.iy, an everage oi three or more hospital persoMel are needed to care for each pa- tient -double the number needed only 20 years ago. A major operation can now in- volve a dozen or more surgeons and supporting t:echniciaDs. At the same time our demand for the Lockheed Gets Order For Orbital Lifeboat Perhaps the most en- couraging aspect of the travel payment! situation is the cooperation received from business in promoting travel of foreigners to t.he United States t hr o 11 g h reductions in transportation tares and hotel rates. ;y/1jc ff !)( 111 l!tl by Bob Wigmore Johll 0 . Ballard ba< been appointed mana- ger of the South Corona SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) -The space agency has picked a California aerospace com- pany to design an orbital lifeboat capable of returning three astronauts from gpace t.o the earth in an emergen- cy. A spokesman at the man- ned spacecraft center said the Agency wants a craft that could be launched emp- ty and left unoccupied in orbit until it Is needed. Astronauts would abandon their own disabled craft and get in it to return home. No such rescue-type craft now exists. Lockheed Missile a n rt Space Co.. space systems division of S u n n y v a I e , received a S200,000 contrzct to develop a conceptu.'.11 design or a vehicle to fill this need, the spoktsman said . l~e said the c;tudy would last eight months. lett•• ttli:t t 11eth1, 1oo~ •t tli•t de! Mar Branch of Se- First designs will be for a craft t.o operate up to 300 miles in space. about threr lime11 as h.igh as most ellrth orbiting nianned f I i fl h I s . keui• ef yourt , •• 11·, 1101 tt.1 curity F'lrst National 1t mt er1e you beu9t.1 1t•tr1I Bank. 3435 E. Coast ytt,• tg• •• • 1-1 ........ 1, .. , ,.,. Highway. which is sllll climbi"IJ 11111! yeur ho1n • 11 prob•bly wertt. • lot mo•t scheduJed to open this tod1y ••• 1t wo11ld i,, wi1t month. He has been FI RST, FAST Wf,e ltll• veu fi"t tboul l~t bt1I 1 .. lec•I "•w1? Ct.tdr ii •-+. 1!'1 "ttrly t lw1v1 !ht DAI LY P'ILOT. te look ti v•ur fi•t ir11ur1,.ct manager of the _Long poOcy, too. Unltu il'1 bt•" Beach Branen si nce btou1ht lfi U11t with lod•'t'• 1~-1966 hilJh Jt.llillltf coiti, 't••'r• ht•d· 11ijiiii0iiiiioliiiiiiiiii 111! for +retblt ••• W1tcf,in, II loc1I pric•• •• • cht 119ittt prep- •rlv ¥11••• • , • oN kttpin9 tw r cltt nk l11wr anc• 11p-te-41lt, tff!C:111t erKI ecott.-i1lcel I• p1rl ef our P'fllltr t«"llllU ••• If ~011'11 .net 111leyl1t9 th1t kill4 ef 11rof111io"1I i11111r•H-• lritl, • • • c1ll "'' tod1y , . , WI GMORE INSUR A NCE l9l9 Horbor Blvd. Co1t1 Ma11 S49-o.391 ' Merits and Benefits of leasing lhe F1mily Car lftcrt11i119 11u111btr1 ef A111trlc1111 11ew 11111 +lie f1111ily ci r. Ap· pt•t11•ly flit ict11 ~1: "wh1tt' 9eH f•r c•1l·c•111tiou1 bu1i11t11 f!'le" h t l1e 90011! fer Mr. f1111lly•111t .. .'' lrtmpl...-t ritw Celo11y P'1r k iltlie" w191111 wltt. ti• c•11dltio11!11t C'lll bt lt1114I for Stli l!IO~lv (+h1 f1b1leu1 1it+l1 Ce<191r 9011 fer 1boui S•ll, whicf, i .. cfui11 111 •1qui1till 11r•ict t"41 111ti11!111111c1 fer 40,000 .,.;!,, loff c.Ji1119t1, lu"••t1 111, etc.I. TJ.t ct1tltr buv1 "°"' 1r11111i ctr. fr1tirt9 c111a11 for 111•11+111111! 111 lht "'''••• 01 1+.tl •1c1•i•" pro,ert\' 111 th• rl .. er. "'" twctl11u1f lto•~ltl t" tt.i1 111b!11t 11 fr•• f" ff,r 11u,.,. P'l.e11t Jeh"'t" l 1011 ll11ctf11.M11cury 111 N1wporl l11cf,, ••1·0•11 111 S4S-1211. Exch anges Shut Dowi1 For Da y NEW YORK IAP I Over The Counter NASD ll>ll"9• fo< Tuead•y, J..,. 11, lMI It's a f)rive-in This cross-section of lhe Lockheed 500 cargo car- rier, big enough for Greyhound buses to drive iqto two abreast, provides the entrance to the Lockheed- Georgia Company's exhibit at the 4th International Forum for Air Cargo at San Francisco Internation- al Airport. The event opened Tuesday and will close Thursday. Lockheed is offering the 500 to airlines for mid-1971 delivery. Mining Boom Over. • But 3 Won't Quit 0 LING HOUSE. Nev. (AP) -The,gold and silver mining boom has eorne and gone in #le to'Nll. of Ol- inghouse, but its last three intraibitants just don 't want to leave. "They'll probatty bury us here." sa)\S Ray Clemmons, an 81-year-old n1iner wh(l drove\ teams to the mining camps in Nevada jl13t after the turn of the century. "They can't get him out." says ilis wife, Juamta. v,...00 married him 50 years ago wten she was a teacher in a one-room schoolhouse in Mill City and he freighted supplies to a tung ste n m-irting camp there. 500 PERSONS At the time, OUng'house wa:s a busy town cl about 500 persons on bhe -¢astern slope of lh1! Pah-Ra!h moun- tain flange 50 miles east of Reno in western Nevada. It. produced $100.000 a year in g<ild and silver. The Clemmons settled in Olin~se in 1934 -wtien there wa.5 still some mining going on. N()W they live in two old cookery w1agons a m o n g some sagebrush, juniper. rusted mining carts. an abandoned mill b r o k en water tanks and about a dozen old cabins. Clemmons g(lt in on the tail end of the gold and s~lver mining boom that swept the west, but together wiUl Angelo Mangini and a miner knoYo'n only as Little John he pulled Sl00.000 in gold out of the Texas No. 2 mine. Now, only 1'1·angini. Clem· mans .an:t his wr.ife remain !n Olin~ouse. Where is Llttli! .John? "He's six feet un- derground." s a y s Clem- 1moni;. Mangini sits in a rockini::- chair on tlhe front pordl o( hi5 cabin with his sheepdo.g, Vinnie, and -by his own admission -does nothing. He says about 25 miners and their families still lived , in town when he arrived in 1918. Mangini came from his . native Genoa. Italy, to take part in the gold and silver rush. He worked for others and dug his own claims. earning enough to live and save for the future. Now 78. a slight man with a tanned, wrinkled face and gray hair. he says he left Italy after tiaking part in the . Libyan campaign wiLi. the rtalian army. "T juS't wanled t,o change countries." hP says with an a::ccnl still strongly Italian. "I 111an1 to ch·ange it no more." A cottonwood tree · Mangini planted wtien hear~; rived in Olinglhouse now : stands fiO feet tall in front of · his wooden cabin. He points 1 to a spot acr05s the dirt road where the Olinghouse Hotel stood, and points · farther down the rood where ' the store and sohoo\ once we.re. DOZEN CAB INS lbey have burned over the years, along with most of tbe buildings in town. On- ly a dozen cabins, rusted mining gear and broken 'NQgon parts -f'or the most part -remain. The miners? ··some died and some just left." Mangini says. Mutual Funds Clemmoos is more activt>., He diis in a gold claim about a mile and a half from . Olinghouse and precesses , his ore in a mill he built from parts left over from : the town's more acUve days. "Oh, I don 't do mucti." says Clemmons, a laTge and powerful m·an despite hi.~ years. "You get lazy wht!n you get old. I've done quit"' a bit In my day. but my days are just about ovt!r." : \ "He works pretty n<>.';1r 1 every day,'' his wife says. Stie is a tiny woman with white hair. "He wnrk .~· harder than some young peopl'e .. , , Clemmon~ wa111 horn in · KaT11Sas. but grew up in t.he : silver minin.'( !:own of Creed, Colo. He oame Ill Nevarla when M was 19. RA ISt:n FAl\111 ,,, When the gas(ll inr r11c inf' replaced the teams hr usrd . lo drive. he decided ro g1:11n- IO mining. Even .u Clemmons began , his mining, tM boom was dNwing to an end. But he didn't expect to get rich. r "I l"Qi5ed a family Of three · ~ldren from v."'hat t dui : out o( the ground ~." he · '"Y'· Clemmons say~ tlwrr i.~n ·1 much gold left in tbe ground near Olln~hoo.!of>. "The . orr: i~ preu~· lCI~' xra~ 111 so mt ~as~." he 111ay~. ''Sometimes you bare-1 tr m~kf' wage.... I.ots of ; tim~1 you• dig a lonj! w,,y . bef6re you find eny .inld." ' • I ' I I ,I ' I I ' I ! I .. ,1 I I ' I f . •;,. .. • . ., ,. ' ~--~ •• ,. '< . ~ •' °"\• ~-...... \ .,,. .. - ~ El . •· ~. ---·-·· .... -,., 1 ~-·t·c I ' 4 ,. i t • ':.~ \J. ,.. ,.,,., 1 n ... A .. p··· .~ •. n: '•'!• .... ·-.·.;,,.,, <>.d • . , . ..... rd 1<1<: • . •q: . ... "'"' >l fo;1 "" ... 7-.. ~·u·.r·. I I l I ... •' ·~-. . .,.. i I •\": ·' .... , ' ,. ' ....... p.-. , .. : .. ':l '.< I·~ •••• J • . ' •'· ... . ,. ' ... "l -t..' , ... ,, ... ' ,.. , .. l'l ' . . ' ' . : '; ,. '" ....... .r1. ' • . ,,._ .. I ' • I I ' ·~' , .. , ,. > ., :.r.)""• ~~--~ i.,.. .11 !-. ; ....... ~ .. ·~ .... . -' .. 4 ·• • • • - ....... ' -' ( . • ' • , . • ' ' ~ • Theres more than one way .. to make your own money! :Just for fun, you mlglif fry tlie llttle do-If. ·yourself kit supplied above. But please don't try to spend the money your make this way. If you want to try to make the kind of money which 11 really 1pendable, try doing it thi1 way. Pick up your phone, dial 642-5678 and 1ay, "I'd ll!ct to place a Want Ad, pl••••·" What klna of• Want Ad7 How al:iout ••II· Int ••me ef those nice thing• you no longer. use 7 Tliey may lie· 9atlierln9 du1f In your home, but 1omeon• el1e wanh them an·d wlll put them to good u1e. .Y.our DAILY PILOT Want Ad can cost 111 little 111 $4.50. Think of your profit If yo11 ,. • 1old 1omethin9 worth much more than thaH . . · , · Don't delay. Make that. spendable mo.hey. A DAILY PILOT Want Ad will get It for you ' "' - -. . I· ,. • .. . . . ' ., ' DIAL DIRECT-642-5618 Say ''Charge It'' • FIOM NORTH COUNTY PHONES DIAL~ 541-1221 . ' ..., DAILY PILOT Want Ads Will Work for YOU ' .. • ,• • -• t I • ---------I • . -.. . . · J_;· ·DAll.Y PILOT • • • I •• ;· .r ,l ... lr! ,,, ••• :·~· ·: : . . ~ • .. . Sex ·Symbols Get Younger By NORMAN GOLDSTEIN NEW YORK (AP) Youth JS talcing over the world. Even teen-age girls are replacing the maturer maids as the sex symbols of the sixties. Or at least that's what the movie industry would have us believe. It was "Lolita" that ap· parenUy st.ar-ted the trend on the screen, with Sue Lyon -then 16 -playing the sweet seductress in Stanley Kubrick's toned-down 1962 film version of the VJadmir Nabokov book. Ewa Aulin -Miss Teen International at 15 -in the title role. 'fhe part calls lot· lier to be oft-chased and oft· caught, in a series of comic "romantic" frolics with top- name costars. In "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush," a mad and merry English entry about a young boy's sexual education, there is Judy Geeson, 19, playing the free- love·thinking apple o! the hero's eye. The same Miss Geeson ralds her mom's supply of birth control tablets in "Prudence and the Pill." --- Melodyland Sets Three Rock· Sliows Mail orders only are now being accepted at Melodyland Theater for three new rock s h o w s scheduled for July at the Anaheim s:howhouse. ... .. .. ... . 'ADVENTURES IN PAPER BAG' OPENS 'AT SCR Toni Doutl111, J•m•s McKle, Michell• Reday Sta91 'Happening' Kubrick faced a good deQ.l of pressure, particularly f r o m religious organiza. tions, before "Lolita" came to the screen with her sunglasses and lollipop. He has said he would make the film a lot differently now, in this age of a more liberl movie code and a generally freer rnorill climate within the industry. And when producers went looking for a girl to play the part of an English hippie who seduces a policeman - the ubiquitous bath scene is back, this time wlth boui gal and guy awash -and gets unwittingly involved in the sale or lurid films "in the ap· propriately titled • • T h e Strange Affair," they chose 17-year~ld Susan George, an attractive, bright-eyed bnmette, for t he role. The Little Richard Revue, with Bo Diddley a n d Wollman Jack, occupies the MelodylaDd stage on July 8 atJd 9 for two performances • • .. ' •• 1: •• •• ... Theater Notes only. · Three New Shows Arrive Lolita was 12 in the book: 'an indefinite 14_ _in the filui, which concerns the rela- tionship between a middle· aged man and the teen mistress of his fate. Melodyland will host the Strawberry Alarm Clock, the Evergreen Blueshoes and the Seeds for a one· nighter on July 22. On July 23, Martha Reeves. and the Vandellas will appear for one performance only, with Sly and the Family Stone. • On Orange Coast Stage~ NEW SYMBOL The film scene today is filled with nubile nymphets. The child-woman, with her intriguing combinatibn of It's enough to make one almost forget that the Academy Award for best actress t1rls year went to 58- y e a r • o l d Katharine Hep- burn. And does anyone still remember the'• a g i n·g •' Elizabeth Taylor? The DAILY PILOT Covers Boating Best in West By TOM TITUS' Of T" D1Jty Pii.t ltlff A comedy, a drama and a show that just about defies classification arrive on the Orange Coast this weekend as the latest additions tQ the theatrical population ex- plosioo. The comedy is "Born Yesterday," Garson Kanin's ' lighthearted look at political corruptioo, which closes out the season for the West· Community Theater, I t opens Friday for three weekends. On the dramatic side, the Huntington Beach Playhouse opens • • T h e Petrified Forest'' postponed from last weekend by the assassina- tion of Sen. Robert Kennedy -Frid.ay evening for a four. weekend run. In the questionable category is South Coast Iiepertory's "Adventures in a Paper Bag," an ex- perimentaJ offering which combines theater, film and audience particjpation, This ,.., show also opens Friday at the Second Step Theater in Newport Beach. On the latter attraction, directors Ron Thronson and JO:hn Arthur Uavis announce that "the basic tenet of the play is a strong reliance on unusual and bizarre th ea tr i cal techniques. Forewarnea is forearmed. A third of the evening is DD film, with footage of the SCR actors blended · with stock shots from Hgllywood movies and comn1ercials. The movie and sound effects are handled by \Varren Deacon. T·he cast includes Mike Douglass, Toni Douglass, Walter Phelps, Dennis Lam- bert, Saundra D e a c o n , Michelle Reday, J a m e s McKie and Jean St. Pierre. "Adventures in a Paper Bag" will run Fridays, Saturdays and SUndays for four weekends at the Second Step, 2815 Villa Way. The reservation number is 646· 1363. • • • Larry Trammell. resident director of the Westminster Community Theater, is stag· ing "Born Yesterday" at the recently acquired new playhouse in the Westminster Center mall, Golden \Vest Street a t Westminster Avenue. George Haddad as Harry Brock, Nancy Wells as Billie Dawn and Randy Keetie as Paul Verrall head the \Vestminster cast. Completing the lineup are Nonna Hammers, Willie Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Posltlvt S Long nar~ row apttlure 9 Faculty membtrs: Informal 14 -Eagle lS Arrange written material 16 Adversary 17 Un it~ States Army Resme; Abbr. 18 Flavoring mate-rlal 19 Dwell 20 Freezing 22 Stylish 2l Un it of capacily: 24 Famer s concern 25 Washed 28 Makes a loud noise .. ,, ....... , : : 33 Fasfilon 34 Tot1111 pole 35 .... ~. a_pparafus 36 Engllsh county 37 Desert feature 38 Bird • 1 39 Farm .~ ani111als ' ' 40 Shelflllce projecUOn • , , • • : ... ,-+-!--+- -,,- 41 Breaking suddenly 43 Fictional sheep owner 44 Cord 45 Indistinct· ness 46 Goblln 49 Tiger or cougar 53 Mock 54 Well known street SS Depression between hllfs 56 Weight unit 57 Intellect 58 Ardor 59 U.S. author t.O Frattmal organization 61 Skillful DOWN l , .. , ... 2 Wind"' -;econd best 3 Sln;lo 4 Celtstlal beln;s S Bring bact to 111emOry 6 Senseless ...... 7 Manitoba's neighbor: Abbr. ·~···; ' COt1feetl1111 • 1 6112/68 10 Scurrilous 36 Steal: 11 Sheep genus Slang 12 Temporary 37 In iquitous fashions 39 One who 13 Weaver's chec ks on reed fellow 21 Had.the employees same sc0te 40 Strongly 22 Auto body audible style 42 -of 24 Stock· Wales broker's 43 Mixes word 4S Extreme 25 Pl1nt1Uon tdge units 46 Pori lco 26 Ttff' frvlt 47 Salnt- 27 Grayish 48 Ladd&r miner.ii • maker's 21 Object necessity 29 S!nd out 49 Container JO Sierra 50 Novel Madres OC' 51 Man's name Selkltts SZ Tenant's 31 Expensll't payment 33 Barber 54 Title of shop respect: SHVief;.... ___ ._ .. _,_. -- I 1011 1213 Rodrigues. Burt \Varner, Dick Taylor, Coreen Statts, Harry Hammers, Yvonne Tardy, Robert Trammell and the director himself. Due to the limited seating · capaci_ty, tel~phone reserva- tions (839-0fiQ6) are advised. The comedy plays Fridays and Saturdays through June 29. • • • Huntington Beach's "Petrified Fore s t' ' is directed by Ron Albertsen and marks the season's finale for the playhouse group. Ron Lambert, Valaree How and Don Rhoades head the large cast of the vintage drama. Completing the company are James E. Smith, Alan Sandquist, Dennis Perrin, Gwilym Williams, D a 1 e Hash, 'Ann Moreland, Bill Moreland, Grace Sh aw , John Zimmerman, John Hensley, Ron Langseth. Alex Osorio, Paul Sulliven and George Ralph. Eight performances of "Petrified Forest" are plan- ned, Fridays and s-aturdays through July 6 at the Barn, 2110 Main St., Huntington Beach. Reservations are available at 536-8861 or 892- 4638. • • • Closing out its season 'vith the final four performances of "Slo\v Dance on the Kill· ing Ground," the Laguna Pl.:iyhouse r e s u m e s pro· duction of the Wil l iam Hanley drama tonight. Directed by John Ferzac- ca, the play features David Paul, Robert Franklin and Francy \Valsh. It runs through SatW'day at the playhouse. 319 Ocean Ave:, with Uckets and information at 494-8061. • • • Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire" enters its second weekend Thursday at South Coast Repertory's Third Step Theater at 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Martin Benson is directing the drama. lleading the SCR cast are Cherie Patch as Blanche lial Landon Jr. as Stanley' Bonnie Gallup as Stella and Don Tuche as Mitch. The show plays through Sunday with tickets available at 646-- 1363, sensuality end innocence, i.! DETACHMENT the screen's current sex symbol. G<>ne is the lush sexuality associatde with the Monroes and the Mansfields. Going the way of the fl esh no\1:adays are the sweet six· teens, the under-20s. George Bernard Sh aw recognized the advantage of making Cleopatra a teen- ager in his play, "Caesar and Cleopatra." Jutiet, the classic romantic figure, is supposed to be 14 when she meets Romeo . But, Shakespeare's great heroine has not been played on the screen by any girl that young -until now. Two previous film versions starred N o r m a Shearer and Leslie Ho\vard -both in their 40s at the time -in a 1935 entry. and Laurence Harvey and Susan Shentall in a 1953 pro- 'duclion. motives, the movie treat-:J l \ t-j I ; [ Whatever the underlying R ! ment reflects the "cool ," I..I_ .... ~_.,;._ ... ,_~-.. 1-~;.!l· the complete detachment of ~-IN lllEATR!5 the new female film figure., There's no real sense of , ::49¢ emotional involvement; no • ' I ' I 1 .,TIE actual sense of being sexy; no flaunting of the .feminine . These youthful lasses accept -and portray -the roles in a matter-of-fact style, as just the w-ay things are. Miss Autin, a blonde, blue- eyed Swedish parfait, hinted at this in her description of the character of Candy: "Feminine, sexy, funny - but unconscious of it. So in· nocent." Miss George, who appears partially nude in several scenes in "The Strange Af- fair," pictures the character she plays as a ~'wide-eyed innocent." But she combines that "charm-like innocence" with woman-like sensuality says Miss George. ' ,.., ........,.,.-._ St2-4n7 AclllMIY AWlrd e Gftr .. K•nnrdy Std 5v1P0rlln1 AcfOf' f11ul NEWMAN "Cool Hc1111d Luke" e Color Audt•Y HEPBURN "Wolt UMll D•k" e Color Sllow 5t.m At DllSll ChiklrM llrMhr 12 FIEEJ ••= I C_.,.iy e Olfs e Adlon IH MOPE -PhYHll DILLER ''TN Prlv ... Novy of Sgt. O'For..ell" 111 C•IW Clltll IAITWO!)D e Ctlw "for• hw DollClfl More" ALL DISNEY P:UM !HOWi Ill COLOlt ''Tiie Ju119I• ... II" ln Franco Zeffirelli's new youth-oriented film version of the tale o! the star.cross- ed lovers, Juliet is played by 15-year-old Olivia Hussey. She's 16 now. The wedding night scene shows Romeo, 17-year-o l d Leonard Whiting, completely nude Now •t Pop11lor l"rfcn ! P'"1' U$tlMV "ll11tbbeorcl'1 Gho•t" 111 COLOlt and J uliet ' ' s k imp i 1 y J111i• Anclr•ws draped," as they say, at "The Sound of\ Music" least in the E u rope an To11l9ht-0"° 011lr version. 1:20 p.111. Ironically, British censors ---gave the film an "A" COl!Nri'" ClflC COAST HIC,,.AT. nK ST. certificate -youngsters un-~ der 16 cannot see it unless I i:itlr:iill accompanied by the i rll parenst. "CANDY" FILi\1 "Candy," the story of.the sexual misadventuns of a naive 16-year-old girl, has NIWl'otT IU.CM -.t IM elllrw- '-lelt.thn U4• 101--Ol. 1-ISS• .,, •. ~~: I Adu" Ono11111 Md Clomlllly AIRrt P:INMEY ''ToM J-•" e Color Jtne P:ONOA e Clolllr "lortffft 111 the Park" RKommtndN For Adun1 FOUNTAIN VALLEY _ ... _,., ............ 962·2481 FIRST RUN .IN THE HARBOR AREA 1hfl 1111 liYI It Bnmls IM!de ... and 111 PriY11111tsid1 ... Th1 pmbl .. was to git the 11,. !111•..is l11Sld1 A"l M 111lsid1 ... and ulhl ' I 1111111 ~.,I~ blnlllll cen!IU! PAUL i DEWmRD l ALSO ALSO Great Adventure on the hlgh seas with Great Tuna F1eet "CHUIASCO" ~.-.... -S.-Stro~t St1rt1 Next Wedneld1y W11lf Dhn1y'• ''THI HAPPllST MILLIONAIRI" __ l!AvlllliwiP ·iluaRlhuu "A flltlml • I•••••" A Univet$1I ReletM • Techn lcolo,. • ' • Richard Boone's!l Hawaii Fihn Out By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UP() - Richard Boone, who went native in the J1awallan lslands almost five years ago, has made good his pro- mise to make a movie )n the 50th state. Boone retu1nf!jl to the mainland to announce that he is ready to releaSe "Kona Coast," and already looking forward to a second picture for filmin g entirely i n H·awaiL In his first effort, Boone was executive producer and star, along with owning the company, Pioneer Produc~ ions. Now, with assistance from Hawaiian state official!, -he hopes to establish a permanent motion picture industry in the ~lands. But he admits it will 'take some federal money, too. The point is, why? He could remain i n Hollywood faking pictures and television guest shots \Vithout building an empire thousands of miles across the Pjicif~c. Boone's rumbling voice pravided the a n s w e r : "BecaUse I love Hawaii. I live there and I want to work there, loo." Clearly, Boone is dodging no issues. ''lave already got a s~te .... . .., picked out for a studio over there," he said. "Mr the government will donllJt the land then we can take a realistic look at l:iulldin g sound stages and ''..6.tber necessary structures." Boone bas two h!-s in the islands, one in lulu on Oahu and the o~ on the island of Ra wail. e : "Most people don't rQlizo the wealth of.' backgM?nds we 'have over therEC for shooting m o v i e s l' for television series," he"sald. "There are sections <i the big island th&t look eacUy like Arizona. You <;:oW.dn't tell the difference -~nd, cactus, the whole bit. i'hen there a r e snow-cas>Ped mountains with skiing O?ven months a year. Or iJ, you like, we have volcanos; Boone held an icy gl~ to his forehead and groaned with satisfaction. ~: "You ought to see the::Jlif. ference living there. i as done for my boy. He's'JTIUch happier and better a'djusJed away from the overcrtwded mainland. It suits me l>et:6!r. "I'll never move b4ck! to the mainland. If I move it will be farther west.": '. That leaves Tahiti·,. BOra Bora and Pitcairn Istaild, among others. · Thun. ·Sun,, t :)(I 1.m. Third Sit' Thttlni, Co1l1 Mne Ghelde~d• ••• .. "Adventures in a Paper Bag" Frl .• $1.111., l :JO, 2MI Step Theatre -Newport leoch COt1trcil ler Offlu -ReHrYatfo111 646-1161 l1ch1si•• AN9 R1111 SAT. • SUN. Ce>n!lm>fill f1111n 10:11 A.M. Two Walt D!_t;IMY Gre.ts Top E11twtcil11mont for tM E11tf,. fa1111!y!;. A SWINGING SAFARI OF LAUGHS/ ' " '· '• " •• " ,, ~ -Frttl T...,m, .,...,. Gtrtkllnr =-~ MacMurray Steele Garson Page :-;; .----;;:=':''"''::.'o=-;;;;;~;;--1r,..::''l Smu. ~fr SiEVEN.S"" ·~Go,;- ,_... ...... ~ -~Q;ll~ Ill S~lol P.T.A. 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IRONING BOARD Pad & Cover SET WELMAID -"Teflon" coaled ht!avy col· ton drill cover ••• two 1 79 layer pad with non-;kid base. • HAU FUl HAIR "Breck" CONCENTRATE I SHIMPDD -Leaves your hair 59c so houncin g cl ean ••• so manageable. 1.00 4 1z. Tu~ "Breck" HAIR SET MIST with new holding power! Choose 1 39 from Regular, Super & Gentle Hold. 2.25 14 oz. Siu • ..... • •• -... •• • -~ -.• • ~ . . . . ' :!!'. ,4 ..... .. DAJL V P11.0T ' No1ninees Set 10 Vie for Yardley Trophy Ten or the Orange Coast area's n1ost outstanding mate athletes have been nominated for the 1968 award of the coveted Yardley Trophy. The annual awards banquet Is scheduled for June 26 at Balboa Bay Club and Lakers 8nnoudee.r Chick Hearn is lined up as guest speaker. Tickets for the stag af· fair are priced at $6.50 each and may be purchased at the doo:' or the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce. This year's nominees in.elude: MJll:e Heckman, m i s t e r everything on the UCI basketball team which stunned observers by finishing second in the NCAA regiooals and which u p s e t Nevada Southern and Cal State (LA). Gary Johnson, former Orange Coast College athlete who is .now managing a minor I e a g u e baseball team for the Chicago White Sox organization. Jim Jorgensen, member of Orange Coast College's un· defeated rowing team, OCC stu- dent body president. Mike Martin, UCI freshman who bolds NCAA swim records for the 400 and 200 freestyles in the small college division, a star water polo player and a former Corona del Mar High athlete of the year. Jim OcJe, Newport Harbor High tennis star. named Sunset League player of the year and stalwart on the squad which was undefeated until the CIF cham· ploruohips . Phi.I Spiller. aclenslve whiz with the St. Louis Cardinals of the National Football Lague, ex- star at Orange Coast College and Newport Harbor High School. John Vallely, Orange Coast College and fOrmer Corona del · Mar High School basketball flash who broke OCC scoring records, was named Eastern Conference player of the year, Was on All-state squad and made Jaycee Olympic !ry9u~. BW Vots, moved up to parent organi2ation in early season after a smashing start with Hawaii of . the Pacific CQast League , now starting in the out- field for the Chicago White Sox of the American League, He prepped at Newport Harbor lligh and then moved on to Orange Coast College before entering pro baseball. Frank Weirath, back of the year in the Eastern Conference after smashing season with Orange Coast College. Prepped at Marina High and is now at- tending San J ose State. John Yule, Irvine League player of the year, led Corona del Mar High to a 28-3 season record and a berth in the ClF quarter finals before his mates bowed in overtime to Marina. Candidate6 mw;t have received at least a portion of their educa- tion in ttie Harbor area (Orange Coast. UCI, Newport Harbor High. Corona de! Mar High ) . . -·-----"""'---------------"" Like North Africa -Aging Stadium, Capital ~ Poor Site for AAU Meet -::would you believe : -That the AAU would hold a na- tional championship m e e t in Slcramento. Our state capital is quite like North Africa in the summer months, which should cause con· Siderable gasping, ' groaning a n d perhaps a bit of heat exhaustion by the athletes. And the track at a g i n g Hughes stadium is fit for dog races. perhaps, bUt surely not for an event which serves as an Olympic Trials qualifying meet. Also, the stands leave one with th e impr ession the city lli too impovrished WHITE WASH """""''''''''"""'""' .. t,.. paint or clean them. Anyone who has sat in them and left without dir· tying his clothing deserves a .certificate of achievement. e That 8@meone 11ugg:e1ted we swap the city of Berkeley to North Korea In exchange for the Pueblo and tll crew. However, tbe offer wa1 ap- parently turned down. Gue11 they've heard of the Cal mes1 a1 far away 11 tM Yalu River. •That tt.'s harder to get in the Hun· tington Beach Pop Warner football program than it is to gain admission to see Rudolph Hess in Berlin's Span- dau Prison . \\'arner requirements include cer· Man 101 to Run 101 Yard Dash ' BERKELEY. Cali!. (AP) -Larry Lewis will open the National Collegiate Athletic Association track meet Thurs- day by running 101 yards. Lewis will be 101 years old on June 25. A waiter at a San Francisco hotel, Lewis predicts he wHl cover· the di&tance in 20 seconds without trying bald and says anything under tbat ume would be l!I world reconi for 100- yejlr-olds. tain age, weight, report card, blrth certificate, acc.ompanirnent o! a parent to regisiration and a $5 signup fee. At this moment there is no r_estriction to color of eyes or hair. I was told by a West Ber-lin public relations officer that not even Hess' mother couldn't get eJ\interview with the former Naz.i wheel. • That North All-Star basketball coach Russ Hawk (SllDDy RJlls) show- ed up 40 minutes late for the Costa Mesa KJ wanJs luncheon Tuesday and ' that bJs players dribbled In a couple at a time throughout the affatr. Russ offered tbe allbl that final ex· ams were responsible for t b e tardloess. However, coach Bill Bloom (Corona del Mar ) or the South manag- ed to make It on time and so did all or bis player s, except Mark Soderberg. The latter Is on a visit lo the Universi- ty of Kentucky. If Tuesday'• demonstration means anything, look for Bloom '• group to r un up a bumlllatlng: 1core when tbt pride of cou nty prepdom colllde1 Junr Z2 at Orange Coasl College. . • That of all the day camps listed in a recent edition, one was omitted - that of Corona del Mar's Bill Bloom. Perhaps it.a because someone reported that a former Bloom counselor was Sirhan Sirhan. The Bloom group operates under the handle of Treasure ls'land Day Camp and further in- formation can be obtained by calling 646-3362. Cnrlos Fumes Sprinter John Carlos ls still boil· Ing over the judge1' ruling that cosl bJm what be felt w11 a clear-cut vie· tory Friday night In the 100-yard dash at Tbe Colt*um. "That made me decide I'm going to run and wo"fk Uke I've never done before," be 'fumed during a 1ub11e- qoent lntervfe•. "You got to wtn each race by eight yard1 Just to get credJt for winning 10 I've gol to get ready'," be stated. 'Some or the pre11 cor,s was 11 shocked as Carlos when It was an- nounced that Tommie Smith was the 100 victor. And there wa1 plenty of groaning over 11tarter Les Hellman'• fal11e start mania. . . . ' w . . . ' . . . ' . . . . . .. . , .. ' Mets Aren't Clowns Any Mo rse .. • LOS ANGELE5 (AP) -Once 1lj)Oll a time there wu an expanalon bueba11 t>eem named Ibo New Y or l Meta whlch most fans "'i"' .ven Meta fans -thought were tunny clown11 who owned tile National Le&:goe cellar. B.ut the fiee11 around the league are beginning to lose their 1mile11 and the expressions on the Los Angeles Dodgers' !aces have turned to frowns. The Meta aren't funny anymore. The Dodgers were riding the crest of a seven-game winning streak when the Mets hit town Monday night. Tom Si:aver sniiwed tile Dodgers' streak with a masterful four-hitter to win, l-0, in 10 innings. Tonight Nolan Ryan.will oppose Doo Drysdale, 8-3, who bas won seven strai~t and recent.ly .1.et major league records of six stra.ighr shutouts and 58 2/3 consecuti~ sc<ln!less innings. It was Dick Selma's turn Tuesday night. He picked up his sixth victory of the season without a loss, silencing tile * * * Nl!W YORI( LOS ANGl!LlfS Ht 111'91 •l r ll,.. &oscll. d 3 0 0 0 P1ri<t•', lb ' O I· O Linz. lb • 1 1 o W.O.vl1, d ' a a I Grol•« ' 4 1 2 o G1twl1lson, If •, .•,· o3 •, Cllerles. Jib • I I o Hiller, ' Swobo0'1, rf 6 0 2 0 F1irly, rf • 0 I 0 e""""",11 30111C.Bo¥er.lb iooo S1>1mi.kv, If I o o o PoPO\llcll, :lb J o o o Goas1en, lb 3 (I I I V.nallM, IS 3 0 1 0 kru,.-1, lb 1 O I O C.Osl99n, p , 1 O O 0 Wltls,u 601 0 Purcl!n,JI 000 0 S.lm1.p •D IO F1lrev,"11 1000 Gr1n1,p 0 0 00 Tot1li l5 3 11 2 Tot111 :ti 0 J 0 New Yori< ... , ...... ., . 010 tl02 COO -3 Lea ""91tle5 , ......... • . OOQ 000 ODO -0 • E -IC. Ooyer 7. OP -New Yorlr. l, Loi Anveln l . LOO -N.w York 6, Loi Anfleta J, 2a -F1lr1Y, s -Oosch. IJINR lf•••so S.llNI IWMl t J 0 0 1 4 C.Otletn U •• .Wl 1·1 13 t 3 1 I 3 Pur(lln 211 1 0 0 o 0 Gr111' 11000 0 Tlme -2:12. Attend~ -15,616. ~ tNm named the New York won, 3-0. '""8 Mets have the four best young starter1 in the league," said the Dodgers' Ron Fairly as he dlscuned Seaver, Selma, Ryan and Jerry KooamJU. "I think ao too," 1aid teammate Wlllle Davis, ''There's n<> telling what the Mets could do if they had hitting to go with that pitching." They'll have to try to cope with Ryaa in tonight's rinale. The 21-year- old rookie !lreballer with • M re«<d has 1truct out S2 batters 1 ntbe 70 1-3 Innings be has jll!<;hed thl• year. Dodger Slate Ju,.. I! Dod"'' vt Htw YW1l ,:IS "'"'' ICF I "'" JuM 14 DoclMfl I I Jlhllldel.rlll J;OO P.111. l(FI 14-101 • "The first time I hit .against Ryan," said the Dodgers' Wes 'Parker, "I thought, Oh My God. I'm really overmatched." · Mets Manager Gil Hodges • his team, particularly thf!I mound C!a>I. ii for real. -~'Ihe kind of pitching we're getting ts m~g the entire team belieye it can win," be said Tue1day ai'ght. "We've been out of only 3 of the first 55 games we've played." Selma-,a relief pitcher in most.of thf!I four off-and-on years he's beep_ }Vitb the Mets, said after the victory that he was resigned to having that job again when this season started. Verdict Called a Joke Griffith Wins Split Decision OAKLAND (UPI) -Former mid- dieweight king Emile Griffith today was back on the road that could lead him to a fourth meeting with the cur- rent champ, Italy's Neno Benvenuti. Griffith won a split decision over Andy Heilman Tuesday night in a rug- ged 12-round bout at Oakland Col- iseum Arena. The victory assured Griffith Of a Ju- ly 8 bout in Philadelphia against unbeaten Gypsy Joe Hanis. The win- ner of ttiat one gets a title shot, ac· cording to Ne-w York matchmaker Teddy Brenner. Griffith and Heilman both weighed 157'h for their go here. There were no knockdowns in the action, but Griffith staggered Heilman with a right in the 10th stanza, Griffith's best round. Judge Elmer Costa called it 8-4 and Johnny Lotsey 8-3 for Griffith. But referee Vern Bybee called lt 5-5. After the bout, the ex-champ qt.Up· ped that "the referee did a good job, but I wonder what fight he was watching." Gil Clancy. Griffith's manager, call· eel the spUt nature of the verdict "a joke." Concerning Griffith's forthcoming match with Harris, Clancy commented that "Griffith is showing true class by going into somebody else's backyard back-to-back when he fights Harrlli in Philadelphia. " Heilman suffered a cut on his nose in t he. seventh round. Griffith s a i d ' later ''l never tried to buslIUm up aJld I never was trying for a knockout." Heilman's pier six style seemed made to order for the quick-handed Griffith who alw.ays landed more than he took. Heilman seemed to lose a Jot of zip from the fifth round on alter early body punches slowed down the San Pedro, Calif. battler. Griffith now has a 55-9 record wbilt Heilman is 40-4. A crowd of 4,171 shoved nearly $40,COO across the till. Griffith &:ot $12,500 and ·the loser about $9,000. Brenner was at<-ringside far tht fight. If Griffith can get by Hai:ris to fight Benvenuti, he wil,l be tr)ing to even up t.he score since t.he champion bas beaten him twice and lost once. .. ,,t: ,i ii IJl"I T .......... IT'S A STALEMATE -Andy Heilman {left) and fo rmer middle- weight c'hampion Emile Griffith both exchange solid blows in this seventh round flurry. Tuesday night in Oakland. Griffith scored split decision over Heilman in 12-round bout, winning by spread s of 3-4 and 8-3, but having referee Vern Bybee calling it even at five points each under the California .scoring .system. Trojans Battle Oklahoma State OMAHA , Neb. \AP ) -A pair of old pro coaches in college baseball. Rod Dedeaux nf Southern Califnrnia and Chet Bryan of Oklahoma State. ar' headed for an early showdown in the College World Series tonight. Both opened with first-round vie· toriea Tuesday night. USC needed only two hits to defeat Brigham Young S-3 behind Bill Lee. OSU sprayed 17 hits and got a no-hit. no-run relief job the last eight innings from Bob Richardson in an 8-5 victory over Texas. Dedeaux is after his fourth NCAA baseball title·and USC's fifth . "USC won it in 1948 a n d 1958, so maybe 1968 is our year," he said. This is Bryan's U1ird straight tri p to Omaha and he has the best. hitting club of the three. The 1966 team was runner-up lo Ohio State. SSS Talks Pro Tennis May Spell Doom for Amateurism NEW YORK I AP) -The head of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association is confident that if pro tennis cootinues to flourish it will spell the doom of sham-amateurism. "Before, there was no place for most of the world class tennis players to go if they wanted to cash in ," said Robert Kelleher, the USLTA president from Los Angeles, today. "Sure. the Wimbledon winner could sign up for a lot of money but the p1ayers who fi nished. a few notches down didn't do loo well. "Now with the National Tennis League and World Championship Ten- nis and open tennis tournaments, there's a place for most of the players who want to make a living from ten- nis." Kelleher said he was delighted with the smash successes o! these two open tennis tournaments -the B r i t i s h Hard Courts Championships a t Bournemouth. England, and the French Open Tennis Championships at Paris. British tennis officials said the Bournemouth tournament drew twice as many spectators as it ever did before. The French Championships grossed a Tecord $170,000, three times what it did in 1967, despite strikes and a lack of transportation, Kelleher said he had been told. Rain Weary ' Angels Try Again Tonight BOSTON (AP) -RainoufJJ can destroy an otherwise simple baseball scbeduJe. Teams in cities used to rain are ac- customed to playing a number of makeup doubleheaders each season but the California Angels, who have had only one game in two years rained out at home , have had five games washed out on the current road trip. Included in those five are two that weren't played Tuesday in Boston. The Angels have now had seven A ngels on TV Channel 5 , 5 p.m. games rained out this year, all or which must be made up. Cool Casper Man to Beat • Ill Open Kelleher said he was counting on the first U.S. National Open Tennis Cham- pionships at Forest Hills, Aug. 29-Sept. 8 to gross at least II00,000 more than the $.12,lXX> of 1967. He wouldn't be surprised If lt did considerably better than $100,000 more. Today, playing a twinight doubl~ header in Boston's Fen way Park, the Angels are playing their third con· secutive twin bill . In today's games, California'i; Jim McGlothlin. 5-4 , and George Brunet. 5· 6, were to face Jose Santiago. 7-3, and Ray Cul p, 2-2. ROCHESTER, N. Y. (AP\ -Billy Casper, quiet aod cool u ever but the hottest commodJt;y on the pro tour, Wal a IOlid favorite toda,y to capture his third United· Slates Open Goll Oiamplonsbip. Casper'• near fantastic 1ucce11 thi1 year -he's won four t:oumementa: and 1hno1t 1125,000 -has tbJ'Ust him ahead o{ the usual favorites, the troubled twosome of Jack Nlddaus and Arnold Palmer. "Biiiy's go! lo be-the JIWl to hea~" ••id young Let Trf!IYino, al.Jo ranked by his fellow proa as 1 prime coo· ( tender for golf 's most prestigious title. "Casper's playing Incredible a:olf and the course is made for him." Play slarta Thursday on the deman· ding 6.962-yard, par 70 Oak lilll Coun- try Club layout. 'Ibe starting field of 150 will be trimmed to the low 60 and t I es after Friday's play for the final two rounds Saturday and Sunday. "J'm playing the best goll ot my We,'' sald the 36-year-old Casper. St!· cond only to Palmer on the all·time Ust of money winners and this year's leader. "I have never played ~-Large- ly, J think, it's my attitude. Whatever it is, it'i; all there. AW aspects ol my game are the best they have ever been." He had a practice round of 10 in sweltering heat Tuesday and said he wa1 satisfied. "I don't think you'll see very many low scores," be said. The course is not overly long, wllich favors Casper. But the fairways are very naM"Ow, favoring hJs rlfie-Uke ac· curacy, and the course ls studded with tom~. 34.,000 trees, mosUy oat and pine, and laced by wlndini broolu, pie· • turesque but hazardous. Nicklaus J1 ln a slwnp. He hasn't ""'On this year. Palmer is plagued by a balky. aching hip. His last major tiUe was the 1964 Masters. Gary P layer sa)"! he's playing well and putting poorly. He hasn't scored a tour victory since tile 1965 Open. But they're always threata. And Nicklaus said hJs game bas beea im· proved wJth a new driver. "I'd beeo driving badly," thf!I 28- year-old. Goldf!ln Bear aald. "But the new club has given me new con· ffderx:e.0 "There's tremendous interest in open tennis," he said. "We'll have the best players in the world, amateUl and pro. We have definite commitments for the top star1 of the NTL and WCT." He said the pros would eollect the entire $100,CXM> pize money whether they won the t:IUes or not. ln the F;{encb Champlonshlps amateur Nan- cy Richey of San Angelo, Tex., beat pro Ann Jones of England for the women'1 title but the t l,000 ftrst prize W&S not &iVM to the pr'OI. But maybe it's aH for the best. A rest could do the Angels some good. It might get their minds off baseball for a while. Si n c e June began, the Aniels1 record is 3-7. The team has dropped to ninth place in the American LGaeue with a record or 25-32. But then again, things might not be that bad after all. After S7 games last year, tht Angels were in ninth place with a mark ol 25-32. And they wound up in the first division. In fact, the Angel record last year dipped to 25-33 before a five-game win- ning atnak rllthled the slnldn& &hlp. \ . -..... ~--· ... I. l(ENNEDY .. (Continued from Pace 31) An unbroken rucceaalan ol election victories C&n'led him to the preside.ncey, Then ln Dallas in November 1963, he was shot and killtd by an asJas~. So Robert took up the quest. He moved to New York and won a Senate seat This year he sought the presidency. Then in 'Los Angeles, after a moment of triµmph in t.qe California primary, Robert wa'1 'shot and killed by an assassin. TITINK ALIKE In the close.knit Kennedy family it was natural for the three brothers to think alike on major issues. Alike thef Were in many ways. But not all. John Kennedy was the bookish brother. A graceful, eloquent man, he was, nevertheless, re s...trV e d, aloof with strangers. Bobby was the moody, in- tense brother. Whether seeking evidence as counsel for a Senate committee or managing one of John's campaigns, Bobby operated with an intensity many call- ed ruthlessness. He was the most controversial, the least liked of the brothers. Teddy was the likeable brother. No one ever called Start 'etn Voutig The Orapge ~oast College summer swim program will begin Saturday and run in two--y;tek s.e_skions through· :Aug. 9. Sptlcial toddler classes will be held , as w~ll as classes for all abilities, from beginner to advanced. Recreational swimming will be held each day also from 2:30-4 :30 p.m. Instructor Georgia McClellan.~left. oJ Nemiort Beacb,_helps Mary Dale, 4, of Newport, learn to kick. GiD.8 Dale of Newport tries to coax Guy Jacobs of Costa Mesa _into the water. Teddy · rut.bless. Less elo------------------------- quent than John, less moody than Bobby. tall, handsome Teddy i.5 easy to like. ENTERED SENATE If tragedy has shaped Edward Kennedy, so too did the moment of triUtnPh. wh en he took his Senate seat in January 1963. A ware of the dangers of being tagged as "the one Kennedy _ t,oo m a n y .. ' ' Edward toJd newsmen lje plahned to stay ·out of the limeligtit. 1'ed studied his new job. He saw. newsmen only !or home state newspapers and turned down chances for na· tional television exposure. He sought out the . Senate e l ders m o.;t ly Southerners to whom the K e n n e d y s , particularly Robert, were anathema. He listened to their advice and, above .._all, obeyed a prime r u 1 e if or freslunan senators: he:,J.ept quiet. So the Senate elders learn· ed .,, h a t Massachusetts voters knew: Thls indeed was the likeable Kennedy. The assaTslliat!l>n o f P resident Kennedy w a s shattering to Robert Ken· nedy . He was haunted by its memory. WORKED BRIEFLY Edward responded dif- ferently. On the Monday morning of the President's funeral, Edward worked briefly at his Senate office. "I felt this was where he would have expected me to be." he later said. It was March 1964, more than a year after he entered the Senate, before Edward gave his first major Senate speech, a . moving ple~ for the civil rights blU President ' Kennedy bad proposed. • Edward Kennedy has not escaped violence. On a June night in 1964 he was aboard a private plane that crashe d in Massachusetts. ~le suffered a broken back that immobilized him in a hospital for six months. But running for re-election for a full,six·year term that November offered few pro· blems. His family, including his pretty blonde wife , Jean, wa ged a campaign that swamped his Republican op- ponent by more than one million votes, a new state record . A 'IT ENDED SESSION The next January, with the aide of a back brace and a cane, Edward Kennedy at· tended the opening Senate session. Robert took office that day as the junior senator from New York. Lllce John Kennedy before him Robert was impatient with' the Senate tradjtions Edward had learned to ac- . cept. Edward waited more than a vea r to make his first ma· jof speech. Robert wns hardly settled in his seat when he began speaking out on Issues. Edward quietly deferred to Senate elders. Robert clashed heatedly with com- mLttee chairmen. Meanwhlle, E d w a r d , reaching another mJlestone led an effort for legislation banning poll taxes. De<pli, oppol!tton from the Wbllil House and the Senate leadership, It came withln four votes o£ passage. Edward Kennedy h a d matured in the eyes of his colleagues who admired the way he bad ma11.tered all details of lhe legislation as well as the way be worked quietly to muster 1upporL Claremont Graduates 3 Countians Three Orange Co u n t y students have rec e j v e di bachelor of arts degrees from Claremont M e n ' s 1 College . Steven R. Boyd, history I ;:jdo;~t~~ ~:· i:~~:~ ~~I had been on the dean's list. He wrote an honor'! thesis entitled, "The American Whig Party: Politics and Political Philosophy." - was a . member of the Forensics and History clubs, .and plans to attend the University o f Wisconsin Graduate School ... Also from Cost.a Mesa was Michael E . Morrill, 218 E. 18th st., aD Octo·ber[ graduate. Morrill was an assisla.Dt solar observer And research I assistant ·for Dr. Harold Zirim at Mt. W i l son Observatory. The ph~c1· major plaris to continue with graduate s tud ies ln astrophysics. Also graduating with a bachelor of arts was Jack L. Schoellerman of 1818 San- tiago Dr., Newport Beach. He had been on the dean':i 1 list and war chairman of the 11 Newman Club. Hf: was also a memller of [ the Business Club and board member of the Conference on Religion. The political science major plans to at· tend law school at the University of San Diego. 1 Over 75 percent of th e I graduating class has been named to the · dean's list at least one semeSter, . llC· i' cording to Claremont College sources. Buffet Set For Wallace George Wallace for presi· dent supporten ·will hold a buffet dinner and dance at ; lhe Moose Lodge , 1731 S.1 Manchest,er, A n ab e i m ,I Saturday, according to Helen Odom, Orange County chairman of the Wallace campaign. The. affair, which will be gin at 7:30 p.m. will 1 feature a film , ' ' The California Story" whi ch was filmed during tbe reii1tra- tl on drive which closed in January .. Tickets of '2.50 per person may be obtained at the Waliftce headquarters at 2101 A West 01.apman,' Orange.· I Funds will go towafl/i co sts of the Wallace rallies I planned for early July in Orange and Lot Angeles I counties,·Mr1. Odom said. Pair Graduate At Princeton Two 1tudenta from ttwi I Orange Oout area have received bachelor ol ari. degrees f r o m Princeton University. Graduate! . are Richard SCott, 120 Collins Ave., Balboa ltland; and Peter Campbell Gardett, lta Cllrl Drive, Laguna Beach. TOYS-HOlllES..:.., STATIONERS rm E e SPACE STATION & SPACE CRAWLER DELUXE ACTION SET TltR£E ACTION TOYS 111 Diii! Space Station, Space Crawl· , er, Major MATI MASON In· eluded! ONLY $9 99 MATTEL'S 'NEWEST ITEM DR. DOOUTILES TALKlll DOLL From the current mntlon p{(:ture & book S1rle1. Yesf Evtry boy 6 99 and tirt wlll w1nt °"' D&t llMOST 2' HICM • Skediddle Kiddle 4-l neh doll wa1 ka, ,.uni and IVll'fl sits. Head iurna, arm• ·and l1g1 mov1. Willlker eill" be: removed for 11parate pJ.11y. $3.50 vatu• enly 1.97 BARBIE® l FRANCIE® DOLL TRUNK SUPER THINGMAKER® Sb Wt t•Y'I 111 .......... Mt! PICADOOS!tm ), FRIG-MT FACTORT •114 4 -N I e Mi ke hund11tl1 of pl11tk thin91 end d1eor1fion1 I e l11dud11 I bottl11 of 91nuin1 •"' "r "f'"-PLASTl~OOP®. mold1 i nd 9 99 1e~11 1or1 11 f • KIDDIE KOLOGNES 1• .. ROSllUDI I ..... , .-ta-1Wfft Int llt.1 "" --1 e Only 2'' ti ll ! Root1d h1ir! e T1k1 het out lo pl1y-d 11r plt ttic dt ct nlet op1n1! e Flo\o.1r co1h1"'1t 1111tcl111 p1non1lity! GENTLE BEN ANIMAL HUNT GAME 11 ... flltl•• flu1! 1.17 e H11t1t for GENTLE IEN i nti h1 1nlm1I frit nd1l e l ·D pl1itic 911'11 bo1rtl l e ltetl·t ctlon pi th 2.76 thtt mo•tl M· 16 Marauder Need• no latttrlo• le1k1 reel, tovnth ... 1. 12 lrteh11 J.n1, ""4111 ne bef.. .. ,1.. ., ,.,.. Roo-Tol•Totl 4 97 .... .... . IY MATTEL Says II dltft<tnl ....,, 1ftM ""' ... -1!1>" 1111. Per fect bedlimt 3 97 p~ .... $1.•-. Wed11tsdi1J, J1111t 12, 1968 SC Seeks College . ' Graduates WE WO.ULD ~-N. ~ .. , The ·University of · Southern California 11 aeek· RA ER ~n~er co.n•::1arf.:~°:J\:'yo~ M I SS A . learn teacher educ•tlon pro· , gram. The program Includes ex· SALE perience as a part-time teacher as!Jstant at a salary 111 or SI.500 to $2,IXX> P,el" school year. The duties of tbe teacher DAILY PILOT assistant performed under the direction of a teacher, will be prepat'atory, sup- portive and c lerical. ••• than mis·fiL your baby's feet. Poo~ty fitted BUSTER BROWN. baby, shoes can cause young feet to develop . . . Individual futorlng1 small group instruction, and other duties may also be assigned. serious growth problems. That's why we-take Candidates for the pro- gram should have senior standing or h a v e a bachelor's degree from · an t he greatest care to make sure these fine quality Buster Brown shoes will fit your baby-eXactI}r. accredited institution. The program will qualify can-1 didates for the standard elementary or secondary / credentials. r/ow 2 Store6 Jo Serve '/jou Further inforination may be obtained by contacting Dr. DOnald Wilson, director, teacher education at room 1001, Waite Phillips Hall, University of S ou tbern California, Loi Angeles 90007. 30 FASHION ISLAND NEW"°RT BEACH WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH 4-DAY MATTEL·O·RAMA GIANT MATTEL TOY SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE JUHE 13 to JU,NE 17 Lucky Lock,!" Kiddies MATT .. 'S •Only 2" till! • "Jeweltd'' loctet frame (• Re.Ill Rooted h1lr! • LIWI· 11 persnn1lity! • We11 JS 1 loc•1t! 1 17 • ~ Ind play 1ep1retel1! 1 Little Kiddies All 1tyln t o choote from. 31 lnehes tan, bendable, po.eabte, comb and bruah her hal,.! only 1,57 MATTEL TOY SALE Lowest Prices Anywhere TWIST 'N TURN BARBIE DOLL ...................... 2.47 MATTEL RIDE-AWAY ... _ .. __ ,, ___ ._,,_ ..... -.... 6.99 TUTTI DOLL ................ _. __ ........ -........ -............. , ....... 1.67 FLEX! PETS ·-····-·-· _,, .. ., ........... -...... _ ........ _,_, .. 2.47 TALKING HAND PUPPETS ..... -.................. 2.99 TWIST ;N TURN FRANCIE DOLL _ .................. 2.47 SKIPPER • SCOTTER DOLL ....................................... 1.17 MATT MASON with MOON .SUIT _ ............... 2.99 MATT MASON SPACE CASE ................. -..... 2.99 COMBAT MARANDER ·····-··-····-·----·--·-1.99 MATT MASON GAME ................. -... --.. -.... 2.76 BARBIE GAME . BABY SMILE 'N FROWN ..................................... 3.99 24 CAR CASE ... • • SAVE UP TO .............. 1.47 SEE 'N SAY GAMES by MAmL Mattel·O·Phone· I T1lk • 18 minutes of 2·WI)' ttlk wttl 40 friellds! •·Voic11 coma from "' ceiver -like 1 real phonl! • 5 discs included! .... $11 , ... Tight Squeeze TH Stugki Str11§1ki FmOc Altlc ._., M1tt11! • wrunn 11u nn• action &l!Tle for llttl1 kllbl 811 llicb tool • Grut 2.97-· party ideal • Belts. spll"lltl", \ft. 1tructiona! Incredible Edibles'" Suprtlu! • Ma ke wild aoofy tfira:. to 11tl • Frirfltft.dly delicious! • Molcft · Ind y11nmy G0881LDEGOOf' 6• .,, included! Rfl, 114 Yll• U' T·HINGMAKER"' ,,.....,,...,.."""-,FEATURING PICAQOOS"" e For111 ctlorful '""'''' of fl11i1h1d ,1l11tic: t ri wfth 911111111 · PLASTl&OO'®I • ,,, PICADOOS on 1tu1111, w11fob pic:luttl, .•.••rythin'I e El9hf bottlt t 9t1111ln1 PLASTl&OOP, 1c:ct11ori., 1 inclwdfcll• JEWELRY KIDDIES HEART PIN AND PLOWER PIN KIDDLES e Th• tini11t KIDD LES 01 •II Tntidt . retl i11welt'( yow &tn w11rl e KI DDLE doll1 only 7/1" t nd I 1/16'" ft l/ pop 011t f1r t•1t•••ft ploy! • Stftty Ct fc:h pl•I 99 .. Mt tch•1 1ny eutflH .. THE TALKING LEARNING MACHINE FEATURING TALKING TILES '"" hi ,,.,_.,." •• '""'' e 412 1ountlll tr•elc1 of noun•, verbt, tdlt ctivet. colort, nul'll.1r1. mu1lc tnd 1111nd1 ! e Seys word1 ind n11l'lb1n , n1m1• eolort! • Pit y• music, 1po1•1 En91i1h, 19'' Ffenc:h t ntl Sp1nilhl 1HINGMAKER"' rr-lr-'11""i1"'""11 FEATURING MINI -DRAGONS e Moltlll eel!'llc:ol t rtttur11 1-hu!Mfr4'1 of 1htpt1 •nd 1l1e1I e Wttr 'tm •n btlh, 1~1"1 incl blou1t d e Four bettlo1 9tn11lno Pl~STIGOOP~. t c:c:1111rit 1 lnc:l11detlll l MATIEL DOLL CLOTHES SALE BARBIE FRANCIE CRIS TUTTI ,; SCOOTER -CASEY BUY ONE OUT ·FIT • • • GET ANOTHER OF Etj>UAL VAWE ' \ ThinCJ~aker PUN MOLDS IY "MA mL" FREE • Fu111 F"ltwlN • c,...,,. Crawt.foa • e Cl'NPle People e l'rlght ,__,. ................... ,,.... 6·76 Value. .v oU ,. CholM • ?==::===:::::::------ I .I ..... .. . .. . ... -.... • .J • • • • • . . . . . ' ' • . . ' • • • •• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.G E • • • • ·-. -...... ... ' ~· .. . .. . . • • . . ¥ • . . • . , ~ , "~'·~·: .:.: ;,:.:..:...'~ I .,.,, '" . . . . -. School Budget Problem • The budget !or LaguM Beach Unllled School Dis· trlct' has more than doubled in the past 10 years but It may not take that long for It to double again. The school board ha s approved teacher pay hikes which 1 with built-in increments, come to more than a 10 percent increase. Administration 3nd classified per· sonnel also will have substantial increases. Edwin Hind, district business manager. estimated that budgeted. expenditures will be up about 14 percent in the coming year. ' The bottom. of the scale for beginning teachers. which was low at $5,818 per yeat, has been il)creased to $6,400. The top of the salary schedule has gone to $13,1154. One problem in education, and this is national, is that the best minds don't seem to be able to agree on techniques of evaluating teacher ability. This must gall highly Sk~ teac~ers w~o ~ave grown professionally and put their all into their Jobs. For they are ~derpaid at $13,000. There are other teachers, of course, who would be overpaid at a much lower figure despite years on the job. One factor that has raised costs in the district has been the board's willingness to c ut class size to improve the ratio of teachers to youngsters. Effective teaching time has been increased aJs~ .by hiring teachers' aides to leave teachers free to utilize their maximum skills. These are good educational measures but school School Driver 'Education' Is a Waste Several years ago I was battered from attacks :all over the country when I ventured to soggest that the ''driver education'' programs in the nation's high schools were most likely a waste of time, money and energy. Now, a traffic safety c0mmittee named by former Sec. J ohn W. Gardner of the U.S. Health, Education and Weliare Department reported last month that there is "no certainty and much doubt" that the multimillion- dollar investment in driver education actually makes better t e e n • a g e driver1. AFTER MANY YEARS of a widespread program (more than 1.5 million students took school driver training courses Last year alone). there is no clear evidence that driver educalion j'has signilicant favorable effect upon driver attitudes, performance or other achievements." the report said. A continuation of the present program would "squander vast publ.ic sums" lo the process, the committee warned. Tliere is an even more important point involved. Why should a high school teach young people how to drive. which is a purely private skill, having no relationship to education, and diverting public funds from the real task of educating boys and girls as human beings? THE WHOLE IDEA ot cornpulsory mass public education in America - and it was a fine and revolutionary idea when it wat; conceived -was to raise everyone to the intellectual and cultural level of the founders of our nation , so that self-government was as Dear Gloomy Gus: We have laws on jl.ijit,about ev· erything else -;-why not ou't1aw detergents? Their indissolubili· ty has ruined the kelp beds and therefore the wonderful fishing we once had offshore of Laguna Beach. -F, F, A, Tlllt le1lllr• rf'lltch ....,.n• vltw1, - .. (.J.Wr!lp ~ .t lllf M-INI'. StrMI 1"f Pll •Hll<I fol OIMlllJ Giii. O•Np ,lltl. broadly based as possible. An ignorant people obviously cannot govern themse lves intelligently. Bui, more and more, we have drifted away from our initial idea. Our prime purpose is no longer to turn out informed and reasonable citizens. but to instruct in various vocational and manual skills .. Proficiency in sports and the ability to earn a living seem to nave become the prime goals of our modern school system. A DUMMY WHO drives a car well is still a dummy. Learning how to drive a car, like learning how to dance or hit a ball or make fudge or fix a bicycle. is something that should be learned at home, not at school. And the more time the school devotes lo these marginal matters, the more dummies it will continue to turn out. It is true that poor driving kills peo- ple . But poor thinking kills even more people -in riots, wars, social revolu· tions, and assorted m a s s ir- rationalities. The schools are eharged with the task 0£ turning out people who ca n drive t.heir own minds and steer their own passions. Any time taken away from this prime task increases civilization's chances of spinning ri ght off the precipice or fate. A Pro-Red's Black Plot WASHINGTON -Immigration and custom authorities have been alerted that U.S. Negro expatriate Robert Williams is preparing lo try to sneak back into the U.S. A fugitive from federal justice, the pro-Red Williams mysteriously turned up la.st month in Oar es Salaam, the capital of Tanganyika, after livi ng in exile in Cuba and Chlna for the past seven years. Informant.! among black militants in Detroit have warned fed e r a 1 authorities that Williams ts due to return to that area before .July to lake over leadership or a new under~ound movement planning to set up an all· black nation wiUiln the U.S. Guest or the .anti·1unerican jilOVern- menl of Tanganyika, the 43-ycar-old WJlliam1 has been in contact with Stokely Carmichael, Lhe pro-Castro mllltant, through the Tanganyika em- bauy ber<. ALT B 0 U G II THEIR ll«l11 meJltlU are relayed under the UJbtest aecurlty pr~aution5, it can be accuratet,y npcrted that the recent excbu111 dealt witb Williams' pro- pelled nturD and Che I r o w i n I paosib!Jil)' of violollt proldtl here. CannJchMJ., now or,:anllin& mllltanl youth aanga in the~· under the eyu of JudJce Dt _ ent oUlclals. bu been urline Wl Jam& to return for wtlat he de1cribe& 11 "the hot, hot, 1wnme:r.'' - Sinco arTlvtng In 'I' • n ( 1 n y l k a, WllUam1 hu kept quJtt and out tJl the public •Y• -UGllJle bil r!Ndy 11roam of anti-U.S. broadcasts from China and Cuba. .. The militant Negro's closest com- panion has been Sheik Abdul Rahman Mohammed Babu, Tanzanian minister of lands, settlement and water development. The two men met while both were in Peking. UNDER THE Nt;w WilUam s·Babu pla.n, Negro m ilitants are bc:!ing en· couraged to travel to Taniania. where they will be trained in guerrilla warfare before returning to America. \Vi\liams. who is wanted on a kid· naping charge. waii cho!;Cll al a March :n meeting of Negro militants in Detroit to lead the proposed new black nation. ' Milton R. 1-lcnr)'. chairman o[ the radlcal Malcolm X Society. In ~nlng the conference read a telegram from Williams as follow s: "You stand under wcr-ld spotlight in corridors of history. Make the m()(l of it. Through wisdom. u n i t y , perseverance and sacrillce, the seeds Of the Dttroit convention can mature to black nationhood. Hall the lnvinclble spirlt of our emH"glng black nation." Cooference delegates. numbering about 200, drafted a declaratilon of in· dependence from tht U.S. and a ~n- 1titution for their eeparate llatlon. to be tel up in tiv.e 1tate1 of the Sohth. ' Pall Scott board President William Wilcoxen raised a good point when he suggested the administration may have to de- velop a baseline to show just what it costs to place a teacher before a class for a given amount of time. This district spends more per youngster than any unified district in Orange County to educa te children. During salary negotiations, teachers scored a valid point also when they asked if they should subsidize the quality educationaJ program being offered. They should .not, of course. But, lhey might come to the next negotiating sessions armed with specific recommendations on where the fat could_be trimmed from the program without injuring the quality of edu· cation. The teachers doubtless have ideas where corners could be cut. This could help them, the board and the taxpayer. The taxpayer fs going to be squeezed a bit to fi. nance the increasing costs, a record 25-cent tax hike, next year. And, unless the ground rules change, he will be the one who decides on sizeable future budget increases. The board indicated that it will be necessary to go to the voters next year via an override election to in· crease the tax rate. Whether this had t.P come this soon is a moot point. What does seem important is some pretty hard- headed cost controls so that teachers can continue lo receive saJary increases while a first-rate educational prograz:n continues. L 'We Should Read lf .S. and World History' • The 'Have Nots'· vs. the _ Letters to the editor concerning the a.!Sassination gJ_ -RQb.ett F. Ken·nedy itn.S'Y.f!"fb1itf~ef3' ·hav'i been Ye· ceived in such volume that an entire page in che DAILY PILOT tomorrow. Thursday, will be devoted to thciT publication. -Editor To the Editor: Th.e dir~ction in which our society is moving disturbs many who believe in our past form of "government by the people, and for the people." Those who desire increased taxes for educatiOn, social security, medicare, welfare and other handout programs have lost sight of our total history and the prin· ciples upon which our republic was founded and has grown to its present stature. By taking from those"'\Vho earn inore and giving to those who earn less (or none at all) is to defeat free en- terprise. Granted, there is no simple solution to these problems, however legislated evening of the spread of our wealth is against all that our rounding fathers stood for . My type <lf thinking is outdated and will draw trite but ac· cepted rebuttal from many of your readers: however. I feel that the motivation is hidden behind their words. THOSE WHO HAVE not always ra- tionalize why those who have should share. It would be grand. indeed. if all could have everything. It would soon be found that competition would cease. incentive would die and progress come to a standstill. Cannot the "do- gooders., in our society see that to take from those who have is as classic an example of discrimination as can be found? It seems to be acceptable to discriminate against those who have as long as those who have not ~ain thereby. Generosity should result from a willin g:ness lo assist. not from legislation. TO ELIMINATE poverty will reduce the entire nation to a state of poverty. Who then will have gained'.' To assist the poor at great expense to the. tax- payer only to have riots and destruc- ti on of lhe taxpayers' property at the hands or those tov.•ard whom the help is directed is a paradox to say the least. fl all reminds me of the Ru ssian Revolution wherein the oppressed overthfew the capitalists for want of the opportunity to better themselves only lo end up with a more sophisticated system of oppression . Or it could be compared with the ultimate goal of unionism wherein the .---su Geo..,,e---. Dear George: I let my neighbor go in my ~arage once to borrow my pliers <1nd now he goes in whenever he rel'ils like it and borrows my tools and power mower without ask· 1ng. Recently he was having a party and ran out or Vermouth. I was in the shower .and told him to get a cupful from the kJtchcn. Now he helps himsell without asking -to anything in my home bar . What ca n I do about a guy like this? FURIOUS Dear Furious: f'irst. send your wile to live with her mother ... CON FIDENTIAL 1'0 EAT'UM'UP. INC., Yes, I lhlnk a candy bar with an edible wrap· per 11 • good idea, but I don't think you realty 1houkt ask Lady Bird to endor.se It ln her &nU·lit- ter c1mpaign. Republicans eat caody, too, you krli:iw. Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signature and mail· ing address, but t«Jmes will be with- held on request working n1an shares equally in the profits of his employer. lf this ever becomes the case and the employer feels it not wort b the risk of his capital, thereby closing his business and putting all workers out of a job, who will have profited? JT IS TIME to consider the rights of those above as well as those below. The.students, the soldiers, the youth or past years are those nasty old con- servatives or today who "do not understand" the\ problerris of youth. students and so diers of today. No credence is given to the fact that the older general.ion has suffered the same experiences and has that prac· tical knowledge to draw upon. I feel that we should read our history and that of the rest of the world and draw from the lessons of the past prior to thinking that to change everything will result in in1· provement for all. R. WHITE Laguna Hippies To the Editor: In the editorial. "Impact of the Hip- pies." June 5, the author was most constructive and understanding of the problem or the Hippie element and the needs or our community to suggest equitable solutions. As I read the arti· cle I was looking for intellectual con· cern and wanted the author to end with a punch . LA:i and behold, he ended by saying, "Whatever the community consensus, police can't wave a nightstick and make the problem vanish. It is not illegal to wear long hair or unconventional garb or to be without funds or to go unbathed." I a·gree to a point with the police nightstick theory, but cease to un· derstand his reason for the last sentence. This typifies much of our thinking today. or oourse it is not il- legal to be without funds or to go Un· bathed. but what of the moral aspects? I-lave we become so "sick" we nn longer care. are we too lazy or afraid to speak out for our basic ideals, are we going to sit back and watch a minority element flaunt our ba5ic moral standards? OR. ROBERT FITt'H in the June IO issue of U.S. News and World Report said of the Hippies. "They pretend to be adult!, but they are desperately afraid of growing up and assuming respon11ibllilies. They pretend to be nonoonformists. but in speech and dress -even in odor -they are the most rigorou~ conformists you cou ld wish for. They pretend to have con· tempt ror ou.r economic system and Ole affluent society. yet they sponge off It. 1n fact, where they are in a ma· joril,y, they practice extortion. and neighborhood merchants are afraid not to give them money. And , Unally, they pretend to be the aposUes of love. This is the worst obs~nlty. They talk about -love, but they do not understand iti sacrificial and redemptive side." Or. Fitch also goes on to say, "But they become diaillusloned •.. when that happe:n5, the sontlmentalist becomes 1 cynic - he drops Illa Oower and pk;b up a switchblade, because sentimentalism .and cynicism are two sides of the same coin." Are we going to be a permissive community, giving more freedom to those we do not respect, or are we going to S'Peak out our convictions and use due process: of law a nd th e democratic process to cope with our problems? I do not beUeve America is sick nor our community. There are too many of us that are concerned. MRS . JOHN C, PENNEY Sa.,lor: Ra:ror Strop To the Editor : A friend of mine is the secretary of an important executive in the city of Chicago. A few years ago she left her job. walked through a park, took a short bus ride ... and was home. Now, her husband comes for her with a cab! She doesn't dare walk through the park! Come sundown. no womall' dares to walk through Central Park in New York City. Why? All because Mr. Gillette in- vented the safety razor! UNTIL THIS horrible thing hap- pened, men removed the hair from their laces with the straight-edged razor. To maintain one of these tools so that it would remove hair from the face of America, required a razor strap. The razor strap had. in my yo uth. a secondary duty. In combination with the woodshed it. combined with the strong right arm of an adult male. to bring understanding to a not-yet adult male. I can recall more than one of these "layings-on-of-the-strap" (not one of which can I say I did not have coming!). AS l RECALL, there were two of them. One at school and the second one at home! If I cou ld get the financial backin~ of some fathers (with strong ri ght arms. of course) I shou ld be most hap· py to form The Save Am erica Razor Strap Co. ('fhe company would be hap· py to supply. at no charge, our product to school teachers who have to face dirty-shirted. mini-skirted youth of to- day.) Mr. Gillette, I am su.re, is turning over in his grave. He didn't mean it that way! HUME SEYMOUR Wnll<h19 Dor•e Craelt11 To the Editor : I write lo appeal lo animiil lovers and to those who deplore cruelty to animals to work for passage of State Assembly Bill 1812 (i ntroduced by Assemblyman Frank .J. Be.ar of San Diego) which would outlaw the "sor· inJt:'' of Tennessee Walking llorses. To produce a speeial type of gait in some show horses. "soring" methods are used. Three common ones are ap- plicatlon of oil of mu stard on or under the sensitive areas of the horse's hoof. producing severe blistf:ring and ir· ritation, chains tied to the feet after oil of mustard has been rubbed on the area, and, a horseshoe naU driven into the quick of the front feet. • -TO AVOID THE extreme pain then caused by putting his full body weight on hi.s !root le8'. the horse must bring his rear feet forward to malntain balance. thus causlnJ: him to overstride when In motion. Too long, these tortured horses have been pleiasing horse show judges. The time Is Inn~ overdbe for con· ctrn~ Californians to take steps to 'Haves' stop this deliberate cruelty. Please write to·your state senator and assemblyman, in care of the State Capitol, Sacramento·, California 95814, asking them to support and to work for passage of the Bear Bill, A. B. 1812 to ouUaw this inexcusable practice. DORIS VAN BRUNT Refusal to Learn To the Editor: You published a very terse letter (Mailbox. June 6) from Mrs. Robert Werkheiser in which she deplored the fact that a Soviet Life magazine i11 being offered to American families. This letter, though short, contained some emotionalizing about Russians being anti-God and communistic. She also leaves one point a bit unclear when she asks, "Where do they get names and addresses of American families?" She neglects to make clear who "they'' refer to. For Mrs. Werkheiser's information, there are beautiful and informative publications available to Americans who care enough to remove their horse-blinders and try to learn what Soviet life is like \Qday when some at- tempts should be m ade toward in· ternational understanding. Soviet Life is an example of such a pubUcation. A REFUSAL to learn or understand about Soviet life on1y increases the gap that unfortunately exists today between our country and Russia. "Russians do not )lave horns," states the Citizen Exchange C.Orps, which hosts Russian& in American homes and sends Americans to Russia. All Russians are not anti-God. Ali Russians are not Communists. For the record. I am not a Com- munist. but I feel that a little reading about Soviet Life, or traveling in Russia or talking to people who have traveled there, might enUghten a lot of people. To rephra&e a frequently used quote, Better READ than dead. LOGAN M. LOCKABEY One More Reason To the Editor: Your editorial ·(June 6) regarding the reasons for Kuchel's defeat left out a most important one, in my opinion. Regardless of the po Ii tic i an ' 1 political philosophy, he must pay some attention to the wishes of the majority. It seemed to me that Kuchel respond- ed to the press and pre1sure groups a n d the majority be damned. Th i s may not seem important to a paper t.hat consistently represents t h e minority opinion in Orange County but it was my main reason !or voting against Senator Kuchel M. TINSLEY ---W- Wednesday, June 12, 1968 Tht «-ditorial page of the Doil11 Pilot se•kl to inform and 1tim- ulatc. f'Codtr.s bf( presenting thU ncwspo.~·1 OJ)lnions and com- nwnt4711 on. topic, of intere1t cznd flgni/icon.ce, b11 providing a forum for the tzptfl'N'ion of our rt<Ukn' opinlon.s, and b11 presenting t.he diverse IJieio- pointa of informed observer1 trnd 'POktstnen on topici of the d4y. Robort N. Weed, PubtiJher i. I. '/ l i ' . . . . ' ' I ' , I • • ' • , • ; • l • ' ' ' ' ' • • 1 •. ., ~ l } ' ' ' ' • l • • l l l. .. t ' • .. .. .. ' 1 ' ' i I • I 1. } I " ·:: I 1: i l . ' l, j: " " ,. ~: '· " " .. I· f f i: ·r . , I.~ jf :. ... '" '.t ~ ~; ~: .. • . •• I: ~: ,. ~j gf :..; Ii j: " ~: ' ,, ' j : , .. ,, ~: !· I" ' , .. '· '.· . : i: I: r . : •• • •• •• j: ,. ' ., l • Fruit Pies 8tl-Air froitn-Popular Varittie& 8-in. s pies Popular Fruit Flevors-Low in Price! 46-oz. can FROZEN FOODS Orange Juice Scotch Treat-flavor- Favorites from Sunny Florida-Low in Pric•I 5 ~ s100 Vegetables ltl·•lr-A-rted. In Butter huoe G B lol.,l.....C•L reen eans lltced or Frtnoh 4 10 "' '1 pkg1. 4 ..... •1 pk gs. Dairy, Delicatessen Cheddar Cheese Safewey Mild-For Cooking, Snacks or Sendwiches- Whole Milk Foi-mula • •· 69c C tt Ch L"'""' Low plot 311 0 age 88$8 Cal or Regular ctn . F "t D • k L•u'"o-lo rUI rift $ Popular Flavors. Jlt-gat.• 291 ctn. Lucerne Salads In Popular 3 pint '1 Favorites. ctn1. FRESH BAKED BUYS! . . Angel Food Cake "Heavenly" ·Cake to Serve 12:01. C Mrs. Wright' 1-lt'1 e 2 9 Your Family. lbw in Price! Rlf\I) Ra"1s"1n Bread .,,,.,,.,.,,,mp, , .. , .. ...,, Full of Goodneu! loaf £P Ap I . K h " A.., ..... "'"" 351 p • . UC en RoU~FNlhly B•ked each Cigarettes Liquid Bleach -'Motor Oil Sholl XI 00 • T oxaco • Hovolino • Valvolino ' RPM Spociol - lee Tissue Bathroom-'#hito or Sol.I Pastels. 14c Off)$ 4-roll packs LIQUOR SHOP BUYS! .......... u. ..... ,..._no... ..... s.., • .-. 1), 14. 11, 1"•. 1"' Kavlana Vodka ·Q~ 53n Stanton's Gin MacNairs Scotch":::: 14" I Large AA Eggs I ~=~.~;b~g~r;:~c~:h:: 1-cl01. 39c I your neighborhood S.feway. ctn. . " Medium Size ~:.~ 35' Extra Large 6~~ 43' :; c. •• ,., 0 ' fllt Cro>p &r•d• "AA" Cr••"' 0 ' I~• CrGJI &rid• AA lnnmHDllllllllHHllllllDllllllllllHllMlllllll!ltHlllllllllHHlllllllHHn•m11111ullllJOOllHllUllHIN!lllli...UH Ice Cream Cetillil Cltnl-4:1111111· HaHc!::"" 69c SllitUI ~ Pl(llll' llMri; Crest Toothpaste tt Wlritefts and 111ftlm TeetM Pricl ldHls 5c Ott -- le(1la1-, f1ltlr 11 Kilt 1111 Chet 111~ In Pricl! White Maik-Worb like M·l·l·l·C! ;;: 59c -'2'!. '" Cake M•ixes 111. ·~·s byer-aieice ,, several ""111 f1111rit11. IH Cl!uk This low l'ice! Safeway Coffee Large Size Apricots Juicy.Sw..+ Sun l luihed. low in Price! 4 ..... •1 Large Slicing Tomatoes ~ ...... Rod Rlpo 2 9c to diet In uladt. .. South American Firm And Golden Ripe. Ideal For Snacks, Lunch Boxes Or To Slice In Gele- tin Salads. Groot To Mako Your Own Banene Splits. Chock This Low Price! Watermelons Sweet And Red Ripe c lb. Peaches Yellow Meated-First of 29C Se15on-Reel Tasty! lit. Mild Onions ue:~~~1~· 3 ·lbs. 29c Additional Produce Values Seedless Grapes .~·~;, , .. 391 C t Pack1gecl Fre1h 3 ·lb "M1I arro S Dolly fo• Vool pkg. £7' Fresh Cucumbers .~,~~~ 3 '" 291 Juicy Limes ~~:.: "'" 51 1000 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach 211 E. 17th SI., Cosl1 MeSI / . Wrdntsd.u, June l2, 1968 • DAJLY PlLOT . f'•ft . Irish International ~$fee,,Lecha4e ~ __ &_ufEEPSXAV.S WIN ·,uoP OVER •2so,000°0 ~' In , Cash Prizes! WIN: s5oo.s100o.ss00o -slOOO'' ~ s10000.-s,1,ooooo IN CASH! Pick Up Free Canl At Safeway! ' NO OIUGATION Ir NOTHING TO IUY. RECENT WINNERS IN STEEPLECHAS E SWEEPSTAKES USDA GRADE A U.S. GoYt. Inspected WHOLE BODY Plump, Tender & Mooty. Cut-Up . Split °' 35' lb Quartered lb. " I C Rolled mtd Tied USDA Choice Grade leef Chuck Rtvorful end Juicy 11 only • S.fowoy llMI R .. st lb can be. low In price, I c Chuck Steaks Blade Cuk -Jdool for Outdoor Borbocuing 0 USDA Choice B .. f lb. 49~ -~ '5'' V I Ch F h S 'b Small Size or Country 69 ' ea ops res pqrer1 S ::~'"I;~.:~~ ~~:k Too· Ill, C snou1der cu1-render 69c AH-Meat Franks : ~~::.:: ~~o S9c And Mf!aty Low tn • Morrtll Price. • lb. Luncheon Meats •::~~:' ,.!~o 39c Pork Steak Breaded Shrimp T•1.':.' :::.-:-~~ 69c Or Pork Chops (larte 69C ~.i~l)oin or Rib End IL, Bolna"• Mo,,,n s11c•d 1.11o. 69c Chopped u ... -114.,,,11 1-o1. 39c WI 9111 "'&'"' r •• ,, All Mt•I ,.,. "41111 Sllctd ..... Bologna M ...... 11 $llc•d 1.1~. 69c Callo Salanu· ... ~.11 11 .. ~. 59c Tutr •II h•I •kt. Sliced •kt. Rath Meat Salel ••i'ced Bacon t.1~ 11.c• 1-1b. 65c .li H1•l 1<••4 pt9. P .... Chops '"'" .... , .... ,_ .. , $1 69 Ulll l•~ol" I M••tr II>, o Ham Sl'ces ...... c .... , c, .. _ $169 I Lo•~ lt1l1no •o•I I~. • Turkey Salel Hen T urkeYs ;~·~~.· ... ~~.::. ~. 39c Turkey Hindquarters '"· 39c Turke R st ........ ""· $2 69 y oa l!,M I Olfl •••. • SI• d B • Dubuque Ml11 Iowa 1-llt, Ste Ice aeon • l.uer'1 Iowa Farm• I* 81vory Hlckor y·Smoked t · • IN.Wt Slf-'1 ..... N111tet YHCM ,_II lllcM 1.c• , ... ,tit. 6tcl "'-ltff.c.,.,_ n... ,.,. S..., '-ll. ''• 11, It. • S.....,. ...... Ill ,.--... fA ~ ...... c--11i.1, Le. ,_.... lac•ff s.. ..._. Clw....t, IMt ......_, I.a .,......, .,.. A"""91 ..ii ~ ls-I IMU, C... W... ........ Mi9NI -4 L..-.... ...,,I ' Boneless Roast • aotto"' "ound 89C • Cled • "ump •• UIDA Cholol • .,, Lm:IL Chops. lt19t Slle11191t C11t-tac USD,A Cit.I•• t..mO. .. Attiil ,y Trl--4. 2t Mo111rch llJ P1111, So. Llgun1 636 N. Cod Hwy., i..,mi lelc• ' I ' 'I • . f ,. I . . ... .. -. ' . . . .. . . .,_--, . . . ... ..... . ... . · . ._ . . . . .. . ........ ~ - .. ,. .: ' • ' -.. '· ,.. ,' .... ~··· ..... ,....,_. -.,.... ... ,. ....... """ . . . ' '· ' . . . • ...... ~ .. ~ • . . r DAILY PILOT Wedneoday, June U , 1868 ' Fantastic . !7.-91 · A. savings in this ad FATHERS DAY COOKOUT FAVORITES! · ' MEA f YOU CAN TRUST • • • -~~~!'Cl. iiP ..t AT DISCOUNT PRICE,. TOOi r' ~· . ,, ..... , "!· "·~v,, ,,. FRESH FRYERS WllDl( IOOY IEST If FRYER IOWI MAID BACON "llO UCl!S ........ W TDIN QUAUIY 52c •· l·ll. "'~ llATH ll:AClllAW~llDDM H r. 9UT 111>11111 • ""* MlllAIM • l U. PACWI RLFHR BETA BACON •i.t.r He ARMOUR Mira C1re HCOM'i.~581 01CM W.TP • 12 IUICl HitllA&I GROUND JEEF 1treJ £COflO. PAK 3'.81 OR OVEll 1"" ... ...._. 591. MEAT LOAF rl'fil. IOIELiss FlllLY STUK 191.· SMOKIE 'l•Wf!Sl 68' U.S. GOVERNMENT INS'1CTtD CAMP'S • f'KOZlN I 12.0Z. N. KAPTAIN XW!JSlY • FIOZO • UllKS TREAT WIUOW'S 'COllll lllK' • IOlllll.111 s4as CONED Hill .:::Ill. I ~I• -. HALIBUT """' 69 ~ STEAKS "" BUTTERED 55c BEEFSTEAKS BREADED ,....,. SJ29 SHRIMP PCS. · THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE 1l1URSOAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY JUNE 13 THROUGH 19 -a&w:!lill = ·~~rr· W T VANUSA • ~ IW'.I $ . · ·:· PllTl·HOS& 1111 J 11 ID ; ,. 1S"s66" • PLASTIC COATED . O'.I: ' REED IEACH MATS II' 79c YO U" ID i . • . Alpha Bata's "Man In Biie" says: TOTAl DISCOUNT Every Day f..,"' ,~ Every Minute! About Our DOUBLE DISCOUHTS . tltJTCH fflIDE • HAU' GALLON • FROZlN IMITATION ICE MILK 39c 35c ®ii'Eu'oiicoliii""'zi~ 111 M0ACAROKfi CHEESE Uc 381 ~I or. lloltl• • Fr•neh lAdr •le: Ofl 21• ~MILANI 5WJ.'\lio 39c ' ~ U!ll'f"I •'OUNCE CAN' 221 ~Vienna Sausage 2lc @c~tlaU 'ilri:n'P'" ssc 451 GER'i'EiilNIAir'FoOD IDc 94 ra\ PEAcliEs ~"'·"~,, •Oc SLICES ...... SO~F srnR£\ CHARGE 33l OELIC ATEISEN & CREAMERY SOME All'HA llfTA. STO!'ES DISCOUNT -CHAll:GE PIUCI McCOY • ' OUNCE PAcv.G! SUCED PASTRAMI ~~I OUNCI PACQ.GE 111e11 Ctn ld lllf Ht8R?W NATIONAL • 12-0UNci: PJ:G&. KOSHER SALIMI SI .DI kOSK£JI FRANKS •j l IO JCOSH£11 lCHOCnvt.IRSf • 1.00 AL,HA lfTlf • t•-OZ. • W1G1 98' :t ALL MEAT SLICED IOLOGll ~w 5ft @s:it'°i.',Pri.;'.mo3ac 37' @ c'hitf;0'ii•ilr1;:11c 37' b~t°chliio~c:i.r;.~1~; ac .361 I . BUTl'ERN\IT •ml. & GZC. f COFFEE !·LI. C/Jf 71 c 601 2·LB. C:~ • REGUUR 11.41 JG, lociil°J1A¥&"cof'r'il7Sc 131 CARTON • ALL POPULAR BRAND& KllG SIZE M CIGIREnf.S P.J' sz.11 • 1." MEN'S, WOMEN'S ' CHILDREN'S Sl!.ES ZORIES mOlmD COLORS 31j 29' 31c ~:!OS CAN • ITIWED uBBrs TOMATOES 31c 211 ~ Better Produce at DISCOUNT PRICES! BOX or St Q· TIP SWAIS 31c JPKl>SON •VALUE PACK • SHEER STRIP 781 IAID AID !\l,~'0 18j 1oilif' cat'ORBAA-IO CO'~' 681 PACIC or n FOIL WltAPPED TAILtT'S • , ,, ALIA SELTZER 1111 ir,;;. @ClliifHu's1!R's"" ea; 44c ·- N"i>.lf PACtAOt or \:ID . MJX N' MATc:H 29c ZEl NAPlllS · 31 1 CAllNATION •PACK OF t ENVtl.OPE&i tie INSTllT AU.n.AVO" 681 v 1 BREAKFAST l ie !Wk 91 ID la'l'•)opas •Chee., Cho.. Malt II.It ... i OUllCHllZ • ~ 1011\Jl 491 Ju'Wlldlw c111 .... 11c l'i tJQr· ....... lie so1 Eiifmaur ~le 11 ' • @ "-'"'-' EX11IA WICE w WESSON Oil 75c @ u oz. • corn:r: cJU:AMEJl.81' PREAM T9c 3CX1 CAN • SOLID PACE HUNT'S TOMATOES 25c 221 'fl GAL • Fruit Puncb er Onmo• 411 YITA PAK! LO CAL 4k 2( OUNCE BOTTLE llAZOLI COllN Oil l5c &2• 41 OU!fa: llOTTt.t ... ... \'J~V"fR~V CAT FOOD He 26' "5 OUNCE CAN !lllPPY DOB FOOD lk 16' !"',~"'CHILI IEAllS 21' 181 300 CAN 18' U W KIDNEY BEANS lk S 6 W •2llOUNC'ECAN DYElf WED BEAKS lie 36' !V.NfiH STYLE • 1~0%. CAN PIN 0 BEANS 2Dc 18' Mil SPUD • l-UI. PACUGE INSTANT POTATOlS 41c • HUQlS • :JOO C'f TO TO SAUC lk 18' 1' OUNCE llonu: 22• NUHrs CAISllP. lie 9.07..~P. •Wm! KORStl\ADISK MOR DUSl MUSTARD lie lli' 1-LB. PACJ':AOE • MINJATtJllE 311 !RAFI MAISllllAUOWS 31c Cblck•11 01 Th• SM!· Ha. V. CAN' CHUNK TUMA LIGH"t' MEAT 33c • Cllunk White TuM • Nt,_1/i Can 41• .. $olid Whit• Tu.1111 • N .. ,YI C.. 41e • tl'a~j"','i,'\f(G MEAT [~f'fo~QFo llIF 81'Rol"6n~ri~I 2lc 22' lie 11' l ie 11 ' ~m ·~1M'i'NT"' orr 11.n 1111 ra1&rmxswHT W1 11c 14' · WcUiiila"'''°'f11 11' ~Ill .... 21' 1i"'d"'c!A .... 1lt • HAWAIIAN GROWN PAPAYAS RUSHED 29C BY Allf EXPRESS EA. FLORIST QUALITY FLOWERS AT DISCOUNT PRICES/ FATHERS DAY SPECIALS '9treJ e.e MAJllTIC 59-• DAlllll -. ::~·.~~---·· '1'' :u:ci0.~~~-.. 89- GAROEN FllESI! • ~RGE • SOI.ID HEAD LmUCE ONIONS RED SWEET MILO SLICING SIZE 5: CUKES ,.ll lemon l11f with purchase of tresll cut Flowtrs , AVOCADOS l:6 ~~~~ITE 25~ CRISP GARDEN FRESH 10: THESE. PR ICES IFFECTIVE THURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13 THROUGH IP llillioiiili ":: 591 COSTA MESA-241 I . 17111 St. ONE ONLY • BOX OF 12 !!!~!ER !91c ORPLUS .. • PRICE WITHOUT COUPON' #te < O SOMt STORU CHARGt UP TO 4k •. O · • -Clllt a:itll'Oll l'(R f.Wll Y " - ' · COIPOlf ... TIMI IUC ;, • HUNTINGTON IEACH-9045 Adoma HUNTINGTbN IEACH-11611 N. Mai n SI. FOUNTAIN VALLEY-30 Warner LAGUN~Ol22 S. c-t·Hlway I - l I , l • • • ' ' ' I • ' .. ' i ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I • • A • unc 1 ., Do: .. wh .. ' rca • I· lne s the stu cor A • of ... gra . WO! to . sho wh. s 'J . ' I· .. ' -· 1 . Ba: .. ' "" ' \Va· mi1 •: A "B. ' a'' ! nev .. nur mo: ; Bal ; not ' B ;! T . ~ .• ~ ' • ' ' • • • • • • • r • • 1· • • ' • ~ j c • ' • • r. • ' • ;, • h . • . • . • • < . ' i • . • ' • • ' I • • :·( • • • I • I J • • Ne.wp~rt Darb-or DAILY PILOT Your Bemet.owa ·.. w .-T EDITION Dally Paper VOL 61, NO. r~r. 8 SECTIONS, 96 PAGES DAILY PILOT .....,. ff L.91 P'•fft9 WATCH THE WORDS -Teacher Mrs. Dorothy Sloniger watches with students Debbie Mitchell and Kenny Kalmbach as words are flashed on blackboard to build reading speed in Ensign Intermediate School reading laboratory. At 800 WPM That's Top Ensign Reading Speed Rood faster, kids. Read faster. And while )'ou're .at it -learn ' to understand better. That could be the creed of teachers Dorothy Sloniger and Lois Simkins who today wrapped up a first--time reading Jabaratory program at Ensign Inetrmediate School. Speed reading techniques used at the school in Newport Beach helped students read faster and with better comprehension. After a semester of only 22 minutes of instruction per day, seventh graders who started out re;1ding 250 words per minute read oat a rate of 350 to 800 words per minute. And tests show they now understand more of what they read. Some of the seventh graders read with the abllity of college students. Most,r-11,.at~st •l.the "41th grade level, Mrs. SIOD'lger sald. Several 11'l.eChaii.ical devices are used to do what the teacher can't do - force students to read faster. Among these are: Tachistoscope - a projector Utat flashes words on the blackboard for 1/5 of a second or less . Controlled reader -a projector that rapidly moves through a written story showing but a few words at a ·time. Reading accelerator -a &bield that moves down the page of a book block~ ing out type at a predetermined rate. The machines are used to keep students reading a little bit faster than they \Vant to read. Then they are (See READING, Page 2) That's No Crime Wave, It's a Burglary Ripple The plush private community of Bayshores -portrayed in its cWTent newsletter as engulfed in a crime wave -is really caught up in what might be called a ripple. An errant dispatch in t h e "Bayshores Bulletin" tells residents of a soaring burglary rate. Lamented the newsletter editor: "Bayshores is currently No. 2 in number of residential burglaries per month, being surpassed only by Balboa Island which is No. 1. We are not proud to be No. 2." But Bayshores needn't fret. The neighborhood actually has ooe Orange r..oast Weatller of the lowest, not highest, crime rates in the city, .according to Police Chief B. James Glavas. 11e said some confu sion in the newsletter report possibly resulted from the fact that Bayshores is in- cluded in a police department grid that categorizes the city geograph· icaliy. It is true that burglary incidents within the grid are high , but the gr:ld includes a large section of toWn , ex- tending to commercial zones, Glavas explained. Checking the records, the chief said Bayshores has had only eight reported burglaries the last seven months. Five W1lte within residences, and only three of the five burglaries involved pro- perty loss. The other three thefts were ·from garages. Glavas said a preventive crime pro- gram is being caJTied out in all neighborhoods encouraging residents to keep homes and garages Jocked, to reduce thefts to a still lower level. NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, ·1968 TEN CENTS AWOL Marine, 17 Slaying Suspect Named By JEROME F. COLLINS Of Ille D•llY ~U.t IJ•tl A 17-year-old AWOL Camp Pendle- ton Marine is being ·sought es the prime suspect in the slaying of Corona del Mar ineurance man George F. Lyons , Newport Beach police disclos· ed t00ay: Pfc. Edwin William Chott lll of Per- ryville, Mo .• is named in a murder warrant issued by Newport Harbor Municipal Court, The warrant, car· 'Showdown' ·Demanded On A.irport By JACK BROBACK OI tr,. 0111'1' PH.t Sii" F'uming Orange County-'mrport ·com- missioners bl~w their tops Tuesday night and demanded a -he'•cknm · meeting with the Board o f Supervisors, charging their advisory role is being usurped by County AdJ:oinistrative Officer Robert E . Thomas. A sublease to Cable Commuter Airlines, an air taxi firm, for space in the terminal building caused the uproar. The commission earlier had deferred action on Cable Commuter's request for the sublease approval two weeks ago. Cable Commuters.started flying out of the airport Saturday, June 1 as the firm had 'Widely <JdVertised .. Thomas at the su~ge1tlo'l,~I (:ountt Dlr~ pl Aviation Robert l!mnlhari oP°i!l'oVed the' sublease of space from Pac.We Southwest Airlines 10 Cable would h3ve scime place to sell tic1cets. Commissioner James Gillmore of Santa Ana touched off the fireworks Tuesday bj mOving that the Cable Commuter sublease be denied. "My understanding is that we recommend action to the Board' of (See AIRPORT, Page 2) Fraud, Sabotage Cl1arges Taint OCC Elections Elections were held in pairs at Orange Coast College this spring when fraud and sabotage spoiled original balloting. One election had to be repeated because of ballot box stuffing. A se- cond had to be renm because can· didates Campaign posters were torn down and a campaign booth ripped apart. The election tampering has caused charge and countercharge to ny on the Costa Mesa College campus, but the culprits have not been caught In the latest repeat election, Al Porco was elected student body presi- dent for next year. Accusations were Jeveled against his backers by can- didate Bob Nuttman and supporters, but couldn't be substantiated. Three candidates' campaign posters disappeared overnight and Nuttman's booth was wrecked. The student judicial board found in- sufficient evidence to support ac- cusations and Elections Commissioner Tom Lankard ordered a new election "to clear the alr." Porco won by a greater plurality than he had the first time. Earlier in the semester a vote on revisions to the ttudent constitution "A'as repeated because, as Lankard ex· plained. "a large number of ballots were very obviously marked by the samtl person." rying no bail, was issued sec:reUy several days ago. Newport Beach Police Capt. Louis Heeres, said the s~arch for. Chott, pro· nounced Cot, is centered on the St. Louis, Mo., area. "At our request, the FBI has en· t.e:red the case and has obtained a federal warrant charging the suspect with unlawful flight to avoid pro- secution for murder," Heeres said. He noted that •;some lea!Z" on Chotl's whereabouts had failed to develop in recent days. Chott was described as a youth of medium build, five feet, ten lncbes tall, with a light brown crewcut ·and brown eyM. He enlisted in the Marines five months ago. He was last_ s~ at Cfmp Pendleton on Mey 20, the morning of Lyons' murder. The young suspect is r eportedly from a family of modest circumstances. Capt. Hee:res . saJd Chott was rePorted seen in Springfield, Mo., at . about the Ume Lyons' missing 1961 Thunderbird was found there 1n a motel parking Jot. Lyons, 48, was bludgeoned to death 1n his amall apartment at 7201h Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar. Capt. Heeres declined to dl!{cuss what evidence allegedly linked Chott_ to the slaying. Gun Curb, Bill l(illed State Measure Dies; No GOP Support · SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Assembly Criminal Procedure Com- mittee early today killed a tough gun control bill, almost a week to the minute after Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was fatally wounded. The voice vote by the IO-member committee came minutes after mid· night On the measure by Ass.emb!YJnan ~1)ert W. Crown (0- AIS:meda), a member of the delegation pledged to Kennedy at the Democratic Harbor Board Decision Due Within Week A decision on ttie future Orange Co'll\tf Hl'!'bor J;))strict Wlll l>o ma<I!>. by tht BoB1't lltlj>e!'•llM1 Wltlllifiirie· week. The board, after hearing a repQrt on the proposed dissolution of the dlStrict, yielded to pleas of urgency from a legislative representative. the presi- dent of the County League of Cities and tw~ city representatives. Supervisors heard County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas report on the 19-page study made by a supervisors'-appointed committee or three county officers and two League representatives. Thomas concluded b y recom· mending that the district be dissolved and a county Department of llarbors, 11eaches and Parks be substituted. J.Ie i;aid the.job could be completed in one year. _ Jack Galvin, rep re se n tin g Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R- Fullerton), urged action because or Brigg's pending bill which would abolish the district. He sald Briggs wanted to word the bill to dovetail with the supervisor's determination. League President Dean Shull Jr. complimented the committee on its report, but added, "The supervisors must look at the whole county, not just how the Harbor District can best be served or how any individual city along the coast can best be served. A change is needed and it is up to you to study and reach conclusions soon." Shull warned that many people ia the county were supporting Brigg's bill and urged early action to avoid "ugliness" in discussions over the pro- blem. Mayor Don E. Smith of Orange and former mayor. now C o·u n c 11 man Donald E. Shipley of Huntington Beach both urged that the district be dissolved. Mayor Doreen Marshall and City Manage r Harvey L. Hurlburt of Newp<nt Beach were present but did not speak. Rate Remains Steady WASHINGTON (UPI) -The na- tional unemployment rate remained steady at 3.5 percent in May, the Labor Department reported today. • National Convention Crown said none of the five Republicans on the committee voted for the bill. He said all five Democrats favored the measure, but ·six votes were needed for approval. However, he indicated there was a possibility another measure might be sponsored by some other lawmaker and sent to a difiererit committee. As sembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh, Kennedy's California c amp a~ g n • chairman, told new.smen Tuesday he favored swift action on a gun control law. Crown "8id Unruh supporf:ed ):Us bill alter alnendments were added Tuesday to make it tougher. Gov. Ronald Reagan told his weekly news conference Tuesday California now has probebly the best gun control laws of any st.8.te. · ' However, he said some im· provements could be made_. including (See GUN LAW, Page Z) \ Vietnam Victim's Father Crashes Shop for Photos A Costa Mesa father, tormented by the Vietnani combat death qi. bls only IClll, ls lr«f~~ ~.,, l'!/rif l!!t,P,· fi/g lnto a San Diego photo shop to get pictures of ·the youth's military funeral. ,1;1-..,,·,...' .. Anthony Gerome. 51. o( 240 16th Place, was arrested on suspicion of at- tempted burglary after witnesses call· ed police, but was released on $2,500 bail Tuesday. · Victor Gonzalez, owner of Victor's Custom Photography Studio, has not decided whet.her to prosecute the anguished real estate salesman, who smashed the fancy glas1 door with a tire iron. "The genUem.an has already bad quite a Joss," Gonzales tOJd the DAILY PILOT today, "He must be suffering a great deal or sorrow. \Vhy add to it?'' Gonzalez, however, said he feels it is only fair that someone should replace the ornate, $100 door which he destroyed on Monday. The suspect -who could not be reached at his home for comment to.. day -told San Diego police be .visited over the weeltend tn the hope.of gel· ting pictures taken at the May U funeral. He went to the closed shop on Sun· day, then returned on Monla'y,,shor;.l,y -. . ......,,, beforJt Go~ez. arrJv~. trqm a .w~kllll,d· 6jlilzie,. trip, and"reJ,;tt.4J.y went loto1' a fteozy when he found Jt closed again. IronicaJly. Gonzalez said to4ay, his studio haudles weddings and . other happy occasionsL but he . s~~t . a photographer to the Fort. Rosecrans funeral of Sgt. Michael A. Gerom~. 21, as a favor to a Lloos Club associate. Friends of the Gerome family had ordered prool9 of photographs of tbe young Gl's nag-draped casket .and the rifle squad as it gave the country's final salute to him. "I have never met Mr. Gerorr..c or had any dealings with him over the photos," Gonzalez said today. Gonzalei said friends of U1e•Gerome family purchased proofs of th.e funeral pictures Tuesday and will presumably order some to help the GI's family honor their grief and· lo1s. Young Sgt. Gerome was killed May 7 ta Vietnam and the funeral was May 18, according to. reports. J! you don't see the sun to- morrow morning, wait a while; it'll be a little late. That's the word from forecaster Gordie Shields who sees a continued cooling trend along~tbe coast. Ancient Art Aids Aerialist INSWE TODAY Tht musteriow men with tht m11sttriow lift at tht nondt· script London Hottl 1DtlJ tht ob- ;ect of one of Qrtattst man- hunts in hiltOTt/. Page 9. -' --... u M..,_. ir...-U N•lltMI IMM 4·1 0r9-,,._ c-•• 1 ,, .... ...,... " IMi.I fll-".JI ,_,., ,.,,, ·-" """'"' , .. ,. w-• 01t!ii9 Wl'ltte M w ..... """" .., By EVELYN SHERWOOD Of flll O.Hy , • .., St.n A strange amalgamation of t!le talents of. two Harbor Area men is helping one of them tncreaae his in- ternational fame and ts helping the other ooe keep an ancient art alive. Ernest Lee Beatty, a ?t-year~ld Costa Mesa caner, is the master of the fast disappearing art of weaving baskets and chairs, etc. "I've woven ·cottcm pickin' baskets, lunch baskds and dog basl<el• in my day," said Beatty. "Now, I'm we.avin' balloon baskets. Flamed Corona de!. Mor balloonl!t Don Piccard, who operates a balloon ' ~ "factory" in Costa Mesa, cam• into Beatty's -workroom at about ttd.I point · 1n the couver1ation. The two weot into a huddle ovet the design of a new basket fOr one of PJccard's balloons. It was to be intor·woven with steel wire to bold 16,~ pounds tn suspension. Balloon baskets c~t ar<>und ~ and take about eight d1y1 to weave, Beatty said. The bamboo he uses com- es from Malaya. "Of 13 balloons th.it raced Memorial Day at lodianapolls in the traditional balloon ewnt before the auto races, 10 or the bask.eta were Beatty'a," Piccard pointed ouL ... Beatty picked up a ba!ket of white pain1ed wicker, ''1bl.5 ls a 'bow' basket used by farmers in the South for vegetiablea. It's woven by band Crom the bark of a white oak tree. "It would COit about SSO today because or the labor involved,"-he said. "Years aao, everyone wove their own." Beatty was bOtn in North Carolina, and came to Costa Mesa in 1952. Besides plying bll cantng trade, Bea~ ty alto wiekl3 a lldtUul-btnd ot..-epalr- ing vlollna and old clockl. lie IOd hts wtr. haw four children In Florida, seven granddilldren .and eight great-grandchildm>. • , MASTER OF ANCIENT ART Kl!EPS CANINO ALIVE El'Mtt ... tty st-. 8otMt W..,..-lor a.u-w 11!-nl • . . -~ • ..... _ ... _. .. . . -. . -· ·->-.._ __ _ DAILY '""°' Slllll l"Mte BRAVE 'GIRLS' -Mrs. James Carney, a brave mother, talks·things over with Laura Carney before the ~year-old "9ueen of hearts" underwent first of two pl&jor cardiac operations and before she was selected as Memorial Day Gift Girl of the Orange County Heart Association. Things look bright for tiny patient now, if she can only get help from blood donors during Friday's bloodmobile stop at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Worst Over for Heart Girl Laura R ecovering A ft er Breathing Sc are in Operatiori 1t's been a rough 15 days for the James Carneys of Huntington Beach, but the worst is over. Tiny 3-year-old heart patient Laura carney underwent a 10.bour closed heart operation on May 29 at St. Bernardine's Hosp 1 ta l in San Bernardino to partially relieve her breathing problems caused by a badly deformed hearL · Her parents and the team of heart &urgeoi;is who perrorn1ed the operation though at fir st It was·,, succt:,1s. The first clue that Jt wasn't what they hoped 'came when one sll!!geon 1aid be wasn't ietting the expected "blurp" sounds which the new opening in the heart chamber should make. Symptoms developed with Laura's breathing becoming more and more difficult until she had convulsions. The surgeons performed a second operation Tuesday. three hours this time, to reopen the original opening which had closed: Today Laura can breathe. Her lungs are clear. She's ale.rt and brighteyed, but she "hurts." She will be watched closely by tbe intensive care staff of St. Bernadine's another day or so, then transferred to the pediatrics ·ward. Airport Critic Lashes Executive Lear Jets \Villi&m Harris ol Newport Beach, a frequent critic of Orange County Airyort flight noise, hcmed in on "e:s:- ecutlve" jets like a riled-up radar set 'l'uellday. He oin6od out the Lear jet as tile .. _plane t2iat flies out of Orange Comty Airport" In bl! )?l'Helltatioo ~ momben al tlie coonty Board «Supen>lson. Harris previously bas complained about commercial airline planes 'A-illch, he cl&ms, make too much ncUe .. they climb out of tile airport and fly tile paUiern over Upper Newport Bay. Tuesday, he att.mpted vert>elly to lhoot down tile corporation type jell!. '"Th.ls plane flew over my home ear· ly in tile morning at le6s thao l ,IXXI feet altitude unda' full throttle," Har- ris complained. "It shook the house." Hams 1aid he undentood tile pai1i<ular jet which he objected to is kept at tile alz1><rt by "Gates Aviation, DAILY PILOT makers of the jet. They have it there to demmistrate and sell this horrible plane." Harris said he understood there were only two regularly based at the airport. "Is there enough incune to the county from these planes to justify that noise? Is it worth it?" he in· quired. Harris hold the supervisors tbat a television crew was at hi s hoosoe {o"r more than an hour recently. ''They didn't get to n~ard the flight of any a·irline planes because they weren't flying," the man explained. "But a Lear Jet came over and almost wreck- ed the television microphone." Supervisors• chairman C. ·M. "Cye" Feather1y agreed with Harris on the noise of the Lears. County Administrative 0 (Ii c e r Robert E . Thomas suggested that he would 6tudy the leases with the jets md the board approved. "Let's find out if there is anythi.n" we can do about this legally," said F.ee<bedy. * * * f'ro11t P .. e 1 AIRPORT •.. Supervisors -not the county ad- mlnistraUve officer," Gillman charg· ed. "In thJs case, a decision has already been made. Are our actions only valid if we do what the ad- ministrative staff wants'!" Commissiorf' Chairman Dennis E. ~arpenter of Newport Beach a~ed. U tbe administrator is going to make the dec~lons, perhaps we should aboUsllDils com.mission." Commissioner Roger Slates of Hun- tington Beach angrily challenged a previous move by the Board of Supuvisora for an admlnistraUve study for a commlssJon recom· meodation to waive fuel flow fees for Air California and other a.ltUne1 UJblg the airport. HWe held an extensive hearing on th.11 and-the recommendations we sent to the board were complete and wtll documented," said Slates. "Now we find they have asked the CAO to study the matter some more." ~nter tried to calm thtnga down with alt tight until we get a hearing on the whole problem. We'll go to the board and find out whnt they want us to do. If it's nothins. fln'e, I have enou&h work ID do lll)'W~y." Her homecom.lng to Huntington Beach will make her folks and three sisters mighty happy. Debbie, 13; Belinda, 11 and Terry Lee, 7, are waiting at their Delaware Studio aparbnent with their grandmother. The Carneys asked the DAILY -·~~µ,IT .to convey their thanks and ap- preciation for the contributions and letters they hav'e received !rom neighbors, friends and total strangers. Many had he'1'd of Laura after-she was chosen by the county Heart Association as their· "Memorial Day Gift Girl" .... From Page 1 READING .•. tested on what they just read to prompt them to keep up with the quickening pace. Other student!, meanwhile, listen through individual head sets to taped lessons on phonics, syllabication and wo\1 attack. Some, in another part of the room, study power builders and test themselves for comprehension and meaning of words. Students shift am.grunenta every day and the variety of the reading lab eiperience motivates them to learn. .. "They llke it/'· Mrs. Simkins said. 'Ibey read because they want to and not because a book r..virt Js assign. ed." ~- PTA mothers an year Ion g participated in the program, cor- recting testa and helping supervise. Student helpers also were used to run the machines. "We just Started this year. We were sort ()f bewildered ourselves," said Mrs. Sloniger. Critiquing the pr()gram, she said the greatest gains were made in speed, accuracy and retention. "We didn't s~nd enough time on vocabulary. Nex t year we 'll have more work for a~le.rated students, We'll teach skimming and scanning. And how to take lecture notes. "We'd like to get a reading eye camera so we can see what's wrong wi,1!' ~ student's eye movement. It e a dream," she said, "but even. tually we would !Ike to test students for what reading skills they need and develop individualized programs in· stead of ofierlng a smorgubord. But f~r now with 400 kids and two teachers its pretty tough to do." -From P .. e 1 GUN LAW. • • beUer control of maiJ order weapons although. be said he did not favor ban: ning mail order sales. C;own's measure, reguJating the mall order and retail sales of rifles shot guns and l:maller flrUrms wa~ lint heard by the committee ~bout three weeks aco. '.!'he bill would have problblted the sale of rifle• and sbotguna to alltns felons and narcotics addicta. ' Those persons curren:uy are pro- hlbJted trom own.in& smaller, "con· ceti lable" weapons. Mall order sales withln CallfornJa also would be prohibited. To obtain a CW'I , a person would have to apply to the dealu ln peraon. Then the buyer would h8ve to fill out a form to be 1eot to local law enforttment &1tncle1 and Ille state'• Bureau o! Crlmloal JOeJl. UftcaUoo and Jnve1t1iatloL ' -~ .... ..,. ..... ~--. ' Budget Ax Spared $1.25 T ax Seen After Lt!Jng Meet . ' . '. o Newport Beach city councilmen Tuesday night spent almost three hoW'S plunglpg tbro)Jgh 80 pages"of the city's ~page preliminary 1968-69 budget. · They emerged In agreement with 0- ty Manager Harvey L. HW'lburt that there Js not much to be cut. At least two more meetings will be held next Monday and Tuesday nights. The tentative budget calls for $9.1 million in expenditures. Its proposed tax rate is fl.243, but councilmen in· dicated they may round that off to an even ,1.25, as suggested by HW'lburt. The present tax rate is Sl.175. Hurlburt noted to councilmen that the 7 .5-eent increase is almost entirely at· tributable to an actelerated sewer replacement and improvement pro- gram th.at is to s~ next year. According to the Public \Yorks 5,000 Carnival Fans Exp ected For Youth Show hlore than 5,000 youngsters and grownups are expected to shO\Y up over the weekend at the Corona del Mar Youth Center's annual carniva1. Amusement rldes and game booths spom;ored by several local service clubs will be set up Friday. The carnival, on the Youth Center grounds at Fifth and Iris A venues, will open at noon Saturday, and at 1 p.m. Sunday. It will close at about 9:30 o'clock each night. Prizes of a giant stuffed animal will be given away every two hours and a $500 U.S. Savings Bond will be awarq- ed on Sunday. Favorite booths returning this year will include the jungle board, hoop-la, milk can pitch, balloon dart and paint booth. There will also be plenty of hot dogs, cotton candy, cold drinks, pop com, coUee and snow cones. Among service clubs sponsoring booths this year are the Newport llarbor and Corona del Mar chambers of commerce, Community Church . Youth Fellowship, Exchang~ Club of Newport Harbor , Corooa de! Mar High School Boosters Club, Newport Beach .City, Employeli As~ation, E:s:cha_nge Club of Corona del Mar. Kiwanis Club , of Corona del Mar and the Optimist Club of Newport Beach. ~ , Department, the sewer system 1n the 9ldef' pµU or town is literally crumbl- ing. Udo Isle and Balboa are in especially poor shape, said Public Works Director Joseph T. Devlin. Said, Hurlburt of the proposed tax rate, which would finance only about a third of city expenditures: "In view .ot the continually fn. creaaing cost of doing business, and higher prices for material, this tax rate can be considered a sign of con- tinuing' efficWncy and intern a 1 economy, cbfipled with a broader sprea<ling of revenue sources." It is this "spreading of revenue sourcl:ls" that is expected to help furnish funds needed for a recom· mended 6.8 percent increase in some 450 city employes' pay. The preliminary bud,i:tet does not provide for the needed $291,000. Councilmen are. presently con. sldering increases in various llcenso fees, excluding business license•, as one means of generating the needed extra income. The new fees are ex· pected to be approved prior to adop- tion of a final budget sometime next month. · Among questions co u n c 11 m e n directed to Hurlburt was whether some $200,000 recommended ror the citv's ready reserve fund is sufficient. Councilmen noted that lt is the same amount as in previous years. Hurlburt said the city's auditors had sugg!sted the amount for emergency uses, "such as when revenues don't materialize as anticipated." Councilmen instructed the city stafC lo review the proposed fund to make certain it is an adeQuate amount Ray Extradition Papers Given to Foreign Office . . LONDON (AP) - A formal request for the extradition of James Earl Ray, accused assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was handed to the British Foreign Office today by U.S. officials. The documents were handed to the Foreign Office's treaties and na- tionalities section by U.S. Consul General Jack Herfurt. The U.S. Embassy declined details of the petition. It merely described it as "documents required for the ex· tradition proceedings." Stressing the urgency with which the U.S .. Justice Department regards the case, officials managed to collect the necessary documents a day ahead of their own deadline. The documents run several hundred pages and contain information on Ray's identity and the cases against him -both In connection with King's murder and Ray's escape from the Missouri State Prison while servjng an arn1ed robbery sentence. The Foreign Office now must certify that the request satisfies the terms of the extradition treaty with the United States. The Home OUicc then rules on the validity of the murder case under British as well as U.S. law. Then the file goes to a judge for a court hear· ing. The forinal ent"adition request came as Scotland Yard delved into the mysteries of Ray's stay in Britain. Ray has been traced to two London hotels between May 28 and his arrest Saturday, but there is an unexplained gap of about 10 days, starting May 17 when he left Lisbon. U.S. officials have not tried to qu.es- tion 1'-aY to avoid legal complications resulting from Supreme C o u r t decisions in recent years. And now that he has been charged under British law, Scotland Yard cannot in- terrogate him outside a courg.oom. \Vhile British police were trying to ascertain whether Ray had any con· tacts in London , detectives in Toronto were Searching for a short blond man who reportedly came looking for Ray in a rooming house three or four days after the suspect flew to London. Father Will Present Son His Di ploma "Gee, thanks dad." John Blanpied will be able to say at Lincoln In- termediate School g r a d u a t i o n ceremonies TI1ursday. His father, Newport-Mesa school trustee Lloyd Blanpied Jr. will present the diplomas. PLAY IT COOL! GIVE DAD A. GIFT HE'LL ENJOY • • • FOR MONTHS 'n MONTHS munsingwear. ,.-... l " Wintuk Orlon® DRESS-UP SPORTSHIRT •Links texture richness-soft, springy fl:nit • Mock turtle fashion-the no·tie look • COiors bright or soft-fa.sh ion right • Easy washing by hand or machine Si1os M·L-XL -·-·--·-·----···-···-··-$I 0.00 90\.lhftl T.I•. Of coun•, we'll gift wrap hit gift! DEPART,MENT STORE PLAY IT COOL ' l i9h twei9ht bl•11tl of 01ero~ pe!ye1l1r 111d r1yo11 th1t'1 1t•r'"111e11tly 1"•11elll PLUS Z•p•I tr1 1t'"e11t to re1i1' 1t1i111. W11r tl.1111 011 the 9olf lOltrll •• , 11 the''""'., l•d Nl1•i119 e11ywh1r•. Stylel wlttl h11f,belt 111 1111. bl11e, ,.1t1, .11 ..... M~I tLUJ Aklw oJu, ~I ~I!!!! HAYTHORNE'S tQ['2J iiiii CHARGE ACCOUNT 37.11 COAST HWY'. e CORONA DEL MAR 111 AVE. DEL MAR e SAN CLEMENTE I I I -.. .. --· . . . .. ---.... ~.----~ .. l\.ENNEDY .• (Co•ttnued froml'a&e •l An unbroken rucceaslon of election victories carried him to . the pres~encey. Then in Dalla1 in November 1963, he wa1 shot and killed by an assassin: So Robfil.t took up the quest. He moved to New York and won a Senate seat. This year he sought the presidency. Then in Loa Angeles, after a momept of 1riumph in the California primary, Rpbert was '.shot and killed· by an .assassin. .. THINK ALIKE In the close-knit Kennedy family it was natural for the three brothers to t.nint~auk·e on major issues. Alike they were in many ways. But not all. John Kennedy was the bookish brother. A graceful, eloquent man, be was, nevertheless, reserved , aloof with strangers. Bobby was· the moody, in· tense .brother. Whether seeking evidence as counsel for a Senate committee or managing one of J ohn's campaigns, Bobby operated with an intensity many-call- ed ruthlessness. He was the most controversial, the least liked ot the brothers. - Teddy was the likeable brother. No one ever called Start 'em Young · The Orange Coast College summer swim program will begin Saturday and run in two-week sessiqns through Aug. 9. Special toddler classes will be held, as well as classes for all abilities, from beginner to advanced. Recreational swirrinl.ing will be held each day also from 2:30-4:30 p.m. Instructor Georgia McClellan, left, of.Newport Beach, helps Mary Dale, 4, of Newport, learn to kick. Gina Dale of Newport tries to coax Guy Jacobs of Costa Mesa into the water. SC Seeks . ~llege . • Gr1J~\fales ' The U.nJversity of Southern Caillornia is seek- ing college gr,duates to • enter a salarled-while·you- learn teacher edu<!atiOn pro- gram. The program includes ex. perience as a part-time teacher as~!stant at a salar)( of $1 ,500 to $2.000 per school year. The duties of the teacher assistant perrormeCI under the d.irecttt>n of a . teacher. will be preparatory, sup. portive and clerical . Individual tutoring, small group instruction, and other duties may also be assigned. Candidates for the pro- gram should have senior standing or h a v e a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution. The program will qua-Iify can- didates for the standard elementary or secondary credentials. Further information may be obtained by contacting Dr. Donald Wilson , director. teacher education at room 1001, Waite Phillips Hall, University of Southern Wedntsday, Junt 12, 1968 -.. ••• than mis-fit .your baby's feet. E.oOrly fitted. baDy shoes can cause young feet-to develop serious growth problems. That'a why we take the greatest care to make sure these fine quality Buster Brown shoes will fit ~our baby-exa,Uy. 30 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH DAil V ,ILOT Sl BUSTER BROWN. WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH California, Los Angeles1:===============================~· 90007. Teddy ruthless. Less . elo~ ---------- quent than John, less moody ~~~~~~~~ t.han Bobby, tall. handsome Teddy is easy to like. ENTERED SE.~ATE If tragedy has shaped Edward Kennedy, so too did the moment of triumph when he took his Sehate seat in January 1963. Aware of the dangers of being tagged as "the one Kenne:dy too m a n y , ' ' ~ Edward told· newsmen. he ' I. planned to staY· out of the limelight. : Ted studied his new job. He saw newsmen only for home state newspapers and turned· down chalices for na· tionaf television exposure. He sought out the Senate e lder s mo .itly Southerriers to whom the K" e n n e d y s , particularly Robert, were anaUl.ema. He listened to Ul.eir advice and, above all, obeyed a prime r u I" e for freshman senators: be kept quiet. So the Senate elders learn· ed .,, h a t Massachusetts • voters knew: This indeed T was the likeable Kennedy . The assassination cf President ·Kennedy w a s shattering to RoPert Ken- nedy. He was haunted by its memory. WORKED BRIEFLY Ed\vard responded dif- ferently. On the Monday morning of the President's funeral, Edward worked briefl y at his Senate office. "I felt this was where he would have expected me to be," he later said. It was March 1964, more than a year after he entered the Senate, before Edward gave his first major Senate speech, a moving plea for the civil rights bill President Kennedy had proposed. Edward Kennedy has not escaped violence. On a June night in lfl64 he \.\•as aboard a private plao.e that c ra s hed in Massachusetts. He suffered a broken back that immobilized hiln in a hospital for six mont hs. But running for re-ele ction for a full six-year term that Nov ember offered few pro· btems. 11is fam ily, including his pretty blonde wife , Jean, "'aged a campaign that S\Vamped his Republican op- ponent by more than one million votes, a new state record. ATTENDED SESSION The next January, with the aide or a back brace and a cane , Edward Kennedy at- tended the opening Senate session. Robert took office that 5 daY as the junior senator from New York. Like John Kennedy before him, Robert was impatient with the Senate traditions Edward had learned to ac· cept. Edward waited more than a year to make his first ma- jor speech. Robert w:is 1 hardly settled in his seat when tie began speaking out c on issues. Edward quietly deferred to Senate elders. Robert :--c lashed heatedly with com- mLttee chairmen. Meanwhile. E d w a r d • reachittg another milestone led an effort for legislation 'banning poll taxes. Despite oppoll.ition from the White House and the Senate leadeT'ship, it came within four votes of Jl.US3ge. Edward Kennedy h a d matured in t.he eyes of bi, colleagues who admired the way he had mastered all details or the legislation as -well as the way he worked ' quietly to muster suQPOrL .~ . . Claremont Graduates " 3 Counti.ans -' Three Orange C o u n t y students have received bachelor of arts degrees from Claremont M e n ' s, ' College. I Steven R. Boyd, history1 major, of 280 E. Wilson St. graduated Ctini Laude. He 1 had been on the dean's list. I He wrote an honor.5 thesis I entitled, "The Americ-an I Whi·g Party: Politics and I Political Philos1>pby." - was a member of · the Forensics and History clubs, I and plans to attend the University o f Wisconsin Graduate School. Also from Costa Mesa was Michael E. Morrill, 218 E. 16th St., an October graduate. · I Morrill W.85 an assistant solar observer and research 1 assistant for Dr. Harold Zirim at Mt. W il s o n Observatory. The phYlic!i major plans to continue with graduate st udies in astrephysics. Also graduating with a bachelor of arts was Jack L. Schoellerman of 1818 San- tiago Dr., Newport Beach. He had been on the dean's ' list.and was chairman of the Newman Club. He was also a member of the Business Club and board member of the Conference on Religion. The political science major plans to at- tend law t.choot at• the University orSan Diego. I Over 75 percent of the graduating class has been named to the deari's list at least one semeci:er, ac- cording to Claremont College sources. Buffet Set For Wallace George Wallace for presi- dent supporters will hold a 1 buffet dinner and dance at: the Moose Lodge, 1731 s.1 Manchester, An a he i m .I Saturday, according to Helen Odom, Orange County chairman of the V/allace campaign. The affair, which will begin at 7:30 p.m. will feature a film, ' ' Th e California Story" which was filmed during the registra· tion drive which closed in January. Tickets of $2.SCl per person may tie obtained at the Wallace headquarters at 2101 A West Chapman,' Orange. I Funds will go towards costs of tile Wallace.ralliei: 1 plaOncd fur early July in Orange and Los Ange.tes counties, Mrs. Odom said. Pair Graduate At Princeton Two students frQm the I Orange Coast area have received bachelor of arts degi'ees f r o m Princeton 1 University. Gradl.lales Are R!chard I Scott, 120 Collins Ave., 1 Balboa Island: a.nd Peter Campbell Gardett, 14& CliU Drive, Laguna Beach. . .. G ,SPACE STATION & SPACE CRAWLER · DELUXE ACTION SET THREE ACTION TOYS 111 ONE! Space Statioo, Space Crawl· er, Major MAIT MASON in· eluded! ONLY MAmL'S NEWEST ITEM Dfi. DOOUTTLES TALKING DOU From tht current motion pictUr1 & book series. Yes! Every bor and 1irl wm wM1t n DM.t • 6.99 ALMOST 'r HIGH Skediddle Kiddle 4-lnch dolt walks, run• •11d even 1lt1. Head turns,· 1rms •11d leg1 move. Willker can be rem1ved for separate play. $3.50 value only 1,97 BA.RBIE® & FRANCIE® DOLL TRUNK SUPER THINGMAKER® ~ Sb Mt loya 111 on• 910111 sell m.IPICADOOS (Im), FllGHT FACTORY ind 4 1110N! e h4•k• hundreds of pl•stic things '"d decor•fions! · e li1clude1 B bottles of 91nui111 .Ai fr(i'-PlASTIGOOP@, molch •noil 9 99 •cceuorit•I e KIDDIE KOLOGNES 1'111 iOSEIUDI I 1-ll pet'forM "1Wff1' j111t llkit ,,,.,n_I e O"ly 1'' t•U ! Rool1oil heid e 1'1ke her out lo pley-le•r plestit dec1nter op1111I e Flower co1fume m•tche1 -petlon1lity! GENTLE BEN ANIMAL HUNT GAME Colorful tll-nslo111 ef compotltlv. fuit! e Hunt for GENTLE BEN 1nim1I fri1nd1! e 1:0 pl1itic 91m• bo1rdl e R11l-1clion p•rh th1t move! 1.17 2.76 M-16 Marauder Ne•d• no Iott.riff LMk• NII, tovnch roe!. 12 i11ch1t lon1, ""'' n• b.1- t.ri11 or c•"'- laa-Tot-faH 4 97 .... .... . tY lllTIIL Says 11 dlttweo! ~eepy tiooe phrases -ISl'i' telf. Perfect bedtimt '3 97 pl-'1. .... $1 •• -• 4-DAY MATTEL-0-RAMA GIANT MATTEL TOY SALE PRICES EFFECTJVE JUNE 13 to JUNE 17 ' Lucky Locker Kiddies MATT•'S •Only 2" tall!• "Jeweled'' loc•et frame!• Real Rooted tiair! • LO'l"e- IY per$onality1 •Wear il'S 1 locket! 1 17 • Open 111d play sep11r1t1lyl • Little Kiddies All 1tyle1 to choose fro m. 31 Inches tall, bendable, po1eable, comb and l 57 brt11h he_r hair! only 1 MATTEL TOY SALE Lowest Prices Anywhere . TWIST 'N TURN BARBIE DOLL •......................... 2.47 . MATIEL RJDE-AWAY ···-·············--·····-···-·6.99 TUTII DOLL ...... ···········-..... : •..•............•................ 1.67 FLEX! PETS -····-··-········ TALKING HAND PUPPETS ...........•..........•........... 2.99 TWIST 'N TURN FRANCIE DOLL •...•.•.....•.... 2.47 SKIPPER • SCOTIE:R DOLL . . . ·····-·-······· f .17 MATI MASON with MOON SUIT .......... _ ... 2.'19 MATI MASON SPACE CASE ·········-··············2.99 COMBAT MARANDER ······················-·--··--·--·1.9'1 MATI MASON GAME ·················-· --···-2.76 BARBIE GAME . ················ ········································ .. 2.76 BABY SMILE 'N FROWN ··················· . .3.99 24 CAR CASE ................ . ..................... . ... 1.47 SAVE UP TO ' ,.:._ ..,. . ,_._, . . -""""' .. .,, . ._ ' ' -.• . ....___-;;.·;_.,~. ' --.-.A I _I SEE 'N SAY GAMES by MAmL e Mattel-0-Phone· I T~k • 18 minut" ol 2-tJlk wi11 40 friends! • Voices come from ,. ceiver -lik~ 1 real phone! • S discs included! 4 99 Rq. $10 Vllll , Tight Squeeze TM Sftaull SU.Ult frutk A11tk ._ q llllthll • Wl"'ln' aiulin' ICtlon pme for little kids! 811 kids tool • Grett 2.97-· party id11! • Belts, qih"lller, ln- sttuctio11S! Incredible Edibles'" Su1arl1u1 • Make wild ro0fy tl'inn to eat! • Frightfully delic:fousl • Mofcfs a<ld yummy G088lE·DEGOOP 6 ,.6 included! Rec. $14" VD ,11 THINGMAKER ® C;Ji;;;i!'.5QJ FEATURING PICADOOS,,. e Form colorful u1u1r•t of flnish•d · pl1stic 1rt with 9111u/111 ' ,LASTISOOP®I e 'ut PICADOOS ori purst1, w•lt1fl picfur11, 1v1rythin9! e Ei9ht bo.tll11 9enuin1 Pl.ASTlliiOO P, 1 cc1noriet inchld•d l JEWELRY KIDDIES HEART PIN AND FLOWER PIN KIDDLES e The tinie1t KIDOLES of 111 i"1id1 r1•l jew1lry you c1n w•1r! e KIDDLE dolls only 7/t" ind I 1/16" t1U pop out for s1p•r1te pl•yl e S1fety c1tch pinl 99 M1tch"e1 •ny outfit! C: THE TALKING LEARNING MACHINE FEATURING TALKING TILES F1111 to ploy-f111 to IM"'l e .fl2 1ound tteck1 of 11oun1, v1rb1, 1djectiv11, colors, 11umb1n, music 111oil 1ou11dsl ~ S1y1 word1 end numb1,., "•m•• colott! e Pl 1y1 mu1ic, 1p11k1 English, 19'' Fr111ch •nd Sp•nbhl THINGMAKER® FEATURING MINI-DRAGONS e Mold comic•I cre•tur•1 in h11"dr1ds of 1h1p11 •ncf ti111I e W11r 'e111 on belts, shirts 111d blo11se1! :;,;~~Id e Four bottl11 9en11i"1 PLASTISOOP®, •cc111ori•1 induoil1dl MATIEL DOLL CLOTHES SALE I F.REE FASHION ISLAND, Newport leach . . ! ~ -~· -. -.. .,_ . . . -·~ .41b." ... .. • • ... . .... ' . . . • . . . . • , I -.... " • . -..: . . -.. -.. .._ ... .. . ... . . '-• .. • • -.. " DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE Civic Center Location Ui:ely siles for a' new civic center for Newport Beach are now down to two. tt's been a long time getting the.re -18 months, in (act -since city councilrnen formally went on r.e<?" ord declaring the need for greatly expanded murua· pal offices. Last v.•eek a council-appointed citlzen.s' committee considered two 20-acre sites on lrvine lands and unani· mously recommended one of them as an acceptable al- ternative to the present 4.S acre City Hall location. The City ltall site and the remaining alternate site -at the intersection of MacArthur Boul~vard and E. Coast Highwar, in Corona de! Mar -wW now be studied ''in-<lepth' by civic center consultants. Welton Becket & Associates. designers of the Los Angeles Music Center, ~Jil conside~ architectural ~ro~ terns at both sites; whtle E conomic Research. Assoc1 .. ates (ERA) will study the e:conomic factors involved in construction at both locations. The comparative analyses should b~ .compl.eted within six weeks or so, according to muruc.Ipal aides. The citizens' committee will then presumably come up with its final recommendation on the two sites. City councilmen, of course, need not accept the recommen'dation. But it is very probable that they will if the advantages of one site clearly outweigh those of the other. Even then, much work will remain.. S e t t 1 i n .g on a favored location for new government offices 1s but one of many big steps ahead. One big element in the det;isi?n invol~es whether the new civic center should be lim.lted to City Hall ~d police facilities, or should envision eventually baYJ.Dg other governmental, or quasJ.publlc, agencies located nearby. Other Important itema include bow conatruc- tion is to be fl.nanced, what architectural style should be adopted ·and, of course, the timetable. AH of these decisions, together, will determine what the Cost of the new civic center ~Ill be. ,,... There are sociological elements that must be taken into serious account, as well. For example, if the corn· plex were to be built at the Corona del Mar site, what changes will occur at the old City flail area? That is but one of the re asons why the present site will have to receive many more hours of attentiOn from consultant~ than the new site alternative. In any event. the search for a new civic center has been given fresh impetus. Not many months ago there we re a full dozen pos· sible locations under discussion. Boiling those down to two is a significant accomplishment. • Fun for the Whole Family Take a ride on a· merry-go-round this weekend. Or ride a ferris wheel. Or knock down some milk bot- tles in a game booth. I! you tlo these things at .the Corona del Mar Youth Center. you'll be doing a lot: more - such as helping to pay1tbe cost of an improved Youth Center. The fifth annual carnival is aimed at making con- tributions to the Youth Center easy and fun. Carnival hours are from noon to 9 p.m., Saturday, and from I lo 9 p.m. Sunday. ll should be a happy outing, for the whole !amity. J N School Driver 'Education' Dear Gloomy Gus: 'We Should Read IJ.S. and World History' Is a Waste Several years ago I was battel'ed from attacks all over the country when I ventured to suggest that the "driver education" programs in. the nation's high schools were most likely a waste of time, money and energ~. Now, a traffic safety com1111ttee named by former Sec. John W. Gardner of the U.S. Health, Education 8lld Welfare Department reported last month that there is "no certainty and much doubt" that the multimillion· dollar investment in driver education actually makes better t e e n ·a g e drivers. AFTER MANY YEARS of • widespread program (more than. I.S million students took school driver training courses last year alone ), there is no clear evidence 'that driver education "has significant favorable effect upon driver a t tit u d es , performance or other achievements," the report said. A continuation or the present program would "squander vast public sums" tn the process, the committee warned. There is an even more important point involved. Why should a high school teach young people how to drive, which is a purely private skill, having no relationship to education, and diverting public funds from the real task of educating boys and girls as human beings? THE WHOLE IDEA of compulsory mass public education in America - and it was a fine and revolutionary Idea when it was concl!:ived -was to raise everyone to the intellectual and cultural level of the founders of our nation, so that self-government was as We should all file suit against the airport fighters. The ad· verse publicity they are creat· ing is decreasing our property values! -D. M. K. fhll 1t1hln fflltc:h -.n• ,.,,.,., !ltf ... tti.Mrllt -Ill fllt ltlWI,.-. , ...... 'f'Nr 1111 •MYI II COIOMIY COIK. DIN' 11'1111, broadly based as posslble. An ignorant people obviously cannot govern themselves intelligently. But, more and more, we have drifted away from our initial idea. Our prime purpose is no longer to turn out informed and reasonable citizens, but to inrtruct in various vocational and manual skills. Proficiency in sports and the ability to earn a living seem to have become the prime goals of our modern school system. A DUMMY WHO drives a car well is still a dummy. Learning how to drive a car. like learning how lo dance or hit a ball or make fudge nr fix a bicyc le , is something that should be learned at home, not at school. And the more time the school devotes to these margina1 matters, the more dummies it will continue to turn out. It is true that poor driving ki\1s peo· pie. But poor thinking kills even more people -in riots, wars, social revolu· tions, and assorted m a s s ir· rationalities. The schools are charged with the task of turning out people who can drive their own minds and steer their own passions. Any time taken away from this prime task increasc!t civilization's chances of spinning righ1 off the precipice of fate . A Pro-Red's Black Plot WASHINGTON -Immigration and custom authorities have been alerted that U.S. Negro expatriate Robert Williams is preparing to try lo sneak back into the U .s. A fugitive from federal justice. the pro-Red Williams mysteriously turned up last month in Dar es Salaam. the capital or Tanganyika. after living in l!:xile in Cuba and China fOT' the past seven years. Inform.ants among black militanhi in Detroit have warned fed e r a I autborjUes t.hat Williams is due to rl!:tW'n to that area before July to take over leadership of a new underground movement planning to set up an all· black nation within the U.S. Guest of the anti-American govern· ment of Tanganyika , the 4'3-year·old Williams has been in cont.act with Stokely Carmichael. tbe pro.Castro milltant. through I.he Tangan)1lka em· buly here. ,~ ALT B 0 U G ff THEl.R secrtl mt1sage1 &rl!: relayed under the ti&btelt seruritj precaution.s, It can be aoearatel1 r~ed that the recent ucban1e1 dealt with WJ1Uam1' pro- poHd retum and the trow 1.n g pouiblHtJ of violent protest.. here. OOJJilcbael, now organiting miltlant youth ra.ngs in the ctipit.al under the eyes ol Justice Department officials, ha, been urgini Williams to return for what ht describes as "the hot., hot, 1u.mmer." Since arrlvtnt in T 1 n g 1 n 'Ii k 1, Williams baa kept quiet and out of the public e.y1 -u.nlike biJ stead)' rtre.am l of anli·U .S. broadcasts from C-hina and Guba . The militant Negro's closest com· panion has been Sheik Abdul Rahman Mohammed Babu, Tanzanian mini ster of lands, settlement and water development. The two men met while both were in Peking. UNDER 1'HE NE\\' Williams-Babu plan, Negro militants are being en· couraged lo travel to Tan1.ania , where they 11t'l1! be trained in guerrilla '11.'arfare bf fore returning to America. W1lham s, 11.•ho I~ \van led on a kid· ni:1ping charge, ""'as chosen at a ~arch 31 meeting or Negro militants 1n De.troll to leal'.I lhe proposed new b!a('k nation . Miiton It. Henry . chairman of the radical Malctilm X Society. In opening the confe~nce read a telegram from \V llliams as follows: ':'lou stand under world spotlight In corridors of history. Make the most of lt. Through wisdom. u n i t y , perseverance and sacrl:fict'. the seeds of the Detroit conventio n can mature to black naUonhood , ~!ail the invlnclble spirit of our emerginrg black nadon." Conference l'.le\egates , numberlnR about 200, drafted a declaraUon of In· cfependeoce from the U.S. afKI a con- atJtutlon for tbelr 1epar_ate nation, to bt set up in {Ive states Of the South. Paul Stoll ' 'The 'Have Nots' vs. th e Letter$ to the editor concerning the assassinati011 of Robert F. Kennedy and related m.atters have been 1'e· ceived in such volume that an entire page in the DAILY PILOT tomorrow. Thursday, will be devoted to their publfcation. -Editor To the Editor: The direction ln which our society is moving disturbs many wHo believe in our past form of "government by the people, .and ror the people." Those who desire increased taxes for education. social security, medicare. welfare and other handout programs have lost sight of our tottl. history and the prin· ciples upon which our republic was founded and has u own to its present stature. By taking from those who earn more and giving to those who earn less (or none at all) is to defeat free en· terprise. Granted. there is no simpll!: solution to these problems. however legislated evening of the spread of our wealth is against all that our founding fathers stood for. My type of thinking is outdated and will draw trite but ac· cepted rebuttal from many of your readers: however. J feel that the motivation is hidden behind their words. THOSE WHO HAVE not always ra· tionalize why those who have should share. It wouJd be grand. indeed, if all could have everything. It would soon be found th.at competition would cease. incentive would die and progress come to a standstill. Cannot the "do· gooders" in our society see th.at to take from those who have is as classic an example of discrimination as can be found? It seems to be acceptable to discriminate against those who have as long as those who have not gain therebv. Generosity should result from a willin~ness to assist. not from legislation. TO ELl1\1I NATE poverty will reduce the entire nation to 'a state or po verty. Who then will have gained? To assist the poor at great expense to the tax. payer only to have riots and destruc· lion or !he tax.pa yers' property at the hands of those toward whom the help is directed is a paradox to say the least. It all reminds me of the Russian Revolution wherein the oppressed overthrew the capitalists for want of the opportunity to better themselves only t.o end up with a more sophisticated system of oppression. Or ii could be compared with the ultimate goal of unionism wherein the .---B11 George---. Dear George: I let my ne ighbor go In my ~arage once to borrow my pliers and now he goe·s in whenever he feels like it and borrows my tools and power mower withoul ask· Ing. J{ecenUy he was havi ng a party .and ran out or Vermouth. 1 was In the shower and told him to gel a cupful from the kitchen. Now he helps himself without "-Sking -to anything in my home bar. What can I do about a guy like th is! FURIOUS Dear Furious: First. send your wife to Uve with her mother ..• CONF IDENTIAL TO l:.AT'UM'UP. INC.: Yes. I think 3 candy bar with an edible wrap· per ls a good Idea . but I don't think you·rea11y Ahould ask Lady Blrd to endor1e tt ln her anti·lll· ter campaign.. lll!:publle11n1 eat candy, too, -you know. Letters from readers art welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel U reserved. All let- ters must include signature and mail· ing address, but names will be with· held on request. • working man shares equally in the profits of his employer. If this ever becomes the case and the en1ployer feels it not w or th the risk of his capital, thereby closing his business and putting all workers out of a job, who will have profited? IT IS TIME to consider the rights of those above as well as those below. The students. the soldiers, the youth of past years are those nasty old con· servatives of today who "do not understand" the problems of youth. students and soldiers of today. No credence is given to the fact that the older generation has suffered the same experiences and has that prac· tical knowledge to draw upon. I feel that we should read our history and that of the rest. of the world and draw from the lessons of the past prior to thinking that to change everything will result in im· provement for all. R. WHITE Lessott itt Bonest11 To the Editor : On Memorial Day our 50fl lost his wallet on the beach at Newport. Later that day a very nice man drove to our home and returned the wallet. In his excitement over getting his wallet back our so n. Doug Middleton . failed to get the man's name and address. He had no money to reward the man: thi s he did think or doing. THIS \\'AS OUR son 's first such loss. !low grateful we are to the man who brou ght the wallet to our home, We ha ve had our son return things he hq found and have tried to stress honesty. Whoever the man is, we hope he reads your paper, and we also want to say thank you over and over. Lhis proved to our son that we were right. there are still good and honest people in this world. MRS. LOUIS O'CONNELL Savior: Ra%or Strap To the Editor: _..- A friend of mine is the secretary of an important executive in the cil'y of Chicago. A few years ago she left her job, walked through a park. took a sl'lorl bus ride . , . and was homP. Now, her husband comes for hf'r with a cab! She doesn't dare walk through the park! Come sundown. no won1an dares to walk tti_rnugh Central Perk in New York City. Why? All because Mr. Gillette in · vented the safety razor! UNTIL TlUS hDrrlble thing hap- pened, men removed the hair from their faces with the &traight-edged razor. To maintain one of these tools so that it would remove halr frOTI} the face of Amcric•, required a razor 11trap. The rt1zor strap had, In my youth. a secondary duty. In combination with the woodshed It, combined with the 1tront right arm or an adult male, t.o bring understanding to a not·yet adult male. I can recall more than ooe o( tbe.•• "Jayln~s-on-of ·the-strap" ('not one of which can I say I did not have coming!). , AS I RECALL, there were iwo of them. One at school and the second one at home! If I could get the financial backing of some fathers (with strong right arms, of course) I should be most hap· py to form The Save America ·Razor Strap Co. (The company would be hap· py to supply, at no charge, our product to school teachers who have to face dirty-shirted. mini·skirted youth of to· day.) Mr. Gillette, 1 am sure, is turning over in his grave. He didn't mean it that way! HUME SEYMOUR Walking Horse Cruelt11 To the Editor: I write to appeal to animal lovers .and to those who deplore cruelty to animals to work for passage or State Assembly Bill 1812 (introduced by Assemblyman Frank J . Bear of San Die go) which would outlaw the "sor- ing" of Tennessee Walking Horses. To produce a special type of gait in some show horses, "soring" methods are used. Three common ones are ap· plication of oil of mustard on or under the sensitive areas of the horse's hoof, producing severe blistering and ir· rit.ation, chains tied to the feet after oil of mustard has been rubbed on the area, and. a horseshoe nail driven into the quick of the front feet. TO AVOID THE extreme pain then caused by putting his full body weight on hl s front legs. the horse must bring his rear feet forward to maintain balance, thus causing· him to overstride when in motion . Too long, these tortured horses have been pleasing horse show judges. The time is long overdue for con· cerned Californians to take steps to stop this deliberate cruelty. Please write to your state senator and assemblyman. in care of the State Capitol. Sacramento, Cal~fornia 95814, asking them to support and to work for passage or the Bear Bill, A. 8 . 1812 to ouilaw this inexcusable practice. DORIS VAN BRUNT Refu•al to Learn To the Editor: You published a very terse letter IMailbox, June 6) from Mrs. Robert Werkheiser in which she deplorl!:d the Medicare F:spanola, N.ft1., Rio Grandt: Sun: '·\\'hen the American Medical Associa· lion opposed medicare so vehemently, one of the group's arguments was that the: plan represenled ultimate govern- ment concrol over the medical pro· fession . Now we read where the Senate has been petitioned t.o put 'federal ceilings on the fe es doctors charge for treating medic.art and mcdJcaid beneficiaries: The AMA fears perhiaps are being realizl!:d. lt may take some time. but the govern· ment someday could be telling doc· lors what they can charrge." Sht.lbyvllle, K)'., Sentinel: "To our knowledge) no taxpayer bas ever com· plalned about tihe law requiring a rlnancial accounting Of pubUc e.X"· penditures: the only opposition or complamt has come frotn those oo the public payroll who mu.M explain once yearly w h a t lhey'.i:e dolng with 1omeone. else'• money." 'Haves'· fact that ·a Soviet Lile magazinl!: Is being offered to American families. Th.is letter, though short, contained some emotionalizing about Russians being anti-God and communistic. She also leaves one point a bit unclear when she asks, "Where do they get names and · addresses Of American families?" She neglects t.o make cl-ear who "they" refer to. For Mrs. Werkheiser's information, there are beautiful and informative publications available to Americans who care enough to remove their horse-blinders and try to learn what Soviet life is like today when &ome .at. tempts should be made toward in- ternation'.a.l understanding. Soviet Life is an ex.ample of such a publication. A REFUSAL to learn or understand about Soviet life only increases the gap that unfortunately exists today between our counlly and Russia. "Russians do not have horns,'' states the Citizen Exchange Corps, which hosts Russians in American homes and sends Americans to Russia. All Russians are not anti-God. All Russians are not Communists. · For the record, I am not a Com· munist. but I feel that a tittle reading .about Soviet Life, or traveling in Russ ia or talking to people who have traveled there. might enlighten a lot of people. To rephrase a frequently used quote, Better READ than dead. LOGAN M. LOCKABEV One 1'Jore Reason To the Editor: Your editorial (June 6) regarding the reasons for Kuchel's defeat left out a most important one, in my opinion. Regardless of the politi cia n' 1 political philosophy, he must pay some attention to the wishes of the majority. It seemed to me that Kuchel respond· ed to the press and pressure groups a n d the majority be damned. T h i s may not seem important to a paper that consistently represents th e minority opinion in Orange County but it was my main reason for voting against Senator Kuchel. . M. Tl.NSLEY Quotes WWjam D. Burns, L.A. "Criticism o( policl!: may sometimes be warranted. but indiscriminate brickbats only foment (urther dislike and withdrawal of the citizen from his duty Of involvement in good law en· forcement.'' A. R. Wagner, Oakland -"The brl!akdown in Jaw and order is due to the avoidance of the law of order." Wednesday, .June 12, 1968 The editorial page oJ the Datiu Pilo.i seek.$ to inform and stim- ulate reada1 bt1 presenting this newspaPfT'1 opiniom and com- men.ta'll on topics of interest and ~gnifioauc, l.111 providing a forum for the e.ipresston •f Otlr rtadf'rt' opinl•···.. n prescntir'.1 tlte ,, _, J)Oinls of infonMd 11bscrvcrs and spokemen on topic,f of the dou. Robe.rt N. Weed, PubUsher ----·---. Costa Mesa ---_ DAILY PILOT EDI-Tl 0 N VOL. 6 f, NO . 14 f, 8 SECTIONS, 96 PAGES COSTA MESA, CAOFORNIA WEDNESDAY, ~UNE ·1z, 196i • - Y 01ll' DemetoWll' Dally Paper JEN CENTS Tough Gun Bill l(illed ' , Dies for Lack tilfifJP.V:ijte s in Ass(3mbly Committee MASTER OF ANCIENT ART KEEPS CANING ALIVE Ernest Be•tty Shows Basket Woven for Balloonist Piccard Talents Woven Mesa Caner Auu lJ~J.'!P~ist -- By EVELYN SHERWOOD ot t11e D•llr ru.t 1t11rr A strange amalgamation of the talents of two Harbor Area men is helping one of them increase his in~ ternational fame a°:4~ is helping the other one ket!p an ancient art alive. Ernest Lee Beatty, a 79-year-old · Costa Me6a caner, is the master of the fast disappearing art of weaving baskets and chairs, etc. "I've woven cotton pickin.' baskets, lunch baskets and dog baskets in my day," said Beatty. "Now, I'm weavin' ·balloon baskets. Famed Corona del Mar balloonist Don Piccard, who operates a balloon "factory" in Costa Mesa, came into Beatty's workroom at about this point in t.he conversation. The two went into a huddle over the design of a new basket for one of Piccard's balloons. Jt was to be inter-woven with steel wire to hold 16,00J pounds in wspension. Balloon baskets cost around $225 .and take about eight day1 to weave, Beatty said. The bamboo he uses com· es from Malaya. "Of 13 balloons that raced Memorial Day at lndianapolis in the traditional TV Set Stolen A burglar walked into Thomas L. McBride's Costa Mesa apartment at 2376 Newport Blvd., Jate Tuesday and carried away a television set valued at $85, the victim told Costa Mesa police. balloon event be!ore the auto races, 10 of the baskets were Beatty's," Piccard pointed oot. Beatty picked UI' a basket of white painted wicker. ··This is a 'bow' basket used by farmers in the South for vegetables. It's woven by hand from the bark of a white oak tree. "It would cost about $50 today because or the labor involved," he said. "Years ago, everyone wove their own." Beatty was born in North Carolina, and came to Costa Mesa in 1952. Besides plying his c;aning trade, Beat· ty also wields a skillful hand at repair- ing violins and old clocks. He and his wife have four children in Florida, seven grandchildren and eight great-gI'andchildren. Police Listening For Loot Again Cos ta Mesa policemen -one of whom caught two burglary suspects when he heard a stolen horn toot Sun· day -are listening for loot again. Entertainer Barry Kenyon, of 449 Hamilton St., told officers his drum, a wrist watch and suitcase full of clothing worth $100 altogether, were stolen from his car Tuesday. The vehicle was parked near a tavern at 145 E . 17tih St., investigators said. • SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Tb e Assembly Criminal Procedure Com- mittee early today killed a tough .gun control bill, almost a week to the minute after Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was fatally wounded. The voice vote by the 10.member committee came minutes after mid· night on the measure by Assemblyman Robert W. Crown (D· Alameda), a member of the delegation pledged to Kennedy at the Democratic Arlington Drive Due For Repair The road is quickly being paved for irnprovement of Arlington Drive, the major thoroughfare which has been a major thorn in the side of Costa Mesa city fathers. A resolution calling for work on the rugged rpad along a three-quarter mile stretch between Fairview Road and Junipero Drive wnJ be issued by the city council Monday. Widening of the al-foot surface road, which serves Costa Mesa· High School, Maude B. Davis Intermediate ~hool, and Charles TeWinkle Memorial Park, will begin as soon att possible·. City Manager Arthur R. McKenzie, City Atty. Roy June and Assistant City Atty. Robert l{umphreys ~~ to sacramento Monday to·mate~ ;w .. rangemtints for the job. Complications bad to be surmounted because the 24-foot strip required to widen the deteriorating thoroughfare is part of the Or~ge County Fairgrounds, which is state land. McKenzie and June. representinJ! the city, and Humphreys, a director of the Orange County Fair Board, met with' Tom Bair. director of the state Fairs and Expositions Board. at the California Department of Agriculture. State officials require detailed in- formation on the need for dedication before giving such land away. They said to simply submit a report on the critical need for widenln~ Ari· ington AvenUe. whic h is choked with vehicle and pedestrian traffic at peak school hours and spotted with mud puddles in the winter. The city engineer's office currently is preparing cost estimates so bids can be taken for the job, which officials (See REPAIR, Page I ) Mesa Girl Injured By Spraying Glass Spraying glass cut a Costa Mesa gi rl in the face Tuesday when her car col- lided with another vehicle at an east side intersection, police said today. Linda L. McCoy, 18, or 181 Broadway, was treated by the family doctor after her car, westbound on 18th Street, struck one driven north on \Vestminster A venue by Kenneth P . J ohnston, 6.1, of 317 Robinhood Lane, Costa Mesa, according to police. Mesa Students Speak Out Principal Conducts Candid Talk Sessions for Kids By THOMAS FORTUNE OI , ... D•llr rll•I lt•lt Students were encouraged to speak their piece .at Sonora School in Costa Mesa this school year. All through U1e year they confront· cd each other in class meetings t~t brough~ out the best and the worst m them . Periodically sittJ.ng around in a cir· cle, they discu.s9Cd strengths and shortcomings of the educational sys- tem, what the purpo!!ie is of their being in 11cbool and how they are getting along with eech other. Wemlell Edwanfs, principal of the elementary school, inaugurated the class meetings as a way of making school relevant to the pupils' every· day life. "I'm convinced from my own ex· pcrience with lhls that something good happens," he said. "The brain realJy Is designed to think, not memorize," he said. "Mem- ortzation lacks relevancy lo life. We ~ tllat too many people cannot make life's choices. Instead ol thinking through a decis ion they act emotion· ally." He faulted Ule certainty principle in school-the definite right or WTon g answer. "Kld6 who tend to be a failure in school always see themselves at odds v;ith the establishment," he said. ··niat's \llhy kids who are having problems eat up class meetings. They have always smpect.ed that things aren't so neat and Udy. "On the other hand, conforming students. especially girls, often are disturbed by class me<tlngs. They sense there is no right or wrong answer." Edwards, who next fall will move on from Sonora 1.o the Fountaln Valley !IChool system, borrowed the class meeting idea from Or. William Glas- ser. a JlflYCh.iatrist·turned-.chool con- sultant. The format of the cla11 meeting Is simple. The teach61' Jl09eS a question and the class di8CU88CI it. In directing the discussion, the hard- est thing for the teacher to do, • - ... E dwards said, is avoid coming up with a solution. "The class meeting is antithetical to their training. Typically, teachers are going to be judgmental/' he remarked. tie said he has found teachtts reserit U1e meetings for taklng time away from the cWTiculum "they feel they must cover at all costs, even if jt ~ans some chikln!n hate it and de..,lop an anti-Intellectual ideot!lica· tion." · Sometimet problems of Individual student! are discussed in clals meet- ings. Obtaining from a student in front of his classmates a promlJe to lm· prove Is orten more eUectlvt than discipline. Edwards said. The students can be very direct, he noted. They may tell a student who is having dllOcuUy with studies he roots around when the teacher is ex· plaining stuff. Sometimes the students get stcem· ed. upj so class meetings alway1 are held ust before recess or a break, Edwards ;atd. National• Conventio:i Crown 1ald none of the five Republlcau. on the committee: voted for the bllJ. He sofd all five Democrats favored the measure, but 1iz votes were needed for appro,vat However, be indicated there was a posslblllty anotlier meaaure might be sponsored by some other lawmaker· and sent to a different committee. Assembly ~er Jesse M. Unruh, Kennedy's California ca m·p a 1 g n chairman, told newsmen Tuesday be fayored swift acUon on a gun control law. Crown said Unruh supported his bill after amendments were added Tuesday to make it tougher. Gov. Ronald Reagan told his weekly news conference Tuesday California now has probably the beat gun control laws of any state. However, he said some im- provements could be made, including be~ control of mall order weapons, ... ~. -DAILt r lLOf SMtl f'Mfto tt~ui 'rel RELAX~ Patternmaker Wayne Hel,,;lck winds up his wooden clock; which has ·orily one metal part, the weigh$. as \vork· day draws to a close at ~ewport Harbor Pattern Co .•. where·he often spent an occasional !ew moments off to put ·the intricate mechanism together a~ a person~! challenge. Got Ti111e Builds Clock Duri1ig Spare Hours By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of 11\t D•lflr r 1t11 51tll 'fime waits ror no man. But when you have a spare lunch hour here, get to work early there, then. you can have some fun by building something with which to measure those e :z: t r a momenU in the future .. Craftsman Wayne A. Helmick, CO· owner of Newport Harbor Pattern Co., 461 N. Newport Blvd.. however, doesn't think he'll take the time to build a wooden clock again. Eight months were consumed in constructing his unique timepiece. which hasn't one working metal part and loses only five minutes every 12 hours, depending on atmospheric con- ditions. "Then it took another Month to get it tuned up riJlht." says Helmick, of 12382 Browrilng Ave., Santa· Ana. whose hands a.re literally tuned to the moods of wood. ,, LETS STUDENTS TALI( Principe( Wtndoll Edworda lVIalcrials for U1c 13-gear clock were relatively inexpensive, since hard rock maple was used !or all but the Lucite face, which·cost '4.!'JO and the weight is made of solid lead. Nylon monofilament fishing line is used to suspend the weight. Personal satisfaction is the only con- sideration involved In Helmlck's spare time projects, which have run the gamut from rubber band.powered airplanes to a muzzle-loading flintlock rifle. "I built a gun and it works," he ex- plained. ''I buill a clock and it works," he adds. · "I kind of like the oddball stuff," he says and no one much disputes him. "I just enjoy seeing It run," .he con- cludes. Helmlck and bis partner. James T. Wright, are the men to see when it comes to b1.1Jldin g a pattern for some component which must be reproduced over and over. Their shop makes everything from custom light pole standards to boat propellers, to -you name it. "All my work has been mechanical," says Helmlck, a former model and mockup technician for Douglas Aircraft Co., "but I. always seem to come back to woodwork." Two of h.ls prize projects have been bandsome grandfather clock cases. one of them a seven-foot specimen with double doors. which took less time than his unusual wooden clock. Each gear ln the wooden clock was carefully cut and smoothed, most of it with power tool1. •i'J'bey say you can Jigsaw and file the ~· but that would be a lifetime job, I he esplaint. Material for the handsome, modem clock cost perhapa ~. but, pressed for an answer as to labor, the price skyrocnts. "l wouldn't touch the job again for any less than $500." he says. although one suspects the e!rort was worth tt, in terms of enjoyment. Helmick admits tllnt he stamped II with the finishing date, ot Jan_ 19, 19118, because time, after all, man:hesion. 0 1n case someone dip It up some- day," he says w1th 1 smile • although be said be did not favor ban· Ding mall order 11ales. Crown's measure, regulating the mail order and retail sales of rifles, shot guns and smaller firearms, was first heard by the, committee about three weeks ago. The bill would have prohibited the sale of rifies and shotgul)s to aliens, fe1ons and narcoUcs addicts. Those persona currently are pro- hibited from owning smaller, "con· cealable" weapons. Distraught Dad Held In Break-in . A Costa Mesa father, tormented by the Vietnam combat death of his only son, is free on bail today, after break· lng into a San Diego photo shOp to get pictures of the youth's military funeral. Anthony Gerome, 51, of 240 16th Place, was arrested on suspicion of at· tempted burglary after witnesses call- ed police, but. was released on $2,500 bail Tuesday. Victor Goozalez, owner of Victor's Custom Photography Studio, bas not decided whether to prosecute the anguished real estate saIUman, who smashed the fancy glass door , wJth a tire iron. "The genUeman has altei111, bad quite a loss," Gonzales told tbe D41LY PILOT today, "He must be Suimtng a great deal of sorrow. Why add to it?'' Gonzalez, however, said he reels it is only fair that someone should replace the ornate, $100 door which he destroyed on Monday, The suspect -who could not be reached at his home !or commmt to- day -told San Diego police he visited over the weekend in the hope of get- ting pictures taken at the May 18 fu r,cral. l~e \Yent to {he closed shop on Sun- day, then returned on Monday, shortly before Gonzalez: arrived from a OA·eekend business trip, and reportedly went into a frenzy when he found it closed again, · Ironically, Gonzalez said today. his studio handles weddings and otber happy occasions, but he sent a photographer to the Fort Rosecrans funeral or Sgt. Michael A. Gerome, 21, as a favor to a Lions Club associate. Friends of the Gerome family had ordered proofs of photographs of the young Gl's Dag-draped casket and the rifle squad as it gave the country's final salute to him. "I h&ve never met Mr. Gerome or had any dealings with him over tbe photos," Gonzalez said today. Gonzalez said friends of the Gerome famlly purchased proofs of the runerAI pictures Tuesd8y and will presumably order some to hell,J the Gl's famlly honor their grief a04 losa. Young Sgt. Gerome was killed May 7 in Vietnam and the funeral was May 18, according to reports. Orange Weather If you don't see the sun to- morrow morning, wait a while; it'll be a little late. That's the word !rom forecaster Gordie Shields who sees a continued , cooling trend along the coast. INSmE TODAY TM mv1U1COU1 mon. w'th th4 m111ttrio1U' Ufe at ~ non.de· 1cript London Hotd WCI Uat ob- ject of one of grc11U1t man- hunts in ht.storu. P11oe 9. ,,_ ,,• ....... '-'""""• ' Cle!fl.Nlttll ,,.... c-ia n c,.._,.. it DMlll ..... l 1.itwl•I ,... lit •n"rh""-1 l .. tt "IM!Kt ll>IJ 'JN C•llt l H_._,. It Allll ......... 11 M•..... • , I .... ... 0-... -• . --·-.... .._ ....... ~ ..... % DAILY rllDT .. . ---- • · .... ·~-, -. . .... ..... ':" -. ' . -. ·-' Airport-t~oard Demands . Cou_~ty Showdown BJ JMS altoiAca: .... DellY ""' .,.., Fuminl Oronp County alrJ>ort com· mbsionus blew their tops Tuesday nlght and demanded a showdown meeting with the Board o t Supervisors, charging their · advisory role Is being usurped by County AdmlnlstraUve Ofncer Robert E. Tbomaf. A sublease to Cable Copirnuter Heart Girl Recovering After ·Scare It's been a rough 15 days for the James Carneys of Huntington Beach, but the worst is over. Tiny 3-year-old heart patient Laura Carney underwent a IO.hour closed heart operation on May 29 at St. Bernard~'s H o a p J t a I in San Bernardino to partially relieve her breathing problems caused by a bad1y deformed heart. lier parents and the team of heart surgeons who per£ormed the operation though at first it was a success. The first clue that it wasn't what they hoped came when one surgeon Said he wasn't gettin~ the expected '·bl•Jrp" sounds wh ich the new opening in the heart chamber should make. Symptoms developed with Laura's hreathing becoming more and more dUficult until she had convulsions. The surgeons perlormed a second operation Tuesday, three hours this time. to reopen the ori&lnal opening which bad closed. Today Laura can breathe. Her lungs are clear. She's alert and brighteyed, but she "hurts." She will be watched closely by the Intensive care staff of St. Bernadine's another day or so, then transferred to the pediatrics ward. Her homecoming to Huntington Beach will make her folks and three siaten mla:hty happy. Debbie, 13; Belinda, 11 and Terry Lee, 7, are waiting at their Delaware Studio apartment with their grandmother. The Carneys asked the DAILY PILOT to convey their thanks and ap- preciation for the contributions and letters Jbfy have received from neighbors, friends and total strangers. Many had heard of Laura after she was chosen by the county Heart Association as their "Memorial Day Gift Girl." Birthday Group Meets Thursday A special, executive committee planning events for Costa Mesa's big 15th anniversary birthday celebration just 16 days away will meet Thursd.ay in Chamber of Commerce conference rooms. Primary aim of the noon meeting, at this juncture, is to set events for Saturday, March 29, mid-point of the three-day commemoration of city in· corporation on June 29, l 9 5 3, spokesmen say. A special sales program in. shopping centers throughout the city is planned Friday throuj:h Sunday, with a citywide open goU tournament scheduled Sunday. Highlight of the week will be the 15th anniversary banquet Sunday night at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club, featuring speakers who will air views of vfflat the city can expect by its 30th birthday. Coita Mesa just passed the 73,Qj() mark in population, a vast step beyond what city leaders could have guessed when cltyhood was attained 15 years ago. • DAILY PILOT ---a.--. N. Woo4 -n.,,. •• Koo'lil ..... n.t..01 A. MllfPllfH --J•tl: .. c.1.., , •• 1 NltH• ...:""" ~ u..rt~1 Olrldor ---1)0 Wort h r s1,..t M•lll111 A•4Nu1 P.O. h X 1660 92626 OtltW Offfto1 ,,.....,, hOCll; 2211 W ... .., loult••r• ..,.. ...... <II• 1'U •«nl • ..._ ltlli•lh,.,. loodl: M JI; ftrt>tl c:. ~ 11 air tu! itrm, !or space Jn the -bllildloi ··-Ibo uproar. Tbe oom•tuloc earlier bed deftrrid action on C1ble Commute.r's request for the sublease approval two weeks ago. Cable Commuters started flying out of the airport Saturday, June 1 as the firm had widely advertised. Thomas at the suggestion of County Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan approved the '111111111• of ._ from Paelac ........ -,. --u.e:t' IOU~ ol Stnla Ana =i:r= the lhe-ka Tu<aday by moving that the C.ble Commuter tublease be denied. "My uriderstanding ls that we recommend action to the Board of Supervisors -not the county ad- ministrative officer," Gillmore charg- ed. "Jn this case, a decision has already been made. Are our actlons CAIL.Y PILOT ....... W Lit Pipe WATCH THE WORDS -Teacher Mrs. Dorothy Slonlger watches wi th students Debbie Mitchell and Kenny Kalmbach as words are flashed on blackboard to build readlng ·speed in Ensign Jntennedlate Scllool readlng labo:atory. At 800 WPM That's ·Top Ensign Reading Speed Read faster, kids. Read fas ter. And while you're at it -learn to understand better. That could be the creed of teachers Dorothy Sloniger and Lois Simkins who today wrapped up a first-time reading laboratory program at Ensign lntzrm ediate School. Speed reading techniques used at the school in Newport Beach helped students read fa ster and '''ith better co mprehension. After a semester o( only 22 minutes or instruction per day, seventh graders who started out reading 250 words per minute read at a rate of 350 to 800 words per minute. And tests show they now understand more of What they read. Some oI the seventh graders read with the ability of college students. Most read at least at the ninth grade level, Mrs. Sloniger said. Several mechanical de vices are used to do what the teacher can't do fo rce students to read faster. Among these are: Tachistoscope -a projector Lhat fla shes words on U1e blackbo!l{d for 1/5 of a se<:ond or Jess. Controlled reader -a projector that rapidly moves through a written story showing but a fe w words at a time. Reading accelerator -a shield that moves down the page of a book block· ing out type·at a predetermined rate. The machines are used to keep students reading a lltUe bit faster than they want to read. Then they are tested on what they just read to prompt them to keep up with the qu.ickening pace. other students, meanwhile, listen through individual head sets to taped lessons on phonics, syllabication and word attack. Some, in another part of the room, study power builders and t~st themselves for comprehension and meaning r.f words. Students shift assignments every t.lay and the variety of the reading Jab experience motivates them to learn. "They like it," Mrs. Simkins said. "They read because they want to and not because a book report is assign· ed." PT A mothers all year I o n g participated In the program, cor· recting tests and helping supervise. Student helpen alro were used to run the machines. "We just started this year. We were sort of bewildered ourselvc~," said Mrs. Slonlger, Critiquing the program, she said the greatest gains were made in speed, accuracy and N!tent1on. "We didn't spend enough time on vocabulary. "Next year we'll have more work for accelerated students. We'll teach skimming and scanning. And how to take lecture notes. "We'd like to get a readlng eye camera so we can see what's wrong \\'ith a student's eye movement. "It's a dream," she said, "but even· tually we would like to test students for what reading skills they need and develop Individualized programs in· stead of oUerlng a smorgubord. But for now with 400 kids and two teachers It's pretty toulh to do." Fraud, Sabotage Cries • Mar OCC Student Vote Elections were held in pairs at Orana:e Coa&t College this lipring when fraud and sabotage 1poiled original balloting. One ·election had to be repe1ted becauae of ballot box gtuffing. A 1e· cond bad to be rerun because can-· dld1te1· campaign poster1 were tom down 1nd a campaign booth ripped •P-•rl The election tampering has caused charge ind counttrcharge to fly on the Cost.a Mesa Colltg• camp~. but the culprJt.s have not betn caught In the latest repe•t elecUon. Al Porco was elecled studeM body pre•!· dent tor nei:t year. Accusatlon1 were Jevoled a(alnll bl.I backers-by can- dldate Bob Nuttman and supporters, but couldn't bt subltantl&ted. Three candidates' CIJl'pliln posters disappeared ovorniibt and Nuttm .. 's booth Wll WftObd, Tiie llludont judJclaJ boanl lound In· sufficient evidmce to npport ac· cusattcm1 and. Electloaa Commluloner 'Tom Lankard ordered-a new tlecUon "to ci.ar th• air." Porco won by a grNler plurality than he had the Ont time. Earlier in the smeate·r a vote on revl&k>1u: to the student const1tut1on was repeated btcauae, 11 WnUrd U · pWntd, "a larl• number cl ballots were very obviously marked by the samt peraoo." \. ..., Yllld JI ... do whit lllo 114. •'illltllllve ataff wants?"· Ion · Chairman Dennis E . of Newport Beach agreed. ministrator l.s golng to mate the decisions, perh1ps we should abollah Ui.11 commis&ion." Commlsg\oner Roger SlateJI of Hun. tlngton Beach· angrily chaUenged a previous niove by the Board of Supervisors for an admini&trative study for a commls11on recom· mendation to waive fuel flow fees for Harbor Board Decision Due Within Week A decision on the future Orange County Harbor-District will be made by the Board of Supervisors within one week. The board, after hearing a report on the proposed dissolution of the district, yielded to pleas of urgency !rom a legislative representative, the pres!· dent of the county League of Cities and two city representatives. Supervisor s heard County Administrative O!licer ·Robert E. Thomas report on the 19-page study made by a supervisors' -appointed committee of three count y officers and two League representatives. Thomas concluded b y recom· mending that the district be dissolved and a county Department of Harbors, Beaches and Parks be substituted. He said the job could be completed i'n one year. From Page l REPAIR ... hope will be completed shortly after school opens in the fall. Arlington Drive initially will be 44 feet wide, but the city is asking for a 1()().foot right-of.way dedication. to allow for future improvement needs. A portion of the required land also is under federal jurisdiction as a result or the Old Santa Ana Army Air Base lease. But thl8 will expire in Sep· · tember, a~rding to McKenzie. Costa Mesans, especially those liv- ing in the immediate vicinity, have been campaigning for improvement of Arlington Drive for a Jong time. During the April city council cam· paign, it was one of the most fre· quenUy mentioned problems in a survey of high school students, asking about the city's greatest needs. Air caulornla and -... ~ .... : the airport. "We held an extensive hearinc oq this and the recommendations we ient to the board were comr,lete and well documented,'' said Sla cs. "Now we find they have asked'the CAO to stu~ the matter some more." · Carpenter·triect..to calm things down with "sit tight until we get a hear1ng on the whole problem. We'll go to the board and find out what they want us to do. Jf it's nothing, fine, I have ' enotllb work ta do UIJWV," r The commission was '&lso upsit Tuesday night over a letter from ttie Crand Jury requesting that all leas,s and expansion of facilities at t~e airport be delayed· until the Pereb!a rePort on the airport is completed. ' Slates -charged the jury was "out Of order." The commission ordered that a llst · of action taken since last Marcb be forwarded to the Grand Jury. Police Seek Marine, 17, ! As CdM Slaying Suspectl By JEROME F. COLLINS Of lr.t D•ll't l'llM S11n A 17-year-old AWOL Camp Pendle· Ion Marine is being sought as the prime suspect in the slaying of Corona del Mar insurance man George F. Lyons, Newport Beach police disclos- ed today. Pfc. Edwin William Chott Ill of Per· ryvllle, Mo., is named in a murder wm-rant i.nued by Newport Harbor :t.funlcJpal Court . The warrant, car· rying oo ball, was issued secfetly several days ago. . Newport Beach Ponce Capt. Louis }feeres, said the search for Chott, pro· noWl('ed CO't, is centered on the St. Louis, Mo., area. "At our request: the l<"'BI ha5 en. tered the c85e and has obtained a federDI warrant charging the suspect with unlawful flight to avoid pro· secution for murder," Heer es said. He noted that "some leads" on Chott'S: whereabout.a had failed 1o develop in recent day•~ Chott was de.scribed as ~ youth -of mediwn build, five feet, ten inches tall, with a light brown crewcut and brown eyes. He en-listed in the Marines five months ago. Water District Meeting Delayed Graduation days have stalled a regularly scheduled meeting of the Costa Mesa County Water District, \Vhich was originally planned for Thursday night. Some members of th e board have sons or other relatives graduating from Harbor Area st:hools, so the 7:30 µ.m. session has been rescheduled for the following week. The June 20 meeting will involve a fairly routine agenda, according to CMCWD spokesmen. He was last seen at Camp Pendleton on ·ME:oy 20, the mo"ning of Lyons' murder. · The young suspect is reportedly from a family of modest circumstances. Capt. Heeres said Chott was reported se~n in Springfield, Mo., at about the time Lyons' missing 1961 Thunderbird was found there In a motel parking lot. ' Lyons, 48, was bludgeoned to death In his small apartment at 7201h Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar. Capt. Heeres declined to di11cus!I wh~evidence allegedly linked Chott to the slaying. Dr. Cunningham Named' to Lead Baseball Parade New school superintendent, Dr. \Villiam Cunningham, will be grand marshal for the 21st' annual Harobr Area Baseball Parade Saturc;1ay. The Newport-Mesa school chief will head a procession of 2,800 boys from 236 baseball teams. The parade, the largest and longest ever, will start at the Balboa Pier parking lot at 9 a.m. It will move up Newport Boulevard, travel al9~ Coast Highway and will end at the Community Youth Center at Fifth and Iris avenues in Corona del Mar. Officials from Costa Mesa and Newport Beach will join in ceremonies opening the ne\v baseball season, which ,,·ill include a game between l\VO of the younger teams. The baseball program and the parade are co-sponsored by the two ci ties' parks departments and the Harbor Area Boys' C1ub. Baseball Commissioner is Rod MacMillian. PLAY IT COOL! GIVE DAD A GIFT HE'LL ENJOY • • • FOR MONTHS 'n MONTHS Wjntuk Orlon® DRESS-UP SPORTSHIRT • Links texture richness-soft, springy kn it • Mock turtle fashion-the no.tie look • Colors brlght or soft-fa shion right 9 Easy washing by hand or machine 5;,., M-L·XL -.. ------................. $10.00 Of course, we 'II gi~ wrap his 9iftl OEPARTMINT STORE .. ' PLAY IT COOL l i9ht>-·1i<.1ht bl"'' of D1cro11 1toly11l1t •11d r•y•11 tJ.11', P''"'1n1ntly pr1111d ~LUS z.,,1 tr••'"''"'+• .,,1,+ ''''"•· W11r th1n1 !"" the 90H <:oura• .•. •I tl.1 t •m• •• lutf r.1••1119 •nywhor.. Styl1d .. 1tt. h•lf-klt h; t•n, blue, ,.,,, .. ~. Maw! tLlMI .J.aJw oJu1 Fl ~ E HAYTHORNE'S LI::2) CHARGE ACCOUNT 3311 COAST HWY. e CORONA DEL MAR 111 AVE. OEL MAR e SAN CLEMENTE '· • , I • -~~---~~-~-~-~--~-~-~-~~ ....... -~.~ .................... " ......... ~ ........................... ""l.""'!""' ...... '""'' .. ""!SJ ... '5,..~•-'"'!5~·~.:""Jl"l4Pl~1~?·•~'· ... ~s...,.~.a~.~2~$"2! ... i!ll,,ll!!!'ZZ@)"'';s~;s~.)S~)i!ll'!,)01!!11A""'l!!!'ll!ll!J!l!!!i!!ll!ll • "W·ll ,.., .. I' 1 ----.. --· DARY PILOT ED ITORIAL PAGE ,--~~~~-····-·-·~~~---.I Solid, Steady lt certalnly won't come as a surprise to anyone, but Costa Mesa Is growing. . City Manager Arthur R. McKenzie announced this week that Costa Me~a·s population officially stands now at 71,300. A special census, based on a n analysis of water meters, telephones and other indices. estab- lished the figure and lhe folks at city hall can put the new figure to use. A municipality's share of numerous lax funds i!'i based on population. Costa Mesa's increase of 2,100 persons in the past year will mean a bout $27,300 in revenue to the city treasury. . The fastest growing city in Orange County now is Huntington Beach, which several weeks ago passed the 100,000 .population mark -a spectacular increase over its 11,500 population established in the 1960 census. Costa Mesa now ranks seventh among Orange County's 25 incorporated cities. The cities with the larger populations are Anaheim, Santa Ana, Hunting- ton Beach, Garden Grove. Fullerton and Orange. For the most part, the growth pattern in Costa Mesa is solid and steady. This bas helped our schools keep pace with the services required. Something to Consider Almost everyone in town has worried about what is happening and what will happen to Costa Mesa's down'town area -the commercial community gener- ally surrounding the Harbor Boulevard-N'ewport Boule- vard intersection. . The proble!JlS and worries of . Costa Mesa 's older business community are no different than those of hund- reds of other cities throughout the United States. Con· sider these remarks from a publication called Down· town Idea Exchange: School Driver 'Education' Is a Waste Several years ago I was battered from attacks all over the country when I ventured to suggest that the "driver education" programs in the nation's high schools were most likely a waste of time. money and energy. Now, a trafiic safety committee named by former 'Sec. John W. Gardner of the U.S. Health. Education and Welfare Department reported last mooth that there is ';no certainty and much doubt'' that the multimillion· dollar investment in driver education actually makes better t.e e n ·a i e drivers. AFI'ER MANY YEARS of a widespread program (more than 1.5 million students took school driver training courses last year alone), there is no clear evidence that driver education "has significant favorable effect upon driver a t t i t u d e s , performance or other achievements," the report said. A continuation of the present program would "squander vast public sums" In the pr<>cess, the committee warned. There is an even more important point involved. Why should a high school teach young people how to drive, which is a purely private skill , having no relationship to education, and diverting public funds from the real task of educating boys and girls as human beings? THE WHOLE IDEA of compulsory mass t>Ublic education in America - and it was a fine and revolutionary idea when it was conceived -was to rai&e everyone to the intellectual and cultural level of the founders of our nation, so that sell.government was a.s Dear Gloomy Gus: We should all file su.it against the airport fighters. The ad- verse publicity they are creal· ing is decreasing our property \lalues! -D. M. K. ~ flill f9tlff't ,.ffKh ,_,., ""9wl, - lllCISHflt1 !II .. If "'' MWllll-. StM .,...r "' , .. VI II Ollll'l'IJ Gu1, OtllJ l'Utl. broadly based as p06Slble. . An ignorant people obviously cannot govern themselves intelligently. But. more and more, we have drifted away from our initial idea, Our prime purpose is no longer to turn out informed and reasonable citizens. but to in.struct in v.arioos vocational and manual skills. Proficiency in sports and the ability to earn a living seem to have become the prime goals of our modern school system. A DUMMY WHO drives a car well is still a dummy. Learning how to drive a car. like learning bow to dance or hit a b'all or make fudge or fix a bicycle. is something that should be learned at home, not at school. And the more time the school devotes to these marginal matters, the more dummies it will continue to turn out. It is true that poor driving kills peo- ple. But poor thinking kills even more people -in riots, wars, social revolu· tions, and a ssorted m a s s ir· rationelities. The schools are charged with the task of turning out people who can drive their own minds and steer their own passions. Any time taken away from this prime task increases civilization's chances of spinning right off the precipice of fate. A Pro-Red's Black Plot WASHINGTON -lmmigratian and custom authorities have been alerted that U.S. Negro expatriate Robert Williams is preparing to try to sneak back into the U.S. A fugitive from h!dera! justice, the pro-Red Williams mysteriously turned up last month in ~ar es Sala~f!l · ~e capital of Tanganyika, after living 1n exile in Cuba and China for the past seven years. Informants among black militants in Detroit have warned f e de r a I authorities that Williams is due to return to that area before .July to take . over leadership of a new underground movement planning to set up an a\1- black nation ;within the U.S. Guest of Ule anti·American govern· ment of Tangany;ka, the 43·year·old Willlams has been in contact with Stokely Carmichael, the pro-Castro militant. through the Tanganyik1. em- bassy here. A L T R 0 U G H THEIR secrtt rneu..,.. are rel1yed under the tiabtelt 1ecunt.y precautions. it can be aocur1t1ty rep:orted that the recent exchan111 dealt with Williams' pro. posed retnrn and the I r o w i 11 g posliblJJIY ol vlolont ..-oi.su heh. Carmichael, now or1•nizing mllit.anl youth 1an1s In the capital under the eyes of Ju.atice Department officials. has bttln urgin& Williams to return for what he describes as "the hot, ho~ summer.'' Since arrivtna: ln T 1 n g a n { I lt 1. WlllJa.ms has kept quiet and ou of the public •Y• -Wllike hlJ 1ttadY ltrea!n -- j . . of anti-U.S. bro.!dcasts from China and CUba. The milltanl Negro's closest com- panion has been Sheik Abdul Rahman Mohammed Babu, Tanzanian minister of lands, settlement and water development. The two men met while both were in Peking. UNDER THE NEW WilUams·Babu plan, Negro militants are being en- couraged to travel to Tanzania, where they will be trained in guerrilla warfare before returning to America. Willi ams. who ill wanted on 1 kid- naping charge• was chosen al a March 31 meetin g of Negro militants in Detroil lo lead the proposed new black nation. MUton R. 1-lenry, chairman of the radical-Malcolm X Society, in openin~ the conference read a telegram from Williams as follows : "You stand under world spotlight in corridors of history. Make the most or It. Through wisdom. u n it y , per1everance and sacrifice, the seeds of the Detroit convention can mature to black nationhood. Hall the Invincible 11pirJt of our emergin& black nation." Confer«ince delegate!. numbering about 200, drafted a declaration of in· dependence from the U.S. a.nd a con- 1tltutlan for their tepArate na.tfon. to bl ael up in Uv1 atatu of. the South. P111IS.OU "It has long been recognii ed lhat downtown 1uller1 the defect of one of its great virtue5. The virtue is Its size and diversity. "The defect illherenl In thi s Is lhe multiplicity of individually owned firms and, perhaps more serious. the almost unbelievable multiplicity of ownership of the real property. This is intensified by absen•ee own- ership. estates and trusts. ; . "As has olten been pointed out, a shopping centt-r typ1~ally has a single ownership of land, concomitant .ablhty to make and enforce unifo rm polici es on many things -from parking systems to store hours." One of the suggestions being advanced to pull dC'lwn- town a reas back into the business mainstream is the formation or a commercial improvement district. Such a district. in effect, provides a single unit of manage- ment and control for a diversity of businesses and property owners. ll has proved successfuJ in severaJ states and a number of California communities are now considering it as a remedy for their ailing down- town districts. It can't be done by wishing and it can't be done by !Jl~ee or four smaJI merchants getting together ar..:I dec iding they'd like to organize a united commercial front. It takes close working relationship with the.ci ty governmen~ -and it takes enough solid promise and salesmansh1p to attract financiaJ investment. Even when the ultimate routing of the Newport Freeway through the downtown area is determined some program of action must be put into effect if ~ownt?wn Costa Mesa is not to simply wither and turn itself into an array of beer joints, second-hand stores and run...ctown filling stations. Certainly it is something that downtown business· men. -and Costa Mesa city government -should consider. c 'We Should Rend V.S. and World History' The 'Have Nots'· vs. the Lett~rs ~o the edit6r concerning the assassination of Robert r . Ken·1iedy and related matters have been re- ceived in such volume that an entire page in th e DAJLY PILOT tomorrow. Thursday, will be devoted to their publication. -Editor To the Editor : Th.e direction in which our society is movmg disturbs many who believe in our past form of "government by the people. and for the peaple." Those who desire increased taxes for education social security, medicare, welfare and o~her handout programs have lost s~ght or our total history and the prin· c1ples upon which our republic was founded and has grown to its present stature. By taking !rom those who earn more and giving to those who earn less (or none at all) is to defeat free en- terprise. Granted, there is no simple 11ol1.1tion to these problems. however legislated evening of the spread of our wealth is against all that our founding fathers stood for. My type of thinkin g is outdated and will draw trite but ac. cepted rebuttal from many of your ·readers: however. J fee l that the motivation is hidden behind their words. THOSE WHO HAVE not always ra. liona lize why those who have should share. It would be grand. indeed , if all could have everything. It would soon be found that competition would cease. incenti\le wou!d die and progress come to a standsWl . Cannot the "do- gooders" in our society see that to take from those Wh6 have is as classic an example of discriinination as can be found? It seems to be acceptable to di scriminate against those who have as Jong as those who have not gain thereby. Generosity should result from a willingness to assist. not from legislation. TO ELIMINATE poverty will reduce the entire nation to a state of poverty. Who then will have gained? To assist the poor al great expense to the tax. payer only to have riots and deslruc· lion of the taxpayers' property at·the hands of those toward whom the help is directed is a paradox to say the least. It all reminds me of the Russian Revolution wherein the oppressed overthrew the capitalists far want of the opportunity to better themselves only to end up with a more sophisticated system of oppression. Or it could be compared with the ultimate goal of unionism wherein the B11 Geo r ge Dear George: I let my neighbor go in my ~ara~e once to borrow my plier!\ an d now he goes in whenever he feels like it and borrows my tool~ an d power mower without ask- ing. Recently he w•s having a party a nd ran out or Vermouth. I was in the shower and told him to get a cupfuJ from the ldtchen. Now he helps himself wiUiout asking -to anything in my home bar. What can I do about a guy like this? FURIOUS Dear Furious: First. stnd your wile tc Uve with her mother .•. CONF IDE NT IAL TO EAT'UM'UP, INC.: Yea, I think a candy bar wi th an edible wrap. per, ia .J good idea, but I don't think you really •hould ask Lady Bird to endor1t1 It ln her anti·llt· ter cam.paiJn. Republicans eat undy, too, you lcnow. ' > • Letterr from readers are welcome. Normall11 writers should convey their messages in SOO words or less. The right. to condense letters to fit .!pace or eliminate libel i.! reserved. All Lit· te rs must include signature and mail· ing address, but names will be with- held on request. working· man shares equally in the profits of his employer. If this ever becomes the case and the employer feels it not worth the risk of h.is capital, thereby closing his business and putting all workers out of a job who will have profited? ' IT IS TIME to consider the rights of those above as well as those below. The students, the soldiers, the youth of past years are those nasty old con- servaUves of today who "do not understand" the problems of youth. students and soldiers of today. No credence is given to the fact that the older generation has suffered the sa me experiences and has that prac- ti cal knowledge to draw upon. I feel that we should read our hi.story and that of the rest of the world and draw from the lessons of the past prior lo thinking that to ch ange everything will result' in im- provement for all. R. WlflTE Sa ·vlor: Razor Strap To the Editor : A friend of mine is the secretary of an important e:itecutive in the city of Chicago. A few year1 ago she left her job. walked lhJ'ough a park, took a short bus ride ... and was home. Now, her husband comes for her with a c ab! She doesn't dare walk lhrough the park! Co me sundown. no woman dares to walk through Cen tral Park in New York Ci ty. Why ? All because Mr. Gillette in- ve nted the safety razor ! UNTIL THIS horrible thing hap· pened, men removed lhe hair fram their faces with the straig'ht·edged razor. To maintain one or these tools so that it would remove hair from the fa ce of America, required a r azor ~trap . The razor strap had. in my youth , a secondary duty. ln combination with the woodshed it, combined with the !ltrong right arm of an adult male. to bring understttndlng to a not-yet adult male. I can recall more than one of these "la~ngs..on-of·the·strap" (not one of which can J !lay I did not have coming!). AS l RECALi., there were twit of them. One 81 1chool and the ~econd one at hornet If J could get the financial back.Ing fJf some rathf.rs {with strong right arms, of course) I should be most hap- py to form The Save America Razor Strap Co. (The company would be hap. py to supply, 1t no charte, our pr~uct to school teachers who have to face dirty~shirtld. mini-skirted youth of to· day.) Mr. Giilette. I am sure, is turninJ: over in bis crave. He didn't mean It that way! l!UME SEYMOUR Waiki,.. Bor•e Crueltv To lllo E<lltor : I writ. IA> appeal to anlmll lovers • . . • • . and to those who' deplore cruelty to animals to worA: for passage or State Assembly Bill 1812 (introduced by Assemblyman Frank J . Bear of San Diego) which would outlaw the "sor· ing" of Tennessee Walking Horses. To produce a special type of gait in some show horses, "soring" methods are used. Three common ones are ap- plication of oil of mustard on or under the sensitive areas of the horse's. hoof, producing severe blistering and ir· ritation, chains tied to the feet after oil of mustard has been rubbed on the area, and, a horseshoe nail driven into the quick of the front feet. TO AVOID THE extreme pain then caused by putting his full body weight on his front legs, the horse DWSt bring his rear feet forward to maintain balance, thus causing him t o overstride when in motion . Too Jang, these tortured harses have been pleasing·hone show jud1es. The time is long overdue for con- cerned Californians to take steps to stop this deliberate cruelty. Please write to your state senator asking them to support and to work for passage of the Bear Bill, A. B. 1812 to outlaw this inexcusable practice. DORIS VAN BRUNT Opposes Guest Honae To the Editor: On Monday evening , June 3, I sat ln the Costa Mesa City Council chambers listening to the discussion of the con- ditional use permit being granted to Mrs. Helen Slezak on Bucknell Road. I listened to the gentleman who spoke against the issuance of the permit and ca:n't feel that anything he said would show him to be against elderly ~ople. Then the heart·rending speech by Dr . Evers, full of hearts and fl owers, ending with his offer of the use of his home and pool to the dear old ladies an,v time they wanted it. FINALLY. MR. ST. CLAIR'1 speech ln favor of the issua~e . ending with the statement that the lady in ques· tion, Mrs . Slezak, didn't do this from a business standpoint, and ooly made enough each month lo make her house payment and then a little extra to keep her off of the weliare roll6. This I miKht add, I found very h a· r d to believe. Now , a J erianne Danielsen. wrote a letter to the paper finding fault with - the people who opposed the ''Guest Home" on Bucknell. l\1AY I PUBLICLY go on record as one of the property owner' in College P.ark wha does oppose the Guest Home. Not because I am against Medicare Espanola , N.M ., Rio Grande Sun: "\Vhen the American Medical Assoclt· Lion opposed medicare so vehemently, one of the group's arguments was that the plan represented ultimate govern- ment conttol over the medical prr>· fession . Now we rei.d where the Senate has been ~Uoned to put 'federal ceilings on !he fees doctors charge for treating medicare and medlcald beneficiaries.' The AMA. !ears perhaps an bein& reallied. lt • may take some time, but the pern. ment someday could be teUinC doc· tors what they can charge." and assemblymen, In care of the Statt tapllol. Sacramento, California 9581-t, ' . Ne• Rockford, N.D., Trancrlpt: "With 50 states and the U.S. Congress passing 11w1 almost every day lt!ie.re ba~ 1UU beeen no improvement in the 10 Commandm1ntl. To 'Nbich we'll add Amen.'' ' . 'Haves'· elderly people. but ·because I am against a business, any business, being operated in College Park. If this makes me a monster in the eyes of Dr. Evers, Mr. St. Clair, and Jerianne Danielsen, then that is their problem, not mine. MRS. EARL C. DICK Refusal to· Lea,.,. ' To the Editor: You published a very terse letter (Mailbox, June 6) from Mrs. Robert Werkheiser in which she deplored the fact that a Soviet 1Jfe magazine is being offered to American famtlies. Thls letter, though short, cootained some emotionalizing about RustUna being anti-God and communistic. She also leaves one point a hit undear when she ask.!, "Where do they get names and addresses Of American families?" She neglecta: to make clear who "they" reler to. For Mrs. Werkhei1er's .fnformation, there are beautiful and informaUve publications available to Americans who care enough to remove their horse·blinders and try to learn what Saviet We is Uke today when some at- tempts should be made toward in- ternational understanding. Soviet Llfw is an example of such a publication. A REFUSAL to learn or understand about Soviet life only increases the gap that unfortWMltely exists today between ow country and Russia. "Russians do not have homs," states the Citizen ExchaDce Corps, which hosts R111si1111 in American homes and sends American& to Russia. AU Russians are not anti-Goel All Ru1sians are not Comm unists. For the record, I am not a Com. mun.i sl, but I feel that a little reading about Soviet Life. or traveling in Russia or talking to people who have traveled there, might enlighten a tot ol people. To rephrase a frequently used quote. Better READ than dead. LOGAN M. LOCKABEY o..., llfore Re ason To the Editor: Your editorial (June 6) regardina: ..____ the reasani for Kuchel's defeat left out a most important one, in my opinion. Regardless of the po Ii tic i an • 1 political philosophy, he must pay some .attentloo to the wishes af the majority. It seemed to me that Kuchel respond· ed. to the press and pressure groups 1 n d the majority be damned. T h i 1 may not seem Lmportant to a paper that co nsistently represenll th 11 minority cpinion in Orange County but it wa s my main reason for voting apinst Senator Kuchel. M. TINSLEY ---- Wedn,.day. June 12, 1968 The editorial page of tile Doi!U Piloc ittlu to inform and sCfm. ""'" ... .a... bv ,, ... ..,.ling tllia """lfJOPf"I opinio!lr cmd ..,,.. · mtntaru on topics of ·interest cmd &fgn!Jica'!C•. Du prollicllng • forum for Ou ezpresrion of aur rtaden'· OJ)intort.s, and bW presenting ih• divers• view- points of infonn.td obsm>tr• and IJ)(tkesmen on topfcs of tM dou. Robert N. Weed, PubiWw' • • I . . • ·~· I • KENNEDY.~ (0..--P ... a) An u~-ion ol oloc:llon .iot.rlu carrlod hlm to tllo ..,-cey. Then In Dallat In Novom ber 196.1, ht 'O'U lflol and ltillod by "'I aHudn. So Robert tool: up tho que1L He moved to New York and won a Senate 1eat. Thi& year he sought the prelidency. ,Then ill Los Ange~s, after a moment o[ triumPh in the California _,pritp.ary, Robei:t was shdt and killed by an assassin. THINK ALIKE ln the close-knil Kennedy . family it was natural for the three brothers to think alike on major issues. Alike they were in many ways. But not all John Kennedy: was the bookish brother. i\ graceful, eloquent man, be was, nevertheless, r e s e r v e d , 'aloof with strangers. Bobby WU the moody' in- tense brother. W beth er lieeking evidence as counsel for a Senate committee or managing one af John's campaigns, Bobby operated with an intensity many call- ed ruthlessness. He was the most controvers.ial, the least liked of the brothers. Teddy was the likeable brother. No one ever called Start 'em Young The Orange Coast College summer swim program will begin Saturday and run in two-week sessions through Alig. 9. Special toddler classes will be held, as well as classes for all abilities, from beginner to advanced. Recreational swimming will be held each da.!,...a1so from 2 :~:30 p:m. Instructor Georgia McClellan, left, of Newport Beach, helps Mary Dale, 4, of Newport, learn to kick. Gina Dale of Newport tries to coax Guy Jacobs of Costa Mesa into the water. Teddy ruthless. Less elo----------- quent than John, less moody than Bobby, taH, handsome Teddy is easy to like. ENTERED SE."IZATE · If tragedy has shaped Edward Kennedy, so too did the moment of triumph when he took his Senate. seat in January 196l. Aware of the dangers of being tagged as "the one Kenaedy too many ,'' Edward-told newsmen he planned to stay 'out of the limeliiht. Ted studied hi5 new job. He saw newsmen only for home state newspapers and turned down chances for na· tiorial television exposure. He sought out the Senate elders moitly Southerners to whom the K e n n e d y s , particularly R"obert, were anathema. He listened to their advice and, above all, obeyed a prime r u l e~for freshman senators: be kept quiet. So the Senate elders learn· ed ·~1 h a t ·Mauachusetts voters knew: This indeed was the like•ItfX~edy. The assllaination o f President Kennedy w a s shattering to-Robert Ken- nedy. He was haunted by its memory. WORKED BRIEFLY Edward responded. d.if· ferently. On the Monday morning of the President's funeral, Edward worked briefly at his Senate office. "I felt this was where he would have expected me to be ," he later said. It was March 1964, more i: than a year after he entered ? the Senate, before Edward t I gave his first major Senate ·" speech, a moving plea for the civil rights bill President Kennedy had proposed. Edward Kennedy has not escaped violence. On a June night in 1964 he was aboard a private plane 't hat crashe d in Massachusetts. He suffered a broken back that immobilized him in a hospital for six months. But running for re-election for a full six-year term that November offered few pro· blems. His family, including his pretty blonde wife, Jean, waged a campaign that swamped his Republican op- ponent by more than one , million votes, a new state i1!1 record. •l I~ ATTENDED SESStON The next Januitry, with the aide of a back brace and a cane, Edward Kennedy at- tended the opening Senate session. Robert took office that day as the junior senator from New York. Like John Kennedy before him, Robert was i.mpeUent with the Senate traditions t ~ Edward had learned to ac· cept. Edward waited mare than a year to make his first ma· jor speech. Robert w:i' hardly aettled In his seat when he began speaking out on issues. Edward quietly deferred to Senate elders. Robert clubod heatedly with com· mitt<• chalrmen. Meanwhile, Ed w a r d , roachlne enotber mllestooo led an ellort fnr leCIJlalJOG poll taus. Deoplto !?om the Wblto ouse nd the Senate 1tader1blp, It came wltbln lour voce1 of puaage. Edwaid Jtenntdy h • d 'matured l:n the eyea of his eolleapei who admired the w•y h6 bid mastered all delalll of the Jetfll•.U• as -well u the way be worbd qulo!J1 lo mUlter support. Clar emont Graduates 3 Counti.ans Three Orange __ c o u n t y students have rec e i v e di bachelor of arts degrees from Claremont M e n ' s 1 College. 1 Steven R. Boyd, hiatory major, of 280 E. Wilson St. 1 graduated Cum;J.aude. He had been on the dean's list. He wrote: an honor' thesis entitled. "The American Whig Party: Politics and Political Philosophy." - _was a member of the Forensics and History clubs, and plans to attend the University o f Wisconsin Graduate School Also from Costa Me.sa was Michael E._ ltforrlll, 218 E. 18th st., an O c to be r graduate. Morrill w..as an assistant solar observer and research anistant for Dr. Harold Zirim at Mt. Wilson Observatocy. The physics major plans to continue with graduate 1tudies astrophysics. Also graduating with a Dachelor of arts was Jack L. Schoellerman of 1818 San· tiago Dr., Newport Beach. He had been on the dean's list and was chairman of the Newman Club. He was also a member of the Business Club and board member of the Conference on Religion. The political science major plans to at· tend law school at the Yniversity of San Diego. 1 Over 75 percent of the graduating class has been I named to the dean's list at' least one semerter, ac- cording to Claremont College sources. Buffet Set For Wallace George Wallace for presi· dent supporters Will hold a 1 buffet dinner and dance at the Moose Lodge, 1731 S. 1 Manchester, An ah e Im ,1 Saturday, according t o Helen Odom, Orange County · chairman of the \Vallace campaign. The affair, which will begin at '1:30 p.m. will feature a film, ' ' The California Story" which was filmed during the registra- tion drive which closed in January. 1 Tickels of $2 .50 per person may be obtained ' at the Wallace headquarters at 1 2101 A West Chapman. Onnge. I Funds will go towards costs of the Wallace ralliei:l planned fur early July In j Orange and ~ Angeles! counties, Mr1. Odom aaid. Pair Graduate At Princeton T1ro 11u11en11 1rom th• I Orange Co•st area ha"e I received bachelor of arts degrees f r o m Prlnceto" University. Graduates are Richard SCott, 120 CoUinJ AYe., Balboa laland : and Peter Campbell Ganlett, H6 Clitr Drive, Laguna Beach. • 0 SPACE STATION & SPACE CRAWLER DELUXE ACTION SET THREE ACTIOM TDTS Ill Diii! Space Station, Space Crawl· er, Major MATT MASO~ in- cluded! $ 9 99 ONLY MAmL'S NEWEST STEM DR. DOOUffiES TALllll& DOLL F""'1 the wrrent motion picture I bGoli series. Yts! 'fmy bor and 1lrl llitt w111t OM INLY 6 99 AlMOST %' Nlfilt • Skediddle Kiddle 4-lnch doll w•lke, runs and evtn 11\1. Heid turn•, arm1 ind leg1 move. Wilker can be removed for 1ep1r1te pl.l1y. $3.50 valut only 1. 97 BARBIE® & F~ANCIE® DOLL TRUNK e Soft vinyl construction! w.1h.bl11 e 2 doll comp1rtm1nh I do11hl • ""''" 2.93 inclucl1d! SUPER THINGMAKER® Sb W9 toys 111 OM .... Mtl PICADOOS !ttrd , FRIO.HT FACTORY oit4 '4 _,., e M,1~1 hundr1cl1 of p111lie thin91 .1ncl cl1cor.1tion1 I e lnclud11 I boHl11 of 91nuin t e Alf7'' PLASTl~OOP®, molcl1 incl 9 99 I CClllOflll! I • KIDDIE KOLOGNES 1'111 ROSllUDI I 1lllOll porhilM IWfft j111t llli:• ""'""'°' e Only 2" ti ll! Root1cl h.1itl e T1k1 h1r out to pl1y-cl•.11 pl1itic cl1c•n+1r op•n1 ! e Flow1r co1tum• m1+ci.•1 p1rson1lityl GENTLE BEN ANIMAL HUNT GAME c • ...,.,,,,,o h11! 1.17 e H&1nt fot GENTLE IEN 111cl h1 1nif!l.1I fti1ncl1I e l·D pl1itic 91m•• bo1rd1 e R•1l-•cfio" p•rh 2.76 tJ.11 mov1! 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Further information may be obtained by contacting Dr. Donald Wilson, director, teacher education at room 1001 , Waite Phillips Hall, University of Southern Wednuday, June 12, 1968 ' ••• than tnis-fil your baby's feet. l'oorly fitted baby.shoes can cause young feet ·t.O develop serious growth problems. That's ~by we take the greatest care to make slire these fine quality Buster Brown shoes will fit your baby-exactly. 30 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH DAILY PILOT 37 BUSTER BROWN. WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH California, Los Angelesj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· 90007. !.: 4-D/4Y. 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THE TALKING LEARNING MACHINE FEATURING TALKING TILES Fu1 .. ploy-hi ....... I e 412 1011111111 tr•ck1 of nou111, v1rb1, 1cli•cfiv11, colori, "1rmben, m&11ie •n4 1011n41! e s • .,, worcl1 .1"d 1111mb1r1, n•m•• colort! e Pl1yt mu1ic, tp11k1 btlith, 19'' French i nti Sp111!1lil MATIEL DOLL CLOTHES SALE BARBIE FRANCIE CRIS TUTII SCOOTER -CASEY IUY ONE OUT ·FIT • , • GET ANOTHER OF ECj)UAL VAWE • -. .. . . . .. -. • • \ ,, • 1 \ 1 • l -------~ --------------- BY WILLIAM REED Reeds ••• In the Wind A long disagreement between the city recreation department and the various leagues such as LltUe League and Pop Warner may be on its way into the open and to having an important problem solved. Look for action in the next lew weeks on this one. Little League, as an example, is considered a private sports league. l!embership on a team is supposed to be by talent and it does cost to belong. Participants. must live within certain boundaries and not au boys can make the teams, at least not the top teams. • The recreation program, by con- frast. takes all would-be players and tries to see that all have an 6pportunity. Most of the cost is ~me by the city taxpayers. * . Generally the biggest problem {aced by the private sports leagues \~ finding a place to play. With land priced near $30,000 per acre, it is impossible for the leagues to buy a ball park. In addition, since it is parents putting up money for ball field im- provements, they would like per- manent facilities. • Robinwood Little League has ~amped on the Marina Park site at Edinger Avenue and Graham Street for several years, raising the ire of homeowners who Want io see their park developed for {arnily activities. * Ocean View is located on land owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Some- day the church will want to build and Ocean View will have the Ian~ problem. Recreation officials have main .. fained that the private leagues do riot accept all children and should not be supported at public expense. The council cannot make a gift of public funds or property. So the private leagues have re- sented. what they consider a "non- cooperation" attitude from th'e city recreation leaders and the public Qfficials have resented the efforts of private leagues to obtain use of public playgrounds, resulting in hard feelings for all. I • I ( HEllPDRT CEH~ . . ·- • Wtdnesdlly, June 12, 1'%8 OAllY PlllJf :J New Buildings Set , , . :l Bonds Okay Aids-1. / Good Scholars and Citi%ens Eader School sixth graders of Huntington Beach honored at recent awards assembly include (top, left to right) Steven Springer, Joe Gammage, Barbara Hadley, Margo Matthews, Scott Palamar and Debbie Marsh. (Bottom row) John Seymour, Scott Damerval, David Roach, Colleen \Vallace, Linda Curtis and Nina McEachern. Tennis, Anyone? Rec Department Giving Lessons ~ Tennis instruction for fifth grade through adults will be offered by Hun- tington -Beach Recreation and Parks Department, beginning June 17 at Hwitington Beach High School, Marina High School _and Golden West College. A registration fee of $3 may be paid at the Recreation Center, 17th and Orange Streets beginning Monday, June 6. Lessons are one hour in length, three days a week for three weeks. Classes will be divided into three divisions, fifth through eighth grade. high school and adults. Classes will run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at }lun- tington Beach High, 9 a.m. lo 4.:30 p.m. at Marina High with a 6:30 p.m. class and 1 :30 to 4:30 p.m. at Golden West. Two sessions will be offered June 17 through July 6 and July 12 through August 10. Classes at Marina will meet on Monday, Wednesday; and Fri- day and classes at Huntington Beach high and Golden West will meet on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. A city tournament will conclude the summer during August 12-16. Ken Jackson is the instructor. Russian Paper Attacks Long Beach Solon The Soviet Union has denounced Rep. Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach). The Mos~w newspaper, Pravda, recently branded the California con- gressman a war mon ger who seeks "to encourage the proliferation of nuclear weapons." Yuri Zhukov, aeputy chairman or PO Bids Sought For Seal Beach Bids for construction and leasing 0£ a new main post office for the city of Seal Beach will be sought beginning June 18, according to Congressman Richard T. Hanna (O.\Vestminster). . The new office will be located on the west side of Westminster Avenue, 375 feet west of Bay Blvd. Bids should be submitted to Richard King, Post Office Department real est.ale office, p_. 0. Box 1701, San Diego. Bjds will be opened on July 17. · the Soviet Peace Committee, charged that Hosmer was typical of tJre "thick headed American Congressmen" who along l\.i.th the "West Ger man revenge.seekers" opposed U.N. treaty for the ·nonproliferation of nliclear weapon.s . Confronted wibh the allegation made by the Soviet press, Hosmer Said that the Russians had twisted his views on the treaty. Hosmer added that the Soviet criticism of him appears to have stem- med from a National Educational Television program in March, during which he debated the treaty's merlts with the Russian Ambassador to the U.N. Father-Son Night "Father and Son Nlgbt" of the Hun· tington Beach Boys' Club will be observed Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Yorktown Avenue and Delaware street facility, announces Eddie Dob- koski, program director. GWC Expansion Golden West College is a step nearer construction Of Its thlrd buikling in- crement following passage of Proposi· tlon 2, the statewide $65 million bond issue for junior colleges, aceordillg to college officials. What the bonds will mean to Golden West in the not too distant future is a neW technology building, a six·module addition to the mathematics-science building, a secood forum with a com- municatiOM center and a gymnasium and more locker facilities. The exact amount of cOMtruction money to go to Orange Coast College and Golden West, the two colleges of the Orange Coast District, ls yet to be determined. But the approval of Proposition 2 has been greeted with high optimism on both campuses. At the same time, Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, Golden West president, sound· ed this somber note in a message to faculty: "Facing nakedly our national shame and personal remorse with the senseless assassination of Senator Robert Kennedy, how oan one find satisfaction, exhilaration and ex- citement over any political victory. "Perhaps meaning and satisfaction can be found in thls. These monies for furthering educational opportunity, here, as elsewhere in this state, must find dedicatioR in our t e r r 1 b 1 e responsibility -our unique op.. portunity as educators -to deal directly with the fear, the hate, the violence of our society. Fountain Valley Days Schedule The Fountain Valley Ju n i or Chamber of Commerce has announced tine schedule of events for Fountain Valley Days · at~ corner"tlf Magnolia Street and Warner Avenue. -Today, 3 to 6 p.m .. 25 cents per ride; 6·10 p.m., all rides free with $1 general admission ticket; 10 to 11 p.m., ~ cents per ride. -Thursd>Sy, June 13, 3to11 p.m., 25 cents per ride. -Friday, June 14, 3 p.m. to mid· night, 25 cents per ride; 8:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Bavarian Beer Festival and Dance. -Saturday, June 15, 11 a.m. to mid- night, 25 cents per ride; 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. helicopter rides at $3 per person; circus from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and B p.m. to IO p.m. at Sl.50 for adults and $1 for children. -Sunday, JU11e 16, noon to 8 p.m., 25 cents per ride; noon to B p.m. helicopter rides. Sunset Beach Right of Way Battle Opens The former Pacific Electric right~r­ way through the heart of Sunset Beach will be the prize when the local residents lock h o r n s today with the Southern Pacific Co. before the Local Agency Formallon Commission. Southern Pacific own.s the mile-long, 80-foot·wide strip which stretches from Anderson Street on the west to Warner A venue on the east. Last Feb. 1, the railroa'd company leased the property to C a r l t o n Builders of Beverly Hills. Carlton ap. plied to the plannJng commission for a planned community zoning to build a string of three-story apa rt m en t hou-ses. Then residents got into the act. They began the formation of a "Boulevard' District". U they are successful it will be unique -the first in the state. Under the district they hope to , widen Pacific Avenue and develop a parking area. Paciiic is now a narrow one-way street on both sides of the sandpile that was once a railroad. There are a couple of problems ·, presented by the local group's pro- posal. First, if the district is formed and at. · tempts to raise money to purchase the strip of propertY, the rest of the eoun• ty's taxpayers are liable for 25 perecnt of the cost under the "Boulevard Disb-ict" provisions. Second, the property owners of the ' small dirlrict would have to raise at least $1 .S million to buy the railroad property. WI N AHONOA register now at any Buffums' store ~'Mighty Mac Code Flag jackets .•. .'!-•• ·from A to Z, Buffums' has them all •ftf,:. ·.1.1~ • •\\j· • i~\~: :. '~f•r. ~::.m ... '. '. ~i!i,:. "'':Vir~ •. · 1 1~ : ' ,_, " ):.• . .. Rugged combed cotton jackets are lined with light woven nylon, They're sea-proofed for water repe llency. And each jacket reproduces one of the 26 lellers of the International Code Flag alphabet. Choose your letter! Men's jacket, sizes S, M, L, XL, 25.DO &Jrgee Soo style; S, M, L(S-18), U,IO Burgee Small Fry style; S, M, L (5 to 7), H,Da Store for Boys and Store for Men u urns' ' • • #1 FASHIDH ISLAND r • 644-2200 .... ·-~-'--·- • MDHDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY lO•Otl mt ,,,n v > . ---·~-~~· -----~·-~~~~~·-·~~·--- • • ' • --J I l • -.. I I • • • \Yfdnt~JJ'. Junt U . 1968 ,~ ... .., .. ~"' , ...... in John ''Jake'' Flowers, 31, of Mount Prospect, Ill., was about 24 hours too early when he holed in one Monday during practice round for the Harrah's invitational golf tounWnenL Harrah's, a casino-re- so rt is offering an $18,000 Rolls· Rof ce for any hole-.in--0ne scored during tournament play. The tour· naµient began Tuesday. ·-- Navy Ca pt. Wiltiam L. McGanagte of Coachella, Calif., former commllnder of the U.S. intelligence ship Liberty, wipes tear! from his eyes after he re· ceived the Medal of Honor Tuesday from Navy Secretar11 Paul R. lgnatiiu at the Wa.!hington NaV'I/ Yard. Ale· GonaOle 1'tceived tlie decOration for "saving the lives of many of his crew and for saving his ship" during a sur- pri.se attack by l sfneli boats last year. • Three hundred American tour- Gr ipe• P •til ls lted Cons Surrender, ~ Free Hostages .(\TbANTA (lJPJ) -·Four conVlcts, satjsfied by publl.eatibn of . tbeJr grievances, released 21 hostages today and dropped their pistols out a win· dow, e·ndlng a 27-hour ordeal in the bleak Atlanta Federal Penitentiary. The l 6 men and five women. held sin; ce an escape attempt was foiled Tues- day morning were unharmed. Four others had been teleased previously. The convicts -three bant robbers and a murderer =-were ta.k en far Uir terviews with prison officials and then to "close security" cells. Prison officials hailed the Atlanta J ournal, which pub'tiihed the convicts' nine grievances in a copyrighted story. ''The outcome of th.is entire case rested on how they (the inmates) felt the Atlanta Journ~ handled their grievances. I think the journal did a service," said William C. King, a federal prison 1y1tem 1poke1man. The hostages emerged fi'om the grim gray adminlstration building to be greeted by their families. One guard, Samuel McCalllst.r, 411, bugged his wife and said "I wu scared to • death." But be said during the night "I Just lay down on a beoch" and slept in the office where tbe convicta held their hostages. ~ey were treated "acellent)y," be said. AJ the bo.tages walked out of the prison, convicts in other cell blocks resumed the screaming, yelling and window smashing that broke out earlier when tile siege reached ita 24th hour. There were reports that most of the windows were shattered in one cell block. Nixon Gains Delegates In lllin~is, S. Carolina By TllE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican presideDtial candidate Ricliard M. Nixon has gained a sizeable block of delegates in Illinois and South Carolina primaries that nominated a host of incumbent con- gn!ssmen for r e-election. Meanwhile, Texas party conventions Tuesday gave Democratic Gov. J ohn Connally and Republican Se n. John G. row.er !avorjte son control over the State's national convention delegates. Connally has not comm~tted himself but is believed to favor Vice President llubert l l'. ;Humphrey. Most of the GOP delet3.tes 'were reported leaning toward Nixon. fD·I ll.) -at 86 the oldest man. in the House -who lost to former state Re p. Abner Mikva ·oe Chicago. But Senate Republican Le a d e r E verett J..t. Dirksen of Illinois coasted to r enonrination for a fourth term. Five incumben t representatives in- clucling .O~Hara had oppositJon and the other four were nominated for re-elec· ti on. Another 19 incumbents . were WlOppOsed. In the South Carolina Democratic Primary, incumbent Sen. Ernest F. Hollings defeated challenger John Bolt Culbertson of Greenville for renomina· ti on and veteran . Rep. L. Mendel ruvers, seeking re-election defeated George A. Payton , a Negro lawyer in Olarleston. * * * McCarthy Says ists, saved from a stricken pleas· ure steamer May 6, have thanked thei r Welsh rescuers - by present- ing them checks worth over $7 ,000. The Americans were -stra nded aboard the steamer St. T Mllo, which fouled a propellor as she ·, ferrie4 them from Llandudno to the 20 ()()().ton Swedislr criuse liner ·, K ~ngsholm. Jack: Wil,llams of the ·: trawler Kilravock anil his crew of five \vho took the steamer in tow, rec~ived $3,466. The crews of life- ' boa ts who also helped in th.e r escue Nixon won at least Tl of the 48 Illinois delegate seats at stake Tues· day, On the Democratic side, Hum- phrey won at least three or the 48, and Sen. Eugene J, McCarthy at least one wi th 28 other v.•inners listed as un- committed. .. t\ maj'or exception to the general renomination of i n cum· b e n t con- gressmen was Rep. Barratt O'liara Blaib erg Sho ivs I mprove1n ent Support of HHH Ve1·y Difficult From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Sen. Eugene J, McCarthy said today it woold be "very difficult" for him to support Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey as the Democratic Presidential nominee il l-Iumphrey holds to his present views. .• got a check !or $3.562. I • ·; ~""'.. ....r ...... 13'.»'1".:V~ Cats in trees are coming off Ji tile list of thiflgs the Hueytown. ·: .. Ala. Fire Department will .. j llandle. Fire Chief John Bradley •, says thdt· too many emergency :: [ calls have come in while fire· men were out on a limb after cats. "We stilt get chitdren out of trees," Bradley said, "but we don'l wast time on cats. They'll • ., . " :• come down When the11 get llungry." • Now the ''hearing-ear" as well as the "seeing-eye" dog is a tax deductible item. The Internal Re- venue Service so ruled Monday in the case of a man 'vho requested a m edical-expense deduction for the training and upkeep of a guide dog for his daughter , who suffered ~ severe hearing loss. The ruli ng was based on a previous one giving a ~ tax break to blind persons using ~uide dogs. Cr\PE TOWN , South Africa (AP) - Doctors reported a s Ii g h t im· provement today in the condition of Philip Blaiberg, the world's longest surviving heart transplant patient who is stricken with l',epatiUs. A bulletin isgued by Groote Schuur l·lospital said: "l'here has beeri a sllgllt improvement in Dr. Blaiberg's condition. ll.is blood pressure and circulation are satisfactory. The pa- tient rem a i n s under close supervlsion." A b.ospilal spokesman said Blaiberg is conscious. The spokesn1an did not say how Blaiberg is feeling. A com· mon side effect in liver ailments is depression. In London. the condition of Frederick \V est. Britain's first heart transplant patient, "remained stable throughout the ni ght." the National I-l:cart Ilospital reported. West, v.·ho recei ved his new heart May 3, developed a chest infection over the "''eekend. and Monday trouble \\'lth his kidneys was reported. McCarthy, reopening his own cam- paign for the Democratic presidential nomination after the moratorium for µt e death of Robert F. Kennedy, tole! a news conference that he would at- tempt to sell party leaders and delegates on the idea that he is the best man to carry the party banner in November. Meanwhile, Gov. Nelson A, Rockefeller, in an all-out campai gn to wrest the Republican presidential nomi nation from front runner IUchard M. Nixon today inaugurated 8 na- tiom\•ide newspaper and television advertising campaign. Rockefeller's headquarters he r e said an ad titled "Why I Run" ap· peared in 40 newspapers in 35 market areas. This meant the ad appeared in l\\'O newspapers in five cities. One minute television commercials based on the text of the newspaper ads also were started today in the 35 market areas. Southwest Record Lows Set M.id ·wes t Suffe rs Frorn Hail, Rain, Thunderstorms California SOUTHi!AN CALIFORNIA -tn- UNllnl nleht •fld mom!111 low clouds w1111 toul '°' Ca91111 arN• alM!rwlw t1lr lllr'OW'h ThllndlJ wl!h 1-0t!'!e high cloud1 "°'""' POrtlari. Slll!'l!I' ccoler COlllll 1~1 Wednftdl' 1ncl nor1'll 1ric1 wei.t llOl'llonl Tllut'lcl1J. Gl.!1W wllldl In cl8,rt1 boll! cl1y1. LO$ ANGELES ~Rl!A -Hlthl •!'Kl ""''"lno 1-Clo.xii a!'KI loc1I log l>u'I "'°"Ill" IUftft' 1f!1mtaf!I WedntMllY 11nc1 Tl!\lrtdl,, S119hllv c.oole<" d1vt- 0Yerftl8lll lows ntlf M. Hllh Wecf. ..Wr 7'. MOUNTAIN AREAS -Ma1!11 <le1r Incl IUrl"'I' ~11" Incl Thu™'l1 lllfllfl -hlth clouOI: norlll POrllO!\. A Hiiie ~ klwff co-1!1'1 1IC1HI W-"neldlr ancl .i1tnnr cooler mo11 l'MI Tll<lnclar. Temperat11re• AllM.l•utf'IUI Anc:hora .. AIS.nll l1k1nflekl ""'" lo1ton Chic..oo Clt1Cl11r1111 Clevtll ncl 0..m °" Molntl Dolll'Oll Euret.1 Fort Wortf\ ,_ ~ .. " .. " .. n " .. " " " .. n " M .. M " n " " " .. ~ .. .. .. • ~ .. " " " .. " n " .. ., ·" .. INTERIOR AHO OEIEltT REGIONS -Mo.ti' cle•r tonl1hl lfld IUMJ' WllllnncWir Incl Thurtd•r wlll'I 1orrw hi.ii C:lauch nonfl -11on. Gl.!1!y w'lfld1 al ti~ WMIM'ldav 1llfrn°"' l11erNllns nursci1,. Owmleht i-s JI It '5 -Vl lity'I, liO II 7G klwff "II...... Hlfhl W..,,,....r 1.5 ,. IS .,...., VII~ '5 ,. !ti IOWtl' Yl\ltV1. Hot to Wi nn llOr1h -11811 Tllurldl,, Sc.llhtrll Clllfotnlit •11 ll'ltfllr IUn- Coastal •Sli.ftl will be Cl\lerc.11 •lent the Or· •1199 COii! clurlnt "It"' ancl ~l"a l'lau" !Ddl' efld Ttw,..,1,, ... 1111 ,,,.,.11-. MHIJIY 1111,_.,,, Vb lbll!lv will t,. •bollt 11 mllf\, Wln<b •re v1r1tb!e we1l.flO!'ftl-I If IO 11 ........ V.S. S11mmar11 VIGlerit Wl!ll~r !Ore ~ lhl: ..... Hariolulu Hoo.i1ton K1nw1 CllY Lii VHll LOI Allltltl Ml1ml MllWllllcff MlllnffllClll1 • H-ar-i.. .... r.ew v.,. OMtlll'ld .. " n " '" .a n' lolllY 111C#I ff/II' ll'!C!fftlllt nl9hl tfllll -.itno CNllll klW Ctoudl arid 'ffl. T..,,..,..tw.s -. 1t1t1111r tool· _., _, "" a.ti, la Afttllll .,,. VJcJnlfY WM "'°''· tr WNIY .,,lftl lht 11~ but hM ftltltl •I'll morn'"' low ciou. ; ..... fOlt. It ... illthllY moMt'" 611!'111f '.1N tin """' 111t Cl•k Ctnttl' ~· 1111 • """ llHf 7'. dO'MI !ti'" di• WW t~ TlldlNY'a hllfl. Tarillflr'I kM' Wiii Oii .0, kulhtfYo C.lll11n1$1 Wiii bt drv With -~1v,.. 1111n11v 11ci-norm11 flltWlll Morlder, eccord/M to tr. tr ..... 411' 1-llf lu""'f b' "" U.S, Wun.. .,. ·~· \ . • l-'tlJNS lknl ll>t COiii flM• 111 fA!rll Si II tt. lllS.ncl lM flMe Wl1 • to ti, Welor '-''""fl! 11 •1 Sua, Moon, T ides THUlllOAY, JUHli U S• 11.-J :•l 1-"". kll l :IW •.m. M.-II.._ JO:lll 11.m. S.11 1:10 am. Jt1W ,..,,, 0, l'uU LMI O. JWll 2J Ji.tr, J .IVI' t J-11 JW.. l-Hitll Ltw HJ911 IJ •••1-S •1.U i.t 'S:,. :LS '11:4 •.1 11 7:llol.1 ·2~tt J.t '6.42 :t1 17:42 S_, IS 1:11"°-' 'l ·lt I.I ·t:O. 7 1 Oc'••n l'tmPf!'lfltff'fl: L...,D a .. <11. HI $1 I Manlu, 6'. n. 11 m. All llrnfl O.v!ltl!I M\lt'r" hit! of ll'f ,..,;.,.i 111111,. .,..wnlns 1 tDf"Nlfo '" Flori!U incl wncllM "''"' 111un<1rr1torm1 ,_1,.. from Oll!o lo N"" Yori!;. ll'le mo1t vlolenr -•tMr "f'f"liled ..,.,. of • cokl '"'"' 1lr!td'llM from c~1r11 Te•11 10 Olllo. Ti'ie torn1do lltuck Weit P1111ma c11,, F l1 , 1u1t f>cfore mk1111fhl, 1111ur· 1"9 -WO!'fllft Wiien Mr c•"""r lr•lltr w11 -r!v<iMd. Htll also ICC-ltd !ht l1Wl'lllotr· "°"""• ri111r wtlldl """ l'ltl...., r11n 11'111 Pl!! Nrfl of Ol!lffloml, Ar11i:tnMI Incl loulalaN lfld...llwn*r'thlrml l lMI -re ~eel I" l'lotlcll. 1t11" 1110 1111 In lhll 1111oer Mlclnll Incl 11'1 fflt llOt'l~rn ltodllll. tl>t 111111·1.onlo cold lrarit 1110 bro\!1111 rKonl ~o/cl h!m11er1lllm to HfU ot lllf $0ulllWHI lrwl r1li.v10 11111 ........ In !ht Mlftftt 11 tN ('OOler, drltf' !.Ir •l/llltcl In betllfld 11\f • ' itt••~ . ' ... ~ . .. ' -. • • n .... .... PIM ltotodt1 PllH1cleiPl'!l1 Pllornl11 Pllhtlu""' PortJancl /11:1~ City R:ecl 81111'1 ·-S.Cr-~ St. Louil S.!11111 Slit L.akt Cllv Sin Oltff Sin l'r1t1Cllco S.nl1 ll1rtHrr• $11111• ..... ,,. Thtmlll W11hl,,.1on " .. " .. " .. " " .. ., " " • " " .. n n " " .. .. ·~ .. u " .. " u " .. .. .. .. .. " .. " .. .. " " " " • " " " ,.. . . . . . . ... ·" .. . a . . ' UPI T11t9llOIO San Franciscans Disarm Police Officer Reno Rapagnani inspects a Czechoslovakian machine gun behind a table covered . with hand guns and rifles surr~ndered by Sah F r ancisco citizens on an appeal by Mayor J oseph Alioto. So far 72 citizens have turned in their anns in the campaign which runs through July 11. Are you still J1 ®o you hate your old oven ~ All covered with grime, That old-fashioned oven You sc rub all the time? You start in the mornin g '.Ti! the sun does decl ine, Grease to your elbows At oven-cleanin g time f l3ut there's a new flameless oven For you and for me. Cleans itself spotless With electricity. IJust a push of a button Saves work and saves time . . Cleans up the whole ove n For le ss than a dime. ~No more oven cleaning when you own a 1 _Ramelea1, electric range with a aelf-cleanin g oven. Flip a •witch, and the oven cleans itaelf , automatically. See your dealer today. " ~' " Sung by Housewives Unanimous France Bans Protests In Streets PARIS (UPI) -The government to. day announced drastic steps to .ltan demonstrations a nd break up Com. munist s t u dent organll:atiorll. Workers throughout France staged a one-hour work stoppage to protest stu. dent and worker deaths-in France's second crisis in a month. At 3 p.m. electric power was cut. trains, subways and buses stopped, running and protest dei;nonstrations· were held in factories and other places of work throughout the country. The stoppage was ordered. by the Communist-led Confederation or Labor and other labor unions. No street demonstrations took place during the one-holll' s t a n d s t i 11 and the go vernment'.s new ban on meetings was not infringed. The government had just banned all demonstrii tions throu~hout France and ordered the immediate dissolution of a number of leftist organizations and private militia groups. The step was short of declaring a full state of emergency. The drastic steps were announced as new fights broke out between police using tear gas and students who hurl. ed Molotov cocktails in a new wave of vio l e n ce t h a t a wept 2,000 demonstrators into jails In Paris alone. Hundreds were injured and ar- rested in other cities. Five persons have died. Prtsident Oiarles de Gaulle called his cabinet into gession today to con- sider the new threat to his fifth republic. Presented by Southern California Edison ' • -. . --... ,, . . ... . . . '0#~ • .-............... ~~ ..... _ .. • W. Berlin Asks West To Stop New Crisis BERLIN (UPI\ -T he mayor of West Berlin called on the western allies today to make clear to the Soviet Un.ion they will fight a new Communist attempt t o choke off the outpost or West Berlin. must oppose new mcasiires cording to the old rules at an n ounce d by East East Gennany checkpoints. Germans Tuesday night that Westero allied and West would hamper seriously the flo'Y ol food and goods into (ferman officials gathered \Vest Berlin and make dif-in Berlin and in Bonn today ficull the entry of West t.o consider how to deal with Germnns into East Berlin. these new restrictions : · H• stross<!d th• am., -Wost ·Berlln•rs and Black Panther must use diplomatic and West Germans will now Ky Resigns Key Post;. I Thieu Wi n? SAJGON I API -Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky quit tod-ay as head ol SOt.lth Vietnam's People's s·e~l l Defense Co1nmittee, giving fur·tllf:I' e-vidence Of' Presi· 1 dent Nguyen Van Thieu's gains in the long power struggte between the twol WtdltHda)', Jun~ ll , J%8 • 1•AILV, •n . .or 5 . . WOOLWORTH~S . . . SOUTH COAST PLAZA Bristol al _San · Diego Freeway COSTA MESA A new Berlin crisis began to heat up, the most serious confrontation between East and West in the divided city since the Communists seal· ed off their half of the city by building the Berlin Wall Aug. 13, 1961. other peaceful channel11, need visas tor tr ave I Aide Releaised ml'n. I with no thought o! the use o{ between the city and the Ky'11 letter of rr~nation force . West. VAU..EJO. Calif. tUPl l -tfl Thieu <.-ame after a week \t The new restrictions will. -New "drastic" taxes Eldridge Cleaver. minister in whidl Ky has n 0 1 The Chancellor of West Germany, Kurt Georg Kies- inger, announced he would fly t\ere Thursday in a de- fiant gesture to show thal We;;t Germany stands by the t.ncircled city and con· Siders it a part of the nation . Mayor Klaus Schuev. an- nounced lo the c i t ,. assembly that the United Stal~s. 'Britain and f''rance among other things, make it will be imposed July 1 on of Information or the Black participated in any govern. harder for West Germans to trucks and barges ~rrying Panther parlY1 Was ordered ment activi(ies and has re· get into East Germany than supplies to West Berlin and freed on bond Tuesday by mained almost entirely in to any other western Euro· on goods leaving'it. Superior Court Judge Ray· seelll<Slon at ttie se~de pean nation and double the -In a threat to !he vitRI mond J . ~herwin. town of Nha 1'rang. cost of shipments or goods supply trafric, the East The 3 3 -Y ear · o 1 d con-The committee is an at · into West Berlin, 110 miles Germans said shipments trnvcrsial auioor has been tempt by the govet"nmefll to , deep into East Germany. would be barred from pass· held at the stilte'11 Vacaville arm and give rudimentary[ The new visa reguJations ing thrnugh East German Prison facility since he was training tn neighborhood did not take. effecl im· .checkpoints if their freight arrested April 6 af!P.r a gun and vil\aj!:e t?"041p!< roc self mediately. Tr a v e I er s papers described W e s t battle between B I a c k defense a~ainst Uie Vjet between West Germany and Berlin as par! of \\fest Panthers and O a k 1 a n d Cong. Ky was appointed to West Berlin reported today Germany. police. head it on May 3. they were proceslied ac-------------'-----'------------'----- Harriman Assails Saigon Terrorism PARIS (UPll -U.S. negotiator W. AvereU Har- riman today entered ttie Vietnam war talks witb a con d e m n a ti on of in· doiscriminate Viet Cong ter· ror attacks on civilians in Saigon. ·'The North V'Ietnamese Communist party is pursu- ing terrorist actions and is ki!Ung civilians without any military objective," Har· riman said shortly before he f!nteredthec o nfere n c e room. Inside, he said. he would deliver a !ttrong protest against the attacks. On the .North Vietnamese side Le Due Tho, a high- Spock Trial T estimony Completed BOSTON (AP\ Testimony has ended in the trial of Dr. Benjamin Spock and four other men charged with consipiring to aid. abet and counsel young men to avoid the draft. The pediatrician end~d hi!! second day on the witness stand Tuesday with a denial that he ever attempted to persuade young men to resist the draft, but said he was "glad and delighted" when they did. Closing arguments by <1efense a n d prosecution begin today. A final charge by U. S. District .Judge Francis J. W. F01'd remains before the all-male jury receives the case. On trial with the 64-year· old Spock is Yale Chaplain Wi!Uam Sloane Coffin .Jr., 43; Michael f'erber, 2.1, a l larvard graduate student ; Mitchell Goodman, 44, a writer and teacher from Temple, Maine ; and M_arcus lt.askin. 34, a Wash1.11gton research director. They face m a x i m u'm sentences of five-year prison terms and $10.000 fines if convicted of the conspiracy charges. ranking Communist party member sent by Hanoi to! oversee the talks,. attended the first session since his ar·I rival two weeks ago. In the past seven sessions the Hanoi delegation chiefl was Xuan Thuy. EarHer U.S. diplomats had warned the rocket and mortar attacks w e r e pushing the talks to the verge or coUapse. Some observers speculated the United States would con· sider a restUnption of ·air raids in the north if the \ shelling did not end. •·we are gravely con· cerned by the Communist terror campaign," Har- riman said. "We are con· cern.ed. as I am sure are all Americans." The long range shelling of. Saigon has been carried out for 12 days in a row and for 25 of the last 40 days. Poo~ Li st 5 Demands WASHINGTON (UPI) - Poor people's campaign le&lers today isSlled five "immediate" demands tiley said must be granted by the government before residents of Resurrection City ean begin to coosider their cam- paign victorious and think! about returning home. 1 'rhe seven-page statement of limited goai.s called for expanded and lower coot foOd aid to the needy. in· creased participation by the poot' in federal antipoverty policy c:.od repea1 of con- troversial welfare restric· tions Congres6 adopted lesi 1 year. The Rev. Ralph David Abe matily, leader of the 1 campaign. said the poor I woold present their demands to the individual federal a.genci~s involved' before June 19, the day thousands of persons have. been invited to the nation's capil'A~ to march in support of the six-week-old cam-po;gn. Yorty Explains Why He Spoke on Sirhan LOS ANGELES (UPI\ - Mayor Sam Yorty sayi'I he disclored certain statements said to be written by Sirhan a. Sirhan to dispel rumorR and prevent the violence which followtd the assassination of Dr. Marlin Luther King Jr. Yorty was criticized la st week for possibly pre· judicing the case of the ac· cused slayer of Robert F. Kenoedy by revealing en· trie.s in diarie!I assertedly kept by the defendant. . The mayor defended his l'ction 115 a "public service" Al a Tuesday new5 con· fere nce held 24 hours after he was served with • court order prohibiting publi~ ol· ficials from m a k 1 n g statements about the case . Hr said early rumors identified the suspect as a Cuban or a -Me xica n . American. "I think it 1¥.as a public J\ervice to identify t h e suspect as not coming from , those groups." the mayor said. "I think we had to get I the racb to the people to prevent violence." I Yorty identified Sirhan as 1 a native of the Jordanian! sector of Jerusalem. now controlled by Israel. lie also, disclosed the existence or lwo notebooks which he 11aid were found in Sirhan'11• Pasadena home. I The mayor criticized the order issued by Superlar Judge Arthur L. Alarcon as too limited because it did not include news media. He saJd reporters were 1WJ free to . gather a n d d i s aeminate information about the case. Yorty 11aid he wlll abide HUNDREDS OF UNl~UE & USEFUL GIFTS for FATHER .... ..,, CLOTHES BRUSH Clips on glass and blinks when 100 refill is needed . lrECIAL, SAVE 6'% VERY SPEJ IAL 1 --10% OFF - TO A~L BRIDES 10% discount on invitationi. 1nnouncement1, party 11oods, ~t· bums, 11uest books, l1vor1, P'l!'!r 1ood1, etc. Tremendous selr ct•on. ~~ S T A T I O "jERS 8U£"4A P.ARK SHOPPl!G CENTElt COSTA MESA SOUTH ctJAST Pl.AZA Complete-Commerd1I St•tiollflry Suppti&a lrom 11111al1 lo book-t~plnr 1upp!l1s. Spedtt c1!1r1c l«Oi#llJ lo 11utlnt11ts. .~ollll•! Prla(ii ! S trll'<J•! ASSORTED NECKTIES Choose from a wide amy of Jour-in-hand and redi· ties. l:~1nbroidered design.~. . ~mart prints, n~rrow and \vWe i.:tiipes. ~tany (.'Oiors. so ,.f' • GIFT BOX FREE! Pal11<J•t .. r-a11ll0 "9rah" "•lto11 ·WHITE DRESS SHIRTS Regular collar broadcloth · or button down collar ox- ford cloth. Button 1.;uffs. Soil release removf'~ mosl stains tasilr .14.JI tn 17 99 .flAG & SAIL TOILETRIES ·1 .. 210 S/1il·y c'Olognc "r nri('nt~l R trr slHn·r. rn, 4 n 7 ..•. SI C:olo~ne, altf'r ~h11\'C anrl. ~oap-On·a·rope ....... 1.5 0 COLOGNE AND t.FTIR SHA VI .... 450 600 FABERGE •.•.. s ........ . COLOGNE AND AFTH SHAVE Russian Leather •.•. s .......... . rs .BRUTND4.:~·-..S~A~I •................ 500 COLOGNE AND AFTH SHA VI YARDLEY ..... Sth ................ . ·--· 500 s-.01 ••........ COLOGNI PUB Shock· resi!fa{ll. ca.lendAT" modf!l.s' Ahd muCh more. ChOMf' yellow flr 'white with l'Xp&nslfln (lr il"ather band~. Bo~ed. · 1 • · ···-"~ ...... DLD9Mlls I • ,.,, ' ~ . I ''It shoUld be pointed out," Yorty 1aJd, "that in the first houri after the (Kennedy) aSAassination tt'le w h n I e world wanted to know who lhe Kuspect was." b~· the -.,rder and will not Shop Every f'ltnlng MoftCl•y thru ''"'•Y Until -9:30 P.M. Saturllay itU t ~,-.M, discunthecaseany more. 1-~-~~~--------~~~~l ·~.,.---~~~~~~~~~~11-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~.-•·~~~~~-' ----------- l • -.-.-12.l'llll Police May Quiz MO<kl ••PWll~ Property Tax Cut · Measures Doomed • Over Brown Assault Case Porno Bill Killed by Committee SACllAl!E.'>'ro I APl Goo. Reagan'• plaa .. .- Californb. youth from tlle crow i ng m.au:ies °' pornoua;>ay .. a! ttjecu!d Tuesday ni ght for tiJr ..e- coDd year in a ra-bf t:br . .\ ssem.bly Cr i m i aa I Proc:edw-e Committtt The commntee -split evenly ..... pany liDes - aJao bl11Jled d 0 W' D a Democratic comm i ttee :!m::J :m: ~:C plan in somr a:rus. .. parti5an -each bllJ failed 10 wm the m voeet: required to 5eOd it to tht A.uemblJ Door from the 10.membtr COlllJJtlnee. Alter fhe action. RepuiJb. calJ Sm. -J. Lago. -d Ojai. aulhorol !hr-.._... Reagu plaJI. Wd he -tod he could ,.,,,... -... .-. ed vote Uus Jml". LOS A.'fGl'JIZS (llPO - A lJea-wtifol D-rea'-IM model ...,. ... thr ......... wtw+iliH: Uft tll wa;:d- il( lhe mysra~ umdl eue-Ul•,,..•ilc r • • 11t a 11 put-tm .......... Jim a T -1br -llTa -Bom01iL I-ball .... Kimi. • a cwr& pmi9 ti 1 A Brw1is se~••tl lloar balcolo1 -.,. .... ..,. -qw ,f" d ......,. ..,. polioe. -..:n.-- --• .._llC Tm:Mal' •a .....,. ....,~;· ~ Wm .-.. Ml •·Mc a .... •• ~ ... ie & " cjpl« a repirW fipt S ,.,. Ai,&111 al fbt acur's 'flilll bJW... l&s •m <>in w a s repsted sn.Miq -prisf .... '"" ..... ---., .. Down the Drain Pay Toil.et Ban Bill Flushed SA~"TO (APt -ly dime ill b•ildia&• ~ c:rios d ---bf mi.. city er am apinst ...... m111 ta-. ~ ,.. "'irs ma. of a M • Nt:J. a A ~ ~­ AswmbJy namjttrr palled Mrs. Vmcml I 1. e r r a . the -,..,_, oi"'1 -.. -of fhe bill. an a biD .mce w.zld i.. • said women a r e pay toillflb iD p a 1t I i c dix:rimiDased. against by t.rildings pay t.oildry brcauw frtt Owing moft tha .u hour farilities 1eldom ue pro.- of idtimaoy aml ~ vided. •ltile men's bdtfl: the P.mlic BeaJdl Jt:sli ..... -sbe's hem told (Amnitttt. Aurm.blymu -ba'ft mate free locations. Wa.Htt Powezs saw his: bill '""1"aildl are a w a, - gradually go -.a the dniL nai • lmury," .... Aid. fie' agreed to wort up .. ADii tlieJ are a cWil -not a"""""""' and tttlrD to to mention a civiliud - the commif:t.pt> in tW'o weeks riOd-.. 1fi:th a pol.icy statement iD-Countering testimony ~t stead ~ a law. pay toilets .-e cleaner than Origiaally, fhe biD by fhe --· Mn. hem ~Democrat said.,''Uapenoailaslob would. bave-cutbwed.all pay he's IQiDg to be a slob toi.JeU: in c.aliforni.a. But be W'hrther be has a dime or bad •end9d it to cover on-mt.·· Youth on LSD: Tumps to Death LO!<G BEACH (AP) -A young man pol.ice say was under the effectl: of the mind-upanding drug LSD plunged to hil death from the third Ooor of tho polic< building her~ Officen said the man, who had identified him.sell as Robert C. Kime, 22., of Topeka. Kan., WU arrested Tuesday morning and later charged ... i th tampering with parted cars. As be was being ques.- titmed, Detective George W. Workman said Kime got up, ran into an adjoining office and secoDds later went crashing tbrouJb a ball-inch thick glaq window. He was prooouuced dead at the IC .... • 10 llDDLllAI :e 10 SUBCOITRACTORS • LOCAL IRSTll 1111111 coar.. d ~ Uo,opilal ~ s•e wm 1eeu,aiq frem3 5 , ...... ~ ud---p:oliihilod -Bnrn ~ was hmited • n.pi iM el a15a•tt ~ iatelt to . eomm« mardl!r and aaaaJt -:I ~ af:6oer. But !hr dUtrict a11amey·, lificr-n:fused tD in:Dr a mmplainl far tbr illjmy to Ilia; Bol:m--Qia. C i t i D g "'insnffirient evidmcr" and '""" tho -11..r .... girl refu5ed to name 8rww'9 as h!r aspjlg -...SuidDey ..... tJJin:' IO ebtaia m a r e Hideoot Im bow (he pt suf. fered the iDjuries and might •mi..--isar a CQmplaim wtlidi pro-L;,. __ ...J, _____________ __. babJy would be based an ;a ~·a your JleW' hair...tylist. Doug, .ameone lesser ctJage than asu.ult &n•tor Dirben fiftd. !"' with iD1eu:t to tom m i t ---------~-------­mo:i"der. • Neither Miss Bobn-Olin nor Brown bas (!Ommented poblidy cm the case and thr girl ·~ bas. told iD- vt'Stigators little so far. Brown's attorney has is.sued a statement denying Brown's respxnibility for her injuries:. California's Kennedy Delegates Uncommitted SACRAMENTO llJPI! - No cbance: was seen today for . pc operty tu relief measures -ktser1 in a down to the wire race wid:I the aJowly grinding J<sis!ati .. mill. -Sen. George Miller JL ID- M.artinez), said Tuesday there was "no chance" pro· posals giving the $ 1 5 5 m.illiQD earmarked last year for property tax relief to cou.oties or big city school dUiricu could he heard by bis Senate Finance Com· m.ittee before Saturday. Unless a formula for distributing property tax relief funds can be put on Gov. Ronald Reagan's desk ·ani1 signed bY Saturday. th• relief YID be from the sales taL It will . drop from five cents oa the dollar to 41h on July 1, start or the new ft.seal year .... It is a legislative setback for Reagan who backed a plan granting counties $155 million they were to use to lower tu bi.lb of pr-operty owners. M. Unrul! 10-lDglewood) went aJonc with Reagan on· ly after tho speaker •dded S35 million in surplus revenue to Reapa'1 pro- perty tai rellef measure. The governor bad that $3.S milUon In anothtr bUI he is pushing ror lower income taxes for middle income familie1. But the Senate removed Unruh's amendments and Miller said it would be technically impossible to e o m p romise differences between the upper and Jo....-er house version1 before Saturday. Schmitz' Sex Bill Approved SACRAMENTO IAf'\ - Stale colleges woukl be re· quired to fire any erilploye convicted of a felony or of various sex offenSe1 under a bill approved Tuesday by the Senate. The vote on the bill in· trodueed by Sen. John G. Schmitz <R-Tustin) was 2>- 8ro1rD was airest.ed S-- day night and released cm ~ bail pending bis .... puranc< Tlmnday befaro Beva I) B i 11 • V11+iei1•' Jud~ Andrew Weis:L SAa!AMKNTO (IJPI) - The llltiml's b i ggest pimary ekdicm priu DlaJ not be a....,.ded until the Dem o<ra tic NationaJ Coa\'"elltila in AugusL A1sembly speaker Jesse before he was felled by an [-=~~================ assassin's buJJets a week ago. now is officially un· 1 committed. 0. Enroll Now·-Hawthorne Miss Bohn-OUn. • fre.. quent companion al -modeled ..-th. ..... d Eva Chin and oho was known as Eva .MarU: De B8nh Qin. h ,.. berm ill c.rma.y.,.. bad .... ~ a ilesire to get into, rmnes. 'Jbe asuWt on a peace ol· fi<er chart< s:ternlDecl-lrom when deputies trll!d .. -Brown's apartment to m- vestigatt: the r e p o r t e d altercatioa. Deputy Jobo Te:r.eria. 'Z1 • said when be attempted to step inside the room. Brown hit him _With a left forearm jab, burlJDg him seven feet across the hallway and up against tbf: opposite wa1l. Tbe m-vot.e California deloptlm, "'"' by Sen. Robert f . Kennedy -short.Jy And its leader. Anembly SpeaUr Jesse M. Unruh, said Tuesday he would nu to see it stay unpledged until the convention. FIJN. • Fall ,._ · Christian Semester Schools killdera:arten tll1u 8tll 11ade all-day classes Ir« bus wnicr Call 962·3312 ,, , ;; .'. : : . • For The ENTIRE FAMIL Y ! .. .-ONLY MINUTES AWAY FOR RESIDENTS OF THE COASTAL CITIES • LOWEST "FACTO.Br D•ECl" PRICES SALE ; BUG FREE PATIO'S ALL AlUMIJIUM --- fRll 200~ .. ClMl'!!v ith purchase YI ....+io cover. y-~ et rin'I• of --· .. .., . ..... • ALL OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS •• ; CALL TOLL FREE CALL NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATE IN YOUR HOME • -' . ---.. ,. --... GOLF CLUI MEMBERSHIP la Tlte Mesc l'll!r'tle Count"ll Club 61YES YOUR FAMll Y USE OF THESE ULTRA MODERN, BEAUTIFUl FACILITIES 'T IN.HIS CLUI * Two Pools: A competitive Olympic size pool ond a sep- arate diving pool with one and three meter divin9 boorcls. * Indoor locker rooms and shower facilities. Reduced rates on i-ns for the entire family. * Confl>etitive swimmilMJ and diving team. * Synchronized swimmilMJ lessons. * Club house privilec)es. * Parties and fun for the whole family. * Four tennis courts. Two courts are night lighted and serv· iced by our tennis profes.sional. * A well stocked tennis shop. * Tennis lessons. * Tennis tournaments. i I LIMITED GOLF MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE .tAesa Verde Country Club 'lOC,b Club House Road, Costa Mesa 17141 54t·0377 Swim Office 546·1900 T"9 .... .._. An. from I.ell ltM. _, or S-Die'° Fntway to H.ttor ltvd. wnt Ni MtM Vtrdt Dr. Cel .. Yhft • hr fmtitr hlfonMthNI. - ---- - - - - --- -.., IT"i:::rlr;;;;;ra;;;;-iFT~ • Yes! Send me your colorlul, descriptive bro-f6.:5li.l chure on Mesa verde Swim and Tennis Club. Nam••------------- Address•-------~---­ Ci~·---------Phone_. _____ _ MIMIOSHIP UMITID ACT NOWlll \ , ~· . -· -.... . -...... _ -· For The Record Meetitags Births GARDEN 'AllK GENlll AL H0$,ITAI. MI Y 21 Mr. 1'1!1 M,,. ll~O G!llltt. •SJI Ktn!i• lnt!Ofl Drive, Hunllntton Beech, bov , Mi r H • Mr 1nd Ml"I. Char!H Wa1~•.r, lUJl l(ttlSOf1 L1111. H11nllntlOt1 lleacll. 9 1rl LONG BEACH C O M M U N I T Y HOl,ITAL MIY 11 1 Mr. 1od Mr>. "fom M .. Mr~ce~. Jl3'1 Oock1ft;11 Cln;:Je, Hllfll!nt~n Beach, "" M1v H Mr. ~nd Mr1. 0-ld E WlcklA.,.,_r, 14.lllt s1...i11wooc1, Fount1ln V11tey, "" IT. JOIEl"H HOS,lTAL .... ~ Mr. and Mrl. llon1kl G. llK liN'• 100? v11ene11. C<al• Mft.1, olrl Mr. tncl Mr1. '°"n E. S.11!nt Jr., t16ol Lt P1lom1, Founf1ln Valley. bo¥ ,,.,..,,, M•. and Mrs. Come!. E. '"'..,, 1569 Ort"" AYil., COlll ~. bov Mr, Incl Mrs. Lucky S. Y1m1<11, "" ll1llam1 l"t.c.t. Cosl1 Meu. boll ,_, Mr. ~nd Mrl. Llavd A. llrin;n. 6.!11 Jardl,,.1 Orlv1, H11nllntlon ll""'ch. ,,,, Mr. incl Mr1. Kfl!Mtlo D. 11\0rt, IODll Sf1rllrltltl, Wntmlntlitr, bay JllM 1 M•. '"" Mr1. Ci'U!rles D. W!rrte'>. •IJ'" Ltrk~r. Cctron• Gel Mir. ~1'1 ... M > Mr. 1nd Mrl. °"""'"' L. N11n , 2619 Or1nve ,t.ve., Cosll Mewo, bov Fire Calls wu 1ml11htt ';Zll •.m. Tue1clAV, m~lc1I 11lcl, In.I') !G~O~sh!~.:'i.~1'.wen "''· lOOfl 1!!1vt rlv l:i't~~'"" ll'I lnve1!111t11>11, Oovl1 11nd J:11/ P.m .. ci r !Ir!, S•n Oieon Fr~'"'"v .,.,..fjl el We1tm n,ier Roulrv••cl Hvnll111r111 a11Cll 11 :1• 1.m. Tuetcl1v. 1r1H r;,,, 1!!11!11 Clllc1 Gun Club ~:«t p,m ,, 0\1!11 f!r1. ?110 Huntlno!on St. 1.f.~1• p1,m,. meclic1! old. lle1c~ lloultv1rd 11'1d EOlnlt" Avtnu• C11t1 Miii ':II 1.m. Tuticlav, rescue. 2l5J Hl<:-fl'Y 1 .!''P.~ .. 1r1n flrt. 11«1 Pllctn11a J:~v'P.m .. ~nollnt. w1~n. 1711\ ,,~":~~ ~1b:nm,Md il>ee!, 1103 VIC- t!)l'IJ Htw...., ltl<~ f,J6 1.m. We<tM1d1r, l•llh llrt, 5()(1 Suo>erlor ..,wt. Pilot Visitor~ DEA T H NOTICES ALLOWAY LU<.V I. AllOWIV tOI ... 1111Mm1. Hu .. t· ln9!on llet cll, 01•1 n! dP.1!h, June 11. Survlvell bv 1on1. JOl'ln. Wiiiiam F. 111111 w1m1m s. AllOWIVI dAUll\le1'5. Cl1r lC1 G1l1Cr111 , L1ur1 "'"°''"°"' Viole Jun Moller. Oollv Ano OcWf!r Lo,rrll<!t llolltlll'M'. 111d Lucv Mav Firtier; 11•••" Ten, l!ler1h1 Knl1h1. "'llct S!1cv 1nd Ev• E,ilboy: ll tr•"ck/llldren tlld lG 1•t•!·1r1ndcl'll~ ~r1n. ~rvlce1. Frla1v. ? 1.m. 5ml!h• <h••el. l~"m>enr, H1rbor Rett Mt,· ....,rl•! Park. O!ret!HI bv Sn\!11'11 MOr • tutn>. HOPKI NSON ~INll<f ~. Hoak!nlO'I. 1?111 l!IMM 51 • Gt rO.n Grow. 5vrviVfll bv ¥· "'""' H1rrv H. Hoa~lnsc•H JIJ!f•i. Evt F1rtlfr, r ... 1. •nd 1111 l!I. Okld~. •nd •Merion Weow• . .1.ervlces. S.111r- cl•Y· J P,M,, Peo~ F .... llv Colon!•I F11,..r1I Hom!', BALT'l MORTUA RIES Corona def Mar OR 3.9450 Costa Mesa 1\11 1·24%4 BEl.L BROADWAY MORTUARY 118 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 8-34Xl PACIJo~I(~ VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e ft1ortuary Chapel 3500 f>aclflc View Drive NewPort Beach, California 6«02700 P EEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERA L ROME 78tl BolP A vt.. We1tmln1ter m.:su smTH'S MORTUARY 8!'I Main SI. Huartn(t.On . Reach LEM$31 WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 17th St., c01t1 r.te11 I ll 1111 WESTMINSTE R MEMORIA L PA RK l\lortu1ry ~ Cemetery Ch111Jlf'l5 1'381 f\1!11,.h. w~sl mlns~r 1 L,1·11!.' e n.1-%41:1 -----~----~-~-----.,.--....--~---~-~---~----------~-----"""'~ .. ' . " . . -~- • Wtdnt!idAJ, JI/flt 12, 1968 o~ILV mor 17 SUD11Der Session PSA 's Airpo rt Lease 0 'd Highway.· Share Alloted VCI Extension SANTA ANA -El\' e n though Pac.ltlc Southwest Airlines has not nown a scheduled plane in or out ol Orange County Airport, thP- firm hci~ a lease on 726 square let.I ol terminal bullding space. The Soard ol Supervi$Or1 approved lhi *375 a month leasr. Tuesday upc)p the recommendation or County Civitan Clubs F ete Viet-bound Marines F i ve-btindred \'ietnam· bound Camp Pe n d I e to n Marines will be guest of a dozen Civitan Clubs here on Catalina Island June 29. Aboui 100 more Marines Villa Park Reservoir Polluted VILLA PARK A 100,000.gallon reservoir was drained Tuesday because weed oil got into the drink- ing water suppLied lo Villa Park residens. Dr. John Philp, county health officer , saido.tke Villa Park Dam water was not poisoned and would have been no danger to anyone who drank it. "But it di(ln't look too good,'' he con· eluded. The water was dumped in- to the Santa Ana River and lhe reservciir is being clean- ed. , The Serrano Irrigation District. a public agency, !<tUpplies the water to Villa Park. District M a n a g e r Norm Wilson did no! know how !he oil got into the reservoir. Sunset P a rk Ready Soon SANTA ANA -F'acWti es al the county'~ S u n s e t Aquatic Regional Park on Anaheim ·Bay will he ready for public use by mid-July. Supervisor David L. Baker said today. Boat launching r a m p s a b I e to accommodate 250 boats a day will be in opera- tion as well as a beach and picnic facilities, Baker said . The Board of Supervisors Tuesday approved the nam· ing of two streets in the park. They are Sunset Way East and Park Circle Drive. The for mer ties i n l o Edinger Avenue. Cor y School Bill Okayed A s semblyman Kenneth Cory ID-Anaheim) has an· nounced passage of his Assembly Bill 379 which eliminates the requirement that unified school districts provide t h e i r superin· tendents with a minimum four-year contract. The bill was signed into law early last week by Gov . Ronald Reagan. Prior to the passage of !he bill. only non-unified school districts could determine the length of superintendent contracts. "Now if a unified School board wishes lo try out a new superintendent. it can offer him a short-term cnn- tracl instead of being com· pelled to hire him a minimum of four yearll. Cory said. --·- FIRST, FAST Who t11!1 ,.Ou fi .. t 19oul tli• b11t ;,. loc1I n•wJ? Cli•ck It 0111. 11'1 "''rl'I' 1lwt 'I'• tl11 DAILY PILOT. , • from 1.ong Beach Nava\ Hospital will also attend. The Marine day at Pebble Beach, Catalina Island, will feature several h u n d r ~ d pounds of barbecued steak. The USS Tioga will be u~­ ed to transport the Marines from lhe main{and t o Catalina Island. Two of the Civitan Clubs sponsoring the day will be. !he Laguna Beach and Orange Co a s t branches. Tom Floyd is president or lhe Laguna Beach club, and Richard Weets is president of the Orange Coast Club. Red Cross Sets First Aid Courses ANAHEIM -The Orange Ccunty chapter of t h e American Red Cross is of- fering free first. aid courses in Anaheim , Santa Ana and Fullerton. .&,. 10-hour standard course will be given at the Anaheim F'ire Stati on, • 2610 N . Brookhursl. St., fTom 8:30 to JI a .m., on .June 18-21. A JO-hour course will a lso be given in the basement of FulJerton Ci ty Hall, 303 W. Commonwealt h Ave., from 7:30 to 9 :30 p.m. 1'he course wiU be given on June 17, 19, 24 . 26 and July I. .t.,, 15-hour first aid in- structor.! course will be. of· fere d at Willard Junior High School in the cafeteria at 1342 N. Ross St .. Santa 'A na, from 7·10 a.m . The ad· vanced cour se will be given on J une 18, 20, 25, 27 a nd Ju- ly 2. To enroll in t hi s course . ~udent.s must hold a cur- rent Red Cross advanced first aid certifi cate. Med School Sla te.s Ball UCl-California College Or Medicine will hold a n ''Alumni-Senior Graduation Banquet and Ball" Friday night a t the Newporter Inn. Three classes will be honored: the graduating class of '68. the silver an- niversary clas11 of '43, and the golden anni versary class of '18. The progTam will begin at 5::l0 p.m. with th e admini~terin,I? of the Hip· pocratic Oath and progress througti cocktai ls. dinner, presentation~ and dancing. Airmen Go To Lemoore The Naval Air Reserve Attack Squadron 716 which wall called to activt duty rturing the .lanuary Pue.bin lncldcnl will fly from I.As Alamilo~ Naval Air Station today to join Attack Carrier Air Wing Five at Le moore Naval Air Station, Lemoore, Calif. Awaiting the squadron at the base will be a new version of the Skyhawk which is one of the most ex· tensively used aircraft In the Navy's inventory. I See by Tod ay· s Want Ads • A uniqu• hllchell'tl' 11pat1· men! clei;::antly tumlaht'CI. e An 11,.m or lnterelll In atrferl. H~no·11 1 9' 10" H1wlltl 11.1rftloard. ~ riRhl! • t11ptor1 J11~ !!:lll'den- lmi:: F'rtt estimate&. • fl/ffd 1. lriMd or compan- lnn. Here'• a lovable toy EnrUlh Pua. • 'n\tt you can fl,v ln C811- lln11 ! Fl\J[ht11 IHVe d II t 1 y lrorn Or1oiJI" County A.ir- {'1'>11. r' Adminis.trativ 0 ft l c e r Robert E. Tho as, The lease l eludes back rent (13.348)_1 ~ ,Jast Sflpt. I when PSA t\o d to OOgln fl ying out of 0 nge County. Since then P lie UUliUes C'..ommission arings and debate has hJ up the PSA franchise. 1 In the m ttlme. Ca ble ('..ommunter 1 jrllnes i s Oying a set>~ led air taxi service out (If i~e airport to Los Angeles International. They hl!Vt s et • part o( PSA's spa~{ • Thom.as .-. roved Airport Manage·i'j, R obert Bresnahan's, pproval of a Cable Comm er lease f!f. rective June . because th@y started fl yinf that day. Parkw· y Due For Wid n ing SANTA ArJA Widening o{ Crown Vall y Parkway fo r almost a h I f -m i l e stretch betwee Sea Island and Pacific Isl d drives in the Monarch B area Tues- day was appr ed by the Board of Super isors. The new roa ay will bf' four lane; w de with a divider cente ~ I r i p . E stimated col'il $15.5.000. Check Needs Birth Date SANTA .t.,,NA -The ma- jor delay in !l8Ying Social Security retirement benefits is estab\ishigg a person's date of birth. according to Ralph A. Dillman. district manager of the Sanl a . .\na SociJil Security office. "We have never failed tu .prove a perSOJl was born." 0 i 11 m a n said, "but S(l metimes it take,; a while ." 1'o speed payment of the rirst check , Dillman advises anyone whose birth was not recorded prior to the age five, to contact the Social Security office before retir· ment to determine what proof of age is acceptable. Lncal officel'i are localed al 14.11\ E. First St.. Sanla Ana. or telephone 543-0151. Co n1 plctc Meal k l at )'our ar c f'i ngcrti rs in llo1n e with 'our Coldspol }''r eczt>r Orange County's 11hare-or the May apportJonmen4: of the highwRy users tax Is $644,239 St-ate Controlle.r liouston I. fi'lourooy an- nounced today, From this a1nount alloca· Uons lo cities are: Co.-;ta Mesa. 141 .~; F o u n ta In Va 11 e y $12,326.97 ; Hun- tington Beach, $ 5 e , 5 4 I ; Laguna jJeach, $ 8 , I 8 I : Newport Beach, 524 .224 ; and Westminster W ,377. From the Slate cigarette taic, Orange County will receive. $12,042. Cities allocations a r e : Costa Mesa, S 3 , 9 5 0 . 7 5 ; Fountain Valley, S2,7'Ul.58 ; llunlinglon B eac h $18 ,376.T.?; Laguna Beach S5;222.C>9 : Newport Beach, $19 ,596 .29 : and Westminster, $8,83t90. Hos pital Ge ts $4.6 Mill ion FULLE RTON -SI .. Jude Hospital here has awarded a S4.fi million contract for a ISO.bed expansion. Tocluding equipment, the expansion will cost $5.3 million. Program Started 1-IC Extenslon at the a Sum mer Fiction Wor.klhop Irvine campug openi; Its to bf' cond uclc<f by writer largest summer program Patrick McNulty . yet Mondaf witti more than A th · '70 univer$1ty-level courses. no er experience-pro-worksho~ and t e ct u r e gram will be ' 'Th 8 series. Dyoomics of Marr.iage," 11 weekend on campus July 19· Many l)f tM summer 1 ill Courses wiU combine achlal 21 in which coup es w ex• plore thelr relationsilp from experience with cl&."11 and various perspectives and lab 9tudy · focus nn marrlage a.s a Extended field _tript; to Ba· per60nal way or lire Mt.her ja California or <>long the than as ~n imtituti-On . coasUine as far north as A iso offered wHI b e Sonoma ())unfy. for in· courses in art. business ad· stance. will be a major ministration. conservation, feature of two advan<'ed education, Fl'ench. Russian, mar ine ecology workshops. history. mat!\, m usic , Parents are encouraged to political science. psychology bring children over 8 years and real estate -many 0( old on a series of conducted them offering credit. · nature IOUr!I of the desert. lo;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-._;;; mounttiin. wooded valley and seashore environment ''"l'he Treaoores of Nature." "Shakespeare on Stage", ;i credil course in E nglish. will com·bine att.endance at rhrce productiorrs of the G tobe Theatre in San Diego wltti class study a n d discussion of the works of the im·mortal bard. Aspirinjl" wr.iterll w i I I discus!I one a no I h er ' s aS>Sigrrmenll'i in a pro- fes~onal atmosphere during WAl l!MOUS• OU TLI T FURNITURE ... CARPET 811 SOFAS $169. •11. Wt. FORTREL CARPETING • ••. t.95 5.95 J. J . KNICKERIOCKH 4001 lllCH ST~ N.I. tMlwwft "•llMMI 6 liUCArlllllf'I MS·ll409 s·PECIAL FREEZER AND MEAT OFFER! ' ., ~ l SIDE OF BEEF } I 15.8 Cu . Ft.* Upright Fr eezer s • 32-in. wide, 651/~·in . high and 301h ·in . deep .•. stores 552-lbs. •Features Bookshelf Door stor· 11ge, grille type s helvef:, ad just· 1tble cold control, porcelain·on· steel interior. Morie\ 2822. 23988 NO MONE \' l>OWN on Sf>Al'5 F..e"'f Payml"nt P1An LIMITED TTME ONL Y with the Purchase of Coldspot Freezer ~IDE OF BEEF Approximate Weight 300.lhs. NO~I ONLY Here 's What T·8ttM Stealta -P•rterhotl1e St..alll11 T6ft 91rtola !teaka Fillet Mlf'*' SW,1k1 RM•ll Ste1lt SWltl S&ealt 1'1a•lt 1Steall: ~"'4• ,,, Ste•lt• Chltii !Mi111k1 Rllt Skak1 s,e~. !Jte•k• 47~ You Get ... R&and 8tinil Red Ro•d 1 enne seer RflMt Slrl.,h1 np Ro•rt Brhrkel Rtt•st -Ill" ...... Sffp M111~ R•inp Roatl• Prttrte Rltii Rout. lkeelt •• .. BMl Grotn1d c:lilftlt All thill: includN:, cul frM by dilled ~tl cuttars. T1Uored t:e your iodJvidual Medi. Shtrp lrfftin&. FR~I!, to seal ln all lbe CENTER MEAT 00. tht n1tura\ Juleat. · Se ars ' l'~llll'ltll!' l)o"rl'Tlment Orll.dlli AA C'llolec Oou11-n1•~d lt•er ~I~~ Scar ·~anla Ana, 1716 S. Main St. Phone KI 7-3371 Sears Orange, 2100 N. Tust\n Phone. 637-2100 . sta Mesa, Br is,tol -111 Sunflower in the South Coast Plaza Phone 540-3333 Scars Buena Park, La Palma al Stanton Phone 82844llO !:\ --. . . • r~· _, - I l - EAGLE SCOUT Rlch•rd Slater Andrews Yoqth Gets . Scouting's .Top Honor Richard Slater Andrews, 17, bag achieved the rank of Eagle Scout in Newport Beach Boy Scout Troop 79. The honor is won by fewer than 1 percent of all youths who enter scouting. Andrews was presented the award at a formal-Scout Court of Honor at M:ariners School-He earned a minimum or 21 m e r i t badges, and active~y participated in commu'!1ty affairs as well u devoting time to leading younger boys in scouting events. He has attended District · Camporees fOr the la.st six years and gone on two fifty. mile •High Sierra hiking trips with selected scouts. For bis com munit y service -project, the youth was involved with civic beautification and erosion control. He was one of the young people who manned sandbags al West Newport last fall in the successful ef· fort to save homes from the advancing tides. Andrews is a junior al Newport Harbor H 1 g h School, and has partici~ in track. He is also an active sailor. He is the son of Robert L. Andrews. of 1215 Sussex Lane, and the late Mrs. Andre\VS. He is t b e grandson of Mrs. Isabel Andrews Pease of Corona del Mar and the la'fe Mr. , George Andrews, .and of E. Ord Slater ol Pasadena and the late Mrs. Slater. Rats With Pill Eat Less Food EAST LANSING , WJch. (UPI) -Female rats given birth control pills ate less food , developed t h i n n e r bones and lost phosphorous in their blood systems, ac· cording to two Mlchigan St.ate Univer'llty researchers. In an ll·week test, Drs. Modesto Yang a nd Olaf Mickelsen gave the oral con- traceptive ''Enovid" to one croup of virgin rem.ate rats. "Feed consumption of the rats decreased im· mediately," Yang said . "The amount ·e ate n was always less for the pill-fed rats than for control (groups) on the same diet without the p 111 com- pounds." The rats taking the pill weighed an average or 10 percent less than the other rat& after the,_expt!'fiment. When both groups .at.e equal quantities, the pill-fed rats also lost weight, possibly because they "excreted a greater percentage of the dietary protein than the con- trol rats," Yang 1aid. The diameter of the bones of piD·fed rats was "reduced significantly" but there W8:) no reduction in the length of the bones. Both scientists aaid !urther study was need- ed to explain the decrease in Ute amount of phosphorous in the blood. Yang &aid a aignificanl lack c o u 1 d weaken bones. "We must be very careful In comparing the findings from rat studies wtth human females,'' he said. "Signl!icanl findings will be transferred to h u ma n 1tudJes before we make any application.s." NO. I °"' •' "" ll'lett p.,,1., MW1p1p1r fe1fv,11 111 fft1 IMffre \1111ted St1te• h the A1111 L.eMI.,.. t1l1"'"· ft't • '•"r ...... ,. ef ... DAIL y PILO"' 1114 -r re14'er1 till •• It'• evr Ne. I ,.1111111. • STORES TO SERVE YOU HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER DIRECTORY Banks: CROCKER CITIZENS SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL Barber Shap: HARBOR CENTER BARBER SHO, Beauty Salon and Supplies: BENTLEY'S BEAUTY SALON PERMATRESS REGAL BEAUTY SUPPLY Candy Stare: HELEN GRACE CANDIES Cleaners: ORB IT CLEANERS Children's . Wear YOUNG LAND DelicatflSan: PINK KITCHEN Department Store: J, .c. Jll;NNEY CO. Drugs: THRIFTY DRUG CO. Gym: HOLIDAY HEALTH SPA Giftwear: MEMORY LANE Hardware: KIRBY'S Housewears: THE HOME SHOP Jewelers:· KIRK'S JEWELERS Ladies Ready Ta Wftar: ANITA'S GENES SMART SHOP SYLVIA'S PANT TREE THE WINDSOR SHOP Market: FOOD GIANT Maternity: MOTHERHOOD MATUNITY Men's Wear.: Music: GENTRY LTD. KINGS FOR MEN • DISCO MUSIC '"~ A"LIANCES Nursery: R. P. K. Office Supply: COLLEGE OFFICE SUP'l Y Optomltrist: DR. KLIEN Restrauant: JOLLY ROGER Sewing Machines and Needs: SINGER SEWING CENTER Sltae Stores and Repair: CABOT'S CHILDRENS SHOES \ FIELD'S SHOES GALLEN KAM P'S THOM McAN THE COHLERS BENCH Stenographer: A. I. STENO Toys: TOY WORLD Variety: WOOLWORTH'S Yardage: EMPIRE SILK ST<~lRES Yant: '% IEVERL Y'S YARN SHOP • AND · ' 'CANYAI OXFORD FOR FATH E:R ON H IS DAV FOR SAFETY C11111fort .i ... 1c:1 DIWIH•tll ~ •• 1 c:lltfllM, AFLOAT coeli....""':d!P,. Jll!.l!IJ._M1e'1 lllf Wantt11'1 . •tl-.wlltt1, MtVVo Titn, COMFORT UN BELi EV ABLE VALUES! TOO! An shoes on ~le are current fash· ians In spring illors. A large selec· tion of c:oo.:.i nated handbags at special price" YOUR FAVO ITE BRANO NAMESI SIZU 6'/i t. l 4 "7/.14 .i4 -11""4 ,,ilu.tJ""'°"" Jo .JM ..,,... "°"""'"' "'1/J. &«la/. ..,J 8""M- -" q..,,., All .- J., ~ '°''io.. ~­ -,.t~ ~~;bO SJ,,,,.,,t,. '114.<f~ So. Coast Plau 3333 Brlatol, Coatt Mesa Htrltor Center 2300 N. 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"~ w ·'"'"· -- """" ..... u """ ....... hrflct wtlll ""1 ONI •tell " 1111$111111t.171tWtll. illlllltlt.lt-..... IOll IO. r1cttM 23 ltWtll..1411. IOH • , Ytl"" II' I ......... Ttllllw --...... .,, .... When you give 1 Bulova you give 1 worttliy ew1rd for achievement You give more than a· watch. You glvtl a fine name, the boot wor1!monllblp end the dlltlnctlon of oie91nt, good -· BulO'll lo I gift you give· with prlde-becaute It'• mt~• with pride. Come In and let our Watch Expens help you chooH from our •X1•naM Bulova Graduation Cotltctlon. 1'*''• oo rift lib 1 watch -no wlkh Hu 1 '"'°''· BANKAMERICARD-MASTER CHARGE e TAKE A YEAR TO ,AY ~~\\1111!. ' ., .... -~._ ... ,,._ }_•r-~1.- 2 Gr~•t Stor•1 .To S•rv• Y eu Horllw --.. H-""'"" c ..... c .... 2* H~ l lvtl. IMch & 141nttr C•ta MeM Huntlntt• IHCh l4S"'4li m...uo1 Oji" Moo., n.n., l'rl, II t ,..,, • • = • • •••• 4 a z c a c a 4 4 4 a e a; Boy Scout Tom Barker. 14, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter 'Barker, of 450 E. 21st St., Newport · Beach, became Harbor F R. ' 1· E I Area's newest Eagle Sc.out this week in a ., Family Court of·Honor . • ·of Troop 10, sponsored by .St. Andrew 's Pres-ANGEL BASEBALL TICKETS ,_byt_erian_ch_urch_. - ' SEE COUPON ON THIS PAGE COLOR HARMONY! TAILORED BY ROUGH RIDER Very humonloua.,. th1t'1 thJ1 new cu1tom-Iook "Sult" of color coordinoled Sportco1t·And·Blcck1. The Goldin R DUET com11 lo c wide variety of luxuriou1 imported cod dome1tic f1brlc1.,. mud11 with the expert craft1m1ruhip of Roush Rlder'• m11tcr ti.lion. s4500 ,, IANllAM••1c.1.1to MA.STUil CHAAGE ".,.,., lltepph•t c-ter JJOO Hothf, C. M. 64Mf42 o,_. Mct1., Th-., & M . TMI t :OO ANGEL BASEBALL ' 'TICKETS ·-············ • Address •••••••...••• Phone ••••••••• ' . ' DEPOSIT IN ANY ' HARIQR CENTER STORE ' What Did Ray Do In London? By GODFREY ANDERSON . LONDON (AP) -James Earl Ray seemed to be an easy going fugitive until something alarme<l..._h i m t5ru-d«ys1>efor€his arrest. Then, overnight, he was jumpy and sougbt to blde himself. The bars a n d restaurants of Lisbon and Londo71 saw him no more. He awltched to an obscure back atreet hotel. Jocked. himself in, changed his whole mode of llie. When he went out it was only to buy cold snacks from the shop around the comer. ·He ate them in his room . And bis nervousness seemed to increaae when he was twice informed that his planned flights out 0 r England had been delayed. The Pax Hotel in Pimlico, where Ray stayed and caU· ed himself Ramon George Sneyd, presents a blank.Jy anonymous face to the oµtslde world. -... 3-STORY BUILDING It is a cream-painted three-story building In a street filled with others just like it. A two-minute "falk away is the B r i t 1 s h Overseas Airways terminal and the busy Victoria co n· tinental rail deport. There's no name on the black-painted door and the electric sign above it only says "hotel." The push-but· ton by the knocker is labeled "bell." The telephone number is unlisted. The Pax i1 discreet. Taxi drivers have nev er heard of the Pax Hotel. Nor has the nearby milk depot. Nor the newsstand. Anna Thomas , the S w e dish-born 54-year-old wife of an Englishman, bought the place recently, redecorated it from top to bottom, and opened in April. She has seven rooms and can accommodate a tota1 or 12 guests. LYING LOW She saw little of Sneyd during the three days he was with her from last Wed· nesday to Saturday. He was already lying low. "He arrived in the middle ol a violent rainstorm Wednesday evening," Mrs . Thoma1 said Monda y • "There was no one in the hotel becaUM I'd only just returned from vlJiting my 8&-year-old m o th er in SIDcltholm. "He had only an airllne bag as luggage, but I gave him No. 1 on the ground noor. We often get single genUemen with only h.n airline bag, staying o v e r between flights." Mrs. Thomas said Sneyd didn't have much to say. "He said he was from Toronto. I uked him about Toronto. He .saJd there was a lot ol unemployment there." But she noticed how nervous and ill be seemed. NEVER WENT OUT "He hardly ever went out and then only to buy food. kttl -ot newtpapers and upirlns," Mrs. Thom as said. "He seemed so 1U and 1tayed in bed all day. He told me he had arrived on an early flilbt and wu very tirld. lie ~ed very, vecy DU'VOUI," 'nle room asslgned to Ray wa1 • the rear of the croun<I Ooor. lt looks oul on (See RAY •C• It) ' 0 ., { 1 ' t ' ~ I _Fi .. -'# •• ,~'""="'"'"-~ .--.;-~~-----~~. -. ~---~------.. ~ . . -.. . .. .. ' ,--. . ...... L 1 " 19 ".OAILY.Plllll' Wol/lf~. Ju" 12. 1968 ~: I Six Vessels Ready for Tahiti Race Transatlantic Race Rough ·, ~Skippers Ind crews ol six cr.aick dee~wattr "alUilg vMMls art maktna final prepare.lions this week tor the 1tart Saturday noon or the 3.~milt Los Angelu to Tahiti race. 1tart1Ag from 1At1 Angele11 Harbor. The Tahiti race spo nsored by SECARD'S ' SWIMMllG POOL SALE 100% J;noftdng GIANT POOL l 6x30-0.DJ •ecton9'1lar 3 to 8 ft. o..p I ,__ ___ __, CorTtplet•ly ln1toKed Only $1369.00 INCLUDES: Pool, J. Yi H.'P. Filters, Built-In Auto-Skim· -m8r, Bottom Drain, Stainless Steel Lad- der, 1 End and Side Decking, Steps, and 20 Mill Liner with 12 Year Warranty. NO l!LECTl'UC AU SIZES TO FIT YOUR YAllD 3~ Mill lint1r, Boord, Healer, Zonolite Bottom, light, Sf.de, ond La1y l or L Shope Op1io,.ol1. S locotion1 With 9 Years E ic~rienw SEE OUR DISPLAY NOW Oll'EN 7 DAV& A. Wt:EI( 10t:IO TO 7:10 323 S. M~IN, OUNGt: 532-19'92 Is the Transpacific Yacht Club but 67·foot ketch owned and sall· i1 not 1aUed on a regular td by Jacob Wood. basis as Is the Transpacific c atflornla Yacht Club. LONDON (AP) -· HW' Tied that -they're· ahead of ricant·force winds a n d me," Williams said. tremendous uu today The record for a single· brought !eara that aome haDded Atlantic crossing is 27 days set by l''raDCe:I Eric Tabarly in the 1964 "race. Tabarly is out of thls year's ~:~s~o lk>noluJu every twn AU six of ttte yacbta will Heading the list for the be alongaide the guest dock Jong haul across the equator at Newport Harbor Yacht is Tom Corkett's Cal-48 Olub T.hiusday af\ernoon. A Salacia from New p.o rt skippers meeting ls schedul· Harbor Yacht Club. Salacht ed a:t NHYC at 3 p.m . and was a prime contender in the 1967 Honolulu race until the instruction d i n n e r she was dismasted some 700 1'hursday night at 8. • miles from the finish. Communicalions on the Skipper Corkett ls a progress of the race will be. former winner of t he provided by t~yle Nelson, a Honolulu race in the 40-foot ham radio man aboard the sloop Islander. Corkett's Crew for the Tahiti race is Aranji. Nelson will be composed or bis Cather. remembered Cor the yeoman Earl. Bob Dickson, ·Burk communications task he M kB dt performed in the 19157 ooney, Fran r 1 n · HonoluJu race when tbere ~~~~ Abrams aDd Mark was no Coast Guard eScort. Another hot contend_J!r is the 48.foot Lapworth-design. ed aluminum ketch Aranji, owned and skippered by Henry Wheeler of Newport. Beach. He wiU be sailing un· der the burgee of the Lahaina Yacht C \ u b . Wheeler's crew consists ol Dan Elliott, sailing master: Frank Person . Rick Hambleton. BiU Lilly, Bob Clark and Dabe Wood. A relatively new yacht in the race is the Col umbia-36 yawl Star Dancer owned and skippered by Doug Starkweather of Seal Beach Yacht Club. Others scheduled to start are Rapture, Columbia-50 sloop owned by F It 11 er Calloway of San Francisco: The last Tahiti race was sailed in 1964 with a new record crossing or slightly more than 17 days !let by Bob Johnson's 72 foot ketch Ticonderoga from Portland, Ore. The corrected time winner in 1964 was William Wilson's K-50 Rascal from Santa Barbara Yacht Club. The Tahiti race is usually started at a time that will give the yachts a chance to fin ish by July 14, start of the French island's Bastille Day celebration. Race Dates Changed For Cruise q , Aliacapa Winner BOO S I o a n ' s Dauntless from Newport Beach but sailin~g uni:ler ih~ banner of the ' haina Yacht Club, wal'I st to finish and win- ner On corrected time in the annual schooner r a c e around Anaeapa Island. The race was sailed Satur· day from Channel Islands Marina at Oxnard. Sebo!td boat to finish but third ~n handicap w a s R y r on Chamberlain's Golden Hind from Seal Beach YC. Third boa t acrO!ls the line and second on handicap wa~ Ted Pounder'i:: Albatross, Chan- nel Islands YC. event '" yacbts in the single·bandedi lii~~;i;i~ii;;-;i;;;;ii;;;;;---~---~poii;;;;; TransaUantic yacbl race may m4et more trouble . than they can cope with. ' SeasOned seamen. among the r•ct leaden reported conditions 1n the mid-Atlan- tic were the wor1t they bad ever experienced, Vi l th winds gusting ue to 100 mph. Twenty-eight '°of the original 35 1tarteN1 are lighting it ollt on the AUan· tic course between Plymouth, E ngland, and Ne wp ort, R.J.1be race, sponsored by the London Observer newspaper, started June 1. Britain's Leslie 'Williams, now more than l._,100 miles out ol PlymoUth in his 5.'J.. foot-..sloop, Spirit of Cutty Sark, reporled by radio that the sloop was lying beam on to ~eavy seas with all sails lashed down. "This is the" worst storm J've ever experienced," he said. "It's impossible to car· ry sail and I'm making no headway whatsoever." Australian Bill Howell, in the 43-footc at am ara n , Golden Cockerel. radioed: "This is-the worst storm I have seen in 18 years' sail· jng -and I've done 20,000 miles. "Huge waves are break· ing clean over the boat. Water is being forced in throogh the hatch and ven· ti la tors. I "The waves are m ore than 30 feet high and very ' i ~·;~~ ' ' \ BRIGHT~~, IDEAS FOR·':' FATHER'S DAY·;; "' ;. -ARROIF:,~ Misty, Bounty-41 sloop own- ed and skippered by Ed Spaulding. Los A n g e I es Yacht Club; and Chiriqui, a The 17th rerun of thP steep. I've been terrified Nassau Ban·L:on..,·IJ ,._ Yacht Racing Union Cruise Shai·k Island that a wave might tip the h b h ed r A boat over·b u t l feeJ more ' ' ' . Perma-lron Sport Knit,:" E1ti1Y"? inll1t1bl1 " rood .r '°' ... :111 CROQUET SET CoMplete for 11p lo I pltytrs. llld: Roe• 1111pl1 b1U1. widitb. """'''' II ,.. .... 7 M Olhlf !Iris. 4.M '9 1 ... as een c ang rom ug. ccnfident now." 8-11 to Aug. t to 4, according 8 r it a'i n · s G e offrey to Robert w.. Allan .Jr., com-Op' en1·ng Set Williams, in Sir Thomas modore oJ the YRU of Southern California. Lipton , a 57-foot ketch. is Stiark"Is land Yacht Club's lhe leader of 'the five yachts Allan said the YRU cruise whose positions are known! date was chan•ged to avoid Opening Day ceremonies and apparently was sailing conflict with 0 I y m p i c a.nd dedication of its new north of the worst of the , yachting trials scheduled in club quarters at H i rt h weather. r I August. HarbOr will be held Sunday He reported Tuesday, "I There have also been with flag raising ceremonies am pressing the boat to the some changes made in the st"heduled at noon. maximum. She is taking a for mat of the cruise. The The event was scheduled tremendous hammering but first race on Thursd<fy, Aug. fnr last. Sunday but was J held full working sail in a 1, will be sailed from Los postpotled in deference to wind up to 28 knots yester- A n g e Jes Harb 0 r to the nitional day of mourn· day." Howland's t~anding 0 n ing for the late Seri. Robert Williams said he was anx· Catalina Island . Previously. F . Kennedy . ious to know the position of - You 're sure 1o·fl,nd Dad's favorite col.or in out,;;~ wide collec1ion of thes~ handsome ~port koit~.'. : ' '"•f1 Soft, luxurious 100% texlurized DuPont" nylon for comfort. ·Button-through Rap·.~~: pocket. Speciall y designed placket and loop:··· collsr for lasting neatness wash after wash~ "1 " .. .: . ., the race terminated at SIYC is the. largest a ll two yachts who were anlong Moonstone Cave. The first powerboat club west of the early l~aders but. now race of the cruise is for the Floridt>. The former Hirth have lost radio· contact - Los Angeles Times Trophy. Harbot facilities at 347 the French yawl, Raph, sail· one of the oldest yachting Bayside Drive have been ed by Alain Gliksman, and awards in s 0 u the r n completely remodeled by the South African ketch, California. the SIYC membership. The Voortrekker, sailed b y D f P A"T M fN T STOil!. r,c;1,·1.1 also includes boa! Bruce Dalli'ng Friday, Aug. 2 will be a Y · 1816 Newport Blvd. lay-day as far a-s the cruise 1-'''.'.'i~ps~'l"nd"'..!g~ue~st'..".doc~k::.. ____ '..'' '':''m"'_~tr~e:'m~e:'.nd~ou"'''.'.'Y~~w:!Jo'::c·~~~~~~~~~~~;,,.~~~~~~~~~~ yachts are cortcerned, but there will be races schedul· ed off Isthmus Cove for the I Shields Class, one-design day-sailers. On Saturday. Aug . 3, the cruise fleet will up anchor .and race to Moonstone, and on Sun<l.·ay the fleet will race from Long Point to Long Beach for the final day of the cruise. Other trophies up for grabs are the Walt Elliot Trophy for the Saturday and Sunday races. the Allan Ga- boon for the Saturday race. the West Trophy for Sunr day's homeward b o u n d race, and the W y m .A n Trophy for ttle overall cruise wi nner of ttie three Ev1r' w11k MMCO Htlafln -· ttt." 10,000 '''"""i11lon prolll-. '1"011 ••I ,,., towln•, • ,,.. ('OH· el'l1ek, 1111, 11flcitflt l.1rvlc-e.t ti11111 ii\ ju1t -ol1y. Alt'll wH~ AAMCO, yeur tr1n11ml&1ien -ll<o llf'tlteet.11 1ty .,., 500 MM'OO e .... 11" COlft lo lllHt, [Yery mil>.,._ -cf I "-If, -· •tw ...-.. ••• ., ......... .,.._. • a•laal .... AA•Ciet SMART APl'IAIAllCI TOP QUALITY OUTDOOR LIVING IS A WAY OF LIFE ••• IN ORANGE COUNTY!· I .' •. and Santa Ana Toni ond Awning has the New Loo~ 'Ff.r '68 .•. everythino to make outdoor relaxation a family pastime. l'LUMINUM PATIO COVER Planned for either lorge or small home5 ... mobile homei; tool Durable, long lasting oll aluminum construction. Screened enclosures -large doors , , , completely bug proof. ' ............ .... OUR ALUMINUM WINDOW AND DOOR AWNINGS FIATUllHG 11 STUNNING DKOUTOI COLORS FOl YOUl llllCTION ll!GHT, VllUNT, MODElN , llAUTWUL ' . ' AND SD MANY snui fOl SO MANY NllD!. Tiii MIW LOOI! POI '611 CAllYAS AWNINIS • YALAllCIS • CURTAINS Nothi"G O•corate1 like Co"voJ, l •outiful New Colors ' N•w fcbrk1. far home1 •• , for busi!letsl MANUPACTVllD • INITAWD - • S STORES IN OltAN~l COUNTY TO SHVl YOUI ; - COSTA MESA 1741 ... .,.,. It ... ,.,.,, "41 ........ ·-..... Ht-all Stnt• An• m •. 1'11""11 ll, Hl<Hll 01/f ~ ~·, ;,/\'!(~ ,~.~ l\ -..c·.•ra~" SANTA ANA TENT ..... AWNINCi co. FACTORY SHOWROOM 2202 I . MAIN ST ., SANTA ANA 141-0491 jl AANCH omcr OAANGI COUNTY AWNI• CO. f SenoJ"• Nortll o,.,. .. C.-ty 4127 I . MAllOI, 11UU•f0ie ,,..,,, aJ:• .. e7~2 -----355 ~ I 70 s Many Do ·nave" Use· ·::;For Pills •. •.ll'lY 1 PETER J .. STEINCROJIN ---ar Dr. Stelrierohn: I ·(l>ok a pill iD .rof lllil J'ln 72 year( oi.t: Hji'I ., 0J1l~ kind OfT~d?-m • ,, ...... ~nt: tf.,you :~ere' tn Jymp1cs, 114' ~ote you a ' ·medal. If be :liJ.ed !(\" ' : Poe'might h3Ve. writteD ·oem called "Pills! Pills! t' 'Instead of1 ar "in ad· n to, ''Bells! ·Bells! I" I ... • •• G;;;;t),'ui li,ouses are turning ~ .•. delilgo ot all lti~da :.ol ~ft. Got a headache? ~C·h~·fOt .~ pt\L-'Ate~.YGu ·"i-•ti~led1 Reach 'IOi a ~pijl? Hav:e he~tb)D'D? A •~C pilliwill cleat it up in . time . at all. 'suffering m iD.S:Q.mnia t A p i 11 ~l.ra~-~· .-blissful ~etfulbess in slumber. · let us be ,thankful fOr ~ltb.ough, as a nation ave a tendency tQ pop :.r,prus int.o our mouths: .as !Jm!.C~anU.t as we ,<!ef'.fia!'d, -rafidiea, fhey are· 1 ~n genuipe: life-sav19ta. -· •' NG IJFE , ' ' ' patient who t a k e s . tis pills prescQ.bed by '1 doctor may prolong his r for ye'ars because this 7~arently ordinary p i 11 ·· ;..,.zwings strength and life to the heart muscle. ' Cortisone pills may nOt only relieve m:th!itis, but can· actually ·save .the lives of penpte who have in. sufficiency of the adrenal glands (above th,e kidpey.s). President John Kennedy was said to suffer from this ailment. Mrs. A. is 'a diabetic', but not severely enough to re· qlrire ifiSulitf. Special 'pills take . its place and prolong her-life. Mr. 8. suffers from tuberculosis.· Pills will help hatness it and bring it under COlltrOl. ~o. let us be thankful for the pills which drug houses manufacture. Mountains of them may be unnecessary. Hi1Js of them may tem- porarily r e 1 i e v e patients who have h ea d ache s , nervousness , insomnia and f~eS · oP other non- {,fi r e atening complaints. !i:nall piles of t h e m , 'i:iwever, may spell the dif- t:3t~· be~e~n . lif~ a~d '1nvell11 Is 'sorrV .fli ·Q· ·," reed.en' 1etfir's •. Nevertlleleli.' I!~ ol OeMral l111eresl Int ' . 1111 .... ••1· '" . Iii later (OIUITlll•. . •'. Cll . ~ c • • • •• '"Y ...... .., '" our ,.. "' ' . rn:arand . of '!" j:!iOrange :!!·County :,:'Music' 11:, • 1. 11 lliT he I,, . " ::Colorful l!i sound of ll!RADIO . :'!KOCM ,I,, lif103.1 FM :1.; :1:Fni>m · 1Ut .~ .. ;· • :11Fashio.n ,· h·11 ·'"d :i:I ~.~~ .I rnNew,p~rt i!!Beach '. •u1 UJ: 1: ... t •I • .· • -,...-;--w,u+uwp pp-p;;Qp$$S$WS+z¥ • • • • .. • .. ;z •••• 8 Beach & Edin9er Blvd., Huntin9ton leach • 233 E. 17th St.-Costa Mesa ' ; ~ Slioppln9 'Cent91'. Costa Mna • 2300 HC!lrbor llvd. at Wilson .St- Harbor ShopplllCJ Center, Costa Mna • 16827 Westminster at Golden-Wost. {\ ~ ' "' . ,, ·wntmlnster --' ~ .. :. .Fralned P1ct.ures !~9'" v_jj,1Now09'1y ..... i:~Pfianti~Sp&jiil;b ltyles 24x36" pie-s·999 ·;tu;rta,jr;:ith d~CoraUve2~"frameswith · . _ ·~ "~tf,c:'.•o/¢,.• look. Reproductions !Jf · .. :~tl'(0,9f>~~.etinb, inclll:dinfmany · ~:ot·-$"o~ ;~ti~!. A terrific value! , 66 c •••••• s1·.A1tstlc Listerine ••• 7 3c lox ot3o To~ltt• 4 9 79c Di-Gel • • • • • • • · c P'lc of.J O A1sorttd 9e,c·· BAND-AID :::t~~. 58c 4~'61. 'lero10U proy $1.49 Bactine •••• ·GliiCk; IUYt~CHlwenitnt $2·. 6. ·o· · l'l'·JT P.ushbutton :. • ' . . 11: ·' ~once Permanent $1.00 Value! Flower' Pins Blossom • bright ·posies. fo ·liven up . your summer out· . fits! ·At-1avings or over bait .4Jc ! Cup·O·Gold Ca .. dy Bars ~rH011 .... 3'19C Whip ed ma.rshmat 0 l~w hndant cre~m I · center coated with cttocoJate, •• , a .,.~ •• .,. 11 c ' .. '~~5 .~6·~ Val • .:Chenllle . Bedspreads . Q ~ •hill. ·3· ·99 · Twi• . ' ' letl Si111 . A~t , 1tyles, stripes, solids. Thermal and regular ehenille. cot ton• and blend1 of Rayon Acetate I: Cotton thtt are machine waabable, need no ironin1. 2·3c ea~ S·Year Light Bulbs 10:0w":11 6.: .. $.106. · Stock up tor the year ' at thl&-Thrift;y out· 1tandin1 dltcount •ii•• . ...,., .. 1avinpl · !le ', '' "'~ , '" . •2••cott• 30xSO·lnch ~ug• Hl·LO Loop Extra deep ·J:H·lo pile with smart railed pat· tern. Latex coated for aafecy. Machine wash- able! 8 popular color•! ., •1 10 Walnut Finfsh · · Desk Accessor.Je• • '°" o~i Slo•i a·: s ·c·, • Alltlrt11 look • llotttr • P•ll Walnut ara1n 11 vinyl itew tor Dad'1de1Jc. Wo••n'• .Zlpp~re.i: .. Nylon Taffeta Jackets Sixes S·M-L > . ' Comfortable nylon taffeta $198 jacketl with front zipper-· : i.n new "bot" colors! Ela1-; · ~~ tieized wrist, drawstring ·- waist, 2 pockets. . •~4• Value! 42·qt' .-.1y Extra Large~ :Ice Chest . ' · Wlth Twlft H•fttlle1 · 'frylon cheat 1. ' ke~a -. rood' or • 64 ~·-: • 'driDks.~Old lon1· · · er. Buy for sum-· . ' . fl'ert~~ J!iC~ic1 .. 1 .• .camp1pa. ,trips! . ·~" Rect•l.aular · 01clllaflng •prln~ler . . r. . .. .wa~ up ~.is;5 . . 1 • ,aq. feet.. S.I n '2'' . ':,,. ... ,,,.,,,..Ji!; · .1 · • ipraf, ~automatic . . ; control. 1 year . . ' 11uaruteel 1 , '7" Yal. 24-lno ·•·Ct Grlils ~':J $577 1" aluminum toldlnt legs, chrome plated crid witll. haddlei. . ' ' . . . , Jac\udea(ot1:11 turner ·and lOnp or hlahea't quallt)' tteeL . ' ' I '·• ,1: • .•22•tkel , .......... ·Crea• . .1;. ... JJc, For 1u11.-1en1itive 1kln-1ive1 a\fded protection. • , P'Or Dads who ftsbt Wi.tb. . 1- aectto·e lure bu.. . • I I PC 4 I a a I • I 4 • 0 • :: • Wtdntsd1y, June 12, 1968 OAJL V PJLOf • 14Q6 W. EdlllCJer and Bristol ~t.­ EdlnCJV Center, Santa Ana •• 17tp4 Mapalla St. at Talbert, . ' F1mtcil• Valley ~ ---1Rlfn1 .. ~PllCf 'IPICTKi~ ' ,_ . ' . I '"" · Men's ShOrt Slee¥ · ·coUt'tliy- • Perma· Press Dress Shirt •11• ~~~~~~?Ii! In DO iion, "Soil Re· ~ leaae" bl,end of M% Polyester & ~%Cot- ton Braadclolh, reg" ular coll•r ... and Sa"nforized CottOn Oxford with button· . down collsr. Colors. stripes, checb. Men's Chewette lhert llHve O.u~I• Knit Sport Shirts :•'' •·»• ~••;•y•t '' I . . . . . ~ R1yoo 1od '°"" ,2 ,. . .. cott.oa . .:ifoo.bl• knit _ _ IPOl't 1 shlrta With " ' mock turtle .nerk.' · collar, Lpaier look ~ ' . · in 1olld..'eqlon .. nd irrideaceilt ilripes'. S to XL. • I ' -~ . ·' TOPS ON DAD'S UST .. "\ . ',:;:.' .. ' . , '. . .. ' . . . ''·' . . .. ' ' Mell's:,Pe ... a Pr'es ... · .,·-_ -.• ~ .... ~k--· .,, . • ' ' -• !,! : ' ' •. } :-. ,r, ... cOmbed . Coi, _·'. ~ .,, __ '. . I ~1~e~1~~~~~~~ .. 1·4-97 ... -.: · . -. Powder ;Blue, °'1· .terandlfa,.,.'Siz~:' .. · .. · 38to48._ .. ·r •2 .. Yaluel M••~• :~ Courtley. Ties . ,. Handsome ties in regUiar $159 orready·tied1tyleil., _ · ' , .. •100 Men'•: · Stretch .. locks·· l:1ic <;:'!;: 5· 7c stmtclt "-nJlon:·•.~ , ' r • • Abtorbo -Ion --· 10Cks ef50%Nylon and50%Durene mereanited Cotton lined, or 4-p?y Banlon NylOn 1oe·k1 In rib or cable' de sip, · ' . .,·r ,., ,., . -·· . •11 .. ·Ust Pih• Ron•n sl-.lidard · ' ·•u.t,ane l.lgh.er , a •• d .. m• "Standard" 1:5 9• butane liabter fuell ~ll · • 1eeond1. Liahtl fOrr • mont&a on a alnalefill. Leather covered. ' #'., •1111 lil.•t••.culi• C• ... ra Klt:r r. ~ ' ' ·complete Imperial $ • ~. l . or film by Kod•t1 _, • outllt Includes col· 888 ,t>«tteries and G.EJ .. . .. Fl~h-cuie ~ •3 .. Yaluel Men'• · ..-fllffir';i11Hfol• ,_ . · "Stitchleoa '1. ••. ·. • con1true-VV tion, wtde 1 1 ffleeti08 or • Hlora. : ., EXCLUSM AT tHRlml , Full 'Quart .. · Harkoff Vodk• Now prict4 even.-. Jower tbaa eur- evtmfaJ low J'ric9 or •·•· stoct •ii now for cool wm-mtrtlmt nl'rt1Wrl ........ •tTbdr\71 :'3·~· t . . • j 4 0 I "r , I f I \ l I \ Jt DAILY PJLOT Travel $Keep s On Move lly JOHN CUNNIFF NEW Y 0 R K (AP) Adminlstr.ation efforts to keep dollars at home by curtailing overseas spendJng for pleasun are running head oo into obstacle. that seem likely now to reduce chances for any dramatic success. Smne Platnber The objectlve is to reduce by $500. miWon the annual travel deficit, which in 1967 soared to S2 billion, the net t:e.<iull ol Americans spen· ding nearly $4 billion abroad A comely mermaid checks the plumbing in this demonstration, for the new Am- while foreigner s spent $2 phenol Corp. at Broadview, Ill. The purpose ol the aquabatics is to draw atten- billion here. tion to the firm's ne~ plug for special underwater applications. Jt is water- Lessening the prospects proof in both "plugged in '' and unplugged'' positions. for substa,ntial help In balan---------=---------------------'--- cing the travel outgo and in· come are these factors: -Measures t h a t would Impose taxes on foreign travel and limit spending abroad are still be i n g argued in tl'le Senate and may not, therefore. be sigo· ed into law in time t.o have much e!fect on summ er travel. TRAVEL SEASON The peak travel 1eason, tne. time when sb.ldents. educators and sightseeing secretaries head for Europe. began in late May and will extend to Sept. 28. A gooi part of the season will have passed before any bill. -Americans have plenty or mo(M!y to spend on travel regardless of whether a travel tax is passed, and they seem also to have the desire to use this money. -The ease and glamor nf airline travel is making trips tO.......,foreign I a nd s • particularly to Europe, an a Imo st irresistible at· traction to people o f moderate incomes. These people also are get- ting some encouragement from the airlines. As one of them puts it: "We can still wrap you up in any one of hundreds o{ complete tour packages. Say the word. We'll give you the Europe-you always wanted -Starting as soon as tom O!'?VW." FOR PLEASURE Whatever the motivation. new and renewed passport applications for the first twO mon-th s of 1968 rose sharply over a year earlier, with the great majority of them com- ing from person& intending to travel primarily for reasonts of pleasure. A study by the National Industrial Conference .Board, and reported in the Conference Board Record. a monthly publication of the n o n p r o f it or ganization, showed passports w e r e being handed out early this year at a rate 30 percent higher than a year ago. Less than 10 percent were ob· tained for business. Perhaps the mos1 en· couraging aspect of the travel paymenU situation is the cooperation received from business in promoting travel of foreigners to the United States t b r o u g h reductions in transportation fares and hotel rates. ~/1jc· JI ~~'Ill/ti by lob Wlgmor• l•ff•t t•lr• an•tli•t loolr •I th•I ha111• af yo11ri , . , lt't net th• aam• an• yoi.r bo119ht ••"•••' y••r1 •90 • , , Hom• ... t11a1 ••• •flll cllft'll.in9 ind your ho111a b 1M'Ob1Dly wo•th " lot 111ora t~ay • • • It wo11ld b• wi11 t• l•ok •f yo111r flr, in111r•11c• l"licoy, too. Unl•u if'1 b1•11 ....... ,ht i11 li111 with tod•r'• ,ky. •Ith IH!llcll119 c•1h, ya11'ra h•acf· H fw tra•W• •.. Watchi119 loul prlc:•t • , , r.h1n9i119 prop· arty ... , •••••. '"' .,.,,;"• Ht dl•11tl lnuiranr.a .. ,.ta.dala, efficofaflf •ltd •r.0110111ical It pail J -,.,_,,, t~lc. • • • II P''t• 11•t •11loylftf tfriat ~if!cl of ,..m.ua1al i111•r•11c• .._,,. ••• calf •• W ay_. , , WICiMO~E lNSUllANCI 29Sf H•riler al .... ,.,,, -549.oHl ' Your Money's Worth New Incentives Necessary To Check Hospital Costs Ry ;5''L\11A PORTER In some of our big city hospitah:. charges are up lo $100 a day, and still rising. Just since 1965. U.S. hospital costs to us h.ave shot up more than 35 percent, and we are in for another in- crease in ·these-costs of 15 percent th.is year .. Just since 1965. doctors' fees h.ave risen a full 14 percent and there costs, too. are sti ll climbing. Today, our national heaJth bill t:otla'ls about $50 billion a year and this figure may nearly double by 1975, THE BIGGEST single fac - tor )s ttie ballooning hospital wage bill. This trend has been splllTed by the 1966 nurses' strikes leading to raises; the new minimum big and long -overdue pay raises; the new minimum wage coveri'ng lower-paid h05pitaJ 'W'Ot'kers; big wage increases in many hospitals for gr<>6sly underpaid in- terns and residents. A second factor is the soaring cost ·to hos~tals for new equipment r a n g i n g rrom computers to tieart- Jung machines. The new equipment requires not only huge ootl:aiys but also the hiring of specialized person· nel to operate it. ~er vices ol and nurses is far outrunning the supply of t h e s e' pro· fessionals. FINALLY, a fourth factor is the zooming cost of hospital construction. It now cos16 up· to $35,000 to "build" a single n e w hoopi1'11 bed. 'ro slow the rise, doctors are moving toward less cos- tly group practice in which two or more doctors share office facilities, diagnostic equipment and secretaries. Since 1959 tile number of group practices Jias tripled. Even greater economies are being made under preparid group practice in which the patient or his health insurer pays a Oat fee for all doc· tors' services. lncrea.singly . pre-surgery tests are being done outside tlle hospital. In Des Moine s. Iowa. a citywide experiment ii; underway in w h i c h surgical patients receive tests outside the hospital before their operaQon5 , with private health i n s u re r s paying the costs. Yearly savings through s h or t t r hospital stays can mount in· lo the hundreds of thous.ands of dollars. The He a I t h I nsurance In s titute estimates that one in 10 hospital patients today does not actually need to receive A third factor i6 that to· day. an everage of three or more hospttaJ personnel are needed to care for each pa· Uent -double the number needed only 20 years ago. A major operation can now in- volve a dozen or more surgeons and supporting technicians. At the same time our demand for the Lockheed Gets Order For Orbital Lifeboat I .. John 0 . Ballard has been appointed mana- ger of the South Corone deJ Ma r Branch of Se- curity First Nalioilal Bank. 3435 E. Coast Highway. which is scheduled to open this month. lie has been manager of the Long Beac.h Branch since 1900. SPACE C ENTER , Houston (UPI) -The space agency has picked a Calilornia aerospace com. pany to design an orbital lifeboat capable of rcturnin~ three astronauts from space tn the earth in an emergen- cy. A spokesman at the man · ned spacecraft center said the agency wants a craft that could be launched emp· ty and left unoccupied in orbit until it is needed . Astronauts would abandon I heir own disabled craft .and get. in it to return home. No such rescue-type craft now exists. Lockheed MissUe a n d Space Co.. space systems division of SunnyvalP.. received a $200,000 contr<?cl to develop a conceptual design or a vehicle to fill this need, th e spokt'.sman ~R id. lie said the ~tudy , would last eight months. F'irst designs will be ror a cralt to operate up l.o 300 mifes in space, about thr~r. ti mes as high as most earth orbiting manned f 11 g h I s . FIRST, FAST Whe 11111 yo11 firit •haul t+.t h•1t in lace! ntw\ 1 Chic~ if a11t. ll'o n1•rly 11"''Y' th• DAILY PILOT • Merits and Benefits of leasing lhe Family Car lncr1e1iflt 11111nbari of Am•Hcef11 11ow 111\• th• f1111lly c••· A•· p11111lly tti. id11 Iii "Wf.1+.' t •otl fat cod-cen1cie111 b111iJ11\i 11'1111 Ii alto t•otl f•r h4r. f•Mlly-1111a11." E.-a..,.pl.--n•w Colony P1~ ttatian we9•n with air c;onclitl•11in9 c111 bl l••t•d for $121 1nontti/y ltht fah11lo111 llttl• C.119•• t••t for ebo11t 1911, which incl11cl•1 all t•qult•d te,...ic1 a11d 1111i11+.rienc• fot 40,000 111il1t loll c;ha119•1, htn•0 11pt. ate.I. Th• clael•t bwyt Y•11r '""''"' c•r. fra1i111 capital f•t iflvt1t111•11f In tli1 111•t••t ., f~•t "•r.•1!011 ,.r°"r+, 011 tht ri,,tr. A11 ••c•ll•11t hao\-lat tn thh 1whj•cl !1 Ire.• fo• t+.t ••kin9. '11011• J•h11••n j $011 Ll11cel11·M•rcw'Y i11 M••~orl kec+.. 6'42·Mlt Of" 141·1271. --' Excl1anges Shut Down For Da y ·Over The Counter NASO llttlntt for Tuold•y, Junt 11, 1'61 ·, ,. ', .. " ·: .. " . . • • " • ~· •.. •' .. •' .. . · ,. '· . ------··~~ ...... -~-~-------~-~-• ..... • •• a • a a a a asuoessz .. Price8 -Complete, New York · Stock Exchange List , ----------.. --· • =.,-... -11:, '=·-... -ci::l ' 1:i---.r: l':it~~ti#Jl_~J!lik~!~~mt.tllli • • ' J l I ' . . • --. DAll.Y PILOT 'ADVENTURES IN PAPER BAG' OPENS AT Sf R Toni Dougl•n, Jem•• McKie, Miehelle Reday Stage 'Happening' Theater Notes Three New Shows Arrive On Orange Coast Stages -- Sex Syinhols · . Get Younger By NORl\IAN GOLDSTEIN , NEW , YORK (AP) - Youth IS taking over the world. Even teen-age girls are replacing the maturer maids as the sex symbols or the sixties. . Or·at least that's what the movie industry would have us believe. ·It was 'lLoJita" that ap- parenUy started the trend on the screen, with Sue Lyon -then 16 -playing the sweet seductress in Stanley Kubrick's toned-down 1962 film version of the Vladmir Nabokov book. Kubrick faced a good deal or pressure. particularly r r o m religious organiza- tions, before "Lolita" came to the screen with her sunglasses and lollipop. He has said he 'vould make the film a lot differently now, in this age of a more liberl movie code and a generally freer mol"'al climate within the industry. Lolita was 12 in the book; an indefinite 14 in the film, which concerns the rela- tionship between a middle· aged man and the teen mistress of his fate. NEW SY~IBOL Ewa Aulln -Miss Teen lnternatJonal at 15 -in the' Utle role. The part calls for her to be oft-chased and oft- caught, Jn' a series of comic "romanUc'' frolics with top. name costars. In "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush," a mad and merry English . entry about a young boy 's sexual education, there is Judy Geesoir,"H;-playing the free- love-thinklng apple of the hero's eye. Melodyland Sets Tliree Rock Sliows The same Miss Geeson Mail orders only are now raids her mom's supply ot be i ng accepted at birth control tablets in "Prudence and the Pill." Melodyland Theater f o r three new rock s h o w s And when producers went looking for a girl to play the scheduled for July at the part of ail English hippie Anaheim showhouse. who seduces a policeman_ 1'he Little Richard Revue, the ubiquitous bath scene is with Bo Diddley a n d back, thJs time with 1'oth gal Woliman Jack, occupies the "and guy awash _ and gets Melodyland stage on July 8 unwittin,ly involved in the and 9 for two performances sale of lurid films in the ap-only. propriately titled • • The Melodyland will host the Strange Affair," they chose Strawberry Alarm Clock , 17-year-old Susan George, the Evergreen Blueshoes an attractive, bright-eyed and the Seeds for a one- brunette, for the role. · nighter Oil July 22. On July It's enough to make one 23, Martha Reeves and the almost forget that the Vandellas will appear for Academy Award for best one performance only, with actress this year went to 58· Sly and the Family Stone. Richard Boone's ... ••• Hawaii Film Out . By VEllNON SOOM' picked out ror a studl6 dvtr HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -there," he said. "II .1#.e Richard Boon el who went government will donate,.~.• native Jn the Hawaiian lslands almost five years ~and t:tien we C\n take .. ,a. ago, has made good his pro-realist!£_ l~__:!f bull4hag mise to make a movie in the sound &1ages alid Ot.Iier 50t.b state. necessary structures." -,.. Boone retllrned to the Boone has two homen mainland to announce that the Islands, one in Hon~ he is ready to release ''Kona on Oahu and the othef,,;o.P Coast,'' and already looking the island of Hawaii. . · forward to a second picture "Mo.st people don't reali• for filming entirely in the wealth Of backgrount Hawaii. we have over there for , In his first effort, Boone shooting m o v I e s ~ fit was executive producer and television series," he said.:, star, along with owniilg the ''There are section'! Qf t$ company, Pioneer Produc· big island that looi: exac•h• ions. ._. like Arizona. Yoi.t coUJ.On;_t Now, with assistance from tell the difference ..:.... s&n4. Hawaiian state officials, he each.is, the whole bit. Then hopes to establish a there a r e snow-cappOO. permanent motion picture · ,,... industry in the islands: But mountams with skiing sev"ll, h dmits 't ·u ~k months a year. Or if YMl e a 1 WI .... e some like, we have volcanos.· T-.federal money, too. ,. The point is, why? Boone held an icy gl8SI w He could remain i n his forehead and grolti~ Hollywood faking pictures with satisfaction. .~ and television guest shots "You ought to see the-!Uf·i without building an empire ference living there IJD:s i thousands of miles across done for my boy. He'S Dua.ch : the Pacific. happier and better adjusted : Boone's rumbling voice away from the overcrowded ! provlded the a n s w e r : mainland. It suits me better. · ''Because I love Hawaii. I "I'll never move back;to : live there and I want to the mainland. II I mo'Ve; Jt ; work there. too." will be farther west." ~. ~ Clearly, Boone is dodging That leaves Tahiti, Bora: By TOM TITUS Cit T .. Dally Plltt Sllft unusual and bizarre theatrical techniques. Forewarnea is forearmed. Rodrigues, Burt \Varner, Dick Taylor, Coreen Statts, Harry Hammers, Yvonne Tardy, Robert Trammell and the director himself. The film scene today is filled with nubile nymphets. The child-woman, with her intriguing combination of sensuality and innocence, is the screen's current sex y e a r • o l d Katharine Hep---'------_:_-''~­ burn, And d<>es anyone still The DAILY PllOT remember the ' ' a g i n g ' ' Elizabeth Taylor? Covers Boating Best in West no issues. Bora and Pitcairn Is~.: lr=="=la=v=e::::=alr::::=e=a=dy=:g:o~t=a~s~n~e==~am:"'on~g~oth~e~rs~,=;::::::=;~~i-=;l A comedy, a drama and a show that just about defies classification arrive on ttte O~ge Cout this weekend as the latest additions to the theatrical population ex· plosion. The coonedy is "Born Yesten:I~," Garson Kanin's lighthearted look at political corruption, which closes out the season for ,the \Vest- Community Theater. J t opens Friday for three weekends. On the dramatic side, the Huntingt on Beach Playhouse opens ' ' The Petrified Forest'' - postponed from last weekend by the assassina- tion of Sen. Robert Kennedy -Friday evenmg for a fOur. weekend run. I n t h e questionable category is South Coast Repertory's "Adventures in a Paper Bag," an ex- perimental offering which combines theater_, .fibn and audience participation. Thfs show abo opens Friday at tile Second Step Theeter in Newport Beach. On the latter attraction, directors Ron Thronson and Jctin Arthur Davis announce that "the basic tenet of the play is a strong reliance on A third of the evening is on film, with footage of the SC.R actors blended with stock shots from Hollywood movies and comn1ercials. The movie and sound effects are handled by \Varren Dea coo. The cast includes Mike Douglass. Toni Douglass, Walter Phelps, Dennis Lam- bert. Saundra D e a c o n , Michelle Reday, J a·m es McKie and Jean St. Pierre. "Adventures in a Paper Bag" •will run Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays ror four weekends at the S~cond Step, 2815 Villa Way. The reservation number is 646· 1363. • • • LarTy Trammell, resident director of the Westminster Community Theater, is stag- ing "Born Yesterday" at the recently acquired n e w playhouse in th e Westnti.osler Center mall, Golden West Street at Westminster Avenue. George Haddad as Harry Brock, Nancy Wells as Billie Dawn and Randy Keene as Paul Verrall head th e Westminster ca.st. Completing the lineup are Norma Hammers, Willie Crossword Puzzle ACRO SS 1 Positiv e S long n1r· row 1ptrtire 9 F1c11Uy members: Informal 14 -Eagle 15 Arrange I written mater/al 16 Adversary 17 United States Army Reserve: Abbr. ,. 18 Flavoring materia l 19 Dwell 20 Fmzlng 22 Stylish 2l Unit of 2• ~=~"5 concern 25 Washed 28 ll akes a loud noise 32 ....... 33 Fashion 34 Tote• pole 35 le••lnt apparatus 36 Engllsh "'""" 137 Desert 1 feature 1 38 Bird 39 F1r11 40 =~::e pniJeclfon ... 41 Bteatclng suddl!nly 43 Fictional sheep owner 44 Cord 45 lnd lsllnct-ness 46 Goblin 49 Tiger or co11gar 53 Mott 54 Well known street SS Depression betwern hllls 56 Weight unit 57 Intellect 58 Ardor 59 U.S. authoC' 60 Fraternal org1nlz1Uo1 61 Skillful DOIN .1 s~,.,, 2 Wind '' stcon4 btsl 3 Sinol• 4 CefnUal beings S Bring back to 111!1110!'1 6 Stnselt ss ...... 7 Manitoba's fttlghbor: .Abbr. I Legal •an! Abb r. 'ConfttUon 10 Scurri1011s 11 Sheep genus l Z Temporary fashions 13 l eaver's .... 21 Had the Sa.me SC G'e 22 Auto body style 24 Stock- broker's .... 25 PltntaUon ""'" 26 Tree ftuit 27 Gr1ylsh 111lneral 28 ObJtct 29 Send oat 30 Sierra lladrts or Selklrks 31 Exptnsive 33 Bartlet shop service 6/JZ/68 36 Steal: Slang 37 lni11111tous 39 One •ho checks on fellow einployees 40 Strongl y a11dlbl e 42 -of Wales 43 ll iJfeS 45 Extreme .... 46 Portico 47 Salnt -48 Ladder 11111ker's necess ity 49 COfltainer 50 Novel 51 Man's nne 52 Ttnant's payment 54 Title of respect: Abbr. 10 II 12 ll Due to the limited seating capacity, telephone reserva- tions (639-0506) are advised. The comedy plays Fridays and Saturdays through June 29, • • • 1"1 u n ti n gt o n Beach's ''Petrified Forest'• is directed , by Ron Albertsen and marks the season's finale for the playhouse group. Ron Lam be rt , Valaree How and Don Rhoades head the large cast of the vintage drama. Completing the company are James E. Smith. Alan Sandquist, Dennis Perrin, Gwilym Williams, D a I e Hash, Ann Moreland, Bill Moreland, Grace Sh a w. John Zimmefman, J oh n Hensley, Ron Langseth·.- Alex Osorio, Paul Sulliven and George Ralph. symbol. Gone is the lush sexuality associatde with the Monroes and the Mansfields. ·Going the way of the fl esh nowadays are the sweet six· teens, the under-20s. George Bernard S h a w r ecognized the advantage of making Cleopatra a teen- ager in his play, "Caesar and Cleopatra." Juliet, the classic romantic figure, is supposed to be 14 when she meets Romeo . But, Shakespeare's great heroine has not been played on the screen by any girl that young -until now . Two previous film versions starred N o r m a Shearer and Le!lie Howard -both in their 4-0s at the time -in a 1935 entry. and Laurence Harvey and Susan Shent.all in a 1953 pro- duction. Eight performances or "Petrified Forest" are plan- ned, Fridays Md Saturdays through J uly 6 at the Barn, 2110 Main St.. Huntington Beach. Reservations are available at 536-8861 or 892- 4638. In Franco Zeffirelli's new youth-oriented film version of the tale of the star-cross- ed lovers, Juliet is played by 15-year·old Olivia Hussey. She's 16 now. The' wedding night scene shows Romeo, 17-year -o ld Leonard Whiting, completely nude Now 9t POfllller l'rtasl • • • and Juliet ' ' s i: imp i l y Jiilio Androw1 dr:iped ," as they say, at ''T1he Sound of Music'' Closing out its season with the final four performances of "Slow Dance on the Kill· ing GroWld," the Laguna P l;iyhouse r e s u m e s pro· duction of the William Hanley drama tonight. least in the E u rope an '•~Ke 01lly version. ,...--.ttJO p.111. Ironically, British censors gave the fi lm an "A" co11n1111' certificate -youngsters un- Directed by John Fenac- ca, the play feature5 David Paul, Robert Frianklin and Francy \Valsh. It runs through Saturday at the playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave., with tickets and information at 494·8061. der 16 cannot see it unless, 'i:im accompanied by th e i r ll par en st. "CANDY" FIL~I "Candy," the story of the sexual misadventures of a naive 16-year-old girl, has tl1ernesa . ' . • ' • ·~:--~, , 1.. • • ~ ·~:\'.•'"'!.; f,NLJ f•···f3(Jf.'. ll>J C1.'JTA ~',!:5A ALSO Great Adventure on the high seas with Great Tuna Fleet "CHUIASCO" ~'-"I .... -, ..... ''"'""' St1rt1 Next Wednesday - W•lt Dlu11y'1 "THI HAPPllST MILLIONAlll"' r • L Lo PAUL IBlllllO Adutt Dno1111 And C..,...., At_, l'IHHRY "'•• "-'" • c.i., JOM l"OHDA e Ct!M' ......... 111 ,.. r.ti .. •-111 .................... "' FOUNTAIN VALLEY _ .. _,., ·-1 ........ A~ UnkllOWll Wffltl! ~,,, Cllllrll .. HESTON e Coler "P'.lallOf of tttll Apn" Gto,.,. C. SCOTT e Ctlor TennenH Wllllams'_Finut ••• "A STREETCAR. NAMED DESIR·E" Tltu~. •Sun., 1::11 ,,m, Tltlrd Sh1t TIMl1tr1, Collo•Mtt• GMlderoH ••. .... "Adventur.e1 in· a Paper Bag" frl.-S1111., l :JO, 2MI ~f9p "'""9 -N-port leaclll C.trol lor Office -......,.,. 646-1363 TOl!'ltnf bcllliftArN l1111 SAT. & SUN. C1nllftll-f,.111 ll:at A.M. Two Wolt DltMy .,...,.. Top Ellftmtht_,.. fClf' tM l11tfre f•uallyl HUllT, ENDS SOON ! ·- Tha THr'1 H•pplftt M111Kall Otroltllflt MacMurray Steele Garson Page AUO • ~elodlland Attraetlon .. 'f I ·, Mills 'Boys,' Pe~rce Girls Top Boone Show Bi~ I • < Br'TOM TITUS .__ ti ne Dtfff ................ · I ~;oiete may be a ..market the (reshlY. scrubbed olr boy type of crooning .. ~ the uaw, shuckt' at- 'tethpt at audience rapport :.lfbicb ls Pat Boone's stock !n trade, but apparently It isn't at Melodyland. At least it wasn't Tuesday as a Jarge opening night au· dience cheered •he musical precocity of a subteen ln· strumental quintet, gave the venerable Mills Brothers 11 . lleloddlM..l'Jteatre ~ 1S-.Julv 14 • SEATS IDW! ~ i°.:. · JAr.J~s HETZER'S : jj-~'l"~'!1111ril' { . ·-lP' .;! ... • .-:-,;(; "~$> 4, . ;;·· IB~til~ ' . •.! ! !\!. •••·• ~·: '~ ' ; ~ I l '~ ' \.~ i i ,..i4 . .p.L r'PfOlllMHClt $2.IO Mii P,SO e AU. IUTI ltrll'IW'lD • « .. ,, •wec1r-.1d1y: 1 • I PM S1turd1y. 3 &. I PM • • •'thured1yi 8 PM Sund•Y: l PM • 'f"-rriiay. I PM •Sunday: 5 PM • .f .:!u.!i!!l.l!l!'!!l.!~ter,), !!~. f.?.£~.!h £ 'ti';· .. -~ • -*" ·-Cltr'• • All ...... ApKln • "'-(114) 11'-lal' • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ' ··' ~. '•' NOW . EXCLUSIVE 1st RUN SHOWING ' -··-·· --· .... Hit No. 2 "FOil A FEW MILLION MOllE" Clint Eastwood, Man with no name 1tandln1 ovation but greeted only politely the eUorta of the erstitrhile star of tbe pro- ceed.logs. Boone comes ·to Melodyland fresh from a string of bad movies and a canceled television t a l k show, hoping to boost his image by dusting off his million sellers of a decade ago and giving them aouther spin around the Anaheim clreular stage. But he has a tough act to follow here - two tough acts, to be precise. The Pearce 11lsters, who open the bill, are themselves ahnost worth the trip to Melodyland. They're five cute IitUe musicians ages 11 to 5 (the y'oungest~member, age 2, shows up !or the closer) who really know their way around t h e musical beat. Showing their skill on a variety of instruments - trumpet, tro m b o De, ac- cordion, saxophooe, k e y bass and drwns -the youngsters really are· un· Mllevable. Tb9,l mo 1 t popular la 6-yeor..&d Debbie on drums, who wblps up a storm on their specialty number. From the pablipn set to the gerJtol 1eneraUoa - much of which w a 1 represented at ,Melodyland Tuesday -the. program swings to the Ml 11 s Brothers, who have been around since before the thirties end 1ook as ii they'll be around for quite a wbUe to come. Thm-1lmple. unglm· mic.ked harmony draw• on a reservoir of hits charted over the many years, from "Paper Doll" to their latest release, "My Shy ViOJ.et," which proved. tb&· most satisfying of the eveniilg. Then, of course, there are "Up the Lazy J\iV'er"• and "You Always Hurt the One Your Love," also 'a part of the Mills Brothers history. Lest you forget, t h e brothers remiftll Yo.u it was · \BALBOA e 673-4041 e 709 E. B1lboa Bl. e On The Balboa P•nln1ul• ' I • Now Showing • Exclusive AN• Showing • Matlnff W~nltday, Saturday •ncl Sunday • Curt1in 1t 2:30 -Not Continuous • 2 Evening Performances -6:30 and 9:'30 • Molln10 Prices-Adult1 $1.7~hlld to 16 75c -Evenings Adulh $2.50-Chlld to 16 $1 .~ UL.AX IN OUI IOCllN• CHAii ~U TO Sil GAIETY ••• VllltANC! ltADIANCE JULIE ANDREWS• amrA'HIR PLUMMER they wbo jwed up . fjio ."Glow Worm" soas a few year• blcJ<,-and they of(v the only known vuca.l ·at'· rangeme~t ol "Opus 1," a swin/:lnc openiJIJ numbir. Tuesdoy nliht they could·do no wrOll(, and lntermlH)Oll came too swlftly for moat.of the Melodyland p1tron1. \, 1ben along comes ~. and the mt of th• ••OJ\1!11 may be 1pent in unJn· tenupted slumber. Calhlp.g Jn on h1a "Mr. Clean" iJn. age, ~e wean wb.i.te •blrt. white rult and whit. Ue to mllx:h the oblifatory white 1hoes. "After the Mills Brothers a n d the Pearce Sisters, I've got \0 do something," be explain;. He Is .. rlgbl Boone plays hlJ nice"'e!t~ with aa much fervor as JaCk Benny ·does his alle(ed penury, but bardly with' :aa nJ.UCh professionalL,m. His most immodest stabs . at feigned modesty sort of , stick to the roof of your mouth atte'r a while, sltice humor ls far from his forte. To accuse Pat Boone of employing bid lute m,ay sound a blt irraUonaJ, but his delivery of a Mayor Yor·· ty gag predl<ated by the Kennedy tragedy certaiDly dl®'t sit well v.itb many Melodylaoders. Following the predictalile ''Love Letters in the Sand" and "April Love,'' and a well done medley of 'past and present musical trends (while lighting the theater's sound system), -Boone lapses into an overextended soliloquy on h1I failure to produce a male offspring (he h11 four girls) which 'just about dissolves au the groundwork he's built. However, it can honestly be said that the number was effective. Scores of people were vlJibly moved -they left the theater. Lite !'· ~ Mills Brothers, Ciey stood up for Pat bone •. co, ~ . only to get to the exits. Boone and his ramilr· oriented show will be around through Sunday evenlng at the Anaheim arena. The star aside, there's good entertainment from, IS well as for, the pre-8 and the post-80 generation. iiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Man.~:11untad.~.caaaa ... 1orce11 10 mate Dr CIYlllZ8d 811881 llik 11 c •.•••. , ... Aslrtlmt. •i....1o • ....w ....... .. ... -.. ........... "" ..... . • Tlilshlltn.11MwM--TMslslr.la--. Oolr .... "" -" ... TMs ii -"""" tOtly ..... _..,.... .......... ..... ~ • .,..i.!ty. ---..... ......... CONTINUOUS MAT.INEES DAILY ,.,.,.o ---------AClll.lOfl Box Office Opens 12:30 •••• w .. • 41""1 "" -..... - I , Show Times "Pl1Mt of Apes'' 3:00 6:45 10:30 "Film-Flam Man" 1:15 5:00 8:45 FD-:"wsouTH COAST -~AZATH .. iid Sen °"'° .... .., It Mltol • • • DAILY PU.OT . .DAll.Y PILOT lllff ..,.... 'Over My Dead Body' James El. Smith (right) tells his son (Dale Hash) and granddaughter (Valaree Hew) that he's not going to sell the cafe in this scene from "The Petrified For- est," opening Friday for four .weekends at the Huntington Beach Pla)rhouse. Jiinmy Stewart Wins · Medal As Air Reserve Career Ends By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) Ja'mes Stewart r e c e n t l y eoded a 27-year career with a rare distinction: the Air F .or c e ' s Distinguished SerVi«i Medal. It was only the second time that the h o n o r had )>een bestowed on a Reserve officer. The citation &aid that "the si n gularly distincUve accomplishments of Gell. Stewart culmlhate a loog a n d dJstingulshed · ·career 1n the service of his country and refiect the highest credit upoo hlmseH and the U.S. Alr Force." Having retired from the service at 60, J i m m y Stewart returned from the Washington ceremonies and indulged In some r a r e reflection on his years with tlle.Air Force. Actually, it was the Army Air Corps when he was drafted on March 22, 1941. Stewart took his training at Moffatt Field, Calif., was commissioned a s e c o n d lieutenant in 1942, went to England in 1943, flew 20 combat missions o v e r Germany and left aclive du· ty ·a« a colonel in 1945. He bu never talked much about his wartime years, and he said that he doesn't think much about them. "But I'm reminded of the war every now and then when I run into men who were in my outfit," he &aid. "Like Maj. Gen. Andrew Lowe, who was at my retirement in Washington , I was operations offjcer, and he was my assistant. Now hti's in the plans depart· ment." Stewart explained why he chose to remain in the Air HIGHEST CREDIT Ji1ma1 St•w•rt to continue t b a t rela· tionship." For the next 23 years, the actor spent two or three . weeks a year on active uty, including two visits to Viet· nam. His most memorable experience, he &a1d, was working with Gen. Curtis E. LeM.ay during t.he formative Period of ·the Strategic Air Command. He conceded that some highly vocal segments of today's society are an· timilltary, but he said that such expressions are ·com· mon in peacetime, "When I was a kid, military people were tucked away on a base somewhere ; they never took part in any of the civic functions," he remarked. "If a boy ran off and joined the Army , he was considered to be a faJlure. "Now the miUtary is very Force Reserve: "1 got a lot much a· part of our society, out of my experience in the and ·J think that's a good se:vice during the W;lf; I thing.· I find the caliber of think that experienc~ h~lped mllltary per.Sonne! is ve ry make me a b_etter c1vlhan; I -high . You find among them was greatly impressed with a tough-mindedness an d the caliber of men I met and spirit to do the job cor- worked w1tb, and I wanted recUy. Tammy Grimer In 'Clear Day' Tammy Grimes and John cuuu.ln will play the leads in the Los Aztgeles premiere of the Broadway musical, "On A Clear Day You Can See Forever," at the Greek Theater thl.s summer. The Alan Jay Urner· Burton Lane musical opens a two-week engagement at the Griffith P a r k am· phitheater July 29. "Ttie service academlet aren't just technical schools any more; they're , now stressing · the humanities and the liberal arts. The AJr Force Academy produces u many Rhodes Scholars as any university in the United States. "Yes, I know a lot of peo- ple say, 'The mllitary's only purpose Is to mak, war -to kill.' I don't believe that. I've found in the military almost a reverence for humanity. When you deal wiUt the kind or person I've encountered in the service, patriotism makes sense." NIGHT .nd DAY SERVI.CE 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATUllDAY IO A.M. TO 6 P.M. • ., ' \ I ... . . . .. . .. . . ... . . J8 DAILY PILOT Ray's Activities Chronicled (Conlhl .. d from Pa1e I) to a Uoy backyard sur- rou.ndt(\ by a wall. The wallpaper ls patterned With peacocks and there are yellow drapes at the lace· i curtained window. A bath- ~ room is in the corridor outside, next door and two steps d9wn. Mrs. Thomas said she on- ly once got into the room while he was there. !fhat. was when he'd slipped out for aspirin. She round he'd made the bed and tidied up. And he'd washed his own ! shirts. When she brought him breakfast the first morning he refused to open the door ~nd told her to leave the tray outside. She asked him for the hotel register which she'd given him to sign . He put It out later with the tray. But sh~ found he· hadn't signed it. NO VISITORS Mrs. Thomas said Sneyd had no visitors and only two phone calls -both from a girl at British European Airways about postponed flight bookings to Germany. "I didn't know who he was when she asked for Mr. Sneyd," said Mrs. Thomas. "I said: 'Do you mean the Canadian?' And that was it." BEA telephoned Sneyd on Thursday and again on Fri- day. Mrs. Thomas pushed the messages under his door. He didn't open or answer. "He said he would be leaving Saturday," she said, "and I said to myself: Good riddance." _ BuL she. moved h i m upstairs to No. 3 for his last n i g h t in the Pax flotel, because No. 1 had been booked for. someone else. PAID CHECK Sneyd paid his h<ltel check with a five-pound bill, the equivalent or $12. Then he went out for the last time through that anonymous· looking street door. He was arrested at Heathrow Airport a few hours later. He was booked on a night for Brussels, not Germany. But there was no clear lead as to why he might go to either place. Brussels airport police had Ray's name with a cou- ple of aliases on their watch list. according to an in- formant at the Belgian state po~ce. )Jut they ha-d no pic- ture of the man. Speculation in Brussels ranged from the suggestion that he might be seeking to enroll as a mercenary for Africa or Yemen. was en r oute to Eastern Europe, or just hoped to lose himself in the continental s u m m e r vacation crowds. There was mystery ebout Reports have circulated some ot Ray'a , ear 11 er that aoq:ia of th& white movements. London AlJ'l)ort mereenarles who fought in officials first saJd he had the Congo have now jolned beert arrested upon D.ylng 1n Portuguese forces battling from L i s b o n. Latu they ruerrilla armies in 1 t :s said he was out'ward bound Africa tenitones. for Brussels. Mrs. Thomas There Is a gap not yet ex· said he had been intending · plained Jn Sneyd's to fly to Germany. movements between May Reports from L ls b on 17, when he left the hotel in showed the man known as Portugal and May 28 when Sneyd had certainly been in he turned up at the New Lisbon earlier. l~e was Earls Co~ Hotel in Lon· reglistered at the third don. category Hotel P o r t u g a I ThJs hotel is near the big May 8 at 8 p.m. arriving Earls Court Stadiwn in from Lisbon Airport with a West LoOdon, scene of Billy flight bag and a suitcase. Graham's British cnl68des. The hotel bas only sleep-It is in an area thickly dot· ing accommodations and no .ted with hotelJ, large ·and resta.urant service. small, ·charging moderate He signed the register as prices. Ramon George Sneya, 36, Canadian. without pro-COSMOPOLITAN fession. The same spelling The population of Earls error in the surname also Court is cosmopolitan. Here appeared on his passport Londoners rub shoulders and the Canadian Embassy with Australians and New in Lisbon said he not~ this Zealanders," Canadians, In- when he asked. .for a new dians and p a k I s t a n i s , passport there. Negroes from Africa or He stayed in room No.) 2 Jamaica. It is a shifting on the first floor of the Ho£et population of studenb and Portugal until May 17, when wwkers. No one stays very he left at 10 a .m. and paid long. And everyone minds 60.50 escudos or just over '2 his own business. per day, The New Earls Court GONE 18 HOURS Hotel Is where Sneyd' stayed The hotel staff said he from May 2.8 to last Wednes- usually went out about JO day, when something appar- each morning, often return-ently alarmed him and he ing 15 and 16 hours later. shifted a couple of miles He appeared to have plen-east to the e v e n greater ty of Portuguese currency anonymity of Pimlico's Pax and possibly ate his meals Hotel. in local restaurants or bars. At the New Earls Court, The general impression which is usually full, Sneyd Sneyd gave the hotel staff had room No. 54, a third- was that of "a man of few floor single. words." • VERY QUIET What he might have done Jane Nassau, 21-year-old in Portugal was not clear· r e c eptionist, remembers But Jan Colvin, 8 reporter Sneyd as "very q u i e t , for the London D.a i 1 y h nervous, pathetically shy Telegraph who as close and unsure of himseU." She contacts..,with Europe a n . h groups recruiting foreign said e had no visitors at mercenaries in Africa, said the hotel and no telephone he talked with a man calling messages. Because the hotel himseU Ramon s n e yd only serves breakfasts, be several times by telephone went out for his meals. He last Tuesday; the con-took break.fast in the hot.el versation gave a hint. dining room with other Colvin said: "W be n we guests. first spoke, a Canadian or Miss Nassau said Sneyd perhaps an American voice signed the hotel register but said to me: 'This is Ray-she could not show it mond Sneyd. I want to join because the police had taken my brother who has been in it away. Portuguese Angola.' " The New Earls Court Ray has 10 brothers and Hotel, like the Pax, is near sisters. None is known to be an air terminal. Only a few outside the United States minutes away is the big air MORE EXPLICIT terminal of British Euro- Col · s "d R an-.1 pean Airways, departure vm aJ ay c eu · 1 · him again last Thursday and and arriva· point for all said, "this time he was .. =E=ur=o=pe=a=n=ru=· gh=ts=.==== more explicit. He said histr brother was not missing but that he had not seen him for four months. It was no.t so much that he wanted to start a search for his brother, but he wished to become a mercenary in Africa bimseU." FAVORITES National an4 local raador. 1hip poll1 prov • tho DAILY PILOT corrio1 101110 of tho 11101t popul1r column1 on4 f11tur11 ov•iloblo in ony n1w,pop1r 111 tho United Stoto1, reg. ll.99 Sportcrcst 2-lb. sleeping bag, 13.59 reg. 2l.99 Sportcrest 4-lb. sleeping bag, 22.09 Sportcrest 2 lb. sleepinq baq roqularly IS.II 13.59 The outer cover and 1iood art cotton poplin. You al.so get single air mattress pocket, weather stripping, scenic cotton flannel lining. Sportcrest 4 lb. sleepinq baq 22.09 Mi oversize bag willi double air maltl<ss pocket, Kenic col!ofl flan· oel lining. <Xlttoo duel: rover and hood. It gives deluxe mmfort. . . ' .. . ~· . . the favorite on Father's ballot r a.ther's :Oa.yis June 16th Ban-Lon shirts of nylon by Puritan Thr~w your support ~hind the pro~e~. ~·inners. _Short sleeve, full-fashion, ~ool and light, they' rt perfect runrung mates for Dads summer act1v~t1es. Machrnc washable and dryable. From our large collection; a. the· Brook-hi in full turtleneck style. Sun, black, 'vh ite, Agean blue, sizes S to XL. 10.00 b. the Brookfilir in mock turtleneck style. (.of fee, red, sun, green, black, white, blue. Sizes S-XL. 9.00 c. tht B1ndu,p a V-neck with its win insert. Blue, green, brown or navy. Small to x-la.rge. 15.00 d. tht Brookview is the classic )-button pulJover. I=ire, ''"hite, black, marine blue, lemon, chamois, green, mango, blue, coffee, lime. Si~es S to XL 10.00 men's sportswear 84 ®TM Jooeph Bancroft and Soos Co. • • A.-Y 0 9. .. 9 lV.[ • -may co south coast plaza, san die90 freeway at bristol, costa mesa: 546-9321, 675-3418 shop monday throu9h saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. . .. .. ~ .. • • • ' •. < .. ·-· ·:· ' 1 1 I ·j 4 ,. I. • l I ! I ~ l •I :j ·• • ,. r -------------·--~ • BEA ANDERSON, Editor .............. u. , ... CM-*1-l ....... , ... 11 Home Talents 'F I are Well Can you bake a cherry pie? Do your friends drool over your apricot preserves? Are your handmade quilts th e envy of your neighborhood? Then heigh, ho come lo the fair. And bri ng _your talents with you. Coas\ Homemakers' are urging all area women to conquer their shy· ness and enter one of the numerous homemaking categories at the Orange Cou nty Fair, scheduled for July 16 through 21. You can enter by calling the fairground~ 545-1131 and requesting an entry Corm and premium list. Form s must be returned to the fair· grounds no later than June 21. Not only will you be competing for a first second or third place rib- bon but also may wi n one of the prizes offered by Orange County mer- chants for ''best" in category. This year, prize-winning entrants in wearing apparel and knittin~ sections will be able to model their own garments in a style show. Prize winning recipes for baked goods will be auctioned to the public with pro- ceeds going to the owner. Home economists will give demonstrations in Versatile Ways With Portable Appliances and Blender Magic every day at 1 :30 p.m. Divisions in which entrants will be competing include 'Preserved food s, baked goods and confections, clothing and textiles and· table set- tings. There are numerous classes and categories in each division. ••• = • e ; u c; c a e a a a a s e acoss es . Among Coast Homemakers who will be participating are Mrs. Rob-- ert r-·. Cox Jr .. supervisor. assisted by Mrs. Pa u I Bernhart. Mrs. Don Schablein is program coordinator. SKILLS PRESERVED -Hoping that coastal area women will not be too shy to enter their homemaking talents in the Home Economics divisions of ·the Orange County Fair July 16 through 21 are Mrs. Robert Cox Jr. Oeft) and Mrs. Paul Bernhart, both members of Coast Homemakers. Theme of the home economics exhibits and demon1trattons is Yesterday Meets Tomorrow. , Adoption: Love Enough to Share Lucky Seven Find Happiness No Gamble By PAMELA HALLAN Of T~I i>1Uy 1'1101 119ff A little boy with tousred blond hair ind a mischievous grin burst through the back door. "Can I have a drink o{ water. mom?" "~m" srnile-J. excused herself and walked into the kitchen to gerform tilds everyday motherly function. But there was a ti me when Mrs. Wallace Mitchell had completely lost hope of ever bei ng able to get a child water or wipe away a tear. That was before she became the mother of five adoptt'd children. "I had always wanted a large f.rimily ," ~d Mrs. Mitchell. . . l-ler own famify h_ad been large ~nd sihe was used to carinc: for babies, hsten1ng to their chatter. and helping them with their problems. Bul a serious illness which almost took her life made a permanent· change in her future plans. 'After she recovered she was told she could never bear children. "It was an awful psychological experience for me ," she said. "I shied away from people who had children. It even took me a long time to de-- cide to get married.•· Wben she did marry, she and husband Wallace did not make what would see m a natural decision to adopt a family . "We talked about it but we botlh married late and there was ao much rigamarole then that we decided not to." said Mrs. Mitchen. • Fifteen years passed :The desire for children grew strong again. And though odds seemed against them, the Mitchel1s decided to attempt an adop- tion . ROOM FOR ONE MORE -Five years ago Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Mitchell ol Fountain Valley decided then! was room for one more in their household . Repeating the decision four times after that oroduced (left to rilbt) Alicia, I, Burt, 4, Kelly . 5. John, 3, and l\1ichaeJ 3. And though their door ·a1ways is open to neig~bor chil- dtren the Mitchells.have decided that a fami ly of five is quite a nice size, but then, you never know , .• "We didn 't apply at any agency. We had inquired about an age limit and had 1heard lots of rumors. We didn't want to be told no." sl'je confessed, "Rut our friends knew we wanted children. We heard about a possible adoption and arranged it through an attorney and a d'octor an'd we were able to bring the baby home when only a few days old .'' Ke..lly Ann, now 5, was the first baby . Her four siblings, following soon After, are Burt Leo, 4. John Wallace, 3. Michael Patrick, 3, and Alicia 1 Sue . l . (SH ADOPTIONS, Page 191 Figuratively Speaking, Your Loss Isn't Always Their Gain DEAR ANN LANDERS : I got tired of hearing people say, "You have· such a pretty face -if you lost some weight you'd be beautiful" So I went to my famlly doctor and asked him to put 'me on a strict diet. I shed 40 pounds in seven months. So what am I writing about? Well, since I've lost weight I've also lost my fat gi,£1 friends . r &hared my diet with them 'Cij!_d kept urglng them to stick with it oot they didn't have the wl\lpower. At first they seemed thriJJed about my weight loss but as I began to look better they became cooJer and cooler. 1be real break came when I ltarted to date some very attractive men. It's hard for me lo believe that my friend& are jealous yet t don 't know how else to fi(Uf't it. Do you' -THE NEW ME ANN LANDERS DEAR NEW : Succc11 ca n be 1wf11ly bard to take -parttcolarly somehody eh1e'1. Those d11me11 "'tre n111 frtend1. They wert. merely ac· qualnlancea with who1n you once 1b1red .. common misery . You've lost nothing 'M value. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am employed in a large office. The man Who clears all down payments has been helping himself to money. He coolided that he •tarted by takinJ small amounts f&r a da .v or two t.o tide him over a personal "crisii'i." Now he takes larger amounts for longer periods. I have access to the books but have neve r had any reason to cfieck them. I'm afrald one-day he will be discotered before he hu a chance to · set the boob right. This has caused me sleepless nights because now that I'm .aware Of. what's going on I have what is known as "guilty knowledge." J don't know why be eut me in Oii his maneuverings and I wish he hadn't. Should 1 go to the bo6s, or to his wife. or keep my trap shut and hope for ttle best? -TOO MUCH INFO . DEAR TOO MUCH: Your co- worker Is commlUh1g the crime of embezzlement, i nd the ract that 10 fer he has made restitution perlodlcally dOe11't ctt1n1e .tM-1ltu1tlon. lt11 your duty lo teU the bo11 what's going on 11nd leave It to hlm to decide whetber to live Mr. Sticky Finger• ano ther cha nce. DEAR ANN LANDERS: U you don't want t<> print my letter pleue put a check lin eidler ol the boxes I have drawn at the bottom ol the page and return It to me In tile enclosed en· velope.One box lo marked SHE PAYS. The other box is marked YOU PAY AND FORGET IT. I have a cleaning woman who is unbelievable. If &he had one more brain she would be an Idiot. This dumbell has worked for me for six years. Don 't ask me how I have stood it. Yesterday she tried to do me 1 favor and save 15 cents worth of soap powder. She overloaded my wathing machine and burned ou t-the motor. The repair bill ls going to be out ol this world. Should the woman pay fOf the: damage « not? Please check the square and I will do as you say. -:- EMPLOYER OF A NUMBSKULL DEAR EMPLOYER: I am cheek· Ing "YOU PAV AND FORGET IT.'l Everyone "".ho ba& domeattc help mitt expect aome breakage over a period el time. 1 Even smart and careful boUHwiftl ha ve been known to break tbia11 eeee la a wblle so don't be so blJ'd on y.., cleaning: woman. Alcohol is no shortcut to social --. · Cffl. If you think you have to ckinklto be accepted by your friend&, a:et the facU. Read "Booze and You -P"ot Teenagers Only," by Ann Landfl'S. Send 35 ceots ln coin and a tong, ..at~ address.a, stamped etWelope wllll Y'O'K request. Am Landers will be glod tn help,... with your problems .. Seud them to ber In can ol the DAil.Y PILOT, oocloe• Ing 1 self addressed, sta.mPed • velope:. ' ' • • I ' I ...... -... ·----. " -· Juno 12, IW.S Natural Makeup ~ I Best for Bride 87 GAY PAULEY '"'1de to 1110b 1ome NEW YORK (UPI) _ Ex· compluloaa pale. Hen, a aueratlon obould bow to 11ttlo colqr ohould be added. tradition when a bride But moat 1.t!u, Miu Gwen mike• up fw her bl1 ds1. oald, t...i to take oa all ttle Coomellct lbou1d never -ary added P>w from icream upaktted ... U1e false the excltetnent R o u g e rarely 11 ·needed, 1eabel cmly if you've been "The best .,,,,, to 1Mure weari1lc . them ·r<gUlarl,y. ····-,,_._ ....... Don't cbaoe• to wbat you =-Y· 1-·-.. •-looks ...... ~ Uffd to In fOUO· OD tho day • • • lo to get ._, daU<a, powd«I, lipotlcu !!~. reot aa you can. and eye makeup w111>out "~~ 1 n~ like sleep, plenty of prewedclinl day bnpOocible ao it may aeem pr..,tice. to get, to give racliallce, keep your Iida young, -b Most makeup ~ x Per t.s and firm looking," Miss warn, Che wedding day 11 · Lauder' adds not ooe for cosmetics ex-On -· da · perimen&g. The natural ~ y iloell, she ad· look is the trideJ look. vises, take plenty of time to make up. Try to keep the 1be6e are &Ome sug-crowds of well-wishers and gestion& for looking ooe'a well-meaning J:ie!Pers at a be« oo the nuptial day from dl~---three Wooten who should "'WUI\.~. • knaw -Estee Lauder and Miu Lauder suggested Evelyn Marshall, who head that after powder, some up tteir own cosmetic com-g\o.s6y hlghlights done with paoies, and Misrs Gwen at color contouring makeup Qtarlee of the Ritz in New are b e c o m in g , Keep York, who makes up dozens fingertips pale and natural of faces each week. looking. Says Mias Gwen, as stie ifi In eye makeup, Miss billed at toe salon, ''The Mar 1ba11 says, tbe whole idea is to look minim.um is the rule. Don't natural. The pitfall is too und.erHne the eyes o r heavy appllcation. nie lip6 elontgate eye finer . ' . GETTING PICl(LED -Eggs, that is, for members of Fountain _Valley Woman's ' Club will ~ ~e~ling pickled eggs at the Bav.arian dance, a part of the city's Found· ers Day activities scheduled by.the Fountam Valley Junior Chamber of Commerce today tb~ough Sun~~Testing the liquid to see if it's right for the pickling are (left to ngbt) Mrs. . . Lyddon, second vice president; Mrs. LeRoy Smith and . Mrs. Michael Welli on. FV Founders Day Women Lend a Hand ORIENTAL CUISINE -Mrs. Robert Tarleton (left) and Mrs. George Rein· bald, co-hostesses of the Woman's Guild of the Huntingt<>n Beach Church of Religious Science, are planning an Oriental dinner next Friday ~vening in the should be glowing pink, not Skin care"befcre the wed- the white some g i r 11 ding should be special, Miss ordinarily wear. Remember Marshall adds, Start careful too that e x c it e m e n t cteansiDg and m.e of facial 900letimet makes the skin masques two or three weeks exude more oil; this tends to ahead to insure a clear skin turn foundation yellowish, so for the event. Nerves can keep the founQation oo the play havoc wit b com· pinkiah side." plextoos. Fountain Valley Woman's Club and its Junior Aux-. iliary and Fountain Valley Jaycettes will ell participate in the city's Founders Day celebration scheduled today through Sunday. The Jaycettes will man a coffee booth Friday and Saturday nights which also will feature cookies. In con- nection with the Bavarian dance the group will sell brautwurst sandwiches on Friday. ways and means chairman, is in charge o f ar- rangement.! for th• senior organization while ttie of· ficers, the Misses Sue "Moss, president, Cathy Moss, vice president, Lydia Scarpine, secretary, and S h e r r y Beaty, treasurer, w i 11 oversee preparations for the junior auxiliary. cbun:b. . Smnetim.e6. though. the Important also is makeup Oriental Dinner Set Up Members and guests of the Woman'• Guild, Hun- tington Beach Church of Religious Science will dine in an Oriantal atmosphere next Friday evening at 8: 30 in the c:burch. · The 'gWI Is apomoring tblo --In ltt .,,,.. rent Olbor [.mi, 111rie1. Two Making of "'Sum- -Will be CAROL ROTMAN Entagod • Betrothal Disclosed Carol Ann Rotman, daughter of the Carl Rot· mans of Costa Mesa, has become engaged to Peter J . Hadley. aon of the Albert Hadleys of Newport Beach. 'Ibey will be married Sept. 14, in st. John the Baptist CatholJc Church in Costa Mesa. Mila Rotman,, was eradlWM from Colla Mesa llllh School and O!'ange Out College. She ia a lice.med vocatJonal nune. 'Ibl bened.lt-elect WU a student at C«ona de! Mar lllgll Scmot and IJ enrolled at <>a;. NB Auxiliery n>a Ledlao' Auxlllar7 of Newport lleacll P'ln De- pcilneat cathm tho lblrd w-., ol each mcmth al I p.m. la vorfOUI foca. tlons. lalormoUoa reiardlnt localioa m17 bo obtalned bj' colllnl Mn. Ted Mdlu· tars, MWO'll. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~- blushing br i d e · is a for weddmg Ji>ot.ographs, m i s n o m e r ; excitement Use a shade cl foun<ktion that matche& yG\ll" skin tone . Garden Grove Home Sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the celebration will feature a carnival and a circus and a community Bavarian dance from 8 p.m. to midnight next Friday. Nuptial Vows Recited Gardeners The new ll<juld b a s e d makeup worb best, because facial highlights are essen- tiial. Avoid pancake makeup and Oat-toned face powder. The Woman'.s CJub will prepar~· pickled eggs and pretzels for sale during the dance. The junior auxiliary will operate a taro stand at the carnival on Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. R. E . Lyddon, In other preparations. the J a y c et t e s have been assisting their h u s b a n d s with posters publicizing the dance and the helicopter rides, the latter being Satur- day and Sunday, Home in Garden Grove are Wi1Gam Edward Gdbson ant bis bride, the former P'a1ricia Franke who were married in St. .AiKirew 's Pre 1by le r i an O:tapel. Newport Beach with ttie Rev. Dr. Char~ H. Dieren· field officiating. Tho bride ;. 111e daughter ci Mn. A. E. Franke of Palm Desert, and b e r husband'• parents ace Mr. and Mrt. William H. Gibson ol N""'!Jllrt Boech. Mr. -Mrw. Lauranc< N. GiboOD ol Los Angeles, b-ond orist«-Jn.law of t-he bridegroom, attended as best man and ma.tron of honor . A ~<m took place in tole Garden Grove home Or Mrs. Harry B. Norris Sr .. great-aunt ol the bridegroom. 'Il>e bride is a graduate of Garden Grove High School.. while the bridegroom is an aJwnnus of Newport Harbor High School. He attended Fl"anklin College. Indiana am: Calilcntia State College at Long Beracb. Grooming Their Hats Hats of all shapes and sizes will be donated by Laguna Beach Garden Club members when they close their club year with a silent auction at 11 a.m. Friday, June 14, in Laguna Beach Woman's Clubhouse. _ .Highlight of the gathering will be prize• awarded for the most beautiful, comic and original bonneta which member• will adorn "1th - • . Cal . State Gradu -ates Reveal Wedding Plans • fresh flowers or p I 1 n t -material ,. -- Mr. ond Mr" IWward R. Ri<hard.I of Newport Beach have announced that wed· ding plana are being made ..,. their daughter, llMalind Richards, and John Weber, ni d. Mn. Frand.s Kelter Of C«ona del Mar and the 1ata Pao! E. Wel>er. 'lbe marrlage will take place Aug. 17 In st. A !l d r 1 w ' 1 Presbyterian O:lurcb1 Newport Beach. The tea committee will provide rolls and beverages • for the 12:15 p.m. salad luncheon. Members are re· quested to bring a salad bJg enough to serve six. During the afternoon Mrs . H. G. Van Winkle will show slides taken of the group's recent Oower show. Mexican -Cruise Luncheon Aboard the Princess Italia, cruising to Mexican ports of. call are Mr. and Mrs. Raoul Carrigan of Corona del Mar. Submerged . 1 St d Garden Nuptials n u y p . . N Members of file Zonia air 1n ewport Beach Link ' Churchwomen Close Season At Installation Women's Service Guild, Laguna Beach Church or Religious Science will install new officers during its last meeting of the year at 1 :30 p.m. Friday. During the ceremony in the church at 20062 Laguna Canyon Road; Mrs. William Juvenal of Laguna Hills will t.ake · o v e r presidential duties. Assisting her will be the Mmes. W. K. Ball of Newport Beach, vice presi- dent; Success Vestraci of Laguna Beach, secretary· Elmer Heutmaker of Laguna Hills, treasurer, and Wilber Vaughan of Costa Mesa, coo re spo n ding secretaty. Mrs. Marion Forrest of Laguna Hills will preside over her last meeting and plans will be discussed for the comnig year. A brief musical program is included in the agenda, which closes the club's season until September. JUNE ISth Sandy Carlson is back, with partner Mari Graves • •. to offer you many fine lines of "Intimate Apparel" and Corsetry Do YI.it " ttik Sotvr4cry • ltetbt• fer door prhH tool Sp1ci11ldn9 in "D" Cup1 • M1st1ctomy 6 r1du1!1 Cor1•ti1r1 Mo•ttw.Scrt9t96 "I• Comfort1bl1 in Your Cup1" 110°1. L 11"1 • c .... w .. ht HIUGllN S9UAll ...... '41·'410 THE N-E-W The bride-to-be is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, Orange C.O.sl College and California State College at Long Beach Mlere she received her degree in 81Xial science. She will continue for h e r elementary teaching er eden-· tial. ROSALIND RICHAROS August Bride Club will bear about Sealab II and deep submergence systems at their n o o n luncheon tomorrow in the Senior Citizens Recreation Center in Newport Heights. Miss Karen Uoreda aad .the Rev. Andrew H. Renner were linked in marriage in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Barry Danielsen of Newport Beach. Best man W88 E'.dwan:l Riddle of Costa Mesa and ' ringbearer was Donald w. !-- Van Doren III of Thousand : LQQK Her fiance also is a graduate of Newport Harbor High, OCC, and C S L B receiving a geography. 'Ronald J , Sweig, U. S. degree Provisional Members Embark on Training i n Navy Public AUairs Officer, will be guest speaker, telling about the rescue unit which was developed from a three year study after the loss of the submarine Thresher. The need for better forms of undersea survival a n d rescue was recognized and a stepped up program was in· augurated in the form or Le<lming about tile p<O- j e c t & , accomplishlnents. history and inner workings of the Newport Harbor Service Leegue are new pro· visional members who were honored by the board of director& in the home or Mrs. John KUJefer. League presider:, ~1.rs. tg- nacfo E. Loia.no Jr. greeted the provisionals who have already begun the program tllat will eduoat. and train them for active membership in tile league. Among e....C. end pro- jects ~ by file league .... tile Obildre!I '• Art Wori:abop, the Vol.uD· -Bureau, 1lle ort e.tiibiU at the Collet Garden G_.,, 1110 Project Sdlool 'l1me A r t Appreciation ~. and the CO• --ol Ibo annual I. )lapin F-Show to ralle tuDlo for 111e Y ootll ~In ~ County. ,_ projedlt ... bolle!lt Ille .--V -muo It a better place in which 10 Sealab III which w i 11 live and ,,.,,.ve. operate off the coast of San ....... Clemente. Provisional members in-Guests or honor will be the elude the Mmes. Robert W. Zonta girls of the year: the Beck, William F. Carling, Misses Christie Lynn Den- Gary Davidson, Richard L. ner, Corona del Mar High School; Donna DeCubellis of Davis. George Drayton Ill. Costa Mesa High School ; Douglas W, Dryer. Willi Mn Diane M. Dreiss of Estan- A. Fruehling, John L. Holm· cia. and Stephanie Moore of Quist , Paul G. McManigaJ, Newport Harbor. Jack V. Pastushin. Jack D. Also present will be Perry, Leigh M. Rabbit. scholarship winners from Orange Coast College and Alexander Robertson Jr.. the University of California, Do.n Rogert:, Kenneth E, Irvine. Turknett.. James s. 1')'1er i.========= William T. White lll. and William A. Wf'ell. Garden, Club Mrs. William Gallavan. member ol Huntington Hilla Gardeo Club, will furnJsh locetlon in- formation at 962.-6139. The club gathers the !eeond Thuraday of eacb mootb at 8 p.m. {l/zo/V ' mUdic STUDIOS Headquarten for beginners on all Wtrumenta. Summer classes now forming. 1194 ,....,... ltM. c ........ Ml ...... The Rev . H. Charles Berner of the Institqte oI Ability performed the service in the garden set· ting. The service was wnt- ten by the bridegroom. The bride Is the daughter of Mrs. Eleanor Lloreda of Newport Beach and Edward Lloreda of Bogota, Colom· bia. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs . Hugh Ren- ner of Riverside . Donald W .Van Doren, the bride's uncle, offered the bride in marriage. She was gowned in trailing "'bite crepe and carried a bouquet or daisies. Maid of honor was Miss Teresa Lloreda of Newport Beach and Oower girl was Miss Ariel Ambruster of Long B e a c h . Attendant! "'ere gowned in short yellow crepe gowns and carried corsages of wbite a n d yellow dais.ies. Oaks. • A recepton took place ! after the double ~ r I n g ! ceremony. Attending were • relatives or the bride in-: eluding her grandparents ! ~. and Mrs. Sherma~ : Cline; aunts and uncles, Mr. • and Mrs. Wayne Van Doren : and Mr. and Mrs. Russell : Ambruster, and her sister • and husband, Mr. and Mrs. ! Carlos Lersundy or Colom· • bia. The bridegroom's ! relatives included h I s : parents and brother and • sister from Riverside. A ! dinner and dance completed : the day. • The bride Is a ministerial ! student at the Institute of • Ability in Costa Mesa. The ! bridegroom \\'as ordained : earlier in the year. After • fini shing their schooling the ! couple will take ! resp on sibillty for the • Orange County branch of : the Institute. ! • • ENROLL NOW Children's Art Workshop • • • • • • Summer Session June 24 -August 2 Ages 4-16 CALL: Mn. Cl-962-3-494 or Mn. Allon, 646.5511 IHOAl JAlllEI FREE WIGLO wnM ""'CMASI: Of' HAND TllD Wto '-""" c.. • ...... .. ''"" .,.,..... ii...,, c.. ...... •999s Wt han Iha l•rgttt Mlldloo off AW .. , WIGLETS ... CASCADES ••• end WIGS lo Orange County. MlnJ """'11• !Of ,.. to try .. 1 • • • • • • • • CASCADES : • •199s"" ~ • FALLS : • Dffll-P•h l I " hf! WI. ... : $JO $45 $60 ~ • • l.t.VI S1S SAVI S3S SAVI $SO WIGLETS SALE! 1-oL SAVE $6.00 .. , .. $6.95 1\4-oL SAVE $9.00 $10.95 2!n-oz. SAVE $12.00 $15.95 WIGS "''" .... ... "O • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :I $2959"'"'.-...... .., ~'?'.2" s2os o.-....... • • .. ~ .. ..,.... Sen4c ............. : • ~~~~~~~~-'-~<·...:.·;;;.:.~...c.·-·:....;·:-.·:-.· .......................................................................................... ~~~~~~~~~..JU.- l .. ...-----.. ------.--·-------_..........---·------------~-------------·----------------------------.. Wednesday, Juitt 12, 1968 Horoscope . . DAIL V PILOT Jt . Libra: Utilize • HANDSOME BRASS TONE ,HI-VUE TELESCOPE MIRROR IS "TWO FACED" Your Creativity Thu .. day, June 13 By SYDNEY OMARR "The wise man controls his destiny . . . Astrology points the way.'' ARJES (March 21 ·April 19): Accent on h ope s , desires. Intensified rela- tionship could culminate in permanent relationship. To- day some wishes become realities. Excellent for social activity. Pleasure is featured. TAURUS (April 20-May 201: Stress 011 how you relate to those in authority. Exude spirit of co-operation. Individual who ls on fence can be won over. Know this : act accQrdingly. You receive meaningful compliment. GEMIN1 (May 21-June 20): Lunar spotlight on journeys, ideas. writing. Cat c h u p on c or- respondence . Plan journey. Welcom e'cont act s , challen~es. You r f' c e i v e nPws which i;purs your creative spirit. You express yourself. CANCE:R l.TunP 21.Julv 22 ): Avoid jumping lo. coti. clusions. Involves opposite sex . Financial m a t t. e r deserves consideration. Pay and collect. Check con· tracts. accounts. F o I I n w through on hunch. Share aspiration s. LEO-(July 23·Aug . 221: Accent o n partnerships. marriage. Deal today with people who profess I o disagree with your views . Social affair tonight could brighten outlook . Sense of humor can be your great ally. VIRGO C Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Settle routine affairs. Basic From Page 17 tasks should be completed. You could feel pinch of relltrlction -this is but temporary. If you con- centrate on job at hand. benefits will accrue. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Good lunar aspect today coincides with expression of emotions . Romance is in- dicated. UWize c re a ti v e resources. Give attention to hobby. Be ready for change, travel. variety. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Spotlight on activities centering around ho me base. Include fa mi I y members in any form of recreation. Day to strive (or .erea ter harmony. Make necessary d o m e s I i c ad- justment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 22- Dec. 21 ): Journeys appear to be on agenda. Ideas, ac· tivities are plentiful. Avoid confusion. Finish one task at a time . Communication from close relative may af- fect plans. Be flexible . CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·.Tan. 19): Mone y, JXlSsessions . come int{) focus . You learn what is needed, wha1 caii bP d iscar ded. Sense nf rcspon~ibility is heightenPd " Greater reward for !'fforls is due. Older person aids. AQUARIUS (.Jan. 20-Feb 18): You successfully finish important assignment. Cy- cle is high . You can take in- itiative. Your personality sparkles. You cou ld be call· ed upon for surprise ap· pearance. Check apparel. PISCES (Feb. l9-~1arch 20): Croup, club activity is favored, but try to get some time alone . There are con- fidential matters w h i ch deser've attention. Don't tell all you know. Key is discre· lion. I l :1· !I ,, 11 ii 4r' t I I \ i I I i I ~ • • • 13.00 For him and h'er! Now sit or s'anCI to shave, to apply make up, Telescopes to 6 feet. Great for viewi ng the b.,cko One side magnifies for close·UpS, U!>e th e- other for regular viewing. Healrh-0-Merer SCALE FOR COMPLETE ACCURACY. 50.00 She'll be sure of ~or woig~t """'Y time w ith this upright scale. Pede stal dial provides easy vi si bility. Thick inlaid rubber platform resists we<!tr. Housewares, 39 • • • Adoptions All were adopted private- ly. four through the same doctor. "There are some fears. T suppose. when a d o pt i n ~ privately," said Mrs. Mitchell. "The main one is that the mother might change her mind before the adoption is final. But we were prepared for this. We decided if it ever happened at least we 'd know that we gave the child Slimming .; :~ 9407 4 \.' SIZE·s 10-111 "" "" 11f ,.,.i ... 11f,,.-r ... LI TifE LINES and lively pleats make this figure- sk:imming princess the very form of flattet')'. Simulated slot. seaming is easy, sm:\J"t. Printed Pattern 9 4 o 7 : Misses' Sizes 10, 12. 14., 16, 18. Size 14 (bust 34l take~ 3'h: yards 39-inch fabric. SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in eoins for each pattern - add 15 cents for each pat· tern for first-class mailing end special ha n d l i n g ; otherwiSe third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian -Martin. the DAILY PILOT, 442. Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York, NY. 10011. Print NAME, ~DRESS with ZIP. SIZE pd llTYLE NUMBER. a good start in life." But that was one problem the Mitchells never had to face. There will be , however , others tha1 face all adoptive parents. But the h-1itchells are prepared. "We believe in being honest with our · children," said Mrs. Mitchell. ''We have never hidden the fact that they're adopted and we never will. \Ve have , instead. stressed the idea that adoption means we love them more because they're special and we chose them to be ours." she said . •·we often wondered if we were getting this i d e a through to them . One day. while watching Kelly Ann I saw her line up her dolls and say to them. 'These are my special babies and we love them very much.' " There wa s another ques- tion Mrs. Mitchell had to answer after a television program on the ori gins of life. ''Kell y wanted to know where she came from an d r explained that Cod plants a seed under a mother's heart and a baby grows in side her tummy," said Mrs. Mitchell. softly. "She ~sked if she had grown inf1de my tummy and I told her no. that she had grown inside anoCher lady's tummy. •·At bedtime 1 found her cryi nJ:!:. J asked what wa s wron~. and shP i;;aid. 'I wanted to grow in your tum . my. mommy.'" Mrs. Mitchell knows that !his is only the first of many questions. but she is con· fidcnl that she 'll be able to answer them .all as a nor· mal. sensitive parent. "There at'f: Jots of people who think because you're an i!doptive parent you arc automatically hypersensi· ti vt' and overprotcctiw .' · 11aid Ule mother . She discovered this when taking her son Michael. who has a hearing problem. to doctors. Npw she takes him tn the John Tracy Clinic where he learns lip reading and is improving. Mrs. Mitchell has never been bothered by ne1ative comments . She doesn't get 11ny. "But r don'! alwayi;; act sympathy for myself when the children ha,,e been naughty," she laughed. "AH that is Said to me is . 'you ' ,. W ATE RPICK ·~ CLEANS, REFRESHES 27.88 The modern appliance for oral hygiene ••• recommended by dentists. Cleans teeth and gums • with th in, vigorous ~+ream s of wllter. With on.off c~libra+ed water pressure .~ jet tips included. Model #37. Housewares, 95 SUNBEAM VISTA HAIR DRYER INCLUDES NAIL DR YER 19.94 Our model VHD22 inclu<:!os o curl oflodiomonl stowaway hose, van ity mirror and more. Exciting slim attache styling for beauti'ful portobility. Lorge beauty cop. Bl ue tones. asked for it' and I did." 1.-----------------------------------------------------------------, But Mrs. Mitchell NE H NGTON BE CH ANAHEI" wouldn'I trade any tiUe in W P 0 R T U N T I A M the world for lhe litle <7 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH e 7777 EDINGER AVENUE «< NORTH EUCLID e ANAHEIM SHOPPING CENTER "mother", a title you don 't Telephone 644-12 11 Telephone 892-3331 Telephon e 535-1111 · si:et by merely bringing a _Shop Mondey thru Fridey 10:00 •. m. to •:JO p.m. Shop Mondey thru S•turdey Shop Moncf1y thru S1turd1y child into the w or Id . S1turd1y 10:00 e.m. to 6:00 p.m. 10:00 •. m. to •:lO p.m. 10:00 1.m. to 9:30 p.m. "Mother" 11 a title you earn .'--------.----------------------------------------------.------------· ~----------------------'-........ --------~---------------------------·-- I I • • • Wfdnesday, June 12, 1968 . ·. w~ / c~ ll. ../' l~,.:·; / (L.,;-· .·.'·", . . _, . • . . . j Fathers Day Specialty DEAR NANCY: I've been married for al years to a bhteberry-pie--snob from New England. Aside from this, he's a wonderful husband and devot- ed father. I've tried several times to1 make this pie but .apparenUY it's not the· ple that Mama used .to. make. Can you help me with a recipe for old-fash- ioned blueberry pie? l'd like to make one for Fa·· thers Day. Inci- dentally, what's 10 special about blue- berry pie? BAF· FLED WIFE DE AR BAF· FLED; This is the pie that men fought \Vorld War II to get home to. Men feel very strongly about blueberry pie. It's just one of th ose things women have to learn to live with. Outside of a key to the Playboy Club. I can't imagine a more thought· ful gift for father than a homemade fresh blueberry pie. It's' not dilficutt to make but all the ingredients must be fresh. So put on your sun bonnet and start picking 4 cups of ripe blue~ berries (or buy them in the market). Here's a blueberry pie that's prob· · ably better than h I s mom used to . make, but he'll never admit it, Con- tent yourselt with ma)dn' the world's second best blueberry pie. OLD-FASWONED BLUEBERRY PIE Homemade ple crust for lop ~d botto1n crust 4 cups fresh blueberries (rinsed and picked over) 4 Tablespoons flour l teaspoon cinnamon J cup genuine maple syrup I Tablespoon butter Prepare homemade pie crust . (re· member, this is an old-fashioned pie). Linb a greased pie plate with bot· tom crust. Pour berries into a bowl. sprinkle with flour and cinnamon and stir in the maple syrup. Pour con· tents into pie plate. dot with butter and cover with. top crust. Seal edges and gash crust ln sev- , er al places. Bake in 450 degree 1oven for 20 minutes, 400 degree oven for another 20 minutes and reduce heat to 350 degrees for the last "20 minutes or until crust is brown and berries are cooked. \Vhat's your cooking predicafrU?nt? Send ii in and see if u1e can cook ~ While we can't personally answer all your letters, those letters with the most entertai11ing or pertinent culinary proble~ wilL be published in this column. Send your letters to WHAT COOKS? clo THE DAILY PILOT. Barry A. Mays _Make Costa Mesa New Home Just returned from a hon- eymoon in Hawaii, Barry Alan May and his bride. the former Kathryn Leigh Hanes, are making their new home in Costa Mesa. The daughter of George Hanes of Alhambra and the late Mrs. Hanes married the son of Mr . and Mrs. Milton W. May of Newport Beach during a small fam- ily wedding ceremony per· fprmed by the Rev. James Lamberth in Christ Church by the Sea, Newport Beach. The new Mrs. May was given in marriage by her father and attended by Mrs. Loy Goble, her sister from San Gabriel. The bride· groom asked Kenneth P. Kinton of San Gabriel to be his best man. A graduate of San Gabriel High School, the bride at- tended Pasadena City C-01· lege where she affiliated with Alphometa sorority. Her husband, an alumnus of Arcadia High School. attend· ed the same college where he joined Phi Sigma Ira· ternity. Club Meets Appointments to duties in • th.e Air Force Mothers Club FHght 19 will be announced at the club's ge n er a I meeting tomorrow· at 7:30 p.m. in the Hyde Park Mobile Estates recreation hall, Santa Ana. President ¥rs. Melvin Roenfeldt h a s appointed Mrs. Jda Lee Skinner as historian ; Mrs. E d w a rd Wilson, hospi tal chairman; "-1rs. Elmer Fritz, A i r Moms service p r o j e c t chairman. and Mrs. Matt Ikeda. pubHcity chairman. Color slides of Greece will be shown by a represen· tative of a travel bureau in Corona de! Mar. THREE GENERATIONS -Mrs. Lemuel J. Downs (left) anticipates the Cali· fornia National Fuchsia Society's 14th annual Fuchsia and Shade Plant Show --where she will represent the Costa Mesa-Bay Cities Branch as queen. She is joined by her daughter,~Mrs. Ronald E. Maitrejean, a branch member, and h er grandaughter, Dawn Marie Maitrejean. • ... Annual Fuchsia Show . . • • • ·-.,. ~Flower 1' .... Orang e Coun t y Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa, " , ~:; =l~J~ ncc:il~~u~ ~June 14·16, when th e .: Oali.fornia 'NaUOOQl F uchsia .: <. Society presents its 14th an· nuaJ Fudlsia and Shade Plant Shaw. Get t i n g ready to partJcipete, Costa Me:se·Bay Cities Bl'QtlCfi oi the society selected Mr, and M r s . Lemuel J . Downs O{ Costa Mesa as their king and queen and repre&entatives on a Ooat for the coming FiJll Fry Par-.de. Mn. l>ownl ii edll« ol 01< ooclety'• N • tloJ>a 1 Power husband ha& worked in the gala show. fw the ,past two years. flighlights of ttie event. being s~ged ~th Fuchsias on Parade as its theme. '"'ill be di.splays by the society's branches tnroughout the state. competing for the coveted Sweepstake s Trophy Md other aw.ard6. Awards also wiU be given to garden clubs and in- diYfduals e n t e r i fl g com- panion shade plants. in· cluWng African v i o I e t s , begonias. ferns. bromeli&ds. orchids, gloxinias and floral arrangements.. Commercial growers are "donating displays f« the occasion. R·eigns assist • the master o f ceremonies in a w a r d i n g prizes donated by merchants, n u r s e r i es . hotels, restaurants and com- mercial and i n d i v i d u a I ·friends of the society. Also av>'arded \\'ill be merchandise Ucket draw. ings Including Uiree days in the ~I acienda lfotel. Las I Vegal'i . DoOl's will open lo the rx1blic Friday at 3 p.m. to 9j p.m. Saturday hours are from JO a.m. to 9 p.m., and Sunday the show wlU take place from 10 a .m. to 6 p.m. Tickets ar~ l1 for adults and 50 cents for students from 12 to 16 years old. <llildrt11 under 12 will be admitted free if they a r e ac- In Coronado Nuptial Vows Pledged Sacred Heart Ca th ol I c Church of Coronado was the setting for the marriage of Patti Kathleen McKenna and Roger \Villian1 Witalis. The Rev. J ohn Purcell of· ficiated at the double ring ceremony. The bride is t he daughter of c.dr. (USN Rel .) and Mrs. Charles N. McKe;nna of Corona det Mar a n d Coronado. -Parents of the bridegroom are Dr. and Mrs. T. \Villiam Witatis of Claremont and B a 1 b o a Island. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore an A· line gown of English net with venetian lace insert!, glove length sleeves, and a jeweled neckline. A bow of venetian lace held her three· tiered veil. She wore her pa tern a I grandmother's engagement· bracelet and carried a simple bouquet of daisies and babys breath. Maid of honor was the bride's sister, Miss Nancy McK"enna while matron of honor was Mrs. Nicholas Roden of Monterey. Both attend~flt& were Identically attired in full lcitgtb A-line dresses of maize linen and fuU brim· med hats of white Italian straw with olive green streamers. They carried bouquets -similar to the bride's. Best man -was David Hall of Los Angeles. Ushers were Robert Ingold of Newport Beach, Glen Anderson-of Costa Mesa and William Fruehling of South Laguna. A reception took place at the North Island Officer's Club after the ceremony. Miss Su s a n Carstensen, cousin of the bridegroom from Van Nuys circulated the guestbook. Out of town guests in· eluded Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Minneapolis Selected· As Marriage Setting Jane Westerdahl of Newport Beach will become the bride of John Fontius during Aug. 16 ceremonies in St. Stephen's Episcopal Ohurcb, Minneapolis, Minn. News al ttie fortllcomi\>g event bas been revealed by her parents, Dr. am. Mrs. H. 0 . Westerdahl ol Min· oeapolis. The bride..to·he teaches at TeWinkle School, Cog ta Mesa and attended the University o f Minnesota Where she affiCated with Gamma Phi Bela. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mm. Charles Footius of Newport Beadl, is a graduate ol. Newport Harbor High School and Slf.nford University where he earned his MA in education and pledged Delta 1\au Delta. He teaches at NHHS JANE WESTERDAHL August Bride where he coaches tne B basketba:l'.I team and varsity tennis. Hoag Rewards Distaff Friends Pins rewarding the efforts Qf 41 dedicated H o a g Memorial Hospital, Presbyrterian A u xi 1 i ary members for service rang- ing from 100 to 2,000 .hours were p~ented at an ;\wards Co ffee r~ently. William R. Hudson Jr., b o s pi ta I adminisfrator. ass.isled by Miss Madeline Shaw, dirtctor of nursing, presented the awards to the hard workers. Receiving 100 hour pins were h1iss Carole Brown and the Mmes. Jack Carney. Jack Christen.son, Melvin Deilar, Charles Gangi , Donald Gustafson, Robert Hauk. L. H. J anssen, Paul Kneiseler. Ralph Ladd, Glen M. Larsen. J . S. Linderman. Glenn Martin. J oseph Masi. Carl Meyer, J . S. Osborne and James R. Seay. Those receiving pins for 250 hours of se rvice \\•ere the Misses Toni Acone and Bernice Vestal and the Mmes. Frank Andru&. J ohn J . Elliot, Leonard Hylton and Allen Kenison. Earners of 500 hour pins were the Mmes. A. Lee . .\dair, George Friedl, Richard Kredel. Leonard J. South and Dale \Vinters . The 1000 hour pins were given to the Mmes. \Villard Ch a m be r l i n , \Varren Clemence, Raymond Dosta. F . T. Eddy, Don Fuller, Geor·ge Cox, James Laflamme, Dorothy Roth and GarWLnd White. The 1500 hour pins were given to Mrs. Charles P . Dewey and Mrs. Ralph E . Wilson. Mrs. W. H. Brown- ing -and Mrs. Rutlh Vedder received the most c<lveted 2000 hour pins. Refreshments for the cof- fee. which is given three: times annually by the hospital, were prepared andl served by the auxiliary's Hunter Chapter members. The Volunteer's Coordinat- ing Committee, headed by Mrs. William J . Durkin and Mrs . Joseph Met c a 1 f. awards assistant, hosted tile 1 event. I Rummage Sale Orange Shores Medical · Assistants Association will I stage Its annual baked goods and rummage sale next I Saturday from 9 a.m . to 5 p.m . at 109 E. 18th St., Costa Mesa. Emblem Club The Elks LOOge is the setting for meetings of the Emblem Club 201 of Laguna Beach. Members gather the first and third Tuesdays al a p.m. I VIRGINIA'S -- SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE 3334 E. Coast Highway Coron1 del Mar . "'If'" ORlol• J·IOSO Now it'1 ti1111 te relei for 1 f•w ""•11th1 111d •n- Joy lo1fin9 e11 lh1 b11ch ot pu>1ui119 yewr f1.,.orite 1po•tt of l•11nl1, 9olf er 11ilin9. Ne•d 111 e•l•1 bet1'ln9 11111, n1w l1n11i1 tlreu er 1herh er 1l 1ck11 t.41~1 • qui~k trip to 111 eur ler91r 1-lectlo11 of 1porhweer f1b1 ic1, 11l1cl 111 111r te lfll~I p1tl1rn I In net1'i119 fli t you Clll cr11!1 yeur own "er19in1l." II yei.r're • b19inner, dor,'f he1il1l1 lo •tk for lielp 111 1eleclien •' 1uH1bl1 f1Dr!c •nd p1tten11 for yert 1peci•I 111..I. '---------Vl~GINIA.--~ Shea of Montville, N.J ., aunt and uncle and godparents of the bride, Mrs. S. H. Emory of Boston, Mass!, aunt of the brJde, and Mr. and Mrs. E. S. McPherson of Sewickley, Pa., grandparents of the bridegroom. The bride is a graduate of Coronado High School and San Jose State College whe re she obtained a degree in occupational therapy. The bridegroom is a graduate or \Vebb School. Claremont, University of the Pacific in Stockton and received hJs MA degree hi tndustrial mahagement Crom Universi- ty of Southern California. , Aller a honeymoon in Southern California the cou- ple will live in Japan where both are lieutenants in the U.S. Army stationed at the U.S. Army Hospital at Camp Zama. she in the oc· cupational therapy section and he in the administration of the hospital. Gala Polka Party Set The international polka MR. AND MRS. ROGER WITALIS Home In Japan dance sponsored by the .,.. • .,,,.,...,.,.,;,,.,..,'!"'.., .. _...,.,._,..m1Em111£1 Orange County Polka Club v.ill take place next Satur· day from 9 p.m. to J a.m. in Abrams Town and Country G.J.ub in Orange. Peering Around Music will be provided by • .,,...,.IC..,,..,. •• ..,,....,.., ... .., .... ., the Cavaliers orchestra. Guests are invited to wear costumes representing their national heritage. A fee of $1 .50 per person will be charged and tickets will be available at the door. Door prizes will be awarded. ~IB. AND MRS. KEN- NETII W. Wager, Cost.a Mesa, entertained the Rev. and Mrs. James Doom and their five children o f Collinsville, m. f<>r a few dayt; before they proceeded to Glorletita, N.M . where the pastor will teach at the Soutti.ern Baptist Encamp· men-t for two weeks. Mrs. Doom is the niece of Wager. ormal (9pening .l::::~c1rr1NG NBvv by DONOVAN 100°/o HUMAN HAIR··BUY DIRECT 69.95 VALUE 1998 MACH. TIED FALLS 125. 95 VALUE 3889 HAND TIED w I G s GRAND OPENING SPECIAL All Styles and Colors! • GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 125. 95 VALUE 3898 100•;. HUMAN HAIR WIGLETS 24.50 VALUE · 589 100•;. HUMAN HAIR Complete Fashion Styling al Lowest Prices PERFECT COLOR MATCHING by DONOVAN 9037 EAST ADAMS • _,, 1o -,_ c:-, "· L Tolophone 968-4174 OPEN MON. THRU SAT., 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M. -F'ucb•l• Fan Magazine and HrVed the bnncb at presf ... dOll~ ......-ding ~ and <.•urr~n~.ly is· cor· rel!pOlldin& __,, Her The state king and queen, Earl Hough and Mrs. Ray Joyce, will reign st the llhow. groot vlaitol'$ and comp•nied by illelr pe.rent..,, __________________ __.llllm••• OPEN SUNDAY 12 'TIL S P.M. \ • ' . . ' ' . -...... ~ ____.-...----......----------------~--------._.........-_.....,,....---..-... ---. . ..... ------.......--·----------~·-·-·-·---·,--·--·--~--"':"'-------..-::""":"": .... ~~ • • • = = = • 0 0 0 0 • • • 0 0 ~ ' PEANUTS lHE W!Alll~ 15 CUl\R ... IT. 511MD 8E A 6000 DPH ... • •• · By Cliarles M. Scliull ;-------; ~ ~ \W:fl!1 ,._....._, b 8,:0fl!)MIUJ .... -.1, (C) A fl l~~~~~~~~ monttii, p1111t1m dtvOttd to Htlffl J c11tture, tllt lhetto 1iid tile bl•cli I L=~~~~==..,.;•!;·~,.J [_::::~~~==:...._:JI [-=~~~~~;!~~,;] mlddl1 tit-. Ualni 1 T\I 11111ulnt WEDNESDA Y JUNE 1% ! V[Nl~G fOfmd, tllt Pl'll1!1m bqlns with 1 let•br11klna news slOfJ 1nd 1 ,. Yltw or ttle Nl(l'O PJW. Scheduled IS I Slflrt by GodfrtY C..milrldtt, folk 3in1« Leo Bibb, 1 look ti U.S. &:00 9 Tiie llt NtK (C) (60) Jet1Y bltck thttter, documtnbrlts on the Dunphy. 1hetto, black PoWfr and Metro hls- D H1111lltJ-lrlllhf ltpert (C) (30) ~A-lfl .. ~ u ...... _., (C) (O> .. d fltll'll 4:30 PM) Ana.rs VL Red Sox. 1:30 0 9 (}) n. IMrlJ Hlllbllllu: D Sk D'Cltd: Mowlt: (C)"Princeu (C) (30) Bent on 1 mlllta1Y ca1Hr, ti till Niie" (advtntura) '54-0eb· Jethro experiments wltll undtrw1ter ra P111t Jtffrey Hu:nter. demolitlcn whll1 prtttlclnt to l>t • m Mtrl11t 1oJ (C) (30) Nl"Y froam1n In the $Wimmln1 ID hUr Mt (30) pool. (R) fl!I -· .... 0 lji) III ..... _, (C) (30) 0) ti ~ Miki Dtrow hom. l:JO D KNIC 11tw1 SerrlCI (C) (60) 0 "" .,,,,, -(C) (30) QIH ... (30) 1!J McHll111 Nl'IJ (30) fm Mtrt fll' Yo.-Mon.,: ''Thi Senlo'r Citizen Markt!." Marion ¥•1'1h•ll 1nd 1 auest explain whal the new markets !Of anior adults may mean to the consumer. @II Notidtr• 34 (C) 1:45 B Anceb wra,.up {Cl 7:00 U CIS &enl111 lffWI: (C) (30) Waltar C1onkite. m MllY lrlffhl (C) (90) CD Wonden If IM World (tl (30) El'I Dr1J111tic Seri•! 't:OO II 9 ([! Cr1111 Aull: (C) (30) A bot for the state firm unal'tlched duty tax st.uu Otil'flr Dout11s on 1 crusedt against taxation without reprasentatlon. (R) 0 KRAFT MUSIC HALL * John David son, Estelle Parsons, Harper's Bizarre CJ @ 00 Jlr1tt MUJi.t Hall: (C) (60).lohn Da~ldson hosts. Guests in· cludt aclrtsS Estelle Parsons and H1rp&r'1 Blzarie. 0 Wrtltllnt (C) (60) DR. KILDARE . RHINfR'S A Sl.ACIC'MA1lfR. 'lbi.l'VE PR08ASL'f FIGURED 1HA1 OUT 'fOURSf l.F. GORDO ~'U1ll'LJ~' '\We1LL ' 6HOW M•S. "°"tA~e5 YJHDl5 1'"' HIPPeST w~ I~ 10YJtJ. 6·11 By Gus Arriola O Nfl Action: (C) (30) '1he lint· backers: Search and Destroy." Pitts· bur1h Stneler Bill Saul gives a ra1e, dramatic look •t • !op linebacke1 Jn action. 0 f Troop U @{]) Wednud•J Nlrftt Movie: ''To Cltth 1 Th1tr• (mystll}') '55- "'• """· "'"' "'"'· ,,~,, JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Doux R<¥tt Landis. On !ht frtf'ICh Riv· \ JIC:-"'l[Jlc=======::::;:;:J 0,..,-,,,..-,-am;-y-,..-.-..,-,-.-.. """"',---,.., ~":-=;r1;:;:"'.5H::;:El;:LA-;vo:SH::;E!;::'":l::NTE<ESTEP;::::;:::;::lll;-;; ... ;;;;"':;-;""";;;;-""';;;;:~U>"' m I love Lucy (30) ID Cllll11n's lsl•nd (30) iera, the "Cat'' In eii·con and ex· MOlllR HAVEtt'r urnJ9tNEP GOING TO PO UICE 10 pO SOME ACT1N6.IN 51!MMER S10CJC! jfftel thief, fills in IM with I FrOM TNAT Al.!NT!i FINEAAL! lHl5 511MMEJ:?' I'M 60!M6 TO SPEAK TO PM AIOllT rr! ED Yow Rliht To $IJ It (C) James Mc8urney moderates 1 dis· cussion ol • mass medit topic with Vim:ent Wasilewal!i, pruident of tilt National Association of Broadcast· wealthy Amtriain 11irl and finds ht HE W6HT IE >.&LE 10 Ma.P HSI: 6ET A. ls suspected of conlinu ini his old JOI M1M 1HE LOCAi.. lHEA.TH 6l'OIP! ers. ind two newsmen. iEl LI C11n. YKla thievery. (R) Ii) Islands '111 tM SU!1 (C) (30) , m Fntur• J @D Mltrwlts M111lc.al ,, .. f) ~ CiJ "' • ''" (C) (30) Dick Holliater's "Jetman" appears 7:30 IJ a([! lost in SpKI: (C) (60) headtd for Broadway until Oscar South of the ecliptic, down Alpha North. who plays the title tharac· Centauri way, Prof. John Robinson's tlf, "freezes" in the out·of·town spice Wanderefl encount~r 1 ga1ac· tryout. (R) tic L1tln, 1 litrce ''b1ndido" wh<I m Zoorimi (C) (30) seeks to compel the EarthlinP" to ED NET festival: (C) "lentil Annual surrend,r to him in ic1 princess Mooterey Jm Festival." Final prj). Whom they ire protectina. Corinna iram of the festival. Selections in· Tsopei, Miss Univitrst 1964, plays cludt numbeis by Illinois Jtcquet, the prirw:ess. (R) Dizzy Gillespie, th• Modern Jazz 0 @ Cil Thi Vir&lni.ln: (C) (90) Quartet, and the Don Ellis 01clles· ''The Fortress." Aller Thi Vl11lniitll Ira. delivers 1 hMd of cattle to • Ca· ill /t11pactos Musicilts Cuervo n1dian buyer, he is uught In the middle of 1 $100,000 swindle. 10:0011 Q!l CIJ The DoM Dtluiae Stiow Winthrop, owner of his own city (Cl (60) across the border from l1rkwille, D @ (I) Run fl>r Your Litt: (C) pays The Vir1ini1n, 11!111 two Win· (60) "The. VoiCI of Gll'll Milan." throp htnehmen rob lift L1rksvlllt Susan strasber1 1uesU as Gint bank, makln1 The Virgini1n'1 bank Miian, en op&ra singer who !alls iii draft worthless. Leslie Nielsen, Bar· love will! Peul 8iy1n ind tftaltt 1 bara Souchet and Kipp Hamilton situation that bodes heartbreak for 1uest (R) · both. (R) O SIM Alltll Shew: (C} (90) O a.or,. Putnam News (C) (60) Gueltl ire Mel Brooks, St1san Bar· 0 Ttmpo (C) (60) rett, The Gordian Knot. ind "G.T.", ID Jack Uthifl """ (CJ (60) tilt Dobritch !nl&rnational Circus tl11er, with trainer 8ob Holter. (R) ID FaYOrite story (C) (30) O @ (IJ TIM Avenien: (C) (60) @II Box del Mltfcotes "Dead M1n'1 Trtasure." John s.teed 10:30 OJ Newi: (C) (30) Bill Johns. searches for the top·secret m1c10· fE MIJOI' Y~rty'a NllWI Confmnce film that w.s hidden by • c;c1urier berore ht was kmed by two 111ents. 11:00 O Elewn O'tloU Report (CJ (30) Before hi& dnth tht rourier had . JtfT)' Dunphy. put Steed's name on an invitation O T11e 11th Hour Newt: (C) {3-0) to 1 car r11ly 11 1 Mr. Bens1ead'1 Georae Skinner. est.alt. (R) 0 The Westlrlllf1 (30) fJ Million $ Movie: "The lwl~ 0 NIWI: (C) (30) BaJ!er Ward. ness of 1111 Lon1-0111111ce llunMJ" d 0 Movlt: "EYll If the Slh1r1" (drama) '62-Sir Mieh1el Rt 1r1ve, Torn tourtwy, Avis Bunnip, P• (1dventurt) '60--Curt Jur1ens, LH ter Madden. A youn1 min In I PadO'lani, Fulco L11lll. British reformatory for robbefY de· m IM Crtnt (C) (60) valops intenM blttarnlSI for the m Mowit: "C.ptei11 Sirocco" (Id· govefnor of tht Institution, and IC· venture) ·~ouis Hayward, Bin· tut!!y "wins tht d1y" whtn ht pur· nit BarnK. ~Y loses tt11 cross· country 1un· nin compftltlM !ft whlth ht hid 11:30 D MM: "DM111 C~111" (dr1m1) ~ .mered. '58---Gene Evans. Kt1th Andes. 91 IPIC!i411-lrwll: 111111 to 0 ID @ Tiii Tot1ipt lhow (C) Mall. {C) (60) Videotape flf music1I O Mn: "flll led M1111C1t" (dr•· p('Oll'lm fe1turln1 Nerro enttrtlin• m•l '49-Robert Roctwt!I, Hanne James Brown, at H1rltm'1 hll'l6d Al:tman. A pot lo ThettM. D @ (]) Joer Bilflop Sllow (C) m PtnJ MISOll (60) 12:00 m .lot l'yrM (C) ED Thi .. r Rtwolvtion: "Question· .. . lni.'' Allltro1·ledu1er Krishn1murti 12:30mA11-NltM .. ~: P~nlf .ct be 1 dlalocu• witl'I boys 11 ttte Shirk ISiand, 1h1 Shoek1n1 Miss Th::; School in Ojai, C.111. The, Pillrim, "Und• H1rry" Ind "Thin discuss world prctil'"1s ind PlfS()n· lu." 11 end conttmpDl'llY lllllff. m Aet1011 n.tit: "Sprinatim• ht @D PTIMler Orholl tht Rockies." THURSDAY DAYTIME MOVIES ll:ODO''tlll• Hu_. (musie1I) '33 -Bina Crosby. ·~ strllt:I" (dra· ml) '3l-G1ry Cooper. lZ:JG m .. ltou&'IJ' .,_kin(' (comedy} •&-Jacll. C.r10n, Roaellnd Rus.Mlt. l:IO llt ..,.,...... (myst:HY) "'" - ROSlll'lllry Ltt1t, Ra1pl'I Morpn, MOON MULLINS •. : .JIJNE"' MOON ... ... CROON ... TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEff MISS PEACH DD 'IOU ~IK'l' ME, FRANCINE 7 ® •, WELL, JUST TRY IT!. •.. l'M READY FOR WU! "l'ES, A!mlUR, r ADoRe vour I THINK Y0tJ l'f'.E SWEET, 5MART, WELL· MANNERED N<O POISED 1 By Ferd Johnson Mow •.• 14'oE ... ~ROW ..• F l.OW ..• ly Tom K. Ryan THIS TIME I Hill A HACKSAW IN THI' ' CELL! HEH!HEH I . • -· -~"'--· By Al Smith JEANNE! "lllEl'I MOW COME 'VDU ·NeVER ll'IVITC ol\\E HOME 11:> MEET '!OUI': PA!reNTS "l' By Men l'l<ANl<L'f, :J:'M ASHAMED Of ')W._ • "'° 0 (C) '"It -.. ,.,... (comedY) '59 -OOrla DI)', J.tek 4:.JO II (C) "ltwM w.,. Fto111 Sl!Jt- ...,... (Mern) '60--Audle Mur· phy, Btny $11lllv1n. Lemmon. a ..,._.. ,........ (Wiit· 9m) 155-#tonlld Reepn. .... ,. --... -.... . Wlldl ... .. 0-(-'63-111· thlll Cnlrl. fnllCOltl Pf1'IOlt. Complete Printing Service Top Quality -Fast Service 1111·11111111119 642-4321 2211 Wnt llllboo Blvd. .. !!UT, HONEY, JU£>f BECAUSE l HAVE ••• A~C> WE JU5T CAN'T· 1Al(E A CH,.&.NlE: ON HAVING BABIE-5 WHO AREN'T RIGHT IN lo\EHTAl.cY RETAIWED UNCLE5 POESN'T MfAN /tl'f O/ju:>f(EN WILL Be lHATWAY •.• "THE HEAD ••• ·---·~__.._ Wedottdly, Jwlt Ii, 1%8 DAILY Pilot • ANGER -Topsy Jane, above, stars with Tom Courtenay in tfie motion picture, "The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner/' tonight at 7:30 on Channel 9. The story concerns an angry young man in reform school, who feels be is being used by the society he hates. TELEVISION VIEWS New Variety Shows Aired By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) - A couple of more variety shows were pumped Tuesday night into television's network channels already teeming .with girl singers, boy comedians and singing groups. First premiere of the evening was NBC's "Showcase '68," a simple, forthright half hour in which, without much (>rOduction, a number of young performers were introduced. All were professionals, but new to network TV. The acts included a young comedian whose special· ty was making noises like a racing car; the mand~· tory blonde girl singer and an instrumental trio consisting of three youngsters in their teens. LLOYD THAXTON, the host, used to preside over:: one of those teen dance parties, and intro- duced. the acts in an econoinical fashion -bringing them on and letting them· perform. All of them were pretty good, and at the con .. clusion of the program a jury of two ~s Ange]es disc jockeys and an editor of a teen-age magazrne picked a winner for the evening -the comedian and the teen-age trio tied . In format and in performers the show is aimed at the young crowd and since it is a partial replace- ment for the Jerry Lewis show has a big audience of young people. The show was followed, on CBS, by the pre- miere of Red Skelton's suqimer replacement. "Showtime," a variety hour taped in London. SHELLEY BERMAN was host on the first of the series, handling the introductions of foreign acts and presenting his amusing, sketch in which he plays an American diplomat, an Eastern European dignitary and the go-between interpreter. British singers Shirley Bassey and Natt Mon- roe were pleasant and there were some mildly amusing moments with an English comedy te'am and a German juggler. Skelton's replacement for the past couple of seasons have been imported vaudeville hours, and this season's output, if the first show is typical ap- pears to be superior to the others. . The new show had some very handsome, ef· fective sets and the camera work was often imag- inative. Goodness knows, however, where they found their studio audience. The sound track sug- gested that they. would laugh at just about anything. "CARDINAL CUSHING of Boston," which oc- cupied half of the CBS weekly news hour, was put together two months ago, postponed and when fin .. ally showed proved to be of special interest. The 72-year-old prelate figured prominently In the Ken- nedy funeral services (both of them). Colorful, tough-minded and delightfully frank, Cardinal Cushing· in an interview with Harry Rea- soner discussed the problems of the church in con- temporary society and other subjects close to his religious concern. . But another side of the priest was also shown -on a visit to home for the aged, he danced a jig to amuse them. Recommended tonight: ''Summer Music Hall,'1 NBC, 9-10 PDT, with singer John Davidson as host and featuring some electronic gadgetry. Dennis tlae ltle~e • •• I ' I I atltf SW .•• 1h1< ...... • • • 1tltf ll!l'h11! -silver-fiasked bottlo -l!eM -.... St111ilfl1 5 5 0 Sitt ..... . I a ~5o 12.50 Russian Leather •Y EXECUTIVI After Sbave LOTION 411. 3 I 00 Cologne 411. 3 .50 Mlll'S Stretch Hose IUIUllCllfl -!xi rill ~ 12" length for firm, comfoll!ble stay 1111 gee fit Dart sllades ••• one size fits-ID 11 ll . --- SCHICK ANNOUNCES ••• CREATEST SHAYINC DISCOVERY SINCE SUPEI STAINLESS STEEL NEW · Schick ''KRONA•CHROME" Blade ....,.--.;;;;;:i wi" Plra Cmlll•• E~11 M-shms, tll!tlasts "" -Made,....,.""'"""· :.~:.cl snc lie 11.,._ .,- PachU NIW FOSTER GRANT ' Sunglasses 11l111°Hll lllts fall< .... 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Sm1rt 1net1I travel wallet. • Rechargeable Tri,lalulor 45CT -wit! po~up trimmer ••• close, fast sliavea •• , with or witho ut the cort 110/220 AC IOlt· 29 88 age se-. CanlrodWfed in MW slim wallet. • REMINGTOI Shavers • Stlactn -tniqore dial adjusts three tllin, sllar~ slia'ling holds II fllr !lrlvin1 heipts 22 87 ' ••• "p~p-1p11 11•1b1r1 tri11mer. Dllrnre~c~. , Sii Slf"1nlic -Worh with or without cor1. 1- positioa Comfort Dial adjusts the 24 ·as _, edtt .. ""' slift ""1 beard. • Oeitxe lift case. 1 •, 'Butane' Lighters "Pl111clt " - a.os. fNm """" of sMes ""1 col1111 in the 11eW slim shape. • I I l " m 111 ql ""1 3 qt sizts dtsigod for IS! with electric 2 49 mixers as well a ..,mixers. I New h1rd-c111 finish resists smtc~n1 ••• Y'U 1 98 Cll USI )'WI' metal ! i .,..,. and spatulas. 1 --l oi. U I 3.99 EAC1 fl I :. I • ... ,... ... I. I I • r t I I .. • , ! 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' . ,. --~enuine leather SULFQDENE •ar. 1111111r1• -liquid lllMication wollts mt lo hnl y;,. do(s nch·sores. 4lr.Sf111 .11 lor.Sl111.H ctmnnn1.0.11m1Hnic111111mmc1 ="'· I SEA&SKI. ~od .. d 0115: 95' ,.,1 '"'· ·=;:: zipper 1 39 1 111-1.11 • T --·-- . ?{-+. -:' ,.,...., iii f'Z Pipe Rack ? with HUMIDDR -· '!:~ Walnut or f!lihogany .w()Od ra:i;k ~-holds ~P ·1o 4 of his flvonti ""'1>ipes : •• i• · · · · - · kee_P.S tobacco · fresh! · Rt(. 7.lt 5.95 PRO "Jet-Stream" Fir M111e Dral Mnie11 was~es awai what your toothbrush leaYes ~in~ ... at 13 88 the gum 11.ne, be· . twetn teetlt • • -~ Dish Drain Tray • ~astlc wi~ ti'bed llllttom that prevents slipping, ggc sloped sides. Asst colors. -• .,. 1.!I • . . - Dish Drainer wlCUP tor Cot1111 .. • large 20lhx1 4" sile · holds up In 8 i.~""' 1 33· Choose from white 'lnll - ass't colll/S. 111. UI • -~••k ,, 1w1 _ •ith gac • 11besln1 palms • • • slatldatd l"gtlt . 1.09 1.79 SCRAtCHEX s,.., I• flop -Kills ft .... ticks .. .stops 1 34 fungus itch. 1 1r. ·1 . .c1 Sir1 • SCRATCH EX for IDH·CAIS -Stops ~I J major causes of scratching • • • ... sac stroys odors. lit Sin ~ -·- $1Rlan LoliOI Fast-workit1' ••• '*"' 1 39 ltoppin' .•. dark tlnnin'. 1.11 4 u. Sill • ~ ....•..•..................... ~ Jelly Jars· "Q1iltd Cristal" -A< tight caps •• , ideal !or home bo_ttling ."l of }am$, jellies and relishes. ,.11.. gee llr. Sin . ''"'' 12 1 29 hz.SIH o "Foille" FllST AID ~\j)\~~~" "Noxzema" "N H MEDICllED oxzema SPRAY -fast relief from Sunburn, lnsett Bites, C~ts, ~urns, etc. Helps 1 49 to stop 1nfect1on. 1.15 S IZ. Sill • VACATION BOUND? TAKE "Wash 'n Ori" p,. ..... 11t Di1,.111Jl1 Towele_ttt -for tfle quickest, · coolest olean-up when :-ycu can't use w;iter • .... 21• 1.41, 41"• 77c 1.09 MEDICATED Instant Shave Made from Nox.zerna S•in Cream Formula .•• c~n· ~~~ cent1ated. 1.211111. S111 . . OPEN 9 AM to.10 PM-7 DAYS A WEEK SKIN CREAM Greas1l1ss - Cleaos up dirt, df'/ skin blemishes. Cool- ing, soothing relief from sunburn • 1.111 H. Size iui1m.." w .... nff ,,_ . WldnesdlJ, June U, 1968 DAILY PILOT (tPRINCESS 'JJl,ff/P.al() NYLONS S1a11l1ss -for the Ital· ttring bare·leg look! Choose frcm three styles in new shades & white for the sum. mer in sizes 8~ tu l I. Un- conditionally Guaranteed. 111. 2 for lie 2i66c GIRLS' Shirts _ ''t to11thor wit~ 1 s•art l11k! Wash 'n wear 100% cotton with built·in stretch. Turtle· neck style with Short sleeves or sleeveless in bold, colorful slripes or solid pastels. GIRLS' Jamaicas Preshrunk cottM in assorted solid ptStel colors. Choose ==:::-- from self belted waist with ·~;:1;:~.~~r ~ty1l . 49 'Tease 'n Style' Brushes Br1sb-Slim style with con· tour shaped handle. R11. 69c !ml & Coml-Double duty brush in assorted colors. R11. 79c EVEREADY 9 Volt 39c 49c Transistor Batteries "YJCJ\ill Sp1<i1I" -Pak 79c of 2 batteries. For mast tran· sistor radios. R11~ 19c tooth Brushes ·ly DUl'INT Regular 33c brushes 3 , 49c in assorted styles, o -bristles and colprs. • · .IRONING BOARD Pad & Cov~r SET WELMllD -"I eflOR' coated hmy t-01· ton drill cover ••• two 1 79 layer pad with non·skid base. • . IEAUTlfUL HAI;-•••-- " Breck" CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO -Leaves your hair 59c so bouncing clean ••• so manageable. 1.00 4 11. Tube "Breck" HAIR SET MIST with new holding power! Choose 1 39 from Regular, Super & Gentle H~ld. 2.25 14 IZ. Size • ~ . 47;._. Dessert 6, ., ~'""o• Ito iassware • fJS ll Co/ • CKJllG . 'Mil 11. Fllf::r~ S!trlot ·~ • llt Wt/11 '••I •I f rout CHOICE 4i6Bc ~ "Finlalldia" , lS •r. s•~t U In Geld, .tqllf. ""'"• •TA~ "ldo C0/4r. 4f68c I ' '.· I ·----.. -------------·----~----------~------ f.f DAILY PILOT Wed""4af, """ 12, 1968 Non1inees Set 10 Vie for Yardley Trophy Ten of the Orange Coast area's most outstandin& male athletes have been nominated for the 1968 award of the coveted Yardley Trophy. The annual awarda banquet Is scheduled for-June 215 at Balboa Bay Club and Lakers announctr Chick Hearn iJ lined up as guest speaker. Tickets for the stag af- fair are priced at $6.50 each and may be purchased at the door or the Newport Beech Chamber of Commerce. This year's nominees include: Mite Beekmaa; m i s t e r everytbina: on tbe UCI basketball team which stimned observers by finishing second in the NCAA regionals and which u p s e t Nevada Southern and cal state (LA). Garf Johnson , former Orange Coast College athlete who is now managing a minor 1 e a g u e baseball team for t.he Chicago White Sox organization. Jtm Jorfemea, member of Qr.ange Coast College's un- defeated rowing team, OCC stu- dent body president. Mike Mutln, UCI freshman who holds NCAA swim records for the -400 and ax> freestyles in the small college division, a star water polo player and a former Corona de! Mar High athlete of the year. Jim Ocie, Newport Harbor High tennis star, named Sunset League player of · the year and s•wart on the squad which was undefeated until the CIF cham- plonahlps. Phil Splller, C1efemlve whJz with the St. Lollil Cardinlls of ttie National Football Lague, ex- star at Orange Coast COUege and Newport Harbor High School John Vallely, Orange Coast College and former Corona del Mar High School balketball flash , wbo broke OCC scoring records, was named Eastern Conference player of the year, was on All· State aquad and made jaycee Olymplc tryouts. BUI Voa1, moved up to parent organization in early seuon after a smashing start with Hawaii of the Pacific Coast League, now starting in the out. field for the Chicago White Sox of the American League. He prepped at Newport Harbor High and then moved on to Orange Coast College before entering pro baseball. Frank Wetrath, back of the year in tile Eastern Conference after smashing season with Orange Coast College. Prepped at Marina High and is now at- tending San Jose State. John Yule, Irvine League player of the year, led Corona del Mar High to a 28-3 season record and a berth in the CJF quarter finals before his mates bowed in overtime to Marina. Candidat:ee mu.st have received at lea.rt a portion m their educa- tion in the Harbor area (Orange Coast, UCI, Newport Harbor High, Corona del Mar High). Like North Afriea Aging Stadiull!, Capital Poor Site for AAU Meet Would you believe: That the AAU would hold 1 na- tional championship meet in Sacramento. Our state capital is quite like North Africa in the summer months, which should cause con· siderable gasping, groaning a n d perhaps a bit of heat exhaustion by the athletes. And the track at aging Hughes Stadium is fit for dog races, perhaps, but surely not for an event which serves as an Olympic Trials qualifying meet. Also, the stands ]eave one with the impression the city is too impovrisbed OL•NN WMITa ••••••••••••••••••••• WHITE WASH ·················- tA> pltint or clean them. Anyone who bas sat in them and left without dir- tying his clothing deserves a certificate of achievement. e Tb.•t 10meone 1ui&eated we 1wap the city of Berkeley io North Korea In excbanie fOr the Pueblo and its crew. However, the offer wa1 ap- pannUy turned down. Gue11 they've heard of tbt Cal mea1 a1 far away a1 the Yalu River. • That it's .harder to get in tbe Hun- tington Beach Pop Warner football program thal it ii to gain admission to see Rudolph Hess in Berlin's Span· dau Prison. Warner requirements include cer- Man 101 to Run 101 Yard Dash BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -Larey Uwis will ope'n the National Collegiate Athletic Association track meet Thurs- day by running 101 yards. Lewis will be 101 years old on June 25. A waiter at a San Francisco hotel. Lewis predicts he will cover the distance in 20 seconds without trying hard and say1 anything under that time would be a world recoro f<r 1()(). year-olds. lain age, weight, report card, birth certificate, accompanJ.ment of a parent to registration and a $9' signup fee. At this moment there is no reatriction to color of eyes or hair. I wu told by a West Berlin public relations officer that not even Hess' mother couldn't get an interview with the former Nazi wheel. • Tbat Nortll AU-Star ba1ketball coacb Ruis Hawk. (Suuy Billi) 11tow. ed up 41 minutes lite for the Cotta Me1a Klwan11 luncbeoa Tuaday ud that b11 player1 dribbled la a couple at a time tbrouPout the aUatr. Rusi offered the allbJ that flaal ex- am1 were re1pon1lble for t h e tardlne11. However, coach BUI Bloem (Corona del Mar) of the South muar- ed &o make it OD Ume ud 10 did an of bJ1 players, except Mark Soderberf. The latter 11 OD a visit to the Unlver1i· ty of Kentucky. If Tuelday'1 demouh'adon means anythloi, look for Blo0m'1 group to run up a bumlllatbig 1eon •hen the pride of county prepdom colllde1 Jane %% at Oranie Coad Collece. . • That of ~ the day camps listed 1n a recent edition, one was omitted - that of Corona del Mar 's Bill Bloom . Perhaps its because someone reported ttiat a former Bloom counselor was Sirhan Sirhan. The Bloom group operates under the handle Of Treasure Island Day Camp am further in- formation can be obtained by ca1.llng ~ Carlos Fumes Sprinter Jolla Carlqs Is 1tlll boll-tnc over tbe Judge1' rullnc that co1t hlm what he felt wa1 1 clear-cnt ~c· tory Friday nlP,t In the 100-yard da1h at The CoUteam. "Tltat made me decide I'm going to run and work Uke I've never done bef0re," he fumtd durtnc 1 1ubte· queat Interview. "You iot to win each race by eleht yardl Just 1• get cred.Jt for whmlag so I've cot to fet ready," be 1tated. 1Some of the pres1 otrps w11 as shocked 11 Carlos wbea tt wa1 aa· noattced that Tommie Smltlt wu Ille JM vkter. And there wa1 plenty of croanlat over tta.rter Les Rellmaa'1 fain 1tart m1a11. Mets Aren't Clowns Any -~ More LOS ANGELES (AJ>) -Ooce U!>OO a time there -wa. an expansion bulbl.U loom named Ibo New Y or k Meta which most J'an.1 -even Met.I fan1 -thought were tunny clowns who owned tne Natiooal League cellar. But the faces around the league are belflnnlnl to loM their smiles and the expresrion1 on the Los Angeles Dodeers' faces have turned to frowns. The Mets aren't funny anymore. 1be Dodgers were riding the cre1t of a seven-game winning streak when the Meb hlt town l\londay night. Tom Seaver mapped tile Dodgers' streak with a masterful four-bitter to win, 1.0, in fo innings. Tonight Nolan R:Yan will appose Don Drysda1e, 8-3, who has won sev.en 1traight and recently set major leacue record& of 1lx straJght shutout& and 58 213 CODJieCUtive scareles1 innings. It wa.s Dick Selma's turn Tuesday night. He picked up his sixth victory of the season without a loss, silencing the * * * NEW TO•K • LOS AJl•ILll ••r llrtll ••rllrtl IMCh, cf J D t Ptrk•, lb I O O O Llni, :I'll I 1 1 W.Dl~lt. d 4 0 0 0 Grote, c 4 I 2 GtbrltolJOn. II 4 0 0 0 CMrtt.,3b ''' M1n.,.,c 4tlo Swotlodl, rf 1 O 2 Ftlo'IY, rl I II I 0 ~.H 311 K.~r.lb 111 11 11 Sht mll!y, If I 0 0 PoPOYlcll. 2b J II II 0 0oe....,,10 311 1 v-11 .. ,u 20111 Kr.,,.p00~ lb 1 II 1 C.0.letll, P 2 II 0 I w.i1.n '01 Purclln.P 1000 S.l,,.,.,p 401 F•ll'ft',Pl'I 1010 Gr111t,p 00110 Tor.i. JS ' 11 Teltll 31 II 5 II N-YDB ........... .,, 010 002 CID0 -:1 LOI "'-'-' ••• .. . .• .. . Diii CIDO Diii -0 E -K. l(l'(t:r t. OP -NIW York J, l• Alt9&1ft '· l08 -N•w York 6, LOI Anttln 5. 28 -F1lrlr. s -ao.ell. ,,. " • .._ •• so S.I,... (WNO) f J I II I 4 C.Otl"'! (L,.U) 7·111 f l I e J Purdin 2/3 1 11 e O 11 Grtl!f 1111001 Tlin. -2:12. AllMdlftCO -l.u.M. -team nomed the New York won, 3-0. '"Ibe Meta have the tour bnt young start.era in the lealue," •aid the Dodgers• flon Fairly as he discm:sed Seaver, Selma, Ryan and Jerry Koosman. ·~t think so too," said teammate Willie Davis. "There's no telling what the Mets could do l! tney hlild hitting 'to go with that pitching," They'll have to try to cope with Ryan in tonight's finale. The 21-year- old rook(e fireball«" with a 54 rocord b.u 1truct out 82 batters i nthe 70 1.S iM.ings he bas pitched this year. Deflger Slat.fl Ju,.. ll DodMl'l vs Nft' York 7:$5 ,.I'll. KFI , ... , Jull9 I• tlo!JMO •I P~li.ci.1p111t J :CIO p.m, KF I , ... , "The first time I bit against Ryari," said tbe Dodgers' Wes Parker, "I thaugbt, Oh My God. I'm really overmatched.'' Mets Manager Gil Hodies uys h!s team, particularly the mOUDd corpe, LS for reaJ. ~ - "Tbe kind of pitching we·~--ietting ls making the entire team believe it can win ,'' he said Tuesday night. "We've been out of only 3 of the first 55 games we've played." Selma a relief pitcher in mojt of the four off.'and·OD years he's been with the Meh said after the victory that he was resiin.ed to having that job again when Utls season started. Verdict Called a Joke Griffith Wins Split Decision OAKLAND (UPI) -Former mid· dleweigbt king Emile Griffith today was back on the road that could lead him to a fourth meeting with, the cur- rent champ, Italy's Neno Benvenuti. -Griffith won a split decision over Andy Heilman Tuesday night in a rug- ged 12-round bout at Oakland Col - iseum Arena. The victory assured Griffith of a Ju- ly 8 bout in Philadelphia against unbeaten Gypsy Joe Harris. The win- ner of that one gets a title shot, ac- cording to New York matchmaker Teddy Brenner. Griffith and Heilman both weighed 157"2 for their go here. There were ho knockdowns in the action, but Griffith staggered Heilman with a right in the 10th stanza, Griffith's best round. Judge Elmer Costa called it 8-4 and Johnny Lotsey 8-3 for Griffith. But referee Vern Bybee called Jt 5-5. After the bout, the ex-champ quip· ped that "the referee did a good job, but I wonder what fight he was watching." Gil Clancy, Griffith's manager, call· ed the split nature or the verdict "a joke." Concerning Griffith's forthcoming match with Harris, Clancy commented that ''Griffith is showing true class by going into somebody else's backyard back-t.o-back when he fights Harris in Philadelphia." Heilman suffered a cut on his nose in t h e seventh round. Griffith s a i d later "l never tried to bust him up and J never was trying for a knockout,." Hellman's pier six style seemed made to order for the quick-handed Griffith who always landed more Ulan he took. Heilman seemed.to lose a Jot of zip from the fifth roulfd on after early bcxly punches slowed down the San Pedro, Calif. battler. Griffith now has a 55-9 record wbill Heilman is 40-4. A crowd of 4,171 shoved nearly $40,000 across the till. Griffith got $12,500 and the loser about $9,000. Brenner was at ringside for the fight. If Griffith can get by Harris to fight Benvenuti, he will be trying to even up the score since the champion has beaten him twice and lost ooce, • IT'S A STALEMATE -Andy Heilman (left) and former middle- weight champion Emile Griffith both exchange solid blows in this seventh round flurry Tuesday night in Oakland. Griffith scored split UPI Ttltplloto decision ove~ Heilman in 12-round bout, winning by spreads of 8-4 and 8-3, but havm.g ref.eree V~rn Bybee calling it even et five points each ... under the Califorrua sconng i;:ystem. Trojans Battle Oklahoma State OMAHA , Neb. (AP) - A pair of old pro coaches in college baseball, Rod Dedeaux of Southern California and Chet Bryan ot Oklahoma State, are headed for an early showdown in the College World Series tonight. Both opened with first-round vie· tories Tuesday night. USC needed only two hits to defeat Brigham Young 5-3 behind Bill Lee. OSU sprayed 17 hits and got a no-hit, no-run relief job the last eight innings from Bob Richardson in an 8-5 victory over Texas. Dedeaux Is after his fourth NCAA 'baseball tiUe and USC's fifth. "USC won it in 1948 and 1958, so maybe 1968 ls our year," he said. This is Bryan's third straight trip to Omaha and he has the best hitting club ()f ·Uie three. The 1966 team was runner-up to Ohio St1te. $$$Talks Pro Tennis May Spell Doom for Amateurism NEW YORK (AP) -The head of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association is confident that if pro tennis continue!; to flourish it will spell the doom or sham-amateurism. "Before, there was no place for most of the world class tennis players to go if they wanted to cash in," said Robert Kelleher, the USLTA president from Los Angeles, today. "Sure, the Wimbledon winner could sign up for 1 lot or money but the player1 who rlnished a few notches down didn't do too well. "Now with the National Tennis League and World Championship Ten. nis and open tennis tournaments, there's a place for most of the players who want to make a living from ten· nis." Kelleher said he was delighted with the smash successes of these two open ternis tournaments -the British Hard Courts Ch.9.mpionshi1>5 a t Bournemouth, England, ali:d the French Open Tennis Championships al Paris. British tennis officials said the Bournemouth tournament drew twice as maay spectators as it ever did be[ore. The French Championships grossed a record $170,CXXI. three times what it did in 1967. despite strikes and a lack or transportation, Kelleher said he had been told. Jlain Weary • Angels Try Again Tonight BOSTON fAP) --Rainouts can destroy an otherwise simple baseball schedule. Teams in cities used to rain are ac· customed to playing a number of makeup doublehea~ers each season but the Califorrtia Angels, who have had only one game in two years rained out at home, have had five games washed out .on the current road trip. Included 1n those five are two that weren't played Tuesday in Boston. The Angels have now had seven Angels on TV Channel 5 , 5 p.m. ga1!1es rained out tltis year, all of which must be made up. Cool Casper Man to Beat • Ill Open Kelleher said he was counting on the first U.S. NatlonaJ Open Tennis Cham. pion.ships at Forest Hills, Aug. 29-sept. 8 to gross at least $100,CXXI mMe than the '32,000 of 1967. He wouldn't be surprised 1r It did considerably better than $100,(XM) more. Today, playing a twinight double- header in Boston'.s Fen way Park the Angels are playing their third con: secutive twin bill. In toda.y•s games, California's Jim McGlothlin, 5-4, and George Brunet, 5- 6, were to face Jose Santiago 7-3 and Ray Culp, 2-2. ' t ROa!ESTER, N. Y. (AP) -Billy Casper, quiet and cool 0as ever but Ule hottert e:ommodlty on the pro tour, was a solid favorite today to capture hls third United St.tes Open Goll Cl>tmplOllll>lp. Cupt.r'1 near tantuUc success thit year -he'• won four tDumt.ments and almOll $125,000 -baa thrurt him ahead Of the usual favorites, the troubled tw01o_Dle of Jack Nle:klau1 and Arnol<I Poirrier. "Billy'• IOI U> be the man U> but" said youn1 I.ft Trevino, al10 ranked by 1111 fellow -.. a !'dm• -· ' • ' I tender for goU11 most prestigiOUl! Utlt. "Casper's playinc incredlblt 101! and the course is made for him.'' Play starts Thursday on the deman- ding 6,962·yml, par 70 Oak Hill Coun- try Olul> layool The llartln( field of 150 w!l.I be trimmed le the low 60 and t J e 1 attw Friday'• play for the final 1W<> ""'"'11 Saturday and Sunday. ' "I'm pll)'inl the best golf ol my We," Aid Ille 31-yur-old Casper, ,.. cone! <>1111 U> Pllm« on the all-time lilt al m....,. wlnnen m this yeor'1 leader. "I bave ..... played beltor. Lor(t- ly, 1 lhinl<. Jt's my attitude. Whatever it is, it's all there. Ail aspect.a ol my game are the best the:Y have ever been." He had a ..-actice round ol '1G in awell«lng heat Tuesday ind 1ald be WU satisfied. "I dOll 't think )'OU 'll see very many low ICOl:'Q," he n.ld. The COlU'H ts not overJy Jong, which favors C1.1per. But the fairway• are very narrow, favorinJ: his rlfle-likt ac· curacy, and the cour1e ii 1tudded with 1crne, 3',000 trte1, mottly oU and pine, Olld laced by wllldllll-. p1 .. turesqu~ but hazardous. Nictlaus is In a slump. He hasn't won this year. Palmer is plagued by a balky, aching hip. His last major title was the 19M Master's. Gary Player says he's playint well and putting poorly. He hasn't 1cored a tour victory since the 1963 Open. But they're always threats. And Nlcklau1 tald h11 tame has been im- proved with a new driY-tr. "I'd been driving badly,'' tile 28- ynr-old Golden Bear said. <;But the new clUb lru lflvu me ....., COD· &deuce." "There's tremendous interest in open tennis," he said. "We'll have the best players in the world, amateur and pro. We have definite commitments for the top stan ol the NTL and WCI'." He saJd the pros would collect the entire $100,000 prize money whether they won the tiUes or nol In the French Cl>amJ>lonshlps amateur Nan- cy Richey of Siil Aneelo, Tex., beat pn> Ann Jon., of England for the women's tltlt but the $1,000 first prize was nol Jiven U> tht prco. ' But maybe it's att for the best A rest could do the An gels some good It migh~ get their minds off baseball for a while. Sin~ e June began, the Angel s' r~ is 3-7 .. The team has dropped to ru.nth place In the American League with a record of 2S-32. But then again, things might not be that bid after an. After 57 games last Y~ • the Angeis were in ninth place WltJ:l 8 m~ oC 2$.32. And they wound UJ> m the first division. .tn fact. the Angel record lut ytar dipped 14 25-33 before a five-game win- '.""' l1nak ri&ht.ct the linldnc "1lp. · ---~----···~-~-..... •~---·=·~•.-.-..... -~-~--~----~ ............... ~ .... ~~...-~~~ ... ~--·~=--=-~··-------=--·~-~·-==-•~·~-.... ..,,,....,. ............... , ..... -, .. .,su..,o""'o""'o""'sld!"•""'s""'ozo'!'SS•\!lil BUD TUCKER LOS ANG!'LES -Bill Shannan had his loot in the door. ·am Sharman has been a lot of things. A colle.ge afld professional basketball super star. A professional b8:Seball player. A tournament golfer. A professional basketball ·coach and so on and so forth. Now he is a salesman. He is selling, of course, the American Basketball Association. This is a rival circuit to the older National Basketball Association. Shannan fled the San Francisco Warriors of the NBA to become bead coach of the Los Angeles Stars of the new league. He is also bead drlimmer. A real hawker. A regular _. -Willie Loman. a ~ ~ This day, Sharman got bis foot in the door and pushed inside and set down his sample case and began swinging on your lapels. __ "We know we don't have as many super stars as ·· the other league," he began. "We have great players but it will take a little time for them to become super &tars so in the meantime, we are selling our game. -:.... _. ''We have a better game. I admit I was doubtful about some of the things, but I am getting to like it ·better all the time." * * * You figured he likes It better each time he r .. ceives a paycheck but you asked him to continue. "For instance,'' Sharman said, ''we have the thre•point rule. When a player makes • basket :·::-·from more than 25 feet, he gets thrff points. This · ·--has to make the game more exciting and interest· ·· : ing. What If every hit in baseball was ruled 11 single?" You allowed as how he had a point and asked .s= :!'Im what else. * * * !I!!!:";": -J =..: "We have a SO-second rule rather than a 24-second --l'iile," Sharman said. "With more ti.ine to shoot ,it ~fnits more play making ahd therefore a better game -:.=.Jot the fans." . _: -~ Very interesting, but what else is new? =:~. "We are putting some color in the game,'' Shar- ~-=-man said. "We use a red, white and blue basketball." =·.:..· He was putting you on. ~:: "No kidding," he said. ·~The ball is red, white and :3)1ue but that's not all. The officials wear red shirts, ;.-white pants and blue shoes. ·· "The ball is much easier for the crowd to follow, much better than the dull old brown ball. And just think bow great it will look on color television." * * * You told him you would have to think •tiout the red, white •nd blue basketball. It is something on• does not buy on the spur of t~e moment. ''It will take e little time,'' s•l•s:man Sh•rman went on, ''but our league wlll be cOmpetltlve. The other leag,ua...has an-advant•g• right now because they 'have more super stars. But their super stars are mostly old guys. Name me one who Is under 30. "Then too, we know we will be able to hold on and operate until we establish super players of our own. All our franchises are solid and everybody is willing tO wait and put out whatever money is necessary.'' · -* * * Sharman and the Stars will put the ARA game to the test in Southern California later this month. "We are having a rookie camp," he said. "We'll bring in all our rookies for tryouts and we'll have a · series of clinics. "Then, on June 18 and 20 we will have two squad games. This will give people a chance to come out and see our team and our game. Admission will be free both nights." You · asked if they will use the red, white and blue ball in the squad games. • "Of course," Sharman replied, "but we'll do better than that. We are going to give away a bunch of door prizes. Among them will be red, white and blue basket- balls. Don't you think it will be worth coming out for a chance to win a red, white and blue basketball?" Better than that. It will be worth coming out just to see one. C°'~"''' IMI. SOV Tri._, Ille. --Contrer™ in Debut At Tijuana Bullring .::: TIJUANA -Raul "Finito" Contreras, t be young Mexican m a t a d o r . whose perform.arice wu the ·::-: }lighijght ol the . -winter season in Mexico Qty, will make his debut as a matador here Sullday in the d'Owntown bullring. Ms n u e I • • ArmJlllta" _ _.Espinosa and R a f a e 1 Rodriguez vie with Con- treres in a COTTida set for 4 p.m. They will face fighting -bulls from the Ernesto G\ievM breeding rancb. Finito, ooe of the major talents in Mexico, once -performed ss e no'Vd.ce in Ti- juana about four years ago. That same year. he bec&me the only Mel!ict.n llO'Vill.ero m recent years to wage • ...,.,...,ul C8Jllp&lgn I n Spain. --He recorded lriurni" In -_........ IOld Madrid In -1964--...ci1 relumed lo light -·--ol corridoo in Spain In 11185. ,. A!tllou&fl ho ._ not ..,. . poared -in -Nena&, Fin.itlo hal rec«ded 5001e o< the g r ea t e at . •· triumphs in Mexico City alnoe he. bec:.m• a matador In 196~.' Several injuries in the past year limited Finite to 17 corrldas, but his recent appearances indicate he has lost none of his finesse. Par· ticularly gratifying to bor- der fans will be his skill with the sword. Armillite., son of ring great Fermin Espil!O«l . who used tfle same ring name, has been a popular figw-e in Tijuana arenas ttie past two years. He bas rarely failed to cut an ear, and is ac- compli61!ed in all a.poets of bis art. He appeared 22 times in the last calendar yeen. Rodriguez, a veteran of SOOle 2(1 year. as a matad<r, is a ctuac atyli1it who does not seem tD }ose bit control ol fle bulls witb ttJe years . He is a contemporary cl Manuel Capetillo .eOO witll him IOld Jesus Cordoba formed tile famed· "llne Musketeers" al Mexican bWlfi&titing. Thia SUnday's corr i d a morlu·th• llnt performance here in lwo weeb. Last SU.· cloY. Ille -· ...... 'll'M'. dart in respect to the Joie-· -F. Ken· ...s,. • • t -1 • ' Wrdnesday, June 12, 1968 DAJLY PILOT 25 OIJJHtpic P1•ospect Caruthers Set As Bolsa Coacl1 By EARL GUSTKEY Of TIM 0.llY P'llol Si.rt Ed Oarultlers, one of the world's best high jumpers. -will become a basketball coach at Bolsa Grande High School in G3l'den Grove next fall, the D.i\.lLY PILOT has learned exclusivelf. Caruthers, 24. is a prime candidate [or an Olympic gold medal in Mexico City in Octobet-and so his teaching assignment won't begin until alt.er tihe Olympia;. "I'm taking a leave of absence during the OJym. pies." Caruthers explained . "The Garden G r o v e school district \lf'lderstands my situation and I ' m grateful for bhat." of Arizona and I e a. .v e s sOOrtiy for Tusoon where he will complete aoademlc re· quiremeots for his degree . Caruthers, 'Mho moved to Sanfa Ana .with his family from Oklahoma In 1958. is training now for the Olym· pK:s. . "I don't plan to do my real hard training until after the first Olympic Trials this month,•· he said. "I don't want to hit· my peak -the Olympics are still a long wa.y off." caruttiers. who has a lifetime best ol 7·21h, ·was asked to name his ohief rivals for a berth on the Olympic team. 1 BOL$A GRANDE-BOUND -World clus hlgli jumper Ed Caruthers will become Bolsa Grande Higb's junior varsity basketball coach following the Olympic Games this fall. With a best of 7-2~. Carutbera rates as a gold medal prospect. He's a graduate of Santa Ana Valley High School and Santa Ana College. B-o.Jsa Grande pr incipal Joe Riedel explained that Caruthers will teach health cla.srses. coach the junior vars ity basketball team and help with the track team. ;.I'd _,ay Otis Burrell, John Rambo, Clarence Johnson, Reynaldo Brown, J o h n Dobroth, Lew Hoyt and myself would be the top jumpers right now. Tars' Ogle Ousted in CIF Tennis Action Newport Harbor's Bob Ogle, a freshman, dropped his semifinals match with Richard Bohrostedt o f Redlands, 2-6, 1-6, in the CIF Gregg o! South 1-lills and Bob Ruggles of Upland in the first two rounds on Mon- day. Caruthers, who had a htgh school be-s( of 6-93/t while at Santa Ana Valley High, established the n at i on al junior college record of 7-llh whjle at Santa Ana College in 1965 . "Rambo hes tbe most ability but he's in love with basketball and doesn!t work · at high jumping very bani. individual t e n. n 1 s cham· pionshlpo ot Bolbo& Bay Club's Racquet Club Tuel· day afbernooo. Bobrnstedt went on to win the singles ti'.le over Ohris Chapin ot San Gabriel, 6-1, 6-1. Ogle had made it to the semis with wins over Bill He cunpeted for Ille last two yee.ns at the University ''It will take a jump ol. 7-1 to make the team, I think. A gt.1y might squeeze in if he makes seven feet on tu tl.rst · try. though." -------------------------------- Starting_ tomorrow! Unprecedented · values on May Co's · top quality nylon cord tire lowest prices of the year Exclusive 4-ply, 36-month guarantee' . 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There's a May Co Auto Centre µear you FREE expert tire mounting FREE puncture repair for life of original tread lowest prices of the year 855x 14 w hilewall plus 2.85 Federal Excise Taz Now 19.44 with trade-in 845xl5 whilewall plus 2.54 Federal Excise Tm Now 19.88 with trade-In 915 /BBSxlS whilewall plt.11 2.97 Federal Excise Tm Now 21.88 with trad•ln All other whitewalls, please add $3.00 each Without trade-in, add Sl.00 for each tire. V~ERIULT PAMUOD Tnlr.: G~.utANTEI: TRr:An LI I' C OUARAN'Tl':E .l.OADftt ALL FAJLVJll:lil: E\'•17 Vanderbilt T1A la ~ lblr Ille ol the ot11tnal tread. •1almt manur1.c- 1ut1n1 d • t f c I 1 and wortanan1hlp, l.f\d •t•ln1t alt fai111.rt1 lrom !'Nd haarda. U 11 .. !aU1 .... will-at our opUon-1'1!palr 1t at no root. or tn eJ1chanrec for 1 n-t!r. cllarwins only tar tlle tl'l!1d 111~ Th• •mount chlf'&'ltd wtLI be °" 1 pro-Nia be.alt •c•lnlt tM cu"°"'t ot<Ulna: price M .....,_-'. all}a11,...,.t 1t1u Fe4ecnW l:xdaol bi. TRl:AD WllA& GUARA.'fTl;J:: BY1tl')' Vanderb!lt n.. 11 1uarante1d 111.!n.•t we1MNt tor the number at rnont.111 1pec1ned. U tread we1ra out (le11 1.111J1 1/32'') within th1 1t1ted p.rlod Nllvm tt.• u .. kl I.Ill' IU!o «n!.tr H llln1 VandarbUt Tim. w1 .-iu ••ch1nr• tt tor 1 II"" ti .. ch•1"11n1 lhe i:wnnl 11UJn1 prte. ..a tlflMI a.((Jlulme111 ,, .. f'MleNI EllrlH Tur llu I llated f.llOWUICI. •SLne1 ,,. \nduatry-wtM qn.. .i: Ml!· dt rtb lldaU, lhe NIPl'1!fflll.t.tlGM to "Trade," ·'11n1 .,. ... 1 .... 'qut.1117'' l'l!l&tl 011J1 .. U.1 prt ... i. 1tand&tll cl I.bl ..,..,. ft.&. VllMl1rbllt Pl'9m.h1111 Gtt.~). AUTO CEnTrEs may co south c0a1t plaza. san dlego freeway at bristol. costa mesa; 546-8321, 675·3418 shop monday through saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. • t ' • .. ' I ·---------------------------------------------'" ' • 26 DAllV PILl!'I' WMl'lt.sday, Ju11t 12, 1%8 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. RAY PL UTKO American Legion baseball, which has withstood counUess challenges from similar programs in the 15- 18 age bracket. kicked off its 43rd campaign last week and reports fron1 the Indi anapolis headquarters ha ve it 1968 may be th e best season yet. The prog ran1 had its sta rt .July 27. 1925 in Milbank. S.D .. and th e following year the first-ever national tournam ent "'as staged. \Vith Yonkers, N.Y .. defeat- ing Pocatello, Jda .. in the World Series. Just 15 states took part in that inaugural season. but since. Ameri can Legion baseball has nourished to all 50 states and many con sider the roots still in the growing stages. Over the last few years the h-1u stang League, Stan J\1usiaJ League and the Connie Mack alignment have all reached ror the top perch held by the America n Legion prog ra m . hut "M•ilh little success. In fact. th e Mustang League folded its organization 1n a ll of Sa n Diego Counly la st year and the same has held true in virtuall.v a ll of Southern California -at la st report just two of its loops s li ll operating. When the Legion program was attempting to get its foot in the door in the '30s . the East Coast domin- ated the play and claimed 10 of the initial 11 World Series cro\vns. However, ove r the last fjve years the focal point has shifted west, with the Golden Stale the center of activity. Lt>11g Beaf"h Gel• Ball R.olling Long Beach {Peterson) got the ball rolling in 1963 when it defeated Memphis, Tenn., for the na- tional title and Upland followed suit when it knock- ed off Charlotte, N.C., a yea r later at Traveler's Field in Little Rock, Ark. In 1965 the Ontario Blacks finished fourth in the World Series (eight teams compete in the fin- als ), while Charlotte avenged its loss of a year earlie r -defeating Omaha, Neb., in the finale . However, the California entrant was back atop the pack in the 1966 season as Oakland Post 337 dumped Tuscaloosa, Ala., in the finals at Orange- burg, S.C. This year's World Series will be held at Gill Stadium in Manchester, N.H., and among those teams across the nation bidding for one of those finalist berths are Newport Beach and Midway City. Area Represe11.fatives Newport and Midway City represent the Orange Coast area in the National League alignment of Dist- rict 29 -the district taking in all of Orange County. Just in case you aren't up on your leagues. Distric t 29 is comprised of an 11-team National League and a 10-team American circ uit. Newport Beach and Midway City are berthed in the National loop, joining ranks with Santa Ana Valley, Santiago. Tustin, Pacifica. J_,os Alamitos, Fullerton. .'\.naheim Kohne, Anaheim Ruede and Son-Low (Sonora- Lowell ). Ironically. Newport and Midway City -neither having ever won the league -are both serious con- tender s this time around with 3-1 a nd 4-1 slates. Carey Coa.,hed Newport Newport Beach, which has been inactive since the '65 campaign, is being managed by Lee Fisher, while Midway City is u n d • r the hand of Gene Loomer. Just in case there are a few old timers still around, you 'll no doubt recall former New York Yankee star Andy Carey and Andy Smith as for- mer managers of the Newport team, while Frank Christia guided the Midway City team for years. World Series Formula How does a team advance lo the \Vorld Series? I t's simple. Newport Beach or Midway .City must first win the National League title and t hen knock off the American League king to claim the District 29 honor. It's considered national competition fron1 that point. with the District 29 wi nner advancing to the Area V playoffs (this year at Upland) a nd the winner of the area movin g on to the six-team state playoffs (Yount- ville, in the Napa area). The U nited States is then divided into eight region- als. with the California winner joining the kings from Nevad a, 1-f awaii, Arizona. Utah . Colorado and Ne\v Mexico in Region VI II. This year's regional will be s taged at Roswel l. N.M., the same s ite where the Ontario Blacks copped the Region VIII title in 1965. Then it's on to the double-elimination \\1orld Se- ries at Manchester. See. there's nothing to it. SOFT SELL SAM By Marvin Myen ~ l(f){f){IJ[-f' lff't 15 )ff MS It/El f !14jlffe Rf< PIA141fR, SO /dWfl!f! YOtJ /X3 />CY'l'T &; '>Wt.5fV!h '1 . ' . ·-----·----~ South Eyes Right Pace For Cloek By RAY PLUTKO CM TIM Dlllty ~lltf Si.ft If you 'd ask Bill Bloom wh.at he'd like to receive for Fat h e r 's Day, t h e personable mentor would prompUy reply, "A wrist watch with a sweep second hand." Bloom. coach of the South squad for the upcoming fourth annual Orange Coun- ty North-South A 11 • S t a r baskttball game, has a soft !!pot in his heart for time -, lots of it. When his South team bids for its fourth straight win June 22 at the Orange Coast College gym, the 36-second clock that will be employed shouldn't prove much of a problem. "I'd like to hold the ball 4-0 seconds if we could," C<1n· fide s Bloom. ·'With the kids we have we could take 11 shot within three feet of the basket every time down the court. ';J-lowever, my main pro- blem so far has been getting these kids lo sel it up. They come down and wa nt to fire away.'' Bloom apparently isn't los ing a ny steep over the matter though as a fron t line t of 6-8'h, ft.-7 and 6-3 has been S K • All A • cJe.,Jng the boards In prac· ea tllg • Ill el''lCffffS li ce as if it built them. "These guys, all or theni. These four Coronri dcl !\tar llig h School su1immers have been accorded AJJ- are just great. The big men American prep recognition for their 3:21.8 clocking in the 400-yard freestyle re- like Mark Soderberg, John lay event. In water, from left, are Bruce Black and Tim McGill. On pool deck Yule and Brian Ambroz.ich' are Eric Curtis and Mike All bright. Their coach, at left, is Dave Millovich. have been doing a great job --------------'--------------------- up front and Greg Snyder is something else in setting ii up for us when we do break.'' said Bloom. .Jim Huckstein rounds out Rloom's current first unil. but the Co rona de! Mar coach says that co u I d change. especially at a guard SJXll. "ActuaJl y, all the kids have been working hard, hut Al Gage of Newport has looked especia lly sharp of late and c o u 1 d move someone off that first team." Bloom reporls his IO·man squad, plus two alternates. are all in lop physical shape. with no injuries to date. Adverti sers Try Golf Sliills In Mesa VerdeTournament The annual Orange Coun1y Association of Industrial Adveftisers Golf Tourna· ment and banquet i ~ scheduled F'riday at Me ~a Verde. First flight tee time IS l p.m. l'he 18-hole tourney ovPr the club's 6.700·yard coursP will result in fir st, second and third place awards for 13 men's flights and a first place for the women's night Seacllff has played i.iost !o the Marine Underwnters on ~~riday , Griffi th Park Men's clu O on Saturday and I.he Dougla~ Traveling Lcar;ue on Su nday. Monday it v.·as t h e Bellflower Chamber of Con1- merce. tana. Prior to hi s associa. tJon \VJ lh the \V a r n e r Springs Club he was with the San l'ranc1sco Gol f Club tor six years. lie rcpla<:es R a~, Catan. ~horechffs, pro for the last three years. who has moved tn the head pro professional po~ilion at \V h i s p e r i n g P alms. 11a Baseball Oiler, Lion Aces _ Make All-CIF Two Orange Coast area high school ~seball stars have been honored by the CJF. First baseman Bob * . * * All-CIF Baseball ·~· 'um ••• PllYtf', ,_ Tt•r Av9, o• Finl!. ll:owllNI ,, .~ o• Wint. S. Torr•nc• "· ·"' o• C•Mtr. SllntW Hiik "· ·"' " Ooi.'111•t. Oomlnt~ "· .•U " JlllO. Lii PolY ''· ·"' " llen1m..,, S..v1n"" ''· .. " •FoU. Notre D"'"' " s.n c Trudell. 5. Torr1nct " .~ • •111et1n1kl, S•v•n<>1 ''· u .1 • ~i.m. ll:11none " ••• • Gto•o1, Lii Polv ''· ,., •cci-oieven • "" Ytl' >K .. T11m o• PllltllPS, Thovut'WI OaQ " .. o• f'11tler, L~nwood "· ·"' o• Flrtu>1trJclt, An1f\elm " ·"' " Hemt110ver, ll:1mcn1 "· .m " lockoll, S.Outl! Hllfl "· .313 . " M•llhew, C~allev "'· ., " Ced, Lfnn<,. " .~l~ ' Ad1m1, "" Gcry.,.,;o ''· '" • Foulk. S. Torr•nct " .• , ' Arenlltln, ltollln11 Hlll1 ,, ... • M•,lne, W•rren ''· .. , T~lnl To•"' 0' Pler(t, S..nle Bt•W•• ''· ·"" O• Cowin. Comitl!H'I k ... o• Henwe•ve,. w111111 ... "· '"I " Wlc~er!h.trn, HuFi11"91oft "· "' " Blot. C•"'ent• VIiie~ ''· .~ " Perk1, L•kewood '" ••• " zar, LMr• ~. ., ' Weller. Wn!ml,..lt• , .. ... ' c-ver, S.nl• An• " .. , • Wiit, Glendti. "· .. , • Wldm1n, Mui< ''· .. , AA Finl Tt•l'!I 01' Musel!. S..nl1 M1d1 S•. .lll' OF 'Mii•. Corona Sr, ·'l'I OF L1"9, S.nll Cllr• Sr .• 110 IB JIYCO•, Cll1n ... 1 lol•f'>lh Jr .. •U 1 7B Strvcula. ltoY•I O.k Sr .• lll JB Avt•ltt, S..nfl•lilO Sr .• .150 SS C41oelll, Blv.oit Amat s.. .d I C Phll•, ll:OVl l 0..k Sr .. l9l P 'Siiton. An!tll!PI! V1llev S,, 11·1 I' O'CorlflOr, Bisi-Amat So. 10.? P Pritt. ll:lgtiettl sr. I0-3 I ·1>11ve• ol the Ye1• I Stcond T11m OF Pederiien, Uw..n Sr .. '00 O~ Cog11 ln•. G•••v S• .. :WI 0 1' Vr1~nllurl1. P1lm<11!1 Jr .. •n I 111 Searl, Hemel S• .• •16 28 SC~WtnllH'I, AntelOf'e Val!ev Sr. .'48 18 J1,..,lo, l!l llllOP Monlgomerv S• •. •11 1 SS Tyler. NeH S• .. .311 1 c N•••nlc. P1ln Vttde S• .. •~7 P Ochoa. Gl•fY Sr. 9-{I P Wi nn. Orin~• J•. 11-? P Wetm1, LI Putt>te J" t-l I 1\1arteen Inks I With Ramblers Wickersham of Huntington Beach and catcher Gregg Weiler of Westminster were named to the AU.CIF Ullrd team. • Wickersham hit .351 this year as a senior and Weiler, a junior. hit ,468. Three other Orange Coun- ty players were named to the first team. Pitcher Andy Bielanski of Anaheim was named co-CIF player of the year with Notre Dame's Tim Foli -the major league's No. I draft choice. Outfielder Gordon Carter of Sunny Hills and Jack Bergman of Savanna were the other fi rst team county picks. Anaheim'!! Tom Fitzpatrick, a n d outfielder and football st;tr , was nam- ed to the second team . J ohn Conover of Santll Ana. a pitcher, accompanied Wickersham and Weiler on the third unit. &AFECD INSURANCE for special GOOD STUDENT DISCOUNTS on your Family Auto Insurance, Bob Paley and Associates INSURANCE HB Warner Signup Set Low grosser will win a trip to Reno t.o compete in !'he upcomjng Region 5 tournament. lrvi11e Ct)ttst Irvine Coast Coun try Club \Vo1nen ·~ A.ssociation wil l have their Guest on I y Shotgun Tournament June 25 at 9 a.nl. Dunn Marleen is back home again today -the former All-Am er ica El Nig11e l quarterback at Santa Ana 474 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 642-6500 1-luntington Beach _Pop Warner football .5 i g n u p s begin this weekend with registration slated Saturday at Huntington Beach High'~ gymnasium from JO a.m. ti.JI noon. Added attractions includr a longest-drive contest, a putting contest and an or· tional hole-in-one co ntest fo1· $1.000. Ron Dizino and .Jack .JC having signed a 1968 con- O'Brien tied for first place tract with the Orange Coun- in a recent Low Net Tourna .. ....'.'~y~R~a~m".'.:b~le~'~'~· ~----~~~~~~~~~~~~ Subsequent opportunities to join the program wilJ be July 13 and 27. Interested boys are re· quired to bring a parent, reporl card. birth certificate and $5 registration fee . F'our playing divisions are to be formed with the foUowin g age groups and weight breakdown; R·lO -55 to 80 pounds. 9·11 -55 to 80 pounds. 10-12 -70 to 95 pounds. 11 -13 -90 to 115 pounds. ~!~oe r ~~e.~~~~"~ ~nt!e,.: I tl.l r••Cud•, 3 ~•llowlel!. 191 bonl!c. 113 btu. r•<1•1 L1ndln1l-JI ~nqle•i: 11'7 boft!to, 11• b<On. l t>alihut. s•N DleGO -w •n11le"; IGS v•I· 1ow11U. se•L I EACH -'' 1n111er1: 1 b<Or- r1cud1. ll bon!lo, •l9 \fnd h••' Cll1r11)-2' 1n11ler1: 2 bltrtcudl, 260 honlto. 10 11nd bin . SAN CLEM ENTE -1• 1n11ler1; S::W. !1.111. •8' bonito, 109 t1.1rr1cud1, I l!eHbul, t vtllowllll. LONG IE•CH IP'•dtlc)-'1 111111ero: l vettowllll. 1• blrrtu1d1, tS. c11ico ti.H. 271 bonl!O. I lltllllul. 11111"""'1 Pi..r)-'• t nt lt!F1; ·~ t)fH,-•1 -II~ 1111 ... I -ll •ntle•ll tU -Ito, ~l ti.o.rocut1•. 11 ""''"· Tournament golfers are eligible for f re e refreshments. ·Those wishin g to get listerl oo one of the golf fli ghts and.or attend the banquet are encouraged to make early reserva tions. F'Dr fu rther information . contact J eanne Vanderburg at (7141 547·7361. A tv.•ilight golf tourney on Friday had Ethel Karman and Dave Rosenthal w1 nni n,e with a best ball of ::!8 for nine holes. In second "'ith .1() wcrr Mimi Smith and Floyd Porter \Vhile third \\'as knot - ted four wa ys. Eleanor Matrang<i anrl .John Ow ens. Terry Dhan r~ and Frank \Vilson. Ela 1nr McDonald and Del llamr<' and Betty Hamre and Bob McDon·ald all Lied "'·ith 31s. Sen.,liff A ''!lope in one" golf {'on- test is slated for J une 29 and :l() at Seac!i(f "~rith the C11 y of Hope the beneficiar~·. !t will be a n 18·ho\e net play for 26 and under han- d1 caps. ·r he lield "'"ill includp 136 players from golf clubs in Southern California. Some of the c ! u b s represented will be Bel Air, Los An geles. San Diego, La .Jolla. Virginia. An- nandale and others including the Palm Desert Clubs. ~\ Fathers Day Spi'.'cial will be held Sunday \vith a ' · F a t h e r-Son-Daughtcr" 1ourney. A P inch u r s I svstem of no handicaps \\'Ill bC ut ilized Starting time 1s 9 a.m. .~lwreeliffs Chu ck Phi!llp~. n1 o ~I rrcenllv ;it \Varner Spri ngs r.olf l;lub, has been ap- p o i n t e d nC\V head prri- f ('~sional :it the Shoreeliff."- Coun1rv Cluh , a<;cord!ng to an anriounccmcnt made hy .John Sepe. owner o{ the club. Me i~ a nalJ\·e of Akron Ohio. b 111 has h e 9 n a California res1dcn1 for 2:! years. Ph 1lhrs slartcd his pro·- fc ssional career at the J_,iv- 1ngstonf' Golf Club in Mon- Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Minnesota Boston Oakland New Yl>l'k Chicago California \Vashington \\'on Lost Pct. .17 1'} .649 32 24 .571 3.1 25 .569 211 29 .491 2fi 2.8 .481 26 2!I .473 2fi :12 .448 24 3(1 .444 2.\ :12 .43!t 24 32 .429 C.8 4 1-2 ,,. 9 9,. 0 tn J]l"z 11 1'2 12 t2'> SATIO~AL 1.EAG UE \Von Lost P<'L C.8 St Louis ~;, "' .60.1 San Franci~co .11 Tl .a34 4 l..os Angele& " " . 5:1:1 • Atlanta 2'I Tl ,SIR ' Cincinnati "' Tl ·'°" 51,1z Philadelphia 2' ,. ,490 ,., Chicago Tl 2'I .<\~2 7 NPw York " 2'I .47:\ 71~ Pi tl!'hHr~h n :10 . 423 111 llou!tton i' " .418 10 1~ ment at El Niguel Country / Club in Laguna Ni guel. both playe rs turning in scores nf 1 68. Sal Ambrogio was se-' cond u1ith 70. f-~OIJO\l'ing in third v.•as ! .John Muroow wit h 72 d ' W·",,i Dr . Ray Henderson fourth with 73. .illissit.trt \''ie jt• The inaugural M 1 ~ s i o n VieJO Amateur Open Golf tournament wi ll be held ·August 24 and 25 at the .f\dd Advertizer Go lf Notes i\1ission Viejo Golf Club. near San J uan Ca pistrano. The tourney, open to all S o u t h e r n California amateurs. will contain four fligh ts: 0·6. 7-12, 13-18 and above ha ndicaps. More than SI.000 \n prizes 11·1]\ be a\vardcd. Entry fee of $2~ "'ill cover both days green fee s and carts anCI an awards dinner on Sunday ni ght in the Mission Viejo Inn at the clu b. Further information can be obtained by v.Titing to Mission ViC'jo Golf Club. 26742 Oso Parkway. Mission Vi ejo, or by calling (714) 837-5604. f • ID IROWN 0¥ • ..... Oii Time Prat TUIMll Y'I llt1Ufl1 &nitlmort I. W111'l1ttllln ! (1'1Ctto '· ~ Y"'1< J Oe!rol! J.J, Mlnnuol1 1·1 Oel<l .. •d :t. C:ll\tt !INI 0, 51. •Min~. r"" C1tlfot1tl1 ,J Bo!ton. r1!n TMll•'• Gol""I r,.~,d•v·, ll01vt11 c inc •""•tl ~ c~•(llllO 7 l<OUtlton j , Pllilt1.,.~•I 1 ;;; Lg.,!• I , •t11nt1 0 r 11t'bll"i1h ,, Sen Fr"""'"(! I N~"' Ytrl: 3, Lo, A"9•1e ft Todly'1 G1mc• Anniversary Sale 1968 COUGAR lri\l1tnesol1 {l(MI J.n 1! DefTlllt ILO!!Cfl •·ll, ..... , Ol~llf'CI !Odom S..) t i Clt!W .. nd CH•'9'" 4.J\, nl"'! B1lllonor1 fPl'loebul }..I) ti Wn !lln-/Ha.....,nn 1-{lt, "'"'' (1'llcat11 !Pe_, ,.., II New VOi'-!Pett.-ton •. ,). ""'' Coll""'l'I'-lllrur>tl U 1"11 M ......... Y IJ.Ol I I 8111· '"" (C11!0 >-i Ind s.rttll'll(t 1·11. 1. IW<..,,.,., "'""...,.' a-et ''"''"''°'' •• Otlroll O•U-tt Clt!vel""" C1!11'111'11l1 11 lollofl Clroc l ...... n (M11o<>t.v .. JI •• CMc~llO (Je~~ ... I ,, Pott•ltu"91> !SIU ,., or Mcl!l .. l'I .I-•) If 5~., f''ln- c••to (!loll" G-11 H~w YOO'• 1ll•t1n S·•l •• Los A....elH IO...,w11• ~l\, "'""' SI. Lou:... 11 .. ltl 1·•l I I Al~n11 !Jt •v•t 1·•1 ,, •• ~r MOUlltln (Wll'°" ••7) •t Phll•,,.ll>ttl1 (5""'1 ).6), ""' T ... riMr • G•"'fl (IMJn11•ll •• Ctl.cato Plll,ltu<Qtl •' S•11 Fr•flCIJCll '4oll''-' •' ,.,,ll.od9kih•~ "'Qhf Sl. Leu•' ft! 4tlftnlt, n19hl Jol111son & Son LI NCO LN·M I ICURY ~OUGAlt·I> IALI ll 600·700 W. COAST HWY .. NEWPORT ICH. 541·7751 642~'81 • I SAVE UP TO 11111:1 L11tt099 litd:! With tM p11rclloM •f • ..... or 115" corl i11rl11t ••r •11nl· "nery solt. CA S4S. Ml11•I TM S.111111fJ of S,om c., L•111ry aiR-PORT BOUND? NOW 23 DEPARTURES DAILY 14"ffr • ....,. JO M111.J• FROM ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT • • • DIRECTLY TO , .. LOS ANGElES INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT use qiR·P'JRT CoaCH 5eRViCe FOR FREQuet.IT·RELIA8Le- ECONOt.11CAL SERVICE .•.. BY DELU"X! Al~CONDITION€D· MOTORCOACH DIRfCTl.Y TO YOUR AIRUNe TEitMI N>.L. '400 Owly '"""" 1·1 t •• "' ,.,. "Olt IHFOll.tMTION CAl,L 776-9210 ZE 7-0738 • ltft'M,...AlS "' c.Mfe£ cotrMtt • JNAMllM -'1llltTOfll -nntl P'lllH _ OIANK Sb'Tt ~& ... OllAIKl COUWTl MIPOllT -MlWP'Ot1' ltlCI! • • .. ;,--=·=--'=•\'Z·fh + t ds b b '=>,'hht h h \ b tt 't& ts • t, t t '$ .. -. ---------~~-~-~----_._. •• _ ----., • ., +•-• • •• •• • _., _ _.._.••··~--•-•F'";" __ , __ ,_,F-.w-••-•-....,•-=-=r• .. 0--------.... -.......................... ~. = ••• a a a p •• a 0 a • 0 5 a '1 • Start Y our Engines _b_y_D~o ulg;,~ - To produce an impartial judge of the wo'rld's top driving talent, we caJl Richie Ginther to the witness stand. Richie , name the top grand prix competitors in the world today. "I'd have to start by mentioning Jimmy Clark, even though be isn't around any more. He was simply outstanding. He bad the greatest record of wins, and it wasn't bec"ause he always had the best car either. He was the cnly driver I ever knew who coWd win in an Inferior ear," Ginther 1ays. ''The best man le.ft is probably Jack Brabham despite his age (42). He isn't as good a natural driver as Dan {Gurney), but J ack gets better l'esWts. "Righi ~ter Jack I would name Furney. There really lin't much to pick between them. .._.,.. "In the same class with them ls Denis Hulme. His style is unbelievable. He Is like Brabham was when he first came up to grall(I prix racing, a regular wUd man. A year ago at Mex- ico City he spun in the hairpin every lap and still made good times. "Graham Hill is the fastest right now, but I believe he is forcing himself to go fast. Until recently he hasn't been fin ishing too many races. Another fast man in this company is Bruce McLaren, but he is maybe more successful In Group --\(sports racing cars). · .• RACE ENTRIES HOU.V .. ARK l!NTltllS , t l"W T...,...y, Jll!le 11,, 1-......$ CNY CIMI' a••" -•n.-r.1 1141 .. ~ •llttT ltAC•. I flltlofte&. 2 .,. .. , old1. Clalmlnt. l'vrM WOO. >1tlml11t ptlct 11~,ooo. Aboul••lo (0 \'•l••-1) 1U Mr. Punctual CW Mlllorl'lfl') 11~ 9tchln Hiii (J GOIU:a"1:l Xlff Clltnb ACfQlll (J Palomino) 11"1 Mr. E1111l11Hr !M Yalln1ueJ1) 111 Rtwt•1 R1wanl 110 FlamlM Ob1on1lon (0 LGntl lU California E191tP (W KIMtckl 111 RUii II Oil! CA Plrwdal lU TPle Sl>llltr ID Hall) 116 1•19111 !k>otl+t11r -xlot M!llY DI! IL Plnc.ay Jr! 116 l•COMD RACS. I tu""""' J nar 111$ llor'fd 111 Ct llfon!Ja. Cll lmlrHI. l'\ll'M "*-T• cl1lmlt111 lll"kot 11JDO. Gf'9f• (It Cam!NI) 1U CIMll>c>e (A Pllle<N> 116 Wlncltlo IW HarmatJ) 110 Winni. Mae {0 Halli IU Ml11 Tan90 Cl" G1n1) XI05 Trlfd N' TfVt (W Hlrtlll 111 FMl.ed ll'ihtnll!tl IM Y11er\.1111l1) 111 TPle Word fJ Gonull1) xlCM Tl11v'1 KllO!I {J Lambert) 120 She Miit Rult ID Vtl••-ll 101 N1lf¥t e1 ... Ru'" cw H1rt1d:I 1U 0on•1 lit CW M11\or'"'y) 112 THlltD ltAClf. ! lurlOllV1. 1 okl maid~ lllllet. Purn llOOO. Wln!er't DlflCI CD Pltra) MIH Rld1w1r (W H1r11ckl TrOPIW Ou~n CJ Gonulsr) Blue Smaf<.t IA Plne<l1 1) Oeeor1tor Su• (M va .. el) Fortver OUl'I (J Lamberti Stt Tht Tims cw Mahornt¥) Mlzrle IJ Sellt,. 2) LO¥t You So CR C1m1>11 1) Mer Ot Gl1ct (W H1rrf1 I) Maln T11MI (L Plncay Jr) R!IH;Jt NtllYt (J TrulltloJ m m •112 m m m m "' m m "' m "Jackie Stewart Is a man on the way back. He had a very short schooling period, and he thought nothing was going to stop him. A couple of years ago at Spain the rain, he was tr.p~d 1"n his car for an hour while gasoline drenched him. It l"OURTH •Ac.-. ' tur1-1. s a ~ rv ¥Nr old milden colt. a, 111141 ..... was very painful, and as he lay there w<indering if the Pv,... woo. gasoline were goi ng to Ignite it had an effect on him. ~::= ~!~nd1lJ ~~:r:r'' ~l! : "That accident slowed him down, and now] think he is in Full or Trout.19 (L Pincav Jr) 1u Jet! Pollc'J' (J Artertiurnl 1n fhe process of speeding back up. F1r1 Awa,, 10 Plen:•l 11' • • Flett ltkll !A Plnada) 1U : "Another speedy driver who had a shattering experience StNrtfoclt <O v1111que1J n' f:s Jo Rindt. A year ago at Indy be hit the wall because his DatJbled UP 1w H1rtK1c l iu Hel'• PvPPll (W H1rm1t1) 1U throttle stuck. It never had before. Imagine going toward the OorMn'• K1111 CR c 1mp111 1u Wall at 6,000 rpm (more than 160 m.p.h'.). He seems to be get· ~~:,. ~ l~ <~,~~1i ~l: fjng back his old form now. • d , l'IFTH RAC•. • furlolln-l Y!l<lr • "John Surtees IS very fast, maybe the fastest, but I on t _ old 11me1. c111m1,.,. Purw l7SOO. TOP B.ke to race with him He has hit more ears than any other c111m1.,. Prke 11s.ooo. Marrn. Dtl Rev • Chamt..r ot Comf'rllfU. driver." Ge<11na1111 <J ~1i1e11 ,BOID They Compare Brabham, Gurney, Rill, McLaren, Stewart, Rlndt, Surtee1, These are Gint her'• picks. How do they eomnare : with the top 1tar1 of the U.S.? It's unfair to pit them ~ against the Indy Establishment In USAC championship : cars unless Bobby Unser, A. J. Foyt and Mario Andrettl go to Europe for a g&Od go-round In formula ear1 In ex- change.· : Interestingly, f.hese GP driven Unl1bed M-19-31 at : Indy. McLaren, Stewart and Surtees did not race there. ODe of the reason1 few Americans follow the trait : of Ginther and Garney abroad for raclng is ihat the reward1 aren't as easUy attainable In Euro~ as they are here. Richie went to Jtaly in 19&e. With a 1teady job at the Ferrari factory he only eamed $%00 a month, which . didn't break him even for the year. In the teeflDd racing : season his profit wa1 about $3,000. fie "made It" 11 a ; successful driver tbe thlrd year, but he's no mUUonaire ·-today. Prl.r Drivers Make $20,000 -;~'The average grand prix dri'9er makes about $20,000. but he Das to pay out of that all his own expenses. transportation. room and board," Ginther reports. "The· really first class driver earns from $30,000 to $100,000 a year." Only the top 15 or so or that exclusive fraternity known as the Grand Prix Drivers Assn. makes that kind of money. The- figi.µ-e s Ginther quoted include ','deal" money fro':" pro- moters, salaries from tire companies, race car factories and petroleum firms. The prize money they win~ a joke. By contrast, Bobby Unser picked up about half. of the Si77 513 first place money in one race at Indianapolis. and Cal~ Yarborough has earned $78,151 in on1y eight NASCAR races this year. . Sports Car Club of America road racing circuits, whe.re tOe future grand prix stars are more likely to start, have m- cteased their financial rewards and are either holding the bll;t American talent or luring it back from Europe. '.:-. Little Richie, who is 37, has just completed his first year 0 f:r eti.rement from driving. He celebrated the other day by tiking a job with Porsche as racing team manager on the West Coast. He has never won that one big plum, the world cbilmpionshlp. but he came close. He has lots of career vie - , tlfties. many friends and all his own skin. -Most of the amateur drivers he started with in 1950 (Richie drove an MG-TC) are business executives who toll as fi8gmen at weekend races or mechanics who have graduated tO airplanes or racing boats or Indianapolis cars. .: Some ex-drivers who were around then conceal the fcord of their misspent youth from the guys at the country cillb. ~: After time off for 'f 1 y f n g service in the Korean War, Rfchie returned to sports car racing in 1955. That was the hllcyon era of gentleman racing on the western slopes of the Jl;icific Coast. • :-Teams were known by their ear owners, and the driving tilent was incredible. The musical whine of the Ferrari was heard In the 1and. " . We a lth!# Sport.men Delp =. John Edgar, John Von Neumann, Frank Lubin, ?rony Parravano, Otto Zipper and Frank Arelero were a :Jew of the wealthy sportsmen who provided raelnf -machinery for such drivers as Ginther, Gurney, Phn Hill, ~Carroll Shelby, Bob Drake and Ken Mlles. The talf:nt was too good to keep. Ginther ,s:lped ·:ivuh Ferrari In 1960, to Jain Gurney and Rill among the 1table or American• who gave II Commendatore some of llils greatest raclnf perfonnanee1. · Ginther moved to BRM In 1962. By '1.1 he was tied with Graham Rill for RCOnd place la workl driver points. .1hl1 ne" prominence eamed him the job of eblef test •tlver and raeinf 1tar for the ntw Ronda Formula I ieam. To cllma:r the 1985 ttason Richie won bit llnt :world cbamplon&bJp r~, the Gran Premlo de Mexico. Ginther .loitU G•nte!I Joining Iong·time friend Gurney at the It.art of '66. Riehle pnipared for his first ass·autt on Indianapolis in an AU- Aiiierican Eagle. :: It was during the month of May that the freckle-faced kid trin the San Fernando Valley of California became the aoier, rcnecttve. sensitive Ginther of today. - Ovl!to's !ltbit (J Lambartl G..., Crldctl (W tilirmtll) S""""11 l"llh !W Harladc) Polly "'· ~l PlllCIJ Jr) FQmial M1rr1Qe CF Gana) MakHdNI ID ltlrrc•J Flrt! 01nc1 fR 8 1arKal X\11 "' "' "' "' Jilli '" "' SIXTH ltAC•. ' turl01111S. ' vear olds .. u1. Cl1lmlni1. Pu .... 110.aoo. T• clalmlng price SJ0,000. Socr.!y af The Pl11llcs lndu1try. B1n1n CJ Ganr1le1) Aq111 Vl19 ID ""rctl Rtslles1 Song (W Hartartl Tm Morr-(l PlllCIY Jr) Y·BUllltr IA Pineda) Al1tK !J Sellen! l llfdl D'Ha .. fE Medl111) :rlU '" '" '" "' '" '" l•VElffH RACI!". 1 1/1' mlle1 on t11t turf. ~ n.r ok11 a. 110. Clalm- '1..,. Puf'M 110.000. T• cf1lml1111 prfee J!O.QOO. H111h11P ICkh fE Medina! 111 lord Byron 10 Hall) 112 5wlldlbadc {J Sfllltl'I) 11! A·SecvrlTV C1'IKk IA P!nedi) lit Voland-ero !M YI MI\ 111 Frrri<;h FOi! IL Pinc.av Jrl 1:!0 Cutlntro {0 Pierce) 115 Wiid Ate (J lambtrtl 111 Found Oiit {W H1n1ctcl lU Rldl Otslrt (l GllUganl 122 Off (J GOl'IUltl) X110 Mr. Anl'O fW H1rrl1) 120 l"IOlfTH •ACE. 1 111' miles. J 'l'tlr old llllle1. Hanevm_, Sttkes. Pur1e ru,om added. G"'" m ,9SO. To w1.,. nf'r IU,flO. Miu Rlbol fJ Saller.J 111 Mortafse (J Lambert) 171 StlNI! fl Pinet ¥ Jr) 112 cv .... ,,,. Ml• 10 H11n 112 Amerreo ltOl'nd fW H1rm11tl 112 lrl1h Mall CA Pll'ltdtl l U Time To L""" ID Vtt1 ...... 1) 121 P~ll'f' lane IJ Gonia1erl 111 TOOi Shoes (W M1h11<neyl ll2 HllffH ltACI. One mile. ' w1r eld1 a, l.lfl. Ct1lml11<1. Pvn.t U500. Clllmr.., 11rlc. M!!O. Mlnh1tten IMdl Stnlor Clllrtnt. ltwal R1k1 fl Glllk1111l 117 A.Prf11Cr Dalt (W Mahoomey) !U Fl"' Indian CJ Selletll ~!! Ololomatlt fJ Gonraltt t) l!.,.. Sli1tltlt Fool CM YaneJ) 114 Pt>1nn1 (0 Halli lU '"'" Ann fJ l.1mbartl 1!6 P110 Robles (M Valenruel~) 114 S.0...lhtrrl Hott /J Amrbl/rr1 f IU l!:I Lobo II!: Art•Undll 114 Ho lljpark R esulti l40ll'l'WOOO l'AJtlC ltlSULTI TU•IDAV, JUHi 11, lHI Cll!Alt AHD l"AST l'lltST ltAClf -6 furkl11111. l ~tr olds. Clflml.,.. PurM 1000. l!:mm1 •1 Orp~an fD H1lll 3.60 l.DO 3.00 Pr111a Jull111 {It C1m1111) 5.00 3.60 Lil' Gill! IJ ~uler) 1.:NI TIME -1.11. ll!COttD ltACI -' turlon9•. 4 l'~lr oldl Ind ""· CkllmlM. Pu .... MOOO. !lrtnd Royal I Pl11CaY Jrl4.IO S.00 l.2fl Luckv .V..I Jr. fJ Seti...11 U.ilO 1.10 "''"' Sllvur IM V1lenruek1) 4.00 TIME -1.10 l /J. THtltll ltACI -S fUrlontt. 1 Vffr old ,.,.ldtn coltl Ind ,..ldl11t1t brK ln Callfllmla. Clalml111. Pur.e MOOD. ~mlc Way (Plne'llaJ f.IO 6.60 3 "° 1Ch11d111 10 Pier«) 4.10 3.00 ~IY ICln ll. Plncay Jr} J.«I TIME -... 1/S. l'OUltTH •ACI!" -Or.. mite. J tnd 4 'J'Nr old makleo! '1111a Pursr 15500. Folf Fur IYt .... tuela) 11.1(1 1.60 ,,«I Dlsandla IF G1ri11 ,.«I 4.90 Hen·-IA M-J 1.60 TIME -1.31 215. •1•TH IACI" -1·1116 mllel. 2 ¥e1r oldt. Cl1tml1111. Pv,_. ll>OOO. Prln<:tll ll l"ft ID Htll127.IO l .ol!I ~.60 Nfccolorb fJ l~mben) J.10 2.60 El ZllP~lero CJ Gon11 1tr1) 4.60 TIMI!: -1.44 115. SIXTH ltAClf -' turlo,.,t . FIRJe1 8nd "" ..... ' Jter Gkll Ind UP. Claim· lrll. P11noi MSIO, Prlmtr Amor {Oon111tl) 6.<40 l.00 1.IO D1Ylr1 ltwkl 1w "'~"""""' J.90 '"" Rert OvtllfV 10 Hall) f.iO TIME -1.10 lfJ. llVIHT'M IAC• -f lll'"lontt. 4 'Hr okh ~IMI ~-Clauffltd 1llowtl'ICH. PU"FM MOOD. Ttl"" CJ l.•mbertl t ... loft Jld: fJ Artffbunl\ 0... TM hkonY IM V-rl TIMI' -I.Of. l."9 I.to 1..• J.IO , ... llOHTM RM:S -I fllr""'"-1 ,..., aid Ill.... E"•tr•tnll Ill-ft. """""" .,.. ...... O'lwd<• Vov IPlln:a) 11 "9 l.20 4.60 l"i.t'ttl is.• ,_,. 4.60 l"lddle ,,_ (W, """°""'11•.to t .to J111 Jlttlt IW Hl nllflfl) •M TIME -..M. AUO •AN -tNrlltle'I nie-. ~1-ry, loll Of ktfoll1. """ l'loHltP, Ho Cuvt""-Snll'furi Court, Wlnrtl, Fou,.,,. lt.avncll. "'0 SCR.ATCHEJ, • ' Wodn~, Junt. 12, 1'168 DAILY PILDT All Penney Stores Op en Every Nig ht Monday Th rough~Saturd~~ Oh Dad, d.ear Dad. Tune-up kit ' Plug-In spotlight Illuminating compass Auto/home coffee ·maker It's wha t he's always w ante d ••. a p rese nt he'll use every day. You'll find it at Penn1y1 (vie know th o way to Dad's hoart). Fatller's...,. 11lu11e11th. UBE YOUR Troller ml"or EN NEY CHARGE ACCOUNT -TD DAVI ·Give -Dad a gift to add comfort and ~onvenienc~ to his driving pleasure! 12 volt vacuum cleaner ... a handy idea! 14.95 Car vacuum cleaner operates on any 12 volt cigarette lighter, uses th row away paper bag1. Flexiblo hose, crevice tool a nd upholstery nozzle included. A great buy! Automotive trailer mirror attaches easily to car or truck, A must for cam ping, traveling. 5.95 Tu ne-up kit contains neon timing light, compression tester, vacuum and fuel pump tester, remote starter switch, Aut o spot light plugs into cigar· ette lighter for instant use, An ex- cellent value and a great gi~ idea, ·tool 12.88 4.44 Handsome wood grain com• pass clamps onto dash. Illuminates for easy reading at night. A valu. 5 98 able aid. o 14 pc. car percolator sot runs of! cigarette lighter socket. Com· 12 0 95 plate with in own carrying case. • _; " • .. ... • '' • " " . ... .. ,. ., "' ,, . •·., : A minor mishap broke a fuel line that rprityed a vo!atile mti: of methanol and gasoline down his back. The experience wis painful and terrlfyJng, for Richie bad been burned ie;flously before. He hung up his crash helfJ\et and left racing. H!.:tctually cfisappeared Into the desert for a time. MIHTH ltAC• -1·111• mlltt, 4 ,...,fr-----------------------------------------------------------· .~ rtunately for racing Ginther hasn't left altogether. only a3 a driver. SWI, be must know that marvelous feeling ex.pro football player• bave. Imagine being asked, 1t the age of rt, wb.at you do for a living. You reply: .. Me? I'm retired." Mil Ind ""' ClllmllO!I, PurM ~-I'm H19~ II" Glnt) :t ... lJ,00 t .00 Dtfltr fM V1nt1) U.IO t .10 It.Id klundaur (M Ya ltnnitlt)J f.2fl TIM! -1..U Sii. ALIO UH -T111 FllDI Hlt11, Ooldlfl Wiii, lllrtt. MY *'"• ,,_!no. a.!'ldlMr, """" W1111t, K•ATCHl'D -INnllfl C...lltr, f1lllnt ICIM • ____._ NEWPORT BE ACH (Fashi on Island) -----·-----· ----.._--~-- HUNTI NGT O N BEA CH (Huntington Center) • . . . . ... .. .. . . • WILSON FORD SALES . ·18255 BEACH BOULEVARD HUNTINGTON BEACH . $2911 .48 ~.~~E $2469 SAVE $442" 10°/o Total DoWft and $65.95 Per Mo. H1rd!oo COUPf'. SPECIAi.. VALUL!" PACKAGE, 700 C.1.0 . @flglM, Cruls-0-ltlc, ~lt~r, ~l11v! rocf, b<lllhl body 1!!19 movldlft•, 11111 -I C11Vtr1, WSW llr.1, PIO!llfd VlllVI Jf'fl !rim 111<1 II~ 1!1..0.rd ftclorv eciul-1. BRAND NEW '68 F-250 STYLESIDE ~-$2595 ., 1 Oo/o '"" '69'~ •• .; •••• TOTAL DOWN With The Purchase of an El Dorado Camper lJI"' wl!ff! hlfM!, l60'' ?U 1-iP VI t"'IM, fully 1yndo•an!ttd 3 M>ft'd dlr!'CI lrlnlf"IS~h111. tliror>'ll' body 1~ mauktlngs, 1wln-l-111'1m lUll>lnllOn, meilmum GVW 11e•<1·m1th: re,,,. sll!.i>enslo<>. llNvy oNt'f' 11" <llltdl, JI •f'nll-11!emelor, O amp bltter"f, Iron! A. re1t ctoubi. Kl!"9 $1>oek 1blorbll!n, fl" (51 t :§D • i..s 1 pl'I •••eel lrud: IWJ. 1Mlllfl 11111 l.H. cl<•-mirror, •II v11!1'1 -I trtm. No. "9. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. llAND NEW '68 THUNDERBIRD 10•1. Total Down and $103.39 Per Mo. HAll.OTOP, 4' VI -lne, cni111+m111c, PO'Ol'er 11ftrl1111-cll1C brttn, AM r1dlo. etock, eomfol1 ~ ventllltlol'I, llltht bench 1tll, "lnYI lnle•klr 1rlm, cou'1ety lltllts, '"'"°'' conlnil mirror, rwtra<;t.tilli "'"" l•l'nl> ctoor1, tull "lll'lttl coven .nil 111 111nc11rc1 tat!O<Y 11<111loment. Mo. U5. IMMEDIATE OELIVERY BRAND NEW '68 MUST ANG Fresh •ir he•+er & defrO,+er, back.up dome, courte1Y & side li9hts, butket lf11'l+s, •II vinyl trim, nylon c•rpet1, ~ocker p•nel mouldings & •ir scoop Orn'ament, se•t & shoul- der b•lts, padded desh & visors , wiMl1hi~ld w~s.her1 & 2 speed wipen, No . 275. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' . 52288 FULL PRICE Plus TAX & LICENSE ·~~D '68 CORTINA ~-:$ 1988 °" 10% ond $52" Po• Month---' TOTAL DOWN OELUXE SEDAN. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, Aeroll""" "'°nlll•llon 1...srem, DISC BRAKES, IUCkET SEATS, Vln¥1 Interior, carJ>eb, lnlerlor & t!Cltrlor decor stionl, WSW tires IP'MI tll 1t1ridlrd ftclor'f t<IUll'fTMl!t. No. 7~2. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. • '~e~ '68 GALAXIE XL SPECIAL fol~ry $4010 .57 ~,::~E $3369 SAVE $641 57 10°10 Total Down and 87.48 Per Mo. FASTIACK. SPECIAL PROMOTION PACKAGE No. 611. VI tntlnr, cn.olse-o-m1llc, _, 11eerln11, H!-r111o •~le. Jf'i.ctafrt COlldlllonl"9, AM ,acrkl, clock. WSW tires, l>lth stylt Whef:I COVftl,. unique )(L 111 vlnyJ Inferior, eutomatlc: ·~••cl. head lamot, l'OCll•• panel maukl!llllS, XL ci'!r"""' exterior lrlm, 'GT' '11rl11n oncl 11! U•nd•r<I lecior¥ t<1Ulpmenl. IMMEDIATE OELIVE'RY BRAND NEW '68 FALCON -$1988 0,10°/o ••• $52"•••Montl ~ . TOTAL DOWN COUPE. ,,,,.., tir 11ee•e• A. del•DS1•r. cl~I l<vctreolk h•811<' l'll!e.,., coort~v llohllt, 1"51r:ft j, ou~ mlrrorL t!Olh t. vlnvl Interior rrlm, Ptt<lded &sh & vii.GO 8llO 411 ll9"1l••d l•ctory tQUl.,....nl. No. Ill. IMMEOIATE OELIVERY • BRAND NEW '68 MUSTANG CALIFORNIA SPECIAL Fo~l~~ry $2946.79 . ~.~~E $2488 SAVE $458" 10 °/o Total Down crnd $65.95 Per Mo. C1Hfornl1 Soecltl GT/CS. GT/CS e<111lp. ptckt94! lndudlnt f1bergla11 bodY 1id1 l<;OOl>I,, llbe•tllu <1u1rter panel fxt., llbeo"tta .. deck lkl sPOner, liber111111 lower bock ,..,.,1, rtd&ll9. t09 lamps, lune! IG~•~ hOOd, exoc.1c1 ~ locks, body sldt llPt strlot , hor!z. fall lamPS. duel Cl«k lid lapf •l•lt<f, --cpen gas cap, lielle•, lirll. 11aH. bucktl 1eal1, 111 vlnYI trim. nylon car..ets, ~d. d1111h., rocker 1>ane"t mid: 'ni IMMEDIATE DELIVE!RY . 1 01111 MOWI . PAYMENTS IN.CLUOE TAX·l ICENSE & FINANCE CHARGES FOR 4 MO. ON APPROVED CREOIT e WHITE $10E WALL TIRES INO W.HEEl COVERS OPTIONAL. •o ID l I N 0 W I VACATION VALUE QUALITY · USED CAR SPECIALS BELOW BOOK SPECIALS. KELLY Blue Book OUR SAVE SPECIAL PURCHASE IMPORT SPECIALS '61 CHEVROLET Nom1cl Wt9on. Aulo, PS, 141 "1"9in1". No. 887 PRICE 1967 GALAXIES . MUSTANGS. FAIRLANES. T·BIRDS '61 RENAULT $295 $865 I $495 I ./ $370 22 Of These Factory Guaranteed '_"'_""'~"~_"'_"" ·- -- -Automobiles To Choose From!!!! '61 VOLKSWAGEN 5595 '62 RAMBLER A•""" Rodio, '"'" 0,;,;.,I. No. 674 I $495 I $295 I "$200 1967 GALAXIE -~ -~·-~._-''.'.:_'"'---$795 _' 6_6_F_o_r_d_C_u_s_t_o_m_~_;;0_._.,;_ •• _ .. _._; 0 _· ._ .. _ ... _. ~·'_' ._ ... N·· \~~1325 _~I _~-99-5_1_ I $33~ ;:,?. ~;.~~;-~·::~.-.:·:-:-:~:---:~i:: ~~~-~~~~~::~.:;~~ .. ~~~~IL!~.~.~-.... ,,. '63 CHEVROLET :;;\~."'o~:.;,vi · "10 " "· ""· ·'· \ S 1370 I $795 \ I $57S 1t61 FAIRLANE -... ,~~:~;~;,:·;.:"";~; •;=;· ;"~,,;:~· .. . $1999 •u v .w. Dilute. rt tdlo, hell..-, 11~1 ~ ..... 111~ ---~-*·VI, tu•om•hc. PS. ·-d••· ~.A~t •>11 ... v w. \ll" llMI. DI•. lntt•iO~, ....... ., •• ~ ... y lln+sl!. ltllll '63 CHEVROLET ~::·,~; A'"'" ........ dio ...... , $855 I $595 I ./$260 ~-------------- '61 CADILLAC 1:;·;0!:~~~:,,,.,No•.. 1-$-985 I $695 _ \ _1s2-qo · BELOW BOOK SPEC !f,LS ;01 :;t~!ok ! P~~~~ SAVE --·---------· -~ -----------'62 CHEVROLET ~~.:'.'>~:: .... t;j;~' I $700 I $395 \. 1s3os '66 CUSTO~~ " ... 0 '·" ... •• • ·" "· '" I s1685 I $1195 I IS49o -------------------------- _'6_5 _G_AL_A_Xl_E _:::_ .. ~.'_•0"·_·,;··_0 .. "_· ···_·'"'_·· "'.;0·J $1850 I $1395 I ./$4S~ '~~ FAJ_RL_A_r~E_·· _~_,'.:,v_;:i.:'_~:·~_:'";,_·;·_,._ I s92s I $495 I ./$430 '66 MUSTANG ~~ ·.·::··"·· ,............. I $2250 I $1495 I l$1ss '62 f>ORD :~~· :r; ';:;;:·;· .............. ,, ... I s99s I $695 I 1s100 -. ·---161 GALAXIE :::.:.· ~~'.o:,·t" PS ""0 I 5560 I $395 I v'Sl 6S '66 FORD :;'," , ..... ,,.,,,, •" O''''"'' No I Sl 6l5 I $1395 I ./$220 -------·---- '66 PLYMOUTH ;::T;,;•;,;•:::;,;:;:;,:;: No l'l I ~Z Ol5 I $1595 I ./$420 '66 T•BIRD ::~:;,,'.:':.::.~;;;~::;~,No"' I $3250 I $2695 I ./$SSS MAKE YOUR CHOICE AND SAVE ·AT WILSON FORD TODAY 18255 BEACH BOULEVARD HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-6611 SALESDEPT. SERYICEOPEN 842-6611 Tuotd1y lhru Frld1y I A.M. to 5 P.M. 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. 7 Ooyo Mond1y1 I A.M. to 9 P.M • • • ' J --· ' - • • .... ---.. -·-----.. --·-.. --.. -.... -·---...-----___ _. ____ ..... ;T .......... ---.... ..--..... -........... -·-----·..-~ •• -• .Y I: NEWPORT .J St.art of a new tradition -'' A Free Sketch of Dad '' ~ In the Moll Friday from 6 to 8 -Modest or not_, make h·im ·com ; .. -And for that g.ift for Dad, 3 days of · wond·erful selection·s. C h: --~--,,.... Come and visit the many fine shops at beautiful Fashion Island, Newport Center, and discover a wonderful world of values-for everyone -The Broadway •. Buff1.Jm1'. •. J . C. Penney Co,,.. pany • Robinson's • Paul Allan, Inc. •.Anthony's Shoe Se~ice • Apropos • Back Street Feminine Attire • Bath Shops • Brett:·W,al~er Goldsmith • Join Bu'cfi: • Bob Burns Reataurtyl\ ' -. ' -• Christensen'S-G.K.C. • Waltah Cfarke':S Hawaiian Shop • Weinert-Clark Fine Jewell • Coco's • B. Dalton, Bookuller • Desmond'• • Di Ortio's • El Poco ~ndlee • -fiiuta Footwear : ff , Ann· Folaer • Gallenkamp • Golden Blade Barbers • The Hair Hunters Salon• • Hatch~• HJ!llmark of Newport • House of ~rmony • How•rd• Men's Shop • , ~~ T~~' Staitioners •. ~ bieS. KOCM Radio • F.a•hions -for La Femme • Leeds • Lerrier Sh9ps .• The Look • Mandela Shoe• & Somethlna Else • Marian's F••hions • Mediterranean Imports • Mother.h~ •• ' l Maternity Shops • Neal's Sportina: Goods • NeYfport Children'• Bootery ~-Nonn Meaaer'a • Ontra Cafeteria • Pickwick • Plummers • The Rluer • See's. Cendiea -•· The Show·Off1J . . .. ' ·~~ Silwrwoocl's • Slavick Jewelers • The Tobacconist, Inc. ~ Vikln1• IV • Waotbrook'.s Yarda19 • Wetherby Kayur Shoes • Wlp by Vao;ice-Papl • Zale'•· l• I ---~ ---·~--·----·· --··- • '· . . .. . . -• • • • ....... --.. ' ,_____,cPainling for Love and L~velihood Santa Anan, 78 Hm Gallery on Display at Fashu;n Island .... Some men are lmpatit.Dt for the 4'1 -they llnaJly rNdl Ibo ••• of 15 ...... place lbemtel ... In Ille puture of retlnmen~ but notJobll Orth. At an age wbea most men have been in Witirement ~or .U years, All Pen11ey Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Sotu..., BELOVED SURROUNDINGS -: John _Orth, 'IB>year-<>ld Santa Ana artist, is pic- tured 10 bis studio where he pamts daily, 56 hours each week. His famous oil portraita of the 35 American presidents will be on display in Island House at Falhlon bland Tbllt"lay throl!Jb Saturday. The public is invited to visit Island H ..... to enjoy this line art display.. • ·~·~~~-'-~~~~~......;.......;.~~~~~ Some Don't Date NEW YORK (UPI) -()jj: 1Y ll0.5 percent of• Am<rloan lffn·ued llrll 10 lleady and 33 peroeot cl fllem do UPS Tallies Safe Driving FLAG DAY ROSETTES The Unttad P11oel Se<viCI drivers of Costa M e 1 a Optratinl Center recently att1tned 1,000 CODJeCUtive t day1 of accidlat.free drlv· Ing. FOR ~RY DAD,. •• THERE'S A GREAT GIFT AT PENNEYS Ille driving day1 al UPS are blHd on tbt number of drivtrt on the road each day and are~ coUecttveJy. It tool< flll Co1ta Mesa drivers two month• of 1afe drivinf to re•cb tblt record. · Driver• were presented a llO cbeoll b1 the oompanf. Director• Meet The nest meetln1 of the bomb of dlnetor1 of Coun- ty StnliaUon Dl1trtot1 numbln 1, 2, J, I, I, 1, and ti of Oran11 County will be bald tonllbt at 7:111 p.m., at 10M4 E1Ih: Ave., FoUDtain Valloy. ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S TWO GREAT RESTAURANTS • FATHER'S DAY Sunday, June 16th FHturing TOIU'lledos ef Fllet Mignon • ,... ... _ef.._ ... $3.95 n ... t Loag lsluad Dueklhtg $3.95 ROY AL STEA.K-0-BOB •flttfw•llitt $3.95 37 FASHION. ISLAND ' NEWPORT CENTER lllWllll llUl'FUMS AND •OADWAY • RESERVATIONS 6.f.f-20~0 f Men's stylish jewelry:.box ........... _ .... _ .................. ......, ..... -.....v.,...~ *5 COSTA Mii~ · Slimline box for jewelry , ... , ....... fer ......... ,... .... Ucl ....... -.a... WM/rlilll • ..... .. *3 Ideal gift for Dad "-'• .....,..., "" ............ .... ...,,........,_,,.,...,.. Popular key-fainer ~ MilQllO c:owNd. k")'COM -"-'1" W'9ht intidit. Madi ot ... /fl, 3.95 lord Bu~ton billfold c_,;w. WlfoU '* r--.. ~ -.a9dit~pod ... llad.eriw-. I Father's Day gifts /are on time at Penneys. COSTA MESA jHorbor Shopping Centor) • ,PENN·PR.&'.87', -~.....--· ·~ TUMlll.DMD Never iron Penn· Presr sport shirts are gifts Dad will surely wantl ~ °""' -' -·· with .._ f'MI looldt11 Towncraft •porl thirto. n..y 11ay ~ W Mat kloking always, wHhout the touch of on iron ... won't pucker at seams • ChooMI handsome soft-toned solids with rich looking pocket ombo-oklery ;n long, °' short s'-w styles,. comfortable short slee"e plaids, buttcndowns 1n ouorted plaids and stripes, or mock twtleneck knits with ringtai/ stripe trim. In a lwT1fie array of.colon. S.M-L-XL HUNTlllGTOll BEACH NEWPORT BEACH !Huntington Conter) !Fashio n lslond) - .· • ~ --------~-.,,,,.,,,_,_~·~...-..-.,.-·-.._, ,. .. , __ ,,.,... •• _,~·c··~--·~···-••• -•F-••-•-•WW> ... p•>•F ... J.> ... F-W .. O•O-•O~··-··-·-··F oo-•-"•• ~--~-----~~~ • . . WtdMSCby, Junt 12. 1968 DAILY PILOT 3J Ceremonies Saturday • 383 to Get De g rees at VCI " ~ UC Irvine will honor 383 ···candidates for degrees at f. ~ommencemeJ\t ceremonies 'i· 10 t.be central '3"1PUS green at 2 p.m. Saturday, June 15. -, The public is invited to the :· colorful open-air event. Principal speaker will be Dr. Louis L. Benezet, presi- dent of the Claremont Uni· versity Center. The graduation rites will niark the conclusion of the :. third year of operation for UC Irvine. For the first time Cali· fornia College of Medicine degree candidates also will participate in the com- mencement. 0 t h e r firsts will be advanced degree awards by the Graduate Schoo I of Ad.ministration, the School of Engineering, and several departments. The degree candidates in- clude 10 for doctor of philos· . ophy, 89 for doctor of med.i· cine, 65 for master of ar.ts. master of science and mas- ter of fine arts, and 219 for bachelor of arts a n d bacb· elor of science. Two years ago there were onJy 14 degrees given. Most of the candidates come from Orange and Los Angeles counties. But 18 other California counties. 15 states and six foreign na- tions are represented. Degree mOO.idates from Orange Coast communities are: ... lbN -0....0111 Andorll.1, JO.I 0c;Hn F'ront (BS, blolOlllUI sdenc;es) 1nd Gre!l«Y M1rlowe, UJ6 e. Oc.e•n Blvd .. (8A. history), tin-. .t.vt., f8A, tr!), Ind ltktllrd We .. '°"' 111 P11rl Aw., (8A, Pll!l~vl. (.11lstr1A1 le1cb-Lor11t1 Htrlow. '"" Dornl11911..(BA, SNnlllll Cum Liii• ,,., and P'lltlcll McH111ty, J.M1t 8Hdl 11.d. CMF'A.-creelfw wtlllnel. e-. .. , lrlY.r -\11llrle lleerd- WOQd, 70) Ord11d !BA, il!:ntlilll), Plt!lt! DoOton, '511 11. ... 00,.., 11.d. (BA, F'._,,1, Enid Eu:i.1on, .QI Avocldo A.vi, (IA, l'll1!ory), Jiiiie F1nc:ler, 612..., Pofnoettl1 (BA, al'lllo$ollft•I, P"rlck Gl••vow, QO Ftrnle1r (BA, lllllorrJ, Steven H11mahr1v, 110 trll Avt. (MO, ln!ernlnv It Or1nu1 CounN Ml-<llcal ·center). WUll1m LfpplfKOtl, 3"112 Oc;e.on Blvd. IM>.. -l•llOll Ind lftVlnintnent•I bl· ololilyl, Jlldlll'I "'-<Vrdl, lOU K1w1met Or. IMO, lnteml119 11 Ot11>M Coun1v Medic.el Cf'lllefl, a.II Munro, .011'1 J11mlnt A ..... 111,.; e11111l111), Lind• 011-., tt'JO B1yvl<!w' (8A, tr!), Lt- Mii Scott, 941 Tlll<!t W1y (BA, hla- l!ll'f), I ncl Jernes WI~ Jr., ""' C:.. brlUo Terr. (BA, ~nl•h), C111t1 Mne-Wl!lltm AtK1rm1n Jr .• 302t Werrtn Line (BA, E11911Ull, Oon- tld 6endl11, 43 Broodw1y IBS, b!OIOll- lcll Klerw;t"S), He<>rv B-rl<'lg, m Tu- ..... (8A, PIYdlolOllf), B1rblr1 Br1d- fctd, 2151 San C1rlol Lf't. IBA. Sain. bh) Cum L1\lde, Mini•~• Clf'Pl'nler, 2111 We11..,1ru1er !BS. blolOllJul Kl- et1Ce$}, Frtnk OllUllWI Jr., 2100 Pl- te-rwn W1f, lBS, l>lolOlllul sclence1J. Oout111 01vlason, mt Oregon (BA, flCOllomla). Oline Ewing, 3005 l-lerdlnu Way (MA, En1ll1h), NOl'm1 Fosler, Jlt E11t 1Plh SI. CBA, E11gUsl!l. Ct!herlne Gtvtr, 3UJ Collew St. !BA, ""mer· lean studlei), G1rrv Glllene. 1u1 Ch1rleo!011 SI. (MS. e1111lr>eerlnf), Bar- bare l-l11>H11, Ill Cor'lel SI. (BA, PSY. ""'-· lllndll Hetrtd<., 7.14 W. Utt. SI. {BS. blo!Olllcal K~). Cart Jelinek, l)IV. E11t 21st SI. (BS, 1i11tlrlUI envlnHr• Ing), M1un1 Cum L1ude, 8rlo1Ut L•· br'enl1, 16"1 Wnt l&!h SI. CM.Ci Ger- m111 ), JOln Mervol, 3066 C1vlon Rd. (MA, ElluUsl'IJ, Gerl!ld McMen1mln. 911 P1ul1rfno (BA, phllosOPhyl, Wit· ll1m Mottl1nd, 3129 81rb.odos Pl. (BA, POll!lc11 scleng!). B,yertv NlcolSOl'I, 2100 Peter1on (BA, pl'i!losaphy), P1u! Pearson, 124' Bel- 1111 (BA, hlS!GrY), Heidi FUctwird1or1, 4d Etsl BrOldWIV !BA, Germ1n), l<tthleen II.agers, Ill BrOl<fwlV CSA, mu1lcJ, Ell11berh Flonton. 941 Pres~ dlo or. (B...,, SP1n1m1. 11.0lemarle Schnuerer, 2344 Bunker Hiii Wlf (BA, Germ1n) M1gn1 Cum LtYde: fof1I. ... Ml11Jooo, (BS, b!olOlllctl K~ll, D.11111 P'ol11t -K1thrvn Jt~Mn, 25301 YIClll IBA, Frtn<hl, Ind ~tltrtl S.•.nc:a. um. Ci mino C1pl1tr1no (IA, E111lllllJ. F-tel11 Vtlllt> -JotV ()ory-, 1~1 Mlr11rtl1 Avt. /BA, pflnlal, -Judith Solomon, 1.w S.nd•I~ • St. (BA, INllMMIUU). HUlll'lllllM INdl -l111rel Adler. 513 Fr1nkf11r11 tBA, dr1m1), Lorn• BYdl, '341 Hudson (BA, En11U1h), Peter O'Ellscu, ol06B Ttnlh $1, !BS, blOI011k1I Kllntfl), Sllt\11 E11tln"r, 123.12 Morrlt Lii. (BA, Germ1nJ. WU!l1m Fffflcllton Jr., i.cn Brltr- clitf Or. IB._, 1>tvchol011V!. Dennis Gelvfn, 1G7 tndl1NPOlll St (BS, bk>- loe~I K ltnce1J, Suwn NuNmeM1r, 32*2 F'1lkllr>e1 Cl"'le IBA, hlltorvl. Jo ... 1'11 Ull41!11, 1231 lndllMl'Oll• !BA, <Mmll!rvl, C1r11 W!lev, 21•n K•~ aotie tBA, trH. lr~ln• -Peter Abr1h1m1, -40,S \11- rl!no Pllc.e !BA, EntllthJ, Fllchlrd AYfm1n~ Jr .. 116 \ltr•no P!ICI (BA, fNltl'le-m1tlc1), M1rt1'11 B1nMr, 1031 \lertno Pltce !BA, Si>enllh), d1rrv !kind, m ver1no Piece IBA, 1>tY<l'lol- OllYJ, JIM Bowen.. U24 Ver1no Pleet (BA. Ene111111, S1111n D•vie, 111 v1-r1no PllC. fBA, EngUlfl), \111 Oell!ne, 4301 Senlu, tBA, M1- 1orv), K1t111 ... 11 Oeu1$ch. lllT.l M•v- •PPle We y CBS. blofolllul 11;lence1), Pl'l•llp OeVl!t, Bo~ .o'/7 (BA, phll1u- oohy), Edl!h Fee, XIS Ver .. Mo Pl1ce !8A, mlll'lem1tlcs), M.4ry l-l•tdlnt , SOol Ver1no Pl1ce {BA, n!•torv) C11m Lu•Oe, l<trlft Hensel, lll Verano P!1c1 IBS, blolOlllt.11 sclentHI. Ron1ld Hen ... 1, 213 Vtrt l'IO Piece !BA, m11nem1tlul, Mlr9ar1f 1<11!ntr, l!i1 Verano Pl1c;e (BA, economlCI), Lorette l<rtOs, 216 Ver1no PlKt (MA, ahlloxol'l>yl, G. Witll1m Leacto, 11)1 Verario Pl1q /BA, hlitorvl, A'utl'I Mc- Clure, 4121 Brlsb1ne Way (BA, Eng. 11,111 Magna Cum L1ude, Roben Ne1ly, 17611 tron Blrlt CB .... hl1Tory), Ind Oougl1s Welch, l:U Ver1no P11ce (B...,, PlY~hology). 'L11un1 INdl -JlldHh Brvnner, 351 Osgood Courl {BA, cle.,ksl, Phlf.. Ip 011111k1ry, 132 ...,..nunit1 Or. (BA, E"'811•hl, Jlldltt. Frre. 16lt C1rmellt1 sr. ces. blologlc11 Klences), S.r1 l<Jrt!;, 13Xt Otin11ll'l!ll Or. (8A, 1rtJ, Judvth Moreno, 261 Ctlllope (BA, El\8· llsh). Mandels Something Else Th is pant-dress by · Baba .Kea of Honolulu is the perfect Jounging coWJ.me. It is made of organdy and cotton in a lush yellow, blue, green, and t.&n pattern. The garment, which is available at Fash· ion Island's Mandels Shoes and Something Else, zips up the front. 76l:l1 E1tner11d1 (BA, music) t;um L1ude. H•-' IUU! -Cr1l1 Cur1!1. 2'01 Crestview Or. !B.., E11111lsh), John Gr•hlm Jr., 2245 lrvlnt Ave. !MO, lntemlna 11 PretbYterl1n Medial Ce,,.. ler, Otnver. Color1do), Fllthlrd Hern- llton, 10ol Hlvlll1nd 51. !MA, hl1torr>. T~am11 How1!1, 17.!I B•dlord LIM CBA, h!storvl. J1mn Ketdl1m, 112J Pembroke Lint {BA, hl1torv), John Kinkel, ll!ld Irvine A,.., (BS, en11~ neer1nal. HU 11.utt. lint (IA, pl'iy1k1l. K1r.., Ph/lllpt, 2241 \11111 Huertt !BA, En• ll1hl, Linde llldl1rct. llU Nvltl1111h1m (llA, 1r1). N1iw;y 11.ouoe, 2006 W1ndw1rd l- (BA, lrtf, C1rol S11mon1, ll2 011· rnond Ave. IBA, pMh»OPhY), B1rblrt Smith, 211 J.1111 St. (BA, Envllll>J, P1mel1 Slrlclc.ltnd, 150.S C11v St. (BA, toClology), Chrl1tOPl'ler Strutt, 1G'l4 Commodore 11.d. !BA, er!), Peter 1}ou ~I finJ ·w on fhe cenfer mall t efween Penne'I ~· & Rotindon ~ RIGGER ROY AL o..w. .,....., ••..•...•......•..•.•• -.. 85c 1.25 1.00 SSc Surf Burger Teriyaki Burger Mushroom Burger MALTS 80c 90c 9Sc The Buccaneer Beach Boy Special Islander Jr. Surf Burger s. .. kit yoll Ht It-·~ . .,.. ... Malts, Shakes or Sodas famous for malts & hamburgers SSc 50c l •lll09 11111111-Jetlrirr JohMO!'I. 2113 q111 Ave.. (BA, hl11crJ"l, 11.11,!l>h Lewis flt, 2°' Onyx Ave., !BS, edmin- lltr1tlon), C.rolyn lllK.lwlr11, 301 Col- WllU1rn SNrkl, 150 M1vnoll1 (BA. PSYCholOllf), LeROY SYrherland, !,.jl H1mllton St. (MS, MU1neerlng), Plltl· c11 Tompkins, 2449 Montco Terr. (BA, hlf!Gn'/, KenrleUe Unde,.,..ood, ~ Towne St. (8A, "'1H050Phy) Su"'"'' Cum L1ude, 1(1ren Veldes, W S.... ate St. (BA, 1rlJ, 1/ld Frederlcli:; Who.e· Ell>11M:iltl Mun11I, 970 81!1 SI. {BA, English). L111rle Odenhelm, j71 N. Coast Hlt"wtv CBA, French). JOflt- tn1n Prince, 2lao M1rlon W1v (BA, 1nthrOP0!011yl, Stephen Smlltl, m1 Tor· rv 11.d. (BS, blologlul sciencn), Alan Sudlne, 680 Glenneyre {BA, m1t11em11- k>). !nd S.ndr1 W1Uect • .u Tre11- 11re Is 1nd fBA, hl1torvl. ...,..n11ret M1r1d!,xlln, '21 Alder Pl1u fMA, hlrlory), K1ren M1y, ll01 CUtl Or. 18A, 1r1), JHn Miiier, 324 Snuv Hirt.or 11.d. (BA, art), 11.el.m Nielsen, :=::::~ ~1:e ... ~~;.11t • .:·~1n!,~~ 16 Fashion Island, Newport Center Wllll1ms, .07 snuu H1rbor 11.d, (BA,''------------------------------------------' Pl't'CholOllY). I • •. Mlnloll Vltlo -Altl1n1• Lolov, W11tml11tltl' -Adrl1 Gretn, 13'12'------------------------------------------C1rdlllo Dr, (BA, ecanomlctl. I • All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday-Through Saturday Penn-Prest® men's wear for Dad... AL~s~a!!!ttlfl looks smooth, fresh around the clock! Fa ther's Day gifts are on time at Penn eys. .......hy ....... 1.-. :PENN·..P.REST: ~~...J'El"FR~" 'WHEN TUMBLE DRI~ Short duve 1hirt1 or1 great for wmrner W90r'ingt Top notch styling and Penney q1.111lity make them o fovorile with Dad. Choo11 our tapered ond tails model of Fortr1I· polytaltr and cotton in assorted glod plaids or buy the pop- ulw turtlt-nec:k pullover of polyesler/cottor1 knit if't sporty Colifornio colors. !oth M'¥lt' iron P1111f't·l'rest' bletlds tome in tiiet S-M·l-Xl. 3.98 Men'• ca•ual •lades wilh youthful Univenity Grod ttyli11g rat.s highly on Docl's list of fmartlet. Penn-Pre~t· means you never need Iron them when thiy'r1 tvmble dri.d. Polyester/cotton oxford " IOV8 11oc:ks ~n wordrobt expending shaOes of o~ve, willow, IOl'I and coffH. Or chooM riM bh.. poly- est.,/cotton baby tord bltncl for warm~ wearing. lolh fn rMn'• ti1es • 98 5. fienneys goH wear scores with Dad! Men'• knit golf altlrt of polplter cnl Ulll~ -iroti ,_,,.!' llllM. fmhlon c:ollc.. ..................... 3.98 "'""lftaltle -• llh«ts """' lllllldMg belt. a-dtri .. , ._, ""-· bl.-.. Q)'tlw. Hewll' Iron l'fM.f'l'llt. Nwf1 ._ 6.98 litht~tht ..., /edit iii' -inwl ,_ PrMt poplin. Colifomia blw, It . .,Id, IN, .... """"'· """""-6. 98 erall ttylH tell 11 ... "'-wwwdln1.., btlt. Ne.,.;,.,.,p_,,,mt,~ ..... '-'.- ~., °'*"'· N.tfs •-8.98 COSTA MESA HU NTINGTON BEACH (Harbor Shopping Center} (Huntington Center) • . Give Dad dress shirts and slacks Shwt 1lleve ..... hlrt ·-lrallfartrlf' polyfittr/catloit o:dord w..t. ~· ........ ...,. "~"· 3.98 """'' ... al.di ................ o..llfyl.-... -'"'",_,,.,WINI. aw. .... --·":"-7.98 t.,.. .,_d,..ahlrtel ~.,,,,..,., cet11111 b............... ii -lrlll "-m-"'-t. l<lngdar c:olllr,....,. Mir'· 14 i.17. 3.98 o..4..,.. ..... __ ._.,_ ,,... ~ .... 1-1 --...... °"' ....,,iw-,11W.1Mt1-$11 ~~ ACCDU~:J: _, . ' NEWPORT QEACH (Fashion 111end I I • . i I l ; ) ' . ! I r . ' • ' '. ' I . "' ... .. • ~· . ' I' ' ' . J • • I < . 14 I . ' l ' ' ' • .... .._ ·. .. . ·. it DAILY PILOT Spacemen to Start New 'Trip' Friday I SPACE CENTER, HOUI· ""' (UPI) -In a space- aaft aiJniltr to the one in which t h r e e utronauts burned to death dwing the 1967 Apollo l fire--but un- der much mcn fireproof condilions-a trlo of space- men will start Friday on a weet.Joog, landlocked space voyage. The mock night in a cav· emous vacuwn cbamber ill designed tO prove the Apollo command module read)' to carry astronauts on t h e first manned Apollo flight this September. A spokesman at the man· ned spacecraft center said Monday the model Apollo is a near duplicate of the one slated to Oy in Septem- ber, with all the fireproof· ing changes made since tbe Apollo 1 fire . It will be filled with a mix- ture of 60 percent oxygen, 40 percent nitrogen during t be simulated liftof{, be said. Once in make.believe orbit, it w i I I gradually switch to an almost 100 per- cent oxygen atmosphere un- der a reduced pressure. These changes are part of the fireproofing measures adopted to prevent a repeat of the fatal cooditions in the Apollo 1 spacecraft, whlch "'as filled with pure oxygen on the launch pad "Except for weightless- nen we can reproduce most oC the eoodi.Uons in a vac- uwn chamber a spacec:ran will encounter iii earth Dr· bit or on· .llighta to the moon," said Or. MaDne Faget, director of the cen· . ter' a enginffring and devel • opmeat directorate. He said the space cbam· ber 1 .. 1 bas the added ad- vantage ol being· able to re. turn spacecraft and crew to earth·like cood.itioos "'in a matter of ~" in cue trouble ii encountered. Astronauts Joseph Ker· win, Vance Brand and Joe Engle are t.est crewmen for the ..... and ooe-hall day mock fligbl Locked inside tbe conical chamber, itself sealed in tbe l2lJ loot high by &:; foot di- allleter space chamber, they will follow a rugbt plan similar to the one astronaut Walter Scbirra's crew plans to fly during the first man- ned Apollo mission in Sep- tember. Plans call for Schirra. \Valt Omningham and Donn Eisele to orbit the earth fer 10 days, cbecking out all the command module systems in space. In December the second Apollo crew plans to test the entire moon ma- chine in orbit under the c o m m a n d of astronaut J ames McDivitt. Legislature i'!-Action ay THR AUOCLATID ~UU T_...,, J-II TM Alsemb"' CrlmlMI P~f c:......mittw kllled tWl;I mqwrn dn ... '*' lo ~ -'IOl••phy ovt ., .. fllnds of -.... --of """"' Gov. ---· ~ wtlldl IMt ... -l•t• i..t rur. TN• GGV•llUfOI! S.id ...... 111111 ~ ""' -'t "enY lrl>•'ffS" lo Yloimm In P'f'QJIOSied IV" l;llntrol lelll1la!lon. THI' ASleMaLY 51offtltf" Mu M. Un,,..,,, 0.. l111ll'fooocl, w id tie w1H Pl'OPOse 1 1trlct pun re<g!1tr.tlon llw If no -rlM ..... ~ .. ,..,.. Al•-"•Mlltl "'"* -p....,1,. pUbll~ letTl91 to -•tor llefweln 1911 Frll'ICllCll Ind Marl11 County/ Al 2f7, Burton, 0..S.n "'l ncllCll. liilt9li -Creelft $al1Qll $ee AllYllOl'V Commlrtw to 11uOY UM •1111 Pfftlnl• tlori of ftW Inland SU; .. ~I, V..,...., R-tA_,.... "'"" -lncrMws llllmblr et ludtn 1ti Ille Las c.Tlb Ml,Jtlld1>11t C-1 Dl1111d Ill lol """"' C-h' from ,.,,.. tlJ fllrMl Aa .C.W. Por1tr. 0.. "'"""" 911111 1" ...... a.,... -ll1<1ulrw • Mt fee •boft whDll!Mll COit for 111 dtvtn IOld ll!ldef' ,,.. Meldi..c.I ll'l'otr•m, r1ft'ler tl\ln • ,,,.rtwlt "' the .n.nMC111; Al JM, B.-D-loM Fr.nc!SG1. D•....... -a..r.. Mmt et Sl.te O..r1'rlwflt d P~I 911C1 voutk!Mt Stl...s.rdl 1o DeNrll'lwlt of BUlil-and P"""'*"'-1 l.Jonlintl AB 1 .... Bl'OWll. .__,., -•now. ,,,,. ...... !( .. rel'IMl'llll 1ld to .nottier wfllclt hi 11t8 or Nrk Oii I !l'ft'llf.., vnder -11111 COllll111on1; .. llM. Wiiton. R·S..11 Dll90. c.m -E~ toll' GPl'tl lrot'l'I ""fist• 1tlOl'I •• "'°""' wflle!M. t..,.,. 1'flllr -•Hon Oii hltflwn Ga¢ -wllll ~ Mm/I U Wiiies 111'1 llaur Of -· b<lntt "*" \lflder _I_, llin n!llll"9 lo ~la; A.a lolG. COl'Y, 0-WHlmllllttr. ~·· -IWll'll:lr'ltes ·--"' MW problollonert tNdlt119 c:ndttitlal fol' two-Y••r -lad to 100 •bliol9-•""'"9 ti.ehlkn _,... holders Pl pJIDf ·"-11119 O'..,.,.tl.11119 l'nlwrll AB IXl7, V.,.l/W, R-Brnle'I'. u... -e.andl ...,,_ of C.llfoml• Uincl CorMrv1tlori Aet of • 1"5 .. .,. .. Jtjl _...,., .. _... -41. ••lllw lhM llN ......... ~11 ...... llndl .... 1'87, Knox, 0..111~. v.... -°""""' _.,.., "' motor fthlCts on PUttlk !'Old If boHorn of '11twf' ff'onl or rur lrllM elld !1 ITMn ""'" '' lnd'le:I •bo¥e Rltd leftl; AB 1"1, "'--0-0.kll,,c!. Alaflel--APoropt111ft 17S1,11f Ill "-'-MG-.tetr Akdlolbm kt -wr1m1 tti._h 6hl di, •lltt' 11111! .0. ioo.or""""1if of lM!i ~l1llllll9 HUion; $1 ...._ M.lr'kl, R-J.Oll Frll!ldsco, ·--"" .. -""" Cl~ ~-Ill Hllbllsh Bllidl; $tudln <JIUf'w. lfi Hr;iro hlmrt •nd Qlll\I .. ; HR m ,,_ ... TH~ SI NATR 11-.Hli•llM .,..... ,......, -...,.niv.d r-.s'*'•llon DI tlr\ler ~ del'Nll ... Gov. ll-111'1 j\odld 1I te!Ktian pla11. •llawlng tur!her ~ to Nss II ll~r; KAl. SI 2t. GrultlkY, R-W•IKll'IYlllt. 91111 Pn ... P-.tlM -Soecttin for i;ourn wlllch 1re.u of law IM 1fwl1lltur~ ln. ftMI fo be •1!'11111111!<1 10lel¥ bY d1ff, Ind wll!dl 111!.U loGlil "°"''""'"" m11 11<•rc1.. c:onlfct OYlfl SB •U. lllcMrdscn, R·Aradl1. Vllllcles -Extwndl to 30 ffn fl'wn C>.trnnt rn.•lmum of 20 the Hme • wl'ilcle '"'"' bt -••ltd IHndfllD ~"' Of rtvi1tr•llon or Uanw plalft; s• ''" eo1o11 .... R·lndlo. Cefl99ll -RMUlrn . r11'hlr ttla.n ...,,...111, flrl,,. Of 1i.te Cl:l11e!N rmPlo\11 amrlctfd of ~Ion,. or N>rC'lflfd w• DI· .fMMl. 1nd blirs lllrl"' of rmPlo'ffi II M Wll c.onvl<"ed of well ctt'"w wttl'lln \111 11~ yurt befor• •""llca11Gn1 Ml -. ldwnllz, lll·T~t111. I lltt OlffftMI T••• -Would NYI r•llM ,,. •• lmum p._tv llK 1110w!'d for M:hOllll II ,._.,. Wll H~rlltd for -II _....1.ron ""'".,. lundi •nd chllc 111e Of "'-Ill SB IW, Pdrls. Q..Oaklllnd. lltt1llllilll ....... Air -""' Prnldtflt •nd Canwreu to 1nves11si1te "monoipo1!1llc" 1lru.noti ot •lrPlaM tommltler HNIOI In c..ntor11111 SJll 15, wtwtmore. R..U ....... lllMlllliWll llllfWllcMI ._ -Mb C-res1 •nd Pl'ftldenf to •PJltOYe lliW Prohlblflflll ·~I • .,.,_ n cecot PIKI olllcer1 fn:im pmwsll"9 hind W\1111 SJll ,,, Mllllir, 0. MlirtlMl. ·. -. •• • •• #. "•'···"·····:•"' ·-•. ' ' . ,. . .. . All Penney Stores Open Every Night M • I Sport gif Father 's Day gifts are on time at Penneys. ......... ..,. ............. Help Dad land a big one with new fishing equipment Penn Jigmast.er 500 rHI giws faster retrie.e and live- lier lure actian. Star drags are extra smooth, extra .$12.99 strong. Handles all lines, including manofilament. • • • Foremost 2 pc. 8' surf spin rod has 7 wire frame guides .and carlioloy-tip tap. P.-fectly balanced .for ease of handling, lop performance. • ....... $16 91f.i' surf Rod ~O Mitchell 302 spin reel, Garcia glass rod outfit Reel boasts 300 yd. mpacity with 20 lb. - line. Ball bearing actiQn, 2 spools. Garcia best hollow glass rod. Rod and reel to suit any fisherman Dad Penn 60 long .l)each reel for deep sea bottom fish- ing. Strong siar drag. 61/2' Foremast medium actiail boat spin rod. Wilson K-28 golf balls for ·the avid · golfer. High compression, liquid center. A great gift! 11.88 doz. Top grade all leather golf glove in tan or blade. ~·s sizes. Golf shoes of man:made Dupont Corfam• poromeric shoe material. Blade/white or black. Man's sizes. love 3A9. shoes 19.99 Vinyl golf head covers come in black/red or tan/black. SizesJ, 2, 3, 4, and 5. .89. Help Dad improve his golf with this Birdie 19th hole putting game. It's fun, lcial 6.98 Super 'ar-l'ak galf cart carry all is a handy gadget for the gaff entluiastl 2.98 : -· -... -~- 39.99 17.99 'Red vinyl fish mitt with 4 cleats in palm assures firm grip. 2.95 Folding fishing chair has built-in tteel tackle box. Ideal for ·shore use. 9.98 Rugged tactde ·box features hip roof Roomy 7 tniy tackle box hos plenty .. of comport· menfs fQr ,....., hoolcs, sinkers ancf l'ines..Plostic bax won't rust 9r warp. 16.98 2 lloy taclil. .... 4.99 • NEWPORT BEACH (Fa shi on Island) Jumbo wood tackle box far Dad's fishing gear Sturdy tackle bax with hinged drop front, two divided trays, spacious storage on bottom. Size: 16"x 8'1."x 10". 13.99 16"x 7~'x9' liox n.99 !loo-rang driving practice set lets Dad improve his game in his own back yan1. 2A9 Golf ball marker leti Dad per• sana lize his golf ball wi~ his name or initials. 4. 98 HUNTINGTON BEACH (Huntington Cente r ) . .. ' . ~-..... -·CU> I>' .... ••• • • • .. • ..... Monday Through Saturd.ay for Dad I &AO I CA.lT COM&INA.TION llJHAPr IA.VU." GOLf IAO UBEYDUR EN NEV CHARGE ACCOUNT TD DAVI 5THL SHAfflD PUTJllS -mu OOlP uus Ease Dad's golfing cares with a Foremost golf bag and golf cart for Father's Day Wire wheel golf cart with 10" mudless tires. Adjustable rubber- padded bag brackets. Folds easily, stands and rolls ~ folded. Tubular construction, adjustable handle. An asset to orry golfer( • Foremost galaxie style golf bag of expanded vinyl features tri- sling construction. Top ideally shaped for cart use. Morty packets for all those golfing extras! Black or milano green. • Putter$ for golf addicts! Satin finish steel shafted putters have eam- position grip. 01, 06, 10, 12, 13, 14. Deluxe brass head blade putters. 01, 12, 13, 14. Shaft saver golf bag Each club has its own tubuli;ir compartment -helps ~t damage to clubs. Sweater, ac:cessory packets. Black, bronze or tan. --. -. . NEWPORT BEACH -(Fashion Island) 8.99 13.98 17.98 . ........ $13.99 ......... $25.98 Deluxe bag-cart combination A golf bag and cart ... all in one I Holds full set of 14 clubs. Fold away padded seat, ball pac;ket. Green or burgundy with white. Faultless solid golf balls Popular all solid construction. ball that defies abuse. It's like hitting a new ba ll ttvery time! Buy Dad a Doun ••• he'U appreciate them( 31.98 8.88 doz. HUNTINGTON BEACH (Huntington Beach) • Wfdne~y. June 12, 1968 Tlae Slaow·off An ensemble for many occasions, this . fresh· new item, obtainable at The Show Off. in Fashion Is- land, can be worn in a variety of combinations: as an ensemble with shirt and capris, or the coat may be used for beachwear or by itse}f as a sports dress. The coat features the Neru look with its high neck. It is trimmed with white saddle stitching, white buttons and coat flaps. The body shirt has a hi gh English collar and is dri}Hlry material. The entire ensemble is of 100 percent cotton. London Blitz Called Worse Than Saigon's SAIGON (AP) - A Briton who was a constable in Lon· don durlng the worst years of the Nazi blitz said tQday there is little comparison between those b o m b i n g raids and the Viet Cong's ter'l'Qr shelling of Saigon, Bill Ford, 56, observed that the nlghUy rocketing of Saigon is "-harassment - although it affects the peo- ple, it is only a nibble." Ford, senior member of the nine British advisers to the Vietnamese police, was a constable in the metropolitan London police force in 1935--44. And his beat was the East End dock area. "Possibly you could com· pare th.is harassment of Saigon to the harassment raids made by a lone plane that flew in and dropped sticks of SO.pound bomb!,'' Ford sa.id. ;'Those bombs did roughly the s am e damage as tnese rockets." A major difference is the elaborate warning a n d sh€lter systems the BJ"itish had set up. Saigon has only one siren for the city and no public shelters. The London blitz was delivered by airplanes until Nazi Germany developed the Vl and V2 rockets. The Russian-designed 1 2 2 m m rockets hitting Saigon are fired from a range of seven m i 1 e s or less and come whistiing in at the speed of a bullet. Although a warning system will not work with the rocket-barrages and it is a virtual impossibility to provide bomb shelters for Saigon's three million peo- ple, Ford said they could take minimal precautions such as taping windows and where possible sleeping on the ground Door or in basements. Partial to plafd1-int.ere1tin1 plaids? Come in and see our Deanegate. warm weather . · eotleetion.l'he!abrie: aeri1p66" ··a . Dacron*polyesterl•S'f'Owoolblan.d IP' th.&tkeep1it..agoodm1nnenon tJia wannest day1. Important: theee · 1uitl are ta1lored in De1n1pte'1 own understated natural ahoulder conatruet.ion, and ther. are manf tolon to chOOM from.. Dean.sgate · l norm MEAGERS ~ STOI~ ~. MEN FASHION ISL.A.N D, Newport c.,t.r-644-0264 ANAHEI M CENTER, A"'hoi..-kE 5-2 I l I The Grecat Orange Coast's _ No. 1 Paper! • • .,, ' i l • • ••• • --{ ·-• • • . . 34 DAILY PILOT . . . . .,. .. . .. . .. . ... --· Wfdntsday1 .Kint U, 1968 ..: ·' ,. , : ' .. .. l 4 .r r~: Today Jobs B _egin at 40 Fair Aids Non Profit Groups Laiv Prohibits Discrimi~ation for Age AJ of today, job< begin at 40. A ntw feder.a1 law went \Hr;;;;;i v~EAUTY BRA N1lurell yf!ett1rin9 nylon li t• bra with 1oftly qu ilt1d Oacro"® poly1•l•r fib•rfill lini"9· Pe+•.,I· ed new fie! Wi11rd Wir•® under cup• 9i¥11 youtkful uplifl end •ep1r1tion. Be t!:" of 1p1 nde~ power-net mo¥e1 wilk yo11. f1 •k· ion colora in 1i1e1 8, C 32-38 $6. 0 32-38 $7. underwired and li ghtly contoured fa shions for ••• cJl $;!/V 644-0170 Mo11., Ft-I. te t:JO P·"'· luft., Wed., nun., Sert. te 6:00 p.111. Opfl • Lah,.._ Charp • , , 8a111!01Mri,ord or Molf9f a.-,. into effect at midnight which prohlbUs d en y 1 n g men and women in the -40 to 65 age groups a chance to work solely because of their age. In reeent years, civil rights legislation has struck down job barriers based on race, creed, color, sex and national origin. Now -with a few exceptions -it is similarly illegal for an em p Io ye r, employment agency or labor union to turn down a job applicant automatically on grounds he is too old . The problem of unemploy- ment among older workers has become critical in the past few years, according to the L a b o r Department, ~·hich will administer the law. "The over-45 age group t.;omprises Tl percent of all . the unemployed, and 40 per- cent of the long term unemployed," a spokesman said. LOWER RATES Basically, the new law makes it illegal for an employer to discharge or refuse to hire an individual or to pay lower wage rafes on the basis of age. It prohibits help wanted ads from citing y,outh as a qua lification for a· job. ''It would appear unlawful," the L a b o r D e p a rtment spokesman said. "for help wanted ads to contain such phrases aft 'age 2S to 35' or 'young' -or 'boy' or 'girl' as· qualifica· tions." -Labor-uhions-.are forbid· den to exclude or e x p e I anyone from membership, or to refuse to refer a worker for employment, • because of age alone. They are also barred from encouraging an employer to discriminate because of age. Employment agencies are under th'e same prohibition. EXCEPTIONS There are so m e ex· ceptions. In practice, many firms have refused employment to applicants over 40 because of retlrement, insurance and other employe benefit plans. The new law allows an employer to exclude an older job seeker from "bona fide " employe benefit pro- grams but does oot permit him to refuse the applicant work merely because of the existence of such plans. Age can be a "bona fide" occupational qualification if it is "reasonably necessary to the normal operation of the particular business," the law says. For instance, a commercial airline pilot was cited as an example of a case where age might be a "bona fide" occupational qualification. An employer also is en· titled to di ffe re n t.i ate between workers or ap- plicants on the basis ·of "reasonable factors other than age.'' The Labor Department said physical fitness mi ght be considered a reasonable factor if it were necessary to the specific work to be performed a!ld if the stan- dard were applied uniformly to all applicants regardless of age. ltowever. the act does not permit an employer .... to assume-that all employes over a certain age are unable t<> perf<>rm a certain type of work. Judgments must be•made Far fJerY casual wear of coune! This one for an:r girl, 1vhatever h.er age or figure. A really well lailored one·piece tunic with attached tJhort pant underneath. Completely lined for cool comfort. O.utandingfabriu ••. Some with iM W.k of dammk ... Some lilu> li.o•ilk ••• O.utanding to/or eombinatwM, ioo. 115 Solid colon with conhmting lininK ••• 113 I ' on an Individual basis, the spokesman said, and it mu.st be expected. tha t in· terpretation of vreasonable factors" will be construed narrowly and the burden of proof placed on t h e employer. The department will rely on voluntary compliance as much " as poss i ble . Individuals who seek to in- voke the law must give the secretary of labor 60 days notice before any court ac- tion can begin. In that time the secretary is instructed to "attempt to eliminate the discriminatory practice . . . a nd to effect voluntary compliance with the requirements At this year's Orange County Fair and Exposition a new community Service Forum will be available to q u al if i e d non -profit organizations, according to Dr. J oseph E. Ribal, fair board president. The purpose of the Forum will be to provide bonafide non·profit service groups an opportunity to communicate their stories to fairgoers as effectively and in- expensively a s possible, Ribal said. Exhibitors in the Forum will be charged a minimun1 fee to CQver only actual costs, Ribal said. through informal methods of conciliation, conference and persuasion." Pre-School Finger Painting- Th e F-0rum will be located in a 70 by 350 foot open air ma!! adjacent to the central exhibit area. As a Labor Department official pointed out, one can- not always d is ting u i s lJ· between age discrimination and differentiation based on legitimate factors o t h e r than age but which are somehow related to age. For example. an older worker may not be as well equipped as a younger workman because of changing techni- ques and continually rising levels of education needed for more and more jobs:• Mrs. William Karges (left), a teacher at St. Andrew's Pre-School, assists her students iii finger painting. Registration is currently being taken for the af- ternoon session in the fall. For information contact the pre-school office at 646-7147. Further information may be obtained by contacting Allred G. Lutjeans, general manager, at the Fairgrounds in Costa l\iesa .. Mesa Youth Mater Dei Top Student Paul Clarke, son of Mr. National Merit Scholarship scientific achievement and and Mrs. Victor Clarke, 2928 program, a California State the Albertus Ma g nu s Ellesmere, Costa Mesa, was Scholarship, the Southern Science Club award as named "Outstanding stu· California Edison award for science student of the year. dent of the Year" at Materl--------------------'------------- Registration Set June 21 The registration deadline f<>P home ecooomics entries for the Orange County Fair and Exposition. is June 21. Actual submission of entry items is scheduled for July. Full details on entering home economics and other categories are available in · the 1968 Premium Book. The book may, be obtained free by writing, visiting or call· ing the Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. According to Mrs. Dee Cox, fair home economic• sµpervisor, home economics includes a broad range of categories. Some of the en· tries pe<>ple may enter are hand-fashioned dolls and wall tapestries, table set- tings, rug weavings and braidings, Mrs. Cox said. The Orange County Fair and Exposition will run from July 16-21. Dei High School. Clarke, a tenior and valedictorian for his class was honored along with 300 other students at the school's annual award s assembly and dinner last week. A Ford F<>Wl<iation four· year tuitional scholarship valued at $10,000 w a s awarded to Clarke, a straight A· &udent, who also has received a Bank of America plaque in science and mathematics. a letter of comm end a ti on in the Group Slates Series of Tours Members of the Orange County Industrial Suppliers Association will be con· ducting a series of tours to familiarize their personnel with products and services represented by the associa- tion, according to Sidney Entin, president. The association wi\1 tour firms in Hunti ngton Beach, Costa Mesa, Anaheim, Stan· ton and Santa Ana COLUMBIA HONEY ANDYWIWAMS HONEY RAYCONIFF ond Tlte Singers Two mood setting albums with dramatic themes for romantic listeners 2 87 each HUNTINGTON IEACH NEWPORT IEACH I Huntintfo11 Ct nftr I • -------- All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday' FOR EVERY DAD .;.THERE'S A GREAT GIFT AT PENNEYS I Huntington Center) HUNTINGTON BEACH Handy Dads will love a sabr~ saw! 26.98 Penncraft9 sabre saw with 2.5 omps., 1/5 HP motor delivers 3,000-5/8" strokes per minute. Tilting base cuts angles from 45• left to 30• right. 3 blades ond rip .guide included. Eccmomy sabre saw makes 2)00.. 5/8" strokes per minute. 2.2 amp., 1/6 HPmoto•.14•88 Versatile dual action sander 22.98 Does orbital ond straight-line sanding. 1 /8 HP motor, ball a nd bronze sleeve bearings. Straight-line sander delivers 7,.. 200·3/16" strokes per minute, Permanently lubri(afed bearings. 9.99 ·Powerful 18 gal. shop vacuum 29.98 2 stage molor develops 1HP.2~" dia. hose swivels 360°, nozzle ond casters induded. $ G•I. shop YICUUm has permQ• nently lubrkated Mi HP motor, steel drum. 23.98 Save 5.44 on %" drill for Dad'! Reg. 14.88 Now9.44 Here's o great bargain m time for Father's Day 1/6 HP motor delivers 1,000 RPM. %" drill houses 1/7 HP motor givN 2,250 _RPM. Cut steel gear; Now6.99 NEWPORT BEACH ' . ' . . . ,._" ....,. ,._.~.~-•--•••••·--~~•-•o-••••-----~-....------.-...--..... -.-·.----.....--.-...--.-...,.._.,_._ •. ,,.,_,•••~•·--~----------..------..----... -..... -. • • C:Ommeneemen Frlday -• OCC to Graduate Over 1,000 . . ' More than 1,000 students are eand1date1 for gradua- tion from Orange C.Oast Col- lege, Commencement-exercises will be held Friday evening ht Pirate Stadium al 7::Ml p.m. Of the total of 1,100 can· dldates. 810 are J n n e gradiates, 216 are student& wbo completed their re'.. quirements in January, and 74 who completed re- quirements in summer of 1967. Processiona_l music will be provided by th& Orange Coast College Concert Band. Oubitanding CJtlzep award will be presented by Dr. Norman E. Watson, district superintendent. Lyn Conry, sophomore class president, will present the Class of 168 gift to tbe college. Graduates will be presented by Dr. Robert B. Moore, president of the col- lege and Dr. James S. Fitzgt.rald, dean of in- 1.truction. · Two studenls will speak : Joa Law of. Laguna Beach wbose topic will be, "OCC: A J)eveloping" Idea":. and Sherrlyn Dee Mikolajczek of Santa Ana Whose topJc is, .. Which Wgy Do We Go.'' Candidates fOr graduation from Oraoge COO.St com- munities are: ..... , l!lrenfan lyrO!I BlorMS, ,l.n!MIW DeGt>erlOOl'icl Blottl, Dennll Alan D•'f· JGAM EktHNM. Jloblor! Enpll,11.L Jr., GIM M•rl• G.rdner, SuHn ci. Greuti.r, /Mry L.ou1M Hoct.1. Bruce Kllufwwlnn. .kllin L 1II11 a ~••ton J.tln!Y flaoert IMrldl.111 Bever v An,. Jtllld«knecl'tt, Kim 01vto SleYlrf, KeflN'ltl WU~ SmlttlL TllotNll Nelson Tuct.er, ~mi Lomtenc• W1rd, K.,-~ Lou! .. W111lko. Jlllllll Kent W1t!oOll. lalboll lala8ill niom.. Evln!tt Cox· well Jr~ Anita Rae Enklne, Richard Fr1n Freemln, Th0m11 BtV« Hllr, R1c111rd Allen J.,.ns Jr., Edwin e. L!i'i. "\~· Fr1ni. Mtn.. James Fmltr Ml l1r, JOfl R. Ruff{ J ... "'JM' Sarrv Jr .. ~ R• n Shltlata, Ohn Ste!IMn Vlt1411Y. Caitlslr1• I I I' Ill Glortll CM m ld\111, Mllrcel141 Mullet. c.r.. .. MM"• Tbomu r:. ""*"" Roblr'I Edwin a.~ Ctt;tll• e. ""'"~earl niom. rlll'llll'Clf, HMrv R. B •• J11nl1 l1fn1 lrldthof1, "'mr\Q Broclr.WI~ SUMn Loul .. B~ Oennl1 . o'"v~""'' Ml C. tl!Mlnifi.am, UV-_... de Paul, Sltnlt'I' Gordon Gnov. Wlllllm DMWlll Hiit*, KlmlNn Lynn. Mack. Kilt.It!<! Ann McNtll Bonnie Elfeii Mori:i.ti, Ct.le 5. NldlOlt. Bru!;e Frtdrlc Ollnder. ROii« Clllrte. overacker. B1rber1 J~n Pe~. Norman Edward Pllll ~; Wlll11m Miia R1y, o.e Rind• enfn:I. Joen Arie,_ ·=· GeoffrwY Sl~tn SIT1nd,f Wit in en.ic. Bou. Ofrln ~l'lh•l We I. c.i. ~: Jory Ad8-I.dim, m Ere11 Aldrldlt. SUl1lm11'Nn• ,.,,.nl, A~! Abdulla .Al- ' ·fkfl, OoNllOt w11111m A "' hi (p Alvartl, -ilobln odle A rd, OOMld H&mlllor'I ~. EdWlrd D. S.blucti. Her~K. 8Hllr1, Jolln TllorTIPIOll BM. •le L'Vnn B1!Unvrr. Rober1 Louis ride, Hllben w. Barkrr, Fred F1mum B•rfje11, Ooucllas A. 81H1cklla.nL Elaine Caro 1M Benrittt, Su~ C.trol 1:1el'f!er. Do!Hild /;J;wrMC• llHll ntL Jain Sct\Np 811111 , Max C~rles 81•'t'• Dof'olfly r l1tlne 81<1011o11r. Garv . Bodklor"'"' Amie Renet1 Bonn111d, Linda Gale B . M. JOM Boyd, DOOM . Blrfde, Ar!ld '~~~11Tt1o~W.°'rf0&e:'f~~~~ Broad, Cl'Ystal G. Bt»m1n. Rolland ~ 8rook1, ChrlstOPtlt'r Ducllrr Brovles, Rlci>ard Lowe Bryan, KtMl!lh Norman Brv .. 111, Man.tit Lv11n Brr,•nl. :~~;. 1cv~eJry6':;.. J°A~ ~a~~ '"\ton Burton, Lawrence R..s.sell But er, Hooward C. Cafl,.,v, JDM W. Calno11 Jr.~Ger .. 1d Kent C1mClbell, S..n-dr• Le•11 Ca!KI, Arlene E I I en Ch .. mberll , Gregory[)al • Clltmolon, Lesli• L. c11ap..,,.11, K1nw1J Navn Cl>MldlhlrY. . ... Linda Louise Chive!. Jolln Clmbeh ... , Oenn!s K. Clark, Noel T. Clark. t•·• ~~' ~~t'."'11r!l'c':lttor'ri!N'OJ,...,~ Ruth CIOud, Cl'larfes Htr'™'n C0111wav, s.nor1 ~n ConMIL, hom• Artllur COllflll", Lvn Conry, Chrl1lloe Marie Cook. -WOOd c-.. DIMlt G1111a n Cooptr, Rl!Wrt WQllY Crawford, Raylene Rite Cruth.1 OD\1!11111 Norm&n CfO'We, Ooniold W. C.roowler, Mary SI.le Curtlw, Rich1rd Let o~, Jr., &!obert Cr1le1 Dake, Ferfthllll A. 11v1rl111, P1uletl' Kay Oarilelton, rothy Lynne 01Rna, L1rry Kenneth D~~i!Sllne 011.w: l\ivkbon, Wlll\1m Jou"" Davji,, Marl n J11 01vls1 Lui, Gilllerl b el uro, Ph P C. Oe1111lnqer, Ctwir!e1 M es OPtiV• Oon Diaz, ""Irick Josepti Dickers.on Jr .. Norman N111 O!llev Col-M"rv 01!1$dele, MlChffl J. ·r.111-. N1ncv JIM Down· Ing, lreM Kavhryn Drake, Pe1er Llovd Ouci<ell Judy Ann Otlnleef MICllH I Timgtll.,' Dunn,. Wllll•m Al.., Dunn, 01vjd Leigh t:lstmlln, JOlln L•mson Eddv 111, Ml\COllT' L. f:lllen., Vlr11!11l11 Jam.,. ElmGre-n1 Ptt.le Eric t:110l1nder, FernM!dO Antono E1olnar, Ol1n.1 Lei M t:va111, C1rol •1111 EKner. Wayne Ar'ltlur Falke, Dini Edward Pav. F e I I• Fellhauer, M19deJyn Ct.rl1!l11t Ferr•.!t Miiian E. Flnlev ,,.,..r!on Lnlle 1'"15her Jr., C11rl1lln1 f lore1nl, Frederick M. Forfie, Wf!ndV Lou For1y1he, E.dll Ml!rlvn Fr111zen, Monlk• Maril Fnel1nd, O..rfls thtllaoniel Freemon Jr., Ch 11 It i Anlllonv Fut*. R-111 L1nc1 Gaw..i. i... Feira Ann· G1l~n. E1rllne 1.11I01 Gardner, Kellh BVl'OllMJG•-, o.°"''" Lou il GelMf", Err04 cNet. r1on, Homa Ghldlml, c111rlu Paul Giefer, Ooroll>v M. Gielow, Gery Ger1rd Giii, Joel A\le~111, Marl•I-GofUlltl, 0t,'i~~e. Jav • GorneY. Alaree Jo Gavell, Her~son EV9rtll c:¥•k7w0• James Oe~IO!I Grant, J1.... . Gr1n1h1m. J1'"" G11vli., Ct1renc:1· L. Grav, Ro1111ld Jona Greene, W1Hlam Elver Grtenll'lll~ Oavld Harold Gr•"°"· S,>,lrln Ann urovn, Stn>nen Pt!er GrOll3ch, E!llotl GrDSI' Vicki Ann Guu, Pele John Hadiey, D1n1 Mlcll1el Hall, Jamu Edwin HMllctv. Girt Robirt KIV tt1nclovl, Linda K1ve HIP- l>f!llnY, Edr1 Loulllt' Har141n, Oonlld RYll'I H1rrl1 Jr. LOili .-. '",•-._; Lynn KaY Hartm1n, Mld'IH .,.,. Hitch, R1nd1ll John H-. JMl'll!elle DICl!ev Hewitlnson .• , ··-·~ ~ Robi!rt Ctwirles "~ --Htl'lrY, Donni LN H OoNlld • "'lbV' A11nekt Ho!gaanl, •mn-'il"'• Ho w1, Mlfrv Ann H-.. v r Shau Howlev. Rkl!ard E1rl Huti.r•"'j·-W .. • ron LH Huttmen1 ... -• Hur!cn, Laure11Ce • lnoklldtl. awt1 Dov'* llt>fll1, Theodor11 C1rl 1--n. Pl!.ll Thom•• Jtlbert Stewn ,c",'•' Jonnsori, AllM.lr Steven JQnlll, ett D-111 Jone•, M1c11.e1 o . "'°'!"",~B E JOMS. Jll'lltl G11~"-I Michael HJrvtY Kati, • Ill kt<i!ler, Jo«lvn lrtne k n, Jo .A/In .Sproul Klrbr, B1rblr111w=lll k11lllll, AllrKI J. Kolo, Garf' R. Krani. Robo:!rl O•n't!! L•l!lrll. •~ ,._, oanl1I Jam~ L• F-'~'""' -.-vi ~nice Lamb, Ed91r Plll!O'! ll~ J r 11 L1Wrel\Ct t+omtr L1rton ), R-11 Wllll1m L1r10n, Ooftakl It.,. ~~ G«irllt M1c1'11fl LauAA~ ~.• L~. K"'ntlh Etrl a' fl•rblll J. L1p5'!1y, Clftlfl' AL ' Gle11n W!llltm 'Crt 'Jr .. Ehl Cf\1pln Lv111'1. RM •"':~i Thom•• 0out1111 -. Attl M&IMllll. W•vne Allen Mlltrt ""'J"" L. M11ont, L1rrv Ol-111 Ma trrr Morm1n MlnfOvt', JllMI ~oblll't M1r11'111!, J1mtf Ltoe ~~ ... ·:r°'!!! J.M Marlin, Shaf'O!I R"""' •• Mii ""'" Jamts Jowllfl M11l, LYl'llll L, ~'•l•-lt1CMrd ectwr11 /Ntt.91\Y, ..... rlt'l:lie ·~~fo~~~ralf=~ 1111n, JOiin ltobWt ~n. 1~1nor .tt~ M<N..,,.,,, SUMn ~~~~ Rt=n.°'E JitN?~:=~ Ch•= .,,~·":m , ~~ -·-t-=-· . " Ii!'.~~~ ~rw· ,.. • ~ K J • t ~l~~u j~/,.':,N.~.l. ~ ~; IHI, J~"r "*'• Sf· p.-,iJ rpvrl, .rll'l'ld J-II llfl, wrtnel lt..UI!, M II 0. ~~· ... , ltll'l'IUllO> I U It II ltlf'(I, ~..:.TW:'til~ ··-.._ ""'" --~-.. MlnMn ROCtlio::t ttletier4 fllohr, ~. .... .... """ "' ''" ~ MIOl't: lll!'Mli, OM -.1 ''"<j··~ w.,,. l'<..i,=t. i., lfhtrfl" ~ ... 10Tfl p, ~ -* on. ,, W1~.-. Sfllll"'t . P111 ~r:ne ~1r. ~lltvl L, -·l....~~ s..!t She~ ~. pttl 8'Uri0',;''~l(ler~" ~lle>ln 11Mr.i Sitoel, Grl!IOl'Y L. !:eflSen..C.rv llrent SlmondJ, s11nlev OMPI! ~un:y11$11:1, Do,..1d Btr,..nl lttl~ J flCllWllne M. Smith, .Mlctiael D!vldl Sl!lllll, Richan! Hlrt!MI Smllh1 w lllem H•rold Sonntnbert. Jiff LYall lor1nMn. Clinton W1li1t Stirk, Slu•rt W. Stitt, Lenn.rt J.oh1n Sl•vtr, MIN H"""'1 SI•-Ed,.. Alt!!:= Sllw•rl~ MlrY Jens Str_, R Justin H'eMOfl; Gm< .. T1lle1. . Fr1nkl1n TtfllPll, ROUMI RM Tlllll, 8111'V E\ltltl" Thill!•· Melvin Glt" Thom1i., M11'1l A !llort Thompson. Wll!l1m Robert T111k1Y. ' Stltllll Htlln Trkel", ~lvn JM..-111tt1 Tubbs, J1mn He111'1' TUillllt, MIC11HI 0. T11,,,tr. Ttrrv Mlcllaet Umland, John C. V1l1t"Rl11tr1,• Ror.rt R. Ven Drlmi. Kartn M•rlt V•" Llntll'n, Ron1ld Al••811de• VIII Y~r. J1m11 G1vlotd Voc:ke, GreaorY .. Lou11 Von Moftm..,., Tf\oml1 You"" Wilker, Ger1ld Thomlo1 ' W11ftl Jr., Joen Elltabelll Wlitl'I." "S'"1lfn l'QUIM W•Utr. Merftll Ann Wi ni. W~:•rw, ~oi,:~• SldWarwlc:, 1 r ~,I: Wtbll.,., Pll~llp JDsel>h ~~Joe, SUttnne ~:. w~~':nbe~.11~r.~.f1~r' :.~~ Wl\111. Mlct'llCI! LIWn!Mt Whltf111, JOI D. Wlban, R1mtl4I Ootintl W.,,., Sit~ D11t1 WO>WOcoll, PP~H ·LQM'tlne WOOdrldl. C1fflll -'-Y CollMn P11rlci1 Youno, G11«111 Pe 1111 Yult J• D1n1 Ptlnl! C11'll«ltll Anl\llMlll Flv1111, ltlY Edmund Kft<"IVll'l. • r:ounlll" Va11rr: R-ld R..,.mand Allonm. Tfl"rv Lft And>e<son, Ar ..... nd Ralph Rlcn1rd Bllede, JllMI Golden Bel\Kllcl 11. Ml•cll Elltm Clerk, 01\lld Allan Diii, Kenneth Fr1nr:l1 Folev, KeMelh Diii Htnlln. Ltt Harold Hunler, Wllll1m Rod...., Hyder, Allll Wadclell Lllldltg ... , Gllrv MlchMI Henry Ll"91er, Mk:llall Lo Cfcwu Jr., K1tllrvn Murray, 01111'11 P. O'Brl1n, Plllllp Sfe91\e" Otr!ly, Cvrll P. Reill..,, Marv SMndltr Rcse, JetftrV A11n Rosi, Robltrt Derrell Riiier, Richard Thomt1 Russell, Clark Alan fllulledvt, L!l\dl Oor1 Salaiar, 81rbara Ann TNUI, WIWl•m w •• ~ Waite Jt. HM!in-BNch• Ro.emarv Alex-11\ditr. Roben John Allen, Bruce C. AllderlOll, RONld Bruct Andr-1, Lynn A. Atl\old, Dive E. Alklnson,. Tlw:imlll AvdlHI', Thom11 G-111 Bak>ugh, Wlll!lfl'I Warren B1 nnl1ter, M•rtt11 Irene Birr.et!, James 8. Berry, 81rti.r1 K•!t Blddlt, Rover G. 81oefnek1, Patricia 8orrl!lflc, Krlts EdWard 8~tl. Jamn Jole'Ph BredY Ill, P1trkl1 Ann Brootis. o -1yne Ln1i. 11rown, Vlru111l1 c~nt~ld B"""'"' MldiHI COl'lf"ad Burti;enl\ltld, Den~I Mllllll'lllll Burris, Dortilnlck lrMmD C•-11 Jr,, David B11k1 C1rllorlo Ml~ R. Cllevt?; --- Ectward Loulo Clbbartln, KllhlMll CIMrw.tirr, Piii! Rola~d Cfou'lltr Jr:, Laguna High Brain Trust Gowned and capped as they will be at tbe Thursday graduation, the four top scholars of iaguna Beach High School are shown at recent awards 3.ssemlr Jy. From left to right are Robert Frost, Susan Brown, Craig Petersen and Jacques Jura. Miss ~wn, a straight A student for four years, is class valedictorian. Wtdn1sd.,, Jul'lt 12., 1968 D41L Y. ~ILOT 3S NOTICE ~~She •••'Y'-your .W ol1M< .. Ille -'°""cl look. 11 U N. MAIN ST. ' SANTA ANA IS CLOSED USE-OUR NEW SHOP AT . 74 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTEll AUW~uy· AT ANlHONY'S Coran• dtl Mir All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through 5aturday Introductory offer! Bandini Oxalis Control For est•blished dichondr• only. 25 ·lb. b•g covers 2,500 sq. It. Bandini PLUSH ... OIC..C<-9-• I> '-ftlll ... ·-.... _, _ ......... ~ .... ................. -..... . Ulfl• .. -· -· -~·· 6.95 Jry Bandini Plush for a healthier lawn Provides b•I· aneed feeding. f 0-6-4 lormul•, 50 lb. bag. 21 ~.~ 4,95 2.95 Ease your lawn cares with a 16" spreader Pennera~ 1611 lawn spreader has big 32 5 88 lb. capocity. • SPECIALS OF THE WEEK! Fuchsias brighten shady areas Brilli•nt noddin~ Jlowers in deep pinks, roils and 3 99c purples. Many v1rietios for available. 5" pot. 5 Inch Pots Radiant tropical Hibiscus plants Adapt•ble and vers•tilo. A f4vorit1 for southern C1lifomia gardens in tn· chanting colon. I g•I. 89c Split leaf philodendron for tropic~! b•ckground • 79c A wonderful plant for indoors or out. Glos•Y. grHn, dMply robocl leovos for • lush tropical look. I g1I. NEWPORT BEACH -FASHION ISLAND • I • • • • I L 38 DAILY PILOT Here's Job For Sm all Boat Man WASHINGTON CAP) Holding out the l~ of ad- venture plus attractive side benefits, the Navy is cam· paignlng for volunteers to command a growing fleet of combat river boat& in Viet-nam . Their asslgrunent: to stop the Viet Cong from infiltrat. ing men and supplies and otherwise waging war along Vietnam's extensive water- way system in the Mekong Delta. It's the opportunity to do what most sailors want to Wod0ffda1, June 12. 1968 do: command a ship. 9J y W"tL S L f To qualified enlisted men ears ' •• C••OO s of the petty-officer grades ~ the Navy offers the helm of , These eight retiring employes will e d 91 total istr~tor, eight years; Mrs. Florence Cooling, Span- $.58,000, 31 . f 0 0 t fiber glass years of service to Newport-Mesa Un ed School i.sh teacher, 12 years; H. Lee Kammeyer, fifth boats armed with machine District this month. Honored by fell employes grade teacher, 11 years; Miss Charlotte Skinner, guns. at a retirement program were {left to rig t) Louis kindergarten teacher, 15 years; Wilbur Bedford ~ A recent call for volUll-Ricketts, custodian, eight ye.ars; Mrs. Stella Fol-custodian, 10 years, and Mrs. MB:rtha Miller, first teers presented the assign-tin, art teacher, 11 years; Dr. Reuben Law, admin-grade teacher, 16 years. ment as "important, chal---'------'--'--------------'------------------- I e n g i n g and rewarding duty." As one officer comment- ed : "For a Navy man it is a r~ e~pGieiice of iight· ing ~enemy eyeball to eyeball, pqt from a big ship standing\oti)hore." A recent avy Medal ol Honor win , he noted, was a boatswain's mate ' running a river boat who disCovered a nest of hidden Viet Cong boats and sam- pans and shot up 60 in a blazing, three·hour battle. ~ river boats a.ni part of a mobile water force •which began in late 1966 ·conducting what amounted to the Navy's first river 'warfare operations since the Civil Wai. They work •closely with South Vietnam· !ese naval units. • The Navy said it wants "highly motivated. mature pelity officers witb proven strong leadership qualities and a high degree of moral courage," p I us six years Navy experience, for the special duty. In addition to plenty of action the Navy promises extra combat pay, total ex- emption of all wages from income taxes, Vietnam dee· orations and 10 percent in- terest on savings deposits, among extxa benefits. Follow John, Robert Will Edward Take Up Kennedy Torch WASHINGTON (AP) -him rise lo his new role ..,_ smile and an easy manner Still ro young to have come comforting the widow, deliv-that reinforced the magic of so far, to have grieved so eringamovingtributetohis his name and made victory much , Edward M. Kennedy brother, greeting the crowds seem easy. stands alone -the last of that gathered along the "The best politician in the the Kennedy brothers. route of the funeral train -family," brother John called Six years in w h i c h many wondered when and him. triumph and tragedy have how he would take . up the When Corigress convened followed one another in ter-quest. in January 1963, the Ken- ribly swift succession have Young Teddy Kenne"dy, nedy brothers could claim thrust him •at 36 into the handsome youth in a unprecedented achievement leadership of a fa b 1 e d-hurry to join his brothers in in American politics. political family. Washington, is gone forever. · John was President , Robert was attorney general, Edward was a senator. The oldest brother, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., had been the one the family thought most " likely to succeett in politics. But he was killed in World War It. So John took up the quest. (See KENNEDY, Page 37) I\ family with a quest that It was March 1962. Teddy by its logic he must take up. had just turned 3 O. MAY WE SERVE YOU? Hi.t brother John was a minimum age for U.S. senator from Mas_sa~husetts senators. The youngest of when he expressed it: the three surviving sons of "Just as I went into financier Joseph P. Kennedy politics because Joe died, if announced his Senate can- anything happened to me didacy. tomorrow, my brother. Bob--"If your name was simply by, would run for Jf.IY seat in Edward Moore ,•' his the Senate and 1f Bobby primary election opponent died, Teddy would take over taunted, "instead of Edward for h_im." . Moore Kennedy, your can- So 1t was that while many didacy would be a joke." still mourned Robert, .eyes and thoughts turned to GLOR IOUS SMILE Edward. But his name was Ken- While the nation watched nedy. And he had a glorious The GOLDEN BLADE BARBERS MEN'S HAIR CUTTING • STYLING SHOE SHINES FOR AP'g!.':.:MENT 644-9802 72 FASHION ISLAND -NIWPOllT CINTll BETWEEN 11.0BINSON'S I. PENNEY'S IKln111 In. P1rlr.ln111 Lor. 12 DELICIOUS FLAVORS • Sets from our Coup d'etat Collection: Emerald cut, $575. Marquise, $750. The Bold and Beautituls: Brilliant set, $620. Matching wedding band, $30. Pear1haped set, $495. The "In" Set l ook: Three diamond set, $300. Ten diamond set, $500. ~ ... , AntiqultieS·black color on 14 karat gold: Flower set. $275. Tradtllonal look, $225. These are twelve of our many flavo rs in wedding sets. And they run the gamut, from Bold and Beautiful to the demure, Fair Lady Th ey all have one thing in common, however. Each Is fully cov ered by our diamond guarantee. SLAYICK'S d~SINCE 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH . . --· -------- . Auditions-Set Monday for Two Op eras Robert E. Willis of 2651 Crestview Dr., Newport Beach, has ~ived an As- sociate in Applied Arts deg- ree from the Rochester In- stitute of Technology, New York. The degree was from the school of photographic arts and sciences. 1 elegance . 1n fash ion NUMBER ELEVEN FASHION ISLAND 644-2252 MAKE A HIT WITH • • • BOTANY 500 SUITS from '7995 GJ~r-~-:B:O:TA~NcY:::::::'.~~ ·WRAPPE[ SP 500 FREE . ORT COATS OF $ CHARG from 5500 BOTANY SOO • SPORTSLAJ(" $J895 e M_..... Cltort-e Dlnen Cl•ll> • • Wll'O"T a •ACM , • Carte llo11the e Ameflton b,,.. FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER 6+1·2875 SAVE 5200 ros300 OVER COMPARABLE ORGANS! THOMAS ORCiANS • More Fun • More Features! More Organ for the Whole Family THOMAS ORGANS START AT JUSTS529 .---FREE -~ * Pri vate LfflOnt * Music * Dollvo ry . ... FASHION SQ\JARE 2'00 N. Me in St., Sant• Ana Kl 7·5971 l(ENNEDY .• (Contlnaed from Pqe •> An unbroken ncce1sion of election vlctorles carrled bi.Jll to the pce1ldencey. Then in Dallu in November 1963, he WAI 1hot and killed by an assassin. ___ .. ___ -.,----<:> " ""' ._.._.~~~-----~-- SC Seeks College .Graduates So Robert took up the Tbe U n I v e rs I t y or quest. He moved to New Southern Callfornia Js 1eek· York and won a Senate seat. lng college graduates 'I> This year he souaht the enter a salaried·whlle-you- presidency. Then in Los learn teacher education pro· Angeles, after a moment or gram. triumph in the California The program includes ex- prJ.m~y. Ro~rt was shot perjence as a part-time and killed by an assassin. teacher as!istant at a salary TH1NK ALIKE of $1,500 to $2,000 per school year. 11' the close-knit Kennedy The duties of the teacher family it was natural far the assistant perforined under three brothers to think .alike the direction of a· teacher, j I-will be preparatory, sup-on ma or ssues. portive and c l:e 11 I ca I . Alike they· were in many Individual tutoring, small ways. But not all. group instruction, and other John Kennedy was the duties may also be assigned. bookish brother. A graceful, Candidates for the pro. eloquent man, be was, gram should have senior nevertheless, r e s er v e d , standing or h a v e a aloof with strangers. . / bachelor's degree from an Wedntsdi)', June 12,' 1~68 WE.WOULD RATME·R. MISSA SALE ... ~ ••• than mis-fit your baby's feet. Poorly fitted ha.by shoes can ,cause young feet to develop serious growth P!Oblems. That's why we take the greatest care to make sure these fine quality Buster Brown shoes will fit your baby-exactly. DAIL V PILOT 37 BUSIER BROWN. ~obby waa the moody, in· S ' y · accredited institution. The tense btother. W h'e I her tart ettl fH,1119 program will qualify can· . ~ n Si'l seekiD"' evidence as counsel didates for the standard r6 .~ Ow 2 ore' tor a Senate committee or ·The Orange Coast College summer swim program will begin Saturday and run elementary or secondary ewfvtOIUO!ln'll_,. . " mana•lng one of John's 1 credentials. 'Jr:~ ~ s. y " in two-week sessions through Aug. 9. Special toddler classes wil be held, as Furth · 1 u· campaigns, Bobby operated er in orma on may O el'l!e O well as classes for all abilities, from becrinner to advanced. Recreati.'onal be obtained by contacting U with an intensity many call· t1~ ed ruthlesmess. He was the swimming will be held each day also from 2:3<M:30 p.m. Instructor Georgia Dr. Donald Wilson, director, most controversial, the least ·teacher education at room 30 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH liked of the brothers. McClellan, left, of Newport Beach, helps Mary Dale. 4. of Newport, learn to 1001 , Waite Phillips Hall, Teddy wu the likeable kick. Giiia Dale of Newport tries to coax Guy Jacobs of Costa Mesa into the University of So u t be r n brother. No one ever called water. California, Los Angeles!'==============================' Teddy ruthless. Less elo-----------_____________________ _::90007~::_· --------'=============================:::: quent than John, less moody than Bobby, tall, handsome Teddy is easy to like. ENTERED SENATE If tragedy has shaped Edward Kenn.edy, so too did the moment of triumph when he took his Senate . seat in January 1963. Aware of the dangers of being tagged as "the one Kennedy too m·-a.n y,'' Edward told · newsmen he planned to ·stay out of the limelight. Ted studied ·his new job. He saw newsmen only for · home state newspapers and turned down chancts for n·a· tional television exposure. He sought out the Senate elders mo.ifly Southerners to whom the K e n n e d y s , particularly Robert .• wer~ an.athema .. He listened to their adVlce and, ·above all, obeyed a • pri:ine r u 1 e for freshman • senators: he kept qui.et. So the Senate·elders learn· ed ·.-, h a t Massachusetts voters knew: This . indeed was the likeable Ken~edy . The assassin~tion o f President Kennedy-· w a s shattering to Robert Ken- nedy, He was haunted by its 1 memory. I WORKED BRIEFL y I Edward responded dif· : ferently. On the Monday morning ot the President's . funeral, Edward worked briefly at his Senate office. "I felt this was where be would have expected me to be," he later said. It was March 1964, more than a year after be entered the Senate, before Edward gave his first major Senate speech, a moving, plea for I the civil rights bill President Kennedy had proposed. Edward Kennedy has not escaped violence. On a June night in 1964 he was aboard a privat2 plaoe that crashed in Massachusetts. He suffered a broken back that immobilized him in a hospital for six months. But running for re-election for a full six-year term that November offered few pro- blems. Ris family, including his pretty blonde wile , Jean, waged a campaign that swa mped his Republican op· ponent by more than one million votes, a new state record. ' ATTENDED SESSION The next January, with the aide of a back brace and a cane, Edward Kennedy at· tended the opening senate session. Robert took office that day as the junior senator from New York. Like John Kennedy before him, Robert was impatient with the Senate tl"adition9 Edward had learned to ac · cept. Edward wa.i.ted more than a year to make his first ma- jor speech. Robert was hardly setUed in bis seat when pe began speaking out on issues. Edward quietly deferred to Senate elden. Robert clashed heatedly with com· mi.ttee chairmen. Meanwhile, E d w a r d , reaching another milestone led an effort for legislation banning poll taxes. Despite opposition from the White 'House and the S e n at e ·1eader1bip, It came within four votes of pa11aa:e. Edward Kennedy h a d matured, in the eyes of IVs colleagues who admired the way he bad mastered all details of the Jea:tslaUon as well a! the way he worked 1 quietly to muster suRJ)Ort. • Claremont Graduates 3 Counti.ans Three Orange Co u n t y students have rec e i v e d bachelor of arts degree& from Claremont M e n ' s College. 1 Steven R. Boyd, history I major, of 280 E. Wilson St. j graduated Cum Laude. He had been on the dean's list. He wrote. an honor.~ thesis entitled, "The AmeriCan Whig Party: Politics and Political Philosophy." - was a member of the Forensics and History clubs , and plans to attend the University of WisconS:in Graduate &::bool. Also from Costa Mesa was Michael E. Morrill, 218 E. 18th St:, an ·o~tober graduate. •· Morrill wa5 -an..-assistant solar observer and research l assistant for Dr. Harold Zirim at Mt. Wilson Observatory. Tbe physics major plans to continue with graduate studies in astrophysics. Also graduating with a bachelor of arts was Jack L, Schoellerman of 1818 san- tiago Dr:, Newport Beach. He had been on the dean':i list and was chairman of the Newman Club. He was also · a member of the Business.Club and board member of the Conference on Religion. The political science major plans to at- tend La.w school at the University of San Diego. 1 Over 75 percent of the graduating class has been named to the dean's list at least one semester, ac· cording to Claremont College sources. . Buffet Set For Wallace George Wallace for presi·1 dent supporten will hold a buffet dinner and dance at : the Moose Lodge, 1731 s. Manchester, An ah e i m , Saturday, according to· Helen Odom, Oranie Comify chairman of the Wallace campaign. The affair, which wW ' begin at 7:30 p.m. will feature a film, ' • T h e California Story" which was filmed during the registra- tion drive which c101ed in January. Tickets of $2.50 per per1on may be obtained at the Wallace headquarters at 2101 A West Chapman,· Orange. Funds will co towards costs of the Wallace ralUes planned !or early July ID Orange and Los Angeles counties, Mrs. Odom said. Pair Graduate ' At Princeton Two atudents· from the I Oruge qoyt "ll'ea bave received MOhelor al. aria degree• I r o m Princeton UnlYeTllty. Graduates are Rk:hard Scott, UO, Collins Ave., Balboa bland;· and Pet.r Campbell Gardett, H6 CUU Drive, Laruna Beach. ·mco - Q SPACE STATION & SPACE CRAWLER DELUXE ACTION SET THREE ACTION TOYS '" Oltf! Space Station, Space Crawl· er, Major MATI MASON . in· eluded! ONLY $9 99 MAml'S N!WEST nEM DR. DOOLITILES TALKING DOU. FrcNn tht currtnl motion plcturt & boolt serits. Yas! EHry boy 6.99 and 1itl will want Ollt ONLY ~MOST r JUCI ~ · Skediddle Kiddle 4·1rich doll walks, runt and even sltl. Mead turns, arms a-nd legs move, Walker c•n be removed for aepar•te play. t3.!IO valut cnly 1.97 BARBIE® & FRANCIE® DOLL TRUNK SUPER THINGMAKER® lb. w. ,..,. 111 .... ,1 .... Mt! PICADOOS ltm ), fRl6HT fACTOaY H4 ~ ..,.,., e M1•1 hundr1d1 of pl11tic thin91 1n·d d1cor1tion1! e lnclude1 I boHl11 of 9e11uin1 •"'Rt-';'' PLAST!i.~OOP@, mold1 end 9 99 1ece11or111! • • KIDDIE KOLOGNES 1'111 ROSllUDI I 1-'1 ,.,t.me •Wfft f••t 1111• "" ...... 1 e Only 1" tell! Rooted hair! e Ta•• her out lo pt1y~l11r plaific d1c1nler op•nil e Flower co1fume malc~•1 p•riona!ityJ GENTLE BEN ANIMAL HUNT GAME c.iert.1 •-1 .... ef 1e...,..ttt.1 "u1I 1.17 e Hunt for GENTLE IEN ind h1 l fti,.,11 fri1nd1 I e l-D plestic 911r11 boa ,d l e jle1l.actioft p•rh that move! 2.76 M-16 Marauder Needs no Iott.ti .. Leoti1 N•I, MH.t"ilh ,..1. H hKftM '9ft9, ..... fte ll'•f. .. ,, .. ., .. ... ll:••·Tot-T•tl •10 .••. 00 4.97 Talking Drowsy· IT. llATTtL Says 11 different sleepy time phrases -15\l'' 1111. P or f tc t bedtimo 3 97 p1.,,,,.1.. • ... $1.111 ,.... • 4-DAY MATTEL-0-RAMA GIANT MATTEL TOY SALE -111H'CES EFF£CTIVE ;JUNE-13 to JUNE 17 Lucky Locket" Kiddies MATT•·s • Only Z" 1111! e "Jeweled" locktl frame!• Real ROGted hair! • LOYt· ''8ersoMllty! •Wear is 1 locket! 1 17 • pen Mid pl•r Stparatelyl e Liffie Kiddies All atylu to chcoM from. 31 friche1 Ull, beridable, po1eable, comb and l 57 bru.n he r hair! only • MATTEL TOY SALE Lowest Prices Anywhere TWIST 'N TURN BARBIE DOLL ................. -.. 2.47 MATTEL RJDE-AWAY ........ ·-·-······· ............. -···---6.99 TUTTI DOLL ........... ·······-········ ............................ 1.67 FLEXI . PETS -....... . . .................................................... 2.47 TALKING HAND PUPPETS ·····---.. "····-······-·· 2.99 TWIST 'N TURN FRANCIE DOLL ·······-········· 2.47 SKIPPER • SCOTTER DOLL .............. _.-... -..... 1.17 MATT MASON with MOON SUIT -............... 2.99 MATT MASON SPACE CASE ........................... 2.99 COMBAT MARANDER ............................. _.. I .99 MATT MASON GAME ........ ·-··-·······-·-···-····2.76 BARBIE GAME ................................................................. 2.76 BABY SMILE 'N FROWN .................................... 3.99 24 CAR CASE ....... • • ~ SAVE UP TO .............................................. -.... 1.47 50 SEE 'N SAY GAMES by MAmL ThlnCJmaker FUN MOt.DS IY "MA nil" • ~. Mattel-0-Phonee I Talk • 18 minutes of 2-way taHl wftl 40 friends! •Voices come from re ceiver-llke a real phone! • s· discs included! .... $10 , .... Tight Squeeze Tllt Slwgl1 Str•~I• Fr•llllc Aliltlc a.. r., Mltt•I! • WiJllin algglin' action pme fOJ llttle kids! 811 kids tool •Great 2.9.7 . parly ide1! • Btlts, spinner, ift. slruclioM! Incredible Edibles'" Sup,leu! • Make wild goofy thinp lo eat! • frightfully delicious! • lllotds and yummy GOBBLE·DEGOOf' 6 76 included! Res. $14 VII• , T·HINGMAKER® C:C:~:ir:::J FEATURiNG PICADOOS .. e Form colorful 1qu1r11 of fi11l1htd pl11tic 1tf with 9111ui11e PLASTIGOOP®! e Put, PICA.COOS 011 pur1•1, wtll1t1 pictur11, •~1rythin9J e Eight bot1l11 91nu i111 PLASJIGOOP, 1cc111ori11 includ1d! JEWELRY KIDDIES HEART PIN AND FLOWER PIN KIDDLE$ e The finie1t KIOOLES of 111 lnsid• rail i1w1lry you can w11tl •.KIDDLE doU1 onlf 7/t" ind I l/J&• fill pop out for 11p1r•f• pity! e Sefety c1lch pin! 99 Mitch•.• .•ny outfit! C THE TALKING LEARNING MACHINE FEATURING TALKING TILES F.11 te ,,i.,..._tu11 te '""'I e <fll 1011nd frack1 of nouns, v1rb1, 1dj1clives, colors, numbers, rl'u11ic- •11d sounds! • Seys words and nu'"h1t1, n''"'' color1! • Pl1y1 mu1ic, 1p1ak1 Eft91i1h, 19'' French and Sp1ni1hl THINGMAKER® fi""'T""!1'""'11--;J FEATURING MINI -DRAGONS e Mold comic1I er11tur11 in hul'ldt1d1 of 1hapei ind 1i111! e Wear 'e'" en b1lt1, 1hith end bl11u111! • Fout bottl1s 91nuin1 PLASTIGOOP@, acce11orie1 included! MATIEL DOLL CLOTHES SALE BARBIE FRANCIE CRIS TUTTI SCOOTER -CASEY IUY ONE OUT ·FIT • • • GET ANOTHER OF Eti)UAL VAWE FREE e '"'" Flowe,.. e Crtepy Craw .. ,.. e Cre19lt Peopi. e Frltht factory e "l1htln1 Meri. !llleg. •1•.00 6 76 V•lu1. Ytur CholOI • ~===-___, I • • I I . .. . \ ~ .... --· --··-. --. -------·---· • ·' DAU .Y PROT EDITOIDAI. P AGE Once Made, Accept It State Highway Commission members have called a public hearing on the Huntington Beach Freeway for July 26 al Huntington Beach High School. It could be the finaJ hearing after more than rour years of study on the north·south freeway lines. Trouble is that everyone wants his own favorite route adopted. They find it hard to accept as final any decision that is otherwise. Line possibilities include the "Green·Red" and "Green·Dashed Green-Red" line on the west side of Golden West Street .in Huntington Beach, the central ''Red" line in Huntington Beach, Westminster, Garden Grove and Stanton, and the eastern "Orange" line east of Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Garden Grove, Westminster. Organized homeowners are opposing adoption of the Orange Line which has been recommended to the commission for adoption by the state highway engi· neers. · Fountain Valley and Garden Grove also actively oppose the Orange Line. Huntington Beach councilmen have refused to oppose the line; they simply favor a "western Jine." Westminster and Stanton are backing the Orange Line and although the county supervisors have not tak- en a 1tand on a line for. the freeway, the county road department is believed to favor the Orange Line. "Early adoption" of a line has been the position of nearly every city involved in route selection and of the super'visors. Most agree that in the interest of getting along with the planning of future development a decis· ion is needed as soon as possible. The commission is offering another opportunity for all the facts and opinions to be presented. More than 100 meetings have been held in the past including two major public hearings. This time the bearing is by those who will ultimately make the decision. Presumably alter the material ls presented and the 30-day period for acceptance of addi6ollll lnlonna· tion ended, commJssloners will decide on a route based on the facts and opinion. Once tlle decision is made, it should be accepted by all concerned in the interest of getting the freeway built and lessening the jam of cars each Gay on Beach Boulevard. Locating the Civic Center . Residents of Huntington Beach next month likely will ha~e an opportunity to tell the Ci ty CQuncil just where. they think the proposed new civic center should be localed. C~uncilmen have narrowed the choices to two: on the s1te of the present center at 5th Street and Pecan A venue at the northern edge of the old downtown com- mercial area, and the second across Main Street from Huntington Beach High School. A re~olution of intent to adopt a site should be forthcorrung Monday from the council. Along with it should come notice of a public bearing at the earliest possible date. Residents of the old downtown have -indicated strong feelings about keeping the center there. Resi, dents of other parts of the city may consider both sides as "too downtown." . ~t a ny rate, this is an issue which appears to be pohµcal and before the council acts it should have the feelings of a cross section of the · community on the issue. ~ouncilmen ~an do a better job if the citizens take the time to advise the council where the community wants the civic center located. ·' . . -·---~·"- H School Driver 'Education' Dear Gloomy Gu s: 'We Should Read l!.S. and World History' Is a Waste Several years ago I was battered from attacks all over the country when I ventured to suggest that the "driver education" programs in the nation's high schools were most likely a waste of time. money and energy. Now, a traffic safety Committee named by former Sec. John W. Gardner of the U.S. Health, Education and Welfare Department reported last month that there is "no certainty and much doubt" that the multimillion· dollar investment in driver education actually makes better tee n · a g e drivers. AFTER MANY YEARS of a widespread program (more than 1.5 million 1tudents took school driver training courses last year a1one), there is no clear evidence that driver education "bas significant favorable effect upon driver a l l i t u d e s , perlormance or other achievements," the report said. A continuation of the present program would ''squander vast public sums" Sal the pr"Oci!ss, the committee warned. There is an even more important point involved. Why should a high school teach young people how to drive, which is a pW'ely private skill, having no relationship to education, and diverting public funds fxom the real task of educating boys and girls as human beings? THE WHOLE IDEA ol ·compuisory mass public education in America - and it was a fine and revolutionary Idea when it w~ conceived -was to raise. everyone to the intellectuaJ and cultural level of the founders of our nation, so that seJf.government was as Unjustifiable homicide and vio- lence is a national disgrace whether it is committed in the Ambassador Hotel or on the streets of Saigon. -G. K. Tllk •••lllll<e rltffllCfS r1u.ra• vflWI, ~ti fle<l "'11rH' t11eoJi1 et Ille .....,.,...... St ... 'l'tll' HI ,_v. tt OllNftlJ Ova. O•llr l"lllf, broadly based as ))ClM.Jble . An ignorant people obviously cannot govern themselves intelligently. But, more and more, we have drifted away from our initial idea. Our prime purpose is no longer to turn nut. informed and reasonable citizens, but to instruct in viarioos vocational and manual 111cills. Proficiency Jn sports and the ability to earn a living seem to have become the prime goals of our modern school system. A DUMMY WHO drives a car well is still a dummy. Learning how lo drive a car, like learning how to dance or hit a ball or make fudge or fix a bicycle. is something that should be learned at home , not at school. And the more time the school devotes to these marginal matters, the more dummies it will continue to turn out. It is true that poor driving kills peo· pie . But poor thinking kills even more people -in riots, wars, social revolu· tions, and a ssorted ma s s ir· rationalities. The schools are charged with the task of turning out people who can drive their own minds and steer their own pas6ions. Any time taken away from this prime task increases civilization's chances of spinning right off the precipice or fate. A Pro-Red's Black Plot WASHINGTON -Immjgration and custom authorities have been alerted that U.S. Negro expatriate Robert Williams is preparing to try to sneak back into the U.S. A fugitive from federal justice. the pro-Red Williams mysteriously turned up last month in Dar es Salaam. the capital of Tanganyika, after living in ex.ile in Cuba .and China for the past seven years. Informants among black militants in Detroit have warned 1 e d er a I authorities that Williams is due to return to that area before July to take over leadenihiJ of a new underground movement pl&Ulning to set up an all· black nation witlnn the U.S. Guest of the antl·American govern- ment of Tanganyika, the 43·year~Jd Williams l'las been in contact with Stokely Carmichael. the pro-Castro mWt.ant. through U11!1 Tanganyika em· bls1y here. A LT B 0 IJ G If THEIR secrtt messages are relayed under lhe tftb&elt security precautions, it can be .ot'Ul'ately reported that the recent uchangi!s dealt with Williams' pro· poaed return and the g r o w I n g pulblHty ol violent protest.I here. Cmmic.hael, now organliin@: militant )'GUt.b pne• In the capital under the e;iu of Ju.tlce Department offJcillJ, baa been urelne Wllllams to ,.tum ror whit he descrlbet .tJ "the hot, hot. 1ummer.'' Since aniving In T a n g 1 n y J k a , Wllllam1 hu kept quiet and oot ti/ tho pubU c ey1 -ualli:e bis steady stream • ol anti·U.S. broadcasts from China and Cuba. The militant Negro's closest com· panion has been Sheik Abdul Rahman Mohammed Babu, Tanzanian minister of lands, settlement and water development. The two men met while both were in Peking. UNDER TUF. NEW Williams:Babu plan. Negro militants are being en· couraged to travel to Tanzania, where they will be trained in guerrilla warfare before returning to America. Williams, who i.oi wanted on a kid - naping charge, was chosen 11. a Maret\ 31 meeting of Negro rnlU tants in Detroit l(l lead the proposed new black nation.- Mjlton R. J~enry_ Chairman of the radical Malcolm X Society, in openin~ the conference read 11 telegram from Williams as follows ! ''Yoo stand under world spotlight in corridors of history. Make tne most ()f it. Through wisdom. u 11 i t y , pers1:verance and &acrifice, the seeds O{ the Detroit convention can mature to black nationhood. Ha.ii the invincible spirit of our emerging blick . .natton." Conference delesates, numbering about 200, drafted a declaration of In· dependence from die U.S. and a con· rtltution for their teparate nation, to be tet up ln five statea of the south. P1ul Stolt I The 'Have Nots'· vs. the Let~rs ~o the editor concerning the assassination of Robert 1''. Kennedy and related matters have been re· ceivect, i11 such volume that an entire page in the DAILY PILOT tomorrou1 Thursday. will be devoted to thei~ publication. -Editor To the Editor: Th.e dir~ction in which our society is moving disturbs many who believe in our past form of "government by the people, .and for the people." Those who des~re increased taxes for education, social security, medicare, welfare and o~her handout programs have lost s ~ght or our tota~ history and the prin· c1ples upon which our republic wa!I: rounded and .has grown to its present stature. By taking from those who earn m ore and giving to those who earn le ss (or none at aU } is to defeat free en· terprise. Granted, there ia no simple solution to these problems however legislated evening o1 the spr~ad of our wealth is against all that our founding ~athers stood for. My type of thinking 1s outdated and will draw trite but ac· cepted reb'uttal from many of your readers: however. T feel that the motivation is hidden behind their words. THOSE WHO HAVE not always ra- tionalize why those who have should share. It would be grand. indeed. if all could have everything. It would soon be found that competition would cease, incentive would die and progress come to a standstill. Cannot the "do· gooders" in our society see that to take from those who have is as classic an example of discrimination as can be found~ It seems to be acceptable to discriminate against those who have as Jong as those who have not J?ain thereby. Generosity should result ffom a willingness to assist. not from legislati on. ' TO ELIMINATE poverty will reduce the entire nation to a state of poverty. Who then will have gained? To assist the poor at great expense to the tax· payer only to have riots and destruc· tion of the taxpayers· property at the hands of those toward whom the help is directed is a paradox to say the least. It all reminds me of the Russian Revo lution wherein the oppressed overthrew the capitalists for want of the opportunity to better themselves only lo end up with a more sophisticated system of oppression. Or it could be compared with the ul timate goal or unionism wherein the B11 George---. Dear George: I let my neighbor go in my garage once to borrow my pliers and now he goes in whenever he feels like it and borrows my tools and power mower without ask· Ing. Recently ht was having a party and ran out of Vermouth. I was in the shower and told him to get a cupful from the kitchen. Now he helps himse-lf without asking -to anything in my home bar. What can I do about a guy like this? f'URIOIJS Dear Furious: First. send your wift to live with her mother ... CON FIDENTIAL TO EAT'IJM'UP. INC.: Yes, I think a candy bar with an edible wra~ per la a good idea. but I doa't think you rully ahould ask Lady Bird to endorse ft ln her anti·lti · ter eampaign. RepubUcans eat candy, too, you know. Letters from reader! are welcome. Normally writers should convey their "!essages in 300 word.! or less. The •nght to conderue letters to fit space or eliminate libel i3 reserved. All let- ters mmt include signature and mail· ing address, but names will be with· held on request. working man shares equally in the profits of his employer. I! this ever becom_es the case and the employer feels 1t not w o r t h the risk of his capita I. thereby closing his business and p~lting au workers out of a job, who will have profited? IT IS TIME to consider the rights or those above as well as those below, The 11tudents, the soldier11, the youth of past yearl!I are thol!le nasty old con· servatives of today who "do not underatand" the problems of youth. students and soldiers of today. No credence is given to the fact that the older generation has suffered the same experiences and. has that prac· Ucal knowledge to draw upon. I feel that we should read our history and that of the rest o! the world and draw from the lessons of the past prior to thinking that to change everything will result in im- provement for all .. R. WHITE Boba Chl4'a Surfing To the Editor; I would like to comment on the views expressed by D. A. S. in ''Gloomy Gus'' Friday, June 7. The question was asked, "Since the best surfing begins at sunrise, why is it that Bolsa Chica has to remain clos· ed and chained up until the ranger comes to work at 9 a.m.?" Surfing is a well recognized and popular sport in this area and Bolsa Chica State Beach is one of the most popular surfing spots. In recognition of this popularity. the Department of Parks and Recreation has established regulations that permit surfing all day and every day on the southerly one and one·half miles or Bolsa Chica. The department has also established the open hours for this state beach at 6 a .m. to midnight. Free parking is a vailable along both sides of Pacific Coast llighway adjacent to this surfing area and is used by many thousands of surfers. IN OCTOBER, 1967, a 480-car park- ing lot wa s opened a t Bolsa Chica. This lot is at the northerly end of the t>eac h, an area used by sunbathers and swimmers. Surfing is not permitted during the summer season in this swimming area because of lhe in· co.mpatibility of the two activities. Open hours for this parking lot have bee.n established at 9 a .m, to midnight during the summer because the non· surfing visitor doesn't normally come to the beach any earlier and we can thus save a few tax dollars with the later opening. Please be assur!!CI that the Oepar1· ment of Parks and Recre&tion Is responsive to loca l recreabonnl needs and will do everything within il! power to lnsure the best recreational ell:· perience for all visitors I o tht CaUfornla Stlte Park System. CURTIS B. MITCHEU, Area Manager Sat>lor: .ftozor Strap To the Editor: A lrlend of mhle ii the secretary of an important executite in the city of Chicago. A few years ago she left her job, walked through a park, took a short bus ride . , . and was home. Now, her husband comes for her with a cab! She <klesn 't dare walk through the park! Come sundown , no woman dar98 to walk through Central Park in New York City. Why? All because Mr. Gillette in· vented the safety razor! UNTIL THIS horrible thing hap· pened, men removed. the hair from their faces with the straight-edged razor. To maintain one of these tools so that it would remove hair from the face of America, required a razor strap. The razor strap had , in my youth. a secondary duty. In combination with the woodshed· It, combined with the strong right arm of an adult male, to bring understanding to a not.yet adult male. I can recall more than one of these "layings-p,n-of·the·strap" (not one of which can I say I did not have coming!). AS I RECALL, there were two of them . One at school and the second one at home! If I could get the financial backing of some fathers (wilh strong right arms, of course) I should be most hap· py to form The Save America Razor Strap Co. (The company would be hap- py lo supply. al no charge, our product to school teachers who have to face dirty-shirted, mini-skirted youth of to- day.) Mr. Gillette. I am sure, is turning over in his grave. He didn't mean it that way! HUME SEYMOUR Walking Horse Cruelt11 To the Editor: I write to appeal to animal lovers and to those who deplore cruelty to animals lo work for passage of State Assembly Bill l812 (introduced by Assemblyman Frank J . Bear of Sa n Diego) which would out~aw the "sor· ing" of Tennessee Walking Horses. To produce a special type of gait in some show horses, "soring" methods are used. Three common ones are ap- plication of oil of mustard on or under the sensitive areas or the horse's hoof, producing severe blistering and ir - ritation. chains tied tQ the feet after oil of mustard has been rubbed on the area. and, a horseshoe nail driven into the qu.ick of the front feet. TO AVOID THE extreme pain then caused by putting his full body weight on his front legs, the horse mu st bring his rear feet forward to maintain balance, thus cau9ing him to overstride when in motion. Too long, these tortured horses have been pleasing horse show judges. The tl me is long overdue for con· cerned Californians to take steps to Medica·re Espanoht, N.M .. Rln Grande Sun: "W-hen the American Medtc.al AS..90Cil· tion opposed medicare so vehemently.~ one of the group'!! arguments was that the plan represented ultimate goyern. m~nt control over Ille medical pro- fession. Now we read whert the Senate hag been peUtloned to put 'federal celllngs on the fees doctors charge for treating me<Ucare a.nd mWicaid bcneflcLatiea.' ~ AMA fears perhaps are being ~a.l11ed .· It may take some time, but the govern- ment someday could be telllna: doc· tors what they c1.n char1e. ·• 'Haves'· stop this deliberate cruelty. Please write to yoW' state senablr and assemblyman, in care of the State Capitol, Sacramento, California 95814, asking them to support and to work for passage of the Bear Bill, A. B. 1812 to outlaw this inexcusable practice. DORIS VA!i BRUNT Refusal to Learn To the Editor: You published a very terse letter (Mailbox, June 6) from Mrs. Robert Werkheiser in which she deplored the fact that a Soviet Life magazine is being offered. to American families. This letter, though sh1>rt, contained so1:11e emotionalizing about Russians bemg anU·God and communistic. She also leaves one point a bit unclear when she asks, "Where do they get names and addresses of American families?" She neglects to make cJe.ar who "they" refer to. For Mrs. Werkheiser1s information there are beautiful and informativ~ publications available to AmericMs who care enough to remove their horse-blinders and try to learn what Soviet tile is like today when some at. tempts should be made toward in- ~ernational understanding. Soviet Lift 1s an example of such a publication. A REFUSAL lo learn or understand about Soviet life only increases the gap that unfortunately exists today between our country and Russia. '·Russians do not. have horns " sta_tes the Citizen Exchange Corp1s, which hosts Russiallt'i in American homes and sends Americans to Russia. ~II Russians are not anti-God. All Russians are not Communists. For the record , I am not a Com· muni st, bu~ I fee.I that a littJe reading about Soviet Life, or traveling in Russia or talking to people who have traveled there, might enlighten .a lot o{ people. To rephrase a frequently used quote Better READ than dead . ' LOGAN M. LOCKABEY One ~lore R e ason To the Editor: Your editorial (June 6) regarding the reasons for Kuchel's defeat left out a most important one. in my opinion. Regardless of the pol i tician'• political philosophy. he must pay som e attention to the wishes of the majority It seemed to me that KucbeJ respond: ed to the press and pressure groups and the majority be damned. Th i s may not seem important to 8 paper th~t consistently represents the ~unority opinion. in Orange CouMy but 1l ~as my m&Jn reason for voting ag.a1nst Senator Kuchel. M. TINSLEY --WWW- Wednesday, .lune 12. 1968 T~e editorial page of the Daily Pilot seek_, to inform and stim. ulatt rtodtts by presenting thU ntwspoptr's opiniOTU and com- men~ry t;m topica of intttest and ngnif1conce, bit providing 11 forum for the ezpres,,lon of our rt~rs• opi?llon.s, and bv pr~sentino tht divtrse vie10o points of informed observers and •?Oktsmtn on topiCJ of the day. Robe.rt N. Weed, Publis.he:r • • • Wtd~, June 12, 1968 DAILY PILOT 38 BUY NOW AND SAVE FJIOM .SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S , FACTORY DIRECT DJALER -iOW ORANGE COUNTY~S NO. 1· LARGEST . VOLUME ·DODGE DEALER BRAND NEW '68 t'.ORONET DnUXI MODEL • Dual Horn System • Tinted Windshield • Deluxe Wheel Covers ·• Deluxe Trim • Foim front seats • While sidewall tires. Ask for stock No. l36. IMMEDIATE DE· LIVERY. . $2389~~~C~L '6 9 l'°Kl~11 TOTAL DOWN PYMT. '69 TOTAL MONTH PYMT. $76TDTAl '76TD!Al DOWN MONTH PYMT. PYMT. BRAND NEW '68 w AGONS Pyiirlt. lncludl tu ' lie. I llntnn d!•r,H on 4 lllOl. O.A..C.. TOTAL PllCE +TAI 1· ll(lltll BRAND NEW '68 DARTS • All Vinyl inferior • Padded Dash • Seat Bells • Heater & Defroster. Ask IMMEDIATE • .. for Stock No. 909, 134. ;59~~: •$9~~!t.H .$ 20 5 9:~~L 'r:t'· 1nc1udo llJ' re. .. fl-W'l'il Oii "'lllOl. O.A.C. l"TUftl sifoiiSMAN VAN .CAMPERS " Vinyl covered comb. Ii" Kttchen cobintt with ..... , to loll sofa & bed 50# ;~1 box II' Drapes on all windows II' 110 volt electricol outlet ,,, v.s fl' Automatic fl' Built-in storage wall, fl' Fold-away Dinette fl' lull length wardrobe DON'T WAITI NOW IS THI TIMI Wl'll DIALING TODAY! atOtCI Of COLORS DELUXE 4-Dl. MODIU Dix. SHI belts • dut l breking systtm • htttw & defrosttr • h1ztrd fl1shln11 sys'ttm • p1dded dlsh & viw • back"p tightl • multi 'Pffd wipers with wishers. Stodt No. 141, No. 159. s2499~~[~L fO~Ll1~. I fOT~ltMf. 4 DAY Q mt1. l~tlude t•• & llt. & fln1nt• <l•113u °" 4 mo1. on •rrwtd u1d11. TRUCK & CAMPER . SHOW IRAND NIW -'61 ,Vi•TON PICKUP 4 DAY • 1~" WHEEL BASEH Sweptline • All Gauges • 3-Speea -Synchro Trans. • HNvy Duty Tires • Cigar l ighter • Heavy Duty Springs & Axle. iMMlDIATE DWVERY. Ask for-Stock No. 789 • • 5 2112 ~lJ ,~lJ, l'AYMINT l'ATMINT USED CAR SUPERMARKET-A.LL WITH PROTECTION!! ' V~LUME! V~LUN,1~~ ~OLUf!! ... • I O!i -(. 0$¥'.Jl _; V .< All PAYMENTS ON USED~ IHC.LUOE TAX lo UtEMSE FEES AHO All FINA/KE Clll••GES CM 36 ""°'· OH A~PROVED C•fD1' 161 CHEYROut IMPALA 'f• Hatdrop. 327 eng. ll&H, P'stttr" 1ulo., wsw, cerpets. viovl inter. (fHl730). '67. TOTAL '67 TOTAL · · ,DOWN Mntl.Y. .,YMT. PYMT, ... 96.,&.JOTALl'llCE •• V"l-TAXlllC. awl IOOK ftfCI $2t71 '66 FORD Frln. 500 GT.A 2·dr. Hardtop. 390 eng., P'stur., brks .• R&H, aulo trans. Fact. air eond. Butkets, console. Wall to wall carpets. (SLV492). '60 TOTAL '60 TOTAl DOWN MTHlY. 'TMT. PYMT. f1766TOTAL·l'llCE .t TAX & llC. .w • .00. PiiCt $2J60 •65 DbDGt CUSTOM aao 9 p1ss., 1t1tion wegon. R1dio,he1ter, 1utomatit. P'steer., P'brtkes, t ugg1g1 rick, wsw, whl!tll disc, will to wotlf e1rpeting, (RRZl.SO). •57TOTAL •57TOTAL DOWN MTHlY. 'YMT. PYMT. f1666TOTAL PllCE .. T.U l.UC. 1LU1 IOOK N.ICI $2JIJ 166 PONTIAC ftMPUT Custom. popul1r 2-dr. H1rdtop w11utom1tle trtns. Rldio, h11T!r, etc. (SHN379). '36 TOTAL •a6 TOTAL DOWN MTitlY. PTMT. PYMT. •106610TAL PllCE •+TAX &llC. &LUI IOOIC PlKI $1700 '65 MUSTANG HARDTOP V.S, r.dio, he1t1r, IUtO. Tr1ns., WSW, tlrpels, buc:kd 11111. (OTJ286). •33 TOTAL •33 TOTAL DOWN . MTML Y. PTMT. '™'· IA66.TOTAl PllCE -7 t-TAX &UC. ' 16f bOD01.CoRONn Automatic, power sftering, V.3, rtdio ind huter. CTGB608). •33 TOTAL · •33· TOTAi DOWN MTHLY. PYMT.. PYMT. '966TOTAl PllCI +TAX & l1C. 11»11001C N.Kf $1451 '64 CHIYROUT IMPALA 55 2 door hardtop. Radio, heeler. 1ulo .. power steer· ing & br1kes, 327 eng .. bucket se1ts, wsw fires. (JZV 15A). •33 TOTAL •33 JOTAl DOWN MTHlY. PYMT. PYMT. '966TOTAL PllCE t-T.U &l1C. . IWI loc:iK Ntcl $1 .. I '66 FALCON FUTURA Fully equjpped with hH!er. t ulom1tic 1r1n1. mission, del uxe Inter .. ete. {Ser. 099.S). •33 TOTAL •33 TOTAl• DOWN MTMlY. PTMT. PTMT. '966TOTAL PllCE .. T.U &UC. MUI IOOK ,.H:l $1120 165 CHIYROUT IMPALA P'st1tr. AutOl'l'lltic, R&H, Vinyl ext. C1rpefJ,.1tc. (VCV359). •33 TOTAL '33 TOTAL •DOWN MTHlY. PYMT. PYMT. '966TOTAL PllCE +TAX & llC. IWI IOOK PUCI $1520 165 PLYMOUTH S.&ftLLITI Y·!, R&H. Console, Vinvl inter. Bucket Stt !s, C1rpeh.. (WIA99 1). . -•33~~ •33 ::'r. PTMT. PYMT, f96£ TOTAL PllCI g+1.u 1 uc. -~--~---~---- ,;,~E! NJ111fdJI . VOLQME! ~--All PAtM1Hli oHlriED CAlS INCLUOE 't.U • LICENSE rtES AAD All FIMNCE UU.lG!S OH 36 MOS. ON ... ,,lOV!D ClfOll "" '""""• .!;; ;ii -.._ . --' f I '#if #• .,. LI , / C '66FOID · '63COMnW.&GON 2 door. Ht lltt. Fully f1clory equipped. (RMA622). Gold S11r. f •29 TOTAL •29 TOTAL . DOWN M?HLY. ',PYMT. PYMT. . f866'0TAL PllCE + T#JI & LIC. IWI IOolC Pita $11 '° '66 DODOI COROND Autom1lic. Heiler. Manv other exlra~. (UOH031 ). •26 TOTAl '26 TOTAl DOWN /,~THl Y. PTMT. PYMT. '766TOIALPllCE . +TAX & UC. IWI IOOIC .. ICI f 1120 ••• ClllYllOUT lllCATim l iseeynt 2 door. Full ftctory equip9fd. (NGP396). Gold Stir. '26TO TAL •26TOTAl . DOWN MTMLY, PTMT. PYMT. S 766TOTAL PRICE t-t.U .. l1C. IWI IOOK l'IKI .'75 Cuslom 4-dr. Auto. tr1ns., R&H, Vinvl Trim inl1r (PWf-438). •19 -~::it •19 ~DJ:.~. PTMT. r nMT • ···S66TOTAL PIKE ' +T.t.1"1uUm ILUl'IOOIC •l'laCI $191 '63 DODOl 440 STA. WAG. 9 l)i5S. Rldio, hta!er, 1u1omttic. wsw, whtel covtrs. Pwr. slet r , v..a. llltA332). •23 TOTAL •23 TOTAL DOWN MTMLY. PTMT. PTMT. '666.TOTALPllC~ •-!--Til & UC. IUll IOOIC l'llCI f1to5 161 DODOI DART Fullv feclory equipped. While sid1w1!1s. (0KK538J, •19TOTAL OOWN PYMT. •19TOTAl MTMlT. PTMT, '566TOTAl PRICE , +tAX I UC:. IWI IOOIC PllCI fl15 VOLKSWAGEN CE.NIER USED LOW MILUGE '681 l '67s THllU '61 . MANY TO CHOOSE FROM '66 v.w. 164 v.w. Squtrebeck '4·speed (PBC74l). '4·spe1d, Buek•t sells. (Se r. 774). s50 s50 sj'4i6 s29 1 s29 si6"' TOTAL OOWI TOTAL M01mL 6 TDTAl OOWll TDTM. MOHTll. PAJMlllT PlYMlllT +r.u &u c. PI YMl lff P4TMllff +TAX & llC.. 1960 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DOOR ... , TOTAL DOWN PAYMlllT RADIO, HEATER, WSW (GNX2on •19 TOTAL MONTHLY PAY MINT '566 TOTAL ,_IC! + TAX 1 llCINSI ' I ' ' I I GoMrol 1000 ntwru 4 B1t 3 bl.W 2 ltol')'. APIS'CJI'" lmattQr m Ill ft of bla nv. ~!WI -bod ..... !lzwpllcodownltalrl f.wU.J' room X' x ¥1'. A mOlt un....W buy, YA OK vA Arzra11a1 $3 ,200 Now port •I Vittorio 646-1111 (Opon Evonlnp) $158 PER MONTll <>wner transferTed -•a y I seU NOW!! Three bedrooms, 2 baths, large fireplace, built-in kitchen, 13'dr COV· ered and enclosed patio, bt'lnd new wall to v.·all car· petlng. Excellent location, nrar f'le~taQ' achxil, c:hurcheti, and &hopping. Low interest, 51~% FHA Jo ft n may be assumed and $158 Ptr n1on1h would include taxes. Wtdl!ndQ, J11111 12, 1968 Oeftlr•I 1000 ~tf¥,' il.14 Vlai. I>tl Ont Nowport B<och ILUFF "I" BeautlfUI loc:aUm -'°"" View, privacy, carpet•, drapes, blt·lna. VI~ bl.I· cony, custom ptdo, separate .muter Bdrm S\dte w/pa1· Vilt drKltna: nn It blth, larr:e Rumpu1 m or Ma - all larp bedrooms. Prlcod To Soll CNlckly · Ph. 644-1133 CarHr Selling Exccllent opportunity f o r wrrent.Jy UttMed SaltllD&n to have the de1lre to entl!!r Gonor•I 1000 MllUMllM DOWN f .H.A. four bedroom• + Den + Di.nine Room; lK balh borne. for 12$,50011 You'll bt thtill- td with •Jl!llCe tor your fam. Uy to ronip, Oil thill oozy CORNER nestled within an CU>' walk to .Fairview Road Sho()t, all IChoolS, lncl\ld. in& Sf. JOHN'S PARO- ClllAI •. THRU O,C.C. EN• JOY the nice yud, concrete block waUs It llwnlnUm covered patk> for planned privacy • Euy •~ bolt and tralltr p1d, the specialized field of ex-1 iiiiiiiiiiiiii.,.,..iiiiiiiiiiiiil Costa Mesa % ACRE* R·2 $26,900 HOUSES FOR SAL E Harbor View Hiiis Coron• dol Mor Lusk • built bunln loctttcl In tht South1and'a mott d• 1irublt &: fuclnallna arta. lcboolt 6 Callf, Irvine Oampua jult momtnt1 away. Stnalbl.Y priced from SM.900 tn $41.IOO LUSK HOMES OlrecUon1: MacArthLU' Blvd. flom PacWc CoUt Hwy. or Newport Fwy. Tum on San Joaquin llll1' Rd.. then follow llal1s to modtl area. 4 ledroams $99 mo. WVELY HOME -Prime school a.t"H., opal btoa.m ct.IJ.. in(1, Iara• cov•red petlo, bullt-llll, l'i baths, 2 ear ~. Eves. 541-4097. • HOUSES FOR SALE 16 Un~$97,500 Newport Beac:h BALBOA PENlNSUL.A-Ju.Jt a f" lhort atep1 to bly or beach. 8J btdtoom and S. blcfteW, AU apta. t..v. pn. ~tt baths and kttcbm tacO· ltt.. 100<H 11.lf'Ollhed. No •lliC»f!C)' tlttor. 23" nft tJptndable. 1.lr. O'Brkn. Evt1. 5'7·'1.m. 200 E. 17th St. 615-4494 WANTED HOUSES ~O~.$ALE noo Ylc:toria Mesa Holllff 11 NEW HOMES LDw dn. 6" ~ 30-vr la.n From U•,950 Vallty Road at Victoria CJutt E. or Srookb\U'lt up on bluff) Udo All.e lot•. fee &lmple land .. Hllh above ltl ltvtl. Sullt·ln electric kitchen. Convenient lo lhopplz\I cm- ter, t1ie1r schooll. 3 and 4 DORMS .. 1 .t 2 11ty. -fire- places, carpetlna, draperle:1, fendn&, laodacaplng. Mlchool K•y, Bulldor Pherle 642-2821 l:vet &fU106 Real Eatat• Salt• J'toople. WHY NOT OET ON 11iE BAND WAGON? Over 25 Yean in Location -Loc:atfonl Oranae County Fabulous neW cuatom 4 A e Full i:-1• •dvtrtlalnl f&mll.y room JU.It completed • Inter office tdetype by BOB a.EGG·. Strlclcinc e Tralnlna: pl'Oll'lJ'D · new papel'I, luab earpetbll e ll\IUl'aDCt &: the finest of IOcltlooa just • Many other beneftll ~ ~ block ntm ltth fairway .. . HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SA~I Nowport looch 1Stl ---· -. --·· Molher knows best c.,.01 dol Mor 1250 !1untl,,.ton ~400 -· . .. Corona Highlands * Pool Tlmel! 3 Bdrm 2 bath home, L.r1 S Bdrm 1'8ola PIU'k" 'nl1s bi the 2-atoey born• lhe aquea.ky' clean und neat, bom,e. Hu lovd,y b\O pool alWa)'I wanted ffA' tbe fam· wllh pool-~ze back yard. 10X28', covertd pt,tlo, lof.t of Uy. Rambllna Home localed $39,500. btau tnmcp'c. Oarag! Ii all • 1tone'a throw from lhc I. L. St rickler, Rltr. paneled and m&kn. o:cel Oce&n. l..tt'gt bath, ram rm 6T'J..65l0 recreaUonal arta when· not OYerlooklng " ~pai'kllnl I !!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!:~~ betnJ used u a Mae. lountlllzl. Uvlns nn + klt· 1 ~ He1V)' lhake f'O')f, Adults ctM?O. atld brt•kfast bar Lido ltl• 1351 onlY have stven thl,a . lino down; 2 lar&i! bechwna l -· 1 b --• 1-~ " ho I 81yfronl Lido 1111 .. at e "'"" p _,er . ttia ooe bUie bedl"OOPl + tut plent.Y of TLC (Tl!ndtr Lov. bath up. Vacant -immed-2 Stof)', 4 BR, 3 BA, 2 ldtch-tna Care) Top location late pout~•lon, ~7.50). ens. best llde of bil)'. Could amot11 lharp bomea. 10~·;, be converltd to duple:<. I... do\vn. Real \'latch tbe boats come w w-LISTER REALTY Ettlte ln 20' of front window. Sil«:· lr.612 Beacb Bl, HD 842~ tacultr v I I!! w ! Directly S.rth for four Y 1cht at )lour own lront door. Easy ~aa to the Big Bay from tbl! OwLo.el Joc1t:lon. Older 2-.iory bont• wtth room to bulld. Pitt • J1oat, 155.000. Burr White, Realtor acrou lrom Balboa Bay Recipe • • • • • Club. for hoppl""'· BY OWNER Take a spacious 4. B.R, 2~~ PbDne for appointment BA boml!!, add all the·"nice. 673-9412 ties·• to giYI!! It ipice; .blertd Bullden Home w•u with nice looailon & 5000 sq.ft. 4 BR & maid's convenience to beach ti shor>- 5 b<, 3 car pr. 1 ~ lots. plng: tor the final louch, 293 E. 17th Si, 6464.fM Call M&M!M .. For intfl'.Vlew of Mesa Verde Country Club. See "Shirley's OJ>l!!fl house" 'ltln N Bl WANT 6 BROKERS •wl ewporJ vd, blend all lngmilents & ad~ Unusual features. Must see a happy f.amUy. For furthrr to appreciate. Brokers wel· details, call owner. M7~ come. 520 Via Lido Soud 642-1615. Eves 675-1669 Eves f: weekends. 'No Down P1ymentl tno1t afternoons •t lrtaul Newport Beac:h F·o rm in a: groUp for new Veterans -Re th1I aharp 4 Circle near Mesa Vt rd e 675-4630 Eves: 642-za:! brueh outce lntertlted ln BR hi Glen Mar homes are•. Drive. workmg on Income proper-Own •··t J t~ d CoJlane Realty 5"5880 WE WIIL TRADE Up • ,.._ 'I Acre er , ... , .. comp e IN eo. -v '9U" FA V 0 RI NG YOU If'l ty, ,.ptl!I, ......,mn1 • age, oratln1. Quly $23,500 too! 1500' Adams at H1rbor NE w p 0 RT / I,. AG UNA. ExchanJes, et<:. 80%-com-Vacant. Immediate posses-,!Near Cinen1a Theatre) mlsston, pcrfC<"t coOp/plan. slon. l..o\v down payment for 1' .. an1Uy movina: to ami. hllll *'SACRIFICE! For quick sale. Vacant lg 3 br on. 50' !Qt. Best buy Oil LIDO. $4.000 dn. $57,000. Owner &12.:fi206, 67S.24it7 BELOW MARKET All re P 11 es contklentlal FllA ~ Mesa Verde flne Cok>nlal borne Arcadia, Newport \Yrlte to Box l\!·148 Daily 001..LEGE ~.j.y~ SI A 0 • k 1, marll:etlible PU S Bedroon11 plus Iara• tam· $17,!SOO. Available also on Huntington Beach 1400 3 BR 1 % bath, elec. bh-tn n &: O, cpt.a/drps, dble girngr, lge fenced lot. S9ro-total move in -no closing COB!s • only $14,950 with payments of $155 per month titcludln::; laxes. .I OJ. 11 N-.-y room -Kitchen with '"'"'",......\ Bay 3 BR, 2 ba, illage Real Estate l' SKIP TO SCHOOLI Viclorlo BE%!5H DUPLEXES WANTED """""" 1"'. Now li""'s ,,.,. .ite $27,000. 675-439'l 2043 WES1U..UT DRIVE 1.1.1. •sl l AGGRESSIVE j'OOm carpet -Sp1<: & Span ~r~;JJ.,krs ~vited &16-7Tl.l Open Eves. -$28,900 to $51,500 SALESMAN "throughout. Water Softener " WHAT JS MISSING? changlng. Working ln Com· I' mercia\ • Industrial -land, and high value Residences. People with exchange traln- _tng preferred. Rnl E11tatc !lelli11g oilers a chaUenge to qualified men &: women ~·ho think creatively and for those v.•ho de1ire hl&h in· come status. We will .OOW )'OU want to do and bow to do lt Paul Stu1rt, Realtor, CdM. Call 67>4070 for appt. &. World'• finest beacb lrom 962-4471 thla immaculate 3 BR corn-1 ·v~A~CAN=~T~-m-"'-1-,.-u~.""S~%~'%_G_I •---h ABUSED. MISUSED (Opon • ,,__, ,.. __ .... A: bf!'\I,' HW heater. $25,250--BJk •A ...,_,," ._ .......... , •• Newport -E • l BEACH HOME eoo~(i,;;N'~~u "0 down 1° qualil'"' buy•r. ; You ~fu", i.::-· Q Owner Leaving Are• l ~====~v~·~·~·n ... p~·~J 3 BR, 2 baths, lar(e ltytng Oran1e Cout Property 646-7171 • 546-:2313 a 3 Fantastic Bclnna. Asswne this Si,i % loen. Fee S BR A:-.family l%. baths I· 332 Marguerite, CdM 673-8S50 OPEN EVES. • 2% Ba .• 2 Frplcs. Simple. Lovely p.rden. Im· thatwillrequirelotaotpaint Fixer Upper j ,~""~·;·""~~pla«ll!!!!,!!!dll!!bl~g'anlll .. ,·,1 ~==::::ii=it;;Y,:;:~:;:!i:: maculate 3 bedroom, fonnal & repair but a smart buyer It .~, -• work, but 123.!:KXI. . . ~$22_li_OO~ • Combin. gar/!am. nn. f ll can get this al a bargain ~ -·" . -• SmaU down -trade dining, large am Y room. ""''-'e now. OnJv 6 years old where can you fmd a view BALBOA IS' AND , Aaent 548..()797 &>st huy in Baycresl. ,.. ' ~ or the boats In thl!! bay .and Wilt. 8 yr old 3 BR beach home - Owner Must Sefl & in a good convenient atta. a mllUon lighta tor $48,000. lllness forces sale of thi! Du-mod. Ready to go!!! BY Owner, ctl8tom Ba)'crest DOLL HOUSE OLDE er, carpeted, dr1ped & ., BA '-I -built-ins. "'00 down & $157 4 BR, M ' "l' c . .....,.950 ... ~ Principals only. 64U24~ monthly pay11 au. Only $1B,-'l50 !F/P. 3 BR. 1~ BA, nev..-lydec., YI· Pacific Shotts Realty cant vll!!YI borne. By Owner, 5J6..389.t Eves. SJS.2375 $20,900 Terms. 968-3965 1705 Just reduced $5,00'.I for quick Owner bking $24.!IOO • use A large custom home with plex near Bay. 2 BR 1 b1th CAYWOOD REAL TY By Owner/Pool Homo 4 BR, rumpua r 0 0 m SUper clean & sharp 3 BR 2 ;your GI or'bQy oo EZ terms. + l BR 1 b lh r~ !al (convert. to 5 BR or pool ARN STYLE sale, 4 bedrooms, la-e for. t-mal din'-•-, 3 .....,....... a · uvuu ren 6306 W. Coast Hwy. n_. _.. 129 bath home, excellent ca......,ts B ·• )riC' .... "'6 .......... u,,....... Owner 1. nl nc\IUC..-u to ,450, immac. mom) 2~{. ba.ths &: large ........ n1al dining room or family ious bedrooms, a Iara:e pool areL ive11 out N.B. 548-1290 3 BR, 2 BA. lfas eve_.,_1,... tbroll&hout, bl!!autlful d~ "-~tiquated & charmin. !$• old room. Secluded yard, plenty and located on a spacious area. • very anxious to sell. ~ Xlnt financing. 546.."'9iJi~ ram. nn, % fripica, 20x40 poal dra lawn. Tr.aru:fen'td OW»-'Vermont ham style borne of pool room. Excellent Jot. Rltr. 646·39'l8 Eve. 642-0185 BUILD YOUR OWN =~~a~·:_234; O 00~ er must aacrtfi<:e at only located on estate -~ i z; family home. A must llell. A.a "RING" *LACHENMYER Excltina: home In Dover Shor· Mesa Verde 11IO 642-202'1 flQ,500. i;roundll. ~aPP,rox. 8001 sq. !>1,$0. 11113 Balm, C.M. .,._ .•"',..·,....SPRING I ""iiiiiijii;iiii0iiii0iiii0iiii0iiii0i I'" Ivan W.U. A Soo.C\Ptom _ -~~~~=-Poul Jonos .RHlty fl.) •h•Jtered -by tall '"''' Jeon Smittl, Realtor '"'~~~"'!'""'!~~!!I 3 u N-1 JS builders, -ofter you m:hl-OWNER 1.foving must sell. PRICE-SIZE-AREA 847·1200 Ev('s. 842·5844 trees. A short walk from SWIM & SUN --RE • T mv tocturol planning, top qua!. Luge 4 BR 2 b<lh. Doool• EXCEPl10NAL!· EWbluU 400 E. lTth, C.M. 646-32fi5 In th'· s-·looi y-~ or ••• ~ l'l.Ul 1 workmanship, excel tenna. fireplace, ne1v carpets , 5 Bd, 3 ba, BI kil·2500 sq. $18,500 ~!~eD~~::e:-~1011'01 OCEAN VIEW ~ ....... OJ'IJ, "ANYTIME" 2 BRs each, 3 g•"g", good 0 -· J, Wini Co. ~.ce ~~ bu.lit · S (l Big Canion 5 yE'ars old uv party in the lqe ~parate ,. 1 """~ """".........., -ins. P a c i 0 u • board & batlon, shuitert'd Lovely Cameo Shores Horne Play rm, next to the ovcr-. I ,..i;ISOiii;l .. ".i'i.'l~c~llfiiliiDii•iiVii'iiOii location. $27,500 ·terms. ""'CHECK THESE backyard, Located on quiet Nr. schools, shops, $39,500 COWltry atmosphere 66x140' windows, gabled roaflines. I .. 3 B~ 4 ba~-, __ , 1 _. 1• Wells·McC.ardle Rltr1. .1vA do ..,.1....,,.. cukle-sac. No down VA or R. C. GREER, Realty R-2 lot, custom built 2 BR Th lly d . nl 3 \11 ...... rooms, ui.:; s..,..,.,. 1eat.,.,. pool. 3 BR, One of 'a K"ind! .. ·no wn ...... ..,.,.,.,,.., 1 34 6 e unusua emgn •·-1 · 1 ....... 1810 Ne1>lport Blvd .. C.M. .~1 000 0 21 ~ aw down FHA. Full price 1 Via Udo 67J.9D) & den, lrplc, hdv.·d lln:, en-D• .. -..5e sw mnung poo '"""i:I fiOOl'IS thruout. All on I ,._ 548--7729 Eves. 644-0684 ~ , % n ·•• •••·•·• ,......, only $26,500. CALL LARRY cl:>sOO patio. GI or FHA. BDn.101. FLOOR PLAN ls a family room & dhllng rm. comer lot-OWNER r.rusr Broadmoor Re!!a e -ut:tlf'r .. 10 Down •••••••• 18,500 ''"" BY 0 w n er. Harbor decorator's dream, with "-'·"~ ; s I 4 'R 2 I ....,,...1151 lleritage Re al u 1 .. hl ds 3 Bd ' b BRASHEAR REAL TY WOO w ..... IC\l garage w storage ELL-a real value at $31,. than new. Most popu ar .. · ot . . . .•••••••• 9500 Eatate •u.e an · rm, a, D PANELED WALLS, owner's family has lf'OW'D 500. Bdrm. plan WI.th formal Din. Ellycr .. t Lot! MIZELL RLTY. 548-%l08 lovely patio. SJ.COO under 847-8531 Eves. 96&-1178 OLD MISSION BRI CK and they ere looking Bun Wh'f R Ito Rm, Fam. Rm, Brkfst. Rm, Ideal custom building alte ln MESA VERDE 4 BR, 3 Bath LARGE 514 % FHA LOAN, mkt. value for quick 88.11!!. A RARE FIND FLOORS, HIGH VAULTED for smaller heme. I e, ea r and J tlrl!!places. Offer ·;oo cholaelt reskl.ential areL DWng, Family ml. Pool. ~~6.l Mo. pays all. $29,00J. 646-0647 or 646-5118 4 BR 2 baths, new w/w car-CEILJNGS wrrn: EXPOS. $74,500 2901 N""""'rt Blvd ~·.~ .................... $54, 9l'x118'. Not lease bold! Open. $43,950. * 549-2042 l ~lst 3 BVR.rd& fam. rm. Newport Hgts. 1210 ...... ting, patio with BBQ f.•m· ED RAITERS i\ CROSS '""..,.. • :•u-s. Harvey Tt'1l:y a ~-•-, ofter-' at n ., esa e e. Deluxe .... ... BE.Ai."\tS. A TURN OF TIIE N-Beach .,... 5...... """ tl • -~--~----ily room, built.in oven & --'"~·Ev"' 642 __ , ~ $25,500! Coata ._ .. _,, 1100 carpe ng drapes: e:o;. CEm"URY BATH, with or-u1~ """"' ""' ,..,~ ·-·M-" d CUSTOM HOJ\1E: 3 br, 19'4, range, fenced yard. ~R to la Ruth P1rdoll, Realtor pe.WJ mani ...... .,,. YI r '"'~ nate vatory supported by Frpl in f .,._ UL ba, 4-ar gar, 75' lot. Room alJ terms. $22,950. . 1 INCOME UNns ~eetelilf Dr. 642-53Jl Buy A New Car rm. i2j,7;~m. rm . -P. u for Ira pool, EZ financlf\a:, R, D. Slates Re1fty c~:v:i~~~a~:l~~~~1~ Cold II B nk & C * $22 500 * reduced to $33,900. By owner 847.l"il!'l 6 Deluxe 3 BR units Wt I I er o. ' with the savings on this 3 I Take Trades 324 El Modena , 548-7954 1 ---,;==~=~~-story w/2 bdrms. ,. tlpe11i; ,..~· 8~:;.'. ~~k:~i. 3 BR 1% baths, 16x20 family BR, 2 be. Gem . Large lot-1,..n.;->J&-..-.;cc;:,so-cc-R-F.Acc;cLT0-'7'R"---AVAIL Jmmed. OIU llavcn 3 POOL TIME to huge 11un porch. :r'fl I·: $825 monU1 income · ef · 6 Older HouMS Y2-1cre john macnab """ month '"como DOVER SHORES Buch Home + 91r opt. m month incomt Magnificent new View borne Cuto 1 BR duplox ot sreat distirrllon in the finest location In I>ow!'. $200 month lncmie si...... 4 1lR. i.,.. oodol PERRON REAL TY CO. nn. 4 be.thl, V1ew d the lBtb A: Orange 642-1771 wtde Harbor uu. Chm· pl...,, """""" -and land""""'· $129,500 1324 G•lny Drlvo OPm D.All.Y ClllJ for appl. ~~~64~2-123S Fun for The family i. WE; WilJ.. ADMIT It DMda IOme paint and min-- or l'fPB.lr 'but $14,500 ls e ROOd PTicl!! for a 3--bedroom, 2 b9.tb home. Just a feYt' blocks from shopping. • Kl f·JlU 011: f.Hfl room with fireplace double fenced ya.rd -walnut pan. 3 BR 2 Ba. hon1e; trpl., cpis., S'--h REAR GROUNDS H 'AV F: .u ( la 1 ,, 1 Br, 2 ha. & 2 Br Oceau Vu "''l'P ome on large Jot 1vith NUMEROUS QDi'fiARD DELUXE OFFICE 1000 SQ. IT. CARPETS PRIVATE RESTROOf.t and kitchen facilities. Only $195 mo. Year leUI!!. STORE ROOM COSTA MESA 12X> SQ. FT. • BUSY TIJQR.. OFARE -LEASE $200 MO. EVES: KI 7-1815. ~~,; ·~· . ,b l)t. li'.6-4494 Eve. 640-5-;'j~ garage, shingle roof, betuU-o:ung -!rep· ce &: b t-in u.i'J>li,. enc · paliu. Oose lo I A lovely heated and n11--• TREES, SE p A·-R A-T ,-, fut yard. Low down. kitchen-all features which elem. schl .. <: h u r ch es , nc pt. S49,500. 548--7249 "''"" . Rllr. 646-3928 Eve, 642-01&5 adds value to this bal"ln>ln-llbrary. $24.500. 0 w n er pool. Expensive carpeting BUILDING F o R ·WEEK ·a-:>t&-3617 Back Bay 1240 throoghouL 4 lrg bdrms, *LACHENMYER pricnl Pn>P'r\Y. $28.000. N'" Brookh<ml END GUESTS. U you hav' Asking $22,500 4 BDRM or 3 and den, 2200 PRIVATE party wilhes to and Adams. a flair for the unusual then M.sa v.rc1. -4 lltdrm. Bun White, Realtor !1~~nOwCounn·r"". ~!l~,Drlve sell lovely home, Back Bay LISI'ER REALTY 842 you must see this chaimini; P1mlly Rm.,.Dlng Rm. -_,......,, " ....,,...,.,, area. 9'J'x12'l' fot. 3 Large --;;;;;;-;,;;;;7"~~:_:-6633:::: older home. IT'S A RELIC Rumpus Rm. king·ab:ed Br. J~'li ba, living WE WILL ADM IT FROM ANOTHER. ·'nA. $24,000 ' 200J=~d. tHwport Beach 1200 rm, den. pool $fl0,0CKJ. It needs ~bupemll· ! and min. Often!d at ~ in'epl.aeelble Covered patio. Built • tna. ---' 548-l m or repair t -.,500 II a P~of -.·· Paneling. Convenlelt Joca. 6'15-4630 Eves: 548-3134 REDUCED To price of lots! good price lor a 3 bedroom, $29,950 FULL PRIOE T~~m. l956 Hartior BY OWNER ~R ~Ba ~o~~e~~ l~v~ ~~.= ~~:!A~:_11 ~~ =~~:g~ fuw DN.T~Y~TfE ORPEI . N Lc..vely, new ultra modern bay Ii: ocean. Can use as 2 Owner • 548--8870 7682 EDINGER HU ~ TRANSFERRED 2-story 4 bdrm. (2 apts, mi. lo bid . Prk. rear ====-=-=== 842-4455 OPEN EVES. ,;RY. uN THIS ONE! And anxious to sell; i~-c 4 king-size), 2 baths. <twin 171 4.lst Owner 573.2719 Corona def Mar 1250 TERRIFIC BUY--S-ISSIOft Reafty It ,__. ...,1; sinks), Firi!!place; I a r g I!! ~ .... VE\ ---··-· ·· -9fi5 s . Coast Jiuov., , --·oa You Asked For ....,..room. 2~~ bath!!, Cathed-yard, quiet strett near May ...... CJ\.!~ -I ~. Fee Simple c ·h • Lo at" 20 20 D --""J ~" nl celllng living"'°'"· !eP-Co. • Cathoti• & ALL Custom honie, 3 br, \..,_den, OIC.e C IOn x uvuus room specials PHONE 1714! -19(..(1131 Ea s t s i de location, quiet • ... '5 (can ~ ..... ' -.,-,..,,--~~.,;,,.,:..::___ ante dining&famllyrooms schools. $2500 Down. 6%.% lovely garden. $54,900. For 50xJl8 ft R-2 Near Beach """"""as master BR • A Vary Special House 647M!X, 7682 ED~~EVES. :;mi:ro~~t~oo~ve: +extra large rurnpua room Loan. 976 Denver Dr. appt call THE OWNER 642-&: Bay, 2 comfy Hornes plus ~r ,i~ room). Choice of for you who are searching Sharp 4 BR home wilh bard-double car garql!!, Wood Bi!!st location, near school. 5&-2000 or 1-866-3389 3l64 Eves. & weekends. ·maids quarters, $5.S,500 firm · Rs. $25,500 I up. for the unusual. Hq-i~ar- wood Doon, fireplace, thick NEWPORT 'burning fireplace, lovcly Delta Real Estate 646-WJ.4 BUY OF THE YEAR. WATERFRONT 62 Balboa oS(wn uc~usi,el~ by: 87~A::!~L REA;4Ir..m actl!!l' & lasting appe~ One sh.:ifi ~ to&.7 pane~ EXECUTIVE yard ... $19,!ro w1th good R. E. SAiesman Needed $17,350 Coves, 3 BR, 0 $75,!XXl. WW ~';~·~wy ~~· S BR of a kind in north erid on w • ccess acres lenns. BUSINESS JS GOOD laving town, Mu.st Si!!ll! 3 tnde for ~· Arabian ·673_3770 ' 2 STORY ocean side of hwy, l blk pl8l)'gl'OUl)d & pool -all fir Hlih on • hilltop in • top Coles rth & ( VOLUME IS GROWING Bdrm. Color tiled bath 00 hones, or. LI S.7771. \Valk to Catholic school & from nlce beac:h and lush $24,500. locstbi on a private street. WO Y 0, IMMll>IATE larp landscaped lot New ~OCEAN==""v°'k!:::w:::/;;F""'""'•"•m--p°'I-o""J' IS\VEEPING View of 1-farbor church, S min to Douglas & tide pools. Thrilling view oC COATS 200'.> sq, fl with everything 642•7777 OPPORTUNrIY water heater. In excellent Br, large family room of. Huge 2800+ sq', 4 br, 21,S ba, Freeway. Sell GI no dawn ocean, hills &: city light&. 2 & to make living lwnuious. 4 Join a Progi-essivl!! Office cond. ~9'727 Owner. a'.179 fered by pr! prty s;;4,900, wet bar in fam rm, custom or take over S~'i~ loan br, sun-den, 2 ba & large WALLACE :::i: =·t:!c1:t~s 19CH H= :~:::· C.J\1, J\f. M. LaBorde, Reatior Presltient Pl. Must Sell? 642-3064 ~:root. $67,500 Owner BRASHEAR REAL Tv beach shwr nn thru dbl REAL TORS 221 E. 17th St. 646-«05 CONDOMINIUM &17.asJl Eves. 968-ll78 gar. Modern br1gbt kitch, -5" •141-DA YIDSON Realou REAL ESTA TE "BANK SAYS SELL" ed -2 nlc< •!%-LUXURY _Condom -Blull• ' 3 BR, 2 BA , ''""· viow cov patio with frpl w/rotis--'' J Brs, l&rgi!! living room &: hr, 3 bs, below mrkt val at ho p ,,. ONLY $19.850 3 Bdrms 2 h• serie. Liv nn u•nal-ha, I"" •cut 1 1 .• r ~1 · I · ·~ 500 ,...____ me. on a<:111c Drive plus k'I 1 • •-· •• IOpen Even In-) fnml'\ ATE II( cpcnucnl ri!!IK!ly office • "yn"stan >aradl.se! ! ln near new condition. One -· · vw•~r lrtvlsf. Cali L c ien w/bltnft , fa ... n.. 18' Rmi-";,,,., w'·~-• frpl •-~-~· h I r 3 •--• J t•· I I Ow 1 5 ~-•A fie,..., new 2 BR, 2 BA apt. 0-.•»ncr f-1 • ....., .......... u......,w ..- .. =~~~~~~=~ 1-uude 3 BR + family, nl'.!w as open ng or associate ......... rooms, 3 belhll o '"" ew s OBle stories ner eves al · U°t't""VJIJ'J S7J..{i904 room, .. ..,.c, hrdwood fln 1; open!I 10 3 decks on 3 cpta/drps, room for b 0 at 1vitb Sl"mie knowledge In ]And Pool , blt·ins, $.Sf,900 ava.llable. Asking on I y ELEGANT Bayvie"'' cond o. 3 newly painted in and out l!!Vels. Priv ent every room TW'O POOL & trailer. & inc o nt e propcrtll'.!s. Top YOU OWN Tl!E LAND $19,950. CALL 5 4 0-115] r ,. Bit ? I · h b 1... OWNERS 3 br. home. Keep Obie gar, tncd yd. Close •A + + + E . U ..... I!!. .. 11v1i; a '"'' 6" .--: • ..s.--1 nd "' ' ' & a myriad ot HOMES Rltr. 2750 lrarbor SB, 01 Commission. Dania Realcy 'llJOY le sun • beach an!& (~ eves) Herltaae Real Pouls, ~I f, tic. Fee land. x 10 lnt., no loan cost $145 ou.....J s a shp'g. 962-4391 flowers as~. Reduced to- 546-5460 Eves: ~169 Co., C.lil. &lZ-6560. ll0i\1E 642-4090 Estate Only $37.~ OY:ner 6n.4l'i6 mo. J."'OR SALE BY OWNER day to 147.700. ~-•l~le e 3 BR. 2 baths. Avail Jul,y S I $28 900 * 673-2951 C'--... ..,..,. ...... 29 3 a.drm -Family Rm TWO HOUSES a espeople W1nted 3 BR., 1% Ba. Redec. New 3 BDRM, 2 ba, 2 patios 2 car ' ~y Care Yard. Poot Frplc. ,with lO'l'I int tr&JU;fen-abl e, • ~ ~R'~bath. cov. patio Pool -$20,000 Near Bay, Ocean & run or part tin1e. J\ql'e$-CJ>ti.: hugl!! yd., quil!!I. street. garage, pool, Magnificent ELEGA.ivt' Small 3 BR Din rm or Den. 3 Bdrm, 2 no · JIOint Joan. Bkr 4M-'l57!. Saft thousands with )'ard Shops. Try Oiler! sl\·enes11 not required, Just $18,500-good tnns. M a y 5.etting. $33,500. 0 w c e r , $39,500 316 Narcissus Bath. Kitchen din, area, bit-MANY "°NDF.:ltnJL Qp. s:·:~e latest feature11 Ii; v.°Oric & paint! Heated & fl!.. $32.500 honest "''Ork, G RAHAM 1 ~"'="'~·_0wn_;;:_/;::ogt~546-55Slc::.=:_-~1552 Owner ~I ins. 897-9911 PO.R'IUNITzEs ba•e bttn a re in newer areu. CALL lert!d pool. Bath house, Cov-Bu\boe. Real Estalc Co. REALTY,· l49 Riverside PRIV. partJ wm pay cub NE.WPORT Heights. 3 Bdrm, Cameo Highlands, spacious 4 Must Sell! Prestige Atrium diacovered fu ClaSllfied Adi Mil. NELSON 5<11)..1151 Herl-ered patio,% 54Q..1720 700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balbol Ave., near Post office, Ni!!W-ftr equity tn your bome. 1'4 bat.ha:. dollble garage, br, 2 ha. On canyon, $36,500, I home. 3 BR. Make Offer Turn back to "Bu.me. op'. ~-iilReiiilliioiEo!>iiii"ii'lliiiiiii.liTiARBi;i;i"';i'i'iiiiiii2905iiiHiarjjl>ojj'il;;iiiiiiiiii~iiii40iiiiiiiiiiilliiJ>oirtiiiBeiiachiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiPrilncii;.imMJyii.i5'6-8226iiiiiiiiii .. i6ii%iiloanii.i1i24ii'000ii'ii642ii-<2liiOiiO.iiii0iWNERiiiiiii67344iiii23iiiiiiili5i24i1iGilii'nro;iiiy~Drii.i. iiii84'-iii721'1jiij,jjj""iiiiiirtunuiei" NOW! ''· 1'Zfil ! :i #J ;DJ_¥4_=t ___ N~O~W~1 .... s ... T_H .... E .... ' TllllllllM_E....,..T_o.,..a_u_v __ ...::= HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE 842°4455 NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE--646-7711 2043 Westcllff Dr. 1t Irvine Open Evenings 761Z I.rioter 01",..0llT•· 0 E I MUMTINOTON <•NT•ll: pH Yeti ft9I __ ....::.;;;==;;;..;;;.-- COUNTRY CLUI ISTAn SPANISH HACllNDA J.;xquisltr liv\n~ tn this auperb 4 bedroom. 3 bath lam.Uy home. Custo111 drapt_'S-, Beautiful ttte-llned alttf't •t~c11ll Uti!i il:Ot'ge<>1.111 Spanl!ih 11ylt'.' 3 bed.1'1)1)111 .home. wall to \\'1111 ca.rpt-tlng, terrazzo entq, fonnal d!nlng roan and separat,. t11mlly Imported decorations [rom Chile. Sl)llnlsh &l!!ltlng throughout: Det.uxl' lutchen room. Twlnkl1n& 18' x 40' Anthony Pool sunounded by c:uston1 lnndscaplng. The with dish\\'lllher. Dee1> pile carpets. thl'oughoot. F1agstone Patio .,.,·1th Bnr·B·Q, perfect i;e tHng for entertaining )'OW' tt1ende,.On1Y 2 bloclt:s to the Country Club. Priced 10 seJI f11A or VA al $22,250. Trade your old home. Just under 3,000 squart feet or luxurious comfort for $47,950. Submit your small- .USUlll VA LOAN AT S>;••io INnllST or homo on°"' """"'ntoed traoo program. Trade up 1n clas8 by usumlrur: VA loan "'llh totnl paymt'nt 11f $1 58 per mon1h. IAYCllST WITH POOL -$52,500 Corgeou11 Balsa Park 70x120 lt. corner. 3 I-lure Bcdroorns. Sho"'' Uke a model Mammonth .f bedroom, 3 bath C\lstom Baycrest home wUh 16'x~· heated 111d home. Uae the equity in your old ho~. Seller will trade. ftltered POOL. One bedroom and bath la on the opl)(lllt:e side of the hoU"'1 from WI WILL ADMIT the othera and would make lood dtu11.Uon for maid's quart6'1. F.zttllent usum- able loan, and owner ntxible on down pe.yme.nt Subrnlt your smaller home for It needs llOlllf! J*lnt and minor repe.lr but 514,$00 ll a load price for a 3 l>edr'«!m tracSe. 2 bath home. luat .a few blocks lrom 1'1oppln1. WALi TO THI OCIAN YOUR NOMI IN TIADI !ram his W.. 1'1m111 homo. 2,200 squere 1 .. 1 ol llvtnc .,.. In lltll ....,, 4 bod-Bere 11 a J81 beauty! a Huge BedroomA. 2 luxurloua bttha. c:amplete\y ttneed room homt. 'rhrtt sp&dOUI baths, two a ttracUYe p&tif». with eu:y malntm&Dce toxlOO foot yard wHh bullt·ln Bar·B.Q snd P•tlo. Ute FHA or VA and lelltr ftot!t Uvtnr. Hua• llvtna oom with tlret>Iace. EhJo1 the •ummer entertalnlng in.de II.YI take your old home in tradf', Pric:ed at $24,950. pleuur..ble ln tt. kitchen wtth all bullt·ln appllancn. Enjoy the blue Padflc and NOW-5 THI n111 OP THE TEAR TO IUT THAT HEA T1D l'OOl """ In it>lo. 0ni,o $33.900. Submll your imatl<r homo on our """'""""" Ind• 4 BEDROOMS + DEN + OtNTNG ROOP.I + 2 luxurloo11 blttht. 111Mtet bedroom i!OO'o S9UAll FllT 11 hup with private beth ,,'ith door to stunning COVERED PATIO to romantic 5 a·n.1Moua bedrooma &nd den. 4 full bethl. Larae llvinr room and hu,e: famtly warm water SWIMMING POOl.. HAPPY DAYS ! Your ramlJy destrvct IL Full kit~ Three ell' prq~. one with boat door to rtV yard. Poot il&e lot Uve COST A MESA OFFICE-545-9491 llli Z STORT -5 llOCKS fROM lllACH This 2 year old. 2.600 11quare root mansion ha& an tmpt'l!!Qive terrazzo cniry, ' extra large bedrooms, 3 elegant bath5. 1.fiw:lvc Muter suite has a balcony Wal- nut paneled family roorn. Built-I n deluxe Kitchen with dumtnv.aJter Sei>arate uUUty room. A Fan~tic VALUE only $34,995. Wiii lnlde for smaller home. COUNTaT DTAn -'la ACH Real country.1t,yle living in the clty. i-tuie 70x330 lot with a 13 year old custom built home tor owner. Lots or cool 5hnde tree. and pl.antlnga plua block wall fence g1ves perfect 1ecluslon. Separate yard with a 36xl8 pool for coot awnmtt en,Joyment. Don't like tract homes? Then this la for YOU! $30,500 with exc,Dent rnA ar VA tenns. $11 ,IOCI -l'ULL PlllCI An unbelievable borne at auch a Jow price! Built on·~ HARDWOOl17LooRS with LARGE BEDROOMS. Queen 11lt6 kitchen with sept.rate~ ~-fu -live ln or rent out aa &n lnVNbnent 127 ft. Jot. Excellent tenn1. Call Now! NO DOWN VA· l'HA -DISllAll.I lllSA VIRDI AllA Loveb' 3 Bedroom, J'AMU..Y R001'f, 1!( Bath Home with Jove'ly avocado ahas ru.p. lmmaculate lhroughoul Move-in Condition. Nicely la.ndM:aped _ ahows pttde ol owntnhlp. ONLY 524. 750. price only $23.500. in Newport Be&c.h'• ~t arta 11.t the barpln price ot on)1 $49.950. Call for ap. potntmcnt -today!! Submit your smaller home on OUJ' (UIU"tJltefd trade plan. ~~ =· ~~~ ..... ~7-~~~~~~,·~~-!!!!!!!!!!!!~::~::::~~::~~~:i.!::::!~::::!::!:::~~::!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~::::~~~::::;~::~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~s·::.~~ :: ; ~ THI ONE 'tO Sii ••• IS DOM WALKIR & LD w~o~: fAtH~l/11:'1~'.1 .. ~=-~ ' , I .. • l ' I ., .... •; ' HOUSES FOR SALE 1705 • OU>E BARN 5TYLE li9tiquated ' ehanning:, e... tate ai%e &l'OUnds, approx fOOO l<J ft. Short walk to bch .aabltd root, 3 DR floor plan' ·Wood P,.'"ln'l walls, Old Mi.: ,!~ brick Ors, 2nd itory 2 .ijR s, S29,!rill. Mission R!ty 4SU731 Condominium 1950 RENTALS RENTALS \ Hous.. Unfurnished Apta. Furnfshtd Co1ta Meu 3100 Cotti MMe 4100 Part furn. 3 BR, 1 BA, Ja", NASSAU PALMS. :l BR tum. yd., on lrvlne. amtll lam. $145-$150. Heated pool. oiey, S19S rno. 545-2740 177 E. 22nd SI. 642-3645 DELUXE 3 BR boma wllb DUC. Apt.,•t BR.; b&eh. on-- pool: avail 711. Lease $300 ly, Pool, s100. 1993 Olurch mo. inc. pool aerv. S46-D>5 St. 543-9633 642-4815. 1====== 4100 RENTALS REAL ESTATE AptL UnfurnJ1htd Geritr1I Nowport Buch 5200 Offlco Ronltl 6070 NEW ooundpO'OOI 2 BR. 2 BA LAGUNA BEACH al'T'OU tm Wstclitf Plan, Dtlk IPf.Cd available In 1665 lrvlne $18>$200, 642· newest oftlce bu!ldtna et O'l39. prime locetlon in downto11m Laguna Beach. Alr ~ Corona del Mar 5250 tionai, carpeted, beaulifu.I paneled PArtitionlna. T w o entratlcts; rear leads tb -Municipal parking lot.a.· $50 ,Sb .... .., per month tor space • ..\dd FOR LEASE: l!OME AT .I wiu •r•rE Ort•' $S for desk •net chaJrt. Acid LIVE IT UP TllE BLUn-s oo the point. Y UOA,I no tor b"""'" boon ... This summer and all .,.,.... Terrlfie Bay view 3 Br, 2% •nut:rs ONLY ON TEN ACRES awerlfta l!nice. All o.tmtiea with NO yard worlt:, NO;: be.th. Wind protected patk>. """ l & 2 BR. Furn &. Unfum paid except ~epbooe. Iorio• malnt"'-· :D.joy 2 l«atoo at July • Aug •• Sept. b...,, $150 mo. """' I Prl/ DAILY PILOT huge heated pools, Plngpong, 300 Esperanza. Ph 644-~ Patk>e I Pooll. Tennis. Con. r.z2 FOR.EST AVENUE _pool and dancing at YoUr Bluff Corde., 3 BR, z Ba. FURNISHED APT. htt'l Bkfst. 9 hole Putt/ LAGUNA BF.A.QI f'l'ivate dub. REALLY UVE $285 mo. Yriy. Pool. AVlill 2 BEDROOMS -2 BAn!S Green. 494-9466 AT MONI'ICELLO! S20.0CiO. immed. 644-2911alter6 PM Waterfront/Loe 900 Sea Ulnt', Cd.M &fi-2611 2 com'!., 1 inclust., 1 w/live Heart cf Newport Harbor BOAT SLIPS (MacArthur nr. Colist Hwy) qtrs. Coata Mesa.. uea . \Valker &: Ltt Inc. Corona del Mar 3250 Channel Ruf Owner. 646-21~ J46..Ulil. ' ---------NEW 1 BR, ctpUI, drps, BEAUT. Ocea.rwiew 3 BR, 2 2525 Octln Blvd., CdM bit-ins, rcfrlg, gar, Sl50. lnduatrial Rental 60tO ATTR. I01.1:er 2 BR. 2 Ba. ba, 2 Fplc,, maint /pool, 673--1788 Avail July lst. 673-6635 cpndo.; adj, to clubhouse relrlg, v.•ash.et/dl'yer. Avall I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" f.1 ·1 new bldg on street front N?. l; Leisure World Lag, Aug 1st. $290 lease. 673--6635 ---------·I m Newton Way, CM. bet 11 Hills. Owner 837-7438 2 BR, i::ardener, drapee, Coron• del Mar 4250 Huntington leach 5400 & 18 ol! Placentia. Sl.45 mo I •-pla ti t -&: up. Agt 833--05CM, Own ' RENTALS A ove, 111·e ee, pa o, wa er e NE\V e LUXURIOUS a """"1188 ·-•• $200 675 <995 UNIQUE be.ch. apt. elegantly ..,,.,. H F .,....... · .., · ..i RESORT UVING 1_:::.:..:;:.::. ____ -J:--""~'"-'_u_m_l•_hocl ___ l 4 BR, 3 ba, range, refrl.g, =·:c:.·~tiln~.~::es· 4 NATIVE GARDENS HURRY! One Left. 2'XXI tt, Rtntalt to Share 2005 dahwshr, 8'llta, no pets. $260 --6 POOts.SAUNAS-JACUZZI modem offlce. tbwr, pwr. r::MPLOYED -WomM would ::424=P°""'=· =tt!a=""'="='= 81iboa l1land 4355 HUNTINGTON HB. "36-3501. like same to share her 3 Huntington Beech 3400 :? BR,.palio, nr. No. Bay GARDENS . Lott 6100 b e d t' o o nt home "'ith July $125. wkly, Aug. $150. available s a.i·age in ex· LEAS E 2 story, near beach wkly. ~Jin 2 ~·ks, 235 Opal Costa Mao l·hangc for light housekt'ep. 3 Bn, 21~ BA, Bit-in~. fan1. • l373-3690 * 1'cnnls • E11r~rtaintnr111 ins plus nonlinal rental. rn1. \v/frplc, frnc('d }d, I"====~=-=== BOLSA-CHICA & HEIL RJ )lr.fercnccs requested write crpt~. <lrps. 2 ·Car ganigr, Huntington Beach 4400 ADULTS 847-8414 3 lN AU.. BUY ONE OR J. ~ily Pilol Box P-149. 962~. -2 B E 0 R 0 0 l\1 UN· 50' x M7' each with private F'E?.1ALE Teachers desire 2 3 BR., paneled den, din. rn1. QUIET & BEAUTIFUL .tllRNISHIID l block to 5 residence. Screened patio, carpets , 17676 Cameron 84?-2125 points stores, avail. a"""""x R·4·CP roo1n mates I share lg. ,.... .... tplfmt hm Sept.July lse $61 dra,pes. bltns. $2.ll. Mo. RENTALS 6'26· $125 per month. cau LARGE 67' x 300' wrr1l mo. 67~ 962-2578 owner 6(2...2835 or Key at Apts. Unfurnished '1701. Ellis ''D''. 84z..83m RESIDENCE, parttla are OOLLEGE or work'g man Apt, to sh:r. Pool pvt. pr., $'10 mo. 642-1!112 aft 6 pm. Call 3 Br. & den, ====~~.,'-'"-~! all near K mart & Harbor U'l5 mo General 5000 TOWNHOUSE, 4 bdrm, dub !bopping center. :r.tr. Pat· IUSINISS tnd EINAHCIAL BUSINESS tod PINAHCIAL- WrdntSd.,-, June 12, 1968 A tod NOTICES OAILV PILOT '.fJ ANNO UN N tnd--NOTICIS Bua. Opf>Orlvnltl" 6300 Money Wonted 6350 Loot 6401 PorllOMlt 6405 INl'Eft.ESTING old plctutet LQ;l' Sm Blk Tu • white, Wil.L pick _, CU' cl YolS' • private papen o! JudQ:e. min. Genna Shepherd am c:boke lo Euro;pe. ! o r From 1867 U1N early 1900't to Nildd. Reward ~ 6H-prtvllce-of dtMDI tbil Dodee Qty, Cunnlaon, COlo. mm. 9lldlmtt, &hip kt .U. Pvt. wt LU• ci,,. 61$.431& -=========' •'>'· °" uns Amtirlc1'1 Mo.t Exciting Food FranchlM "N·-·111. USA" OIM. ,.,_,.,, 6405 _,._ __ ""'-__ --~-,.1 "'"' Announc:emef'jfa -SHORT TERM LOAN ~ ;!"....':."'= ~=:. l11lc lo~~ c1i-Comt Hfflth Club tlonl tl6cka:roond. PIN.&llllt Offered to pubUc by lbpltaUty 1' Our Motto Comee to L.A. & ORANGE CO. - -•t"'-._..._ Bllboa Power Squldron FREE SAUNA wml Ottering: a tested and proven u.JU ..... s. 4'6J' no SWEDISH u•~•GE b burler .eA .. ,.,_,. ElementArY Pilodp& Counca · ·~ fnlnchlse be.eked y well • ............_. Every Mondi,)', 5tartlnc 1 Open wkdn 10 am-11 pm nted 50 year old s.peda]11.ed $25,000 at 10 .l 10 tor l YT. PM, June 10 Newport Har-Stmda,ya to am.I pm proceuSna: plant, one ol tbe RC\lttd by 1 IPf!CtKular bor Yacht Oub, 1')) w. 81,1 132 E. 18th St. &04000 Lvget ot lta type in the Ocean V1.ew lots nlued at U.S.A. ~.-wllh completJon .. Ave., Newport Beach .... ~ OR. for )'OUr conven!ence FUMr1lt 6412 ~ tiy bond. f:99.3U4. Every Tuesday, ltarttng 1 [ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[ Foor company owned''°"' ANNOUNCEMENTS PM, Jun. u, En""" School WmMINSnR ::' s...°F."~~ and NOTICES '"''"" 6 C!itt D•., N......., MEMORIAL PARK Beach, in Ca.tetortum. N'o ~linO~:~~ ;:i~,i.F;.,ou:;.;;.:nd:.::...:IF;.,,..:.;;;;...:.A;.;dt:;;;.,1..:6400:.;;;.;; 1 advance registration neces. Mortuiry & Cemetery (2) La " roUNo J <lb •-S'"--sary. !)woQ •t clau: u any Comr,1•1• funtral1 ' to open soon: s 'vegas, \D"le •u ,...,..,,,,. questions phone 548-1374 or (1) Reno, (1) Phoenix and cUU.S. O:h\l; small grey & rom $245 negotiation.II underway in wblte male, part poodle, c673~';;1855~·=~-===~ Ctmehry loft other prime are•s. about 1 year old (very cute), SINGLES· ADULTS from $130 U not claimed by Jwie 13th, Meet ~e County's Incluc1ea ~t CU. SeU servloe, cash Is CUT)', wUI Kfve to aood hcln~. 675-Nceat ~ at Santa Everythlnc bl "ant beautUul dlgnlfted hua.lneu ot )IOOt ~. Ana's deluxe ballniom pW. meant 1eu colt. own that will return mucb·1'LARGE"",..;,~....,.--,.-,..----I * ORO:lESI'RA * No trattl.o inblema. higher than average net doe Gelman Sbepberd well FOOD 4 CDCXI'~ 141m Beach, Weat:mtMter yearly income. (Sol•ang mannered. Ovmer or good Wm. THURS. FRI. SAT. 531.-1725 893-2421 store netted P>.IXX> first tuU home. Vic College Park. DANCER'S CORNER. · ~~~~~~~~~' year). Ideal for oouple or 546-00':ll 1438~ S. Mein at Edinger St. "' familyopention because. the ~ . SANTA ANA 542-9300 Cemetery Loh 6418 highly gpcclalJzed nature ol CHAt:AGN~ ~ "~le JNTERESTTI ·-,-RE-E-G~,~.-v-,-,-il-.,-.. -Th<- our business requires a min-mu n'lll e ca ' ye 0'Y EX'ffiAORDINAIRE! imum of employeel!. f'yes, 1mt colored flea cot. Good Shepherd Cemetery. lar, N.B. 673-6741 }?or Discriminating Couples Located in "A" section, at or Singles! Parties • trips • prev~ price. u ln· Ca8h investment ~ $14,950 6-8 MO. old bik labrador 001; ..... s. n..;""'-al &: """'"'· t-• ., p 0 n--,.. . ..__.. ""' .. -St ~.. ..,, '-5111 -~.. teres """'• wn e . . DUA provwes a turnkey opera-retriever WUllU on~· · THE GROUP 521, Grantlll Peas, Oreaon ti.on which includes opening in CM. Must identity. Cn4) 'TllHl9U (213) OL 7-6844 97526 inventory, ~pmert ando1...:616.o.::_=!39=-------Franchises AvaJlable "='--======='! ~· A thcrougb train-FOUND: ken cm d:Wn, m. I NEWSP;;;;;;i;;;;;;AP~ER.s~ • .::out;;:::ol~m-t•e I Tr1vel 6435 mg Pf'OO'Blll and cmtimal ~ ~ A Lansing &: 1otei-~ ~ open.tbig J.Ane, c.o.t& Mesa. Call Ir: ....,; magazines, Eng., LEAVING for Dd?olt Ir Qrl. -·u--A I I Gain., Ital., Span, French, l6 -•-rid ......... .....,.. m a mu. m identUy. 5&-1'1!1. China, Ruutan: aho adult caao: route ; l.m\111 • • 1 GIRL To abate. 3 br. BEAOl A.PI'. amount of oper&tln& capital FOUND Vt 1 ., .. _ , .......... lne• ... pa-'--,.t.-. en, women OI' men; llhare ts allo -....&--.> , e. o IUU"Q:-..!IOns ··--.. """'""''""" _, __ ... ,._~ 2 B• Dplx, -• pn·v-, ·~~~. Mkt ......_ Del Mar 1875 N. Harbor, CM"'""' ""'e'" expenses: -...r\.VIJU, .......,..,, ........., -J ·• '-URlll& ' ~ leaving June 13th. ft'73.l.H2. 847--0998 RENT ~,11 ... noo. rn.=.,. """'· "'· 646-1".23. 4 BR 2 batlui S1.!l> per month ~ferencea. 673-7178 aft 5 3 Rooms Furniture •"" s, JO PM $25 Month E>=IP=LO=YED=,..-,1-,d~y~do-,~,,...-o1 I 3 BR, l ~ ba, new pnt inside, FULL OPI'ION TO BUY 6'(J-0;95 bit-ins, drps, avail inimed N d · ·or 2 same to share 3 bdrm. SlSO. 842-mS aft 4:30 o cposit o.e.e. -~Orne wlpool. 962-8121 H.F.R.C. =========I TOWNHOUSE 4 bdnn, dlx, Furniturt Rtnt1ls tfewport Be1ch 2200 club & pool, $16-$160. 517 \V.19\h, C.M. 548-3481 675-3122 or 968-4337 1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 cpt!!, drps, 1 stry, gar. LlU LOCAl10NS AVAILABLE black,~· male Poodle ctll BBC Family Membershlp. nu $ll5. Avail July 1, 842-&37 JN: T _ '---•ler, R~ondo &: identify. ~1498 Will pay transfer fee. Mov· DRlVING New York .le --=====""'===1293 E. 17th St. ~6-4494 £A,Jl!I "''6 """ M t k 1 rld"'' I a·•-• Be h Bal'"--YOUNG ..... ..+ Alrdal bl k ing. Fee increased June 1~ ass., a e • e •u•g L B h 5705 Eves 5'13-9657 ac • uua Island, La· ,,.... e, ac June 14th. Share exp. 1162-~1!!9!'."!!"!a~•!!•'.!:<!!__~~~l•,..,..ii.i;ii .... iiiiii.,..,..; I guna Beach Costa Mesa and co 11 a r, fou nd Co a• t Must s e 11 immediately- LARGE 2 bedroom 2 ha un-60x80 Oceanfront Lot other ~ areas. fligbway, Corma del Mar. Make ofter. Write Box M 139 1 °"1"""'=· =,,-=====·I fur. apt. rompl('tely rrore-{Balboa Peninsula) 6T:r2440 days Daily Pilot SERVICE DIRECTORY o1'a.lcdrhas large..declc ~wlth 17.4&1:. Oceanfront Street-It you_ have......the l'equired BROWN, Gray & white..pid· JNTEREiTING-Old pictures Bilijlltflng 6550 EXEC type 3 br tK:mt', avail 6/22 to 8/10, compl equip. $700 total. 642-1730 view, earpetcd &: draped, Sell or trade, funds and can qualify tO own goon, clipped wings & tail & private papers ol Judge. Fountain Vall•Y 3410 stove & rel. Walk to town 537-0380 and operate a "NU'IVILLE Bantl #6126-61. 673-816'1. From 1867 tbru early 1900's BABYSITI'ING, Experitno!d ------'---·I Costa Mtl• 5100 &: beach. $165 on 1 yr leese.I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,. U.S.A.'' store, call for per-FEMALE German Shephml Dodge City, Gunnleon, Colo. mother, new home. Nor Balboa 2300 3 BR. \Vi th bonus room. l!!i!ii!!ii!!ii!!i!!iiiiiiiiiiiii No children or pets. No ! BARGAIN l eon.a.I interview today. Na-'61 lie. No. 33293. Vic. W. Salt Lake City 673-8316 CdM Springdale &: Edinpr St. Located At lTI9S Santa HARBOR brokers. Call 494-2604. c.~f. TRIPLEX wr tiooal Sales Director, 19th&: Whittier. 54&.ml. Fly to C1t1lln1 3425007 eve!!.'- E'XEx:: Bayfront home, 5 br, 4 .l)ll, Pier & noat, compl ·equip. Avail now to 6/30, & then open from 9/1. Reas IJ'a.tes to resporWble party, Owner 673-2039 Clara, F.V. For rent or ===:::=:=;:;:::,=1$84.10! Owner544-3!fi8 (213) 'Tlz.'1200-~enafon W'--'--'--------ID.n fl l""ts from ~-lease. 842-4449 orwrlteabout"-·~"t LARGE blk male poodle. Y %" v•a.uge MOTHER of 2 w anta -'=""======= Condominium 5950 JV\U DCU o Vicinity of C\ntflla and County Airport to the airport playmates Vie of Pomona A -GREENS Acr•age 6200 CM ... ••11 in~ A~. f1.J6.6612 ....... SJ00 O.luxo 3 be, 2 ba, aJII -;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; NUTVILLE U.S.A. Wl!soo. · · ~ ••w. elce, 200J i;q. ft. pool, db1l• NATIONAL SALE5 LONG-HAm.ED Olihuahua. Get in tune wllh June! * 548.(;512 3705 l'ttONARCll BAY AREA Bl::AU Golf & Mtn View BACHELOR • UNFURN. from $100 gar, crplS. dtps, Finest in San Diego HEADQUARTERS Brn. Gold collar. S.A. Hgts. cn~JIAs.i~~.ATE2l tonoight! BABYSfITING my borne, Back Bay. 2430 University County 8:ll E. SARAHA AVE. , .:""".:::..:="':.::_· ------F ~h'--l 31 L 5-5377 achl cbldrn. $12.50 wk with 3 BR & den, 2~~ ba.. cpts, Vacation Rent1l1 Drps, frpl, pool. $250 mo. 1.:.:;.:;:;,,:c;.;;__;.;_ _____ I Adults. 496-1243 betw 10-5 pm incl. util. 1·2&3BDRM. -:D;':,· =:'"='o;:Gt6=:·26=7=0~. ===\ . LAS VEXiAS 1· ranc ._., Available lunch. l\.1esa Verde 545-4284 ".: Acreage available in the C702l '135-0152 SIAMESE cat w/4 white ALCOHOLia Anonym Rtntalt Wanted 5990 Fallbrook area. Partt'!ls n SPAlngRE TIME INCOME paws. 548-0'279 Harbor Atta. Phone 673·~ WtnIU..m BAY = b~e = HA VE Beaut. furn. Ocean· front studio Apt. Playa del Rey. $200 wkly. June 15/Sept 15. Also Mo. &: yrl)' ,rates. 673-4370 Summer Rtntal1 3995 FURN. & UNFURN. Heated Pools, Ollld Care Center, Adj. to Shopplnii - No .pets allowed from 5 acres to 50 acres; L::>Ondm new field, refilling CAUCO Kitten found vie. P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. 962_3151 BUSIN~ Woman needs l some planted to young Avo-a collecting money from KillYbrook School .iU>out 6 =====--,----,-1 Bdnn unfutn Apt, Costa cado trees with beautiful new high qUallty cot n wks old. 546-6441 6114 Meet Dyn1mic Frltnds BABYSJTI"rnG my home wk INTERNATIONALLY Pub- lished 3 story redwood & glass house, 4 BR, sur- roonded by trees, ocean view, near Wood's Cove. 590 Diamond St., Laguna Beach, June 23 -Sept. 14. $1650. 494-3532 2700 Peterson Wa,, at Har- bor lr Adams. Costa Mesa. 546-0370 ~1esa, Newport, Corona del bldg. sites, Priced from operated di~aers in ~ ANYONE loat an oppossum! with ii:terling que.litiu. days. Huge fncd yrd & Mar, Huntington Bell or $.UXl per acre with terms to area. No selh.ng. To qualify 642-?0Cil • 839-4990 • Refs. * 646-2385 ATTRACT 3 BR beach house in Balboa. Furn. Avllil June .15. $150 v.·k. fi75..5fi6(), Lllguna. Up to SIOO mo. suit, and many new country you mtu1t have car. ex. ,;;;;;~======·I SWEDISH M••1a&e, steam. I-==· ======::;::==I Ga.rage or carport estate homes already build change references, $900 to L t 6401 New ioc. 204 Orange, HB. ·Brick,Matortry:h neeessary, 642-0086 after s in· this area. Close .to goU $3300 cash secured by in. N For •pPt. 536..2844 l>ve/Sun. ~ ' • -416(1 p.m. course. For further infonna-ventory and equipment. Few REWARD $50 for"'information RENTALS Houses Unfurnished G•ntral 3000 SUMMER Tental, lg. l BR. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; [ Completely furnished. Close I• in, l 'I> block& to beach. S?'JO B/B lt1o. 541.-3374 Days; 4M-7997 R E N TA L PROPERTIES 1 =E=v:',-,'·=,.--~~~­ W,ANTEO for Summer & PRIVATE room, bath & re-- Yearly. We are rapidly frig, priv entrance. 6 wki! • &111tling booked up for sum· start 6/18. S200 total. CdM mer, and still ha.ve many re-675-5170 eves. Adults Only Discriminative Tenants for Preatige Address MARTINIQUE GARDEN APTS. Exec. Seeking tion please call Walter Frick hours weekly can net ex-le&ding to return of a llOUSE for 9 member fami· \\1th: cellent income. More full DITCH WIT C ll TREN· ty ror 9 winter mos ea. year. Eckhoff & Attoc., Inc. time. For personal in· QIER Model Cl, Serial No. Beginning Sept. l96B. Can 1818 W. Olapman Ave. terview, send name, addreu ~11. stolen rrom Tract No. furn hse all year. Call Orange, Calif. and phone number to Inter. 5M7 in San Juan Capistrano James Heltrich n4:833-1234 5':11-2621, Evcs-wknds 5.JS..5747 State Dist. Co., 455 East 4th on Ol' aboUt 510> or 5/26. ext 202 South, Suite 206, Salt L&.ke Any information received WANTED SEE Adv. under 6 21 O City, Utah 84111. will be held in strict confi- bowe -winter ''Newberry S p r g a • a> CANDY dence. Phone Gene Robin· Se~. l to June 15, cont yr})' acres:• Call owner 847-6640 SUPPLY ROUTE AOn 494-8595. bl:¢s to $200 mo. 3 BR or 2 eves &: wlmds. Part or Full ~ 1 -"=.,===--~-- BR. & den. Unfum or !l('mi;L2~L~o~'-'"="-~~-Man ot' Woman to refill & $$ REWARD $$ fu rn. College teacher. X1nt TS, 1 acre ea .. .$1400 ea. collect money from new &: For the return of m,y • <lucsts from our repeat cli·· 1-,,-c-N_f_A_L_S~----­ ents. ALSO we are desper· alt'ly in need of Yearly __ A~p_h_._F_u_•_n_ls_hocl___ !!!!!!!!~"!'!!~~!"!!'!!!!!!!!!!!! Rentals. Cotti Mesa 4100 SILVER Parklike surroundlnga FURNISHED BACHELORS UNFURN1BR·2BR ·3BR 2 baths available Carpets, drapes:, garagt! 18th & Santa Ana, CM. 646-4233 646-5542 refs. 528-6307 Hawa.llan Parad1Se Park , · subdivision, Puna district. unJque coin o per a t e d beautilul brown poodle, 30 lo 40· Sailboat going to pot Phone day or eve 962-4766 dispensers. (Candy and Na-lost Sat 6/8 at Fa1hion Boy & s .. rn ""'"'· !no. thru· neglect? I will live . tional Brand macks). E>i;. lsland, Npt. Bch. Any· aboard & maintain in Im· 10 Aeret:. So. Callfomia, $8 cellent income for few Hrs. ooe who has any Wor· rnaculate cond. in exchange ~; $8 per mo, $795 Full weekly work (Day or Eves). mation. for \JSe. 646-?083 pnoe. L. She1A1elt, 326 W. Nv selling. $875 to $3400 PLEASE CALL NEED double garage for 3rd St., L.A. 713: 623-5102 Cash~· For personal KIRSTEN =~:·~~~d. $25 Wk. Up GATE 673-3ti63 • Studio ' Bach apts. I~;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~ 1 • Incl Uttls Is: Phone Rr"T. • MA!d Smnce • TV avaD. Apartments e New Cafe Ir Bar Y 1 sto interview, tend name, ad-644-2()00 &l4-lf309 aft 6 pm ear Y rage; prefer Resort Property 6205 dress&: phone nwnber to: 1:.:.:..:::;::•_.:::.:c:::::.:::::= 3100 Ea.stslde Costa Mesa.. $15i 1-----'--'-....:;:0.:: 1 TRANS-WESTERN TENNIS Per month. 673-2549 40 PRIVATE acre! in forest. DISTRIBUTING co. New CdM Tennis Club 2376 Newport Blvd. 548-9755 1 Bdrm. Apt DESIRABLE- H0~1E W All< to market 22'nd & Npt No pets, 1 adult. l Br. Neat $82 mo. 646-3750 ? BR., l BA., Large !iv • nn Hr.vd -Doors, Cptd., Drapes gartKlisp, garage, water $79.50 l BR, close. to shops. turn downtown. One qUlet pel'500 . ADULTS ONLY NO PETS 548-3402 , RATE REASONABLE 'l-~N"te-e~Jy~l•uc-,7i ... 7od~ba~,h~o7!o-,- Across from Cbwltcy Club apt. $65. 132 w. Wilson Z75 l\1esa Dr. Ph 548-6700 * 548-9577 * N Ca.bin, dining room, beer 500 N. AZUSA AVE. Famous Jamaica IM cts ear schools. free"·ays Rooms for R t 5995 •--1-•te COVINA CALIF \" en UtU·, gro. store. a...., s. , . 91122 Sngle membenhip..$15 Mo, ·•alklng distance to OCC trailer camp, stream & !N !n!U ,. 1 ) 988 El Camino $15. UP wk W/kitchcn 125 ESTABLISHED v e ndin g 0 • wn ees abundance o( spring water. 1 H B F Low coet hooltb and Apt. # I Cotta Men up Studio Apts. 2376 New· rou e · • area. ew hrs. • port Blvd .. C.M. 548-9755 Between Redlands & Big per month. Net good return. Happiness. * 673.STil SPACIOUS SI'UDIO 2 Br. Bear. S.295.000. Sell, lease or Investment from $360. Call A friendly, private club 1%. ba. crpts, drps. elec bit· ROO~f. for :young, work~ trade doWTI. 536-1160. LOST: M111n'1 gold bracelet ins. Nr. schls, shops, free-girl ; home privll.; llunt. h G 0 -h •101952 ~ =" 12 UPflOLSl'ER '{ Buai ...... ,, lop type wale . re at sen· way. 549-0112 eves and wk ..,.. . ,,_,_ °""-;J.J<J'I BUSINESS acres in IA saJe. Owner may }; see~ timenlaJ value. Vic Villa 1-ond=':,·=:-;-;c.,-==--PVT BATH & ENTER Paz, Mexico. $24,soo. betwe-'--. 8·.30 • 5 p•j Nova or Bob Bum'a Npt, 3 BEDROOl\.f. Largt? fenced $135 • 2 BDR.l\.f, new crpts & l Bl..K OCEA "" ,.,., • " Yard. \Vestside. Gar 8 g e , ctrps. 1613 Santa Ana Ave. SPLIT LEVEL N &. BAY E tt 11ino. 1 Oaks daily. 2864 Newport Blvd., Bcb, Sat am. Reward! 51• -. 54" -Lrg 2 & 3 BR. Cpts, d'""", 117-8. 33rd St. NB 673--5536 vere 103, Costa Mesa 642--0168 Eves 644-2836, $135. LI 8-8124 .J-Oo.J•.. .,.., .. ," b ··-:========="~I Resort, c/o Angel111, Oaks, ltns, Nr shp'g cntr & achls. Califo 1 9!ll; ( 714 ) FEMALE Cat. Dark ll'f:l' 2 BR O:indominium. noo mo. E/SIDE 2 BR. Elec bltns, 2885 Mendoza. S.15-5421 iMos;•~·:-'·~·;iT~·~l~··~C;.-;rt~·~· ~5~99;,7;1,~~~ml~=·===·===: I Real Estate Loens 6340 lllld wht yellow collar, Use of pool. patio, Adulls only. 361-B ,,,..... 673-4!16Z Ogle $135 mo. 642-1298 BUSIES1· marketplace m S5 per night on weekly basla Prl. money for lst & 2nd timid, Lost in mo v Ing town. The DAILY PrLOT and up. 2384% Newport Mount. & Onert 6210 R.E. Loans from 11500 Up Balboa Penn to Ea.stbluff. 2 br Individual unit w/gar. 1r S140 Util. paid. Cle:an 2 Oll.SSUied aectinn. Save :B=J::v;d·=·=C=.M=. ==;54=~=•-;;•'";i Jkwa.rd. Call 644-1017 "-·d d Jt •-.. -kg BR. furn . J Blk. K-Marl. ttm & • ~ y 8 0 Jack Smith Co. Blnoe 1949 1 ,.:,;:;:::.:;'-=::::._:..:.:;;.:.:_~ .,,..,1 e. a u s, nope~. -· mon ey, e e!fon . ...oak NEWBERR Sprgs, 543•8381 LOSr Black smooth haired 1.,:ool". iP::"='=· ::ll=OO=m=o=. =64=2=--0'.!::-";-~::"8-07=="=!162=-=1636=====-'-=""=w::! '::'======= Gu•st Homes 5991 acres, hi-dry-desert. Buy all I======;;;;,=== Cockapoo. Between Ga:rfi~ld 1. _______ ....:;;.;.:1 or pert. Level land, pump & &: M Ii HB Re atd 4500Long Beach 4'500 Long IM•ch 4500 PRIVATE Room for t?lderly weU-baa '"""'n in alfalfa. 90 Mortgages, T.D.'1 6345 agno a, w · Long Beach ...... S@\\~~-l!,£trs· Solve a Simplt Scnunbltd Word Pu.ult for a Chuck!• .,..-.o 992--0262 after 5 PM ambulatory gentle m an man made lakes ln area. $!Kl 000 Se ed T Nulrilious meals & tender fish raising, alfaUa growing. • uon D on 160 A fistlul of keys attached to laving care. 54&-5225 rectl!lltional. Ideal tor magnificent Oceanview lots a sa.ilot's lmit~ vie W Bay actively sellin& at $1950 A't'e. NB. 6~. ' trailer park. Price reduced! each: due 2 11'1· Strongl-...;.:..• --'--'.;;:..;=.;_--M._l_ac_._R_•_nt_a_l1 __ ...:.59;;,,-9;.;-9c1 Call owner 347-6640 eves & owner with $600,000 ln- weekendll:. Vestment 2090 d i I c 0 u D t Single Garage for storage $20 mo. 642-3645 REAL ESTATE Gtntral R. E. Wanted 6240 ~~ 'D nu 11 16%. OWNERS: SAFE 12"' RETURN Apt. Unltt W1nt•d $5565 tlrst TD on magnlflcr:nt ~20 Unlt11, first claM. Occanview lot, p a y a b I e lncomt Property 6000 ExceUtttl C()ndillon, Npt. S55.~ mo iocl 8~ due in 3 NOT Rellpons\bl.e for any debts but my own. John R. Duttenhofer. • NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH tHROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD Deb Costa Mesa Cor· m . $7.950 saJe to ;ood llOME & JNCOJ\.fE by <M·nr ona ·•· •1 Mar area by Pr! owner. City now COiinp)oting I A...o;d JI FulflH 61 You BRICK, Ooncme, Carpentry Custom Cabinets. SmaU jobs OK. Frte !At 962-6945 Bu1ine11 S•rvice 6562 Secretarial S.rYlce1 Or...-Coon!;)' -"""'· DI E. 17tb St. 6Wte 212 °"""' M.,. Call Vicki e 6G-1485 HELGA'S Secret'l Servke IBM Exec Typ, dictation, resumes, reprts, mlmeo, 642-3107. Bulldero 6570 RE MODEL , repairs plumb'a.. peintlbs, tiec., carpentry, n1td., com.mere., room addJtbls. R • a 11 675-3038 Cerpenterlng 6590 REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS CABINETS. Any rlz.e job. 23 yrs exptt. 548-6713 e Carpentry e Cablneta e e B1t-lns • Alten.tions • a Repairs • Reas! 646-9583 Cement, Concm. 6600 CUSTOM PA'nOS I: Block walls. .Aleo ~e sawing .l removal. 842-JQlO Floon-Walb-Patios le Ex· posed Rocb. E x 2 e r l woriunanahip. 64U514 CEMENT Work, all types. No job too amall. Free est. H. STIJFLIQ( 54-8615 'I'HORYK CONCREl'E NO JOB TOO SMALL Free Est. * 646--1234 LlconMd -Quollty <:@m.mt work. 8J9.6C6i Exe deptel'i/invest, opply. 4 ... 2ero..·1 J2~ 6'2Good BR, res. &: 10-2 br Apta, party. Write Dally Pllol improvemena. 499-3844 ! ~ ~ ~ 63 Hal- pool. 2-yr old. Eslde fl7S.1393 Box P-146. Bt1ng yoor TDt to Trust ~~ i:!: t:::;:.• 1.Q.fS.16 IHOWEL ' I I' I llllAR l A p&yehloti-lst said to~ ' I' I' I, I !~~~~~\' ..--------''-·•_,l )>Ill you wlll hove one less \ ISEYRUL l'lhlngto-.-.• .,_,..I ""I ... , .... l"""'Tl-..1'".... 8 eomoi.r. "'" ci..,~. .~,.., "' '"'"° '" ~ •• ; .. ,, "'"'' • • • )O\f develop l111m ...., No. 3 belo¥t. & tii·.~·· I' r .. I' I' t I' I' I' I' 111 I e;:.. I I I I J · • I -I I I I .. ,......_ ........ -SCRAMLETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9900 ' -- I BUSINESS and Deed Center .,.here the 1 .,,.. ~v-:t=... IMITTMM Bu1lnts1 R•ntal 6060 FINANCIAL buyers lft. Jack Smith()), •w-31'-"' a.--. • ~-• 1323 N Btoadwa¥, SA ()pen 9 t """""'=' 39~ ft10"!!"t . DK n • PRIME Rtotall Locatlon e Bua. Opportunltl• 6300 to 6 &it Pb. 543-8381 If~ ~t'*"'"' 11 = STORE 17 x 40 90 llTlrN AlAd 72,..._ J.S13Harbor,CM&4&-6654 BEAUTY SHOP for rent % Loam:to$60,000 llT~ 43A n,.._ tully equipped rtlldJ for or~. SINGLE FAMILY f:&:, ::=... ~r= 1'1 ' SHOP ~ leue $135 mo &fO cootl:NH!d bulineu ()pen.tor Bey Mortaq. Co. 6tM865 16 Tocklf .... v-76 aq. feet. Ideal location, Npt will sta,y. $150 ·mo. 19'l l~~ ~=--~~ Deb. 6'1S-5453 Center St. CM 543-4476. or Money Wanted 6350 lt5et1o1 4'0.W... 7'""'-6<2-3l0'7 l---'----"'.;__:.:;;;:1 20~ !!OT• IOL..-ido Office Rent•I 6070 ------~ PROVEN Marine Produett 21 ~_;-31 v-11 51-w ,;.;.;.;,;;;;.;....;.._;_:_ _ _;;,.c,.:. ORIV&-ln restaurant In now IKlld \Yoridwlde. Need fi~ i:::" :J~ FOR RENT beech. cit)' dolna hiith arc>M· $1CM)M to expand prod, & 24'-' ,_.y_ 14~ AJl'Pl"OX. 450 Sq. Ft. carpeted Askinir low doown. 7:30 - 9 l&Jcs. Pa,y bec:k 'U mh i:=: ~~ ::~·,. le drapes, alNlond. AM or after $ PM. 673-6507 wtth bl lnt«est ....i ... -·it... 21 Avof,4 31 ~ 17 ~ MAl!JNElt 'S 8LDG .,..-""I."'~ 21 T• 5' If • ,_,....... · YAOIT Sales Corp. ExCfL llcad.lng PubHc. 2l:h372-4513 2'~ '9Moif "T.ro slue 1515 Westclitf Dr., N.B. MW 1111 a J>OWer • bkrJ. IS XOUR AD JN Q.ASSJ· '°A ~--()td~ Contact Mn. ~nk) &&~ X1nt water toe. AlVpert. '2DT Sc:uwww• ..m i:,. ~--~===::::ISJ:::a-1:. :::18/::AA::•:=========::;!. __ _,_ CHARGE )'(IU1' want lld now. Wrt.'-"'t:::•.;:Box.::;,.P;.,·.:.H;:...:70.;,:;,llY:..:..P!=lot:::·..:...:lm=tti:::"l:..:;r.r:..:ll.:..:Dtol=..:-=:::: I • Ji ' .......... ~ •.. -u. ·-------- • * * * W lffcW...,• rtrM Sf icu:&. aJWWll:A11CIN Po. llATWAL -SWAl'PDS ,,, ....... , __ , __ ,_ ._._ .. _..ma.._ ·* ...._ ______ ....... c.-·-._.,_ _,. .... --.... . -.... I C l 11.-w.•-n...s-.n .. 1111. '65'11 -re ..._ y_. Tr a 1"' ,_ a ~ -.:.. . BEAVTrW..lo6m. ~ .. Jn Lido--. W1U trd hie ... dnar s:rtJIOI eq .... lt...E. .. ~,. ,-au.. ... S..m:t IC. ft-*' ..... .,..,...... s. Oiiif._ ... "' 8C. ........ all at' pUt. WA..Vf': ~ -er C'Cllll 1 mmmr. <>r- ae Calrle1. Rib-. m-mi IL\VE" -... iwpooll!d ne .,. ~~Lale b.hc. x......a side. 11l.ODD dear- :tr an1 R5" -(jait.s -Airpb:nr -TD' s or':' b et;.. i"Q.;)i:S ..... Some im~ iar:ome srn».. .DC,.. eqai(y. For. '!'D's-ar ! . ec El 4!K-:l!t11 -,.. Gd*"' ... "'TRADER'S p~ •• am. Ca -... P.o.a..-.~ .... -.aa * * * J._G.~Lir. ........... * ....... ...... 11.~U.. * - Oil A: Edo-Laws )hmtrn • 1.i.: d.. Sii --56-Zlt aft 4"' .at. 0 I ·....,. • Ftr> --,·-.ul! ·~-·­.... _..,_,... ........ Oii -e • ara-..i-•n , ,, t --••&• ... Jiii . . lilO'iC<G -.. "VU ~ oil'&. ... ndir-r.tTiriili; }W.. Dmia ..., INJc. LE. ...... (al):t.. 0--/lctfl!UW -& EMPl.OYMBnJOU & IMl!UIYMBn """'·--119 """' ........ - • We aeed JWJl.(--UlllldOftrlO-., t.bo•hiSnf'IS.Ur-lft GRADUATIN6 -' HIGH SCHOOL or J.C. el nnt ·-loh:-'lrhnJClll<all .-- • CAREER ...i bdler ,_..u .. --.... ""°"ia ... bllklOm. We- GOOD SfAJn'IN"C S.'\IAIUll.'5, P.'\ID VACAT!O:-;s, PAID ROUD.~YS. Mll Plll\"SIONS Sftuil ltl•S.SWe~Blnl..AMl!eim loom -A.Jll IO 4 P Joi.. ~ llm>Ggb J'ridly SOUIHERN COlHTIES GAS COMPANY Al>-'..,,.... lllllitr om;ilor<T. ileck11ical lraftim11 · wmmuw ~ 1"9n np-""•• ~ ~ .ftiats •ii::& -bma:ac ~ IUnr' ill -Tied. no. pmdllc tll!ld ,,. ... malir ---ccm.la. Cla-Val Co • ) nit & Plec I :tie c-·Mou 5412'111 ·"' 5 .. 11 Cucer SbJrtiDa ~ P• <Um:· ~ J'fnt: 1wr' dl!'IL-...... _ p!W _ 1 ~ hiniac pmpa:m tu c:l!IIt.'m'y Gld rrarinner c;m.. PIUQ'. fDmiiress e s a r • ! bw::Sooud' ~ Ne. ~ ffl.Y..1 1wtr1~ mcie. TID Al.E'U.."Dli!t .... _ .... __ _ ~:fer WP' Tmnc: pumn cm JlliN¥&a •Ilia .... ~--~ ~ pwitiw; ·~ ril a.Sllial! dlis ~ w:i4 t:inali baiaitc ~ PtlUP bmdD • -e;utt-_ ....,,.. PACIFIC FINNta ,_ WUTMINSTER ~ ---J•illr"' FibenJlom I a ·•on • w-...... • Dtr•wilig Cliedrer bpor ..... _., in dMddftt electro JMCM.lical faibric. --.... w ..... estMrnhed cioi1w1•rcial firM witlt ....... fringi. "'"'"'• °"" ,..,.. -.. lent liz mouths u-...,_,,_.,,..,.., hi IWMBllCS 9Z911ob<-~-549-2221 ' W"•· manr;r! All -.wt: )'W tu ~ 2 -Gr...t Fil11,,i.., Inc. l16 W. F.orisilv M Sui. lbral5, Calif. 'n-0 1..u-:s.s c.,_ Oppon...ity .km ~ fasr:@st crosirll' •e511ile-3htcal had salin N'o npofex:e lllKWWWJ'- W' f tr.tin -rap '% p&rt lime MuhNI .,_ ,... .... Inc. .'.'( ~ 8. l6Q3. .. atdia. f.CJ:.l.m SA.. .tn:l N. Bl:md•.,. """"" SALES R£PR.ESE\'TATIVES ~ i11 iftpl'ade-st •ria.l:Dlts .__ •· 100 amtma1 timda. ...... ftt1z ia Clruip °"D7. Di::I: fll m oppo~t•aity to mre ---Id • ij)U't time" hwatw l'Sp l!llOt ~. W\" trUt.. W~. ll'.ttalll: Fa• d M:estwww tac. 219 K. i1IUI;. .._ ... bnt Whilo y.., .._,, Meiw .,,,.,_ ..,..,. Wnrr. ~ co.1-t."i ""' c.uy ...... s. r. a.I!<. 9IUI 6 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -s 6 7 8 ' • • , PRINTING SOYICE -·-W l , LEGAL NOT1CE - -' ' -...... -- I ( r. F I p I I D ( I I • JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT • JO BS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Wtdnm.,. June 12, 1'168 DAIL y PILOT 43 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISI '''o"ac-::M"'•"'•"cHA=NrnD"11ris1"-F"'O"l-""M"'E"'l'"'C"'H .. A°"k"'D""1s'-1"'F"'o"'a~ 2~LI AND TRAOI SALE AND TR.I.OE I SALi AND TRADE Holp W onted SALi AHD TRADI w.._ .7400 fu•nlh!ro IOOO furnlt\lro IOOO T o lr<ltl"' HOS -.,_ He lp Wanted, Men 7200 .A~t_o_nc_i ....... _w_-_on;....7..;300..;. Help Wanted Help W1ntM SU~EltlOlt J OIS _W;,;.o;:.;m;;;'"';;;n:.._ __ ;_7400::::l-W::,::omo::;::n:_ __ :._7400;:::: • C1rpenters Trailer or mobile home ~ prdentd. Ex- ' ccllent bcndill. EXPlORER MOTORHOME CORP. 4000 Campus Drlv• Newport a.ach AtlllltAnt A TTENTION Secy. l Jin ofc • • • • .. • • $475 ~I constNCUoo Co • • $150 BIGpr, f\Ul chars'-•.•• to $5.25 lnventoty Control •• $325-$375 Jr Sec)'/)'OWll •••••••• SD Coot Acta Qlc •••• -Billlnc Clc11t ••• , , , S35l»3'T5 ...... PBX ........ 135().$400 Payrou, a......i .. I"""° StMo/Ofc Mnif' , • . . . . S-tOO Acta Aamtam. . • • • S35G-S450 llocpt/PBX, type ...... $350 Secy/sales div .•••• , .. $fiO CALL 642·TI41 Superior EmplO)'ment ·-y 1875 H.IJtlor Costa Ml!u MISS EXEC AGENCY r ee Politioru: Full Olarte Bkpr. • • • • SS'm Girl Friday/Fe Bkpr, .. ti2S Secretary .. • . . .. .. .. • • $50) Secy, leraI tme •••• ro S425 Genttal OftiCe , • • • . • • • $400 Ciftieral Ottice , .••.• lo S350 Electro- Mechanical • Assemb lers Experienced only. Compu .. r Assembly. -APPLY Marshall Communications 2 230 S. A nno St. S1nt1 An1, C11if. 540-2120 An equal opportunity employer ' Wanted ••• WOMEN! l.adl~ -Wt ~ your lbillllct to lilJ waitin&: jobti In Office.1 ln the Oran1e O;wU;y lJ't:I. Rea;i.lter now for abort tum or long term jobs close to YoUr horn•. Mltull,MOU• _... Applicatlono lolnt , AA . NEWPORTER TV TA KEN ........ ""'. SONY TV AUCTION , FULL ., PART T IME • ~ Headquarten ~.1 .. Juno 14, 7:30 pm 1::;:.~!~!:,T MEDITERRANEAN T!UNSIS!"ER POliTABW N;;:~,"::!,.=~ no 1tudt:-t1U SPANISH Car Boil' Home aieta: Kta at.o ln Cherry, ""'' ~ to 48 -lJbenl. VI· ... aow .. MahopA)', M1ple ... otvus • "lion P<Y· Mcnt r.U.s. ~ Ji 0 1/e $109.95 loY..,.11. --· Occ:u. r.mployeedLlcouna.Uved•Y u-:fu~ t'e,la -, chair•, bunk beds, com· wttk. Apply Monday, Wed· , ,. .. ., , ~ ~ Portabl,s, Jow bo)o1. conaoltt modes, cocktaU lablea, wln- nelldt,y, Thunday and P'rl· $ dow Cl\f:IU, M:Winl: mat.-h• day. ,,., •• ''"'" "New Showroom Sample1 29.95 UP 1n... '"''" •• dnw...,, F. W. Wool-rth deli<•. •w•• l•mps. plc- 2300 H b II d Wiii S.11 Any Pleu lndlvW u1lly Transistor radio.., for ever')' ture1, ma1tn11M11, 1V'11 1.----------ar or y • l)Ul'1)(l&f! •ltrrol, power mower. "Uke 8' Carved arm divan, lg matching chair with $995 · t1ew" rl!frlPMlon. istovH. SPOTLIGHT JOBS -Temporary- • Exec 'l).>plsts • Tram. Secy e Le11J Secy. • l!:xp. Assemblers • Bookket'Pll'S COSTA MESA WAITRESS Good opportunity ?.lust bav• 1ood appearance. APPLY IN PERSON ~ P.M. DAlLY beautifUI fabrics; S pc hexagon dark oak din· • washers. dryers and MUCH Ing set with bltcl< O!' avocado framed chair& NEWPORTER TV MORE? & vinyl c111hlons; 5 pc bedroom &el, 9-dr Mr 13(12'f~ """"' .Phon• SU-85U WINDY'S AUCTION & Mn dresser with lg Jramed mirror, 2 lg eommodeS & matching headboard . 20751~ Nrwport 91.,.d. ONLY S 2 9 Bthi.nd Tony'1 Bld1. Mal'ls. 4 9. 5 !N-.N-i.,N-.&1 .... lt" en.ta Mc,. "'"'681; 1$895 Value) Summer employment for seV- eral collee:e ltUdenta who need employmerlt until Sep- tember 1st . Pre.fer men ma- 1orlni: in bu.liness, law, or psychology. Enjoyable and interesting work and inval· uablt experie~ far men maJot\n& In the above fields. l\u<iu"I°' Cll! ...... ID l340 Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;' Alto Fee Pa.id Positlona COME IN TODAY Snock Shop No. 1 23D5 E. Cuot H,..,. Coron• dtil Mar, C1. o r TI RMS a1 low11 U W•k OPEN DAILY 9 to <t TY1, WASHl•S, --COav:ng t:ountry •••--mATOU Lao! Mlnuto Solo Ne down -UH our 1toN ch1roe plan FREEZERS ·Dl'fEIS ·U11[$ Spaniah <llest: Lamps. Co!· & PIDID$, ..,.-. 1ee k. End Tables: DoW*i $115 por WHk For preliminary interview call 53S.1183, 9 • 2 p.m. YOUNG MEN 11 to 25 Experienced. or not. Learn sales with a gua.r111tee. U you can qualify I ran offer you: • $15Sper Wffk S•l•ry e A new Ca dlll1c e M anagement Tr1lning 410 W. Coaat Hwy., N.B. 00 Betty Brure 646-3939 Secys, many , •.• , , • • to $600 Leia! Secy •• , ••••••• 10 li'lS Dental Recpt ••• , ••• to $500 DMV .................. $475 Med/Gen Ofr .......... S400 Typists, sevt-ral .•. , lo S400 PBX/ Ad mi ting ..... , .. S3JO Trainef! File Clk • , , , , , S310 Tren Dental Atsist ••. , S281 Fartory traintt11 .. Sl .65 hr All.SET AGENCY 437 W. 19th, C.M. 642-8752 \Ve turni5h pverything except desirfl to ma:.r.e money, Ap. ply 1500 Adams, Suite 300, Co5ta l\-1esa U-t p.m. daily. H•lp Wanhcf SECURITY GUARD 1-w---"---74 "-' 00 Exclusive Ne-.vport Beach community nP.l!'ds privall!' guard to worl< iITegUlar d1y1 and how-s. Prefer retir~ peace officer. Salary $400 per moo th. uniform' provid- ed. Please write letter out· lining your experience to Daily Pilot Box M-150. KEZY RADIO INC. Disneyland Hotel Anaheim Htt1 an lmtned.iale opening · for a Bookkeeper. The job ' otters a cliallenaing exper- \Vell &"l'OOmed. Over 18. Good ience in pll!'asant sWTound· opportunity for alert young ings. Five yean: accowil· in&: and bookkeeping exper· ience required. Salary .plus insurance plan, fringe belle- tit1. Male or fem.ale appli· cant arreptable. Send rP- MAIL BOY man . CLA-VAL CO. 17th & Placantia Cost• Meu An equal opportunity employer L11ding Import D•a ler Has opening for qualified Auto S1l .. ma n Det•il Man Service Writ•r Lot Min De1n L•wi1 Imports 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-930.1 Auto Trimmer Experienced on I y. Take charge ol Trim Departm~nt. C.Ompany bendits, vacation. steady employment. Cali Miko 540.0170 No Experience Necessary! Must have clean CaWomia drivine: record. Apply YELLOW CAB CO. 1S6 E . 16th St. Costa Mesa Service Station MECHANIC sume to: D. P . MITCHELL Extcutlvt V.P. KEZl, INC. DltMyland Hotel Anaheim, Calif. PERSONNEL CLERK · Responsible woman for Front Office position in· volving payroll, typing, flllnr etr. Personnel ex· perienre prefml'd. Apply Personn•I 10--4 Mon thnJ Fri ROBINSON'S FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH An ~uaJ opportunity f!mployer r.uil time. Must know Soo}'le --------- tune, brakes, front ends, Cl.a.u A Smog certilicate, rood Niesman. neat in 1.p- . pearance. See Oyde 2590 Newport Blvd., C.M. LOT MAN With aome mechllllical expel'· ience & detail experience. Sl!'e John or Joe. NEWPORTER ~fOTORS 2036 Harbor Blvd. REAL ESTATE. ShouJdn't you bl!' selling the hottest area • Hunline:ton Bearh? Call Phil McNaml"e for •pp!. Village Reil Estalt- 962-4471 546-810.l Car Wosh Help Full t imt or wkeMs. lilin •ll'e 18, apply in ptrson LIDO CAR WASH ORDER CLERK Three years experience: with manulacturin1 firm desired. CALL OR APPLY CLA·YAL CO. 17th & Pl•centia 548-2201 An equal opportunity employer Brunch Woitress Sunday only 4 hours. Ai" 2l to 35, size 1~ nr under. Experienced 0t1lv. Apply in per30n after 3. SECRETARY EXPER.I!NCED: Execu- tive typewriter & .short· hand. Exceptional rrowth opportunity! -APPL\'- Marshall Communications 2230 S. Anno St. Santa Ana, Calif. 540.2120 An equal opportunity employer lntermecli1t• St en o Cle rk Shorthand 80. Start $436 Senior St•no Clerk Shorthand 100. Sta1t $469 Food Servica Wor kar 4-10 p.m. Start $333 Apply immediately Orang• Coaat College :no1 Fairview Road Costa Mesa 8J4.57M Hostess-Cashier Attractive, vivacious host· ess to work 5 or 6 nights. Experif!nce preferred but not necessary. Good In· come potential. Call for appointment. Bob Bums Restaurant M <l-2031 Part Time Work '!~.b•-~· -Anaheim, 1184 W. Lincoln -Santa Ana, Ph. 54()..0325 -Co&ta Mesa, 2700 Harbor An equal opportunity employpr PRODUCTION ASSEMBLY WORKERS No ex perience nece111ry APPLY 1987 Placentia Av•. Costa M•1a PBX Operator Experienced, mature. Perm•· nerll Pff.rl time Sundays thru Tues, PM hours.· apply in ...... Sheraton Brach Inn 21112 Osean AVP. Huntington Beach Radio. Telephone Dispatch Girl 25 to 40 years. Must know loc1l arta. Apply in person YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E . 16th St. Costa t.fe&a BOOKKEEPER FULL OiARGE To asalst CPA • Treas. of &ubatantial Cbrp, N.B. Some lypina: • receptionist duties, 25 to 40. Salary open. Call Mr. Mitchi>:ll 642·1626 M<YrnE'R'S hclper for sum. mer. Hi·achool IM'llor or col· legf! student pref. Own trans. Mon thn.J Fri. 2 lo I PM. 110. wk . 675-4776 bet 3 ii. 7 PM HSKPR. fO!' 2 adulta. Plain cooking, Sal &: Sun oft Pri rm .. ba .. &: T.V. Drive, . English apeaking. Refs. 1275 No expf!!nence necessary to mo. Htg. Harbor 1213) eam good income with Avon. 592-5.38:1 ca11 rollect 540-7041, 18=AB=v~s=,=, =rER=.-u-.-,.-,.-. -. ea,-, lor 6 mo. old boy. Rm , brd, W 0 R K ING parents -2 1mall salary. Pleasant sur- chldm, ages 9 & ll. \Ve nttd roundirt(s. Ref1 exchanged. supervision tor the chldm Sf&..6161 & lt hsekeeplng Jor ~ur cMASS"""E"U~S~E~w~.,,-,,.~.-A-1-,~22 Mesa v.erde home. H1.gh to 32 Will train. Salary Open Sehl senlOr, 1r1d, or moth· Fl.Ill&: part-time. Ref&: no erly wom11.n. 54().7823 eves. pol.Ice record. Apply in PRINTED CIRCUITS peraon 132 E. 18th St.. CM. Touch-up Girls, exper. pre-MATURE Woman wanted for ferred . Apply child care 12 to 6 PM. CHEMFLEX Transp req. Start 6n7. 3767 Birch, NB 546· 7191'.l CdM 675-2514 aft 6 Approved Furniture ;... _ ........ · Jl<d s .. u1""'"· Box,....,, (No Finey Front-BUT Quality Valuea lnskle) -..,..-' C mattreu: Rtt0rd Player Jebs Man, Wom. 7500 2159 H bo I A: R~rds; Diahe1: Kil/ Ir r I vd., Cost1 Mesa 541·9660 Ull!11.sUi: aothini tad!~ 11ze WAITRESSES 1: Dishwuh-Open 9.9 Dilly-Sunday 11 -5 10«. Many Misc Jtem.s. ers, all lhlfts. Expu only 12 Y ••rs ••mt loc•tlon-,,..,,. ewner. " Yr.w A8U¥a 6n.8316 ne~ apply. Denny'1 Coffee ~~ f ~"""_ ... , 20" Portable Zenith TV, bl/ 7M Iris, Corona del Mar Shop, 1600 S. Ort Hwy., -. :1 wh, stand, like new. Re a I Laguna Bc:b. No phone ca.tis 7.~,-;;:;;;:;.'-;:;;;;;;-...<0;;-r====""'===,I~~~~~· .!~~~~--SWIMMING POOL l:l rx• .. ~. plst-. HATCll Cover rotfee tbl, $50: 1100 RCA New Vista Color 1100 IA Ft Poo1, Filter. Surlaet HAm Stylia!, wlth following 2 hatch cover end this $25 _A,:P,:P_ll_a_nc_o_• ____ _; 11 .. 81.k k Wht S99; Both Skimmer, Maintenance Kit. for new Newport Beach ea: 2 n&utical tamps, block Pf!li 675-J9UI FREE Ground Pad. u.lon, offera a free shampoo with chain $30 l!a; blond NEED A ect. · $149.11 aM. ,.,. """"'A...., """"""' ""'m" 50, "'•"' VACUUM? H l·FI & StorM 1210 SICARD POOL berlf'lita. 613-1955 rode acquarlum, ult M 323 ·s . Milin. Or&n1•. TEACHERS tre• water, cuatom made Factory Rtbullt Etectl'olux 19U Solid .i1te atereo like 532·199'2 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT 165; loll more. S a er 1 f 139.SO. New tools, ft@W hoaf, !"ltw cmaole modtt. Taki I '""!"""!""~~!"!~~"!'"'I Phone Mn. Hobkirk becaUM ot d~ltl. ~ 2 Yl!'kr written P9rU i labor over amall pll)'ment or e FABRIC SALE e 83M21J1 or 8J&40M F\lmiture tttumed from dil. ruarantee. . $71.6.1 cuh. c:Ndit dept. Mon to Fri. 9-1.l::lO, 12:304 plaJ' atudiol, model homes, COAST VACUUM S.'\.;...7289 Sat 7 A.M. lo 2 P.M. BOOKKEEPER CPA of· 33.1 E. 17th St., C.M. I='--"-'------Va11t 1elect:lon of knll !abrlcs. · deconi.tor• cancellation. · Stereo ch• .... -FM ... _. tice, will con.sider accounting fi.42·1560 • -...... • ..... ..,.r, ,____ DAILY to publk. llm· ,,..,. ......., Spaniah &: Mediterranean !!le. &mp &: pr!!-amp muJtip]l!'X .,,,.,,., sludenta parl·time . .,,~... WASHERS -95· dryers , ' • it~ timfl only durina in-RD FURNITURE . """'· ' . tapede"ck, onea(>!aker. MAID&: Ma.int Man .. Cple or S35. Fteezen STS; Rdri1., Make otter. 6?3-0lM Vf!lltory clearMCf', aingle. Need for motd.apts. 1144 Newport Blvd., CM eopperton• Ir Avoc.; Guar.1--'==-:=:.:..:::::.::::_ C'o!lta M!!Sll Knittinr Milla 2376 Newport Blvd., CM every night til 9 540.-lO!li THREE 50 watt Power 929 Bakrr St ., Costa MPM Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'ti! I ampl.ifierw RCA type MI Ca.nvaa5era -full time or =='=='======= I Anllquea ll I 0 QIS. S80 each. 615-08Sl UNlVERSAL Luggage car-part time. Del Bunch Corp. r ier. fi11 nearly all mak.el of Tom M·-L-" 213: 866-9791 Office Furnltu,.. I010 INTER~TING Id · I S cani. Triple chTOme plattd: -·•-::.:.::.:::..:..:.:.;;:;c::.:.;;_..:.::.:..:· . ~ o ptctures Bln~u 1r1, copes 1550 MODERN P.x.ecutiv:e desk Ir I: pnvate p&J!l!r• ol Judg~. . $45 .,. a I u e; anniversary Ag•nciet, Men & Wome11 755D Coast Employment (Ma l•) FM Paid Sa.lea Man11er Train~ Pref P.r df!IJ'ee •• to Sf,Ql/mo ln&Urance A1ent, HS grad ,', ............... to S'ISO mo Compen!B.tion Manager. :l yn exp, colll'.'ge deg or u.B , ... , .......•. , • to $lOCXl mo. Management Traintt. Degree desirable .... , . to Sl<XXI mo Assislant Benefits Mgr. 8.S. in Bus Adm or Ind Rel , ............... to Sl<XXI mo. (Ma!.) Ft • Position• Manager Trainee. 21·28 yr!. HS gr11.rl .. . .. . lo $425 mo Inhalation Therapist. tomfl experience .... lo $000 ntt'I. Sale~. exp nect!SSlry $2.00 hr Warehouseman, receive &. rfeliver warts .... $426 mo. (Female) F•e Po1itlon1 General Office. Direct exper· ien~ . . . . .. . • .. . . $315 mo. File Clerk, HS grad •. $68 wk Typi11t, 40/45 wpm •• $70 wk Telltr. 1·2 yrs exp. $3j(I mo. Wa.itreSAes. 6p, .• Jl.65 hr Chair 4 pil!ee office aection. Fram· J.A67 thru e~rly 1900 1 TASCO 3 x t Veritable specilll $14 -95 each. 1 Th tax dry cop·e Dodie 01)', Gunn111on, Cok>.. SCOPE $15. 646--2904 after 6. JOHNSON & SON ;~l~fu~= dk:taphone •:; Salt Lake City 673-8316 CdM 534-4458 anytime Lincoln-Mercury all att1chment1. Value $a<X) ANTIQUE SALE Dottie.1 -000 W. Coast Hi,tlway all tor 11'15. 546-8117. Antiques. 15116 Beat:h mvd .. Sporting Goods 1500 Newport Beach 642-00n _ Midway City, 89.l-2353 1', RE I G HT DAMAGED DECOR.ATOR -type cabinl!t Olli E I I IOl 1 approx 3' x 2' dl!!t'p. Dark ce qu pm•n So h 1120 SURFBOARDS, FI ct 0 r y ••• --·-· ... ,. -Id--· ,_ Wint Mic Inn Direct, Uted board• a.lso. ~ .... i:u ~ ,,. GESTETNER Miml!O(!'lph NI'). 120. Xlnt eond. S150 or best oller. 836-84ifi9. 633-0022 entrance hall or lamp table 1967 Sina:er w/waln cabinet. All cheap. We intltall new etc. Very unusual, Spanish Local Rrvke man leaving removable fin1 in your old or Mediterranean appear- 11.rea. Automati" z,·-··. board. 642-7607 .... .. -A anre. Leaving country -mUBt 8022 but1onhole1, blind hems, SURFBOARD Hawaii, 9' 10", 11acrilirP $75. OR 3-8316 CdM iwercasta Ptr. No 111tach lie.; (I'H.I cond. $45. A..116 CdM Gar1ge Sale GARAGE SA.LE 23751 Landlsvii>W -El Toro J137-3865 Slit &. Sun 11 AM to 4 PM EVERYrnING MUST GO! ntt. Guarttntee OK. $39.15 67J...Kl'lll after 5: 30 DRESSER _ Frencb Pmvin- <:11.1h or $1.35 wP.ek. CaJ\ ciBl originally h9Ultht at m6--$i16 Ml•cell1neous 8600 Sloana. Sarrifice $50. Rerord P I ,. bl playerlnadin $15. Wet IUita Music•I Inst. 1125 00 1,a es &: •urfboard. Kitr.hfln Wirt. Over 100 itPma pric~ fmm nOCK N Roi.I Bllnd c--.:o. NP.w & repoaae1sed $99.50 Many household Jtemi.. Mo. 5r -50c. Vates. shirts, bar LAJw.-. up. Tennia:. Cltampion vinll'· MUST SElL 70I Jrill, •I•···• _,,,., 1m~ kn• , RirkPnbar.ker 11.mp, ""''ita.r, "' ,,.x • ,,... • .._. · c · •y Quality S34.50 up. CdM , OR 3-8316 cups, stuffed anim1ls & Fender reverb, ~ price. C1ll Frank many morr to l'hoose from: 536-4l9'l 531.0311 M isc. W1nt•d 1610 Coffero table $15 3 end tables FENDER J&.lflllr Gu.itar . ./ 'fi6 HO SPORTSI'ER --------'-- $8 each. J lamps $7.SO to $10. Brand new, Custom finish XLCH -WANTED TV elta.ir $12.50. Gold aola w/dlx CIAe. Oria: pre $450, .I .,, C"· IMPALA 12"' • Md chair SGS. White ex-aacrif $275. 642.ai82. .,. nr.V • tension pole •helves $20 Con· color TV, portablP. record toured leather cha.ir $40. 5 MUSICIANS & Groups-pl.ayf!r, 1 8l't 1urf racks. Furnltur1·Appll1ncH di I h 12" Jl.eh earul room, Npt Bch. * 494-6813 * Color TV'•-Stor-plece nelte wt ex· Day or nlte, hourly rates. -- tension $45. 5 mets ·bar OR 3-4370 3 PIECE Sectional, 2 end -TOOLS - glaues !6 to 11 teO $2. -------.--tables, dlnPlti!" 'tablf! w/1 531-1212 or 193.0555 Sleeping bag $8.50 ELECTRIC Gult~r ext J arm c h a i r DANISH dinine: room set, <t Gibl0f1 s.325 $275 for beat of. WP.~tin&house rebi1er1tor'. SS CASH SS chain, oiled solid walnut in· !er. 673-5980 211 E. 16th Place, COila We pay" cub tor: elude• hutch. Colt $800, uk. Meaa, 642--0586 ./ Fumlture ./ Appllances .---~· -ing S.100. Klrby vacuum with Pianos&. Orga~~ll.~O FOAM RUBBER, cul to aize. I Antiques ./ Tool• T W 11.Hachmenta $35 Ladies goU • PIANOS i-ORGANS • Uph supplies, t a b r f c s, ON lTEM or - Schoot .. lnstructlon 7600 0 omen .. • I b Ith ha _, I'" OOMPL~E Hou=~· cu s w g I.nu rart ,w. • J...arrest 1tCK:k ln SO. Calil. n1ugahyde. Fact. outlet. "'' <>c.r ul# ••• of ALL AtJeS Waterak\1, cost $50, sell U>r * 20o/'o-40~ off-Player planoa i.ow pre. A·l Foam Fabric ,.,,.c,.,all~S4..,T~,_',,,48,_o.-~827--8271_~1 You CAN eompete sureea5-Sl5. 3 bikes, SlO each. 2 10od 1000 ro1ll to choose from &: Upholstery Supply Co., 311 CHILDS Cltlfferobe want~. fully tor the job you want! mirrors $6.00 &: $4.50. 2 4 * Tuma. • Terms ·Terms * E. Sth St., S.A. 835-1181 Suitable for ant I q u In I . Ask about our weekly pro. drawer chesta $8.5() ta.ch. cuh for yoW' piano or trade INTERESTING. Old private Phone 642-4980 il no ll\I, try l[l'lm for: Alaorted ilfPH.}len SI -$3.5(). i?'a.nd piano for new splnet papers of Juda:e, from 1867 again. e Bn.i&hup Typing {a[J Miacellaneoua 1 er v 1 n If Flekl'1 Wholeaa.le Piano CD. thru early 1900'•. Alao =========I Elecl dilhea, l11.111J1, l!'tc. 96&-l980. 12072 Brookhur1t 1tCbapnun photos. Dodge City, Gun-FREE TO YOU 10070 San Pablo Court. ASSISTANT bookkeeper _ of. • Bn.ishup Grega: short· Fountaln Valley N e 1 r Garden Grove (714l '38-2770 niaon, Colo., Salt Lake City, HOUSEKEEPER with nurs-lice manaa;er for medical of. hand Brookhurat &: Elli• 1 S , Sal --1-1 ~67HJ,:;:,,:=""-------SERVEL Refriierator, 1Dp Equal Oppty Empl. M & F ln& ability for invalid worn· fice . Mutt be able to work • Mod:orn Otfire Ski.lit • prlnCJ e • KIRBY V:acuum cleaner Ir cro5s freezer, dble door. an. 5 day week, age under weekends. Salary open. Call NEWPORT MUGS, bottlea, PI r 1 Ure 8 Used Baldwin Spinet $595. a I tac h m en t •. Pay ott Works finP. 2151 Irvine, N.B. 5.i, able to drive VV..1• Npt. LI 8-7771 Sc hool of Buslne11 records, dtapes, bowling U1ed Baldwin, 'rhoma1. balance of S53.4o or small ~519 6114 •-h 54•2579 "-I •'~=~~-----"6.()153 balls, guit11.r, dres!IPr, dellk, H do II"' 7 oo.: . area. a-"""ore BARl\-fATDS. . . . v.. ammon rgan!I ,,., up. payments. Credit . de p I . 2 l"RISKJE Kittena must p;n d GO GO 833 Dovr , D , N B 102!. brick~. plant!. Much Splnr.1. Console, Sludin & 5.\';-7289 h ho b Th sd . . , ·· l\n . =~~"'--''-'--··c.:_·c:_· -Morf'! LATEST ART fN. U . h I I 11 ----------ave me y ur ay. RN 11·7 Full time. ~ll part DANCERS PIANO I ... No VAT IONS/CARP.,.... pris: 1 p11.nos, spec a y rt-HOSPIT"L T .. _... · Going on varatlon. 646-84(!] '~IV\ . e ......... ns, young, exp.. ""' dur~. Sl!J5 up. n ype ut:U · apnni:: time. LVN J..ll lull time, ''"" p!'r Wf'ek !.eacher, new in area. Grad. MURAl.S . Thurs. F'ri. k. WARD"S BALDWIN STUDIO k mat llt your twm frame. lllter 4 PM 6/13 11.nd Pflrl timr. Sal a r i e' 6.18-5483 or 63J..976.1 Sherwood ~fusic Sr ho o I , Sal. Garlll'.I' at 106J.4 La lllOl New rt CM &42--8434 C1P.1n . 1tood cond. S 8 J BLACK Male kitten, 7 weeka open. Frina:e benP.firs. Park HOUSEKEEPER -Live-in. Member Music TeachPrs Roia. F'.V. South ol Slater&: po ' 642-3121 evrs Md black mother cat. Needs Lido Convalescent Center. Assist present hslcr. eon. All&O('. Prlv. leaaons for tQI.~ Weal ol LCM! J 1 rd in e • .H c::::.0.:=,:..::. ""'-=--11---good home M&-3870 6/14 "' "10 I thru tet!llJ, sue Denton 367 NOW HERE -the new · · ._,out. II. or part: ........... · :::1esc..,,m~ 3mo.lh1"4,..",_,,.3 Magnolia. CM ~!M 962-23(11 Supenoundlnc T·200 mi11e. cartrlda:e cues, load· BE AU TI FU L Ki ltl!fll Cocktail Waitress · • · · ;n-v .. ~,, -~-------lWIN beds $25 Pad!. Apt Hammond Spinet Ol"ian ina: die1 I: rilles; misc. shop calleo1, tigers and bluet. 6 Day ~ft availablC'. Apply M9-llOl ext ll3 SWrM LESSONS, y 0 U "R -the fin"I Y•t' &: garden ~uip. 675-293.1. And 8 wkl. 54"' .v.v 6/14 Sh t •-h I WAITRESS~ E Jy POOL. Priva1e & Group. relrlg $35, Modl"m apt frplr., J-UU,., I ra on pelC nn. c..3· xper on Reasonablr. Rtd Cross i.n· charrn·a:low gaa S.Bque. SCltMIDT·PHIUJPS CO. ELEC dryPr $115, hid 1 bed 11 wr;:. Old puppy, Cock·Ter· 21112 Ocean Ave. nred apply. Denny's Coffer strurtor, Mr!. Bee. 545-1498 desk la.mp, anow chains • 1007 N. Main O 20th S115, dbl bed set Sl30, rckr rler loves ch l 1 d r P n. "51 E. 17th Costa M'°u DEUVERYMAN, phy1icall,y tit: full &: parl·tlnW!: 18 k over. Own car + ln1ur. Ev· enlnp. AP91Y after 4 PM. 19'20 Harbor. Of. Flwe Crownt lttataur1nt :mt E. Coan Hwy. Huntington Beach Shop. !6(.() S. Cat Hwy., Iller 5 Mustana:. Mise. household Santa Ana chr Sl.5. prtbl TV S40, Lay· 673-8824 6113 WAITR-SES W•nt-•. "'ng-"',•-",. na Bch No phone call& ~~",.,=~~~c-~ items. Dover Sho re• · [':;':":':":'~':;"~;""::'i':'::;''[.i~~l~~r~~lit.'s~u~oi-~· [ · """' ""'"' .Lo .., SCHOLASTIC HS Girl will 0t1 w r 80 tnr · .,....,.~,...,-BEST 01 Hiter. F1uffy male lisb speaking: 8550 we~tmin· . 6'12·:f>.l.8. Decorator's Del1'ght NEVER eee • .. -·· *FRY COOK* Experienct'd. Contact Mr. Corona del Mar No phone calls please Zimmer. BluP. Dolphin Rea--·--------11ur111t 6~. DEUVERYMAN, to work a11 late 11,11 4 AM, rult I pAf't· tlmr. Own ('Ir + Insur. Relief lt.N. 4-1? P.M. Full time R.N. Sier Ave., Westmiruiter. S9J.. WOMEN Exper, ll1 makl!' up tutor your ~lt!'m schl child in n use . u-kHten. Reuulsh black, buff 9&51. for flArR Hu NT ER s basic subjects. S2.SO hr. ~tOVING! f'Um., lcitchl!tl ingnol Strato 1kiis. length and white. 546-9965. 6113 in'.-"~•: Th"-. 6 PM SALON In S.A. k N.B. , -548-~5()1-4_. ------utensils, to Y s, clothlna. GRAND PIANO • insides 207, slalom AJ, S 1 5 0 . ALL white part P@ni.an kit· '" -· ""I"' IO 5••--,. misc. All very rl"as! 15911 A·l , outside nef'da )'Olll' 644-2989 .,....... '""' to •'1UT> lhru f'ri SCHOOL Chlklrm'• vacation I~=='===-=-tm1, Huntinlton Br I ch FULLEREITES, Earn up to ·""'====~~-=--"I 1 Chll !" , •• Minorca Dr, MeN Verde h!!.lp! $599. UPHO' ~~'G -50 2 o~ •136 6 , m wkly, pt time, over 21 HO~SEKEEPER •• IChool ran. . coat v-~aon C'I'utt-Frll. MUSIC CITY, C.M. l.AJILIUI~ ~ 'fl~. • area. ,,............ n. M''. Edw.__,_ "''::...""' ,.,. duldre-n, 5 day11, 7:30 10 Typing School. 548-2859. 1731 ~-=-'-~-=-~-pc. (European craltam~) FEMALE C.1. cf'lestnut col· ,...., .,..,,__ .... 5 -H B R 1 Del Mar CM Garage S&Je -MiaceilaneoUi ___ •c_:."'-::..::21:.:'"::......:*--1 Frt!e est, de!, pickup, 215 546-.1745 · ~Ol · · 11.re11.. " • · E"CH .• N. D. 11~11. WED thn.i SUN iToRY 4 Carle walnut con-Main, HB ''Berny'' 5JS.6405 or, gentle nature, expectlna HOUSEKEEPER. moth''. M " ~ ISE FOR 7llS ,~ •• ~--t M _, R _, kittefl1. 546-0Z72 6/13 S •LE AND T"•OE .... er .. ,~• en temporary ron:mte. ent .... 2 EA. Ft. Prov. CUrrio leu home 2 chlld~n B,ltf'I 5 DRY CLEANING Coun1er _ ~ ""' retw11. SA.VF. 1300! c 11 bIne 11 , m 11 ch Ing-, 10 WK male pJ8iame1e kit· Apply after 7 PM l!Y.!O llarbnr Blvd., CM f.t 7. Live-In. Call 67J..Jl21. Girl. N.B_._ &. H.B. 1rra1. Fur n iture 1000 .Appliances 1100 GOULD MUSIC COMPANY Hidr--a-bed, Chinr.ar chr, h•n, Shola. Mutt find home. ll-t:M A.M. otM. Call 541-0000 bl!'lort l"IOOn -204.-l N. Main, S.A. ~7-0681 misc, jewrlry. 67~1011 Cttild llll<'t'Rlc. 642-49'2. 6114 D M Apply in i)l"rl(ln r.tAKF' F. d r IN NG F'RIGIOAIRE Re.frig. yrollow 11vrr ttlll'l,v A nrw•pa.per No Ptxll"ll' call~ plr.115r OCCASIONAL Rabysiltrr , ;n r m~t . Ari llmr D I mom !If"!, ~xqui!i l( $50. Auto wa1htor, $40. Both WWREY Spinet n r Ran, SAL ANT I "c-cordion, 9' 7 WK Old puppitoa, veiy dtolivtry Corona del Mar Hunt ington leich nl!f'ded. Abll' 10 uv,..tn whrn wk: H.·i. op\lo.lnal. Mr•. OrlenraJ dark MSl"wnod . buf· cond ~ walnut. .OMaln Ir Hawaiiin lloble 11.1rlbo..rd. Good ('On. playful, Mnther pan Cockto.1', 11.rra. Nf!f'd station wag-ConvalMCent Hotplt al rout of town. 19 mo old child. Balley 540-1932 962-.171'.WJ fet R chair• CU!ltom Thal ~~doz• t~ff Bak~Apt~~ 1tUlt1r. $395. difiofl, 6'1J.31711 f11.t~r Doxie. 6-16-4042 6fl3 on or pqual~x: ms 18792 Ddaw.tnt Refs. 642--4910 or 616-8·161. S~ESGlRLS, ~ e ' ... ':'. e en ~~~:..·· ~i~u~~~h:_~~".''::i-:"s':~~··_·_•_3500_J iiC.;';M;i.;;;;:;;-:::--w;::;;;;;;;;;:::: I GO\JLD MUSIC COMPANY 10' GORDIE O:impetitiM f KITTENS fi wk old l pert mo. Hunttn:rt«i Beach HAIR-STYLIST stMp.: ~2 fo~~;;:~ -rnEEZER Westinahoutc 20451'. Maln, s.A. :W7-0681 Surfboard. Beau cond, $65, Persian l SiamHe 9 Moo rnY COOK -Kitcbea Hdpe Lff Cotftures 673--4.186 2 Martie stt-p tables, ~-Uprilht $60. PIANO Wanted, Prlvate par-~1195 ~ 8113 ll-5 p.m. 6 da.ya Apply"' =~w=o~/L~~= .. ~-TRA--INEE--1 J.D Newport Blv N'pt 8dt WAl'l'R..QS ovtr 21 for Hof. Oak desk. S20. White dttuer 60-7615 ty wantl to bu, piano for~ =~"-"'-.,-,.~.~.-.-----~----I~ ""GE Tabby K 11t-n1 HAMBURGER lln'1RY c.....~ ·• • · brau. Will consider trainee. It nil• 1tand $25. Call aft 4 1 __________ 1 rvn....,. '' • .,. •5"'4"'•" vn.AS~ '"' 2136 P\a.centla, Costa Mn.a Lquna Bead! attcmey needs YOUNG woman to •aaiat Call 646-9920 p_m. 548-1625 WANTED: GO<X> Gaa: deytr clUh. 543-93$ ated drink dlspentJCr. Self· want rood home· Ca 11 MAlNTENANCEMani&I' wiltant for hi& ~e with _llaht houttkttpinc. 1 WANTED FUlL TIME DECORATOR'S Attn. El&-c.11 after s itm Televfsl l205 contllried. ,.. 5'8-S325 545-6793 6113 motel. S200 + room 9eCll"4llt.ary. MuR be adt· monunr swr •etk. 54Ml.93. MAIDS far MOTOR HOTEL p.nt custom 90.lid w a I nu t •115-48M * e111l collect. "' 21,1 A~700-0ood vi$ TO aood home Parakeet that 541-!m6 ' =d~ t:_~cc:~ e PART·~E e ln IA.II"'& Beach. 494-4.'i63 din. tbla. PerfPrt cond; •ak· TURQUOISE O:>ld Spot bot-NIWPORTER TV BR~ NCYM" REALTY wh11ilet 4 cap 67J..263 8113 PAR.KING LOT Attendut. cdlmt b'Pinr tkllls c.11 IBM Rrataurant el.p, 1J110 PIT S1 hr ruar. CUltompr inlf $350. 548-2325 l!'Vtl wtcnd. lorn frtt.ur. Uke new • Sony • 5-t6-6464 • HALF Siamese ktttrn to sood Mtn Ovtr 11. -"ply 1t the Executive, S/H 30-90 WPM, BAr-MB.Jdl. Over 21. SG-986.1 atrvlce for ettab Co. M~ RA'ITAN Li v. rm. • dlneue S165 • M?~ Headquarters 9 x ll.ORlENTAL nq. Never ho;me . 54&-1118 1113 ReuMn E. Lre Parlcinc Lot. No 1~1 , x pt r I en r. e APPUCATIONS bein,-tw.ken Brown 540-1932, H.B. turn .. Inc.I. Tamp~ ... re. Xln t G. E. refrl1. dble door, croas UHd. lss. Also 11 x 15, SU5 F'R.EE killen1 to kind h~e, DISHWASHER. 4 d a Y &. 2 ner.twiry. Will triin. Start tor mot•J m1kl1, tuJI lime. Operalon • frimmerwp~cil•I r-ondlUon! ~ (op trtt1f!r, xJnt. r.ond. m. TV · RADIO STEREO TAPE and 6 x 9 MS. 54.')...4211 2318 Oe-l•w•N'. H.B. '/13 nlfhll. ~ i;,rry, Jt~T'lmr Sdl pr r monlh wt t h 2.1111 Nl'Wport Blvd .. C~!. Mach, E"P· Good PflY, 1580 M\OVtNCIAL Sols -~1-.-,-11.. '?lSl Irvine, N.8 . 64MS19. A.5 LO~I :.~ SJ09.9!5 MEN'S Bike $17.50. Roy '1 HORSE fertilizer. 2043-r\i'iijj; DI.Ii, -t~ E. 17th St .. CM MF:R.rr INCREAS&Ci. Repl,y BARMAID WANTED Monrovia , NB M2-• ttl.lent ~.:.:c , S1,t5. RCA Air condidoner, 9.70:! O!hf!r models S29.9S " Ill). Slift1111)' $17.50 '*-• Ave., C.M. • &/14 GARDENFJl \n-H-.---. -&x M·l4.l, Oall,y Ptlo1. In Cotta Meu, phone BABYSM'TER Mon thttt Jl'rl BTU.»oV $SO. 9624:fi7. I.ow boys, pot111.ble11. cont0lt1 IXIRCYCLI 1100 rn.t. DIRT Harbnr aMa <111 f\tly bull. I.ARM.AIDS: NIGHTS !t6-T6M betwn 7 pm Ir 9 pm • 2 boys. Mt.tat h•v. rdtr. Corne r Studio ledl DAILY Pu.or WANT ADS &.ti -Hom~ • Autos 642~ 642-4.371 1114 UT-R't AcJob' 210 5th &t., HB. Wlllt. t1t;illJit;1 DlJYM-a-Uftt Olli •h !'I. 842-:rm LlKE NF.:W! 541-12211 BR.TNG AESULTSJ J'C1 Hvbor Blvd. Ph 541-&"11 Wt. ~ti? Dlm.+.JlM ---,OW!G=""z,...,IT!=---1 • ,. .. q I ' • I ' '· -· , • • Summer Rentals? They Could Be These are some pretty ·exclusive cliff dwellings. They're for the summer if they overlooked the fabulous beaches in Mesa Verde National Park, Colo., and they're estima· of the Orange Coast ... AND, if you placed your ad ted to be 700 years old, not exactly in the same class as where people are looking . This is no cliff hanger. "Buy- the charming bungalows all along the Orange Coast ing" or "selling," the market is in the DAILY PILOT. Dial you' II find advertised d a i I y in classified ads 642-5678 and we'll drop you our direct rope ladder to ' of the DAILY PILOT. But, you k~ow something? We'd. be the Classified Advertising Department where a courte· almost willing to bet you could rent these Indian relics ous specialist will help you with your "smoke signal" --- \ ' J, • ;r Wednt5di1, June 12, 1968 MERCHANDISE FOil SALi AND TRADI TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION MOO TRAHSPOITATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION fRANSl'ORf ATION ... , $lot 904I TSU.. I Ueed Ce rs 9900 Used Ce rs 9900 FREE TO YOU Boeh & Ytchh llOOO ego ~A "'--lm,....ltd A-MOO lmJ>Ortod Autos MOO -------1------~r ony Boat s1......, '°' VOLKSW•"'-EN SCRAM-LETS CADILLAC OOB~RMAN, f..W.. T"°" f-Conal&nm .. t ..i,.. Up lo 40 '61 DATSUN S<dao, • @d, VOLKSWAGEN .. ,. .. ~b-" ,. l11lc lo1tlnt Cl11H1 ft. HoUd•y Marine Salrt dlr, loaded, pah:lt II en&ln9 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1:-:;;;-;;:~==-=::-:::; o,.. .. ~. 00 .. ,..., • ,,.... 01, 1 ... U1u1 ' .. • 11 AN$WERS '67 cou•E DI v1L 'E old. cent t e w/c..illklt'tn, ered lei public by 29lJ W. Co a 1 t Hwy, NB n u •n• • * 'flB Volklwapri radio and ,.. I. good watch dog. Shots & II· B•lbol Power Squadron 64i..ml. leather inttrlor. 0 r iven beater, 2 dr aedtn 1300 t .. 'to cheloee hm. l\tll power, oen~. 96S-3285 after $ Plot. Elementary PUotln& Olu.rlt1 .JocaU7 only. $m cub. dtlt; • &erln A·l oondltlon. WtU UtmOlt _ Mlol1t -Rabi>! -air condUloDiac, new· cat. 6113 Ev<ry Monday, S-7 -.i. ........ '200 <r tail! oldtr ...... Pymlo help !Inanes 6r\ccepJ tn<lt 8'rtty -WORRY /,BCIJr: ,....,_, Pnc.d from lo:;,.=~=::::='°"'=l PM, Junt 10, Newport Har. _ $37.86 aft 1 P~ GMm or ln. Houn dally lfte.r 6:30 A ~ch1atri1t .US <to one $4,795 12} T WK. ~ puppt~. Good bot Yacht Club, m w. ea .. U x 55 EXPANOO, 2 Br. 6Ji..361T· call 113T..J815 Sar or Sun ot hll paUtftt. '"iou warn. , AUIN, for hunt!Jll. German abort Ave., Newport Btactr. " trailer with awning, play '66 DATSUN Sport pickup, t Nobody hes .. afttr I am 1J Mal) aiter'S too mueh. If~ PIY up my "oidamobu.:eadui.c Inc. = ~ ~ s;"ood~;~ OR, for your convenience porch, * 642-1110 IPd. Llkt new. ~ i! bett• uwd VWi pm ~ bUl you will have one }ea 1150 ~-ifwy, OM >;2-1"33 8/!4 Evp•~ryJ 'll>eod&y, &tlrtJn& 1 "---,_ --pelnL Bir -· ~-!_, '6T VW db, d~. """"· O.. ~thl~OiijitO~W~O~R~n1Y~AllO\lT~::::~· 1:La:1<Un:;•;;;::;.,.._;:1: m, tme ll, Enalan School, """'"'eye-"""' lfr, !N:k In Pt•-• ~N· ti.in VW. "'"'" Sefarl bclg•, blr NllQ A CAR? WANT Good bometfor,pure Irvine. aw Dr., Newport H $91e&lhdellortome trade nu11o, extra 1pe aker•. CAN'T BE FlNANCEDf '66 CADILLAC white, blue--eyed kit.tent, Beach, ln Cafetortum. No 15 low Sftell* · tc1r or boat) Pymntt $38.96 We klve them the Votb-SoeclaJ rup ~ white aide eBankrupl:r e RepoaetlfClllT Sedan de VIUe pa11. Siameee. Also 5 other advance registration necea. •• 00 mo. Aft.er 1 P.Ji.I. HY '"'9'773 ""'I.gen 16·polnt Satet, and \\'alls, 12,000 actual rnllea. e Bad O'edltf e OlvOl'C«lf t • d 1 kilt sary. ~-u at ct•··.· u """ 0 Petformance· In 1 p e c tlon. :& to cboole from. Priced a 11 s co 0 r ens. _,,...., ....... -v FIAT 'J11at'a why \\'e can ruaran· $1.75 dell, or ol~r trade. eMWtary •New ID a.r.T 1l"ont 536-2001 6/14 queit.1on1 phone 548-1374 or New '•t . $299* tee 100~ the repdr or tt-PymntJri S46.l!6 mo. QJI after MaJce Payd1¥ PaYIDfnll-i $3,895 4 SHORT Hair ~~ Siamese 673-1855. T r'41il "fO" placement ot all mllJor me-it, 494-S713 or'~? McCARTHY MOTORS ' Al.L.IN k!tlena. 6 wkl 2 Tabby, 1 '64 OORSE'IT 'Farallon -21 ' N * NEW AA T * chanlcal parui• · But not '6t vw Excellent condillon 1f20 So. Main I Edlnpr Oldimobll~lllac luc. 1 rey , 1 Siame1e, Cabin Oulsrr. Sips 4. ISO '6I CllJS s555• AUTOMATIC '"lriO" ever;v uted VW gei. Ws Qwme wheei., new tires, C2 bloeb N. ol Sea.nl 1150~So. Coast Jfwy, 494-3213 6/lt HP 1/0 ~ere. Amer. Tand. D Scrambler $199 DOWN • OAC ~':~~'tea.1v;;~·t1k~ llereo tape. Sunroof. and Sulit. Ana Ph 5C-S:IO'I· t.agun1 Beach f!M.-1* <21 5 \VKS male kittens, i:-rt Trlr. Hd. Galley, Bottom '6l CL350 $666• * M&.!11 per month * \JI, oth er 'extru. Call aJll'r 6 iini!mim!iimmi!l l:=.;;:;;;;;: Persian, real cute! l<fim Ster-.foam. Fulb' equip. inc. A S bl "~" STICK $42.65 PR MO • m&lne • trans1ni&IIOn ptn * 968--lllO sahar a L 1 n e , -u, B, SS, DI, DF, 2 'anch, ae1 crem et HERi FRIEDLANDER e rNl' axle e ftont &ile U· ;67 EL DORADO ffl7.oo37 6;14 Inch, etc. Perfect cood. FREE '50' H 962S Carden Grove Blvd. ..-:nbllft e brake l)'1tem VOLVO 2 to cbook from. FuJI power, $4500. 528-2'155 528-5440. e electrical ay1tem. --------ab' conditlonin&:. New car Kl'ITENS long ha~. whlt• F. itl' BARTENDER On. wh .. I •••• NIW s"9"aa ... • 0 JAGUAR . '67 Volkswag1n '681/· VOLVO w • .,.,,.,. PriO<d fl:om Grey & white M 10 weeks, tandem trail 1 5 ""' $5,995 box b'alnod. 646-7052. 23!16 . ahowu. en.u.":°'ii; :.:'w.ii '450' ''4 J•aoar Mark vu $1699 NEW SHIPMENT ALLIN Orange Ave., C.M. 6112 equip. Owner leaving statr Claaaic Model. lncludct 53 HP"iso0 Hri JUST ARRIVED! OldsmobUe.cadill tnc. PART. dalmatian, champion MS-1131 HERB N $S50. 893-WB "all Calltornia s ·ate te; GET OUR DEAL TODAY 1lSO ~ (ioe.f:t HwY. -andfathtt. Female 11 will. FRI. '60 XK l!iOS Cmv 'Pwr l';3l'l....-" Radio heater l Lacuna Beac:b · 494-lllW Little s;....,. needs a """'· Ready 10 gu onywho,.,! • D ...... , • ope!, mo or oOOd ·~~ lnclu ... e1,.. up • e.m14 548-8832_ evea. 6n4 Price 113,a....,.... ,,_ 13750 Baich Blvd. Sta Wq. &U-.3816 and ... d~ .. ~~'ANCINO '63 CAD Codvt. B1U'IWldy ext .. * SACllIF! 32' 'l'win Diesel EDlANDER ~-• • ~ • JVU v•.:l"'VOU 19 '1 D.IW,n. ..... ,, S w/wht tup A: wbt leather 2str~pedv~';i;.,~':Y w~'. S=-allbotts 9010 '/.Ne~6r't.i1~3/rt:24 A KARMANN GHIA ~ IMPORT Intel'. One own". '"11 ,.,,, -· .. ~ all: cond. !kr;t olfer. Must need good homes and Handt'--BUICK e11 ·-1•" 892-5302 6n4 FOR SALE/FAR EAST •Ta.x, Uc. ,,.... '61 vw KHARMANN GHIA c 1966 Harbor, C.M. &t6-9::i.ol s . OJ.JO-'"" alt 6 PM Piuer Design-AA 31' .Xlnt cond, orla owner, Jl,000 ~ ,6B VOLVOS ===== '68 Cpe De Ville Save $1500 MOTHER cat and four pret-Trimaran/Sloop SS rigging YAM A H A or otler. M2-67M Show Room New Turquoise, ty kiltens, 2 males and 2 T ak int Vol A b d. ' GE"l' OUR DF.AL "LAST" ped I top, all'/-, leather, femaio&-b'oin<d and woan-e "• VO ux, " ' MERCEDES IENZ ' slp1 6, Uke new, 3 mo old. A 'M Slope Bade; •••••••• $299 tilt wh, 544-3476 ed. 642-279). 8113 Reedy to tail away. On1)o '62 • Door ••••••• •••• • $899 CAD '63 Eldon.dO O:inv. Full TWO Female puppies need a $1t,800 FOB West Coat. M "250." '63 Slope Badr: • ••••••• $1099 equtp.'idb: reatm'q, fact ai.-, oOOd """' wtth lcivJn& ..... Writ• CPO eox 339, Nw, INDURO 549-0303 -67:1.1190 Httb Frl9Cllander voeue u..... «1,rm mL !2005 11Chi1!~~11Poodle-~113er-Okinawa A · 1m HARIOR II.VD. lhlklSo.G.G.Fwy. PrtvP.CV•tTU · r or . .r:ov-.Nu 14' '67 W. W. Potter F/G. COSTA MmlA 13750 Beach Blvd. {Hwy 39) . ... ro Good home 2 cute short Encl cabin, full bunk &: H IMMIDIATI 89.l-1566 · 537-6824 ba.lr kitten:i, 1 black & "''ht, cockpit· cushion&, Genoa, DILIVHY '. '65 VOLKSWAGEN Dix . one il'ey tabby. 8 wks. 0 .B. bracket, Bowpulpit A Lo.dee!. 1ow rniltti me .SPort C•rs 167 EL CAld!NO deluxe, bis ' ""' ,.,,77 6;13. run .. 1 .... 11 .. ht, llfety -.,., owner. Pelrl srey, locally • d dlr _,. h •-·~ _;.:,~ -~·~ ·u· °"""'· IUIO cub dela or * N MG. * •· at ' ' ·~o. .. ~ .. ""'-"'}'It cover .• ........., or 0 er. HERB '61 Mercedes 190 S L trade. Pymntt $36.86 mo. ew tinted 1iul, ww, exotic CHl:YROLET 234 E 17lh :,r ~ \ 0 Ii/.', 2100 1-iANB <~~ 111 VO. 8700 642-fGU mlnt cond. 1tereo, Al\i·FM , Aft 10 49f.-971J 6J9..3617 GIT A a:ok:I. Speedometer shows • 32' Bloclclalander, part mta\l IMl\m new molM, 2 tops, new &ETIER DIAL 10,000 rnllea. Under "''ar- Machinery, etc. A. B. Dick No. 320 Ofbet pres.s, W/plate dampener, 1upplies, 1 !Ai )'l"ll old. $850. .,...,.. plnkd, deck, Buda eng. Both rKIWLAnUUl paint I: reconditioned lealb-'62 VW Camper 1500 q. HERB FRIEDLANDER n.nty. Like new. $175. dels or separate. Bat oiler,~ 9615 G.rdN GroY• lt'tcf. er. $2.150. Aft 6 646-1176 &built trans, R/H l37flO Beach Blvd. !Hwy 391 . or trade. Low, low pymntl. PETS tnd LIVESTOCK Pett, General 8800 For Sal• Rffi• Monkey 673-1761 aft 6; aft June HONDA 65 450 cc bags, '61 ms Mercedet Benz°"' $ll50 * 673.ol52 -.2 blkll So. G.G. Fwy. . '56 Buick Good-Cond. -'after~. Of-fT73 or ~L 14 -2777 Bristol, C. r.1. ~.000-mt Must sell clutcll. traM, int r~r J 0 r, '67 VW, radio I: heater $1fi50 893-7Sli6 537.6824 SlSO MB-592'1 67 CHEV Caprice, 1 owner SAILBOAT 24%' Col. Ci. $5.'i()or best otter 673-65n Sunroof, $1250. 673-0319 a!t 5 or be!t otter. 4193-1514 atttr · 10,500 mJ, PB/PS, alr, etc. Sac. $3995. W-extru, slpa "n" HONDA "66'" 7.PM Autos Wanted 9700 LLAC Bought 9 iqos ll'O $HOO. Hu U, encl toilet, huge cockpit Just bee.utiful. 400> mi. MG ;.,66""vw=-P"on=.i,.., ..,,.,.,--°"""'== ---------___ C_A_D_I ____ 1 :yr full W&lTIJ\ty to 1oi <n4) 73S-038S $450. 673-4724 etliine &nd t Ire s-spllt WE PAY • . . '63 Cad. Fr.1 111.lfio, leather :;;"';-;lc<;;;;,!31'0'"'". ";;,-'-&<>Ir:::::;--;;:; 16' Ocean Skltt, 75 hp '67 HONDA 90; many rxtr1!3. ~ M~ MIDGET. Xlnt &eat&-wood pmrllin&'. Must CASH int, air, very clean, Asking '67 OlEVELI..E Convt. Ex- Evinrudr, elM. start. Modified for· dirt I: ainet. crind, Rldio It wire wheels, ~S..~! -""'-=-c""=·~==~ $2000 546-2-120 traa wire whcel!i, prf/sum. Dogs 8825 Raytheon DE 726 Fam• $300. 644-1458 $1700 673-7268 '6 6 SQUARE BACK ,59 Cad Sedan de Ville, fuU mer drtvlns. Must 1ell 675-5985 GERMAN Shepherd, 10 thorneter. 673-t370 1964 Trlwnph 200 OC '5l MG TD. Classic, New VARIENT Sl!IOO or best of. fDr used cars I: trucks jUlt pow, t11c. aJr. Good tires. 838-4981 months old, good with 24' Jolly Rorer fiberglus Excellent. Slrttt. Dirt tiret, $575 eicelt cond. fer. 675-5442 or ~n67 call ua for tree eltimate. SJ50. Sl7·9173. CHEVY Impala '63, 321 stick, children, a:ood watchdoa:. sloop 1leeps 4, cntisina; ex-$375 * 646-8049 545-2498 'tiS V\V Station waion. model &ROTH CHEVROLET .65 CAD De Ville Convertible hard top, xlnt cond, orig 897-2344 tru. $3200 675-1094 evrs. '65 Honda '59 MGA Mutt Sell 1500S; low ml .• xlnt cond. Aak for Sales ManagPr full pow"'· fecttiry air. Prl. owner 5fi5.-0l2o bua. 838-4322 •FEMALE COLLlE. White HOURLY RENTALS :m CC $425 $570. 962-1818 S.l.495. 774-1492 (Anaheim). pny. $2795. 846.oo'l9 , ~"~'· =,,._~...,.,._,,,...,._. '66 vw F •-k ''" d lmt: !kacb Bl., •; CHEV ft-1 Air w & sable. 6 mos. old, very RHODES l9'a * 642-5C68 ut-c • ...,...t con ·i Huntlniton Beach CAD '63 Park Avr, crtam 63 • oo: -qon: affectionate, J35. Call 962.-Fun Zooe Boat O:i., Balboa ,67 Suzuki 80 t'C OPEL bltje w/blJt, inter.-Orla:· Kl 9-S33l pull, full equip., SlSOO or very clean; pwr. 1tttr., $975 10'37. SACRIFICE • IDUlt sell Cal under J<XK> rnl. Xlnt cond. owner $1,600. 84U210 Eve. Will B beat offer. alt 6, 41)5.-.tSGi I :.",.c"-,,""',,.,,,;0;;;;'~'.,37,.,-",.,930"""" GREAT Dane ptippies, exe 20. Oimpl ~cina: &:: cruiaina: $300 * 673-0439 OPEL '67/'68, Spt cpe, 4 on * '60 V W(BIJe) $600 · UY HUSlf:S'l' Ulnfketplactt tn '63 WAGON, Po w IS & B , •lock, 9 wks old. &M)..2'133 le&r· 5fi6..l~ the nr. used 1 wk. Fctry yellow, clean & aood tmtn. !I'ht DAILY Pll.Ot .R&:H, .very clean. Otla:Uial alt 6 30 -SAIL to--.m. SUZUKI 2·600 mile• IU&r &: serv policy. $1BOO condition. 64fi.1504 _Your Volbwqen Cl' Porsche owner. 673-€121 er : p.m. 14' oust, ,.u, genny, like new. SMO 1679 Placentia, CM LI Pr-3414 ;;:--,,.;;--=,,.,.-"""'"""= A pay kip doUara. Paid lot OiaiWtd ICction. s..r ..::0~.,.C,~07.=o::::::- &agle pups AKC, one rn$... main $300. l!'J8 E. Salbo.al==~·~675~5-02l~~O~•~=ol"~";~;;;;~:"'"= '65 VW, white, red tntC'. or not Call Ralph mooey, time I: effort. LoOlr '66 Che1ry n Nova Super One female, from S50. Xlnt Blvd., after l pn PORSCHE Under duh ahelf. xlDt CIODd. now! 11 iiPort, l:rr; !50 !lp, r/h, Pedigree. Thorne MS..1726 -raller, Tr•vel 9425 --------""'." $ll95. 675-6382 Eve. 673· 1190 Dial 642-5678 for RESULTS sim Prl• Pl'!)' 673·9417l D'""TlANS ·Power Cru1.... 9020 p --·-9U 5 ~ ~·-RENTALS '66 0 -' ·~· New Cars 9IOON-r-.. 9800 New Ctrt 9800New c ... * AKC 'S2 MERCURY 2&'; tleepa 8 Chrome wheel.I, AM/FM, lr;iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilij &u.1937 plley held I: bfl.it tank On-TRAVEL TRAILERS. Mllc:e . tuned exhauat, new Radial TOY Poodle, male, white, Jy 10 'bra on new 225 HP rettrvations now for your tlree:, 2'1,000 mi. J415), trained', shots, AKC, 4 m<11. Gray Marine ena. New CMl· 00~~·~·~ca~tlon.~~M~~c \''".,,...,.'""~~~~~=:; Make oiler. 962-6585 vas. Need.I vamiah. Only :": 548-6201 Costa esa $6,00J. May trade for 196~14' Northwe:it coach, RENAULT FE?o.1ALE Collie. White & sm.oJler boat. Slip space No. salf-eontained, sleeps 4, new 1--------- Sable. 6 moa old. Very Af. 2, Huntington Marin a condition, used less than '63 Renault Caravelle -S fectionate $35 962-1097 "Sean". 838-7598 or 716-5930 500 ml. Sl.225. 545-3108 Both tops. Ex<:e;Uenl! UJV ABLE Toy English Pu(, S%IJO FULL Price -20' 546-1150 female, 5 mos., $25. Owrns utility • lapatrake Trucks 9500 ""'3178 hull -%25 HP lnboa:d -•• T • I PU 21 466 SUNBEAM Miniature Poodles hydraulic control -full CHEV 1' ' , cy • ' · 1--------- 8 wks. AKC. Aft S 646-3190 coven -extras -will. trade mi., R/H, O kled ~I'J, tr~ '67 SUNBEAM ALP 1 N E on Cal 25. 675-4713 213: hitch, ready for camper. ROADSTER, 100 hp, dlr, ex. GERMAN Shepherd, black G9l--075l bargain • see ~ E. 18th, otic ractna: lfeen, blck male 4 montha. $35. 9W-7lCll CM 548-6482 bucket seats, t spd, wire 8830 29~ OWENS .Express-Hdtp., '62 FORD Econollne. 8 ft wheels. $185_ dels or take Hors" sleep:i 4; twm screw; SIS, bed. Very good coodltlon older car in trade. Pymnts HOR.~S-E_S_B_O_A_R_D_E'.:'.D:-depth finder, new coven. $595. 874 Da:rrell St. CM. $54.86 mo. aft 11, fH-9713 or Back Bay area. • 1746 Or· Xlnt cond. Offer! 54&-1195 54&-2535 1=63S-JS!"-"""'' =cu=;;-=;;; chard • oH Santa AnL Pad-Marine Equip. 9035 "51 WILLYS t whL drive '67 SUNBEAM IMP SUQJ. dock & Shelters. $55 pr. mo. Pickup. $400. 2363 Westminster Pia«, Call 642-0081 days or 540-9525 FIBERGLASS Boat Material.. MS-Z&ro·After 5 PM C.M. 646-9130 Eves. 6' ~t mold, approx. 40 pl. 1963 Ford, % ton Pickup, 6 '67 SUNBEAM Tiger, 25,<nl GENTI..E GELDING, family ream, C.tllyst, 4 pl, whit~ cylinder, clean, 536-a>62 mi, PERFFCI' SH APE . horse for kids, beginners I: gel cote; 100 )'dis. 7 Oz. 50 ' · 842--Wll ~~ _" -• cloth, 100 ydo. .. ... mal ,__ 9S10 1,;'";;c"o;;~""·"-,,..,.~,.."-'·-..--I MU11t lell, $MX> or oHer . ...,.... TRANSPORTATION 841-8361 '62 SCOUT 4xl, full tDp A TOYOTA Botti & Ytchl1 9000 12 VOLT '"8 D" Mu"" 8't· h.U, t wh dr, Good cond.1-6-8_1_/•_T_O_Y_O_T_A_ teriee 2ffi Amp bn. New l Pr! pty. $850. 494-0765 ""' 16' QIRYSLER Lone Star 40 hp Johnson, navy to P , tnller. $1850. 1966 model, Sharp! Welt Cout Yadiui 3333 w. Cout Hwy Npt Bch. Nt!w port Arches Marina. GG-ml JUNE Special. Boata hauled, bottom ICM>bed a: painted, $1.80 per ft. + paint I: zinc. All other maintenance + engine work, ttt ua! . Newport Dry Dodta 675-~500 On the Bay at 20th St. 14' CRESTLlNER Sldblnf. 90 hp Johruioo, coven, trailer. Sl%JO West O:iut Yacht.I 3333 W. c.out Hwy Npt Sch. Newport Archet Marin a 642-7111 OWN~E"'R'"M=us""T°'S"E"L'L 21!' Fellows It Stewart, open C'l"Uiser. Xlnt. eoncf. Special bit trlr w/air brakes. Orl1. owner. 508 Lido Nord, N.B. STEAL IT I 26' Double-ender Whale Boat, hull In oOOd Wa. -• &4Ul35 • itl' CRUISER. "'11¥ equip. ped, -· Xlnt -· $3000. °""' -""'" -DRY Boa.t ~ 10'-tO', fmced yard, on the water, N"'J!Ort Beach. «Jc per ft, ...._. TAKE mial1 boat in tnU ~· HOL Sloop, A-1 coad. all nceaalls. rad'° 6$.U9l MUm' SEU.! '65 Owem 25' a..EAN. $4400 or make ol- fl!.r. 962-43'n) Dial "'4618 fnr llESIJLTS yr uocondltlma! guannt" ' NEW SHIPMENT ,..... $1tl!.IO Spocla! 1aleLC.;;:1;,;m.;.po1,..",--,,:'."'."-:-'S_2_0 I JUST ARRIVED $49.50 · 1-GE"l' OUR DEAL TODAY M.,,;,. A"'""> Shoppe The Ultlmete 2<10W.CoutHwy,N.e. In Campers fl L•m:• THIS WFEK ONLY! '67 Ford "250" %. ton cam~ f.Gll UlllO NEW 7'2 AJ.IP HR MARINE er Special. OOX1 actual miles, BATIBRY. Retail $34.SO -V8, au!nmatlc, .~ condlllon-IMPORTS Our price $15.95. 1 Yr. Un· ing, custom cab, :itereo cond. IU&r. Marine le Bat-tape, heavy duty sprlnga 1 1966 H bo C.M 646-9303 tery Shoppe 2f30 W. Cout shocka, spedal heavy duty ar r. • Hwy, N.B-:';..':°i:'T':."'n:"io TOYOTA' All Marine electronics ft eabovft' camper complete IO!d at a nk:e dilcount. with double rtain1eae ateel Set UI before )'OU IN)"! Marlne I: Battery Shoppe link, k:e box, ttove, reu HEADQiJARTERS ELMORE ··-w ;._ _ _. H-N.B step bumper, euly a\etJIS 2 I ......., ·'-NIU• ~1 ' ' U.ulll and 3 chllclrm. Thl.1 ~Beach Blvd., Wat:mnttr TWO culboatd motcn. 5 Hp. unit la in like new condition. Phone 8!M-3322 $85. and 9 Hp. $300. Nearly Immaculate in t'Yef')' detail. I========= Now.~ Sold new for w"1 ov.r !6000 TRIUMPH VacaUon Special at $4795. --------BOit Sllp Mooring, 9036 Down ~ent It ttrn1a to 1961 TRIUMPH 'l1t 3 f10Q or WANTED to lease by Bal. flt )'OUr buda:et, up to 5 years belt oHl!r. 53&-1676 alter 4 111. prop. owner, for IWD-"o ~>'· p.m. mer ot year 'round bull; ~ BobPonLongprt -'-----;6;;1°TR;o;3-. --- pier Oil Balboa Wand OC' any uac $lXI or BEST OFFER! nea:by attU. Bonus for 13600 Beach Blvd., W1tmn&tr Runa rood 8f'l.-2UI ,...,IL Call _, m, Pio. -!-=='===.=;;= 69>-0281 m : e!B-637> ESTAm SALE VOLKSWAGEN BOAT SUP s.crtfiee! Electric Car. i.. » to «I' ..,_I • -• ·11 vw e "'" 1<111 ....maui. p .:15 'Ii 6t2-92t1I otl, S .-.!tlo A -· DESPEllATELY In need of Imported Aul• -Good cond-1750/0 flu . lllp or Ott tie. Reuonable e Spot Cub tor Import• ~ aft 5 pm 23' pq, 53S-J7*J aft 5 pm We pt1 more f0t &tt)' lmporl 65 VW NEWPORT resWent nef!d& reprdlru of<yet.t, ma>re MUST SELL! boat 111p for 34' cruiler. ot OlOdlUon. 1'-7 ua be:for• SACRlf1CE SllSO --.... 646-5356 100 1etJ. ELMO R E e 646--9076 e cl'leue;;,;;:=~0===~=='--'==i MC7I'ORS, 9625 Gardenl--;.,,.i;.,,...'v;::;'-::::;-- -G""'' Blvd JE 1-<&30 '6' VW -Xlnl -· loof>.Yochl '"' idded extru Ch1mr1 9039 AUSTIN HEALEY ... ./:: C:,., :-: -e QL\RTER ;rt1E FINEST ' New ¥1 K•tcb 1111 AUSTIN Rnley I eyl,, brlcl. tnafnt, paint. pri pr1J m-2S1: • 115-ia $1!111. "* 1or ..-.. m-m llOOO 1o""' 11t1.1011 _ • • .... JOHNSON & SON GIGANTIC ANNI R~ARY \ + DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE EVERY COUGAR-MONTEGO-MERCURY IN OUR. HUGE STOCK CAN BE PURCHASED FOR. FACTORY COST .+ $50. .•. FREE •• . SPECIAL BONUS ... FREE WITH EVERY NEW AND USED CAR. SOLD DURING OUR. ~ ANNIVERSARY SALE A BEAUTIFUL CHROME LUGGAGE CARRIER. ••• $45.00 Value • • • FREE!! JOHNSON & SON ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST EST AB LI SHED LINCOLN MERCURY-COUGAR DEALE~ 547751 642-0911 t I USED CAR SELL OUT! 1911 CHIYlOLIT l•I .,-.(,. VI , tutu., PS, A, H. IUOJ 711 1 PULL PRICE: VI, •wto., PS, lllH, •ir. ISSX 1171 •ULL '2199 PRICI: Sff Di. $65.16 Me. V•1i•nt. Fully f.,tary •qulpp•d. R&H. FULL PlllCI: S9t h . 1 t6J PONTIAC Gr•nd Prl•· VB , 1uto, PS, •Ir. IJNJ 1101 FULL '1099 l'llCI: 199 ,.., 'SJJ,71 w •• Squ•r•b1,li:, 4 •P••d. IRUH 2451 FULL '1599 PRICE: · 1962 DOD•I 440 H•rc:ltap. I HTD 7021 FULL $599 PllCI: $49 D11. Sll.02 M•. IUY ON HACH CITY'S IASY CHDITI •If yo11 don't th ink y•u h•v• •no1i1gh •qulty •1r oth1r d •• r.,.. h ..... 1r•fut•d you creJitl 11f you h••• iu•t 1ttrtff II~ f lllW lolt ALL CAii IA.SID ON J' MOS. ON APPIOYID CllDn "' MU SOUTH OP THI SAN DIKO NllWAT :: . ·. ·. .•. ,, • .. • NABERS- first AnnualJune (14) · 1968 EXECUTIVE CADILLACS TO SELECT FROM tfi1'l tr; I 3 1968 COUPE DE VIUE All Ctdlll•c powltf' 1qulp'"111t plu1 f1ctory 1lr condlflo11l"t· St1r10 AM/fM, tit wh11I, disc .br1k11, 1tc. 5111 M1t10 rid wit!. bl1ck p1dd1d roof i nd bl1ck full l11th1r h1t1rior. No. ICOlr.1719. SALi ralCl:D All C1dltl1c power 1quiprn111t plus f1ctory 1lr conditionin9. S!1r10 AM/FM, tilt wh11I, di1c brak11, 1tc. B1roqu1 9old with bl1ck p1dd1d roof end bl1ck full l11tfl1r li.f1rior. No. llDlrl719. SAJ.I PalCED .e:r:re) 1968 EL DORADO All C•lfill•c powt t tquipll'l•nt p1111 ftctory t ir condilionin9. St1r10 AM/FM, till whet!, di1c brtkt 1, etc. Monl1r1y 9rt1n with 1tnd1lwood ptclcl1d l op i nd 11n• dtlwoocl f11ll l1tlh1r interior. No. IADlr87 19. SALi PRICED .rttfl,3 1908 COUPE DE VILLE , All Ctdillac power tquipm1nt plus ftclory ,;, condilionin9. Sl1r10 AM /FM, tilt whetl, di1c brak11, etc. Ct rib1 tqut with black p1dd1d roOf 1111d bltcli: full ltt thtr lnltrior. No . IHOlr1719. SALi PRICED 1968 SEO.AN DE VILLE All C1dill1c pow1r equipme"t plu1 f•cfory •ir conditionin9, St•rto AM/FM, till wh11I, d11c br•k•1, 1tc. l1roqu1 9old with bl1ck p1dd1d roof '"d full bl1ck l1•th•r int.rior. No. JPOlr8719 . SALi PllCID At last our new Cadillac supply has in- creased -Ready to talk business -In your favor. All models in stock . ~-OVER 60 QUALITY CADILLACS TO SELECT FROM -- '64 CADILLAC Sedan De Ville. OuUtandina: Sedan DeVllle turnishtd in sparkllna: a.lplne white, plWlh matching nylon and Jee.the-r interior, full pow- er naturally lnciudlng door locks, factory air conditioning. Very caretully driven and !iihows metlculou.s care mside ana out. $1888 '63 CHEVROLET Chevy ll Hardtop coupe. Equip~ with auto- n1atlc tranmiiss1on, radio and heater, \11hlte >1ide ,vaJI timi. Thl'!. nice little Chevy Il ha! the shining white exterior with original fac- tory interior. This will make some family an excellent second car for school or shopping. Drive It , home this weekend. $555 '6-1 CADILLAC CoUpe DeVille sporting a silver exterior wl.th the blac:k vinyl root. Thil showpiece is equip. ped naturally with factory a.1r. oondltlontng and hu &11 the luxury power (e'atures Includ- ing power vents -steering -brakes • wlndoy,•1 and the AM·Fl\I radio. Drive this one horne hO\V) $1888 166 OLDSMOBILE 111.e popular Toronado-Ma$estic rold extl!f'ior with black leather interior. Automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakei, windows and all luxury features. A b'tily outstanding au~ mobile for this special weekend price ot • • • s2m '65 THUNDERBIRD The popular Landau Beautiful light coral with Y.'hite roof. Hu factory air conditioning, all po\ver including windows, steering, brakes, seats, vent \Vindows. Thls Is an out.starM:Uni: low mileage car at a very low price. $1999 '65 OLDSMOBILE The luxurious 98 Holiday hardtop sedan. Full power equipment incl. 6 way seat, vent win- dows, door locks and of course, factory air conditioning for your comfort. This ls an ab- i;olutely beautifully cared for automobile with luxury looks. Drive it home during Utis Sum-mer SaJe for only ... $2111 '67 FORD Country Squire 10 passenger station wagon. This is Fords finest wagon and is equipped v.·ith full power equipment and factory air conditioning Sun burst yellow exterior high· lighted by simulated wood grain panelling and fu ll vinyl interior A stunning' wagon for Ws Summer Sale • $3111 '65 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Monterey green with V.'hite vinyl roof and nylon and leather interior. Full power equipment Including power door Joc ks, power vent windows, tilt steering wheel, AM f FM radio plus mueh more. Don't miss this outstanding buy at , •• $2777 SUMMER SALB PRICED OTHER SPHIAl VALUES '6l 2 DOOR COUPfDE VILIJ e '64 4 DOOR SEDAN DE VILLE e '67 4 DOOR SEDAN DE VILLE e '62 CHRYSLER 300 CPE • '65 FORD LTD H.T. COUPE e '66 FORD FAIRLANE S.W. e '66 4 DOOR SEDAN DE VILLE e '61 CADILLAC H.T. COUPE • '66 MUSTANG H.T. COUPE e '65 THUNDERBIRD COUPE • '64 2 DOOR COUPE DE VILLE e '65 OLDS 98 H.T. SEDAN • '65 CHEV. IMPALA H.T. CPE e '67 FORD 10 PASS. WAGON e '64 FORD CONVERTIBLE e '63 OLDS F-85 4 DR. SED e SAlES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 A.M. lo 9:00 P .M. MONDAY lhru FRIDAY 9:00 A.M. lo 6:00 P.M. SATURDAY and SUNDAY '63 CADILLAC Sedan DeVllle. A glimmering aretic white ex- terior with leather and nylon interior, Factory air conditioning, full power including 6 way seat and a hO!il of other deluxe extras. Shows eXO!llent care by Its previous owner. You shouldp't m16i lb1s one. ' $1333 • '67 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille. Stunning 1'.1onterey gree.n ex- terior with black vinyl roof and full. leat~er Interior. Full power including power ~'!l ~1n­ dO\VS and of cou~ factory air condit1on1ng. Don't wait on this one because It won't ·tast Jong at th.ill Drive Me Home This \Veekend P!iL'C. $4888 '61 CADILLAC Sedan DeVllle. The popular 4 window modeL Original metallic silver pine green with bar· monWng interior. All power equlprrient in- cluding 6 way seat, power vent windows, elec- tronic eye, power door locks and of course factory air cond!Uoning for your driving plea- sure. $666 '64 CHEVROLET The ever popular Impala Super Sport Aztec bronze exterior with beige top. VS engine, automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, white side wall tires. Factory ai con- ditlonina: to cool the inside on those warm drives. $1333 '65 MUSTANG Hardtop coupe. Finished in a bright mela11ic blue color with matching bucket seat interior. Spe<:lal v.•heels "'ith ,.,.Ide oval tires. For your pleasure it ha~ the Muntz stereo pack. Radio and heater, tinted glass and dual exhausts. 1ill!i sporty and young car is without a doubt one of the best buys you will make. $~33~ '63 CONTINENTAL ~ boor. Thi! beautiful Lincoln has all lea1her intetior and is a beautiful mist blue exterior. Equipped with full power equipment and ot course factory a ir conditioning, power vent wlndO\VS, speed control, guide matlc, etc. Take this one !or a drive and you'll have to buy it. $1555 '66 CADILLAC Fleet"'ood 4 Door. Beautiful burgundy exterior wtth black roof and black full leather interior. AM/FM radio, tilt s teering wheel, power door locks, power vent windows front and rear, full power equipment and of course factory air conditioning. Truly an excellent automobile that shows meticulous care by previous owner. S3m , 166 CADILLAC The popular Coupe DeVille model with full power equipment and factory air conditioning. This cool arctic white beauty has black leather interior. Just once in a while an outstanding car comes along ·and this ls one of those. Be sure to see this one this week. $3555 YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA N·.ABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa· Mesa 540-9100 Used Cira 9900 Used C1r11 Used C1rs CHEVROLET * U.S. 'No. 1 CHOICE! '&l CHEVROLET V-8 "IM· PALA" HDTOP SPT. CPE. PIG, Pwr/steer. R/H, etc. Beaut. orig. Alamo tan w/ CORVAIR DESOTO '56 DE SOTO: 5 good tires; engine "shot"; make offer 642-5405 After 8 Pi\1 FORD MERCURY MUSTANG * "FUN-N-SUN" 1964 MERCURY Colony Puk 4-SPEEDS Station wagm. Full pwr '61 FORD V-8 "Sunlintt" AM/FM. llk• ""' cond. SPECIALIST CONVERTIBLE AIT. Pwr'. Best oiler takes! pri owner HIGH PERFORMANCE steer., R/H etc. 1-owner 646-6817 CUSTOM CARS PONTIAC ROY CARVER PONTIAC 2125 H&rbar Bl., ea.ta Me111 Kl 6-4444 RAMBLER T-BIRD • immac. fawn inter. A one in a thousand buy ln "a known value!" *65 Corvair "Mon1a" SPORT CPE. The new high styled model that's a 1968 "Look·al.ike." Spa.rklinig orig. silver blue w/plush black vinyl bucket seat in· ter. P/G, R/lf, \V/\Valls w/ distinctive \\'ire whls. "!c. l-;or 1he quick la .act~ (~old· er Corvairs lo choosr lrom). DODGE '66 OIARGER 4 !!peed, 3SJ E.'lcellenl cond. \\'ill !'lac $?10 or bl'St oiler . 5,~166 new-trade from Lido Isle. ~======== LARGEST SELECI10N IN Orig. teal blue, white top. MUSTANG ORANGE COUNTY "Top down -Spirits up!"--------- ' ONLY $595! .66 i\lustang Con\'ertlble. VS. Selected Auto Orange Cow:lty'a Excluidvt Dealer tor ltoUa -RO)'ee and Bently. '64 RAMBLER • station wagon, 330 dlr, rad io , heater, •utomatic. White ex- tl'rior, fawn green interior. Just apent $200. on engine. Car in perfect shape! Take trade or $150 c a !> h . Payments $29. mo. Call after lJ , 494-9773 or 639-3617 '6 8 JAV E LIN V/8 , automatic trans., Dir, radio. heater, whi te tires, all white vinyl interior, ~laroon ext. only 8,IXXI miles on 50,00J mile wammt)'. Will finance and take trade, Ask for Jer- l'Y 642-6029 ONLY $13751 151 car Jot on Harbor Blvd. JOHNSON & SON Uncol.n-?a:1 ercury Co5ta Mesa Branch : 00 Harbor mvd. 642-'ltliO 4 SPEEDS Sl'ECIAUST HIGH PERFORMANCE CUSTOM CARS LARGEsr SELECTION IN ORANGE cour..'TY' ONLY $1295! l s! car lo! on Harbor Blvd. JOHNSON & SON Lincoln.l\1ercury O:>sta Mesa Branch 19U Harl:ior Wvd. 642-7000 CORYETIE 1111 car lot on Harbor Bh·ti. automatic, JlO\\'Cr steering Center 4 SPEEDS JOHNSON & SON '"" top. Good "°""'u'". '"'" "'""" "''•· 537-4646 SPECIALIST Llncorn..r.1ercury Sl!m. Call aft 4 pm , 5~8-3507 HIGH PERFORMANCE '63 FORD c.1 .. ;, 500 VS, ' Co•I• M•sa Branoh "' BLACK BEAUTY 6 cyl. 1 OLDSMOBILE CUSTOM CARS dr., hardtop, Power steer-lM.l Harbor Blvd. 642-7000 owner Ex~ cond. ln every 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;1 LARGEsr SELECI'lON rn n. ... , auto., Rad~. beater. 1---:4,.-.S"'P"E"E"D~S=---1 way ll!m or best ofr. MB-ORANGE COUNTY -~ 6161 '66 OLDS TORONADO Very good oondttion. Le&v-• Selected Auto Ing for Vl•ln•m $200 & t•ke SPECIALIST '66 Mu•tong Om-Ible V-8. 'i!:. alt -· C t over paymeot.! o1 $42.&7. HIGH PERFORMANCE auto, power steering A $3,595 en er FORD &S6--04ll eves After 5 pm or CUSTOM CARS power top, gooc1 condition. ALLEN 13032 Harbor Blvd. 537-4646 '67 CORVETI'E Conver t all day Sat & Sun, LARGEST SELECI'ION IN Call after 4 pm * 54s-3501 Old~mobil<!-Oldillnc Inc. '62 Le Mans, 2 dr, auto, air '63 4 DR Custom 7 7 0 Rirnble~~ ~\lst sell. $559 or best oiler. 5'ID-0964 427/390 hp Yellmv W/\\·hile '67 f'O RD. FA IRLANE "!iOO" ORANGE COUNTY '65 MUSTANG Conv., One 1150 So. Coast Hivy, cood., Nu tire~. bckt seats. top, 11.00:> mi. Xlnt . cond. V/8, powrr ~leering, r11dlo, Selected Auto Q\\11er Xlnt rond, nrw f.._,~una IkRch '19'1·1CW!4 Good comt. $49j, 842-6210 T·BIRD 673--07'75 hooter. au tom11tl r tt·nns.. Firrstonr. !'JOO Hres, Auto, '&t CATALINA 4 d r, 1----------Selected Auto Center =========;I dlr .. 10.!ll'O 1n i\es, still has 4 Center m11.ny X!ras. Sl59J. 67J..7tl t. 1\1UST Sell 1964 Olds. F85 i:<>w/S&B l O\\'ll. Excel * AUTO . 13032 ll•rbor Blvd. 531~6 COUGAR years left on 5 year Will'-1'.1/132 Harbor Blvd. 53741H6 ~66 1\IUSTAi'IG, 6 cyl nuto C\Jllass, air l.'Of'ld, pow, S. Sll50. 613-3532 aft 5 Pl\1 """· Bluo w/m•t<hing '60 FORD R tmn ti OOd d M, ke o fl"· 612-2n3 CONNOISSEURS '62 ~-· S c..-o lnt. \VILL FINANCE. Mk ' uns good, $175 s, new res, g coo ' \,.I.CY uper ......,. .. new * "THINKING PE'OPLE 1401 st. Anclrel\•s Slli50 or oUer. 847-8010 494-3620 weekend!: & eves. RAMBLER 1963 THUNDERBIRD 5 complete rebuilt 32'7 eng., BUY COOL COUGARS for Jerry &U-6029 PASS. HDTP A Santa Ana '61 P.IDSTANG 6 cyl., atick, '6S F-85 Stal:iM wagon, V-8 • llPt q>e. ~~ ~~dc!,'t., c;:nvt! WITH JUST 13,GSl '6.5 L.T.b., air cond, vinyl Sl850. will t'OOSider tra~. eng .• auto., alr-cond. Pwr. Flawless Ramblers penonaJ. lwrut)' car loeded MILES!'• top, full powrl • 6 waypd1tatl, JEEP 847.....f748 A.ft.1 PM ateer. 25,000 Ml Xlnt eond •• ,, _ _._,_ .,__,...,,,, .. _ w/tuU powr.-eqpt. and nam have $1800 ln car will 1967 COUGAR V-8 DL.X.trol conttolclpane, al'vl.uto • con- 1 Qr!. Owner $1900. 644--0610 ~ .. ~.........,_... .......... ......, .. __ -;e-cool tact. "AIR CONDI· RD tor '850. &tS-lSBI er CP• / t ~--/ ,.. p y . "li6 MUSTANG 2 1: 2, 289 l4IKU • _, Tto·~·G.'" ~..1.11..-T--~U8& c.. w au o .......... , pwr ~1541 alt .6 PM • 65 Int Scout. Must aell im. 4 engine, air, pwr strna:. f\900. '53 Olds Fine transporlAOoa, ~cal. • ' , .... , .. .-. ................ lz========= I ate.er .. pwr. brkl:, R/H etc.1 "''"°"'~;:;-.,,-;:;--;;::-:0'. whl &v, R&H, $1200 or off, 494-7l8'l after 5 good mO!: M ke olI lllver w/pN.lh ailver &able soo.noow ,_ -an ennine ·oo GALAXY; Riii, F•c a1t 531 catw" i,.. Bel>. . Pvt Pty ~;, : an J:;, Holidoy Rambler vlnYl "'"'· "' "" .. a1 di>-COMET • "6.1 COMET Wqm $!'liO. 6 • CyJ. lliclr. dean: ~ tires . • l an!. Rill. 613-0461 whlte w/plush ll'aJ blul!! good cond.; auto. lnms. $29!1 675-5624 '65 l\11.JStANG V-8, Sliver \Vkends 673-3316 l969 Harbor C.l'lf. 642..m23 tinctive Yo\! for only - strato seat inter. Goes with 5.:JG..n48 blue exCfl concL I owner. $12951 new nlr fact. gUar. A C $1500. 67l-3021 '63 Cutlass Conver Ii b I e '6.1 RAl\IBLER American 1Jrt c.n.r 101 on llarbnr Blvd . '61 GALAXIE Conv, Auto MER URY P"''" condition. 191 5. &<tan. Smooth '"""'"d JOHNSON & SON "smart mon(!y" savlng tor-•-RIH b OH ----------FOR Sale 1965 F o r d $2850. ...ns. • pg, P · eng • 494-5089 Vt!.lv' 330. Dt>pcndable. Safe. \;. J For Today's Specia s $499 '63 Olds Coupe H.T. '61 T Bird, air '62 Fon:i \Vagon, Cotmtry Sedan $399 '63 Datsun 4 dr '63 Rambler 4 door '61 Old~ 1'"85 $299 'GO i\lrrC'ury Park Lane 4 dr '59 f''ord Wab'On '60 Falcon 4 door $1:99 '60 1-fcrcury Wagon '60 Rambler 4 door 'fiO Rambler Wagon '58 Mercury Wagon -TRANSPORTATION $49 TO $499 NEWPORTER MOTORS ,: •'• ;, ,, -~t< ' . •I 50n1e dents. $295. fi46..M94 l!IG!i !\.fercury Colony Park P.IUSTANG corwt. MAl-:E -Big buy $4!'.r.; II 0 11 da y Llncoln.!\.fercury ht car Jot on Harbor mvd. BU '!EST w•-full po•"· a.Ir cond. OFFER. 842-4449 PLYMOUTH "·mbi 1969 11 ~Bl d Costa l\fesa Bran,.h 1960 T·BtRD, R-", h~'" JOHNSON & SON ·-~-. -,mo"'A'~"'y"eepn.! --· ~ '" ••~ v . ' ·~ --~ """" ,,1 ~ """"' many extras! * 545--1955 '66 MUSTANG Conv. HJ.pert. WATOI yoUI" TV anowa on 01'0l"l "H"'•"'""",,,...,",.lvd..,..~..,~·.,,""",.,, ideal 2nd car. S 3 4 5 CORVAIR Uncoln-Mercul")' O&.u:lfied mtCtion. Sa•• PLACE yoor-want 9d wh'" Zil HP Fully eq. $1580. 176 '65 S.tellite. 4 spd, xlnt cond, the &el ycu find in the 'Si T-BIRD. Mu!! ~II! st'& ~.!~,!1flr•de fo r sailboat. && Cbrt& Me• Branch mGllQ time 6 elJ'c11. J..ool tbe7 arw Aodlir:w -OAD..Y Slerkl St. 646--6244 $1200. "' $1 50. A: take ove.r OISllficd Ada. Qeck them or otter. 833-144.1 ext 246'2 ~ )9n Harbor Blvd. 642-7000 ~-=;_.:11.:,1 ______ ,!..:P~Dm::=:::._:d:::•:::--=::::_I _:HMm=:::: White depbantlT Dime-.aJ.bM ~""""~·='~"~"'~6~'1').."-'-70~72'---·t-"°"='-------or 49!J.I841 Dial 642.5678 for RESUL'I'9 62 Mona. wttfl lfr· cc:nd. Flm "50. Leol'fltc ..... . ·-:i:. ...... . j • ; . -··-- • ' I er 1n acre of obin..S.lect new ur tr•d•lns to chOOM from EXCLUSIVE! Look for. the RT-130 seal on ·the ca~ of your cho~, it means that car has been reco nditioned to pass 130 vital electronic tests for reliability performance and ~afety. • I > • IAGNOs.nc CENTER EXACT SCIENTIFIC AN- ALYSIS IN SO, CAIJ- FORNIA'S F1RST FORD DIAGNOSTIC CENTER PROVES IT FOR YOU. r----------1 I FREE! 25 :ts~:~ FREE! 1 With This Coapon I on PurelMue of ••IJ Vsed Car I I During Our 47th A1t1ti1'er••r!J I OVER 100 TO. CHOOSE FROM I SALE! I I 1 Ptr Cu1tomfl'-M"9t be pttsented within 2' hn. of ul•J ~----------'65 Chevrolet '67 Ford VI, 2 Dr. lilc1yn•. F1ctory 1qulpp1d, 20 % tlown or tr1d1 ·$]7 p•r mo. 30 mo. NRIOIJ Culfoml. 6 to ehoo11 from. 4 Dr, VI, 1 1110, RfH. 201. dowW or tr1d1 $41 per mo. 36 mo. b · 1m 11 No. P7.717 '65 Mustang VB, H.T. Fully 1qulpp1d . VI, $1295 R&H , auto., PS, 10'1. dow11 or tr1d1 $49 per mO. ]0 mo. PDP 167 '67 F d s • 10 P1 u. Full power, VI, 1ufo., or quire ""· 20 • ,,., ...... '" per mo. 36 ·mo. UQGlll '67 c rt' GT Red. 4 1p1ed, hl1ck i11tff. 20" o In a down or tr.c1. $4• per 1110; 1• 1110. UPS810 '63 Ford XL '67 Galaxie H.T. VB, 2 Or. Full power. f1ctory 1ir. 15'.C. dow11 er tr1tlo $49 pet mo. 24 ino. PRC 112 SOD 2 Or. H.T. Air co"-· VI, 111to, R&H, PS. 20 % down or ir1de $61 per mo. 36 mo. UAS I 01 '61 v lk 2 0'" ...... "' .... " 0 swgn. :1~~·7,s.1s_p•r 1110. 24 mo. POOR MAN'S LIMOUSINE '61 Chick1r 4 Dr. R&H, Air cond. lmm1culeto 8 peu. 20 % down or tf1d• $37 p it ml, 24 mo. RPR850 $2995 $1495 $1195 $2195 $795 $895 '64 MALIBU S.S. '61 MUSTANG c~ ..... VI. 2 or. H.T. 4 ..... •dl•I 111t1, R&H. 2"" ._ w ,,..... J)I W -. • m1, VlU2H $1095 '65 CORVAIR MO!lll. 4 1H. ft&H, UI """"L M Wwll or h'ffl. ll4 "1 ""· 11 -. WlotM $995 '64 CHEVROLET ••I Air 4 Or. Vt, Miit •• ,S, ll&K. M llDWll • Ir ... J41 "' ""' .. ""· ,,,. $995 M.T. lltf M.T. •1110., ll&H. .... ~ ...,.,. ., h'..._ SM ,er -. M ml. TQYU2 $2095 TRANSPORTATION SMCJ•ls. Now 1wtr11l~1 1J un ••r ""41: !Ml en • r1111111-c1 et .......... "'1a. ••· -pin •.e Olds M.T. OCDUI. ... "'"' 2 ... ,.,,. $195 '64 MERCURY M.T. ~It"" 2 Df'. M.T ....... , ,.., •&M. ..,.. .... ... , ..... N1 "' -.. ""· ...... $195 NEW '68 ENGLISH FORD DELUXE CORTINA 2 DR. SEDAN llf ..... nt. ffctr ....... WSW "'"-frHt .. brb., ... fl•• ~ fNdl • .... 2 .......... -....., "" """' _ ... _..., __ . ' THE STOPS . ARE ·ouT -FOR· JUNE! SUP .. ER1 SA V , ... ~NG OPEN HOUSE !HIS NIDAY AND SATURDA' STOP IN AND JOIN US 1'<11 C-'AND llONUTS FREE CAMDT I U.UOONS fOI THI llDS WIN! FREE USE OF DELUXE AIR COND. CAMPER FOR ONE WEEK 4 LUCKY WIMNiRS NO:rHING TO BUY! JUST COME IN AND REGISTER. P R I Z E DRAWINGS EVERY SATURDAY AT 11 A.M. FREE POLAROID CAMERAS Given Every Week OVER 30 PRIZES IN ALL! YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN. SUPER SAVINGS TRi;~~,:~o New '68 Truck-Camper Pkg. 8 FOOT CAB-OVER CAMPER """ .. lptM4, la -........ ..tf-c:Ht9lllff ...... ::-.: •• !~-~11!'!.=":' -=·,.-=:::4 :"'!'9"· $ 3 ·s 9 s BRAND NEW '61 FORD STYLESIDE ........ 111• ..... _. All ,.. .............. h ,... ............................... COMPLETE TRUCK AND CAMPER SUPER SAVINGS PER'°c"A~~NCE ' NEW '68 SHELBY ·AMERICAN GT·500 CONVERTIBLE --........ -..... -.--$4110 81 ......._ ..... tit"'· .............. pwr .... wfttl ..................... ...,.. ....... 461 DISCOUNTED 176.71 PROM WINDOW STICKER . · • · .. ·.SALES OEP~RTMENT HOURS PARTS & SERVICE HOURS PARTS ONL'I BAM ,,) qr M MONDAY FRIDAY . C:,A.TUROAY n AM ,, f, f' M ~ 1\ ',I Ill '1 f' '·~ '~(}~~[JAY • ! fl. M Ttl /) f' M Tlil ',[1/\Y I !-.'If•\' II hf,( TO . p M \J\!Ul;l1Al . • • • CLOSED SU N DAYS •• -~-------~ • I \ . ' I • ~~~~--~~--~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~~-~~~--~--. ' ' •:...·-- 48 DAIL~ PILOT ""NOW c.... ' WtdntsdQ, June 12, 1%8 9IOO ,..w Cara 9800 New C1r1 9800 ------- This is your OPPORTUNITY! , hundreds of new Pontiacs, Firebirds, GTO's, Tempests ..• any one of the Magnificent '68 Pontiacs. Buy now. SAVE NOW! '66 GTO Rltdle 11'111 -~. l uto!Mtlc tr- mluton. powtl' .,..,.1 .... $2517 •uu NICI '66 LE MANS 1 Door her'l:ltOP. Vt, lrfdr1metic, -stnrll'lll. rldlo, l>e1toer, wtllll w1n1. llght blve/b!•ck vlnyl loP, 20.l'l6 m!les. $2471 FULL ra1c1 '61 PONTIAC B-VIMI COJi>e. Redlo, htl ltr, -r •!Hl"lno, 1r.rt01T1et1e. Pllwtr 'fl'll'ldoWs, f1cl'Ol'y tlr tOl'ldlllonl!\G. $3477 FUU PllCI '64 CHMOLET ,,,..,, ~r SPOrl. VJ, oower- ollde. -1leer!1111, r1dio, ht1ttr. whll9 wi lls, loetorv 11• condllionlnt. $1 777 FUU PRICE • ' I '61 COUGAR , Door h•rdlOP. VI. 1t1nd1rd, POW. f<I' 1tHrln1, r 1cllo, helter, white w•ll tires, 52·777 FULL PllCI '65 GTO ? Door 1>1rlllolt. VI, 4 sl>ttd, •tdlo .. httltr, wtilt1 Wiii llrts . :io.JlA mlle1. $2077 fUU PllCI ' '65 PONTIAC 11onntvll1t CO\li>t'. A:adlo • ..., he1too r, 1ulame1lc lr1n1ml11lon, POWlr .ietr· Ing. $217 7 FULL•PllCI '66 BONNEVILLE 2 Door h1r<11oP. HYdr1matle, -• 11ftrl119, radio, heelfr, wnlt1 w11t1, "°"''" wlnclQwl, fac!ory •Tr c11ndl· 1iooln9, $2877 FULL P'llCl . • • \ • I 9IOON1w C1r1 9800New C1rs 9800Now Cors , • We' re winding up for our . . BIG JUNE LOOK AT THIS GTO! THE CAR NAMED AS MOTOR TREND MAGAZINE'S "CAR OF THE YEAR," TAKE YOUR CHOICE. '65 GTO ( D R~l(I al'ld he1ter, a;itom111c ,,.,... mluloll, ~r 1~erln1, f1dory 111' eonc1n1on1n1. $2377 FULL PllCI! '66 VOLKSWAGEN 5etl1n. lt1dlo. ~lier, 4 ~. low mlle19t, wtil!t sidt! will !Ire.. 51677 FULL PllCI '66 DODGE Oerl. 4 doer s~1n. 6 cvllndtr e1111lnr, radio ond l'reeltr, wnlte 1ldl well llr11. 51577 FULL PR.ICE '65 CHEVROLET lm111l1 s\llllfr soort. VL Pawtrolldt, PO_. 1tft'rlno. ••dio, httltr, wf\111! •Ide watr tlN!s. 51977 FULL PllCl • • WITH YOU R GOOD CRED IT WE ARE PRE PA RED TO SELL YO U A NEW PONTIAC I PLU S LIC . & TA X I FOR AS LITTLE AS DOWN '66 CHEVROLET '66 CHEVROlfT Novi l ll llon Wl«lft. Radio Ind Mlt-Bel Air l lllion WHOli. R.cli9 11'11! ''• IUtGINlflc trfftllllr..lorl. hffltr, I UIOll\illlc tr1n1mlul011. $1877 s1977 PUU PllCI FUU PllCI '66 OLDSMOBILE '66 PONTIAC Vl$ll Cruiser Wl90ll. Radio, t>e11f•, BO.lll'!!Yllle·,,~,lon Wl911n. Radio, l>cll· 1utormolic, POwer 11ttrl1111 I. w!ri-er, 1utom11!c, oower 1lttrlno, power aow•, 11c10ry 11r conllltlonln;. wlnOows, factory l ir conditioning. $)077 $)377 fUU PllCI FULL PllCI '66 CHEVROlfT '65 MERCURY ~• Ion old<uo w1111 c1m~r. VI, POW· Colony P1rt< 4 Or. 6 pessenger w1oon. erolllle, POWl'I' 1teerln9, A:&.H, 10111 VI, 111!omallc, """' lll!trlno, rall!o, rJms, overslxe 111'1!1. H.O. c1m~r he111!r, 11c!orY air, while wills. ~"''"~"$ ,_,.,,7 $2777 fULL P'llt:I! FULL P'llCI '61 KARMANN GHIA '66 FORD A.blOl~IY tor_,., 13.7'7 miles, R111!:hero. VJ, 1111om1llc, -· Bii.ii wltn C011lr11t1no bWe lnle!'lor. i:l!t•lno, r1dlo, he-lilllr. wlllte walls, s2277 U,,'3 ml!H, lloM blue w/blec~ in· terior. 51977 FULL .PR.ICE FULL P'llCE ' ~ . '65 BUKK ;port w1DOn. Al/IOITletlc tr1nsm!u lc11, ·adlo 1nd hNler, s2477 FULL PllCI '67 PONTIAC 9 01.,,rn11er ••tcutive wagon, Po,...,, slttrlno. ••lllo, htaltr, new WSW tlN!!, 1ectory elr, luoo111e (lrrier. s3777 FULL rAIC:I '63 OLDSMOBILE Fle1!1 4 Door 6 011&.en!M!r w1uon. Vt, 1ulom1llc, oower '"'''1"11, radio, heller, wnl!1 w1ll1. llClory 1h'. 51677 PULL PRICE '66 MUSTANG M1rd to be!llY1 t,7'*6 mllH. Or· !olnl1 marroon w/blldl lnle!'Jor. HI Ptl'fWm•nte ooek19e. PO...,.r 1!ttr· lno·brlkH, Rl.H, while w1ll1. 52277 FULL P'llCI 0 9800 l ·' ' ' r -------·--------------·----~--~--·----~---~---------------- . -• Pack·•·Pi!'.=nio-a. carefree picnic which leta everyone pi.it together just what he likes when the cloth la laid. And to accompllsh this, rely on your faithful old friend, the bean. These days you can go any d.irecUon you like with the Canned bean -slightly sweet baked beans, smoky barbec,ue, or zingy c h J I i beans; mild-mannered, go- with-everything kidney or c r u•n ch y garbanzos are gfeat right out of the can. and ~even more tempting when teamed with crab, 1pun into a dip, or mashed a.s an exotic filling for dev- il"1, eggs. Bl~d your beans with your seasonings and accom· P,animents, and let t h e m 'manj" in plastic food jars ln your hamper. When appelites call, set out bread, . chips' and crackers, and let averY()lle prepare exactly what ,sdlts his fancy: A good afSortment of sweet or· dill DAILY Tas~et, pickles (and ;you can even dip these into the spreads for a new taste sensation) rounds out the bill of fare. KIDNEY BEAN STUFFED CELERY 1 151k ounce can (approx. 1%. cups) red kJ.dney beans, drained 2 tablespoons sour cream 2 tablespoons mayonnaise 1 hard boiled egg, finely choppecl l tablespoon sweet relish salt and pepper, to taste crisp celery pieces, ap- p11oximatel1 3 inches long Mix 1 cup beans With mayonnaise a n d s o u r creain. Mash bean mixture in blender or with an elec· tric beater. Add chopped egg, relish,. remainder or whole ~ans, salt and pep- per. Mix well. Stuff celery with mixture. Makes about 1 cup . CbUJ Crab Canape 1 15-1h ounce can chili beans, drained PILOT l 1-'ii ounce can AlMb Icing crab 1k cup green pepper, d:l.op- ped 2 tablespoon. onion, cl!op- ped 2 tablespoons mayonnaise salt, to taste squeeze of fresh lemon · juice Combine all ingredient8'. . Toss carefully with fork to avoid breaking beana. Serve .on top of brown or black · bread rounds, as stuffing for celery or filling for scooped out tomato. Makes about 2 cups. Barbecue B e a n Devtllect Eu 1 dozen bard boiled egg1, cut in half lenifbwise 1 15-% ounce c a n barbecue beans 2 tablespoons onion, finely chopped mayonnaise, sufficient to moisten Ma~ egg yolks and mix• with sauce Crom beans and mayonnaise. Add onion and mix well. Fill egg whites with bean mixture. Makes about 2 cups. Oven Baked Bean Brown Bread Spread . OA!~v PILOT F•I ' ' a ~~B.a ske.t . • FOOD 1 1 pound can oven baked beans, drained., 2 tablespooos sour creom • · OUT.OF-DOOliSisTAR'l'.S To CALL PIC.NICK·!'Rs • SECTION 1 2 oz. jar pimiento slices · ~ 4 saJt, to taste .-------;....,..., _____ _._ _ _,__~--~~~-'---'-----''--'.;·,._,...,... .... ,...,.....:.....,--...,.....,,....,...,..._ 1600 New Products ... . Brown bread, thinly sliced Mix · beans, sour cream and pimientos. Spread on brown bread. Makes about 1,% cups. • ... But Only 20 Percent Get Shoppers' Approval ' "What's new :" isn't an your f.amily and other UllU6Ual greetirJg to 8 friend. f~eS like yours will USe Should it happen to be your and like only about 300 of greeting to a food retailer, the new food product total. he may tell you that 1500 Can ~one predict whet the fOod product-s will appear 300 will be like? Not exactly. foc ttie first time on grocers' But yoo oan probably guess lllhelves this year. some of their outstanding The entire 1500 new pro· features. d.tcbii won't appear at the The ;m successful new ~ time and not all of food•·Proo,ucts will have the lla8n -.lYill be wccesses. 1• best 1 i k e d convenience Owinces are that yoo and •features. They will be easy Smart Ca sua l 7421 to store, easy to use and easy to carry home. They will be within ~ price limit of what you want to pay. And they will taste good. It seems likely that many of them will be processed by S()me type of dehydration. Dehydrated foods aren't exaoUy new. The process is so old no one can claim credit for its discovery. But new drying methods are being introduced. Some of them an! combined with other techniques ... l i k e freezing and canning. As they are perfected, look for a steady stream of new dehydrated products. and yes, "new improved'' dehydNted p<Oducts. You don't really believe the stories about new im- p r o v e d dehydrated pro- ducts? Mia.Dy a camper can tell you of improved dried eggs. A better drying techpi- que has improved the pro- duct. Now it is available plain and as a scrambled egg s · a n d ·bacon com- bination. Ottier pioneer drie<l produoto • potato flakes and granules -have become part of. paclaiged caS&el'Ole dishes. You are probably familiar with some of the C1ewest in- gredient mixes. • .milk s h a k e s, inst.ant breakfast drinks, improved flour mix- es and prepared desserts. These make use ol. skim milk powder, dried 'eggs and dried flavorings.. Watd!. foc a greater variety of in- gredient mixes tiw'oughou.t 1968. 'Ilhere is a whole list of dried foods you are going to see mare often. Some of the more popular ones surely will be orange, grapefruit, pineapple and lemon juice .. . and applesauce. Dried tomatoes, green beaM, peu and asparagw are coming to market in increasing amounts. Perilaps you already use de~ydrat.ed "dips" for chips. There wi\J be more. There will also be dehydrated deU'y products. . .cottage cheese, sour cream, natural and processed cheeses. Meats and meat products need -and are getting - great effort in drying tech· niques which will improve both quality and flavoc. ~ foods still In the future ... evec beyond 1968 ••. include lobstet" tails from Sou.th Africa; papaya powder from Hawaii ; banana :powder fr o m Ecuador; passim fruit crystals and marigo con- ceritrate from a number of tropical areas. Elegant in silk, casually -and lilmmiJlg in double-Knit wool or tweed. False Security Blamed On Wife's Extra Income Sew the .seam-angled tunic em liackt for at-home parties, ou1xloon;, PmUd Paltern 9338 : Women's Sizes 34, 36, 38, 40. ~. 44, '4ll, 4ll. Size 36 (bust 38) ensemble 3% yds. 45-in. fabric. ' SIXTY-FIVE CENTS In coths for each pattern · - add 15 cents for each pat- tern for fl.r6f.-clSS6 mailing and special handling ; oihenrise third-clas s delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PllAYI', 442, Pattern Dept., 2;'12 Weet 18th St., ·New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAM£, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Chooae one pattern tree.- clip coupon in new Spring- Summer Pattern Catalog. 100 styles, all 1izes. Send 50 centa. New INSTANT SEWING Boot -5haw1 you how to eew it today, wear it tomor-row. Over 500 j>ictures. Only •1. By JOHN THOMPSON The chief danger in a wife continuing to work after the honeymoon is not that she is apt to wound her husband's ego, but that the double in· come may lull them into a false sense of secuM ty. My own bride, bright girl that she is and wa s, knew .&.U about that without being told. Came the first payday after our ooe-day honey- moon, and we sat down at the dining room table to dope tilings .. ~ We agreed quickly that in principle we should save her salary and live on mine. But there was a temporary emergency. and I suggested we borrow her money for a week and put it baek ln the bank the following week. .. No I think not " said she. "My mother safs there is. always an emergency in hOU<ebold budge<s. Let'• ju&t put mint in the bank as planned, and get along somehow on your&." So that'& what we did. And two years later, when she had to quit to have a. baby, were we glad. The modest sBNings acc<>dnt that held her salary had been built up by then to a respectable sum. It was in fact our only financial insurance at that time. For peQCe o! mind it couldn't be beat . Nowadays there ls 10 much talk aboot budgets and advance planning that young couples have leS& ex- cuse tban we h~ fo play with the idea of spending everything from the start to meet so-called emergencies or anything else. ~Agreeing on what ls im· part.ant and what "' not "' the key to succesa:ful plan- ning and budgeting. But no bu~et la going ·to bold together unless both hu1· band and wife are bound and detennJned to a-t along on a pre-detennined IUm and to save reiuWly. - ------------~- Hills Bros ~_offee is ·more than I :' ,. JI __ ,._ . , • ~-~ · . ...... ' than ot~er, leading coffees ' ~.. . . " -'.I • ' ' ' r ., • WednHdq, Junt U, lW>a I World Sees Nee.d for U.S. to Pu1'-ge ·o ·wn ·consci.ence ~ I • . ~ FRANKFUR'r. Germal'l)' Aub1 said the war "can· h¥'e 11 &!orlfied by movies, "Amerk:a," it said. "w11 (AP) -Amlrica'a political not help butt create 111 at. television, mqulnea, comlc a product of an overwhelm·"' mltnce Ubly wW 1top only mo.phere • tn the . coootry 1trlp1 and chlldrtn'a to)'a. •l. ln1 devotion to con· when tbe poUtlcal 11.ayin.& of conducive to U\e rtady use Some comm.entltora men· at!tutlonal law ; violence\ U -~..i though common, was eaaen-aa. 0 uUnown Necro or of violence. •I Om:u tbe theory t b I t u . ally an abutatlon." f} freedom filbter" ttira u Vlk.tor Meler, Walhlngton violence ls ilthtrited from-~ mucla outrate u the til.llng corres1ponde.atofthe l\merlca's hard pioneer DEATH 1RONIC Of 1 Qflltlonal f1rure, 1 Welt Frankfurttr Neue Preue in·' tlinea. But the BrJU1b week· Jorui1,R. Dove, deputy pro· We9t Germany, alao cited ty New Stlte1man dlamlued ttsaar of English phllotoay Gt:rman commentator aaya . racial tensions; And he 11Jd -J the importance of frontier at Finland'• University of 1be United States needs reaeon enough tor a 1 h a r p 1 b o o t .e r 1 '' "a OUiu, 11w Jt as ironic that t 1a plQ"llns of moral con· aearchJng of conscience is Hollywood ctlche w h l c h Kennedy's death apparently 1 cl t D c •, •' de c 1-red that ·~the revolver-wJetding abu.ae~ tbe hlttcJrlcaJ facY ." ,_. .. oot ''at the h_aoda of 11 J'rltdrl<h Lln&helm of the that oraanlzod crime w11icb. u atlornay 1enera1; be so c o u r 11eoU1ly hounded." Dove's vie"W1 wrt la a let· i.r to the London Dally Telegraph. "Eich fretb act o f violence· aP,reads fresh ·dOUbt 1bout American. capJ,city for 'teader1blp," said the Times of London. "The h a b J t of 1issassination detln>ys the authority of any country." David English, forelgn editor of the London Daily Express, wrote: "Nations, li~e people, can h a v e qervous breaxaowns, and A'lfierica is very near the edge of truss ltua ti on . Paralyzed with ·fear , torniented' by indecision. it is allowing violence -the fatal naw in the national character -to become the most domlnatinc influence in lta We." VIOLENT LAND Brazllia.n 11ewspapers too portraye~ the United States as a 18.nd of violence . They gave the story of Kennedy's assassination ~ore 41pace than the death of former Brazilian President Humberto Castello Branco in an airplane crash last year. C&ftoon1 1n the Bralilian presa rbowed a yo \4 lhf u I rnlper, With mon1ler·like features, Unlng up t h e crosshalrs of his rifle sight on the Statue of Liberty 's t*art:' a.i:i American flag with 50 bu'U.et& instead of stars, and Uncle Sam, with dollars sticking from hi~ coat pocket, blowing the smoke from a revolver bar· rel. c/RhelnJ1cht Post of 1 .. , • • ,_._..fl..._ ,.,..,.., v ... eJ ('(l. .... U Duueklorf. •-.... Mfll OW~., Cal~ Langbetm. was one of a bolt ol lore"1> ... 1y.u lryin( to eip!oln w h y .rt._ Rpbert F. Kennedy was • ~ slain, and pooi!erlng where America II headed. The Sunda,y Time• ·o1 Lon· don aaid: "The Vietnam war and the criaia of tbe urban Necro are the two burning issues, ·an:d they h a v e . defeated solution by con~ , ventionel· politics. To1ether they have produced an ;• ~:c::Ol~~Je =Ion th~ climat., ii not the opeclfic uuae fOr aaa&llinatlon." HEARTLESS "This may seem like a heartless way of saying it," said tbe newspaper Asahi of Tokyo, "but the United St.ate. is feeling t h e 'reprisal for the war' " in Vietnam. GI Knows Why He Had to Die ARVADA, Colo. (Ul'l) '- Their Marine IOll died last March In Vielnam, liut Mr. and N'n. Lloyd Parsons received. bl.I last letter only a few daya ago. The letter was tucked tn a Bible that WU included. in personal Pollellions which Douglas B. Parsons' buddies mailed home froin Vietnam. Among the penonal items was a Purple Heart which ParSODs had won.. 'lbe 21- year-old Marine had never mentioned it to hf1 parents. Tho Iett.r said: "Dear Mom and Dad, "This will be my lut let- ter. It will be delivered to you in case of my death. "Believe me, this is mi ex- tremely hard letter to writ.e. But I must face reality. I want you please to remember two things. I hope tl>ey will both help and comfort you. "First, l died for a cause in which I fully believe -in a fashion that 1oes with tile Parsons name. "Second, when I die, I fully believe that my IOU] will go to Heaven. I believe in God and I believe he takes after b1a: loved ones . So you know that I am really all right and I will oee you botll some day ••• "I want you to know that I love you all very much. You are the most wonderful family that anyone can ever ask for, and l thank God that I was 10 fortuN.te. "Please don't let this create a bitter feeling in1 your hearts -for the swvice 'or for the war. I ~· lt II somelhlng that will have to be done and men will have to die to do it. "I know the blow will be terrible, but I am praying that God will give you the strength to face ttte fact and He will console you ... "l love you all JO much, "Doua:." Pair Given Rh Vaccine SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Two San Diego-area women became Uie fir1t in the na· tion to receive a new lifesavtn1 vacctne a1ain1t RH blood disease last week. The dlJeue, cauted by differing RH factors in the blood ·of !be father and mother, t.Ue1 ·the lives of an esUmatod 6,000 babies a 7ear. The new vaccine , manufaclurod br Ortho Dlgnoltlca ol J\arttan, N. J ., wu flown to Gronmont HOlpital In nearby La Mesa WtdnetdaJ Ditbt for Id· mlniltraHon to ooe mother. The teCOlld to rece.ive the vaccine WU Jn S h I r p Momorfal ff"'Pital 'lb,..,. day nilbL Nam11 ol the NJC!plenll were not revealed. ·2nd Big ·w~ of Alo~a .S,lim Prices (!/!!!Blue Chip Stamps \Iii\ \\\\ \ \\\l I \'\Ill' ll\\I' lliil' 1.111 :•.' ·''' I f PllEIPPLE JUICl -FRUIT COCKTAIL C & H • Pla5WEiT 1j SUGAR VEGETABLES .ul Wiii' 10PPll6 ........ -· 2' ·11N1 SID WAIRIS .•••.. -:;: ::' .. SllHP1lllJll llW IOUGH .. '::.~ ... DOU Hawaiian LIBBEY GLASS WIRE will! rwci... .J Motlw flt ht· l'rM HG. NlCf l!'lt lc lAll ><-20r.19~ G[f 1 fOI THE il'llCl Of 1. • • ..-"""°" ..,. 'Iha"""" w..a ..... u." WIN CASH! PLAY ••• letiGo to the Races ,,,.,,.., ,, wtllllllt IN11 WflJI I " .,. \ .. ' 5 10 25' '100•' '1000 . Pure, Hawaiian Granu lated NECTARINES COTTAGE CHHSE :S SANDWICH SPREAD .:-... SWEET AND JUICY, 25( l\lll Of fl.AYOR S.AYE CASH • BEEF TAMAI.ES ~ FATHER'S DAY LAYER CAKE JU1CY,IUVOVUl. ... SIZI-llOOUSI Boneless Round or Family =s 49~ ljl ~: .. 98~ All YOU11 FAVORllt PARTS! .Breasts Legs 6:::: Thighs . C111cmc 29c 1J1 u(l(s 10c WINGS • & NICKS • PORTERHOUSE .:~. 'I~· TOP SIRLOIN c~'f~ .. •1~ G4ME HENS ~o~°'~~ WT. 69~. HEN TURKEYS •::::; :~o' 49c 10.1 1 ti. AYG. Rt .$.AVl CASH W"H THESE llOUOlt Df'T. SUM ~Q.I VODKA ... BOUR.BON MIUllOOI • IO-PI. .... , JOO" N.,..,., ._..,$,99 -S.o;,lol K""""*1 MALP I .... , . ~::> . ' YIS. OLD GAL ...,. .,.., 16-l'llOOF 010 CROW BOURBON · 'IO" .. .., ..... =·'= .... ....... == .... UL. -l!lllAll tfl'.U I Jll •• -.ootf -· lo ... ............ ~.,. C\UNY SCOTCH . '6" CENTER curs CHUCK ROAST ': •... ~ CUSTOM 43 c • ~TRIMMED • I fllSll llMD CllUCI ~ st~ ' stAllDlll Ill IOAST ~~ W. IOUD 1om ..=:'~toe n~ Savo Co1h on those Voluod flllfl Sell FM ;:.~, 9t C1111ti011 CM Filll!S "°"",. 59' GlllfD1's Fish Cri~ ~'::'. 55' Salad Sllrimp '""'~"':.'I" SGvfh, FO.-Shrimp .~~ 79' Gounnll Shrim' ~L ~:.;.• 79' .... , l' : ~ :.f:~" &;'.IP • cl!NnE CUtS f Froz.,• I/ 9.10.12 Oi. Pk,. 1 $WEET, TENDER FLAVORFUL SWEEr, TENOE#t '1_4'.: 303 CAN £f:,lr FIELD FRESH FRESH CELERY 1,v·>11_'y T[fl'•l(I 19( All Gk~~rJ ., ~ ~'ft) CHECH VOHS "' . SUM Pf/ICES & SAVE.f VONS MARGARINt: .••• , • .. ;.~ 2 i 31• CRISCO SHORTINING , .••.••.. 3l:., H• IC( (R(AM wu!W'OOll •-rco &-""' • • • • • • • • • RA-lo OM. CUI. u.'"" FRISH J!WS!YMAIO IUTTIR •• r.r'..:t 71" VONS INSTANT 99c MILK ·, , TIRIY AKI SAUQ .••••• , ••. ~'::"':': W SOY SAUQ .......••• ,,,, ~~':.': W CHOW MEIN HOODUS .•••• "'i":":' 21' 1-CH!o -·o -· .. ""'· """""'' 111 • 2 .. "'" -Mii lol,MllWM;._ JU , t\i.OL lO.l.P IVORY SOAP ........ , . • • • • ·~'.:'. 1 r JOY UQUID D!T!RG!NT ... • • • • ~~-' H• TIIDSWHT ORANGI JIAC!::":'';:; 2/41' TIUSWl!TORANGIJUIQ:::.t• ,';<;;. 47' Kids Uk• to 'Ask Andy' ~011 Ada• Ave., at lrookhunt, Hu11tlngto11 leac:h 5922 Edi111J« Ave., at Spri119dale, Huntington leach 17950 Mag11olla, Fountain Valley ~ ' ---------· -- '· ' -,) .. ' .. "' • • ' ' • ' . ' ' ---------~~--------------........---------------- • ' • " ~ Moko ff•~.,,, ap..W M.y ... Sundo.r,Juno 1' ••• Dad'• Dari 0.. Wl'U .to do it ••• ;..ay a.nd cc01t0m.icallr ••• ia to '~"'' l im 1omethittg apecial frw dinner! And w}uit coula be more apecial than & Kabab dinn.err A. tossed lfllad,_1kewer1 heavy With qood thino1, hot /rrmi the coa.l6, flaky rice, ~nd fresh berrie1 with aour C1"eam for dessert. And of course, you'll want to have ht's favorite beverage on hand ••• 'to go ·w'f_th the meal and to o.dd the finishing touch Ae'U awreciate!* •Chu Krug Chenin Blane, •. dry, white wine: •••• , .. 5th $1.79 Chas Krug Cabernet SauvignOri , , , red wine.,,,,,, .5th $2.25 Coronation Champatrne •. El Rancho's., S varieties .. 5th $2.19 Korbel Brandy ••• 1111oth, 80 proclt ................ 6th $5.29 ----•- -.. . ' Wednesday, JUne 12, 1968 DAILY PILOT 'ti'.a • -~ I I Beef Kabobs ............... 59c r Lean. tender, flavorful cube.I ••• th.ey'll be ao popular you'll witlh you had mure ••• 8 oz. each. Shish Kabobs.~ ............ 69c Lamb at ita deljcioua beet , •• marinade them, or we'll do it for you. ••• eacA akewer, 8 oz. F·ish. Kabobs .. ~.~.~ ......... : 49c Alterna.ted· Cubea-of favorites from the deep • '. , & !a.scy: VariatjOn '.on a .¥reat theme •.. 8 oz. each. · Ham . Kabobs·~· ............... 59c Lean tubeo of deliclol!I meat ••• S.0.. each. Uao Don the.Beachcomber'• Mahnade.,. 8'ot. eiU_ sk_ Split Broilers .. ~ ............ 39~ Fresh ••• U.S. Gra~~ "A" fryera ••• plump, tender, expertly spilt 1ut.o titirvwll in~e halve! Rath's Fra~nks .. : ........... 49~ Xillt·•iatl· .. •;·au meat· ••• l lb. pq ..•• AU th• .kida and they'll uy they· want bot dogs, tool ' . TqlQltoes .. ; ... ~~ ........ 19c Spear theoe llttle nma on your kabob ekewera .... ~oy thJ 1lavor u well u the color I Baaket. . . 0 0 io OS .... ~ .... ·.s.i~~ .5~~ •• ~ ••••••••• Sw~d flavorful ••. add that extra •pecial touch that mild oniona can afford! Bell Peppers ................ 19f Cut these into reneroua piece.!! • , • thread them on skewers and enJOY thti llOded flavor! • Mushrooms .......... / ........ 59~ "'1 Hothoul!e ~wn •• ~firm fieah~, fancy7quality ••• add mushrOOlnl for authentic Kaboba I Pineapple ................. 3 .,., 1°0 Dole chunks ••• sweet in heavy 1yrup that addl flavor! Save on No. 2 size cana. B,,_,,, a22221 ..... Miracle Whip ............................................................................ 49C Favorite salad dreaaing .•. from Krdt ••• in quart jar •.. so many waya)o uae it, too! Birds Eye Vegetables ................................................ 6 ... s1°0 Frozen ••• 10 oz. Butter Beano, Chopped Broccoli, Corn, Peu, Peu a: Carroll, Loaf or Chopped Splnacli. Cal'llltlOll Tuna ' ................... 3 ... '1 00 Solid pack white meat at thia price ••• No. ~ can. f olaer' s Coffee .......... : ................ 6 ~ Savo on all liHI .. 2 !be. Sl.87 •• I !be. •• Jl.98 Fruit CocktaD ....................... 4 , .. '1 00 DlllClll Hines Cake Mix .. . . . .. 3 ... '1" · Dole's •. • • No. 308 cans, •• for salad or dessert! Bake a cake for Dad ••• reg. 39e varieties. Dole's Fruit Drflik ............... 4 ... '1 00 Pineapple-Grapefruit blend , •• pink or rer. 46 oz. Sarm Wrap ................................ 49• Keep left-overs fresh and moiat ••• 100 ft. roll Or111ge Juice ....................... 5 ... '1 00 Cal Fame •• , froien concentrate ••• 6 oz. cana . . Dill Soap ................................... 35• Bath 1lze • • • packare of two bis bal'8 ! Bluebenies ......................... 3 ... '1 00 Fantastic Clenr ........................ 79• Overlake ••. frozen ••• 12 oz. pkg .••• delightful! Doea ao many j obi ••• 22 oz. aerosol can. I Price1in~f/ectalall1tore1 Tll.un. ti\rouqA Sun., June 11, 1-'·, 16, 11. i . . ~RC~IA; Sunset & Huntihgton Dr. (El Rancho Center) • . PASAOntA: 320 ·west Colorado Blvd. • SOUTH PASADENA: ~remont & Huntington Dr.1 . ' HUNTINGlON BEACH: Warner and Algonquin (just East of Huntington . Harbour). \ NEWPORT BEACH: 2J27 Newport Blvd. ,• 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff VIiiage Center) " ' - - - -----------------------''----------=---- ..-------~-• • . . t"'75.acreW ii"'aerness Could Hold_ Key to Future ........... .. -. '. STANFORD, caw. (AP) face of Ule:world po""ll alion "ln short," Ehrlich con· "Unlil that decision l• They 1 tu. d y popu.laUOp plants to certain in~ ridge, as do honors un· .,.... the dergradu.ates and grad_uate _ Stanford u n l v er 1 it y explosion'. !.. tlnue1,' "our mar v e Io u 1 made, we cannot rationally genetics of ·rabbits ln rela· mlgbt greatly reduce degree cd'.ndidates· do 1 n g researchen bave ·beet stu· "Qu.r planet ls:.:a SpiCeshlp revolul.ion is be&lnnlng to proceed with the pl&Cning of lion to epldemic disease, the present r e.11 a n c e on · special resiarch. dying without a bre.ak for 75 with .a limited cl'.trYing run away with us. and the environment," h~ sa'ld. popldation dynamics of hazardous pol 1 u t l n g In· • They and more advanced 1·1AAI~ years a 735-acre wilderness capacity," says Prof~,f'~ut before it does, we must face ':Many eeople believe the cheiekerspot butterfl,iet, Uie secUcldes. And how is tn. scienUsls stuooddy a(~m: in the campus backyard. R. Ehrlich, a popu1M!oq some decisions. · ~'tbJI<'~~ ~ c r d ,W"d f" polllna!lon relationships of creasing smog affecting grove of redw 1 ~u a n.e outdoor laboratory is biologist ~ w• must dtlkte hetlW, a~dy."l •'I ~ ~· bees and e>Jening primroses, ridge plant and animal life Sempervirens) along s a. n called Jas:pef Ridge. "Technology may sup -•..i wel .Want woods,i8nd mo.I'-· \{Cirld pop~on loday is the behavior and relation to compared with ob~ervations Francisquito Creek. cattall.s • The virgip cover and further increa~e of tfle ·taini' !» wh.ioJ'I ~ s~ abeiiji .3 biUJoo.1xperta el(,,· surroundings of -meadow made in yean pa'lt ? and sedges where884th•toCf.eek animal lifeiOf the Santa Cruz world's population, but tbe .. .<solitude, or an 'B~t-~.,.!~. pect It to dh.Ubfe .in about '.ff larks ~ tar): sparrows , Researchers say no other was dammed in 1 uirm JRange foothll)s have chang. price will not be small:~ . 'stel\ce. Op we wlsl}'11l! cx:ft. ye~. ·•· · -· ground nestlng•birds which American university has SearsviUe Lake and a large ed little since-Indians rCJam· Already we are sufferin ~tinue to eat ·meat~ Will Eflrlich a~ hls ~collcagues will be most affected when available a "real world" marshland. ed the land before the Span-the c on s equen ce s ; pctiridge and fried ~ae sW~. ramble Jas.\),tt1...Ridge, which starlings expand their laboratory comparable ,to A'moist ravine contains a Jsh discovered San Francis· overcrowding lb. desirab!•r: fi ce?" anchors the northwest cor· western invasion. Jasper Ridge in siz e, luxuriant stand of buckeye. co Bay in\ 1769. But clvillza-liviq,C areas. pollu"ti.Dn of oui: Ehrlich maintains that our ner of Stanford's ~.300-acrl'l The ridge of f er s ex· diversity of nat•tral li(t_. Nearby grows leatherwood, tioo presses} air al)c;t .wate_c., sholWn,~ most important decision in· campus, in cont in u in g perimental material f o r longevity of experimentation a rare plant 'locally. Some 1'll'B W.LIE THIS IS ' Biologists ·are loo~g to plicaijon of pesti~\l...'\-11 y;olves the determina'ti9 · of ~ologl(\811 ,JJi..vestigatio~s of more important questions and convenience of location. 3,000 species of tr e e 8 ' Jasper for &O)Tle . OJ . the ban~ptcy oours~.~;,lhe _qie optimunv, nf.PJlber ot/ 1otganfSms ;as they'. Jive. affecting t he way people Eleven formal courses in shrubs, herbs and other answers to rational ~Ding use_ ~mapy ).:f .r a I )ta s.s e.11 & er s -;if<>r ··~ ~ur·: .. repjodu~tt.J•~d dit 1 wjthout. live : -Better knowledge .of Stanford's •department of plants grow on Jasper of the environ~m~e~n-~ln~·~th~e~·_!:re~•°"~~··~~-·~·~';!'---~~a"fs~h~tP~·--4"'~· 11.::'7,-.!.'~t!'lt~~·~~fe!:'r~e~nc~e~, t:.' __ ~lll~e:_f~m~m:i_u~ru~·t~y~n~l__<:ce!:'r~tai~·n"....,~b~io~lo~gi~·c~a~l-'s":cl~e~nc':!e'.'.s_us~e-the~_,_R.::i:odg.,e::.. ----=--- toilet . tissue GIANTFAB 69 DETERGENT < HILLS BROS. 69 COFFEi < '!}7 ·~oVJ ,, . ,.,. ""• _ .... p·118URYCAlllMIX 29' CHOC., K.IDG£, '/'fUOW, WNrTE & DOUMEOOfCll ilEG. Sill YO'I DOG FO~D 12 • s 1· NO. 1 TAl.lCAf'l lltGUl.AR. Vltltlm'OI OllC1C&I ---f UPTONMAINDllHDINNIRS 69' REGUW '11:.G. YOUR CHOICE -........................ ~ ................... ~ ... - ~~,~~i~.!~lll~i:t.l!IEIF HA"! __ 3 9 c WILSON'S BIEF ITEW "«-.. 2i'89' llOZ.'MOltOllllOZ.M--------: BIRO'S EYE COOt. WHIP -·-···· .. ···-QU ART 49c apple sauce MAYFRESH NO. 7~s:11 303 R CAN -. . . APRICOT 1 0, $ 1 NECTAR ~ . ' • ' ..... ~.','.~~·~~~"'A~ 89< waffles ]b s 1 DONMfY fl.AQ IOCOl.Nf _ .......... -...... I l'IHEA,.,lE VAN Dl' KAMl'l'S Uf'SIDf DOWN O~EfOZ. 4Jc WINNERS BOX SCORE 62,683 HAVE WOI . 3,282,500 STAMPS llAVI IHll QVlll AWAY meat • pies 8AH9UET 8 OZ. PKG. BEEF.CHICKEN 2~ 29( ANOTURK5Y - PLAY ", 69< BALLS " ... " . -·-·.•••••••••·-··--FIAIURlllG MAYFA•'I BLUE RIBBOll BllF •••• 0111.Y THI BllT U.l.D.A. CH01C1· SllD BEEF••-•••••••••••••••• MAYFAIR 1.1.UE il6KJN chuck IEEF SlW USDA CHOICE steak 49fb · FRESH FRYING 59 CHICKE~,~ARTS ~ I mayf resh h~n . ": turkeys 1:1.S.D.A. GAADf A 39fb SHORT RIBS /l!!'B 39 of BEEF < chuck or 7-bone """""'~ ltlllON U.S.O.A. OIOKflfff roast 49fb FRESH SLICED SCJ< BEEF LIVER . . •. 49' SMOKED POllK CHOPS 98' CfM'ltl CUT __ .:.._·~··-............ ..:. .. .:__ .. _____ •. Cfl'HEI CUT !~!~~~!!~~e~ ... ~--· 45( ~!!!!~!.~.=~-.59' POltll TINDERLOINI ' . f 139 u.sntlN co.i ft:o l'Oll( • ~ .. OSCAR MAYER lUNCH MEAT ::!:1!.~oz. .99l llOO'S llOOUEFORT, •• 1'0L l9e HORMEl SUCEO SAi.AMi. Hord. ltCJrty, GerlOa, Pkti"OI" luff.t Thvrillg9f'4 01. l'llg. -·-·---49c (,,.. ........... ---· -...... ,~~ Jm111"frah .,.. __ . ____ , i golden white rose Mi;:\ .MG)fGb' Llfluors CHATEAU LA REINE c~n . potatoes s ~39< ~'i s ~.39' champagn..: "'"'' .. c. ~"'· s 1 •• SPtC. IUJIGUNOY --flfT H lllAUMEtSTER 12 OZ. Ba. NOftTIJ9.I .. n1011ll$ 'I" CCHC>ISSfl.All'lA.VOlll'O)I """ 99 BRANDY=~ c ------__ ,...49c · llO'l'AtOCc-' ... Ill 131 • •3•t mangos ---·---... , ............. ;;~ 33c IOliS ,..... . ' -~"'29' 1uai snu liAIS . ~~---6i 5 1 • • j ' IYOIY 1 / IAISOAP ....... =-4i41' YOMA ,..,,.,, "'™ ~ llO'l'ALOCCASION ..........,.,Ch.Mil. • 12• HY ... a Ch!oMi,1 ... , l'Vl t S--,V'-htM GAL. FREE KODAK FILM llODACOLOR OR BLACK & WHITE Witi lMY liol Ldl ttrrt f« DMlcpWlf Md Prints JENO 'S PIZZA ... w.:.O...: _ M• • .49• VET'S DflY,DOG FOOD •.•. 65' .... 11.19 ... ~'2 .69 AlllllTISO PllCES IFFIOIVI 7 F•L DA n -TH•s., JUIE 13th ...... WEii~ , ... ltth MAYFAIR MARKET-175 EAST 17TH -ST., COSTA MESA .2030 w .. t 1st StrMt,.S.!Jfl An1 9192 Wntmlnster, Garden Grove . ·-. ' steaks 98fb SHOULDER CLOD 98c BEEF R~~ST &m I ~~~~~.~~~-~-"""""' .............. • 139 ~ ... ~~~~~~~ ............................... -_.69' BIEFIAUSAGE 49' RlAlMcCOT'S Ill. ROl.L .................. , ...• w .... ~-- ~O!~~~.~~EF H~~H __ 49• ~!!.~~!l!a_w·-·--.. 98C CllOI SPllAY Willi ~CL 69< ONCH """' "°"" l'oclt. ..-. --· ...... $ t• ,jACK and Ille BEAM STALK CllAMCOll ·-4'ftc ~ .. C#f_~7- • . ' TENNIS Tennis b Ill u t e coutoofe dates bac* to 1881 wtle!1 tfr U.S. Lawn Tennil AllOCifl. .. tion waa cqaniud ' •. .\.t· tire of the tennis hour ""P white pure, simple and m. cluttered with a 111elk ,ot. bright red and blue trtm.;U the dad in )'OUl' U1e ii • ten- nis nut, you mlibt look ~ the USLTA oUk:ial garb !"1- tage 1968 in the Yacht ~· White nylon jackets, lined with more white nylo~, ahorU of dacroh and polyester cot· ton with adjustable wa11l• bands , . , all this sheer brid· al luxurY when ajl you do is hit a bQ.11 back and forth over a net and S<lG" tove, love, love. But lend a listen, Tennis ·PfO" tocol milbt be blushing e. tit· Ue. but a hint of yellow apd a hint ot biue are sneaking in all strlct1y official, ol ~ because they bear~ official U.S. Davis Cup Teen insignia , , • Yellow shOrta and blue shorts with del.iri<IWI: big jumbo man cable knit pullovers and cotton knit T shirts to match. OH DADS GO FOR COLOR ALL RIGHI' Yoo ought to 9E!e the ~ mudu tn shades of yeliow«>r-- ar\g'e ancf wl'tite plakt Yflth coontinated T shirt• , in stripes and further ~i­ nated jackets in hot o~e or yellow. Wow ... And more bermudas in stripes of avo- cado or blue ... And tatter· sals to mix and match ••. wild ... According to Tynne and Kay in the yacht *JP there isn't any such thing u an old dad ... The-; all lpve this riot of color, the daisy Hangten rwim trunks, the bright yellow spray suits o( waterproof nylon . . . ~ here's something, I'll bet,fno dad has as yet . . . an elec- tric shoe dryer, . , . Or when he falls in the drink. aU ~ bas to do is push ~ese ~ tric feet in and pow1e, tdUty tennies in minutes. A 'YACHT SHOP IS A OADSY PLACE Full of magnetic cards with boards, Yacht Race games, '68 Campaign chess and checker games, Ban'llCUda 666 diver"s watches, water· proof to 100 fathoms .. , Per· haps a yachting chair that folds up with a matchina:: 'footstool that folds up to0 or whic:b. could .be a table with a tray on top. . . Dkl .)'U'.I know a Golf Buddy is a tiny golf bag of quart size •pro- portions with 2 CUJll and 2 tees big enul tor olives ••• GLASS BOWLING BAILS Get the picture, onJy cut off at an angle, and you get the jist of the new odd ball glasses , . . 2 siT..es, single a n d double. balanced on black feet . • . lop sided IO you can sip tipsy, with a matching stir tipsy big odd ball mixer. Boats, owls, toad runners, quaJI, gdfera, U )'OUI' dad's a fan he'll go for more new bar gluaes with frosted insignia of dad's fun time . CHEF BALONEY .rot: PAYNE You've all beard him ef. ferve90e over the meat ooun- ter about his stuffed pme hens with grapes and his hol )Xllol chicken wingt, now YoU can see hbn in action. Just fOl' the Wtber of it, he's do- ing the big demonstration act with 12 kettlts in the front pa. tio this Frid~ from 11 VJ 4 ... He'll do rump roasts and chickens, not dogs and clllck· en giblets marina.led ln ;..tne ... , Come and have a )lute, talk about meats and mari- nadts and salJCes and SH.· 900ings • • . and of coune find out what makes the mar. vek>us Weber, king of the chlll'C'Ofll cooking circles Hck. II your dad's an o~tdtlor cooking dad and a Weber hasn't invaded hl1 life, why not let him come alive If he doodles with the coals. Wtber news ii .. The Pentho6se .. • which hooks over any nU- ing, even 10 stories uP. Or ''The Sequoia" • , . a Wf!beor Id in a n!d W'OOd wagon with : -la ... -looldrc With Cllhlnet .. ~ and • llhelf' •tmemeath and whetU W handl.e1 '<>! euy JJU.llhl.a«. ~ merntlie'r ·a Weber hu a pclr'o ~ain tlnbh inside and C'IUt with a wearinr ability that never ends. Here at Rlcha.rd'1 ttM! Mar- ket Place, where the moat • dads will go wild with mom'• shopping list. ,, 7 A I I I SllJI . . . . --. ! . -·-- . . . . ...____ .......... _....._---~~·--~--:..___ _:__ ________ .... ---------... --- " u I ke " .ht ,., 'g 01 th iis he If· • ' -· , _, •: . '· . "' •J .. ... ' " ,- ~ _, ,, . , .. • .. "' ~1- 'f -----------------------·c-----·-·-----·--------------------~-~ . • Wtdnesclay, Junt 12, 1968 n Ji 7 -I s s •1 s r , r an fl nu s :: s• s s PHONE 673-6'360 FOR DELIVERY er s m r r s r n •!Dlf!!MliT:Jfta v• 111 ·a•,,••• u r 1: n u 1J r DAILY ,!LOT .f'., ' LIDO MARKET CENTER NEW.1101\T filYD. AT THE ENTRANCE TD LID,D ISLE . tP!wiaeo- VINE R!PENED !MPERIAL V ALtEY CANTALOUPE 5 f-OR $1 FRESH GOLDEN JUBILEE -· . . " WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE BARS , ... 49c " , ·DOWNEY FLAKE WAFFLES · . ' SUNKIST 6 OZ . Orange Juice sf-OR$, BIRDEYE WITH HOLLANDAISE SAUCE BROCCOLI Spec rs,. ... 3 "'89c BIRDSEYE I 0°01. SLICED BEETS .; .. o..,,. sr~.. 3 ,., 89c -. PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 13, 14, 15 - 7 JlE DESER.VBS 1D BEST!' . ••• AND WE BUY ONLY THE :FINEST FpODS, JUST FQR YOU , FOR EXTRA FLAVOR .AND ~ATING ENJOYMENT. ISN'T DAD WORTH'!HIS SPECIAL CARE? t@lllet¢ ZACKY FA_RM ~ISH . ~~UF.GRNIA . GRQWN FlYfR$ : . We buy them dir.ect from the grower! No preservatives addea! . --'--SWEET. RED R!PE BIRDSEYE 1-o" .MIXED WHOLE·"BO·o·y ·FRY·E· 'RSBrushwithKikkoman 39¢ ' ---· ----Teriyeki-Sauce -&BBQ , · -LB, -" ;: .,, WATERMELON RICHARD'S TOI' OF THE ·GRADE U.S.D.A. C~OICE VEG ET ABLES ;~:"o.;., 3 ,., 89c STOUFFER 'S ., ., "' ;,. • r : " \1 ,_. ·~· _,. ,, .. ,, " !!• •• -~· . , . ,. ,, ,. .•. _, "' .i :r. .. ·--.,, -· " WHOLE ONLY 5' LB. Macaroni & Cheese 11 ••. 39( Cant"loupe end wetermelon ball1 make • fresh appetizer, er add 1 littlt1 Cointreau or Triple Sec for 1 li ght dessert. LARGE SIZE, DELIC!OUS FLA VO~ STOUFFER 'S POTATOES ... ,,.,;, STOUFFER 'S CORN SCUFFLE STOUFFER 'S ESCALLOPED • 11 1/1 11. 39c II"' 39c NECTARINES Ch_icken & Noodles .. v.~ 59c --29C STOUFFER'S ll-••- LB. Turkey T etranini . 69c ~ f!!IJ~afiJ4p4V)J RICHARDS B·ounce FRENCH ONION or CLAM DIP KRAFT SLICED AMERICAN CHEESE ARCE~ COUNTRY STYLE , COTTAGE CHEESE BEST PURE BEEF KNOCKWURST CARR 'S TA BLE WATER ENGLISH 'CRACKERS RICHARD'S PRESERVES 12 ... 59c 6Sc "" 33c 11 "· . 79c ,.,, .. _ 59c IN A NEW, 12 OZ. WIDE MOUTH JAR The seme superb quality preserves , jellies end mermeledes in • more conven ient jar! CLOSE-OUT OLD STYLE JAIS I0-01. 39c COME TO THE BARBECUE FRIDAY 11 ·4 Our own Joe Payne will be barbecuing Richard 's fine meats on a Weber Barbecue , in our patio . C~me and taste them ' end see Joe's own special Barbe cue tricks! &d/{ ~ FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL RICHARD'S COCKTAIL NUTS Salted end flavored with eht1se, 1mok1, onion end spice1. Assort. eel pi1fech io11 almonds erid cas- hews . DELICIOUS WITH AFTERNOON COFFEE BANANA-NUT LOAF 99c TOPPED WITH CHEDDAR CHEESE TWIN CHEESE ROLL 6 1w29c IDEAL f-OR IAR·BECUE DINNERS FRENCH BREAD 36c OUR OWN O~r beef is_ fed a specially controlled diet -look for the . whit& .fat. -a .sign of premium qu,ality beef. BONELESS ' . RUMP ' ROASTS Rich in flavor, Perfect on e Weber BBQ 89¢LB. l.a 79 LJ. 89~~ . SPENC:ER STEAKS Aged . to perfection. ' . ' '..,.. .... r .·' ' ._ • . .,.. • • -~ ' ·SWISS · STEAKS A delicious ,tree! braised -. in beer , wine, broth or tom'ato sauce. A WINNER JN THE HARBOR AREA R!CHAR0'S LEAN GROUND BEEF 49c... o BAR-M SMOKED PORK • LOIN ROAST 99,,,, TRY THESE FOR UNUSUAL FLAVOR! BAR-M SMOKED PORK CHOPS 1.19u 0 In Joe's 1peciel s1uc1, • piqu1nt hors d'o•uvres . 4'c LY. Tender cub111 of .... f merinated in burgundy win1 end exotic herbs. 1.lt LS. BREAST -·------·-------------·------·------------1.1' LL LEGS -----·-------.. -·-------------------·-.. ·-·------·--· stc LL THIGHS _____ .... ,_ .... -... -... -... --·-He LL ~ ' . . ~~d?t~-~ l!>. --. . BUTTERNUT COFFEE I-LB. BUTTERNUT COFFEE 2 LB. ' ARDEN AA BUTTER SUNSHINE HI-HO CRACKERS FLE!SCHMANN'S SOFT FRUIT DRINKS ASSORTED FLAVORS 67' Hl-C' 46-0Z .. ' 4 f-OR $1 1.33 1 U -79c IJY, ea . 37c REGINA GARLIC WINE VINEGAR 11 u. REGINA RED WINE VINEGAR 12 ... REGINA Champagne Wine Vinegar 11 .._ 2Sc • 25c 25c 39' MARY KITCHEN ROAST ~~-59, BEEF HASH SCHWEPPES MARGARINE I-LB. 39' CARNATION Al~ FLAVORS INSTANT ~~EAKFAST 15-0Z. It •· 6 ... 99c 8.R8~Gi'.N(;LAzE sAucE 39c ou1.N1NE WATER 15c KIKKOMAN .. ... MATRs1A1MALLows (f?tw~~,,, ru-~E~~1:0~~! sAucE • ... 3 ... ' 1 BK!NRGslFOQRUo cEHTARScoAL "'"... 19c Lemon-filled Danish 1 LI. IOX 3.15 EDY'S CHOCOLATE COVERED NUTS • ~ :.i 'L1Jfo<:V MAYONNAISE 4nc 10·L•. 1"'9 FlyOW Glory.. 25 RED ROSES . ll-OZ. 7 A GREAT BARBECUE AIOI -19' 1 LI. IOX 2.10 - FLAG DAY Dowy frosh KLEENEX Facial Tissue '" "· 4"' 89c REYNOLDS WRAP ALUMINUM '••••*111".·.·.1-- 1 •• .. _· _________ sP•ec•i•AL __ 1;;,;"~9;..;8;.. ___ D•~A.Ls•Ty•H•R•OO• M TISSUE , ~-4 ... 89c FOIL 12".n' 2 RoLts 49' .. .- •• ' -~ •· . "2:c1.~~... l.ik ~ s~ OPEN DAILY 9-6. OPEN FA<Tl--I ER 'S DAY ! 1-4. "2.tc!.....t... M11tel OPEN DAILY, q.7, SUN. q.6 . --~--------~----- "2.w.t .. ~ fltnr lllep DAILY q.6 ANTHONY'S SHO£ REPAIR IA Y Cl.WIERS MON.-FRI. q.s:JO, SAT. q.s. MON .. FRI. B:lQ.6, SAT. 8:30.S. • • ' • ' :- ' l l ' • ·-----. . . • ' f-1 OAll V I'll OT Wtd,.,day, Junt 12. 1'68 . ; A Southern Comfort: Ste-a ks Creo le • ! Tastes GOocl, Too Citrus Cups Brimful of WITH LOW.CALORIE DELIGHTS • ., • -~ Serxi U8 4 &th.Size or 6 CompleXion·Size Zest, 'tmlppers and we'll send you a dollar. . HWTY! Letters postmarked after mid.nigh~. July 15, 1968, are void. See the lat display at your favorite store for details. Or send Zest wrappers to: Zest Refund, P.O. Box 517, Maple Plain, Minnesota 55359. . I/ 11 " .. Fish oot Your dish? Here's a solut1011 to the problem. Bron ha'ltbut .. steaks untll just white,,· to keep flab juicy, and then 'am other with a deliclou,s chunky -sauce ' that adds bright color and plenty of flavor. Here again, the green flecJr;,a ot subtle flavor -fr<>len cb<>pped chives, brtbJ a bknd fish to alert flavor. All a I o n g the coastal areas tresb fish is abun- dant, and. frozen fish is a,Jso plenti.ful. ·Varied ways of t;ookfng fish to spark its flavor are a I ways ap- precjiited. Tb.is creole sauce need not stop at fish, but could be us- ed to sea.son chicke .n, omelets, veal cutlets, pork chops_, broiled lobster, baked noodles, bated potatoes a'.nd other dishes, It is a simple to J>!"epare sauce that can. be made in quantity and frozlln for future use. Freeze in small batches, overwrap in fpil." Thaw overnight ill refrigerator, or defrost over low heat slowly, until thaw· ed and hot. When fresh tomatoes are in season, peel and chop them until you have 3 cups for this recijle. Add chives to the sauce as usual. Because there is oo work in preparati<1n, 4ftd the cost is slight, frozen c h o p p e d , chives are irresistible' to • thrifty but discriminating cooks. HALIBUT STEAKS WITH CHIVE CREOLE SAUCE Y.z cup b utter « margarine 1 clove garlic, chowed 1/-1 cup finely chopped celery '1/4 cup finely chopped green pepper. Y4 cup frozen chopped chives I can (I pound) tomatoes, chopped with their juice 6 halibut stew Salt, paprika, lemon juice, · butter or margarine Melt 2 tablespoons butter and saute garlic, celery and green pepper until tender. Add chives and tomatoes and simmer 30 minutes or until 1auce is thick. Sprinkle halibut steaks with 1alt, p6Rfik.a. and lemon Fresh arapefruit halves · juice on both &des •. Dof top < of each steak with 1 tables- Tang ott~ ' ~ l~ter poon butter. Broil only until 1 ~ ~~Uitv~~~ the fisb be'comes white and opa· s 't 11 '->7.!:'" and que the pitqe Comb• with R~move steaks to a plat· lhrimp, · c b~I ~ k t D or ter and serve some of the vegetable Jillinfs. Af t er creole sauce over them. prepar~on. the fillings are Serve with spears ()f cooked returned to the grapefruit fresh asparagus. Serves 6. shells f« attractive &Uld servings. Tbe fuic1 f.lrt.1weet 1ec· tiont, 10 low in calorie. and high in healthful vitamin C, add wonderful zesty flavor inlertst to a mixture of fresh d\rimp and celery in a catchup -mayonnaise dr~­ sing, and to diced chicken and sliced olives in sour cream. They have a delicious af. finity, too. for sliced beets, cucumber and onion. When sectioning the grapefruit, be careful to save the juice. It's -used a1 the liquid in blelkting each of these delicious fillings. To p r e p a r e grapefruit shells, cut grapefruit in haU; cut around eaclt sec- tion. Re move grapefruit pieces; drain and reserve fruit and julce. Remove membrane from grapefruit shells: diSCM<I. Clllll oil ells. SHRIMP FILLING 1 pound shrimp, cooked cleaned. chilled v .. cup catchup 'l.i cup m ayonnaise 'l.i cup minced celery Y.t teaspoon salt Combine grapefruit pieces and shrimp. Blend !ngether remaining ingredients wllh 2 ta'blespoons grapefruit juice. Add to cr.apefruit·shrimp mixture: toss lightly. OliU I hour : IPOOD into grapelrult shells. YIELD: • servings. CHICKEN FIWNG 2 JS~entliced cooked V4 cup sliced pimient1> .stufred. olives Iii cup 50\ll' cream \\teupooneelt Combine grape fr u i I pieces, chicken and olives. Blend 2 tablespoon s grapefruit juice with Rour cream and salt Add to grapefruit-chicken mixture: toss Ughtly. Chill I hour: spoon Into areP<lrult sbeU.. Yield: 4 aervings. VEG ET ABLE FIUING 2 &:l:ett.sliced beett,, 1 cucumber, sli~ I nall red onloo, aliced \\ \'el-. di! Lettuce Combine grapefrqit pl<c<s, be<t!, and 4 table. spoons grapefruit juice with rema.lning in,eredients. Chill I hour; spoon Into grapefruit tbells that llave been lined with lettuce. Yield : 4 lm'inft. Eggs Earn 'A' Grade Eggs -probably the han· diest food ever stored in a refrigerator. And if you are an eronomioal twosome, it is just plain great that eggs are inexpensive. With eggs and Little else, you ~n create a dozen diJhes from a French omelet to ·a creamy custard to an angel-light souffle. Cooking eggs takes only two important skills -tlle abili· ty to keep the beat tow and cooking time 1bort. High heat or long c o oJc i n g tough~ns eggs' p rote in . ·Omelets -get tough and watery. Custards curdle. Start with good eggs. Carton labels state egg size (small, medium, large) and grade, usually A.6': or A. Grade is the "good egg" part.' It shows how fresh the eggs were at the time or grading. They \Vill -still be that tresll only if they have been kept cold since the time of grading. How can you be sure? First, huy your eggs .from a --refrigerated counter. Don't waste time getting eggs home to your own refrigerator. When you buy fresh eggs, d~ your ,part to keep them fresh . Then, take a close look at the eggs when you break them for use. Really fresh eggs have very thick whites with yolks almost in the center. Sggs are easy for quick- and<e>nvenient meals. Keep a few hard cooked ~ggs on hand . . . you never know when you may need them. Butte rm ilk Buttermilk bas been a popular tlairy product since Biblical time5 and today is rated by nutritionists u n. A·l. low<alorie, nutrition· packed dairy food . The offbeat tangy flavor of buttermilk Is enjoyed by many . Calorie counters and persons on low fat diets welcome its low-cost. hi&h calcium and protein values as we.IJ as the flavor variety it makes possible in their menus . ',I • . J 13 thru Junt 16 In Ucen"d Stfeways Prices Ettective Th•.rs .. sun. une 7 9 l(avlana Vodka$ Distilled Fram Grain ~ Proof (Case $41 .95) Q11rt Old Calhoun Kentucky Straight Bourbon Qierl 86 Proof lCa1e $55.95) Stanton's Gin $ $ London Extra Dry ~Proof (Cale $41.95) Q11rt 79 MacNair's Scotch :;~, Flftl s499 Jim Beam Bourbon r,,., f lft• s529 Jose Cuervo Tequila r, .. , fl"' s5as Winner's Cup Rum ~~~~J329 Brown Derby Beer ~~J 6 ·~.~ 19¢ u will find 1 lara:t vanety of At 111 Stleway Botlltnd~k:>-111 ti IOW everyday pritt• fine Wines, Burs. • 1000 Bayside Dr.~ewport Beach 24 Monarch Bay Plaz~South Laguna • ., •• ' ·. • • • • • • • • . • l I l j ' • • • • • • .. ' l • i 1! .. ' I l I ~ ~: ). . , l· l • •' • " l• F I: I i !i j: •' r 1: •' ll i: r I! I! ll " •• f' Ii ' l ' ; " ' 1 ' " ' ' ,, ' I f ' • I ~~ ., • I • • • ' I i ' 1: I! . ' Fruit Pies 8-in..~ • pies Hi·C Drinks Popular fruit Flavors-Low ir-Pric .. l .46-oz. c:an FROZEN FOODS Orange Juice c ~::h+.~f::;j::;· 5 6-oL •100 Florid.-Low in Pric•I CGllS • Motor Oil Sholl XI 06 • T oxoco • Hovolino • Volvolino RPM Special QuCirt $ Cans ~ee. Tissue · Bolhroom_;Whit, or .Soft Pastels 14c OHi $ 4-roll packs LIQUOR SHOP BUYS! ....................... w...r ,..,., .. s-.. ,,_., I). 14, It, f6, IHI - ~!!il~l~n Hill $ 4 99 10 p,ocf Fifth V-tables ,,, .. ,,_A•0 ""· _,,_ Jn Butter 8aUC11 4 10 "· '1 pkg a. Gre B Bel-1lr-Cut, en 8Qft5 lllced or French 4 ..... '1 pkt•· . Dairy, Delicatessen Kavlana Vodka IO~ '379 Stanton's Gin IO~ '379 MacNairs Scotch-'!,r;:' '4" Cheddar Cheese Safeway Mild-For Cookin9, Snacks or Sandwic:he1- Whole Milk Formula. ... 69' C tt Ch L"'""' Low pl•t ]lf 0 GCJ~ ' eese Cal or Regular ctn. F 't D • k L"'"" .... '' fUI nn 5 Popular Flavcrs. Lucerne Salads In Popular Favorltea. Yz..gal. 291 ctn. 3 ''"' '1 ctnL FRESH BAKED BUYS! ,.Large AA Eggs Ct••m O' the Crop. Rushed 3 9c from Marby egg ranches to 1-cloL . your neighborhood Safeway. ctn. Medium Size tt.'." 35' txtra Large b~~· 43' Cr•t"' O' th• C'..""'P S rede "AA" CreeM O' lhe CrC>tl 5r•~• AA Ice : Cream CetilDI catni-e,...,. An-l::Foocl :Cake ', s.t 11 "'9lar navws. I ';If-·-....... i I I ~H'~.~~?i~rc.i;>: s.... 12:°'· 2 9c Crest .Toothpaste Your Fa~ly. low rn Price! INKJ . Raicin Bread 1kylark-P1ump, ts.or. 'Htl · "":'!'!• P'ulJ of Goodn ... 1 loaf . A 7' A.. 1· K h •• ""'""' ''"" 3r• It ftlt1ls ·1111 ~ Id ...,.p e UC: en Rollo-F ... hly ••••• .... .,. Prlcl lldnlS le Off 111111-,_ 59' Tllbe · Cigarettes Liquid Bleach n1tt Ml(lc-Worts •e M·l·G+C! Cake Mixes ·~· ~=~-:.~n:: ~':~ .. ~ Safeway Coffee~==-· South Americ Fi rm And Golden · e. Ideal For Snacks, unch Boxes Or To Slice In Gela- tin Salads. Great To Make Your Own Banana Splits.· Check This Low Price! c-'2'! Gallon lottt. Tu 33c it .... 29c Pack- ~· 59' c lb. Large Size Apricots Watermelons s;:;·R~;.d •. 5c: Juicy-SWMt Sun llush•cl. low }n Price! 4 ... •1 .. Large Slicing Tomatoes Ph.mp, Rod Ril"' 2· 9c: to Jic;e !ft .. i.c1.. .. Peaches YoHow MHtod-Fi"t of •· 29C: S.a1on-R•el Tasty! Mild Onions be::m~~ 3 .... 29c: Additional Produc.e Values SHdless Grapes .~:;, "· 391 Carrots ..... , .. '""' 3 .... -Dally for Voul pkg. 6.P Fresh Cucumbers .~,:~ 3 ,,. ~ Juicy Limes ~~:.: .. o• 51 llB DAILY l'!LOT .Jl.'t RECENT WINNERS IN STEEPLECHASE SWEEPSTAKES USDA G>RADE A U.S. G>owt • ..._ .... WHOLE BODY ·Plump, Tonder l ·Moaty. Cut0 Up •••• " 35' lb Qu1rte1"11d ttl. " I , .. , ... Mrs. C. I. a-ti Mn &Ills ill '""' ~II• .... lillltts MB. Y. lal(llr Mllfict Morr• C Rolled mocl Tiff USDA Choice G>rade leef Chttck Fla..n.I· and Juicy • ..i; • Salew.., IHI Roaot lb un be. Low ill Priu, I c Chuck Steaks Btado Cuts -ld•ol lor Outdoor Borbocwing • USDA Choice BHf 9 , . c lb. 4 I. • ' . ' '~ . ~!:!~w~~~on•~n~l~ked. 8 !~ • s••' Veal Chops Fresh Spareribs :~!'...~::,".;r;:;r. • 69c: , Otr E11t1m Pork ' 1-1b. r19c: .packogo 01' Shouldtr Cul-Tendtr . 69c All-Meat F, ralfks .: WML"o'!.~",, And Meaty. low in '" Price. lb. Luncheon Meats •:r~:' ...... ~. 39c: Pork Steak Or Pori Chops (brp 69C Sirloin or Rib End Breaded Shrimp r7:: :::::-.... ~ 69c: Cut) ... Bolnana M.,r•ll Sllt14I 1-1~. 69c · ............ Ham M.,,.. "-• -39c ""ft Tut~ All Moot •kt . "'~ Slkod pkt. Bologna Merrill 111C14I l·J•. l!ft.... Cotto 0.1.-·1 Morr•11 11-. 59c ffrty o1ll .. ,, ,... ~ ~Nnlf ,Ille... 111lt. Rath Meat Sal•I . Turkey Sale! Sliced Bacon .... """ ..... '65t ' H•w• ''""' P••· , Hen Turkeys .11"T:~ .~~.~. ia. 39c Pork.Chops •;::~.:·:·~:;,:-:..• $1.69-Turkey Hindquarters , • 39c Him Sl·ces ,,,,., c ..... c.,~ s· 1 69. T k Roast ........ '·"· $2 69 I L••~ lu•··~ ,.,. I~. • ur ey ' u,111 • D.rl ..... • Si i d B •'\ 4 Dubuqut Ml11 l1w• 1 .... Ste Ice aeon . . Luer'• IDWI Farm• .it ..... , Hlok .. , ........... . """'' , ....... •.u """" , .... ,_.. ............ ' ....... .,., . ,...._ .......... n.n .... s-.. J.. 11, , .. ti,''· .. ......., ~-1 .... ...... ....... C.-.1, to. ........ , ................. C.W.-.t, .... . ........ .. .,.., _. °"""" ''"' ...... c-. MMI< ................ ~ .... . , ' ' .,. . . . - Boneless . Roast ,• •ottom f!:ound 89C: • Clod • f!:um' .. . UIDA Cholo. l•f BEACH BOULEVARD at McFADDEN . .;. WESTMINSTER ' l • ' • ·----------~------- ( • J • I -- ... ' . . • '· ' • • • • \ DAILY PILOT Wednesday, June 13, 11!68 FATHERS DAY eoo10UT' F AVORITESI MEAT YOU CAN TRUST • . • ttl#t AT 1>1SCOUNT PRICES, TOO! FRESH FRYERS nDl! IODT IEST ff FRYER "M:I UCO ~ 49' Oii NECKS" a IOWA MAID t:.m:: 52, BACON ~~ RATH IUClHAWK IACOI Hr. •m IMOKU • 1WCIM llEIMlllA • lU. PACWI' -II.PHI BETA BACON 'l:icl" 111 ARMOUR Mlr1 C1r1 IACOl'l.':"5k OICAA lMYt:I • U OlllCE PACQC[ . ' GROUND BEEF '}llUJ s:ooo. PAK 3<8$. OI OVER ';llUJ ... _.. 59L MEAT LOAF 10"'fil. . . IOIEIUS FAllLY STEil 89~ SMOKIE 11•MAST 68c U.S. GOY!RHMOO lllSPEC!tD CAMP'S • BOZU 9 U.(12. rMCI. MAIN QUSTY • FROZDI LINKS TR!Ar WlltiOW'S 'COlllt Kiit$' • IOIE.US s439 CAllED HAM ~lo 5 g, ... HALIBUT ,..,.. 69~ BUTTERED 55c BREADED ...... $129 STEAKS CUT BEEF STEAKS SHRIMP PCS. THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY JUNE 13 THROUGH 19 • Alpha Beta's "Man In 1111" says: TOTAL DISCOU • Every Day! , , .. · Every Minute! About Our DOUBlE DISCOUNTS oormo·111cEil"Lic"'3k 351 ®iii'A'S'oiicoiiit"'2a~ 181 iiciiiorill cH'E'EfE cac 38 4 ~ 8 Cit. BQ!ll• • Fr.rich Ladr • 6c Off 281 ~MILANI WJ.'k.o 39c ~ UBllT'I • ' OUNCE CAN 22' ~Vlenni Sausage Zlc @c':ki.li 'Sliriinli,. ssc 451 GERHR,.BUYFOOD IOc 9.4 ra PEAcliEs ;~,;~~ .. •oc SLICES -~ SOME STO~ES C~AllCE J3c OELICAIESSfN & CREAMfRT SOMf ALPHA BET A. STORES DISCOU"IT CHARGE ,,ua Mo:COY • 3 OUNCE PACKAGE SLICED PASTRAMI Mc:COY • i OUNCI PACKAGE . Sliced Ctrnld. INf AlPHI BETA • 14-0Z, • LARGE ALLMEAT . SLICED IOLOGIA ~%=-_59' CARTON • ALL POPUUR llRANDI llNG SIZE $ CIGARETTES f&' 12.11 2" zori1is"==~·3,. 291 q:T'll•~SWAIS 31c 31 1 Better Produce at DISCOUNT PRICES! SJltJ&D~ ''"'"'s I I HAWAIIAN GROWN -- 1£>HNSON • VAWE PACl • Sffrtl\ STRIP 78' IAND AID ~W'ic 981 ALPHA IETA fU.TUllS PAPAYAS RUSH£0 29C iV AIR EXPRESS IA. 100/o DISCOUNT ON ALL • llAUZINU. IOOl!S & IRlllllt WIS SMALL SIZE• KEEPS 12%COWER TKA'i,1Ct781 ICE PAI "'""'IX PL.\snc 911 I.MOE SIZE ICE Pil SI.ft II.II ' BREClH1lr Stt Mlsl 11 n • 111 41 OUNCE I OTTIZ ... ... 11 OUNCE CAN" TABBY TREAT CAT FOOD 2k 26' 6 OUNCL CAN • 16' lKIPPT DH FOOD lk FWRIST QUALITY FWWERS AT DISCOUNT PRICES/ GARDEN FRESH • LARGE • SOLID -. iR'mcou1'T1011ER •211 • 111 :toii'Y 'clt'°""''0 'l'«• 611 ALU SELrziiL0 ""'ii II s 14• ~ (.oz. BOnt.E • INCL 4e OFF 441 ::;,:. ~CORI! HUSKERS .601 II';>~ ru·1r,iiils'" .. TC. a1• 291 ~"' CARNATION. PACK or ' ENVELOPES ~ llSTAIT AIL l'l.AV0"5 -68' ~ .I BREAKFAST lie Pock of II) Ell,..,_• Choe: .. Choe. Malt 11.ll ... :I) OUNCI &ID• I,\ I ONUS 491 &Ju WlldtW .CIMllll' lie 10Vuvr·-"itc soc HURDUERGEIT lie 81 1 " • ' !'l. 'i~Hlll BEANS 21c 181 300 CAN S l W KIDNEY BEANS lie 18' S &W • 28 OUNCE CAN DYEN BAKED BEANS lie 36• RANCK STYLE • IS.OZ. CAN PINTO BEANS 20c 18¢ Mlt IPUD I l·LB. PA.CllGE INSTANT PDTATDU 4k 39' HUNT"S • 300 CAN TOMATO.SAUCE lk 18' l' OUNCE 80'1"1U 22' HUNT'S CATSU~ 23c 9·07..t AR • WjTH KOPIStRAtllSH MOR HOUSE MUSTARD 1k 16j l·i1FfACftOt • M!NIATUflE ·-K M RSHMAllDWS 31c Chleklft Of Th• &a· No. 'h CAN 30j CHUNK TUNA UOKT MEAT 33c Ch11nk Whl19 'l\IM • K•. Ya Coll 'I' .. Solid Whit• ruaa • No.. Ya-Cctn ' • • rr.~¥"MG MEAT nc 22' il.~~"'fo~Ab IEEF lie IJI 8~fo~~1z8UiifE~J lie 81- ~0fo 'j,'{TU~ii1"' orr $1.31 1111 Jl'i£~~~i~"' "'15c. 14' 2iW"c~CL. I• °'l'lc 111 i8G'~ 211 27' . GIANT ltzr • INCL. ZI 0FP •84 TOP JOI CWIU 111 W" I I _<I ---__ •• - FATHERS DAY SPECIALS ';llUJ (fat lllAlllTll 59-• DAISIES -. :u~c~·.~.~ ..... s1•• :~~ci0.~~~ ... 891 HEAD LEnUCE F 0 R c ONIONS RED SWEET MILD SI.ICING SIZE .5~ C11rKES fll[( ltmon ltaf with_ purchase of fresh cut Flowtrs AVOCADOS ~J5 ~~3RIT£ 25:,. CRISP 1oc GARDEN FRBH EA. ESE PRICES EFFECTlvt THURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13 THROUGH 19 ... Im • It Ofllt<a • JUU..APMT ClllAMDI 1111 .. ..... 59' ' SOME ALPHA IETA STOllES DJ.SC.OUN? C:HARG[ PRlct • 1111 t4 I ta-wdlltll'rtlf • 11111 tt. tr, te. ,.._.. n11 STOU HOURS MON. ttlfU FRI. 10 AM ~ 9 '"'' liJ.T. 91\d SUN. 10 AM ~. 7 fl COSTA MESA-241 E. 171h St. HUNTINGTON BEACH-9045 Ad1m1 HUNTINGTON BEACH-11681 N. Moin SI. FOUNTAIN VALLEY-30 Worn4' LAGUNA--10122 .S. C .. 11 Hlwoy . • . . . ' ' , ' ' ' ' , .. .. ' ~ ' ' ' i ; .- ·:' ' ' ,., •' ,. • .• ,., • J ,, '. ·~ '• l J . I ' j ' • • I '• ! I ) • J • ' . ( -=::::;:;::::::=.::::::-::---:"':--~-="',.._....,=="""~, -=---------,--:;. ----: -----------------------~---,--------~~-...... GO RD ON 9'5 FRESH BAKED . e LEMON e LIME IPoll e ORANIOE EnvolOpesl e MINT °' '. e PUNCH ~'(OllD " Diamond "A" GREEN BIA.NS Cut or $lie"' 303 Can LIPTON TEA !.'\iJ 49c USDA GRADE "A" ·FRYING .. CHICKEN WHOLE BODIED ., FRYER BREAST. USDA .Choice 8on1l111 Rolled Clod ' . . . FRYER LEG & THIGHS 59~ 59~ FRYER . 37¢ ·ROAST BEEF 89·~. 3-LEGGED CUT-UP lb --------. EASTERN GRAIN FED LARGE LOIN 69¢ PORK ROAST ........................... :.......... 111 • EASTERN GRAIN FED LARGE LOIN 69{ . PORK CHOPS .................................... • ' EASTERN GRAIN FED CINTIR CUT LOIN 8 9 ¢ PORK CHOPS ................. :.................. lb FltlOO I 01. G1rllc-FrenCh-Onlon l1r M W11t1rn Style All Meet • .'.:.·.,,. ;, :;:,~STER GRAIN ·fED . ,·t.>!1<,l\ ;'I ... ~rll'r , 0' ,-.~ ""' ,,,_.' -, ., r--I ' . ' : . CENTER CUT R'IB ' Pork Chops GRAND ALLS fiRYER ROASTER LB. -TURKEYS W-=-ednec:-=5da1°'=', ju=ne .,,.::12,,,..,.1968~====-="'DAJLV' PILOT 8 VALUABLE COUPON . -HOl.L Y Ii RA NU LA tED -s.u. IA& SUGAR.· 3·9' WITH THIS COUPON -AND $1.00 MIN. PURCHASI . Limit -bag por •--Ono -po(·•""-" Alcohollc '"""'" ...i -l'lol4 Delrj rr..lucto. lx-od ,,,_ 'Mlolm-....,_.,.., L4W ~ Vold 9'tor ~y • .i-1 16. VAL.;.AilLE C~UPON ' Foremost 'i Gal. Flat ~°"' .. ,. IC·E_ . '· CREAM Foremost Arrow PURE GROUND , IN$T"N'.I' . PEPPER BLA1CK . , IRl"l(PAST · ' ' oz. Can · FR~SH PRODUCE · c YOUR CHOfCE . 1 RED RIPI "TOl't\ATOES . SW.ET LE GRANDE . ; .. . .NECTARINES. or ·SEEDLESS GRA~ES 5 LBS .lor ;S1 SWEET JUICY KLONDIKI WATERMELONS FRESH L6'oSE . CllROTS MILD BE~!/DA ONl.ONS WIENERS CHIP DIPS . SALAMI CUBS EASTERN GRAIN fED 'rlcei •ff•dlvea ..__4_9_~ _____ 2_9__,.,: ..................... ~s_9_·~--POiiSPiR'iRIBS 69~ . ~=~-~'£!ti· lar M W11t1rn Style Bulk FROZEN FOODS ~ .. . . IA!t M WEmRN STYLE IULK oi~~~~0:.j·uicE .' .. ~ ...................... ·39¢ . SLICED. · BAC·ON. IPllN_,, ' s •HNCH •lllD ' , 10¢ , POTAlOE . CllNK'f; CllTI ........................ • . . IAR M WESTERN STYLE SKINLESS, II OI. pkg.I A + .. f J o '-ME..........:.-AT_.PIE_S T_i:£ .. _ ........... _ .... ·:·:·_· -~~__._.51 . PORK LINK$.;._.· i· -· ____ :__ _____ . ____ ----..1 ____ ---- ·1 ;c .. lb c ,GIV! I I CHIP ti ST AMI'S · AMPS COSTA fl'ESA . .19~ anll ~a PLACEN'l'IA. 710 W. Chap_1111111 ' , I c -· -12. 11'1 • I OS M t• --_ .. .. • 1 ilivw .. -. t ,__ tS& i """'-'··~~ ,,.,.,, •s ....... -.e2t ·--1 ! 7 !. !C&_f!s! *::II' ·--WJ ifaw•RZEw. ·r·. e COSTA ME~--- .. -... " .~ ,..~ .... ' ' AIJWy c.. SeD a.., llli115"' low Ptica; Mwket Wet Discoats Prices .• G111ity P11Jsds When -,,,,, Marbt -has -icle cf.scount pricing. -bow - --it. · Ycioo pay rode~ pnm. at Morb1 8mbt 1or pudiwly .-ytiiing. I.loo leading """•d brmds.. Md U.S. Ooice TendelOJ Beef Qdlly. Sa:vi:c fieslt Pl~d Qually. 11.S.DA GnD M. 1gg Qoafily. ~ .,..,. Gel oil al ... d 01 ;>Cot llisa>oot -"-hwy daJ. -· 7 c... •Ifie·'· ~tt --. ... _ _ ... ~ ,. .................. -- ~ .................. i!iac C111ffj11s ••• o.:; oJD .. • I $ 9 ' f • l,_.$11.,. ~1115 I' I 0..., ~.:. ' • 7 ... , ..... .tit" \ D I h • lllkt c ••••• "%:: Jt . ~c;,i;;&lil • : =14' . . . • ' 7 e NEWPORT IEACH-r.:=.e:t.;~!·:·-,e HUNillNGTON 8,!ACH-':!,:::,.-. • • • ' ' t-. •' I. :.. . <:_ _ l r ~ :.. ·l e FOUNTAIN VALLEY-:~ )' • 'MDA ODCl11Nt1Mf mAND ll!IF llCN!IJ!i!I • -. "'°""'"f 8raod 9ool II giOla..-.i· befit ..,.. aod llftder l'JBll' TIM!. N-ol ft<Mll' a..t 1oio. cn prolocled while oaturol 18ndering action ii lpMded vp by pNCisely regulated temperature, humidity ond .air circulation In special . rooms. Teoderoy Brand Beel Is fully aged in 44 HOURS Cit l!SS, lnotead of weeks. No ofl.... beef so fresh eon bo IO llOlurany londerl SPENCER STEAKS 1&1\4, OIOla WY IMW<O --u.llGE l/EATY - RIB ROAST LB. U.S.D.A. -TINDEllAY IAAND iOuiD STEAK JNflitOAY DISCOUl'lf PllCE ' . Hltl#W~ ' 1 P·c1i1s · ..... it7c ·~.. •.• • c..t .1,,· . . ' ' Hnia.t...,_ . . -45c ,.., •• '• • ·• c..; ' • ........ : 954 --. -17-0t. Imo· .•• •· • • CaR · . . . . ~~·-· . , .... ~ ........ --&ou H rt l'AW U.,W Plaa • "t: 7gc ICNft$1iuabw;' ~ ...__ ·~­rr,,.......-11 , • , "" . mw..t c .... .....,. 'Jnc Cocktail ••••• :: .Jil~ ...... l J ' •o.. 21c HIC!ft UICI , "'· AU MAllCfl' tASICtT 1'11..IJTS AND ~>&ES All GUMAN'r!fD SUNRISE FRESH w, futl to shop Momt Bo1k.t'1 colorful saa• of fr.vi fruits and Wgetobln. Y01J am be e«tain emyttirng you dioo .. there hcra ., pkktd at the right "'°"""' of riptMll , •• ruahld r•friterotod froM farm fla tlof9 ••• handled wiril epeciol care ~uiilil·~ .iect It , , , on 1a!11' only.for !he apoclfle tlmt "'°' ii'• atlll al Ille peok of -.... ' • .......... ...., -. 1 llWIJ Fllfftr ~S .2l D111 11• ,. l11m1 •••• _. •.t: 1;r ~-"".' ' ., ..... .. ll1:1~•·di .... 'IU; ---'Hli ,.Mt.r~· ... ,.,.. . 11'1\Nf1&11om11U ' ......... ~ ... ........ • •~It\• .• •. ,, .... • • '... . . /' . . ' . . ' . ., . ".i,..~ .. ~ ... ..;., 1t·. ·n• . -· A! - -, . . . . -. . . ..... . "l"'(Mirliil Oitl ---41E M • i.u.. C' arganne .•• ~ c.•· : __ · Mar•.t la1ktt ••111llH' 17 · Ma • 1-U.. c , rgan111 • • • a,. ' ~··-''-" ' ~-· . ' ari• 1~ .. . • .• ,. c:~. •' . ,;.........., 'I •. ·· •. j]1J I ,,..., ..... ._.;, t;,'.°« , r;1 "cl ';. "'\ r . ~-' ~0.11ChickNH.octl• 14-01. 37c • . ll'l~f o • • • • Jar Ho,--! S · 12.0.. 53c palll • • • • • • C.11 " ' 'NChol0.1'1:--... M IJ,0,_ 37c , I • • • • • • c..11 Clim i. Pith lor9tt~• 3 • Sa 14-01. . 2c . . llCI • .-• , • "" ' Pio11t1r;'t C.c~oll 63 : • Peanuts ""'·0 " c . . . ,., -· • J r ' \¥td1\osdly, :Aiot".U. 1"8 -· D~Lv mar F -· ' . , t1 0 .. -7 t • 9 1 ~IDc , P11 1ili. • • --ilil-.,..... ..... .... ,., ••• ,, sgc •, ' 'M111..-....-:')ftc. z.t Towels ... \"O:: · ;,u-· "'' ' . . ~..ft -··. . ... ,. · ifacial nssue • 5:.-i:: $1- • t.!Mrht w.1 ;,lttdi' wt.rte snc , • Paper'Plates •• '!'I' ;r: .... , ., . . I • Hlli-t • • Sweet Relish 1"~; 2!jC' STORE HOURS:' ,MONDAY tniu PRID4Y 1QAM-9PM . SATURDAY ancl SUNDAY 10AM-7PM ltOUIS SHOWN A• K>IMOll'lfOIU' ll<M:T"""" AH POSTID rN IA.CH ffOll 'IM!>NUS 01sc:t>uNr VECltJiS ' M.W ON ...... "°"'.....,......,. .llMll,.IMI, - Ubla,lttl ·-t • -Sltppy Joe • •r·~'!'; 5gc · hlltlllf Milk • 1 ';.";: $1 11 IMfUt .. , •• , I ' ' MM4't .......... Doil')' '1 . (maier • • • "·\':; 69' I -' · CoffM-Mate ·~... $19" ' ' J•' ' 1 , I ~ .... Tiii logs ••• :.'!; 6SC '· :",· ;t~L T ·. ·. • • ,_.,;_ 81' .c •. · .-HKA H ••• , ... S.S diuM or Colldu·111-Uquid~0r. 79C ucary •••• , • '''· 6 flovon-torn.iio• SI d · "•· 87c 111er ••••• .,, Pl•• 011d St.•-OlictUr 18 Mushrooms •• '<'.'! c liltey Red Silmon.~ !if ' • -.-~~~~~~ ..... ~.--' WI-~-\'O.ACCll'f ' U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP COUPONS IN LOS ~ COUNTY If-I-~ FAMOUS FOR DEEP-CUT DISCOUNT PRICES e COSTA MESA-11 -•NEWPORT IEACH4\:=~.=:·-,e .HUNTING~ON BEACH.'"'-:!.':~-. e FOUNTAIN VALLEY-:C' ... !""' t ;·~··· ··~-: ~: _ __:~~.;,....----~'-'"---'-'---'--=:.:.--:....:..'::___;;;,.:·-=·----"""-'-'""-'..:".;..i.a1 .. •••""_ ..... ;o,;.=•~=---' _____ _. _______ , _____ , ___ ,_, ___ .:.;_~·-'-=----_._l __,i ' ----. • Moving Da9 for ~amie ' , Polldeal Campaigning . l ~ 1968 Was ·Expected to Be Bad ¥ear ' ' ; . By MERRIMAN SMITH . After-6W urban violence 1 of late Jut summer and the 1967 ypUtb demonstrations •ca.inst the drl:f! and Viet· nam, it ~ame increasingly appa.reat to some k e y · goyernment officials that 19fi8 would be a bad year for conventional ' political cam· . ' .palgning. During the winter there seemed to be so m u c b unrest and disseftt against eS'tablished 1:11thority..i it was the considered judgment ,of these officials that con· • ventional c•mpaigning by PresideM. Johnson. or 'any ot • · the major candidates would l>e all but impossible without 'inajor risk. · he wu not about to become a frightened prisoner of 1800 Pe.nnsyl~anla Ave. DEE~TBOUGHT But still he~e:ave _the mat· ter some deep personal thought , and it was in this somewhat lntrMpective con- sideration o( the problem that he · started talking to 'congressional leaden about legislative authority to give 'the candidates Secret Sef'Oce· protection. . The Secret Service, as well JS 1he Federal Bureau of lnve1,Ugation, were aware of thre~ts by certain black milltantl and inti-Vietnam actl.vists to suarl t b e Democratic: and Republican nominating conventions iD. Chicago and NJami. RAISE SUBJECT Concerned ·red er a I of· ficials had some chance of influendn& the President, but they were hesitant to raise the subject with can· di dates generally, First, the federal · goverrunent had no authority. _ Second, candidates as a ceneral rule are so prone to dismiss the possibility of ug· ly crowd consequences th~t they reject local police pro- tection even when it is available: after Sen. Robert F . Ken- nedy was killed in. Los Angeles. The New t ork • Democrat might poss! y be alive today had he a ~iled himself or the prot~tive services or a squad ol\well· armed, crowd-wise :J.. o s Angeles city detectives. Jn any case, his chance11 ol avoJdin g· a murderous hail of bullets would have been better. SMALL STAFF Kennedy . was wounded fatally as he moved through a hotel kitchen area witti on• Iy unarmed staff people near him in a crowd of strangers. According to the Los Angeles polict:.' tbe f(en• nedy staff bad declined1heir protection on grounds that the candidate wanted to be near the people. r The battleship M assachus-etts was· moved from jts temporary bertf:I, to a nearby.perma'nent berth Mon· day in Fall River-, Mass. I~ this aer.~ view she is being pushed ~Y tugs to the middle of the Taunton Rlyer·to posltlon her !Dr backing into the new berth. ' This came up at times in private conversations with . the chief executive. For a t i m e, he maintained he would ' be . able to g o anywhere in America; that Anyone familiar w i t h capabilities of tbe· Secret Service knows, hi>wever, that totally effective pro- tection of any pubilc. ngure simply does not exist if the figure Wists on exposing hlmseU to danger b y mingling f r e e l y with crowds; by moving .about in open automo6Ues and by speaking to inass audiences in. locations where airUght cro'wd control iS impossible. There wM a sharp shift in candidate opinion on the ,,1ubject of personal safety Thus the country had to undergo another t r a g i c lesson. · · • $1.19 SI ZE -PALMOLIVE, REGUlAl ~r MENTHOL 77 RAP.ID SHA YI J:'~n 1 $7. 9s 's1zE-GlllETIE Tl~HMATIC RAZOR 89~SIZE -LIQU1 D H.(fl"GROOM · PROTEIN '29' S1 .49 FAMILY SIZE DEODORANT RIGHT GUARD '"!. $102 Prit• otl label} 79c SIZE-SUPER STAINLESS GILLETTE BLADll HAI KARATI AFTER . SHAVE s12•. Von de Komp's ~ SPECIALS TKUIS .. SUM, JUKE 13·11 · lcff or S11111i 33 CINNAMON · C ROLLS ""'of I ~~· • ., $139 • 4-U)of ~~I~ 15C COFFEE ALL GRINOS· MJB •• 1-lb. con .. t ....... f71r. 2-lb. con ........... 1.41 3·1b. con ....... ,. 2.05 l~ jorin~ont $1.19 EXTRA SERVICE CHECKS CASHED AND AMERICAN EXPRESS ORDERS ERE FROZEN ~NC VAN deJ<AMP DINNERS STRAWBERRY • NESTLE'S QUIK ... U.S.D.A. 'CHOICE' BRISKET CORNED BEEF. ' WHOLE OR POINT CUT • FLAT CUT, 79c lb. •TOP ROUND • SIRLOIN TIP (YOUR CHOICll !tWMC/t SLICID a11p aACOll ':: 75' HORMEti: PORK LOIN ROAST 7-RIB FRESH 4gc PORTION .... • Appl• • D~ffh ..t.piM • ,t,prkot . '"'•""" • loy11~b9"7 • 11citkb9ny •Cherry • f99 C~1wird • Peoch • 5tlow'b9,..,.. lhuborb • Min<• • P11111pkif1 FREEZER: QUEEN BllP • CHICKIN • TURKIY Wl~H GRAVY. $149 . 2•LB. PKG. · lAQY'S-CHEfSE OR SOUi CREAM ' ITUPPID POTATOll1::33c SMOKEY JOE-itb BEEF, HAM, PASTRAMI , 5 7 BBQ SANDWICHll. ::•; c MINUTE MAIO SAMIO e PANCAKIMIX 'Ullf COIM OIL MAZOLAOIL INSTANT MASHfD (1.5.0Z. PKG., 6.51;) UAL Mi:c:O'f'.... ',,J •• I • • .. a11p •:&d'SA•I LlllKS ~ 291 IW McCOY-1-1.1. lOU. CORlllD allP HASH 491 UAL McCOY SMOKID a11P TOllOUI \ 89,i.. 79~. lEAl McCOY PICKLID a11P TOllOUI HORMEL SMOKID SAUIAOI 69,~. . COll,IER'S CHARCOAL BR I QUITS 10~~1tc ~BUnER·NUT COFFEE-All GRINDS ~a· 69~ .. • , CAN . ·~ t~' .... BACON .~ .. R~~l~~EL 5·9 ~'./' .. 1-LB. PKG. ~ i. -~ . •· ~' . .,. ... ·.33c , ... , . CHllS' t. l'ITT'S-3 VAllfTl(S 3 14 . .,,,$1 BARBICUI SAUCI '"'· 1 fltSH, CHIUID llflSWllT {41·0Z. ITL. 67t) rt 4 • ORANGI JUICI ~:,, ....-• SUCIDOICIUS"tol . "·•• 49c ""'• ORAN4;!E )UICI FRINCH'S POTATOIS :-;;: 32c 6 '!!°·J4c FRISH KIST PllllEAPPLI 5 '!:;$J ..... ,. efl2. GO\D!H OUIH, P.\IMUAH C>,I ilOIMHOH' ~ . NOODLI RONI ~33• SAHITAIT f<W.llMI (llUSS Of .. Jfc) tKOTIX PLUS l!fl(S"IMG lfVBAGES (INCL 7c Off) l'RISCA.,DRINKS OCIAN HJ.MD W,t,fE• SOF lllllR SALT ~··· IEADY TO lAKE-WH1T£ ' THllR 49 BRIHPIR• BRIAD ,!!, c , . ' .. DEL MONTE DEODORANT $OAP • • POWDERED COLD WASH DOG FOOD GRANULATED SING LIQ~ID DETERGENT "'57 c C&H SUGAR SWEET PICKLE CHIPS WOOLOVE THOROFED TREND pkg. 12·0L 45c 9c both I •' reg. ]4c ,• ·5·1b. sac 1or bor bor J.lb. 39 c :HUNKS OF BEEF 22-oz. 43 c pQ HOT DOG RfllSH • 5 Hb $] •·~49c bog "..t.MllURGER RELISH 1 ~·oz. 3 5 C (Ind. 2c off) (Incl. 3< off) pkg. plostic ,., SWEET RfllSH aor cons -· ;&300 Barbor •tvd.. at Wlbion St., Barbor SJ,aopplng Center, Costa Mesa \ \ " I . . . . . . .. . ---··•-"''"' • --------~· .. IDE p 0 -· • ' • Long Way From War / . • DAILY PILOT p.J3 Rallr_.,. Not Sorry " . ' . Passenger _Train to Join Stagecoach -' WASl!INGTON (AP), -The rlllroadl, frequent It would bring peopie Dock· operating Income of '1-1 -Tllo nllroad !Ddllltry l&YI tar1et .Of !:9!')Plainll from in( ~acl< to .the rills," says billion from frolgbl the D&tlOD'I p a I I e n g e r . tht public aDd 111embfrl Of the paJDphlet,' service. u tralDa may 8000 Join the Ooagre11 when e·v er a Rall commuter wvice ln It allo iald. that the stagecoach In oblivion _ puaenger run t. •boillhed, blg citle1 II definitely pere and It doem!t appear to be don't thlnlt 1111 more money to stay, It addo, but the hll)llpeed tralna on na-- IOIT)I. should be spent to Irr to future of lntercltx puaenger Uonalltod rallroadjo In Japan 'lbe fault lies with the save money.Jo1irlg-train1. trains is "tutlJe"' and and Europe, trequenUy cited modern Americao traveler .. There is nothing to gain "hopeless.'' . as an example the United Who bas OOsettied ·the trains. -and much 1;o lose -by Besides the turn to planes States should follow, are 1o,.. for planes and Jl.Utos, 'aaya continuing these runs with and· autos the Joss of the ing mon~y and that a Railroa the. Ass~lationln •of Ampam, mcpbleaot present equipment," tbe modern..traveling salesmen, similar system here would wt pamphlet says. along witb-WS expense ac-cost A.merican taxpayers '2 respondln( to complaints of New high-speed tr a In 1 count, ai.o hurt, It says. bllllon a year. late lralna, poor aenlce and-'being d.Veloped with the The pamphlet appeared Nor do the railroads Ill ancient equtpmeQt help of tl)8 l>epartm.ent of designed to rebut recent th.la _country have a public t While the industry d,idn1t Tranaportatlon are deacrib-federal h e a r i n g 1 -on obligation to c o n t i n u e ezacUy say '!good rid·'· "'-u "'an expensive ex-abolishing passenger trains mo n e y-loling passenger dance," it wu c 1 e a r periment" :llr-Mllcb t h e in-in which witnesses com-·runs , tbe ~phlet says. railroal! officlals are shed· Ciustry apParently bas litue plained or dirty cars, poor "The Idea that railroads ding few tears. faith. · dining facilities; 'late trains are a 'quulpublic' industry The-pamphlet, entitled. "American railroad of-and a host of other things. and are 'obligated' to pro- Anny Greei1 Beret Lt. ·Ty ·HBrrington ··with 'Chrl.s Noel was among the 500 servicemen and their dates who were guests of Bob Hope (right) at a special stage show and military premiere of bis new mo\rie -'"!'lie Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell"" Monday night at Grauman's Chinese Theater. "The Case of the, Vaz$hiog f i c i a 11 find it un-The. indurtry , pamphlet . vide pasaen;ger or commuter Passenger Train," s ay s derstandably difficult to .buy said if the railroeds still ran · service, regard I es s of railroads Me losing mpney the idea that there would be as many .'}>!iS~gef trains losses, is entirely outmoded. on passenger 1$ervlce ~t sufficient . public supJ):Ort to as · they did 10 )'ears ago, It may have been valld could be better spent tn warrant the. expenditqre of "\he passenger deficit last when railroads . had a modernizing for an expected hundreds_ of millions . of l'ear would have been aboU~ monopoly on p u b 11 c heavy · increase in might .dollars for new equipment · $1.5 billl<>n -substantiall,.r transportaUon. But thoae traffic. on the long-shot gamble that more than the industry's net days are gone," it adds. ,._., ....... 69,t. 69.I.,' 1::-Jt• !:•1n :>:at• DELTA AIRLINES THE ONLY DIRECT SERVICE TO THE IBBEANI YAl.RftUMIUD s ·ttJ U.l.D.A. 'CllOICI' •••• ITIAK WINNERS WILL ENJOY JN JAMAICA ... 7 DAYS.-I INIGHTI AT A LUXURY RISORT HOTELt ••• AlllRICAN PLAN MIALlt •• ., FIVIE REIOllT AREAi THROUGHOUT THE Ill.ANDI 1 • • YIAR "llOUND 8'.JMMI .... CUMATI VACATIONLANDI .. • • DUTY-FRR .....eN0 PAllADllll • • • NA.11VI alOl9 AND FESTIVITl!SI • • • A WATlll-90RTI •CCAI • • • CELrmAL ICENIC SURROUNDINOSI • 1 1 .IAMAICA HAS ALL OP ntE S!RVICQ TO PAMPER YOU ON YOUll VACATION! I RlmRT ttcrn.LSI THE COLONY ••• ''sr.._t _,, ._ .,.,,, .. , .-. --~nlllrL.1hlml 1"""'1alr......_ ............... _. TOWIRINN ._, •• Alfll.t •._.dR•LY ... LE--llO ......_ 1 ............................. ,, ... ,d BEACH TIL ........... ..,.. _. Ail1hlndt .... I .... WarMll11ls d111 CAIAMONTIQO ,,.a.c.. ..... .._..._ef .. tollllll bwtfful ,.._ .. U.wtdl OO'LDEN HEAD••, An ''; lllt .._. .............. f 1 ....... t ................ _,,_ ..... ,..... ' . Y2'fu2~,'!_~.~.t!.f!2~ ·~· .,, IHAMPOOI YOUI CAIPmHO AS .. GHT ANO l'lfStt AS Nl'WI .. ~ , Lew Dtdly l••ta! Only $2.00 Per Day\ . · .. w .• . ..... ··~· .... -$1 11111, ............ $1 ...... u ...... ., .. .,. -.. . .......... , ....... ,......,. ............... . ,... ......... , ••• ,... ~h c..,.., 17S ..... l .... al"-,IU.0101 .. Wt'tl...i,..$1. OHtf ....... JUlllf . FIRST OF THE SEASON ~iiil GllAPlfRUIT t>JIGE·~·1 SIZE R - 16 PROOF OLD CROW LARGI .~. GAIOEN . FRISH BROCCOLI ~--Mi ... Steak Mushrooms ltlNllOll llltl'-tO "°"' ...... •1.19 ' . Gllbey's .Ancient GIN f Age · .••.. - LIBBY'S CORNED BEEF HASH fl~ 391 . STIAIGltT tclNTUcirt IOUUON lllG. $12Af . CARNATION INST. BREAKFASl~k69' Y' I, AKT FRUIT DRINKS °o':':··· H~ll 391 ITA·P . . f,.,,r. .. h GaL KELLOGG'S POP·UPS a.a.:~ 451 PETER PIPER SWEET PICKLES ~ 39' ' . DILICATllllN , OL' VIRGINIA IRAMO CANNID - HAM SPICIAL YALUll LlvD SAUSAGE fOOOOIANT FlHH 12.0Z. PKO. 4tc CAPlf'WlfWH-3~,._ SLICID PAIUAMI 191 •uo..A ..... ~·s· SAYl•1.00 CANADIAN LORD C*LYIRT CANADIAN WHISKY REGUIAR $13.l f ' ~•12a1 FULL HAif SAYll LAUDER'S SCOTCH WHllKY ====~::;;;::;;:::::::===:;;;;;;;:; FROZEN blET SHAKE METRECAL IDEREO ASST'O FIAVORS P~g. 65. C . •f J ·PLASTIC FOOD WRAP HANOI-WRAP 20().ft. 49' ~II SMUCKER'S -20-0z. JARS ORANGE MARMALADE ................ .t9t SECDl.ESS llACK8EAAY PRESERVES S9t APRICOT /PINEAPPL! PRESERVES ..... 63e ST.~~·wv PAESERVES ,. .. _,.,. .. 67c PICTSWEET PIAS &CARRIITT 5 Ii: $1 uocc011 smRS no...> 29c BRUll!l SPROUTS 110-0..J 39c PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. !hrv SUN. u JUNE 13, 14, 15, 16 . 1968 2300 Barbor Blvd. at Wiison St., Barbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa \YHITI OR.PIHi( I ' .. .. . . . . . . .. . f'•J4 DAILY PILOT . . . . . Wtdntsd1y, ,Jurtt 12, 1%8 I I I I I •· ••• .I I •• •• I . . -. . . - '' .. ,----~· .' ' I USDA . I CHOICE I I I I , I ... . . . . .. . . . . ~ I I . I I I I . I I I I I . I - ., ' • .• f-- . I I I .. I I I I •• I U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE LEAN ST ANDING •• I I I U.S.D.A. GR,llpip CHOICE LIAN WELL TRIMMED -I I I I I I I I I YQl!.NG 11'\UMP' WHOLllQDY • I FRESH, LEAN : IASRRN, LOIN END I I I I I I .. OM LEAN .EASTIRN CORN FID PORKERS I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I CENTER CUT LIAN WI.LL 1'111MMED RIB ROAST ·I I RIB FR.ESH I I I : PORK . I I I COUNTRY STYLE SPARE · I I PORK. I I I I I ' . . I • I I I I I I I I I STEAK I I I I FRYERS ROAST I I RIBS I I I I CHOPS CENTER cut EL~E . \ WHERE 98c lb. Cl •• I ELSI Iii I WHEH- 1S1.191b. I LEAN MEA1Y IEEF . 11.11 SHORT RIBS .... ~ ..... 29~ WELL TRIM~ED -ELSEWHERE 19c I~. •69, LEG 0 LAMB.............. lb c: . I ELSE . lb 1 WHERE I 39c lb. I c ! ELSI· Iii 1WHERE I 79c lb. I I I c : ELSI Iii I WHERE • I 75c lb. •• • BONELESS TOP -.ELSE WHIRi $ 1 .7.9 lb.. s 139 IUCID AND 'lllD SIRLOIN STEAK ......... lb PORK ROAST , ........... 69:. TURKEY -ELSEWHERE 35c IONILESS TOP -ELSEWHERE $1.19 lb. 98 DRUMSTl'CKS ... ~~~~~'! ... 23~ ROUND STEAK.......... ~ c : ELSI lb I WHERE I 91c lb • I PORTIRHOVR OR · IUI $ 109 T-BONE STEAK .. ~~~~... . lb BREADED FISH STICKS. OR 14 or. 65, FISH FILLETS .. ~;;.~~~.. · FRESH FRYING CHICKEN PARTS · . LOW, LOW S MOKED MEAT PRICES LOW ADVERTISEIJ BEEF PRICES · , CUT UP FRYING CHICKENS.~ ... ~;'.~~ ..•.•. 33'.. FRYER LEGS and THIGHS ... ~ __ -:r;;~~· ..... 45~ WHITE FRONT·SLICED BACON ... ~.'~:.~.o;~ .. 59' OSCAR MAYER SLICED BACON~;.'~~&9' OSCAR MAYER LINK SAUSACE~;r.~!~&9' CENTER CUT HAM SLICES .. ~~~~-· .. ~~.'.".· .. 98'. LEAN MEATY CLUB STEAKS .... '.~~ .... 98'. LEAN PLATE BOILING BEEF .. : ... ~~;~: .... 10'. . FRYING CHICKEN BREASTS ... '.~~'. .... 59:. FRESH LEAN GROUND CHUCK .. ~ .. 59'. FRESH LEAN GROUND ROUND .. '.~'. .. 69:. ROASTING CHICKEN ......... ·.~~:~~ .. , ....... 39'. FARM FR.E$.H GOLDEN THICK MEAT, YELLOW FARM FRESH GREEN ONiONS OR ., PEACHES·~·" · C-9RN RADl·SHE'S :; '· 2 lbs. for c (· BU. • • SWED VALENCIA 10 ( SWEET BERMUDA ·2· 19\( YOUNG TENDER 10( ORANGES................. lb. ONIONS........... ·lb•. . CARROTS............ .lb. S & W COf f,.EE 1 lb. can 59e ELSEWHERE 71c ' XIE 4 Roll Pack s TOILET TISSUE ....... 3 for 1 F41cii°L c1is·suE ....... 5 forsl TOM SA WYER 12 O:r:. Pkg. POTATO CHIPS .......... 49- &EICH-NUT STRAINED IL.st: $ BABY FOOD .. "~~!: .. 12 for 1 . . ioLo6iii .,~~~ .. 65$ ALL MYERATEFRANKS •• 65~, OL' VIRGINIA 6 Oz.-EUEW.HERI 39c 29• LUNCH MEAT ........... .. OICAll MAYH VAlllITT PACK . · LUNCH MEAT ....... 120 •. 89' LARGE EGGS GRADE AA 39·1l DOZEN ,. ILSIWHIRE 45c SHORT'NING WlllON'S BAKE-Rm 59;e a tla. Can -ILSIWHIRI 799 • CAL:FRISH 12 Oz. _ $ HUNT'S I 0z •• MIWMnl:2tw2ic s SODA POP .... ~~?~~ ... 12 for 1 TOMATO SAUCE ... 1 0 for .1 GOLD N' SOFT 1 lb. $ HUNT'S 300 Con . s MARGARINE ........... 3 for 1 TOMATO SAUCE ...... 5 for 1 ARDEN PINT HUNT'S TOMATO 14 Oa. Btl. s COTIAGE CHEESE .... 33• CATSUP .. -.... ~.~~~: ..... 5 for 1 OVEN GOLD HAMBURGER OR 29 ARDEN GAADE AA HOT DOG BUNS ... ~~:.. • BUTIER ...... ·.~~.!~· ...... 79- . ·MIRACLE WHIP .QUART JAR KRA" ILSEWHIRI 591 49e HUNT'S No. 300 Can FRUIT COCKTAIL ..... 51ors1 ARDEii YOGURT. . . ··~· ..... ,. ... 22' OYEN GOLD BREAD ll'.:l '°., ...... 23' MJB INSTANT COFFEE ..... to OL 11.29 IJI COFFEE ...... , •· 71' ...... • ,..12.05 icEH'ciiEAM .. ~~~: .. 65$ ORRAN1GEcju1cE. 39$ • TREISWEET 6 OJ:. CAN llSI s CAL FAME -ELSEWHERE 2 lo• 25• s LEMONADE .... •'.;'?l· .... 10 for 1 FROZEN DRINKS ..... 1 O·fo r 1 FUDGSICLES ~ND s OIE~IDA POTATOH 16 OJ:. • POPSICLES .. ~~~ .. 4 for 1 FRENCH FRIES.: ...... 3for89- 0IE·1DA 16 OJ:. ORl·IDA 16 OJ:. CRINKLE-CUTS ...... 31o.89-COTI AGE FRIES ...... 3far89• .. ADl'J:./(/'ISEIJ PRICES EFFECTIVE J UNE 13 th,,. J UNE 19 I ' FINI QUALITY SMOKED SHORT SHANK 5.7 LBS. .. Wednesday, June 12, 1988 DAILY PILOT pr.15 ' IONI c IN .. 11. IONELESS • 99• ROUND STIAK ........ :• FllSH LUN ) 69· ~ROUND rtOUND .. . a FRISH llAN 59• GROUND CHUCK .... a PRE·SLICID PICNICS ........ 45~ USDA CHOICE LIAN IONl:LESS -r 79• SftWING llEF ....... a . BREAIFAST SPECIAU ' iiiciD'' W0llll1'5 YOUSH'li 5 7 c BACON.. . 1& l"llOZEN f'IHIDS MRS. FIUDAY'S--1 111-lt . Pk9. '11 H JllADID IHllhlP ••••...•••• • • • • • • • ... MRS. FA.lbAY'S-7·•i. Pk1. 89' NIUD DmlNID SHllMP . , , • , , , , , , .. A.Ul'ERT -•-•1. l'lo:1. 69. PlllD HALllUT ••.... , •...•• ·., •,.; .ii. . FOUR FISHERMEN -24-ei. Pkf. 98' PISH STICKS • , ..••.••• , • , , , , , , , • , , , • ICELANDIC -1-111. Pkt. 75· f ' HADDOCK PILUT •••• , , , , , , , • , • , , , , • PATR ICK CUDAHY'S CkY-0.VAC 69C SIJCID IACON -1.11 •. Plrt. , ·-· ••• • •. BONELESS ROUND 'ROAST . IOMlll$S , 95, PAMILY ITUKI......... 11 IONIY:SS ITI Of' • , ff IOUND ITUK............. · 11. . . . RIH ... ISI ITI C• • , ff IOUND IOAIT... ......... 11. IOH .. IN 75• -BONELESS STEAKS ' SIRLOIN TIP , TO~ ROUND BREAKFAST c HOFFMAN'S PUR.f POltK-1-et. Plr9. 4 " • , llflll SAUSAll •••••• , , , , , • , , • • •, a. RATH 89' SMOllD DAINTID ••••••• , • , • • • • • • • a . ICILANDIC -I·"· "'•· 98' HALllUT PILI.Ir •.•• , • , , • , • , • • • •,,, • ~R IUMP IOAIT ........... .. LEAN 89c !.~~~ IOAIT ............. 85~ l lRD FARMS wHOLE HOG--1 -1 •. Rell 79' POii SAUSAll ••••.••• ,, •• , • , . . . . a &ORDON'S WHITE er WHEAT SLICED 2 2' BREAD ..... '.':~~.'~~'. .... C.H.B. - 2 LB. JAR STRAWBERRY PRESERVES · • ~ AllltlCOT, APRICOT-PINUPllLI ,k:. OR GRAPI JILLY c ' )~~SEYt-IAID Id QUALITY "M " -1-llt. Chi. BUTTER ........ .' ....... 79' DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT SPECIAU WISCONSIN AG-ED ~-=:::: ............................. 89~ KRAFT DELUXE-SLICED 12.oz. PK&. CARNATION -2-111. Pkt. 98' 111SH m.t.u . ... . . . ... .....••••... • HONEYSUCKLI -14°ea. '1'1!1. • 79' ILJ~ID TUlllY wt•rwy .... , ,, , , • , • ROTISSERIE . lb "nHHl·Lll" 1CN1L1s1 111sm 6., COllNID lllP ~o~~H~~. W• 11. ''.!J/ Jt ~ Jn Sea6on ... Jt ~ Jn :J/irifiimartf" PAC.HES . . . ' YILLOW c , NEW CROP SPANISH ONIONS ........... .. STUFFINa StZl llU. PIPPllS ................ ~ .. CHIOUITA .' FRESH DRfSSID YOUNW FRYIN5 79c RABBITS .......... :.. 1b HILLS IROS-10% RICJIER . . . 3 LB. TIN COFF·IE . s -89 . SAVE "• fl /} I C1 ' . I GllKUY DEPARTMENT SPECIAU C..verfN6h ...:frozen •-,.0,. .... • VEGETA-BLES jiL~o~ ................ 12 i '1°0 CAINATION--4 INY. ,.( •. -ALL llUYOU · AMERICAN 5-9c ·-·CHEESE ..................... , ...... . PEAS, CORN, CHOPPED SPINACH, INIT.&NI' . . . 6 7c BRIAKFASJ ................... . ~RECIOUS-l·L I. PKa. RICOllA . CHEISE ......................... . 59' PAECIOUS -.!Jo ·LI. PK&. ~=:1s~~·~······ ..... : ......... 69' JANE ANDERSON-PK&. OF 12 CORN . 2, 25' TORTILLAS .. .. . . . .. . .. : . :JreeSweel · :J-ro;en 6-oz. :Jin6 ' MOl!ION'S -6 FUYOlS CRUM Piii , .... 2' 5c ..... .. • ORANGE REAL FLORIDA JUICE s 00 'FOR MORTON'S -I VAltllTlfS 3 COURSE DINNERS "• t7•M. 59~. FRENCH FRIES OR CRINKLE CUT POTATOES REG. SIZE PKGS . s • KAL KAN -6-0Z. TINS CAT FOOD MPS, TUNA ci-tlCKIH, MIATIMI, CHICllH PARTS, llTS O' HlAllT llTI O' 1111', lmY STIW. /<. TUllXIY'.CHICklH~K& I • • . . uevea DPAllTllllNT 1na.u..1 00 • ' ' CHlffON · 5 , •100 FACIAL TISSUE . .. : •IANT 12·01. 'WTle-INCl tic C,._ "NIW LIMON".· C LIQUID JOY ................. 49 4-CZ. CUPS--4-Cf, Pll. , • ~ '" l'rALIAN . 3 ' '1 oo' ICES .... , .... 1 ................. : . . . Pull :lop /Zg. or . ~ielelic ' . -. ~. CA, .. ,N:ll:E.D. . ·~IOP ·~ ... · .. , 00 FOR · · J1'°4 l~IFTHS •529 BOURBON ... .J.ERCSEY.MA ID CCAT.ERIN .• G A·iCTN ........... ,. ·1~ FAll5kOUNOS, 6·Yr..Old •329 , BOURBON ... 'Nmi • 4 • t I . . PRICES EF~Ec;nv.E 11-iURS:THRU SUN .• JUNE 'fl, 14, 15, '· 1J08 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 2701 HARBOR ·aLVD., COSTA MESA e . 11922 IROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE • l • • ~ • I ~· ' .. .. ' 4-i • ' I ' I I I' ' ' ·1 f '! l . ' • • • I .,--.: .. ~ .~ .. -.. .. -.... • • ' .... I DAILY PILOT Wedntsd17, Junt 12, 1968 CAKE THAT WAKES UP APPETITES - Rituals at Breakfdst Brightened With Cake Wake up early morning or late morning, for that mat- ter. appetites with this but- termilk flavor brightened Grac eful 7098. So graceful! Button on this lovely capelet when bre!zes whip up , or for evenings out. Jiffy-knit cape for year round wear! Big needles, 2 strands mohair, knitting worsted. Knit, purl bands. Pattern 7098: directions, sizes 32 to 38. FIFTY CENTS {coint) for each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for first· class malling and special handling: otherwise third· class-delivery will take three week! or more . Send to AUce Brooks lhe DAILY PILOT. 105 Needlecraft Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea StaUon , New York. N.)'. 10011 . Print Na me. Address. Zip. Patten Nu mber. First time~ ,Jumbo 1968 Needlecraft Catalog -hun- dreds of dedgns. 6 free pal· term (includes d e s i g n e r sweeten) iutructions in· side. Kn.It, crochet, em· broider. 50 cent... Boot · ol 11 Jiily Ra11 - complete patterns -ln- e~naive, e:asy to make. 50 cents. Book No. I -Deluxe QuJlts -is complete patterns. S.nd !O ceni.. Boo~ No. 2 -Muuum QuU!• -pattern• lor 12 quills. 50 ce11ta __ J. ' Wake Up Breakfast Cake. Thi& frult filled beauty if quickly made with a bl.seuit mix. "It is the buttermilk and sugar-coated . cereal flake!! that ma.Jee it different," say neighborhood testers for the Dairy Council or California who worked out the recipe. Prepare it and bake it while the family finishes up morn· ing getting-ready-for-the-day rituals and serve it warm topped with butter. Round . out the menu with glasses of juice or a servint of fruit and A glass of milk or hot chocolate. BREAKFAST CA KE o/4 cup buttermilk , 2 cups biscuit mix Jh. cup sugar 2 tablespoons soft butter 1 egg 11.z teaspoon pure vanilla extract o/4 cup raisins. chopped prunes or dates 1 cup sugar-coated cereal nakes Mix ~ cup or the but- tennilk with bis('uit mix, sugar, butter, eg~ and vanilJa. Beat vigorously 1 minute. Stir in remaining v, cup buttermilk and choice of fruit. Pour into buttered 8· inch ~quare or round pan. Sprinkle with cerea1 flakes. Bake in moderate, 350 degree, oven· 25 to 30 minutes. Makes 6 to 8 serv· ings. Look O ut Fo r Hom e Hazards The use of carbon tetraohlorM::le ·as a ·household cleaning wbstance i11 an un- necessary hazard. warns DcM'Qth-y Wenck, 'home ad· visor for the University or California. 1bere are many safer subslttutes available ror use as spot remoV1!r.s. Swallo wing carbon tetrachloride or inhaling its fumes can cause death or can re5Ult in .eriou.I injury to the liver, kidney, be.art or nervous system ineluding the brain. BecaU;Se ol these hazards the U .6. Food and Drug .o\dministrat:ion h a 1 pro- posed to ban carbon tetrachloride from in- terstate commerce under the Federal H a i a rd o u s Substances Act. The ban would also apply. to the use of the chemic.ti in fire ex - tingUJsberr ' • "' ... -· .... ·sPARERIB. S ••111'"' . 59 c C111try Stylt •••••••••••••• , , • , • , • ll. FRYING CHICKEN f:.~:~~~~1~~~ ....... 11. 49 c FRYING (HICKEN lr111t1wltlRl1t ...... 1t 59 c FAMILY STEAKS ::::1:.~·.1 .............. 11. 89 c BEEF ROAST :~:~:.~·~ ..................... 11. 89c FRESH SALMON hi Wlolt 1 19 Fml · 129 , .orHtlf .. 11. St11k ... lt · RED 'SNAPPER fmlfllltt.1 ................ 11. 75 c HALIBUT STEAK iri:~~ ............... ~.11. 69 c SLICED BACON P111yWIH . 55 c , lr11• , • , ,., , , , , , • , , •·•,,., .Jl. FRANKS .... ,,,,_,,; ............................ 11. 49c FRANKS OscerM11or .• 65 c All M11t •• -.,. :. , ••••• , , ••• , , , ,,, ,, , , , , ,, , I~. LUNCH MEAT lmeric11Br11I 29c Slice• ......• , •• ,.,.,,,,,,. I 1z. VARIETY PACK ::::~n~~~ ................. 85c BOLOGNA Osctr Mayer Ill Mut 65C · 1r All Beef ••••••••••••• , •••••••••• 1211. TAMALES .,.~ ........................ 11.111 5I1. - END CUT ..... - -\ ..L ' - CHEESE :~~i!!~c~~ .............................. 1211. 69c MILK SHAKES :~1:::: ..................... 5/1. GEM ROLLS ~~~.·~~'.~'.'.'. ...................... $/ 1. PORK CHOPS ~~~~'.~.cl~~ 79c PORK CHOPS r~rJ'.~.~~~ 89c VINE RIPE SWEET MEAT MELONS FOR ALIERTSONS OLLOWS THE SUN . TO IRING YOU CALIFORNIA'S FINEST-FRESHEST PRODUCE- GREEN BELL PEPPERS Sweet, Juicy Nectarines • EXTRA LARGE Santa Clara DRIED PRUNES 3L:s1. Ivory Snow-F lakes LGE. 35 c FOR CAULIFLOWER SANTA ROSA Sweet 4 Las. Plums /1°~ LARGE SNOW . WHITE HEADS N0.1 SWEn AN~ MILD •••• Personal Ivory Vanilla Wafers 4 roR 26 c NILU 39c 120Z •. Prem. Duz-Oxydol GIANT •a c S"otch .... ;,, 6'' \I SJ111k I G11rt ........ . .. Bourbon '"'""" 4'' Ke1t1cly .,,, D11rt • R m l11~c1P•trt1 619 u l iCll , • , , , , , , , , , , , , , Q1i/t Pink Chablis ~:~· ................. 1"''· 129 Be W• ""'' 1'' rry 1ne ''"''"'' ............... 11 .. ,. 1 Mix8s ~i.~ili~.~~.~~ ....................... nto 99• Draft Beer '"'''"" J3S S11114' ................ 1-11 tr. SUAVE ::~7!1~' ...................... 11.,. 59' PERSONNA "'"'""h'"' 591 £•1• 111•11 .......... : •• SPEAKEASY = ....... -..... 69' NOXZEMA :~: ............. _., .. 79' LOTION IHll!UIH I" fA•ltlwlil ... ,.,..,,.,,,,,, .. _,, ~ \ • • .. • ORK -. •\ IN T MILD~WHOLE or HALF ---. . -. ~·11r CHOOS . LEAN .. .. K Shoul er .Steak . ' ' . ' PILLSBURY LAYER H(,lC 46 OZ. ·-CAKE FRUIT ·MIXft. DRINKS • , 3 $ 4 ~.$ FOR FOR - ONLY •••• OftLY ~-••• 8unqi·Cookie COLORING CONTEST @valuable PRIZES! 3 IN EACH OF TH ESE AGE GROUPS 5·7, 8·10, 11-12 GET YOUR ENTRY BLANK-NOW! 3.VARIETIES-9 OZ. 31 /$1 Burry' s Cookies V • • DLE RONI 1111u;r1i1 3/ 1 4 Y1rl1tles • • • • • • • •• • LES I DAISIES·:~:;·~~· 3I1. ED BEANS ::~t~ .... 11n. 4/1. NEY BEANS:~'.~ ....... 6/ 1. 'RGARINE ~~:~~ ............ 3/1. VE ETA Krlft Cimo 1 F11• ...................... 21'. lt1f e RIED BEANS m·~1!'. ........ 4/1. LARGE TWO LAYER-7 INCH CAl<E-CHOCOLATE · ICING-"DAD" / ICED ACROSS DEL ram 1/1's AURORA. 2 PACK CHUNK BATH. TUNA 'llS·SUE " -(. ' ' ·.4 $. 5 ·$· --. . . . ·-·-' ·FOR FOR ONLY •••• . ONLY '.~<;: FRESH . .. . $ BREAD ·-SA. GE 1~1,., 4/ 1 _ Yi1•11 , , , , , , , , ...... , 4 11. Til • GFOOD 10/1. THE TOP ••••• ONLY i HOT fROM OUR OWN OVENS DWOOD RK ·~~"1'' DWOOD LCH ~l'' LARGE _ASSORTMENT 4 $1· F.avorite Cookies oot ~ , 15 OZ. WHITE LOAF LORINE 39c '---------Huntfwtton leach -8911 Adoms Fountain Valley -16042 ~Ila . t OL ACID e ..... _. -3049 com HWy. 69 c Costa Mesa -135 w. 19th La.-a 8"ch -700 Sq. Coat Hwy. · H.;.,i11tt~11 leach -15511 So. ldW.nli .. ·-DASH llANT 79c Ivory liquid 220l. 59 ° I • --J ' CASCADE ze oz. 43c .. ' a •ONUS . GAIN Cl~Nf 93c llANT 81 c ' .. -• • •• " " ' .. r -~-·-----------.-:-.... Wrdntsday, Ju.ne 12, 1968 DAllY PllOT E'-17 Home News & ·Views ' • Synthetic Foods • Are· With Us : By DOROTHY WENCK Q. Someone told EM that Mel~s m........ h'uit1eu protein can be made ftom ...-. , petroleum. How is this fruit juice, miltleel ·milk, possible? . - noodalry cream -no doubt A. Researchers h a v e about it, the synthetic ~oods . discovered that c e r t a i n Ire with UI. . _.,_ ..: bacteria 'and yeasts C8n be And we oan. expeet them raiseQ. on crude Oil. TJiese to become more prevalent micrciorranismS are then M IM! "real" foods ·become "harvested" and c0nverted mon tear~ and more cos· Jnto dry, stable, bland, high· tly, . · protein .iroducts that can be Our mejor concem, as shaptd_ and flavored , to C9JINilttn, iJJ that we .are resemble meat. lfl 24 bours not cheated nutritionally l ,OOl pounds o( t h e s e ~ we buy ,,,tbe d>sti.tute org8.rlt:ims will muIUply to fOod. We ~ standards for · s,CXXt-i>ounds with a protein ccmpari.sOn. content of 50 percent. The At Ule moment we bave cost of producing protein by fffw lllaodanls ·and li~e in· this method is i till not low 1 : formation t.o gl,l.ide us when enoi.Igh to make ita feasible we choose betJr,reen the real means of prdViding 1o'if cost food and the syntheUc. protein to the w o.r 1 d ' s For ex.ample, in Calilornia hungry people bowev~r,· we have a -standard for Q. I am confused by' all fresh whole milk -it must the different sour creams on have a minimum of 3.5 per-the market. Some a r e cent butterfat and 8.15 pet-regular sour cream, some cent milk-6oli.d5·not fat (the are called imitation sour lUritiou.s portion .containing cream, some say they are protein, ca 1 c i um and nondairy. What's the dtr- riboeavill) and it must be ference between them, and "Grade A " meaning it which ooe would be the meet6 ~n health stan-· lowest in calories?. dards for bacterial count. A. Y.ou have good reason We have no such standard to be confused by these for the so-called imitation m~y different kinds of sour milk. At present such a pro-cream. Let's begin with duct might be "filled milk" your last question first, and -1hal iis nonfat milk wittl say that there is little or no vegetable 'tat added' in place difference in calorie count d. butterfat ....,. and be nearly between all of them. Some as nutritious as whole milk use vegetable fat instead of But imitation milk ~ butterfat, ~ut th!s . does not might have little or no milk save calones -1t ts merely solids and be sadly lacking a chang~ in the kind of fat In nutritional v.alue. used. . Alto, imitaliciri ·mllk may R.e~ ~ur cream 1n be made from lower quality ~aliforma ts made from "GNdie B" milk· iMtead of light crea:n and has at le.ast "Grade A" _and UU8 could ~ percent butterfat. lnuta- be one rea80ll why it is tion sour cream may . be cheaper made from nonfat milk , ........ _ · with vegetable oil ..1.U111 problem 18 that as substituted for butterfat or oomtml4;ft we have no way it may contain no milk ~ lmowiDi whet we are ~et· solids M: an, in which case it ting when we buy the 1m-could be labeled "non- itation milk because there dairy." However it still will are no standards. ~ we c~. usually contain s 0 d i u m do ii read the lilst ol. m-caseinate which is a milk g:rdeots .on. the label and protein derivative. The im· ~ the kind that uses n~-itatioos are g e n e r a 11 y fa milk. or nonfat. dry milk: cheaper than regular sour "· a DU_l)Or ~eot -or• cream since they use the ltick wilt .real.milk.. cheaper vegetable fat in · 'Ibe Oalifonna legislature stead Of the expensive now ~ ttnder 1 coc· butterfat. aiideradon a measure tllat would set standwda for im- illa!ioo milk products. ni .. e dnlld be belplul Ill con- """"""· tritltatioa ocange Juice is anotner eumpie of a .. •yntheUc food wbicb may oe leu nutritious than the real thing. . One type of frozen con- cerrtrate COD6i6te of. water, sugar, Cl"ange pulp and orange rind, plus artificial ftlEM:n , oolors and thicken: ing agents. Vitamins A and C are added. It looks aEd tastes just like orange juice. It~ no orange juice, yet tt oost.6 ju6t as much, oc slightly more, than real huen ocange juice. Another synthetic orange breakfut drink iii i n powde<ed form and le • mixture of sugar, artificlal flavorings add color and VU•miM C and A. It ...U conslderably more t h a n frozen oranee juice con-centrate. Would you con· llide< it a good buy? In .tdWon t.o the ~juice ~etics we have other p'l>flll<tl !Bbeled "0<al!ge jul~" (which have about 40 """""" orange Juice) and f·«I08e drink" (wtddl may have 10 pe.rcent juke). !Siels give 118 lists ol. ingredients in order ol. impartance, but do not give us percentages of ingredi· <nts. Smocking Smart needlework! Make these smocked pillows of corduroy, velveteen, 1atln, -· Easy, jiffy, smocked pillows! Done on reverse side of fabric. Pattern 704:1: transfer: directiOnl 11-inch round; U square; bolster H·in<:bel loog. ThUI in one &W'Vey when hcmemakers were asked to estimate the amount of ac- tual orange juice in these various produdl, t be i r e&tiimatee were much too hkl,:h. For example, orange drfnk with 10 percent juice was thought to have 42 r.r· cent iuice; lmitat on breakfast drink with ~_juice FIFTY.CENTS (colns) for wu thought to have 44 per· each pattern -add 15 cents . cent juice. . · for each pattern ·tor first- . Over two-thirda o! these class ·malling and special women thought I ab els handling; otherwille third- 1hould list ingredients· by class delivery will take percentage. three weeka or more. Send An 1mitatlon meat product to Alice Brooks the DAILY we've jult discoverW 11 im-PILOT, 106 Needlecraft lt.AUon bacon bita. It'1 made Dept., Box 18.', Old Chelsea from 101 fiour, vegetable Station, New York, N.Y. oil, lilt, dried yeast and 10011. Print Name, Addre11, ·artificlat color and flavors Zip, Patt.em Namber. Iti1 crunchy and "bacony1i .. Firlt time! Jumbo 1998 ill flavor and would be con-Needlecraft Catalog -bun· venlent to UH 1n redpes dred.s of dellp, 8 frte pat· calling for crumbled bacon. terns (includes d e 111 n e r But tt'1 not cheep -49 sweatm) instructiom in- centa for 1~ ounces. Nor i1 side. Knit, crochet, em- the soy protein as compl~ Molder. 50 cent&. a.s tile meat pr o t e t n , Book of JI Jiffy R11a1 - although in th.it Use the complete patterns -In· 1mou11t of protein ls small expensive, euy to make. (bacon ls 70 pwcent fat, on· • 50 centt. . fy 30 _percent protein). Book No. 1 -Deluxe QaUll QUESTIONS WE ARE -16 complete patterns. ASKED• Send 50 cents. ~ • = == ---· a . . , • j ' • I --,_ -::::----------------------~~ .. -•• • •1 .,. .• -., '"' • _..,, \"' •• ,..,_.. _______ o_o.eo., ......_\t . .;;;;;..---...... ,.r __ .. ..,_. •• ·~ t ••,' 4 '~ .;,,, I ... Y,· I•• , -' "''"'f-.._ #'.; .;,.! JI V •"-'~ ... . . .. . ... .... " ..... P•ll MlV l'llOT vii. WITH COUPON 59c LIQUID ~11~~ . *;~ 7oo4 "t'~I .. .,..,._..,H -5 •1 ORANGE JUICE...... t?:; MOnONI AMOlftD VAlllTIU , 59 c 3 COUUI DINNERS ......... . PERCH FILLET ........ ,, .... 4 llUIO MKD1N MllO 'c HAU BUT FILLET ..... ,, •. 59c HASH BROWNS ..... 6 ·.~-::•1 iciciEAM BARS !'~'..:~s9c j lttCM JAUA• Of• .... .....lfo 4 '1 '-CllOCOUTE ECUllS .... "'·";i· COTT HE FRIES ...... ,_...... .. .••. ,_ 39' ll"U IOOl-mll .. ~ 5"' · WlllP TIPPllll ............. , ... 01. SOLE ALLETS .................. 1-.. .:.· --59' -llllUU WI"' M oYf + 7"' , APPLE PIES S.HiCIL ...... •• SLICED TURKEY.......... . ...... ;i· @-"K.Ulf "?..,--;-u FRIED RICE ~':.~~~, .. ,,, .• , 49' YEGET AB~E CllOW ME.IN .. ,, .••. 49' SHRIMP CHOW MElll ...... &9' CHICKEN CHOW MEIN ,, .••. 69' EOG ROLLS :~-::;~;~ . . .... 59' HILLS IROS. . COFFE~ ,..., 11·~ CAN ' ~l:-.... •1.41 ::.:·., -·· •2.01 .l(A~llAN PUNCH . CHILI CON <ARNE • 4w'™ "::::-$'"'1"00 CANS --~_.....,..._.,......_ ..... " 3 :~oz. $)00 CANS ' II • u:s.D.A. CHOICE OR STATER BROS. CERTtFIED BEEF ' . ·T·BONE $ PRICES EFFECTIVE 7;JULL DAYS ' STEAK LB. PORTERHOUSE ....... ~ 11L! TOP SIRLOIN ......... ~1~! ROUND snAK ~ 73~. CHUCK STEAK ....... 49i. ' . ' CUBE STEAKS ..... ~ .. 98~. SIRLOIN TIP STEAK 98~ .. -• •. . . SLICED BOLOGllA MANHATIAN KNACKWUm .................. 49' MANHATIAN RING BOLOGNA .... -.... u.or:41' STATER BROS. 'WIENERS .................... ,, .... 39' · 1SlATfl l l OS. "ORMEL'S S:.LB~ CANNED HAM ...... : .. : ... '. .'~19 ALL llf1 01 ALL Ml A 1 ...... 39' 3·LI. CAN ........ $1 .75 STATER1 BROS. COFFE-.... ~ .. 1-LB. CAI CHICKEN OI MUStfl90M CHOW MUN t ciiiii0 'i1NG .. ( DINNE·Rs • DOUBLE \ . -PACK lllllT -· · Piiio 1·11·Ns 2·LB. BAG ........... . NISTEA INSTANT "' GROUND BEEF Dl\ICIOUS . FRESH -LIAN . 39· ~ ROUND IN OUI OWN STORES SLiCED BACON T::r .:::: 41c PACKAGE • -~ CANN·ED1 H·Aif HORMIL'S •11• C:::r:=E::L ;~'~.' ROUND ··B'Oll BEEF · ROAST U.S.D~ CHOICE 49c STATll IROS. CIRTif1m 119" LI. Y·B APP.lESAUCE .. -.. _ ....... 21 C CRISCO 01~ ................. ,, ..... "'' 4 P'lllT BmER ~~ .. ".17' ...... . · CllOPPED BEEF.,...,._._.., .• , 5 BEEF STEAKS"""' ................ . ROASlBiEF ~'t'J." ... ., ....... ,, .••. DRE$SlllGS .. ..:::.i:1~~:t. ....... 3 C -A11urs .. , ..... -. 5 rs, DIT•OASftD .,,,,,,,,,12·01. llXED llUTS a .. us •••..•.•.•. ,, .•• BORDEllS MILK .... .'~~=-·· PRUllE JU!CE.::.. .... 49' ........ HAllDl'WUP _.,_.~: ....• :-c IRAHAM CRACKERS: ll!':3 ·PEAR HALYES .. _.. ........ ... DOG FOOD::::~~~ ......... & ...... . ILEEKEX BOUTIQUE ROU TISSUL ... 2 - ILEENEX BOUTIQUE FACIAL TISSUE ... •~ IUEllEI FACIAL TISSUE ......... -·•·•• KLEENEX TOWELS t OIOllS .. --'''"'""'"IPllO C WEii UHT SlftET l'US ··-~­l ll!lf~l llAllf llEEl llUllS -...._~ 1: .•• . ' mEll llDT IEXICOlll ....•.. =:r' . ~ llAIT ~EAi tTYlE·_,,..,. , UEllUIAllT WllTE COii ...... ,__.. •. _ . IREEll UANT CUT ASPAIA&US~-~~ SLICED SWISS CllEISE .. _._.., ........ ,, .... 19' HEEi ltHT ·WllOU AIPARHiJs .. -_, TEA MIX UMO~l~H4-0L STAI YALUY SWISS,CllEESE ::-•...• ~ .. It IAIY FOOD · lllCH-NUT ac I ASJOl'lf.D , .... _-J 1. -~ HEH llANT IUSHROOIS :::t::._ ..... . U.SUlUR HAS •• .,..,,"' ............... _ ....... u..o r . LI. ' CORN I.AIOI, X·PANcy • IWllT, ftNDll ' EARS SAµ PRICES EFFECTIVE 7•FULL DAYS-TIURS. tin WED .. JUNE 13th·19tlt 3430 W. Llneoln.,Allohel m 1522 Woltmlnator Blvd., W•tml 2564 W. lroodWoy, "'•helm 14212 Ml-Ave., WhlttlOt' 21IO Newport l lvd., Ce;to -• 1100 E. Collins, Ori"'° 707 W.1l 9th St., C:..111 MOia 2630 141ngor St., S.nt• AM .... Chopmon .Avenue, Gordon G .... . ·~ . I .. l • • ' J " w pc tit tu G: W• "' 21 F1 Si ia wi te " lh kl ·~ W• gc er hi se W• dE m al r e tu 1 1 ed ze to· ed of re pr VO tUl let yo th; F 0 l Or l FL Sii ev• bu -